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Monday, Nov. 1, 1948
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Voters Will Mark 3 Ballots In Election
Three ballots will be handed voters at the general election tomorrow. These will cover the national-state election, the state constitutional amendments, and the district-county-township contests.
The national-state ballot will include the candidates for president and vice-president, United States senator, congressman, justices of the state supreme court, governor, lieutenant governor, secretary of state, state auditor, state treasurer, attorney general for Kansas, super-intendent of public instruction, commissioner of insurance, and state printer. The residence and party of each candidate is listed immed-
only after the name. To be marked in the square at the end of the line.
On the constitutional amendment ballot, voters will mark their preference by checking either "yes," or "no" in the squares beside the amendment. The first proposal would permit the legislature to regulate, license, and tax the sale of intoxicating liquors. The second proposal deals with compensation for justices of the supreme court and judges of the district courts. The last of the three proposals fixes pay and mileage for members of the legislature.
The district ticket, found on the third ballot, lists candidates for judge of the district court, state senator, and representative in the legislature. The county ticket includes candidates for county clerk, treasurer, register of deeds, attorney, probate judge, sheriff, coroner, superintendent of public instruction, clerk of the district court, and commissioner for the third district. The city ticket, last on the third ballot, covers the offices of justice of the peace and constable.
Ballots will be handed voters after their name has been checked against registration and their name entered by the clerk. After marking the ballots, each will be folded separately with the numbered corner on the outside before being placed in the ballot box. This folding will be done for the voter.
Latest estimates indicate a record-breaking number of citizens may go to the polls in Lawrence, producing a total of 9,000 votes in the city. This figure is based on 50 per cent of the total population voting in the last four general elections.
University Buys Two-Acre Tract
Purchase of a two-acre tract by the University was announced today by Raymond Nichols, executive secretary.
The tract, which runs 660 feet north from 16th street along Michigan street, was sold by the Rev. Arthur Ward, former pastor of the United Brethren church at Big Springs. The University already held title to the adjoining ground on the north, east and south. The Lindley hall parking area is to the north, the Military Science building area to the east and the west extension of the intramural fields on the south.
WEATHER
Six small houses are on the land. The University has no plans for immediate change in use of the property, Nichols said.
Kansas—Showers south, spreading through most of eastern half today, ending west today, and extreme east in early morning. Tomorrow fair to partly cloudy. Cooler north and east. High today 70 north, to 65 south. Low tonight, low 30's.
Voters: Save Feet Call KU 467
Free transportation to the polls will be furnished to University students by the American Veterans committee, the Young Democrats, and the Young Republicans.
A car pool will operate from the Union from 8 a.m. until the polls close at 7 p.m. tomorrow.
The A.V.C. will operate a booth in the Union to receive calls and co-ordinate cars. Students may either go to the Union or call K.U. 467 and a car will be sent to their house.
Mrs. Simons' Funeral Today
Funeral services were held at 2 p.m. today for Mrs. Gertrude Reinek eimons, wife of W. C. Simons, president of the World company.
Mrs. Simons died Oct. 30 at the Lawrence Memorial hospital following an illness of several months. She became seriously ill in July and entered the hospital here August 11. She had never fully recovered from a major operation performed in January.
Mrs. Simons was active in music organizations in her early married life. For several years she was the contralto member of the University of Kansas quartet which served as the official musical group of the school. She was a past president of the Music club.
Mrs. Simons is survived by her husband; four children, Mrs. O. W. Maloney of Tulsa, Mrs. L. A. McNalley of Minneapolis, Dolph Simons, Lawrence, and Mrs. Harry F. Johnson, of Wymore, Neb., and ten grandchildren.
Burial was in Oak Hill cemetery
21 Pledged By Scarab
Pledges are Robert Arbuckle, Earl Erl Clark, Charles Dutton, Robert Vance Ford, Robert Fountain, James Harrison, Gene Lefebvre, Kenneth McCall, Claudio Mason, Robert Mullens, Howard Nearing, Don Noyes, Jack Plank, William Roehl, Donald Robertson, Richard Sime, Leeland Mordecai Srack, James Stiller, Edward Stryker, Paul Taneyhill, and Claude Doren.
Glen Horst, vice-president, attributes the size of the class to the large enrollment in the School of engineering and architecture.
The largest class in its history was pledged by Scarab, architectural fraternity, recently.
Robertson was elected pledge captain.
Break Causes Water Shortage At Sunflower
Sunflower students went without coffee and shaves this morning. Despite a heavy downpour outside, no water was being piped into apartments.
mours.
A 12-inch water main located at Sunflower ordance works broke about 2 a.m. today. Maj. Alan C. Johnston, commanding officer, said the main serviced the central heating plant at the ordance works and supplied water to Sunflower village.
"We are doing our best to remedy the situation," Major Johnston said this morning. "In the meantime until the trouble is repaired, a 500 gallon tank truck will be kept in front of the Sunflower drug store to furnish water for emergency purposes and drinking."
"I was lucky, though. My wife made me a cup of coffee by melting ice cubes," Mr. Lamonica chuckled. "But as yet, I haven't been able to get a shave."
John L. Lamonica, Sunflower housing manager, said that he had been up since 2 a.m. doing what he could to help the situation.
The housing manager said the average family in the 1500 unit village ordinarily uses about 160 gallons of water a day. This would bring the total consumption for a normal 24-hour period to 240,000 gallons.
"Consumption is high because of the large number of children here," Mr. Lamonica said.
Nies-Berger Gives Recital
By JAMES W. SCOTT
Edouard Nies-Berger, organist of the New York Philharmonic-Symphony orchestra, presented a varied and colorful recital to his audience Sunday in Hoch auditorium.
Mir. Nies-Berger was at his best in "St. Francis Talking to the Swallows" by Marco Enrico Bossi and "Pastorale" by Marie Joseph Erb. He achieved beautiful effects with these two selections which were probably the high points of the recital.
The program was presented chronologically, beginning with "Prelude and Fugue in G-Minor," by the 17th century composer, Girolamo Frescobaldi and ending with "Toccata," by the contemporary American composer, Leo Sowby.
"Toccata in F-Major" by Johann Sebastian Bach drew the greatest applause from the audience, although the rhythm was somewhat unsteady.
Mr. Nies-Berger is an organist o the emotional type. Using practically every stop and effect on his instrument, he delivered a recital which seemed to please his audience.
Daily Kansan Election Poll
| Freshman Men | D. 74 | Trum. 22 | Wal. 4 | Thurm. 0 | Thom. 0 | Repeal | Legislator Salaries |
|---|
| Yes | No | Yes | No |
| Freshman Women | 67 | 33 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 78 | 22 | 41 | 59 |
| Freshman Class (total) | 67 | 24 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 67 | 33 | 83 | 17 |
| | | | | | | 76 | 24 | 48 | 52 |
| Sophomore Men | 54 | 38 | 8 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 77 | 23 | 77 | 23 |
| Sophomore women | 86 | 14 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 57 | 43 | 72 | 28 |
| Sophomore Class (total) | 61 | 33 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 73 | 27 | 73 | 27 |
| Junior Men | 52 | 41 | 4 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 79 | 21 | 68 | 31 |
| Junior Women | 67 | 33 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 58 | 42 | 58 | 42 |
| Junior Class (total) | 56 | 39 | 3 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 73 | 27 | 67 | 32 |
| Senior Men | 65 | 35 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 89 | 11 | 69 | 31 |
| Senior Women | 60 | 40 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 92 | 8 | 80 | 20 |
| Senior Class (total) | 64 | 36 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 90 | 10 | 71 | 29 |
| All School (total) | 63 | 33 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 77 | 23 | 67 | 33 |
Repeal
Dewey Truman Yes No
70 30 71 29
41 39 81 19
(All Figures Are Percentages)
(All Figures Are Percentages)
Raising Salarie
Yes No
73 27
64 36
KU Favors Repeal Dewey, Pay Raise
Bv BOB ROTER
University students are almost two to one in favor of Gov. Thomas E. Dewey for president and over three to one in favor of amending the state constitution to permit the sale of liquor.
Influenza Shots Start Wednesday
They also favor, by almost two to one, an amendment to raise the salaries of state legislators.
Influenza vaccinations will be offered to students, faculty and University employees by the Health service beginning Wednesday.
The shots will be given at stations in Marvin hall, Frank Strong rotunda, Union lounge and Watkins Memorial hospital, as part of the preventive medicine program of the Health service.
Vaccination is being offered to provide effective protection before Thanksgiving, when an influenza epidemic may normally be expected. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the Health service, said there is no impending epidemic now.
Experience with mass vaccination in 1947-48 proved that it was highly effective in an epidemic. About 56 of every 1,000 non-vaccinated students had influenza, while less than 13 of 1,000 vaccinated students had it.
The vaccine protects against four strains of influenza virus, but does not protect against common colds. Protection develops in ten days and lasts 60 to 90 days. Persons who are allergic to eggs should not take the vaccine.
Guest Talks To Sigma Xi
After visiting the Midwest Research institute; Dr. C. B. van Niel, professor of microbiology at Stanford university, will address the faculty and students of the University of Kansas hospitals in Kansas City, Kan., today.
Dr. van Niel, a circuit speaker for Sigma Xi, the Scientific Research Society of America, will arrive in Lawrence tomorrow to address the local chapter at 8:15 p.m. in 305 Bailey laboratory.
He will be guest of honor at a dinner in the East room of the Union after attending a seminar on biological processes and discussing problems in anatomy, bacteriology, botany and biochemistry.
Dr. van Niel, a native of Holland, received his degree from the Technical university at Delft. He joined the staff at Stanford university in 1928.
An authority on photosynthesis, Dr. van Niel, will lecture on "The Comparative Chemistry of Photosynthesis," according to Dr. J. O. Maloney, secretary of the local Sigma Xi chapter.
Dr. Homer B. Latimer, president of the University chapter said the lecture will be open to the public.
Clergyman Urges Dry Law Repeal
He termed the state's prohibition amendment a measure which made hypocrites of those who were unwilling to help enforce it. He made the remark during morning services at the cathedral Sunday.
An Episcopal clergyman has urged that Kansans repeal the 68-year-old dry law. He is John Warren Day dean of Topeka's Grace cathedral.
A University Daily Kansan poll shows 63 per cent of the students will vote for Dewey, or would if they were of voting age. A total of 77 per cent of the students favor the repeal of the prohibition amendment, and 67 per cent favor raising the pay of state legislators.
The poll was set up by the University Daily Kansan with the assistance of the bureau of government research to insure a representative cross-section both male and female students in all schools, classes, and income groups were interviewed. About four per cent of the students were polled.
Poll-takers were warned by the government research group against relying on the results. Environmental background, interviewer bias, incomplete cross-section, and the "band-wagon effect" were listed as being the most probable reasons for an incorrect result.
Sophomore women gave the largest percentage to Dewey, 86 per cent, while the junior men gave Truman the highest vote, 41 per cent. Wallace received the majority of his votes from the sophomore class in the School of Engineering. His total for the university, however, is only 3 per cent.
The repeal issue is issue among senior women, who are 92 per cent in favor. Sophomore women were against repeal by 43 per cent.
In conducting the poll, several interesting points came out. For example, the rather heavy vote for Wallace in the School of Engineering baffled the polltakers.
The School of Pharmacy went four to one for Truman, for no apparent reason. The College, against early predictions, is strongly Dewey, and the School of Business is split about even. The School of Fine Arts showed the highest Dewey margin, 10 to 1, while the journalists are more or less undecided, being divided 50-50.
According to the latest United Press figures, the University students will vote on the national election in about the same percentage as the vote for the state.
Women, on the whole, favor Dewey by 70 per cent, while men give him a 60-40 advantage. Women, in a surprise vote, favor repeal by 71 per cent with the men 10 per cent higher. Women are more generous with their money, as they favor rising legislative salaries by a majority of 73 to 27. Men are more thrifty, as only 64 per cent favor the amendment.
Fifty-five geology students at the University of Kansas will make a field trip to the Tri-State mining area and into southern Arkansas. The trip will begin tomorrow and last through Sunday.
55 Geology Students To Make Field Trip
Dr. Robert M. Dreyer, chairman of the geology department, will be in charge. The field trip is required as part of Dr. Dreyer's mineralogy class offered each fall.
After studying the lead and zine fields in the Missouri-Kansas-Okla- homa area, the students will inspect the bauxite, aluminum bearing ores, and quartz crystal deposits in Arkansas.
The group will make overnight stops in tourist cabins for which advance reservations have been made.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1948
You Are About to Elect A NEW CONGRESS
DEAR STUDENTS:
You have a right to be represented in Congress! Do you know that for the last five years your present Republican Congressman, who now asks you to re-elect him, has voted consistently against the interest and wishes of the great majority of the people of the 2nd Congressional District? THE MAJORITY HAS NOT BEEN REPRESENTED DURING THOSE FIVE YEARS! His record shows that and here it is:
HE VOTED:
Against the Marshall Plan and All forms of foreign aid and thus voted for communism and chaos in Europe.
Against the Marshall Plan and All forms of foreign aid and thus voted for communism and chaos in Europe. Against the principle of Reciprocal Trade and thus voted to build up farm surpluses and to reduce foreign trade. Against Flood Control, against Soil Conservation, against Rural Electrification by voting to reduce funds for those purposes. Against Low Cost Housing and thus voted to keep our people in overcrowded homes, in slums, in chicken coops and in garages. Against Fair Labor Laws. Against Financial Aid for schools.
Against Flood Control, against Soil Conservation, against Rural Electrification by voting to reduce funds for those purposes.
Against the principle of Reciprocal Trade and thus voted to build up farm surpluses and to reduce foreign trade.
Against Low Cost Housing and thus voted to keep our people in overcrowded homes, in slums,in chicken coops and in garages.
Against Fair Labor Laws.
Against Financial Aid for schools.
Against the Fair Employment Practices Act.
Against Civilian Control of Atomic Energy.
For Inflation by voting against Price Controls which made it possible for Big Business to More than Double Its Profits while wages, salaries,and profits of small business did not increase by nearly so large a proportion.
For Inflation by voting against Price Controls which made it possible for Big Business to More than Double Its Profits while wages, salaries, and profits of small business did not increase by nearly so large a proportion.
For Higher Rents—"Nuff" said.
For Lower Farm Prices after 1950.
For an Unfair Tax Reduction Bill which reduces taxes on big incomes by as much as 50% but reduces taxes on small incomes by not more than 20%.
For removing 750,000 Workers from the annuity protection of Social Security.
For Higher Rents—"Nuff" said.
For Lower Farm Prices after 1950.
For an Unfair Tax Reduction Bill which reduces taxes on big incomes by as much as 50% but reduces taxes on small incomes by not more than 20%.
For removing 750,000 Workers from the annuity protection of Social Security.
You Need a NEW CONGRESSMAN! Elect PHILIP A. DERGANCE, Democrat, Tomorrow
Resident of Lawrence. Asst. Dist. Att., U.S. Dept. of Justice, until Sept. 1948
HE IS PLEDGED TO AND WILL VOTE FOR:
Full re-instatement of Farm Parity.
Reciprocal Trade and foreign aid programs.
Fair Labor Laws, expanded
Expanded Soil Conservation and Rural Electrification.
Expanded Flood Control.
Social Security and Higher Minimum Wages.
Lost Cost Housing.
The Fair Employment Practices Act.
Aid to Education.
A Strong Defense.
A Strong United Nations.
Continued Civilian and Public Control of Atomic Energy.
Excess Profit Taxes.
A Balanced Economy program, including a fair tax law to halt Inflation and to prevent ruinous deflation.
Your Best Bet Is with DERGANCE
(Paid for by K.U. friends of Philip A. Dergance, Democratic Candidate for Congress, Second Congressional District which includes Wyandotte, Johnson, Miami, Linn, Bourbon, Allen, Anderson, Franklin and Douglas Counties.)
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Women's Hats Spark Romance; Rent Bonnet And Catch Husband
New York—(UP)—Men are "really mad" about the hats mats women wear, says Miss Matty Clarke. "A woman's hat, and not a man's stomach, is really what sparks romance," she said quite seriously.
Miss Clarke, a blonde, willowy former model, claims ownership of the nation's only agency that rents hats to women.
She said her hat renting business is a whopping success simply because she knows how a feminine bonnet will affect a man.
"Why," she said, "one of my hats, which I call the Flora Dora number, already has clinched five marriages and three engagements.
"The Flora Dora hat," she said, "is always in demand, but I don't rent it unless I know, positively that the situation—e-calls for it."
Miss Clark said she doesn't rent any hat unless she has a "complete fill-in" on the occasion.
"After all," she explained, "my clients rent hats to impress their men. If I encourage them to wear the wrong ones—" She twitched a shoulder with graceful significance.
"Before I dare rent a hat," she continued, "I must know a few things about my client's date. How old is he? What's his occupation? Where are the couple going? Is the man trying to impress a new date, or pep up an old one?"
"I keep a file on the rented hats," she said, "including detailed information about the reaction each hat received. It serves as a valuable guide when renting hats to other customers.
"Ive found that most men like attractive hats, no matter how wild a creation it might be. Sure, they howl, but they don't mean it. When their women draw attention it pleases their ego."8
Miss Clarke said that for blind dates she suggested a "head-hugging green lame, with drooping, black, palm glycerine feathers." And for dinner with a businessman, a "tri-corne, cluttered with pink plumes."
She said the "out of town buyer" type, who wants to paint the town red in one night, usually like "the provocative, profile hats that have plenty of sophistication."
"It has a homey air," she said. "I guess it reminds the boys of their mothers."
But it's always the Flora Dora, she said, when the men are sentimental and on the verge of proposal.
Religious Leaders Here This Week
Two religious leaders will be guests of the Kansas School of Religion this week.
Dr. John C. Trever, head of the department of English Bible of the International Council of Religious Education, will speak at regular sessions of religious classes Thursday morning.
Rhodes Thompson of Texas Christian university, national president of the Disciple Student fellowship, will be in Lawrence on Wednesday and Thursday. He will address the University Fellowship at a dinner Wednesday evening.
Democrats, AVC To Form Car Pool
The Young Democrate club voted Sunday to join the A.V.C. car pool tomorrow. Members decided to hold a final meeting before the campaign at 4 p.m. today in the Union.
They are making a final door-to-door campaign sweep, trying to encourage all eligible voters to vote. They want to furnish as much transportation as possible for voters, regardless of party affiliations.
$5,500 Job Is 'Orphan'
Worcester, Mass. — (UP) — Probate Court here has a $5,500-a-year "orphan" job. The post is first assistant register of probate, a position declined so far by three lawyers. All said they felt their present connections offered a more promising future than the assistant registriship.
Socially Speaking
Watkins, Battenfeld Dinner
Watkins and Battenfeld halls had an exchange dinner Oct. 27. Following the dinner, an hour dance was held at Battenfield hall.
PK Leaf Raking Party
Phi Kappa recently entertained the Alpha Delta Pi sorority with a leaf raking party.
***
Tri Chi Initiates
Tri Chi announces the initiation of Robert E. Banks of LaCygne.
Sigma Kappa Buffet Supper
Sigma Kappa entertained with a buffet supper Oct. 23 at the chapter house, Guests were Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Burkholder and Bruce and Elaine, Mr. and Mrs. James F. Flasco, Dr. and Mrs. H. B. Sullivan, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Mowery, Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Bodwell and Nancy, Mr. and George Harter, Mrs. A. M. Ricioran, Ruth Cullins, Thea Klein, Nancy Gering, William Akright, Eugene Allen, Chan Boucher, Edward Coburn, Jack Dalton, John Fleener, Forrest Gifford, Newell N. Jenkins, Herbert Mesig, James Mason, Bernard Nordling, Max Pachi, Floyd Potter, Donald Reeves, Robert Revellet, Arthur Ricioran, and Winn Seroy.
Weddings And Engagements
Lashbrook-Gibbs Pinning
Gamma Phi Beta announces the pinning of Lois Charlene Lashbrook, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Lashbrook of Kansas City, Kan., to Paul W. Gibbs, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Gibbs, also of Kansas City, Kan.
The announcement was made recently at the sorority chapter house by Mrs. Ralph Park, housemother, who received a corsage of roses. Miss Lashbrook wore an orchid corsage and was assisted by Betty Crawford and Marjorie Jenney who wore carnation corsages, Mrs. T. W. Harris, Alpha Tau Omega housemother, also wore a corsage of roses.
Miss Lashbrook is a College sophomore. Mr. Gibbs is an engineering sophomore and a member of Alpha Tau Omega social fraternity.
Official Bulletin
Nov. 1, 1948
Independent Women's senate,
p.m. today, Miller hall.
Two vacancies now exist in A.S.C. due to resignation of George Lowe, District IV, and Hugh Johnson, District III.
Petitions for secretary-treasurer of Student Engineering council must be submitted in dean's office, 111 Marvin, by noon Wednesday. Form available in dean's office. Thirty-five signers necessary.
Kansan board, 4 p.m. today, 107 Journalism. All members.
Mathematical colloquium of department of mathematics, 5 p.m. today, 203 Frank Strong, Prof. S. Thomas Parker, Kansas State college, speaker.
World Student Service Fund forum, 4 p.m. today, Pine room, Union. Wilmer J. Kitchen, national executive secretary, speaker.
R. N. club, 8 tonight, Castle Tea room. All graduate nurses invited.
English proficiency examination,
Saturday, Nov. 6. Registration in
office of College of Liberal Arts and
School of Education today, tomorrow
and Wednesday. Mrs. Calder-
wood will be in 313 Fraser from
2 to 3 p.m. today through Friday
for conferences.
Home Economics club, 5 p.m. tomorrow, 119 Fraser. Dues payable at department office.
Sigma Tau, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow,
101 Snow.
United World Federalists, 4 p.m tomorrow, Pine room. Dr. Sandellius and John Malone, speakers Open meeting.
Bacteriology club, 7:15 p.m. to-
morrow, Snow hall.
Sigma Xi. 81:5 pm. tomorrow,
305 Bailey. Dr. C. B. van Niel,
"Comparative Biochemistry of
Photosynthesis."
Sigma Delta Chi, 5 p.m. tomorrow,
107 Journalism.
Scabbard and Blade, 7:30 p.m. to tomorrow, 105 Military Science building. War uniforms. Initiation of associate members.
American Society of Tool Engineers executive meeting Wednesday night in Kansas City, Dinner, 7 p.m. Program to follow. All wishing rides register in main office, Fowler Shops by noon Wednesday.
Women's Rifle club, short meeting, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday, Military Science building. All interested.
Rides to polls tomorrow, Memorial Union, or call KU 467. American Veterans committee.
U.N.E.S.C.O. meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, 106 Frank Strong.
Coffee-forums, 4 p.m. Wednesday.
Pine Room, Union. Magda Berger,
speaker, "My Impressions of America."
2 Big Attractions
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History Fraternity Initiates Ten
Ten persons were initiated into Phi Alpha Theta, honorary history fraternity, Oct. 29, in the history office in Frank Strong hall. Dr. L. R Lind, associate professor of Latin, was made an honorary member for his work in the field of humanities.
The fall banquet was held in the English room of the Union following the initiation. Dr. J. V. Frederick, an alumnus of the University, now head of the history department at the College of the Ozarks, Clarksville, Ark., was guest speaker. His topic was "Western Transportation, 1850 to 1866."
Those initiated into the history fraternity were Lee Atkinson and Frederick F. Simmons, College seniors; Lee W. Dyer, Marjorie Garten, Alice Louise Lambert, Noble Melencamp, Martha Ann Nichols, and Shelia Wilder, College juniors; Dr. William Winter, professor of history, and Dr. Lind.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
University Daily Kansan
Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence) $1.00 a semester, Lawrence Kans., every afternoon during Lawrence Kans., every afternoon during Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class September 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
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The Department of Speech and Drama
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TUES., WED., THURS., FRI.,
Nov. 2, 3, 4, 5
FRASER THEATRE
CURTAIN----8:00 P.M.
(Note new time)
Activity Tickets Admit!
Exchange stub for reserved seat at ticket office-Basement Green hall. Phone KU-412, Open 9-12, 1-4.
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1948
Aggies Toss One Too Many To Give KU 13-7 Victory
A quarterback who was not satisfied with a one-point lead with less than 10 minutes to play gave the Kansas Jayhawkers the break they were looking for to pull out a 13 to 7 victory over the dangerous Oklahoma Aggies Saturday in Memorial stadium.
Jack Hartman, Cowpoke quarterback, with 10 minutes to go, elected to toss a pass with the count third and 5 on the Aggie 40-yard line and the score 7 to 6 in the Aggies' favor $ \textcircled{*} $
Jack Hartman, Cowpoke quarter. to toss a pass with the count third a the score 7 to 6 in the Aggies' favor. Charles Moffett, Kansas left half who on the preceding play had let Kenny Roof, Aggie left half, get behind him only to have Hartman overthrow his man, seemed to anticipate the next pass play. He cut in front of the intended receiver, took the pass on the run, and outraced the remaining Aggies down the west sideline for 45 yards and the winning Kansas touchdown.
If the Aggies had played it safe and stuck to their potent ground attack, they could have walked off the field with the 7 to 6 lead they had nursed since the closing minutes of the first half. This seems likely because the Aggies, although outrushed and outclassed by the lighter Jayhawkers the greater part of the first half, held the Kansans to minus 7 yards net rushing during the second half.
The ever-present threat of Gilman's touchdown aerials evidently prompted the Aggies to go all out for a second score to put the game on ice. Ironically, it was an Aggie pass, not one from Gilman, that spelled their doom.
For the first time this year Gilman was shut out in the touchdown pass department although he scored the first Kansas touchdown on an end run. The Kansas quarterback connected for only two long passes, both in the third quarter. After Bryan Sperry had recovered Bob Meinert's fumble on the Kansas 25-yard line, Gilman passed for a 47-yard gain to Dick Bertuzzi who made a fine over-the-shoulder catch.
Two plays later, he hit Griffith for 27 yards. However, in the meantime, his pass-off to Bud French went over the latter's head for a 20-yard loss to nullify the major portion of the previous pass gain. On the last play of this series, Griffith lacked one-half yard of making a first and ten on the Agie 16-yard line.
The Aggie pass defense proved one of the tightest the Jayhawkers have faced. Only one interference ruling was made, on a 10-yard toss from Gilman to Sperry in the second quarter. Another 25-yard aerial by the same combination went for naught when the Aggie defender jumped on Sperry's back so soon
after he received the ball that the Kansas end fumbled and the Aggies recovered. Many fans thought Sperry was down and the play over before the fumble occurred, but the referee ruled otherwise.
The 124 yards gained through the air by Kansas combined with the 145 yards net rushing, gave them a total of 18 yards more than the Aggies, although the Oklahomans held a 15 to 10 edge in first downs.
Throughout the game the Kansas ground attack was directed around the Aggie ends or outside their tackles. The Kansas coaches, probably wisely, did not want to tire their light forwards by attempting to drive a wedge through the huge Aggie linemen.
The Cowboy strategy was just the opposite of the Kansas'. They did not follow the lead of many of Kansas' opponents this season in trying to get around the small Kansas ends. After they had effectively sidelined former teammate Dick Monroe, Kansas' best linebacker and defensive signal caller, they hammered at the center of the Kansas line unmercifully, grinding out consistent gains.
Coach Lookabaugh's two team system began to tell on the weary Kansans as the game progressed. Twice the stubborn "defensive" Aggie line stopped the Kansans within the A. and M. 20-yard line, and twice Aggie backs intercepted Gilman passes near their 10-yard line.
With the exception of their touchdown drive, the only Aggie penetration within the Kansas 20-yard line came when their fourth quarter steamroller drive bogged down on the Kansas 19. Moffett, Tomlinson, Ken Sperry, Darell Norris, Ellis, and Gilman were the key men who combined to stop this seemingly unstoppable Cowboy drive.
Both eleven had the reputation of being "second half" teams before Saturday's game. The Cowboys lived up to their billing, but the Jayhawkers came out from the opening gun with the most potent ground attack displayed this season to march 77 yards in 10 running plays for their first touchdown.
It took 4 minutes, 25 seconds, for the Jayhawners, paced by a 32-yard run around right end by Mofifet, followed by a 30-yard jaunt around the same end by Bertuzzi, to score. Gilman took the ball over from the Aggie $3 \frac{1}{2}$-yard line on a bootleg play around his left end. Ken Sperry's placement kick was wide to the right.
At that time it did not look as if the missed point would have any bearing on the outcome. The Kansas team took the ball on their own 47 after forcing the Cowboys to punt following the second kickoff, and in eight plays they were on the Aggie $9\frac{1}{2}$-yard line.
Griffith contributed 20 of these yards, 14 of them on a run around his right end in which Darrel Meisenheimer. Aggie guard, had him by the foot behind the line of scrimmage only to have Griffith twist away. The Jayhawker backfull dropped one long Gilman pass on the Aggie 10 after outmaneuvering the Cowpoke secondary.
Bertuzzi aided the Kansas cause with 13 yards in two trips around the right side of the Kansas line. Aggie Coach Lookabaugh substituted desperately at the left end spot in an attempt to slow the Jayhawker flanking tactics. His efforts were not necessary, however, as quarterback Gilman, with third down and 4 yards to go on the 10-yard line, took to the air for two incomplete passes, one of which sailed 10 yards outside the end zone.
Had Kansas been able to capitalize on this second scoring opportunity, the fans might have missed a lot of thrills and Coach J. V. Sikes might have a few less gray hairs.
The first Aggie offensive spark came late in the second quarter when Bill Grimes, Cowpoke right half, put on the finest exhibition of broken field running of the day as he sidestepped one Jayhawk after another in returning Dolph Simon's 52-yard kick 43 yards to the Kansas 23. The Aggies took six plays to score, and then they had to take to the air, Hartman connecting with Alex Loyd in the end zone.
After the first quarter, Aggie backs, Grimes, Ken Roof, and Jim Spavital were seldom stopped for no gain. Jayhawker linemen frequently had clear shots at the hard running Aggies but slid off. The constant passing threat of Hartman forced the Jayhawkers to keep their defense fairly loose,
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Democrat Veteran of Lawrence
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for
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Beta and Phi Psi B's Keep Perfect Records
Two teams maintained their undefeated records in intramural "B" team touch football competition Friday, Oct. 29. Beta Theta Pi downed Kappa Sigma, and Phi Kappa Psi won over Alpha Tau Omega. The Beta's have won five and the Phi Psi's have won four.
The Beta's staged a second hall scoring drive to down the Kappa Sigs 26 to 0. Frank McCullough, right halfback, passed to Ralph Simmons, end, for a touchdown in the third quarter. At the start of the fourth quarter Bob Dare tossed a 30 yard touchdown pass to Wayne Atwood.
Beta's Down Kappa Sigs 26-0
One of the big upsets of intramural "B" competition came when the man met.
Maupin threw a short pass to Stratton in the end-zone to climax a 75-yard scoring drive. Late in the fourth quarter, Vance, Sigma Chi guard, took an 8-yard pass from Holden to score another 6 points. Maupin completed another short pass to Stratton to make the extra point.
One of the big upsets of intramu Silent Men upset previously un-beaten Phi Gamma Delta. The Silent Men have won three and lost two, and the Phi Gams now have a four won one lost record.
Sigma Chi Beats Delta Tau 20-6
Pat Dunne, Delta Tau end, intercepted a pass and ran twenty yards to score the initial touchdown. Sigma Chi tied the game up when Holden passed to Benton. Maupin took a short pass in the flat to give Sigma Chi a 1 point lead at the end of the half.
After dropping behind in the first quarters, Sigma Chi B" (3-1) staged a comeback to down Delta Tau Delta "B" (1-3) 20 to 6.
On an intercepted pass the Beta's again moved deep in Kappa Sig territory. Dare passed from the 5-yard line to Simmons who scored. The Beta's final touchdown came on another pass by Dare who threw 20 yards to Fred Shelton. The Kappa Sigs have a 1-4 record.
Phi Psi Trims ATO 11-0
Phi Pi Trims ATU 11-0
Phi Kappa Psi defeated Alpha
Tau Omega 11-0 in a hard fought game. Alpha Tau Omega's charging line lost most of its power in the face of Phi Psi's excellent pass defense.
Silent Men Upset Phi Gam's 7-6
The only touchdown was made by Gene Nelson as a result of a pass intercepted by Bill Lacy. Two Phi Spi safety plays were responsible for the final score. The ATO's have a 1-3 record.
In a thrilling game the Silent Men won a 7 to 6 victory over the previously unbeaten Phi Gam "B" team.
The Phi Gams scored the first time they got the ball, on a pass from Bill Porter to Bill Binter that was good for sixty yards.
The Silent Men scored late in the fourth quarter on a pass from Joseph to Murray and the same combination was good for the extra point and the game.
Phi Delts Down Sizma Pi 33-0
Phi Delta Theta (4-1) ran over Sigma Pi (1-4) 33 to 0 in one of the high score games. The Phil Deltas had no trouble, scoring almost at will, with Ed Marquis doing most of the passing.
Marquis passed for four of his team's touchdowns with Fountain, Baltus, Cook, and Byler on the receiving end. Bissell accounted for the other score, tossing a pass to Byler.
Oread Edges Sigma Nu 6-0
A defensively strong Oread hall team (1-4) held the Sigma Nu's (2-3) in cheek and scored a fourth quarter touchdown to win 6 to 10. Sigma Nu showed the better offense but was unable to cross into scoring territory.
All-America conference Buffalo 35, Baltimore 17. Los Angeles Dons 17 Brooklyn 0 NY Yankees 42, Chicago Rockets 7.
Pro Football Results
National Football league Philadelphia 34, Pittsburgh 7.
Chicago Bears 35, NY Giants 14.
Detroit 24, Green Bay 20.
Washington 59, Boston 21.
Chicago Cards 27, Los Angeles
Chicago Cards 27, Los Angeles Rams 22.
Oread Hall completed a 20-yard pass in the fourth quarter from Womack to Barton for the touchdown. The try for extra point was no good.
Sig Eps Down Sip Alphs 13-8
The Sig Epi B squad (4-1) staed on a last minute Sip Alph (1-4)
rally to win '13 to 8.
Charlie Medlock's passes to Lyle Woodring was the offensive spark for the Sip Ep's, scoring all their points.
The Sig Alph's scored a safety early in the game, but were unable to score again until the last three minutes when Dave Mitchell heaved a 40-yard pass to Jerry Frieling, who lateraled to Bob Thompson for the touchdown. The try for extra point was unsuccessful.
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2-Milers Defeat Buffs 12 to 26
Bob Karnes and Harold Hinchee finished in a dead heat for first place Saturday morning to give the defending champion Kansas two-mile team a 12 to 26 victory over the University of Colorado. The winning time was 9 minutes 35.8 seconds.
In winning their third straight meet of the season, the Jayhawkers finished one, two, four, five, and seven. Dave Breedential finished fourth, Cliff Abel fifth and Tom White seventh for Kansas.
George Fitzmorris finished third for Colorado in 9 minutes 47.5 seconds.
That Shot Went High
Binghamton, N. Y.—(UP)—It cost farmer William L. Bilka of nearby Vestal just $176.50 to take a shot at a helicopter. Besides having to pay for damages, Bilka was put on probation for one year after pleading guilty to firing a load of birdshot at the 'copter as it hovered low over his farm. He said it annoyed his wife and child.
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Kappas Tie Corbin; Win Division III
Kappa Kappa Gamma narrowly captured the championship of Division III in the Thursday, Oct. 28, volleyball games on a 30 to 30 tie with Corbin hall. Since Corbin had previously lost a game and the Kappas had not, the championship goes to the Kappas.
Kappa Alpha Theta came out on top of Division I. The Theta's have won all their games. This means that the Kappas and the Thetas will be in the semifinal playoffs between division winners.
Scores of other games played Thursday night are: Lockside hall 68, Miller 7; I.W.W. 44, Watkins 30; and Alpha Chi Omega 46, Alpha Omicron Pi 39.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1948
The Editorial Page-
Tomorrow Is The Day
Tomorrow about 900,000 Kansans are expected to exercise their privilege of voting. More than that, they will be performing their duty as American citizens.
Like so many duties in a democratic society, voting is voluntary. But this does not make it any less of a duty. It still remains the personal responsibility of every man and woman who is qualified, and it is a privilege to which far too few people in this world are entitled.
Tomorrow you will be asked to choose people to represent you in the state and national legislature along with a large number of executive officers. In addition, as Kansans, you will be asked to vote on three special questions.
There is the important question of the repeal of the constitutional prohibition of liquor. Another proposition would increase the pay of members of the state legislature. The third question seeks to rectify an inequality in the pay of justices of the supreme court.
Perhaps you can say there are no candidates who represent your particular viewpoint on how your government should be operated. That is quite true, and it will always be that way as long as this is a free country where every man is entitled to his own opinion and has the right to express it. There are 900,000 different views on how Kansas should be governed.
Topeka, Kan.—(UF)—The wet-dry struggle is sweeping to an uncertain climax, described by the state attorney general as the only major area in the world where it's against statutory law to possess even a thimbleful of whisky.
Your job tomorrow is to find and vote for those men who most nearly represent your ideas. It will not be an easy job, but it is a job which only you can perform. And you can't do it unless you go to the polls and vote.
Vote Margin To Be Close
The oldest constitutionally dry st. proposed amendment to repeal pro-4hibition—68 years to the day after adopting it.
All signs point to an exceptionally close contest. Observers who have had experience in checking public sentiment are in sharp disagreement on the outcome. But most of them say the result will be decided within a margin of 25,000 votes out of an expected 850,000.
The proposition of prohibition repeal has been put up to Kansans just once before, in the 1934 general election. The drys mopped up; the wets bit the dust. Repeal was rebuffed by 89.044 votes - 436.688 to 347.644.
This time repeal is given more of a chance. That's because there has been an organized, active fight in its behalf by the Kansas Legal Control Council where there was no wet campaign of consequence 14 years ago, and especially because of the fact the dominant Republican party has taken hands off the red-hot issue while by comparison it was emphatically on the side of the drys in 1934.
Election day weather is likely to be an important factor. Drys, whose strength stems principally from rural areas, are hopeful that no storm—heavy rains or piling snow—will come to hamper the movement of farm voters to the polls.
The prohibitory section adopted in 1880 banned manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquor. The Kansas "bone dry" law enacted in 1917 further outlawed transportation and possession of any amount of whisky.
In the proposed amendment, the legislature is given permission to provide for local option to keep liquor out of certain areas. In addition, it "may regulate, license and tax the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors, and may regulate the possession and transportation" of them.
Dry campaigners have challenged that language as an effective bar to sale of whisky by the drink in Kansas. They assert that cocktail lounges, bar and grills, and other drink dispensing establishments could operate so long as they did not use the name "saloon."
The amendment also carries this statement: "The open saloon shall be and is hereby forever prohibited."
Repeal forces have retorted that any legislative definition of the word "saloon" would rule out whisky sales by the drink.
One thing is certain—even if the repeal amendment carries, the legislature still has to act positively to permit liquor to enter Kansas legally.
- Letters To The Editor -
Silly
Dear Editor;
Here is the solution to the football gambling problem which was discussed in the editorial of Oct. 28.
Name withheld by request.
Since the ridiculous gambling law always has and always will be abused, the decent thing to do is repeal it. It could be assumed that such a champion of decency as the Legal Control Council would get behind such a movement and present the true facts to the public. Such facts as: "You have it now; do you want it legal or illegal;" and "you can't legislate morals."
More Drunks
Dear Editor:
We have been very much interested in reading news about the
There is so much more drinking here. This town of about 10,000 people has 25 or more liquor stores and saloons. Here you see more drunks in a day than one would see in the average Kansas county in a month.
liquor issue in Kansas.
While living in Kansas I often wondered if we wouldn't have been as well off with bars in place of bootleggers. But since for two years we have made our home here where there are saloons, bars, and what have you, we think differently.
Also because of which car wrecks are terrific, insurance is high and life on the highway is hazardous. If Kansas only knew the facts they would keep their state clean and dry.
Will Jevons,
Huntington Beach,
California.
Dear Editor:
There is something dry speakers never mention. It must be a deep, dark secret of the Legal Control Council. Someone should say somthing about this liquor business as it really is faced by the young people. The simple fact is that only the rich can afford to drink.
Unmentionable
Tell me how a young couple can buy a home (in due time), raise a family (also in due time), operate a car (we hope), and throw good money down the drain for liquor at such prices.
You can buy milk at 21 cents a quart and call it expensive, but whiskey or gin will set you back five or six dollars a fifth and after you have downed it nothing remains but a headache.
The question is not one of state income and legal control, but personal economics.
J. M. Neibarger, College sophomore
Piercing
Dear Editor:
The gal who screams from the top of Frank Strong hall from 10 to 11 a.m. ought to give a little thought to the several hundred students within range of her piercing vibrations.
Many of us peasants trying to gain an honest education from 10 to 11 a.m. on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, are frequently and suddenly struck with terror at this poor imitation of a Jayhawk cry.
Votes to this warbler as the girl mostly likely to succeed as cheerleader.
Johnny Hayes, 2301 Massachusetts street
Blind Veteran Sets Record
In Making Radio Tubes
Waltham, Mass.—(UP)—A blind World War II veteran working on a radio tube assembly line, set a three-months record of zero for rejected work which is unequalled by sighted fellow workers. Ex-Army Pfc. Joseph C. Lazaro, 30, blinded by a land mine explosion, was a truck driver before the war. He set his record during the first three months he was employed by the electronics plant.
Ray Evans will be the honored guest at an alumni association meeting in Pittsburgh, Pa., Friday, Nov. 12. M. R. Douglas, '29, is president of the Pittsburgh association. Moving pictures of the Orange bowl game will be shown.
Alumni Will Honor Evans
Daily Hansan
University
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., Nau-
cus Assn., and the Associated Collegei
Press. Represented by the National Ad-
versary. 420 Madison Ave.
New York City.
Editor-in-Chief ... James L. Robinson
Managing Editor ... Wallace W. Abbey
Asst. Man. Editor ... Joan Suffer
Asst. Man. Editor ... Handy D. Neenan
City Editor ... John Wheeler
Asst. City Editor ... Leonard Snyder
Asst. City Editor ... Robert Newman
Asst. City Editor ... Mark Meyer
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Richard Barton
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Patricia Bentley
Sports Editor ... Anne Murphy
Asst. Sports Editor ... Larry Funk
Society Editor ... Mary Lou Foley
Business Mgr. ... Paul Warner
Marketing Mgr. ... Belajellian
Circulation Btn. ... Bill Currie
Asst. Circ. Mgr. ... Ruth Clayton
Classified Mgr. ... Elizabeth Berry
Asst. Class. Mgr. ... Jane Belt
Dance Editor ... Dawn DeWitt
Promotion Mgr. ... Don Tennant
Asst. Promotion Mgr. ... Charles O'Connor
FRESHMEN
VOTE...
Wednesday, November 3!
VOTE... For YOUR Representative!
VOTE... For The ONLY Party That Works For YOU!
VOTE... For THESE Qualified Candidates!
Janice Horn
ALL-STUDENT COUNCIL
High School:
Qualifying Experience
K. U.:
Vice-president of Pep Club, Officer of Dramatics Club, Treasurer of Student Council, Vice-president of student Council, National Honor Society, Valedictorian of Senior Class, Appointed to Quill and Scroll, Class Officer for 3 years.
Ways and Means Committee, Union Activities, Y.W.C.A., I.S.A., Associated Women Students.
John Leslie
PRESIDENT
Qualifying Experience
High School:
Forensic Society, Masquer's National Dramatics Soc., President of Junior Class, President of Senior Class, Vice-President of Sophomore Class, President of Band, Business Manager of Yearbook, Kiwanis Key Club.
K. U.:
Jayhawker Staff, Y.M.C.A., U.N.E.S.C.O., I.S.A., Union Activities.
Shirley Jenkins SECRETARY
Qualifying Experience
National Honor Society, National Thespian, National Forensic League, Vice-president of Radio Club, Horizon Club Secretary, Secretary of Band, Camera Club, Vice-president Courtesy Club, Student Council one year.
High School:
Art Kaaz
K. U.:
I. S.A., Kan-Do Staff, Union Activities, Associated Women Students.
Qualifying Experience
High School:
President of Freshman Class,
Debate Team, Vice-president
of Junior Class, Senior Honor
Student, Senior Class Cabinet,
Ballafun Key Award, Member
of Student County for 2 yrs.
United World Federalists, Y.M.C.A., U.N.E.S.C.O., Independent Student Association, Frosthawks, Senator of Independent Men's Political Party.
K. U.:
MO
D
Janet Gregory VICE-PRESIDENT
Qualifying Experience
On Student Council for 3 years, National Honor Society, National Forensic League, National Quill and Scroll, National Thespian Society, Editor of Yearbook, Vice-president of Girl's League, Girl's League Council for 2 years, Class Council for 3 years, Secretary of Dramatics Club.
High School:
K. U.:
Independent Student Association. Staff of Kan-Do, Associated Women Students.
"Chuck" Childers TREASURER
Student Council Representative, Class Officer, Treasurer of Hi-Y, President of Band, Secretary of Orchestra, Treasurer of Boys Glee Club, Secretary of Mixed Chorus, Treasurer of Spanish Club.
Qualifying Experience High School:
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VOTE...
INDEPENDENT
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 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 promptly. Ads must be called during the first business day (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journals may be delivered 4 p.m. the day before publication date.
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Reinling coats a specialty. Handmade
tailored button hose. Work guaranteed.
Call 29958, R42 Indiana. 12
LOST
JOAFFER JACKET gray plaid with dark
front. Froward. 1725 Indiana. Ph.
k43kw
PLAIN BROWN leather billet bondtain contain-
ment, 1954. Wear only when "vinder keep money," #81 N. Hamp,
706.
BEARLS, single strand Monday, Oct. 26
earb bus stop at 8th and Miss, or between
frank Strong and Journalism building,
sentimental value. Phone 755. 3
**REEN HANDMADE leather lady's bill**- **Bette Darden**, Corbin hall. Reward. 1
WANTED
DISHWASHER to work for meals plus wage. Call 3410 or 2781M. 2
FREEBAND drawings. Sketches that have been made in classroom and carry a perspective and shading required. Will pay $2.00 to $3.00 for each. Exchange Service of Industrial Products, 217 Palm Bay, Barbara, California. Clarence Middleton.
CAMPUS representative. By importor of
who like distinction in their apparel. For
details write British Imports, 53 Spark Street, Brockton, Mass. 3
SALEMEN and women trained. Full or part time. See Mr. Brooks at room 1, $813_{1/2}$ Mass. at noon or phone 1104 for appointment. 3
WANTED: Five more boys to eat good
food. Three are already owned by family style.
1745 Ohio, phone 16748.
FOR RENT
TWO ROOM furnished apartment with a sink. Will accommodate 3 boys. 510 Ohio.
TRAILER SPACE; Desirable location,
convenient accommodations, 2201 Ln
1
TRANSPORTATION
TO SUNFLOWER from Lawrence about 10:30 p.m.; one or two nights each week. Leave reply at Daily Kansan Office, box 1. No. 3. 2
S. I. Hayskawa visiting professor at Kansas City University, will be guest of the General Semantics club Wednesday.
Professor Hayakawa Speaks To Semantics Club Nov. 3
Members of the club discussed "terminology and meanings" in relation to semantic reactions at their meeting Oct. 27.
Axe Will Speak At Baldwin
Dr. Leonard H. Axe, dean of the School of Business, will be guest speaker at a convocation, Wednesday, at Baker University, Baldwin. His topic will be "The New Look in Business Education."
Special Prices: to organized teams.
RESOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH
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Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St
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715 Mass.
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3U-DAY SMOKING TEST PROVES
1
T
--during these 30 days, you are not convinced that Camels are the mildest cigarette you ever smoked, return the package with the unused Camels and we will refund your full purchase price, plus postage. This offer good for 90 days from this date.
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For 30 consecutive days in a recent test, hundreds of men and women all across the country smoked Camels—and only Camels—on the average of one to two packages a day.
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1948
Ex-Nazi Returns To US; Pleads For Lost Citizenship
A former Lawrence resident who joined the Nazi party and served in the German army arrived in New York Oct. 29, and is expected here in a week or two to press for restoration of his U.S. citizenship.
Harry Ward Zimmer, 43, brother of Dr. L. K. Zimmer of 621 East Fifteenth street, was back in this country to follow an appeal filed in the U.S.
district court in Topeka to regain his $^{\textcircled{}}$
Harry Ward Zimmer, 43, brother teenth street, was back in this countr district court in Topeka to regain his citizenship. Mr. Zimmer said U.S. military government authorities in Bavaria and the consul general in Munich notified him that his citizenship had been lost because he served in the German army and was a Nazi. He then got in touch with his brother here in Lawrence and legal counsel was arranged.
Dr. L. K. Zimmer, Lawrence surgeon, said that his brother would probably be here "in a week or two" with his eight-year-old daughter, Iona.
Dr. Zimmer said his brother sought restoration of his citizenship on the basis that he did not take an oath of allegiance to Germany. "My brother says that he feigned a fainting spell while the oaths were being administered and was not required to take them." Dr. Zimmer said.
However, Dr. Zimmer said, "There is no way he can prove he did not take the oath, because the part of Germany where he was inducted is now in the Russian zone."
Nicholas S. Lopez, Lawrence attorney, is representing Mr. Zimmer in his appeal. Mr. Lopez, former assistant attorney general of the state of New York, said, "Mr. Zimmer's petition is based on the fact that he was inducted against his will into the German army since he was put in fear of immediate injury to himself or his wife."
His mother also was warned by the Gestapo that any attempt to get outside aid would result in the entire family being put into a concentration camp. Mr. Lopez said that Mr. Zimmer's father was a naturalized citizen, but his mother was born in Wheeling. W. Va. Both returned to Germany after living in the U.S.
The petition filed in the U.S. district court in Topeka asks that Mr. Zimmer and his daughter, Ilona, be
declared nationals and citizens of the U.S., and that they be issued passports permitting them to remain in this country, Mr. Lopez said. They are now here on a six-month certificate of identity issued by the U.S. consul general in Munich.
In 1938 Mr. Zimmer left Lawrence to return to Waldershof, Germany, where his father owned a china factory. He was drafted into the German army in June, 1940, and was made a corporal in the air force. The Germans always were suspicious of him and never gave him key positions or a combat assignment," Mr. Zimmer said.
"I was for a time a member of the Nazi party," he said. "I felt that I would rather pay a fee to the party and have my peace."
Need For US Aid In Java Discussed
Aid needed by the Javanese from the U.S. was the theme of a short talk given by Soey Bong, College sophomore, from Botoeroesa, Java, at the International club Oct. 28.
Bong stressed the dire need of his people for help in the present conflict and gave a short history of the Indonesian islands.
Marjorie Lee Crane, College sophomore; and J. Vaughn Grimes, College senior, spoke on "The Importance of Foreign Students to the University."
Different members of the club lead the group in songs of their countries. Refreshments were served and membership cards distributed.
Ballet
ALEXANDRA DANILOVA
Alexandra Danilova will dance the principal role in four ballets to be presented by the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo Monday, Nov. 8 in Hoch auditorium. The program is the second in the University concert series, and will present a program given in Carnegie hall in October.
KU, MU Debate At Teachers Meeting
J. Steve Mills and Kent Shearer, College sophomores, will debate with two students from the University of Missouri at the Municipal auditorium in Kansas City, Mo. Thursday, Nov. 4. The subject will be "Federal World Government", and the debate will be held in connection with the state teacher's meeting there.
On Saturday, Nov. 13, teams from the University of Kansas, Kansas State college, and Wichita university will debate at Manhattan.
College Without The Quizzes Is Swiss Way, Native Tells
Alexander Weilennmann attended a large university for three years and was never given a test or quiz. Neither were his fellow collegians.
Weilmann, a native of Zurich, Switzerland, is doing graduate work in history at K.U. under a part time professorship sponsored by the Institute of International Education. As a part of the program he is an assistant instructor in German. $\textcircled{4}$
The absence of tests in Wilenmann's collegiate study at the UniSwiss educational system. State-versity of Zurich is a part of the owned high schools maintain rigid academic standards and generally require one or two years more work than American high schools. The final examination given students who do not attend these recognized schools is one of the most difficult
Engineers See Construction Feats
Senior civil engineering students at the University were guests of the Kansas highway commission on a field trip Oct. 29. The students visited a number of civil engineering projects between Lawrence and Kansas City.
Points visited included a highway paving project in Reno county, the new Santa Fe Hump yard in Kansas City, and the Mission township sewage disposal plant. A number of bridges and viaducts were seen in various stages of construction.
Engineers from the Highway commission furnished automobiles for the 11-car caravan led by the state highway patrol. The state engineers served as guides, answering questions concerning engineering problems involved in the projects visited
The students were entertained at a lunchroom in Kansas City given by the Highway commission. D. D. Haines and C. M. Crosier, professors in the civil engineering department, accompanied the group on the tour.
tests of its kind. Consequently a high school graduate is considered a well-educated person.
In contrast, the college student in Switzerland has a great deal of freedom. Schools of the German pattern require only that you pay your tuition and carry at least six hours a week. Doctorate degrees are the only ones given and the preparation for them is left to the student. He may choose his schedule from all courses offered and is not required to attend class meetings. In every liberal arts course the professor is the authority. There are no texts. As a result of this freedom many students do little reference work in their early years in college.
Commenting on this situation,
Weilmann said, "I had a very good friend who was in his final year of preparation for the doctorate exam.
For nine months I hardly saw him."
Ernest Baenninger who is doing graduate work in economics at University is also an assistant Instructor in German under the same program.
He did most of his undergraduate work at the Swiss School of Economics in St. Gallen, his home. Here the French pattern is in effect and final examinations are given each year. The school allows all the other academic freedoms of the German pattern. Baenninger received a license, or the American equivalent of a master's degree.
"The personal freedom of Swiss college students is worth many, many credit hours," he said. "It is such a complete contrast from the rigid high school program. If I had to pass the high school examination now it would take me at least one full year of preparatory study."
GEORGE K. MELVIN Republican
An Outstanding Graduate of K.U.
P. A. MORRISON
Vote Right Vote Republican
FOR STATE SENATOR
University Dailu Kansan
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Tuesday, Nov. 2, 1948
Lawrence, Kansas
Swiss many,
"It is in the I had aation t one
Political Clubs Offer Rides For KU Voters
Two sources of free transportation to the polls are available to K.U. students today.
STUDENT NEWSPAPER
The American Veterans committee has a booth in the Union where rides may be obtained in cars furnished by the Young Democrat and Young Republican clubs. These cars operate from the Union and will call for students at their homes until the polls close at 7 p.m. The telephone number at the A.V.C. booth is K.U. 467.
The Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce has a car pool which will operate until 7 p.m., calling for any Lawrence voter. Their number is
"The 12 voting places in Law-
rence are as follows:
First precinct--Pinkney school, 810 West Sixth street.
Second precinct—Police station, Eighth and Vermont streets.
Third precinct Junior High
school, Ninth and Kentucky streets.
Anderson Ward
First precinct—City hall, 11th and Massachusetts streets.
Third Ward
Second precinct — Community building, West 11th street.
First precinct—United Brethren church basement, 1501 Massachusetts street.
First precinct—Liberty Memorial High school, 1400 Massachusetts street
Second prefect—No.2 fire station 19th and Massachusetts streets.
Fifth Ward
Second preinct—Kraft and Starr,
1818 Massachusetts street.
First precinct—New York school, 936 New York street.
Second precinct—courthouse, 11th and Massachusetts streets.
Sixth Ward
By Bibler
Woodlawn school, 508 Elm street
Topeka, Nov. 2—(UP)—Kansas voters are casting ballots today on whether the state should retain its 68-year-old constitutional amendment prohibiting the sale of liquor in the state.
Rainy Kansas May Go Wet
Rain which fell over much of the state last night could figure in favor of the wets, since it might keep some of the rural voters away from the polls.
The dry forces, which defeated a repeal attempt 14 years ago by 89.-000 votes, relied on a heavy rural vote in support of the amendment. Wets expected a big vote in the cities of Eastern Kansas.
A close fight was predicted by most observers. Both wet and dry leaders refused to predict the outcome of the balloting.
Neither the Republicans nor the Democrats have taken any official stand on the question.
The dry forces campaigned up to the voting hours, but the Kansas Legal Control council, spearheading the repeal drive, slowed its efforts last weekend.
Religion entered into the issue when Catholic priests and Episcopalian rectors spoke in favor of repeal, while other church groups were aligned behind the dry forces. One principal speaker for the drys was Glenn Cunningham, one-time great miler at the University of Kansas.
Little Man On Campus
SCHIESSER
"Is this any indication of how you're voting today. Worthal?"
Davis Speaks To ASTE
Dr. Robert M. Davis will speak at a meeting of the American Society of Tool Engineers in Kansas City, Mo., at 7 p.m. Wednesday. His subject will be "Impact of Technocracy on World Affairs."
Chancellor Deane W. Malott returned to Lawrence today after attending the meeting of the Association of American Universities in Philadelphia last week. He was accompanied by Dean J. H. Nelson of the Graduate school.
Mr. Davis is a professor of law and a former dean of the School of Law at the University. He also has been the dean of the School of Law at the University of Idaho.
O. W. Winter, president of Acme Industries, Buffalo, N.Y., will speak on "Whither Tool Engineering." Mr. Winter is a former national president of the A.S.T.E.
Chancellor Returns From Attending AAU Meeting
Members of the University student chapter of A.S.T.E. are planning to attend. T. DeWitt Carr dean of the School of Engineering; Harry L. Daasch, chairman of the department of mechanical engineering; Paul G. Hausman, associate professor of shop practice; and Albert Palmerlee, associate professor of engineering drawing also will attend the meeting.
It is the, Kansas City chapter's "executive's night." Members are invited to bring their bosses. Ford N, Bohl, publicity director for the University chapter, said that each member was planning to invite a guest to the meeting.
Dr. C. B. van Niel, Sigma Xi national lecturer, will speak on the biochemistry of photosynthesis.
The chancellor also met with the Business Advisory council at Hot Springs, Va.
The Bacteriology club meeting scheduled for today has been postponed to enable all members to attend the Sigma Xi lecture to be held at 8 p.m. in 305 Bailey.
Bacteriology Club Postpones Meeting Fgr Tonight
Sell Tickets For Waring
Tickets for the Fred Waring concert went on sale Monday at the School of Fine Arts, 128 Frank Strong, Bell Music store and the Round Corner drug store.
Fred Waring and his Pennsylvanians will give the concert at 8 p.m., Monday, Nov. 22, in Hoch auditorium. It will be a two hour concert and stage show featuring modern and semi-classical choral music.
Don Craig, assistant to Fred Waring in the training of the chorus, will give a talk and choral demonstration at 4 p.m. before the University A. Cappella choir and public school music majors.
Address mail orders for the concert have been unusually heavy, and large blocks of seats have been reserved by groups from other cities.
Prices for the concert are $3.00,
$2.75, $2.50 for orchestra seats; $2.25,
and $2.75 for first balcony seats;
and $1.25 for second balcony seats.
The first all-student presentation of "Hamlet" will be given by the University Players at 8 p.m. today in Fraser theater. The production will run four nights.
Activity tickets can be exchanged for reserved seats at the ticket office in the basement of Green hall, open from 9 a.m. until noon and from 1 to 4 p.m.
'Hamlet' On Stage In Fraser Tonight
Professor Allen Crafton, director of the play, has been working on "Hamlet" thirty years.
"If the students don't like 'Ham-let' they will be one of the first audiences in 350 years who do not," he said.
WEATHER
Kansas — Decreasing cloudiness with little change in temperature today. Fair and cool tonight and foggy in east. Wednesday increasing cloudiness with showers in extreme west by afternoon.
Extension Speaker Goes To Wichita
Fred Sharpe, University Extension lecturer, will give a series of lectures to the Wichita Independent Business Men's association Monday, Nov. 8, through Thursday, Nov. 11. Mr. Sharpe will represent University Extension in its course in "Salesmanship for Employees and Employers."
Coordinators for the course are Dr. G. G. Anderson and W. B. Parkinson. The program has been arranged by A. J. Dawson, director of the University of Kansas center in Wichita.
Daily Kansan Picks Executives
Maurice C. Lungren was elected editor-in-chief of the University Daily Kansan for the rest of the present semester by the Kansan board Monday. He succeeds James L Robinson and takes over Monday, Nov. 8.
Harold D. Nelson was elected managing editor to succeed Wallace W. Abbey. Anna Mary Murphy and Bill F. Mayer were named to succeed John H. Stauffer and Nelson as assistant managing editors.
William D. Nelligan was elected by the business committee of the Kansan board to serve as business manager. He succeeds Paul Warner.
All of the new executives are seniors in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
Other executives will be announced later by Nelson and Nelligan.
Alumni Will Hear Faculty
The University of Kansas alumni will hold six meetings Thursday and Friday at host cities for regional meetings of the Kansas State Teachers association.
Representatives of the University will speak at Topeka, Wichita, Salina, Hays, Garden City and Pittsburg, where local alumni have arranged programs.
Chancellor Deane W. Malott and Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, will be guests at the Topeka meeting. Dr. Leonard H. Axe, dean of the school of business, will speak at Salina and Hays. Miss Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of art education, will also be at the Hays meeting.
Dean George B. Smith of the School of Education and Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information will attend the Wichita meeting. James K. Hitt, registrar, will be at Pittsburgh and Tom Yoe, director of information, will go to Garden City.
Math Group Hears K-State Professor
Prof. S. T. Parker, department of mathematics, Kansas State college, explained theorem proofs to the Mathematics Colloquium Monday. His subject was "Summability and Convergence Factors for Infinite Integrals."
In illustrating and explaining his theorem proofs, Professor Parker distributed outlines containing the methods and theorems developed in his talk.
Guest speaker at the next meeting, Monday, Nov. 9, will be Dr. I. N. Herstein. His topic will be "The Radical of a Ring."
Army Engineers Fix Sunflower Water Break
Sunflower residents have water again.
Betty van der Smissen, I.S.A. president, and Betty Brooker, social chairman will represent the University at an I.S.A. regional conference Friday, Nov. 12 and Saturday, Nov. 13 at Boulder, Colo.
They Will Go To Boulder
The broken water main was placed back in service at 2 p.m. Monday. Twelve hours earlier, the water supply was cut off when a 12-inch water main supplying the central heating plant at the ordinance works and to the village broke at 2 a.m.
Working without let-up despite the heavy downpour of rain army engineers of the Sunflower ordnance works had the broken water main repaired just 12 hours after the break was discovered. Maj. Alan C. Johnston, commanding officer, said today that no effort was spared to remedy the situation.
"You've got to hand it to the army," he said. "When the chips are down, they really deliver on time."
John A. LaMonica, Sunflower housing manager, said he thought the army had done a "swell job."
As added precaution against any possible ill effects from the break in the water supply to the village, the housing manager said Dr. H. B. Ivy and Cecil Graves, of the Johnson county health board, arranged to chlorinate the system. The management flushed the system by opening fire-hydrants.
"While the water is perfectly safe, the added precautions were taken because there is no sense taking unnecessary chances." Mr. LaMonica explained. Hand-bills asking residents to boil all water for the next two days were distributed by Boy Scot troop 54.
"Sunflower has a large number of small children. For this reason we thought it best to ask people to boil the water for a few days."
While the main was being repaired, arrangements were made to supply water to villagers for emergency purposes and drinking. The Sunflower ordinance works sent a 500 gallon truck to the village to give water to those who needed it badly. Further arrangements were made by Dr. Ivy and Mr. Grimes to add to the water being supplied by the ordinance tank truck. A private water hauler from Lawrence and the Chapman dairy company of Kansas City sent out trucks.
Delegates at the conference will draw up a regional constitution. Miss van der Smissen, chairman of the constitution committee, will lead a panel discussion on a national constitution for Independent students.
Sixty dollars of the combined expenses of Miss van der Smissen and Miss Brooker will be paid by I.S.A. They will travel by bus.
I. S.A. decided Monday to survey Lawrence cleaning establishments for prices on dry cleaning. This action was taken as a result of a letter from the I.S.A. of the University of Oklahoma, which is surveying dry cleaning costs in mid-western school cities and towns.
The Christmas dance of the Independent Student organization will be Saturday, Dec. 18, in the ballroom of the Union. The dance will be semi-formal.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1943
Official Bulletin
Nov. 2, 1948
A. W.S. house meeting, 4 today, Pi Beti. Phi house.
Slide rule class, 7 tonight. Both sections, Frank Strong auditorium. Y's Men, 7:30 tonight, Henley house.
Rides to polls this afternoon, Union, or call K.U. 467. American Veterans committee.
A. S.C. regular meeting, 7:15 to-night, Pine room, Union.
Sigma Delta Chi, 5 today. 107
Journalism.
Civil engineers: A.S.C.E., 7.30 p.m.
Thursday, Lindley auditorium. Professor Price of mathematics department to speak and show pictures on high level precision bombing.
UNES.C.O., 7:30 tonight, 106
Frack Strong.
Scabbard and Blade, 7:30 tonight,
105 Military Science building, Wear
uniforms. Initiation of associate
members.
Sigma Xi, 8:15 tonight, 305 Bailey. Dr.C.B.van Niel, "Comparative Biochemistry of Photosynthesis."
Two vacancies now exist in A.S.C. due to resignation of George Lowe, District IV, and Hugh Johnson, District III.
Bacteriology club, 7:15 tonight,
Snow hall.
United World Federalists, 4 today. Pine room. Dr. Sandelius and Mr. Malone to give talks. Open meeting.
Home Economics club, 5 today, 110 Fraser. Dues payable at department office.
Sigma Tau, 7:30 tonight, 101 Snow.
Register today and tomorrow in College office and School of Education for English proficiency examination to be given Saturday. Mrs. Calderwood in 313 Fraser from 2 to 3 all week for conferences.
Y. M.C.A. cabinet meeting, 5 today, English room, Union.
Archery club, 5 p.m. tomorrow.
Fraser auditorium. Archery films.
All interested.
Alpha Phi Omega, 7 p.m. tomorrow,
Pine room, Union. Dance plans.
American Society of Tool Engineers executive meeting tomorrow night in Kansas City. Dinner, 7 p.m. Program to follow. All wishing rides register in main office. Fowler shops by noon tomorrow.
Women's Rifle club, 7:15 tomorrow. Military Science building. All interested.
Petitions for secretary-treasurer of Student Engineering council must be submitted in dean's office, 111 Marvin hall, by noon tomorrow. Form available in dean's office. Thirty-five signers.
General Semantics club, 8 p.m. tomorrow, seminar room, Annex F, Frank Strong.
Pre-Nursing club, 4 p.m. tomorrow. Fraser dining hall. Dr. Gaston, speaker.
K. U. Dames, 8 p.m. tomorrow, 426 Lindley, John Ise, speaker.
Quill club, 7 p.m. tomorrow, East room, Union.
Square Dance club to be hosts for Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A. party, 7 p.m. tomorrow, Military Science building. Everyone welcome. Instructions in square dancing.
Statesman club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 106 Frank Strong.
O.T. meeting, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow,
332 Frank Strong. Miss West, executive director of American O.T. association, speaker. Attendance required.
Coffee and forums committee of Student Union Activities, 4 p.m. tombrow, Pine rom, Union, Magda Berger, Czech exchange student, speaker.
El Ateneo se reuiltra el iueves a las 7:30 en 113 de F. S. Elecciones de los oficiales. Sorien Ricart hab-
Froshawks Order New Insignia
Young Jayhawkers wearing freshman hats and holding megaphanes on a white background are the new emblems for the Froschawks. These emblems with a "Froshaws" caption below, will be worn on red sweaters.
The Froshawks will attend the K.U.K-State game, Nov. 13, and will wear their emblems then. Eighty emblems have been ordered for the members, Jack Sutton, president said.
Six contests have been scheduled for the Varsity swimming team in its second year of post war competition, Walter Mikols, University swimming coach, said today.
6 Meets Planned For KU Swimmers
Last year Coach Mikols was working with a squad that had no previous college swimming experience. This year he has a known factor with last years competition as a basis.
Varsity practice began yesterday. Freshman drills will open Monday, Nov. 8.
The team, which won two and lost four meets last year, has six lettermen back. They are: Ernest Friesen, and Evan Davis Ritchi, co-captains; Donald Mederaris, William Roy, Ernie Crates, and Richard O'Neill. Robert Edman, Richard Hunter, Robert Wallingford, and Robin McGeorge, who won freshman numerals last year will help bolster this year's squad.
All S.A.M. members desiring to make a field trip through Reuter Organ factory meet in front of Union, 1:15 p.m. Thursday.
Y. M.C.A., Thursday: World Relatedness commission, 4 p.m., Pine room, Union. Social Responsibility commission, 5 p.m., Pine room. Freshmen Y's Men, 7:30 p.m., East room.
lara de Espana.
Everyone Votes, Kids Too In Voteless Washington
Washington—(UP)—Even the little children will be able to cast a ballot in voteless, Washington. If they go to a certain restaurant.
It'll be straw stuff, of course—cast after you pay for the beef stew and cream.
The kids' elders will get the same privilege at Sholl's—a couple doors down from the United Press building. The end result will be just the same. The votes won't count, but there will be the satisfaction of having cast something into the box.
Adding irony to irony, AL's brother, Joe, happens to be chairman of the Dewey-Warren committee in the district. Joe has voted in the presidential election only once—when he lived in nearby Maryland long enough to establish a residence.
He won't vote this time. Can't.
Here's why:
The cafe is run by Al McGarraghy, called "Mac" or "Mr. Mac" by his help. He knows how it feels to be a citizen and yet not be able to vote. He was born and reared in the District of Columbia and doesn't know what the inside of a curtained voting booth looks like.
Congress hasn't voted Washing-
tonians the right to vote.
The District of Columbia has some 40,000 folks of voting age. But the only ones eligible to vote are those who maintain a residence elsewhere.
There has been a lot of shouting and screaming in the halls of congress about the voteless capital residents. Protests such as "taxation without representation is tyranny." But still the district has no vote.
The taxpayers in this small area pay for services rendered to outside agencies. For instance, foreign embassies and legations don't have to pay taxes. Yet, the local citizens complain, they get fire and police protection and other services. But the cost of same comes out of the purse of the district resident.
A new place to buy used cars . . .
This week's special:
1946 Nash with radio and heater ... $1,650.00
Livengood-Nash Motors Phone 407 617 Mass.
PACHACAMAC - N.O.W. Give Your Vote To QUALIFIED CANDIDATES
PRESIDENT DONALD GUARD
TREASURER
THOMAS PAYNE
VICE-PRESIDENT ALICE ANN SELLERS
SECRETARY GRETCHEN FREEBERG
A. S.C. MAN JAMES MARTIN
A. S.C. WOMAN JEAN HAUSSERMANN
Vote For A
Constructive Student Government
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2. 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Weddings And Engagements
Stout-Firner Pinning
Mr. and Mrs. George D. Stout of Kansas City, Mo., announce the pinning of their daughter, Mari Virginia, to Fred Firner, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Firner of Lawrence.
☆ ☆
Cooper-Pumphrey Engagement
Miss Stout is a College sophomore and a member of Gamma Phi Beta. Mr.Firner is an engineering junior and a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity
Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Cooper of Lawrence announce the engagement of their daughter, Rachael Lee, to Jack Edward Pumphrey, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Pumphrey of Independence. The announcement was made at a dessert party Oct. 30 at the home of her parents.
Miss Cooper is a College junior and a member of Alpha Delta Pi. Mr. Pumphrey graduated from the School of Business the past spring. He is now employed by Phillips Petroleum company in Bartlesville, Okla. He is a member of Alpha Kappa Psi, business fraternity.
Barrett Will Speak At YMCA Forum
Russell-H. Barrett, instructor in political science, will speak tomorrow at the YM.C.A. faculty forum on the subject "Free Enterprise and Economic Planning."
The meeting will be held in the Union from 11:45 a.m. to 12:50 p.m.
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in law) Addrent $10.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence. In lawrence at the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class September 7, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
Dr. Schoewe Writes History Series On Kansas For Science Magazine
Kansas City, Mo., almost one-half of Colorado, and approximately one-third of Nebraska would now be a part of Kansas if certain proposals and pleas had been heeded in early territorial conventions and state legislatures.
In the first of a series of articles on "The Geography of Kansas," which appears in the September issue of the Kansas Academy of Science Transactions, Dr. W. H. Schoewe, of the state geological survey and associate professor of geology, discusses the political geography of the state. In it he presents the evolution of Kansas from the time of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, through the territorial struggle beginning in 1854, to statehood in 1861.
Territorial Kansas extended into what is now Colorado. In 1859 there was a proposal to make the Platte river in Nebraska the state's northern boundary. A proposal was made in 1879 to incorporate into Kansas the territory between the present Kansas-Missouri boundary and the Blue river. This now includes most of Kansas City, Mo.
Other topics in Dr. Schoewe's initial article include, geographic position of Kansas, boundaries, area, political subdivisions, land classification, time belts, and the naming of the state. Eleven illustrations accompany the article.
In the three succeeding articles Dr. Schoewe will review the state's physiography, rivers, and economic geography.
The series represents the first comprehensive geography ever prepared on Kansas in its 87 years of statehood.
Business Students Tour KC Companies
Thirty students of the Economic Systems and C.P.A. Problems classes, and nine faculty members of the School of Business, took a field trip. Oct. 28 to Kansas City.
The classes visited two public accounting firms where they were instructed in procedures followed in the field.
Faculty members who made the trip are John G. Blocker, professor of accounting; Howard F. Stettler, assistant professor of accounting; Alvin E. Tuohino, assistant professor of accounting; Wiley Mitchell, instructor in accounting; Joe R. Small, instructor in accounting; Terrell E. Clarke, instructor in economics; Norman Fuller, instructor in economics; and Lloyd M. Jones, instructor in economics.
Now SEE in Person the Show that Millions Tune in Daily
FRED WARING
WITH ALL THE PENNSYLVANIANS
MUSIC • SONG • GAIETY • VARIETY
Hoch Auditorium, Monday, Nov. 22 8 p.m.
Seats now on sale at Bell Music Store, Round Corner Drug Co., K.U. Fine Arts Office at $3.00, $2.75, $2.50,
$2.25, $1.25 tax included.
D. M. Swarthout, Mgr.
Alumnus Has Position In India With Car Firm
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You'll like everything at our place—where you're welcome for breakfast, lunch,
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Clarence K. Kiene, '33, is division manager of the Studebaker Export corporation in Calcutta, India. Mr. Kiene was in the Philippine Islands at the beginning of the war. He was captured and held prisoner of the Japanese and then returned to the Islands after the war. He was in the United States three months before leaving for India.
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VOTE... Wednesday, November 3!
VOTE... For YOUR Representative!
VOTE... For The ONLY Party That Works For YOU!
VOTE... For THESE Qualified Candidates!
Janice Horn Art Kaaz ALL-STUDENT COUNCIL
Qualifying Experience
High School:
Vice-president of Pep Club, Officer of Dramatics Club, Treasurer of Student Council, Vice-president of student Council, National Honor Society, Valedictorian of Senior Class, Appointed to Quill and Scroll, Class Officer for 3 years. K U.
Ways and Means Committee, Union Activities, Y.W.C.A., I.S.A., Associated Women Students.
John Leslie
PRESIDENT
Qualifying Experience
High School:
Forensic Society, Masquer's National Dramatics Soc., President of Junior Class, President of Senior Class, Vice-President of Sophomore Class, President of Band, Business Manager of Yearbook, Kiwanis Key Club.
K. U.:
Jayhawkert Staff, Y.M.C.A., U.N.E.S.C.O., I.S.A., Union Activities.
Shirley Jenkins SECRETARY
Qualifying Experience
High School:
National Honor Society, National Thespian, National Forensic League, Vice-president of Radio Club, Horizon Club Secretary, Secretary of Band, Camera Club, Vice-president Courtesy Club, Student Council one year.
K. U.:
I. S.A., Kan-Do Staff, Union Activities, Associated Women Students.
High School:
Qualifying Experience
President of Freshman Class,
Debate Team, Vice-president
of Junior Class, Senior Honor
Student, Senior Class Cabinet,
Balfour Key Award, Member
of Student oncill for 2 yrs.
K. U.:
United World Federalist,
Y.M.C.A., U.N.E.S.C.O.,
Independent Student Association,
Froshawks, Senator of Independent Men's Political Party.
Janet Gregory
VICE-PRESIDENT
High School:
Qualifying Experience
On Student Council for 3 years, National Honor Society, National Forensic League, National Quill and Scroll, National Thespian Society, Editor of Yearbook, Vice-president of Girl's League, Girl's League Council for 2 years, Class Council for 3 years, Secretary of Dramatics Club.
K. U.:
Independent Student Association, Staff of Kan-Do, Associated Women Students.
"Chuck" Childers TREASURER
Qualifying Experience
High School:
Student Council Representative, Class Officer, Treasurer of Hi-Y, President of Band, Secretary of Orchestra, Treasurer of Boys Glee Club, Secretary of Mixed Chorus, Treasurer of Spanish Club.
K. U.:
Union Activities, I.S.A., Y. M.C.A., Independent Men's Political Party.
VOTE...
INDEPENDENT
---
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1948
Tigers, Sooners Put Title Hopes On Line Saturday
Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 2—(UP)—Unbeaten and untied in Big Seven conference play and each with bowl hopes, Missouri and Oklahoma will collide before the largest crowd ever to see a football game in Norman, Okla., next Saturday afternoon.
35,000 persons will see the game and only Kansas' unde-
Upwards of 35,000 persons will feated co-champions will remain as a major barrier in the winners' path to the 1948 championship.
Kansas enjoys an open date this week-end, resting up after its hardwon 13-7 victory over Oklahoma A. and M. Saturday, and then wind up its conference schedule against Oklahoma at Lawrence, Nov. 20, and against Missouri at Columbia, Nov. 25.
Missouri's brilliant Tigers, conquerors of Doak Walker and Southern Methodist's Southwest conference champions and easy winners over the Navy, rank up among the nation's football leaders and will be favorites in the Norman battle.
Against Oklahoma, Coach Don Faurot's gridders expect one of their toughest assignments of the season. This 1948 Oklahoma team already has accomplished something no other Oklahoma eleven could, it has made a clean sweep of its three Southwest conference foes, defeating Texas A. and M, Texas Christian and Texas' defending Sugar Bowl champions.
This is the game of the year in the Big Seven, in the opinion of most experts, a majority of whom refuse to concede Kansas of much of a chance against either Oklahoma or Missouri.
The battle brings together two powerful, fast charging lines and two sets of backfields that operate brilliantly off the split-T formation originated by Missouri's Faurot and employed successfully, too, by Oklahoma's Bud Wilkinson.
Each team is superlatively quarterbacked. Missouri has Bus Entsminger, one of the nation's foremost at both running and passing. Oklahoma has Jack Mitchell, a slashing runner from scrimmage, slippery on a broken field, and regarded one of the keenest brains in college football this season.
Mitchell led the conference in rushing last year from his T-formation quarterback position and he led the nation in average yards of punt runbacks in 1946.
The team that wins this Norman game Saturday will be well on its way to the 1948 championship and it will be well up among the leaders receiving consideration for bowl assignments on New Year's day.
While the two top title favorites are fighting it out on Oklahoma soil, Kansas State will meet Nebraska at Lincoln, Colorado will entertain Utah State at Boulder.
Wichita East Wins Cross Country Run
Wichita East High school won the First Annual Invitational High School Cross Country run Saturday Oct. 30 at the University.
ElDorado, Wyandotte, Topeka Haskell, Salina, Mankato, Shawnee- Mission, Lane, Pittsburg, Wichita North, Overbrook, Leon, and McLouth vanished behind Wichita East n that order.
The gold medal winners in the order of finish are: Albert Nielson, and Norman Bitner, Wyandotte, James Bean, James Hershberger, and Tom Lieurance, Wichita East.
Winners of silver medal awards are: Neil McNeil, Topeka; Theodore Hansen, Concordia; Pat Brazil, El-Dorado; Robert Brown, Shawnee-Mission; and Manual Solvale, Rosedale.
Those who won bronze medals are: Earl Kempton, Salina; Jerry Demo, ElDorado; Richard Romero, Haskell; Donald Boston, Haskell; and James Yates, Leavenworth.
The high school coaches expressed their desire to make the event an annual affair.
Bill Easton, University track coach, said in the future the Invitational Cross Country run will be between schools of the same classification.
To Throw For Dough
Reno, Nev. Nov. 2—(UP)—Stan Heath, who has gained almost a mile this season with his phenomenal passing arm, will "throw for dough." next season.
Heath, the 6-foot quarterback for the sensational undefeated Nevada football team, has another year of eligibility at Nevada.
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Three Archery Films On View Wednesday
Women's IM To Finals
Now! The K.U. Food Man has telephone Delivery service. Call 3406 for personal delivery service. We come right to your door with the snack you ordered by phone.
Competition in women's individual intramural sports has reached the division finals in badminton, and the semi-finals in tennis. There are four divisions in each of the two sports. Division winners will meet for the championship.
All division final and semi-final games will be played this week.
Three films on the art and history of archery will be shown at 5 p.m., tomorrow in 15. Fraser hall. No admission will be charged for the films which are: "Activities at Teela-Wooket Archery Camp." "Archery for Beginners," and one film with two sub-titles, "Archer's Paradox" and "The Release."
CALL 3406 FOR DELIVERY
Alice Myers, education senior, president of the club, said the films cover instruction of the main phases of archery target shooting.
Badminton: Division I: Elsie Leemon, Alpha Omicron Pi, vs. Betty van der Smissen, Locksley hall. Division II: Pat Davison, Sigma Kappa, vs. Ruth Henry, Tri Delts.
Division III: Mary H. Shepard, Corbin, vs. Marilyn Smith, Kappa Alpha Theta. Division IV: Joan Lippelmann, Locksley, vs. Rachel Cooper, Alpha Delta Pi.
Division II: Ruth Heibrium, Watkins hall, will play the winner of the contest between Marilyn Smith, Kappa Alpha Theta, vs. Janet Maloney, Pi Beta Phi.
Tennis: Division I. Donna Mueller, of the match between Rush Mit-Delta Gamma, will play the winnerchell, Corbin, vs. Betsy McCune, Kappa Alpha Theta.
Division III: Ruth Henry, Delta Delta Delta, vs. Ada Watson, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Mary H. Shepard, Corbin hall, vs. Sue Webster, Sigma Kappa, Division IV: Marilyn Sweet, Pi Beta Phi, vs. Betty van der Smissen, Locksley.
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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2. 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
8.
Penn's Record Threatened By Penn State
New York, Nov. 1—(UP)—The collegiate football season rambled into the month of November today and the chances were getting slimmer that any harm would come to the nine major unbeaten and untied teams before time runs out.
Only one of the nine teams, Pennsylvania, had much to fear from games coming up this Saturday.
Penn, though favored to win, had plenty to worry about in its battle with rival Penn State, last year's Cotton Bowl team which is also unbeaten, although tied once by Michigan State. Both teams proved themselves in peak form last Saturday as Penn blasted little Washington and Lee, 40 to 7, while Penn State drubbed College, 32 to 13.
A minimum of difficulty was in prospect for the other national leaders. Michigan, going up against Navy, has a chance to try to run up a larger score than the 41 to 7 licking handed the Middies last week by Notre Dame. The Wolverines looked dull last Saturday, beating Illinois, 28 to 20, but apparently be a lot duller and still take less Navy.
Notre Dame, seemingly still under wraps, will meet Indiana, one of the Big Nine's weaker teams. Army, a 49 to 7 winner over Virginia Tech, will meet Stanford, not a tough prospect despite a 20 to 0 win over Washington. Army meets Penn on Nov. 13. Nevada, which posted a basketball-like City to 79 to 13 win over Oklahoma City, will meet sterner stuff in Santa Clara, 25 to 13 winner of the University of San Francisco.
The Golden Bears of California, favorite to represent the west in the Rose Bowl, squeezed by Southern California, 13 to 7 and this week akes on U.C.L.A., 27 to 15 victor over Nebraska.
Outside of the Penn-Penn State battle, the best chance of an upset appeared to be in Georgia Tech's clash with Tennessee.
In leading conference games this week: in the Southeastern conference, Georgia, like Georgia Tech umbeaten in conference play, will be a heavy favorite over Florida.
In the Big Seven, Missouri and Oklahoma, both unbeaten in the conference, battle each other at Norman.
In the southern conference, the features are North Carolina—William and Mary, Clemson—Furman, lus Duke vs. Wake Forest.
Cenn and Cornell, both beaten by league play, will be out of the conference this week, making Dartmouth-COLUMBIA the leading game.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
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Meet The 1948 Jayhawkers
McDonald-Open Fielder
[Name]
Cliff McDonald,
feet-footed right
halfback, started
his o u s t a n d i n g
athletic career at
Lawrence Liberty
Memorial High
school where he
graduated in 1944.
He won 9 high
school letters, 3 in
football, 3 in basket
ball, and 3 in
track.
McDONALD
The Lawrence football team won the conference championship in his junior and senior years. They were ranked first in the state his junior year and second his senior year. McDonald was all-conference football and basketball captain and football all-state quarterback and captain his senior year. He led conference scoring in basketball.
This is McDonald's third year of play for the Jayhawkers. Both his passing and running have made him
dangerous on the offensive. His ability to catch passes was shown in the George Washington and the Nebraska game. In both games he crossed the goal line after receiving a pass. McDonald says he regrets the touchdown pass in the George Washington game which Frank Patee, left halfback, tossed to him because Frank's jaw was fractured on the play. Good blocking is the reason he gives for his success in scoring in the Nebraska game.
McDonald said he chose to come to K.U. because he knew it was a good school and because Lawrence is his home. Although born in Kansas City, Mo., he came to Lawrence when he was one year old.
The 23-year-old business junior spent two years in the Army Air Force. Not a heavyweight, but rugged, he is 6 feet tall and weighs 176 pounds.
A shoulder dislocation two weeks before the TCU game has bothered him some this season.
ERK
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When you make a long distance telephone call, your voice would soon fade out were it not for vacuum tube repeaters. They give your voice a lift whenever needed carry it clearly from coast to coast.
Vacuum tubes and other electronic devices are playing an ever-growing part in your Bell telephone service. As the manufacturing unit of the Bell System, Western Electric makes millions of these intricate little things.
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PAGE SLX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1948
The Editorial Page-
Immovable Objects
That old problem of crowded library steps is with us again this year—bigger and better than ever.
Every time the whistle signals the end of another hour, the rush from the library begins. It usually ends as close outside the front door as possible.
Sometimes there is a narrow path through this obstacle course, but even that has its dangers. The line moves at a snail's pace and it is a lucky day when you can get through without being stepped on, purchased in the ribs, and getting your shins kicked raw.
As soon as these nicotine fiends stop and start their puffing, all who want to get to their next class must force their way through bodily. This is quite a trick when the smokers are packed three and four deep along the rails and the middle of the steps.
Of course the All Student Council could extend the prohibition on smoking inside the library to include the steps in front—but this is too logical and simple to receive consideration.
The new and larger doorway planned for the library may help, but more than likely it will only help the traffic blockers get outside quicker and do a more effective job.
The coming of cold weather might discourage the less hardy of the smokers, but don't expect too much. They are a rather persistent, stubborn, and unsocial group. —Gus August.
University
Daily Hansan
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., Nacogdoco,
Assn., and the Associated Collegeate Press.
Represented by the National Ad-
ministration, 420 Madison Ave. New York City.
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Editor-in-Chief ... James L. Robinson
Managing Editor ... Wallace W. Abbey
Asst. Man. Editor ... John Stauffer
Managing Editor ... Harijan Kishan
City Editor ... John Wheeler
Asst. City Editor ... Leonard Snyder
Asst. City Editor ... Robert Newman
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Richard Barton
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Patricia Bentley
Sports Editor ... Alain Lafontaine
Editor in Chief ... Larry Funk
Society Editor ... Mary Loe Foley
Business Mgr. Paul Warner
Advertising Mgr. Bill Nelligan
Circulation Mgr. Bill Binter
Asst. Circ. Mgr. Ruth Clayton
Classified Mgr. Elizabeth Berry
Classic Mgr. Alex Berry
Natl. Adm. Don Waldron
Promotion Mgr. Don Tennant
Asst. Promotion Mgr. Charles O'Connor
On KFKU
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
Today:
2:30 p.m.-Art by Radio Mrs. Maud Ellsworth 9:30 p.m.-Symphonic Favorites, Lalo's Spanish Symphony, Jack Robinson, narrator
BOOKS for GIFTS and for your own Fall Reading
Pennell, History of Nora Beckham. $3.00
Mailer, The Naked and the Dead. $4.00.
Smith, Tomorrow Will Be Better. $3.00.
Shute, No Highway. $3.00.
Hobart, The Cleft Rock. $3.00.
Forbes, Running of the Tide. $4.00
Carnelge, How To Stop Worry. $2.95
Mmenninger-Leaf, You & Psychiatry. $2.50
Seaver, Albert Schweitzer. $3.75
Churchill, Gathering Storm. $6.00
Sherwood, Roosevelt and Hopkins. $6.00
Stuart Chase, The Proper Study of Mankind. $3.50
We Gladly Wrap for Mailing.
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. Ph. 666
- Letters To The Editor -
Dear Editor:
Itchy
The cheerleader who scratched her leg during a recent flag-raising ceremony was the object of several fervent letters of condemnation. Of course it was unintentional. She only did what came naturally. But the act has been interpreted as a symbol of lack of respect for the flag, for the country, and even for God.
This is a world on the threshold of the atomic age, in which the failure to achieve international understanding threatens universal destruction. In these circumstances it may be necessary to examine some of the foundations of our society, the more deeply rooted a foundation the closer the scrutiny.
No institution is more deeply seated than that of patriotism, because patriotism has assumed the reverence that in earlier periods
Advanced and elementary slide rule classes sponsored by Tau Beta Pi, engineering fraternity, will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Frank Strong hall.
people gave to religions. Yet blind passionate, and uncritical patriotism is the principal reason for the failure of the United Nations. Perhaps at patriotic demonstrations it would be well to scratch not just our legs but our heads as well.
Tau Beta Pi Gives Slide Rule Classes
New shipment of
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Activity Tickets Admit!
Exchange stub for reserved seat at ticket office—Basement Green hall. Phone KU-412, Open 9-12, 1-4.
Collection Of Antiques Grows Into Old Village
Sturbridge, Mass. — (UP) — Old Sturbridge village, a copy of a typical 19th century town, was built by Albert and Cheney Wells of Sturbridge because their collection of antiques grew too big. The brothers, officers of an optical manufacturing firm, now have 28 buildings on their 500-acre tract here, including a blacksmith shop, general store, grist mill and church.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
The WINNERS of CARL'S Football "Pick-em" Contest
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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2.1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
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2010 Meshman, New York.
EW KELVINATOR refrigerators for immediate delivery, limited quantity, convenient term available. B. F. Goodrich Store. 929 Mass. Phone 21. 4
GREY FLANNEL & grey tweed suits
its coat. Tan camel-hair oncoat. Call
us see after 7:00 p.m. Dean Helfert, 613
coustiana, 2614W.
O MEN 'S MEN' blue, winter suits 36 long
e or call Neal Trull, 1399 Ohio, 1534M
1938 MERCURY convertible: Good motor.
Tailboard call. Call 2547W or see at 1030 Maine
1947 INDIAN CHIEF Execlent condition.
Magneto job. See at Eldridge Hotel from
a.m. to 3 p.m. Reasonably priced. See
levator boy. 2
RIFE CASE with built-in 3-ring notebook book. Gentle leather. Brand new from famous leather company in Kansas City. Call Eve Lenai Vegiardi, 355. 2
saxaphones, 2 tenor saxaphones, 2 trumpets, 2 basses and near new Martins, 1 King silver Tone cornet, set 4 drums, Bass tone, dance band calls. Call 1747A, after
BUY HIGH GRADE insurance by typing your work on a new Royal Underwood or Smith-Corona portable typewriter purchased at the Student Union Bookstore.
1938 OLDS SEDAN. Exceptionally clean,
good condition, $495. See Clint, 1424 New York (downstairs back) or call 1870W after 3.
AMMUNITION, Fishing Tackle. Guns and
packages are made, made, made.
Rutter's Shred, 2015 Mast.
**PORTABLE MOTOROLA radios now as**
*$19.95 at B. GoodFirm store, 925 W.*
***
'SED ROYAL portable typewriter, in ex-
ient condition. Pica type letters. Only
5.00 plus your rebate. Student Union
ok Store. 2
ARK BROWN topcapt. Fine condition.
Phone 3006. Phil Billan.
1322 Louisiana.
1945 JEEP, excellent condition. All-weather cab, five good tires, wonderful expensive transportation. Call 1215. 4 SINGLE BREASTED brown suit, practically unused. Size 36. $25.00 Phone 900h. Phil Billan. 1324a. La
× 10 AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHS Bird-sc
view of your campus. Just the
photo for your album. Hurry down the
hill to Rowland's or Keeler's booktore. 8
Nathaniel B. Johnson
Lawrence Optical Co.
1025 Massachusetts
CHEF
SEA FOODS
Delicious Broiled Eastern LOBSTER
Tempting Fried Soft-shelled CRAB
Duck's Tavern
824 Vt.
TYPEWRITERS: Ribbons and stands,
adding machines, calculators, study desks
and tables, posture and swirled chairs,
and safety safes. Peterson
Mass. Phone 13. TW28-
LOST
PAIR OF HORN-rimmed glasses in brown
cathered hair. Please can I bring
laughing eyes? Please can I bring
Jaw dropping eyes?
WILL THE person who took my Rainfaire raincoat by mistake at the Corbin open house please return it to Corbin and pick up his own. 2
SHEAFFER fontain pen Friday, Oct. 29.
Brown mottled color, can be identified.
Please call Joan Bremer. 860. Reward. 4
LOAFER JACKET, gray plaid with dark brown front. Reward. 1725 Indiana. Ph. 2631W.
PLAIN BROWN leather billed containing papers of Bill Rusco. Liberal reward. Finder keep money. 821 N. Hamp. 7 PEARLIS, single strand Monday, Oct. 29 bus stop at 8th and Miss., or between D.C. and Memphis building. Sentimental value. Phone 7553.
BUSINESS SERVICE
A GRAY Parker 51 fountain pen between
A GRAY Parker 51 fountain pen between
Finder call 2735M
Reward offered.
TO SUNFLOWER from Lawrence about
10:30 p.m.; one or two nights each week.
Leave reply at Daily Kansan Office, box
1. No. 3. 2
TRANSPORTATION
TPING DONE, immediate attention, accurate work and personalism, Mrs. sheilads,
MATHEMATICS TUTOR: Lucy T.
Dougherty, 909 Maine St. Please call for
appointment. Phone 3084M. If I'm not,
call again.
ELECTRONIC PROOF of your money's
worth in watch repair at Baitour's.
4
TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel. 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. Ask for Miss Helen. 11-9
BUY OR RENT: Magnetic recorder-producer, tape and wire. Entertaining a band of students with languages; for practicing speeches or violin. Peterson's .710% Mass. Phone 12345.
WHEN ALL PETS including dogs, birds,
fish, cats, pigeons, skunks, parrots,
squirrels, rats, mice, etc., go shopping
for an outfit they go to Grant's Pet Shop.
Conn. S. Phone 418. Everything in
the pet field—heir needs are
11-9
ness.
EBERHART and Son, tailors. Fittest samples made to measure, suits, topcoats, and overcoats. Alterations, repairing and leather work. 831 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. 19
ALTERING SUITS, coats, and dresses.
Relining coats a specialty. Handmade
tailored button hooks. Work guaranteed.
Call 2995R, 842 Indiana. 12
WANTED
GOOD HOME for Collie dog 2 years old.
before 5 p.m. and 23783.
after 5 p.m.
DISHWASHER to work for meals plus
wage. Call 3410 or 2781M. 2
FREEHAND drawings. Sketches that have been made in classroom and carry a perspective plus. Good perspective and positive attitude. Will pay $2.00 to $3.00 for each. Exchange payment to Industrial Products, 217 Palm Ave., Santa Barbara, California, Clarence Middleton.
CAMPUS representative. By importer of English shoes designed for young men a distinction in their apparel. For details see the Imports, 53 Spain Street, Brockton, Mass.
SALEMEN and women wanted: Full or part time. See Mr. Brooks at room 1, 821% Mass. at noon or phone 1104 for appointment.
MISCELLANEOUS
WILL Serve evening meal to two boys.
916 Kentucky, phone 1085R.
3 MEET WITH the Elite! Eat at the Skywagon and fried chicken. We serve soft drinks. 2 MAGNETIC RECORDING machines, typewriters, adding and calculating machines, brats, shoring, cabinets, desks, and tables, soils, renting at Peterson's, 710% Mass. Call 1234.
FOR RENT
TWO ROOM furnished apartment with a sink. Will accommodate 3 boys. 510 Ohio.
DOUBLE ROOM with single beds for two men. Private bath. 2040 La. 4
NURNISHED apartment for two boys. Call 2329J. 4
Freshman Women Will Elect Representatives To AWS
Freshman women will elect two freshman representatives to the Associated Women Students' senate in the regular election Wednesday.
One representative will be elected from each group of three freshman girls. First group is: Joanna Schrag, education; Beatrice Buchler, College; and Althea Owen, fine arts. The second group is: Betty Brown, fine arts; Sally Young, fine arts; and Jayne Mater, College.
Corn Averages 15 Feet
Fort Wayne, Ind.—(UP)—Harold L. Driver grows tall corn but he doesn't do it in Iowa. Driver has an acre of corn that averages 15 feet in height.
CHESTERFIELD IS BUILDING ANOTHER FACTORY BECAUSE ALL OVER AMERICA MORE MILLIONS OF SMOKERS ARE ASKING FOR
The Milder Cigarette
Soon our newest factory will be taking its place in the Chesterfield sky line in Durham, N.C., where the Chesterfield factory group is already "A city within a city."
With the addition of this modern factory, efficient in every way, Chesterfield will continue to keep smokers from coast to coast well supplied with the cigarette that is—
SO MILD THEY SATISFY MILLIONS
SO MILD THEY'LL SATISFY YOU-
Chesterfield
CIGARETTES
LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO.
ABuyCHESTERFIELD
MAKE YOURS THE MILDER CIGARETTE...
Copyright 1948, LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO.
4
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1948
Perrine Shows New Processes In Electronics
Light bulbs flashed and sound reverberated across the stage of Fraser theater Monday when Dr. J. O. Perrine, assistant vice-president of the American Telephone and Telegraph company, demonstrated recent advances in the science of electronics.
"Energy is the common denominator of all types of engineering." Dr. Perrine told his audience. He said there are many methods by which energy is put to use; the projectile method, such as dynamite; the contact method, such as a bulldozer and the wave method, used by the electrical engineer.
In his demonstration, Dr. Perrine lighted neon tubes and light bulbs in mid-air by electromagnetic energy radiated through a horn. Source of the energy was a magnetron.
"The electrical engineer uses wires to guide energy waves," he explained. "There is nothing tangible or physical, but the energy is there, just the same."
Music from a phonograph was made to modulate a microwave transmitter, which was picked up by a crystal detector on the other side of the stage and fed into a public address system.
Africans Are Reserved Power
The native African people are a great reservoir of undeveloped possibility, the Rev. W. C. Esselstyn told members of the Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship Oct. 28.
The Rev, Mr. Essolstyn, who is the district superintendent of Nazarene instruction in Africa, said that South Africa is a land of great contrasts. He gave illustrations in the fields of education, religion, and industry.
Mrs. Esselstyn told the story of a typical conversion in the native Zulu language while her husband translated. The Rev. and Mrs. Esselstyn spent the last 20 years in Africa, nine of them in Swaziland. He is now on burough.
Alum Elected Company Head
Elmer H. Isern, '22, Miami, Okla., has been elected president of the Eagle-Pitcher Mining and Smelter company.
He has been a vice-president of the organization since 1943 and has been active in mining operations in that district since 1926.
Two Grads Mix Law And Justice
If there is justice in law there should be law in medicine so far as Hill City is concerned.
Two Hill City students have been voted degrees by the University faculties. William W. Justus was awarded a bachelor of laws degree. Findley Law received an A.B. degree with a major in medicine.
Law still can't make a mixture of professions. He must finish work in the school of medicine before becoming a full-fledged medical student.
Chiapusso Gives Brilliant Recital
The music heard at Jan Chia-puso's piano recital Monday night was tremendous in both selection and interpretation, and his audience was enthusiastic during the entire concert.
By NORMA HUNSINGER
Professor Chiapusso presented a program of unusual interest in the "Italian Concerto" and "Partita in D Major" by Bach, "Sonata, op. 101" by Beethoven, and a group of numbers by Chopin, Liszt, Debussy, and Ravel.
Professor Chiapusso makes a very impressive figure at the piano, and his years of concert work have given him poise and stage presence.
Particularly outstanding was the sensitive performance of the Beethoven sonata, and the smooth and artistic treatment of Chopin and Debussy. In the two lighter numbers by Ravel, Mr. Chiapusso showed understanding of the composer's motive and made them come alive.
Although he has auspicious technical ability, he impresses most with his unassuming understanding and portrayal of the spirit of the compositions. He makes the notes sound like music, rather than just the media by which a pianist shows his dexterity. He gives the impression of intelligence and skill combined with perception and long practice in understanding music and technical expression.
His concert was well worth hearing.
Stockton Will Speak
Frank T. Stockton, dean of University Extension, will attend a conference of the Association of University Evening colleges in New Orleans, from Sunday to Friday, Nov. 12. Dean Stockton will speak on "Looking Ahead." Monday, Nov. 8.
Chiang's China Faces Collapse; Reds Move On
The Chinese cabinet is being called into emergency session Wednesday in Nanking to discuss the crisis. Some observers thought the government might collapse altogether under the double blow.
Chinese Communist forces completed the occupation of Mukden Monday. Leading only political commissars and security guards there, the main Communist forces turned south to complete the rout of Chiang's troops from Manchuria.
Prime Minister Wong Wen-Hao and Finance Minister Wang Yen-Wu submitted their resignations to parliament today because of the failure of their currency reform program. The gold Chinese dollar, introduced several months ago, has dropped in value from 25 American cents to eight.
One Communist column was only 20 miles north of Yinkow, where two Nationalist divisions were awaiting evacuation by sea. Two more divisions were reported awaiting evacuation at Hulutao, across the bay from Hingkow.
The government of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek teetered today after the collapse of its economic reform program and the loss of Manchuria.
The U.S. embassy in Nanking said a message from Angus Ward. American consul general in Mukden, reported all members of the consular staff safe.
Chiang reportedly has rejected the resignations.
United Nations, Paris—Julius Katz-Suohy of Poland accused John Foster Dulles, who may be the next U.S. secretary of state, of using the same arguments against Communism as Adolf Hitler and Joseph Goebbels. He attacked Mr. Dulles in the political committee during a debate on Greece. He said Mr. Dulles in his speech last week found it "easy to blame world Communism" for the Greek muddle.
Star of 1896 Football Team Visits Campus, Reminisces
William Piatt, football star of 1806 made his annual visit to the campus Friday. Mr. Piatt played 33 out of 36 games while he was in school, and never played on a losing team.
The team of 1891 was called the "never defeated team," and gold medals were given to 12 of the players and to Prof. E. M. Hopkins, the coach. Mr. Piatt, now a retired lawyer, and
During his college days there were two campus publications. They were the "University Courier" owned by four fraternities, Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Gamma Delta, Theta Theta Pi, and Sigma Nu, and the "University Bulletin," a literary paper.
Other Foreign News
Paris—POLice struck at dawn and cleared more coal mines in central and northern France of strikers. Strikers dug in at Lievin, near Lens in northern France, and set afire gasoline-filled ditches in an attempt to halt the police. Fifteen persons were reported injured before the strikers were routed.
In the fall of 1892 some independent students put out a paper called the "Student Journal." This paper almost ran the "Courier" out of business. In 1893 Mr. Piatt became business manager of the "Courier," and the form of the paper was changed from a four page folio to a
During his five years in football, Mr. Piatt played right end, full back, right tackle, and left end. In 1896 he was captain of the team.
In 1896 the "K.U. Lawyer" was published for law students concerning their activities. Mr. Platt was also business manager of this paper.
Fred Dobson of Kansas City, Mo. are the only members of the 12 alive today.
By UNITED PRESS
Mr. Piatt was also active in the glee club and took the club on a trip to Oklahoma territory. He was president of the freshman class in 1891.
"My philosophy of football was to keep right where the ball was and to be able to make scrimmage casualties of several of my opponents," Mr. Piatt said.
20 page paper. The outside cover of the new paper was printed in red ink, imitating a Harvard publication. A year later the "University Courier" and the "Student Journal" combined and became the "Journal Courier."
He has recently written "Memory Chronicles" which covers K.U. activities from 1891 to 1896.
In 1893 he was secretary of the athletic association. In that year the first intercollegiate field day was held here. The University of Kansas, Baker university, and Sterling college participated.
Tokyo—The allied military tribunal for the Far East will meet Thursday to begin reading the judgment on Japanese wartime-Premier Hideko Tojo and 24 other top-ranking Japanese accused of war crimes. Because of the length of the verdict, the accused may not learn their fate for 10 days or more.
Miss Maude Elliot, assistant professor of Romance languages, will address the Spanish round table of the Modern Language association of Missouri at 10:30 a.m. Friday. The meeting will be at the Hotel Phillips in Kansas City, Mo.
To Meet With Language Group
J. Chalmers Herman, instructor in Romance languages, will take part in the foreign language round table at the Pittsburg regional meeting of the Kansas State Teachers association, also scheduled for Friday.
Miss Elliot will discuss her experiences the past summer in Central and South America. The title of her talk is "A Holiday in Spanish-American Homes."
VA Wants Pharmacists Or Pharmacy Graduates
The Veterans administration has issued a job request for qualified pharmacists or graduates of accredited colleges of pharmacy.
Registration in any state or the District of Columbia is a prerequisite to the job, which will pay from $2,974.80 to $3,727.20 a year. No experience is necessary.
Scabbard And Blade Initiates Tonight
Col. John Alfrey, commandant of the University Reserve Officers Training corps, and Col. Kenneth E. Rosebush, commandant of the air force unit, will be initiated into the Scabbard and Blade, tonight at 7:30 in the Military Science building.
Freshmen Will Vote Tomorrow
The two officers will be initiated as associate members of the honorary fraternity.
Polls for freshman election will be open from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. tomorrow in the east and west wings of Frank Strong hall, east and west wings of Marvin hall, and in Fraser hall.
Positions to be filled are the men's and women's A.S.C. seats, class officers and a representative seat to the A.W.S. senate.
John F. Leslie is the Independent candidate for class president with Donald Guard opposing him as Pachacamac candidate. Janet Gregory, Independent, will oppose Alice Ann Sellers, Pachacamac N.O.W., for vice-president.
Gretchen Freeburg, Pachacamac,
and Shirley Jenkins, Independent,
are the candidates for secretary,
and Charles L. Childers, Independent,
and Thomas Payne, Pachacamac,
are running for treasurer. Janice
Horn and Arthur O. Kaaz, Jr., are
Independent candidates for the two
A.S.C., seats, running against James Martin and Jean Haussermann,
Pachacamac candidates.
Therapist To Speak Here Tomorrow
The election this year will determine which party will hold the majority of representatives on the All Student Council. Pachacamac party holds an 8-7 majority over the Independents now. If the Greek organizations win the freshman seats it will increase their majority to 10-7. An Independent victory would reverse the majority 9-8.
Miss Wilma L. West, executive director of the American Occupational Therapy association, will speak on "Organization and Functions of the American Occupational Therapy association" at 7:30 tomorrow.
She will also be the principal speaker at a meeting in post-graduate physical medicine at the University of Kansas Medical center in Kansas City today through Wednesday.
50 Million May Cast Votes Today For President
By UNITED PRESS
The president-makers—American voters—turned out early and in large numbers today to decide who shall sit in the White House during the next four years.
By the hundreds of thousands, they came out to vote in weather ranging from sunny to heavy rain.
The American voters are passing judgment, too, on the congress which Mr. Truman repeatedly has denounced.
Early reports showed "heavy" "very heavy" voting in Cook county (Chicago), Cleveland, Philadelphia, Detroit, Columbus, O., Des Moines, in Connecticut, and in Syracuse, Albany and Binghamton, N. Y.
They are choosing between President Truman, the Democratic standard-bearer whom faint thrust into the White House 43 months ago, and Republican Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, who is getting his second shot at the presidency. Nine others are seeking the presidency, but the real contest is between these two men.
The early outpouring indicated that an estimated 50,000,000 will have cast presidential ballots before this day of decision ends.
In New York City, where an estimated $3,000,000 persons, will vote during the day, voting was unusually light in the morning hours. The weather there was partly cloudy early but the sun broke through about mid-morning. Voting also was light in industrial Buffalo, N, Y., and the Atlanta, Ga., area.
The first returns of the day came from Tiny Hart's Location, N. H., which gave Mr. Dewey 11 votes and Mr. Truman 1. Four years ago the same community gave the last President Roosevelt 6: Mr. Dewey 4.
Another early result came from Catalogooche precinct of Haywood county, N. C., which gave its seven votes to Mr. Truman. Four years ago, it gave Mr. Roosevelt 8, Mr. Dewey 2.
YMCA, YWCA To Sponsor Hobo Hop Tomorrow Night
The Y.W.C.A. and the Y.M.C.A. will sponsor a Hobo Hop tomorrow night for all University students The dance will be from 7 to 8 p.m in the Military Science building.
Kansas Student To Spend 20 Months Writing Thesis On Phillipsburg
Mary Bovard of the W.Y.C.A., are Don Clark, of the Y.M.C.A. will in charge of a program of game square dances, and refreshments The Square Dance club will assis in the dances.
Big business and its social, civic, and economic responsibilities to the community is the purpose of a research project for a doctor's thesis by Lawrence W. Van Meir, graduate student.
He will use the Consumers Co-operative association oil refinery, situated in Phillipsburg since 1939, as his case study.
online study will take 200
"The entire study will take months," Van Meir said. "In that time, I will research the transition of Phillipsburg from an agricultural town to a minor industrial center and the relation of industry to the community. This will include zoning, employment, and the economic and social factors which may enter into any relation between an industry and the place where it is located."
Van Meir is majoring in economic theory and expects to receive his doctor of philosophy degree in August, 1950. He received his bachelor of science degree in agricultural economics from the University of Illinois in 1942, and a master of science in the same field from Kansas State in 1948.
Van Meir was teaching at Kansas State when the Consumers Co-operative association offered him the opportunity to work for his doctorate degree. He came to the University Sept. 1, 1948.
"C.C.A. wanted the project carried out here because the University is well-known in the field of economic theory," he explained.
"My study for the association will be its expansion of the last 10 years," Van Meir said. "In it, I will determine the degree which co-operative units meet the needs of the community and the action needed, if any, to better relations between co-operatives and their communities."
Van Meir added that the study is one of a series which C.C.A. is conducting throughout the Midwest through graduate students at various colleges.
C. C.A. is a wholesale co-operative serving 2300 retail co-operatives in nine states, with Kansas as the geographical center of its sales territory. Of its 1437 stockholding member groups, 337 or 23.5 per cent located and sell in Kansas.
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Wednesday, Nov. 3, 1948
Lawrence, Kansas
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Truman Wins A Smashing Victory
Wets, Carlson,Dergance Lead Kansas Returns
Topeka, Nov. 3.—(UP)—Kansas,
after 68 years of prohibition, today
oaparently had voted to legalize liqu-
er by amending the state constitu-
tion.
To put the people's mandate into effect, however, would require an act of the legislature, meeting next January.
With more than 2,200 of Kansas' 2,772 precincts reporting, the wets were 36,000 votes ahead of the drys. Nearly half a million ballots had been counted.
seemed doubtful that later re would erase the advantage for ideal.
Phillip Dergance, Democrat, regained the lead shortly before noon in the Kansas 2nd district congressional race over Rep. Errett P. Scrivner (R. Kansas).
Returns from 387 of 404 precincts gave: Dergance 56,837, Scrivner 56102
During the bitter political campaigns that preceded Tuesday's balloting, Kansas Democrats led by Randolph Carpenter, their gubernatorial candidate, openly embraced the repeal measure.
The Republicans, on the other hand, held aloof. They said they considered liquor prohibition a moral rue—definitely not a political one.
But Gov. Frank Carlson, who Tuesday night was conceded the victory in his campaign to succeed
--himself as Kansas' chief executive, was an avowed personal dry. And the tenor of his campaign naturally lent to those of his party cohorts. And Kansas grew to consider the Republican party dry . ! . the Democrats "wet."
New Writing Class Begins
A new class in Creative Writing will be started tonight in Kansas City by Miss Frances Grinstead, University Extension lecturer.
The University Extension has issues in creative writing in Topeka (ElDorado also, Miss Grinstead said. The class in Topeka has 24 students, ElDorado 31, and the new class will have 25 to start.
The classes are for adults and include students who are novices in the writing field as well as some who have published books. Some members drive as far as 40 miles to attend the classes, Miss Grinstead said. One blind girl is in the ElDorado class and is doing good work. Classes meet five times, Miss Grinstead said.
Girls' Rifle Team Organizes Tonight
Miss Grinstead, who is also an acting assistant professor of journalism, announced that she would conduct a writing seminar for the Missouri Women's Press club on Friday. Jan. 28 through Sunday, Jan. 30, 1949. She is secretary of the organization.
All women interested in joining the women's Rifle team are invited to attend the organizational meeting at 7:15 tonight in the Military Science building.
Col. Kenneth Rosebush, air force R.O.T.C. commandant, who will oversee the team, said that about 20 machines are scheduled after Friday, Jan. 15, 1949. The team will train during November and December and will fire about 40 rounds one night each week.
Colonel Rosebush said that the women need no previous experience and that anyone interested may attend the meeting.
News Class Covers Election
Seventeen students in the Reporting III class of the journalism school worked on four newspapers in tabulating and reporting the election returns, Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism said today.
Students working on the Topeka Daily Capitol were: Marjorie Burtscher, Patricia James, and James Jones.
At the Kansas City Kansan were: Mary Horton, Bill Barger, and Doris Stahlnaker.
The Ottawa Herald had Paul Conrad, Maurice Lungren, and John Wheeler.
Students at the Lawrence Journal-World were: James Head, Lois Lauer, Charles Moffett, Jack W. Robinson, John Stauffer, and Keith Wright.
Osmero Bartelli covered the local election for INS, James Robinson for AP.
Some of the students did not finish until 1:30 a.m., Professor Beth said. They helped to tabulate returns from the various precincts, answered telephone inquiries, and reported totals from the precincts.
"In general," Professor Beth said, "the students observed the ways in which news staff handle and tabulate local and state returns. They were able to see how the incoming stories on state and national returns were handled."
Free translation services offered by the department of German are becoming more widely recognized and appreciated, Dr. J. A. Burzle, department chairman, said. He said that requests for translations of foreign correspondence have come from all sections of Kansas and from Nebraska, Missouri, and Colorado.
KU Translation Service Expanding
There is no formal organization to answer these requests but the work is co-ordinated in the German department. Many foreign students have assisted in the work which has included translation of 12 languages.
Roger L. Davis, College sophomore, has been elected A.S.C. representative from the Inter-Dorm council.
"Our most difficult translation was of a letter written in Malayan," Dr. Burzle said. "It was translated by a Javanese student of Chinese descent."
Inter-Dorm Council Elects Davi ASC Representative
Robert R. Dunwell, College sophomore, was appointed chairman of public relations by Clarence Atkins, president of Inter-Dorm, counell.
Kansas Figures On Election
UNITED PRESS
Returns from more than 80 per cent of Kansas' 2,772 precincts gave:
For president; (2,218 precincts)—
Dewey 70,127; Truman 349,355
For constitution amendment:
(2,307 precincts) — for repeal
268,225; against repeal 233,433.
for senator: (2.218 precincts)—
Schoepel 279,230; McGill 2611—
For governor: (2,236 precincts)
—Carlson 292,344; Carpenter 208,
099.
In the 2nd congressional district, which includes Lawrence, Phillip Dergance, Democratic candidate, had a 735 vote load over Rep. Errett P. Scrivner, Republican. With 387 of 404 precincts reporting, Mr. Dergance had 56-827 votes and Mr. Scrivner 56-102.
Topekan To Circuit Post
E. A. McFarland of Topeka has been appointed assistant to the director of the University extension program in medicine, Chancellor Deane W. Malott announced today.
As assistant to H. G. Ingham, McFarland will organize and conduct an expanded program of circuit courses. Medical circuit courses are one or two-day programs presented in several cities throughout the state.
Last year 391 physicians attended two circuit courses. K.U. ranked sixth among medical schools for attendance at postgraduate courses of all types.
McFarland holds B.S. and M.S. degrees from Ft. Hays State college. He has been superintendent of schools at St. John and manager of the chambers of commerce at Dodge City and Enid, Okla. He has been field director for the Kansas State chamber of commerce for the past three years.
KU Band To Play For Music Teachers
They will play at a reading session for high school music teachers and will give a 30 minute concert for music supervisors in the afternoon. Friday night they will present a formal concert in Topeka Municipal auditorium. About 4000 teachers will attend this meeting.
Numbers for the reading session will be chosen from the national contest list of band music, and will include numbers-for class A. B. C. and D bands. The band will play "Oberon," an overture by Weber, and "Toccata and Fugue in D Minor" by Bach at the evening concert.
The University concert band will be featured at the Kansas high school teachers meeting in Topeka Friday.
Club Will Revise
Palm Room Opinion Poll
Revisions in the poll to determine student opinion on the Palm room will be considered at a meeting of the Sunflower Statesman's club at 7:30 p.m. today in 106 Frank Strong hall. Recently the club decided to conduct a poll to find out what students thought about the Palm room and the Union. Because of new developments, including the publication of the Union financial report, charges will be necessary in the questions to be asked on the poll.
President Upsets GOP As Dewey Concedes
Gov. Thomas E. Dewey conceded today that President Truman had been elected, in the closest presidential race in 32 years.
A statement read by James A. Hagerty, Mr. Dewey's press secretary, said:
"The governor *has just sent the
County Goes Dewey, Wet
Reports from the county clerk's office at 11 a.m. today showed Douglas county going Dewey-wet by a substantial majority.
In the presidential race, conceded by Governor Thomas E. Dewey, Lawrence and Douglas county gave virtually a two to one lead to the loser, 23 of 26 precincts reporting. The count was Dewey 6,938; Truman, 3,711; and Wallace, 103. This does not include precincts one and two of the second ward and precinct one of the third ward.
Still to report on the repeal issue are the heavy first and second precincts of the second ward where the student wet vote is expected to run up the majority. A total of 24 out of 26 precincts reported.
In the top state races, most of the Republican candidates were leading by two to one margins except in the Congressional race between Rep. Errett Scrivner. Republican incumbent, and Phillip Dergance, his Democratic challenger. Scrivner led 5,644 to 4,119 but the heavy student vote in outstanding precincts was expected to cut this margin, possibly giving Dergance the majority.
On the local level, two races in which former KU students are participating are being hotly contested. George Melvin, Republican, is leading Richard Barber, Democrat and former student, 5.389-4.825. In the race between Melvin Miller, Republican, and Glenn Kappelman, Democrat and former student, Miller is leading 5.466 to 4.771. The heavy student vote is also expected to change these races to Democratic victories.
Other contests are mostly in the definitely-decided column for the Republicans. Former Governor Andrew Schoepel is leading former Senator George McGill, 6,613-3,350, for the seat being vacated by senior Senator Arthur Capper.
Governor Frank Carlson is continuing to build his lead over Democratic challenger Randolph Carpenter in the state, the figures now standing: Carlson, 7,149; Carpenter, 3,196. Those figures do not include the heavy student vote which may reduce Carlson's lead.
All three constitutional amendments, repeal, judicial pay adjustment, and legislative pay adjustment, are showing favorable votes. The repeal issue is close but the other two amendments are very definite and student votes will probably give a much heavier gain in favor of the amendments.
WEATHER
Kansas—Partly cloudy today, with scattered showers in west portion. Warmer east portion, increasing cloudiness tonight. Thursday mostly cloudy with occasional showers, cooler in west and extreme north portions. Low tonight 40 northwest to 50 southeast.
following telegram to the press associations:
"My heartiest congratulations on your election and every good wish for a successful administration."
"I urge all Americans to unite behind you in support of every effort to keep our nation strong and free and to establish peace in the world."
Humble and greatly excited, President Truman greeted his cheering staff and friends five minutes after the telegram was ripped from a printer and carried to him in his presidential suite in the Hotel Muehlebach in Kansas City. Mo.
Mr. Dewey, who had been mulling over cabinet selections, and preparing to move to Washington in January, gave up shortly after 11 am. (EST) today.
The Dewey statement was issued at 11:12 a.m. (EST) shortly after he awoke from a nap. He went to bed at 8:30 a.m. (EST) after spending 12 solid hours poring over election returns.
The hotel was practically deserted by Mr. Dewey's campaign followers at the time of the concession announcement, but a large number of photographers and representatives of the press were still on hand after their all-night vigil. Mr. Dewey will hold a press conference at 1 p.m. (EST) today.
Democrats however already had claimed the victory. Sen. J. Howard McGrath, Democratic national chairman, walked into party headquarters at the Biltmore hotel in New York and said it was all over. He said Ohio's 25 electoral votes had turned the trick.
It was one of the greatest upsets in American political history. Mr. Truman had been given no chance in pre-election polls and forecasts. But he seized the lead with the first returns Tuesday night and never lost it.
He swept a Democratic congress into office with him. Republicans have lost control of both the house and senate.
When the flash was called from the United Press teletype in the wire room—those magic two words that "Dewey concedes" spelled victory for the man no one thought had a chance—the president embraced his brother, J. Vivian Truman.
Outside a cheer boomed through the 11th floor corridor and into the presidential suite as his staff, newsmen, and secret service men caught the words that signalized the end of the bitter and uphill fight.
Within a few minutes, the presidential secretary, Matthew J. Connelly, threw open the penthouse door and a stream of well-wishers paraded in to shake the president's hand.
As the well-wishers went past him, he repeated time and again:
"Thank you, boys, thank you for the wonderful job you have done."
As the photographers snapped his picture in a barrage of lightning, the lights in the room went out. A bit excitedly, Mr. Truman said, "Blew a fuse, blew a fuse."
Mr. Truman told his close friends, as he shook hands, that:
"I just want to deserve the honor."
Pick Up Ku Ku Sweaters
Ku Ku sweaters and small emblems for Ku Ku pledges are ready. They may be picked up today at Obers Clothing store, 821 Massachusetts street.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 19
Official Bulletin
Jay James will not meet today.
Lionnaean club, 7:30 tonight, 417
Snow. Deal Six, county farm agent,
to speak on soil conservation.
Coffee and Forums committee of Student Union, Activities, 4 today. Pine room, Union. Magda Berger, Czech exchange student, speaker.
Nov. 3, 1948
Square Dance club hosts for Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A. party, 7 tonight, Military Science building. Everyone welcome. Instruction in square dancing.
O. T. club, 7:30 tonight; 332 Frank Strong, Miss West, executive director of American O. T. association speaker. Attendance required.
Quill club, 7 tonight, East room,
Union.
Statesman club, 7.30 tonight, 106 Frank Strong.
KJ. Dames, 8 tonight, 426 Lindley. Prof. John Ise, speaker.
Pre-Nursing club, 4 today, Fraser dinner hall. Dr. Gaston, speaker.
! General Semantics club, 8 tonight,
Seminar room, Annex F, Frank Strong.
Women's Rifle club, 7:15 tonight Military Science building. All interested.
American Society of Tool Engineer executive meeting tonight in Kansas City, Dinner, 7 p.m. Program to follow.
Alpha Phi Omega, 7 tonight, Pine room, Union. Plans for dance.
Archery club, 5 today. Fraser auditorium. Archery films. All interested.
Register today in College office and School of Education for English proficiency examination to be given Saturday. Mrs. Calderwood in 313 Fraser from 2 to 3 all week for conferences.
Two vacancies now exist in A.S.C. due to resignation of George Lowe, District IV, and Hugh Johnson, District III.
Civil engineers; A.S.C.E., 7.30 p.m tomorrow. Lindley auditorium. Professor Price, mathematics department will speak and show pictures on high level precision bombing.
Al Eteno se reunira el jueves a las 7:30 in 113 de F. S. Elecciones de los oficiales. Senor Ricart hablará de Espana.
All S.A.M. members desiring to make a trip through Reuter organ factory meet in front of Union at 1:15 tomorrow.
Delta Sigma Pi business meeting for all actives, 7:30 tomorrow, Recreation room, Union.
Deutscher Verein wird sich Donnenstag um vier und dreisig auf Zimmer 402, Fraser, versammeln N.S.A. , 7.30 p.m. tomorrow, Frank Strong auditorium.
Y. M.C.A. tomorrow: 4 p.m., World Relatedness commission, Pine room; 5 p.m., Social Responsibility commission, Pine room; 7:30 p.m., Freshman Ys Men's club, East room.
University Women's club annual faculty reception, 8 to 10 p.m. Saturday, Union building ballroom.
Froshawks, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow 103 Frank Strong. Bring money for K-State game.
IM Officials May Pick Up Checks
Officials who worked the intramural games may pick up their checks in the office of the secretary of physical education.
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Chemical Engineers Will Experiment In Padded Cell
The cell is a small room in which experiments will be made by engineers and members of the research staff of the station.
A padded cell is being constructed for chemical engineers in the Engineering Experimental station.
Two high pressure reactors will be used in the experiments. Because of the possibility of an explosion of
Two high pressure reactors of the possibility of an explosion of one of the machines, which may build up a pressure of 10,000 pounds a square inch, a special room lined with sandbags is necessary.
The room itself is built of one half inch hardwood and is a subdivision of the southwest room of the station. The walls of the 9-by-11-foot compartment are set out several inches from the main walls of the building for greater absorption.
Morris Teplitz, research associate, said that no explosion is expected, but in case anything should happen, the station wants to be ready. In explaining the addition of steel plate he said that heavy steel would be laid around the wall in front of the bags while a thinner plate would cover the ceiling.
Flour bags were used to hold the sand by the business firm from which they were purchased and have caused comments. People wish to know what the station wants with so much flour, Mr. Teplitz said.
Currently, the first of 750 sandbags are being placed around the walls of the room. Later steel plate will be laid in front of the sandbags to take the brunt of an explosion if it should occur.
An attempt to convert natural gas into useful industrial chemicals will be one of the first experiments made by the station staff, Mr. Teplitz said. Chemical engineers will use the facilities for special projects.
The two machines cost about $2,-500. The University has had the reactors for some time but they could not be used until a special room was constructed, Mr. Teplitz added.
Both reactors stand about three feet high and are driven by electric motors. The stir reactor, which mixes chemicals by turning a hollowed-out steel cylinder, will sustain a pressure of 4,500 pounds a square inch at a temperature of 900 degrees Fahrenheit.
The rocker reactor is built along more horizontal lines and mixes the chemicals by rocking the mixtures back and forth at pressures up to 10,000 pounds a square inch. Gages and controls of both reactors are extended from the chamber to a control board outside the room.
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, after graduation. Annual university year, except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class master段7, 17, 1910, at the Post Office, Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
University Daily Kansan
Though each machine has a rupture valve to prevent pressures from rising high enough to injure the reactor, machines have been known to burst. Two of the particularly dangerous chemicals are ethylene and butadiene.
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Draft 257 Kansans For January Quota
A draft call for 257 Kansans to enter military training in January was issued Tuesday by Brig. Gen. Milton R. McLean, state director of selective service. Only single men who are non-fathers and non-veterans will be inducted, General McLean said.
This brings the total to 592 men called from Kansas in the first three moths of the new draft. The November draft was for 140 and December for 195.
Meals prepared with that "melts-in-your-mouth" touch
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Smith Will Speak In Missouri
Dean George B. Smith of the School of Education will give a talk today in Kansas City at the Missouri State Teacher's Association meeting.
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EDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3. 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Socially Speaking
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Ipha Kappa Lambda Hayride
Alpha Kappa Lambda held a hay- ride kick Oct. 29. Chaperones were Ir, and Mrs. Ned Linegar and Mrs. ela Wilson.
Guests were Rita Roney, Shirley chriver, Zelina Higgenbottom, Mary Anna Ward, Bille George, Nancy Sandehn, Marian Kysar, Barbara Lux, Jane Edison, Cherry Koch, Irene Wilbur, Ernestine Pullman, Nancy Mitchell, Norma Haase, Maine Loske, June Josman, Edna fCarty, Zella Nightengale, Sybil Jamm, Gwen Peterson, Mary Lou Oeylet, Betty Robinson.
sigma Phi Epsilon Parents' Day
Mr. George F. Akright, president of the Fathers' club, gave a brief welcome address. Glenn Kappelman elated the history of the University chapter, its achievements and deals. John Moorhead presided as master of ceremonies.
Kansas Gamma of Sigma Phi Epon celebrated Parents' Day Sunny, Oct. 31, with dinner at the Palm um of the Union.
following a meeting of the Mothers' and Dads' club, open house held in the chapter's present ons as well as at the new fram- tility house site.
ota Sigma Pi Entertains
Iota Sigma Pi, honorary chemistry orority, entertained the wives of the faculty in the department of chemistry with a tea Sunday afternoon, Oct. 31.
Theta Phi Alpha Pledges
Iota chapter of Theta Phi Alpha announces the formal pledging of *atricia Horen*, Kansas City, Mo., Oct. 26, at the chamber house.
Theta Phi Alpha Entertains
The pledges of Theta Phi Alpha
tertained the pledges of Phi Kappa
with an hour dance, Oct. 29, at
he chapter house.
Delta Chi Pledges Entertain
The pledge class of Delta Chi held an informal party at the chapter house. Oct. 29.
The guests included Doris Pister, Jacqueline Campbell, Doloris Moussauf, Marlene Nickons, Linne Windget, Mary Marr Evert, Joanaane Grogg, Nadine Craig, Evelyn Knapp, Mary Huxtable, Elaine Madrell, Marjorie Goldsworthy, Dorothy Williams, Barbara Esterle, Martha Gragg, Mrs. John Skie.
omen Engineers Denied Full Status
Full membership for women in Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity, was defeated at the national convention.
Fred G. Gartung, president of the University chapter, gave a report to the chapter Oct. 28. He attended the convention which was held Oct. 3-17 at the University of Texas.
GOVERNOR Beauford Jester of Texas, T. S. Painter, president of the University of Texas, and Dr. Harvey M. Merker, superintendent of manufacturing for Parke, Davis and company, Detroit, Mich., spoke at the convention
Honorary membership to women of outstanding ability who meet the requirements of Tau Beta Pi has been given and will continue to be given.
Eighty-two chapters from 44 states were represented at the convention, Gartung said. A charter was granted to the University of Connecticut.
A preliminary election of new members was held at the meeting of the University chapter.
"There is no such thing as 'campus life' in Europe," said Albert Roland, graduate student from Italy. Organizations there are not sponsored by the university. They are completely organized and run by the students.
No Campus Life Abroad Italian Student Says
Call
"Students in Europe are more interested in politics," he continued. "This is because political problems are sharper and more vital."
Roland, who recently received the A.S.C. scholarship, is foreign correspondent for several foreign newspapers. In Europe the newspapers are limited to more essential news, and there is more political discussion and analysis in editorial form. His correspondence to papers in Italy is based on interpreted news, "I am considering writing an article on the football game. I have never had an experience of that kind before," he said. He also writes reviews for "Books Abroad," published by the University of Oklahoma Press. He reviews Italian and French books.
UNION
Roland was in the underground from September, 1943 until the liberation of Rome in June, 1944. The underground was where he took up journalism. He met people who were later connected with the government, and he had a chance to interview them. The first government after the
B Lord who recently received the $ \textcircled{1} $
liberation was made up of former underground men. People of the underground tried to make the occupation difficult and weaken Fascist control.
"My specific job was to gather information about Fascist spies and troop movements to be broadcast to the American Fifth Army."
Faculty Will Give Reception
Assisting at the door will be Mr. and Mrs. Ethan Allen, Mr. and Mrs. George Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Clark, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Twente, Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Clubb, and Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Korzenovsky. At the tables issuing name tags will be Mrs. J. A. Burzle, Mrs. H. C. Turk, Mrs. Frank Pinet, Mrs. E. G. Nelson Mrs. Hilden Gibson, and Mrs. C. K. Hydro.
In the receiving line for the faculty reception Saturday night in the Union ballroom will be Chancellor and Mrs. Deane W. Malott, Dr. and Mrs. C. F. Nelson, and Mr. and Mrs. Karl Klooz. Mrs. Nelson and Mrs. Klooz are president and vice president of the University Women's club, which gives the annual reception at which the members of the faculty and their wives meet the faculty newcomers and their wives. The reception is informal and will be from 8 to 10 p.m.
Heads of departments have arranged to have their new faculty members brought by present members. Officers of the University Women's club and their husbands and other faculty couples have been asked by Mrs. John H. Nelson, general chairman of the affair, to act as special hosts.
Before coming to K.U. he attended Bethel College in Newton. While there he talked to Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, who was attending a conference. It was then that he decided to come to K.U.
Those who have been asked to pour are Miss Margaret Lynn, Miss Eloise Neuenchwander, Mrs. F. B Dains, Mrs. C. H.-Ashton, Mrs. E Elmer Engel, Miss Elizabeth Meguiar, Mrs. G. O. Foster, Miss Josephine Burnham, Miss May Gardner, M. L. N Flint, Miss Maud Smelser, and Miss Sarah Laird. Assisting at the tea tables will be Miss Ruth McNair, Miss Cora Downs, Mrs. Richard Wagstaff, Mrs. L. C. Woodruff, Mrs. Raymond Nichols, Mrs. T. D. Prentice, Mrs. Natalie Calderwood, Mrs. R. S. Howie, Mrs. William Shoe-maker and Mrs. Ralph Canutson.
He is now taking graduate work in English and plans to write feature articles and book reviews in comparative literature.
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Nation Needs Student Dietitions
The U.S. Civil Service commission has announced an examination for student dietitians. Appointments will be made to courses in Veterans Administration hospitals in Los Angeles, the Bronx, Hines, Ill., and Memphis, Tenn.
Application forms may be obtained from any first or second class post office or from the U.S. Civil Service commission, Washington 25, D.C.
Salary for student dietitians is $1,470 a year, including subsistence, quarters and overtime. To qualify for the 12 month course, competitors must have received a bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university. Their study must have included courses in disease, social sciences and education.
Applications will be accepted from persons who have not completed the required education, but their study must be completed not later than the beginning date of the course for which they are applying. Applicants must have reached their 18th birthday but must not have passed their 35th birthday at the time of reporting on their first assignment as a student.
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Seats now on sale at Bell Music Store, Round Corner Drug Co., K.U. Fine Arts Office at $3.00, 2.75, 2.50, 2.25, 1.25 tax included.
Former Managing Editor Marries CBS Writer
Miss Billie Marie Hamilton, '47,
was married to Mr. Hugh N. Jones
Monday in Weir.
Mr. and Mrs. Jones will be at home after Nov. 1 at 920 Greenwood avenue, Evanston, Ill. Mrs. Jones was managing editor of the University Daily Kansan in her senior year. Mr. Jones is employed by CBS.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
Oil Company Wants Men For Geophysical Work
The Amerada Petroleum corporation, Tulsa, Okla., will have a representative at the University tomorrow to interview anyone interested in geophysical work. The company is particularly interested in electrical engineering and physics students for geophysical work.
An interview schedule may be signed in the office of the School of Engineering.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FOUR
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1940
2-Team System Is On Way Out
New York, Nov. 2—(UF)—The football specialist who plays only on offense was on his way out today as legislation was readied to pave the way for the return of the storied "iron men."
A drive was gathering momentum to abolish the platoon substitution system—which allows such powers as Michigan and Army to use separate offensive and defensive teams. Indications are that next season no more than three substitutions will be permitted at one time.
"The touchdown has become too cheap," insisted Lou Little of Columbia, chairman of the coaches' rules committee who is expected to propose the three-man limit at the January meeting.
He was supported by such touch-down teachers as Jimmy Phelan-coach of the Los Angeles Dons of the All-America conference; Earle "Greasey" Neale of the Philadelphia Eagles in the rival National league; and Hooks Mylin of N.Y.U.
Essentially, the move is designed to aid the smaller schools which haven't the manpower available to afford the two platoon system. Masking this intent to hobble the football factories, the "have notes" contend that once again the premium will be on all around players.
There was fairly general agreement that permitting substitution of three men would solve the problem, even while Little admitted that the platoon system made for better offensive football.
"But under the platoon system the game seems to be getting away from us," he contended. "Scores rocketing into the 34 to 32 realm make the touchdown too cheap and aren't for the best interests of the game."
Phelan added that he had interviewed both coaches and fans from coast to coast and that the general comment was that something should be done to abolish unlimited substitution.
As a side issue, the use of offensive and defensive players was making even more of a farce than usual out of selection of All American teams.
Locksley, Pi Phi's Win In Volleyball
Locksley hall and Pi Beta Phi added their names to the division winners in the volleyball games Monday. Locksley piled up 80 points to defeat Alpha Chi Omega 80 to 10 Pi Phi rolled the Jayettes 44 to 27.
In the other four games, Foster hall defeated Tennessee Terra 39 to 21, I.W.W. beat Harmon Co-op 58 to 18, Sigma Kappa defeated Jolliffe hall 37 to 28 and Alpha Omicron Pi beat Temruth 41 to 34.
Stern Will Air
OU-MU Battle
Norman, Okla., Nov. 3- (UP)—The Oklahoma-Missouri football fractas he Saturday will be broadcast by Bill Stern, sports voice of the National Broadcasting Co., it was announced today.
A special both at Owen field has been constructed for Stern.
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1948 All-America Grid Team Picked By Fraley
By OSCAR FRALEY
United Press Sports Writer
New York, Nov. 3—(UP)—Getting there "fustest" with what appears in this corner to be the "mostest," here is Fearless Fraley's 1948 All America football team.
UNIVERSITY OF MADRID
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As is always the case, only 11 players, their families, coaches, friends and neighbors can be satisfied. For the edification of that limited group, and the scathing comment of the rest of the country, here they are:
matched by the mid-west and the South, while the East and the Southwest each capture one spot.
E. Barney Poole, Mississippi
Off the early record, no section of the nation has a lock on gridiron alent this fall. The Pacific coast makes a comeback with three places.
UNIVERSITY OF MADRID Sponsored by
B. Barbry Phoebe, M.Ssppssr
T. Bob Hendren, U.S.C.
G. Leo Bednarik, Minnesota
C. Charles Bednarik, Penn.
W. Dimitriu, U.C.L.A.
E.
B. Doak Walker, S.M.U.
B. Charley Justice, N. Car.
B. Jack Jensen, California
B. Jack Cloud, W. and M.
Second team: Ends, Rebel Steiner, Alabama, and Wallace Jones, Kentucky; tackles, Dick Harris, Texas, and Al Wistert, Michigan; guards, Rod Franz, Calif., and Bill Healey, Georgia Tech; center, Alex Sarkesian, Northwestern; backs, Johnny Rauch, Georgia; Sta Heath, Nevada; Clyde Scott, Arkansas, and Gil Stephenson, Army.
Poole and Hart are the end stand-cuts in a season where the wingmen haven't been too scintillating. These two, however, would do to take along any time.
With the two-team system in use among many of the major teams, O'Reilly and Hendren are a pair who can go all the way on either offense or defense.
Nomellini, who stands out like a sore thumb in that gigantic Minnesota line, and Dimintro, the Ulan fireplug, can go in any company. Add to that the fact that massive Mike is a former Golden Glove champ and you have a solid, scrappy middle.
Bednarik, known to his mates as the "clutch," is a former aerial gunner who still delights in mowing them down. He is another of the old time "iron men" but still barely gets the nod over Sarkesian.
Of the four backs, Walker, Justice, and Jensen are the best known nationally but the "Flying" Cloud would be a unanimous national choice if he got big time mention season long. Clyde Scott, the former Navy star now at Arkansas, insisted that Cloud is harder to stop than the famed Doc Blanchard, and the Smackover Kid played against them both.
Walker will go down in the annals of the Southwest as one of the cow country's best in the gloried tradition of the Baughs, O'Briens and Kimbroughs. Justice ranks as the best in the South while Jensen, the California "Golden Boy," is regarded as California's best since Sam Chapman.
Old Fearless would take this gang You can have the Chicago Bears.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Kansas freshman two-mile team scored a clean sweep of the first three places in a telegraphic meet run recently with the Universities of Missouri and Colorado. Oklahoma and Wisconsin also competed but the results have not been received as yet.
Frosh 2-Milers Defeat Missouri
Herb Semper, Pat Bowers, and Bill Kazmer, finished in one-two-three order in both instances, with "Red" Dinsmore of Kansas coming in fourth in the meet with Colorado. Semper's winning time was 9 minutes, 47 seconds.
Dave Fisher, the fifth Kansas runner, finished in sixth position against Colorado and eighth against Missouri. The total team scores were Kansas 12, Missouri 25, and Kansas 10. Colorado 29 (low score wins).
The freshman distance men will compete in a telegraphic meet with the University of Michigan freshmen Saturday, Nov. 6, and with Michigan State and Texas A. and M., Saturday, Nov. 13.
Frank Obenland, assistant business manager of the K-book, said this morning that K-books are still on sale in the business office, 121 Frank Strong hall.
K-Books Still On Sale
The books give dates of all scheduled University functions for the year. The price is 25 cents.
Read the Want Ads daily.
Kansas, Duke Tie In AP Poll
Kansas is tied with Duke for 26th place in the weekly Associated Press poll of the nation's top football elevens. Both teams received seven points. The Jayhawkers polled the same number in the past week's poll.
The Missouri Tigers received four first place votes but came in number nine. Southern Methodist moved up from 11th to 8th place in the outstanding gain of the week.
The other Big Seven school in the top 30, the Oklahoma Sooners, received two first place votes and moved up to the 15th position.
Notre Dame nosed out Michigan for first place in the poll by a margin of three points. Notre Dame received 56 first place votes and Michigan 68. Second and third place votes helped move the Irish into first place
North Carolina easily retained 3rd place. Army, rapidly gaining support, advanced a notch to fourth place, displacing California which finished fifth.
Georgia Tech and Pennsylvania clung to last week's positions, sixth and seventh respectively. Northwestern is in the number ten spot.
Nevada and Clemson were the only two members of the 0-team unbeaten, untied contingent that were not ranked in the top ten. They ranked 11th and 12th respectively.
Protest Second Best In Rose Bowl
Pasadena, Cal., Nov. 2-(UP)—Long-smouldering objections to the Big Nine sending its second or third-best football team to the Rose Bowl broke into the open today.
The Tournament of Roses association, sponsors of the New Year's day classic, was reported preparing a protest to the Pacific Coast conference which provides the host school in the annual game.
Read the Want Ads daily.
Meet The 1948 Jayhawkers
Johnson—'Captain Hugo'
IRELAND
H. JOHNSON
Hugh Johnson, co-captain and tackle, is playing his third year of varsity football for the Jayhawkers. In his first two years, the Jayhawkers have won two Big Six co-championships and an Orange Bowl bid.
After discharge from the course
from the service Johnson followed Ray Evans to K U. Evans, "Red" Hogan, Don Fambrough, and Johnson played to one on the Second Air play team stationed at Colorado Springs, Colo.
As a high school athlete at Bay City, Texas, he won three letters in football, two in basketball, and
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two in track. He played football on the district championship team in his junior year and was team captain in his senior year.
From high school he went to Rice Institute to begin his college career. He won a freshman letter in football there and then left to serve over three years in the air force.
The rugged Texan is 6 feet 2 inches tall, and weighs 188 pounds. He is known as "Hugo" to his teammates. A senior in physical education he plans to coach after graduation. Johnson is 25 years old and is married.
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Graham Picks OU Over MU
Manhattan, Kan. Nov. 2—(UP)—Coach Ralph Graham today gave Oklahoma the nod over Missouri when the Big Seven powerhouse elevens meet Saturday at Norman,
Graham qualified as an expert. His K-State club was buried by Oklahoma, 42 to 0, and then flattened by Missouri, 49 to 7.
He said he thought Oklahoma had a better line and more backfield speed. Both teams are about the same size, Graham pointed out, "but Oklahoma's line was a lot harder to block than Missouri's."
O
Missouri's chief advantage will be in having more depth in reserve." Graham said. "Don Faurot has three teams, any one of which could give most teams in the country a rough afternoon."
Missouri's attack here last week, made in the mud, was throttled down by Coach Don Faurot, who had his club punting on first down to give K-State the ball.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIV
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Stamp Collection Traces Growth Of North America
You can study your American history with colored pictures if you care to go through the stamp collection in the Museum of Art.
Everything from the landing of Columbus to honoring the poultry industry is pictured in bright colors. There are 25 albums of stamps in the collection. Four of these are U.S. stamps, and the other albums are from foreign countries.
The oldest stamps in the collection are some three cent ones that have George Washington on them. They were printed in 1860, 1861, and 1867. Ben Franklin was honored next in 1870.
The first commemorative issues that are in the albums are in honor of the Columbian World's fair which was held in Chicago in 1893. The fair was celebrating the 400th anniversary of the discovery of America.
You can see Columbus, petitioning Isabella for aid, on his flagship, sighting land, and his welcome back to Barcelona. And for 10 cents you can see him presenting natives to the Spanish court.
Most of the collection was given to the University by Mrs. Harriet Greissinger Brown. Mrs. Brown was graduated from the University with a bachelor of music degree in 1895. She died in 1945.
Mrs. Dora Renn Bryant, a friend of Mrs. Brown, took care of the collection and presented it to the University for Mrs. Brown. Mrs. Bryant was a student at K.U. in 1899. She worked here as a reference librarian in 1903 and again from 1910 to 1920. In 1920 she became assistant to the dean of women. She held that position until her retirement in 1936 Mrs. Bryant now lives in Abilene.
If you're interested in the history of some Kansas towns, there is the collection of specially printed envelopes that helped celebrate National Air Mail week in 1938. Emporia bragged about William Allen White, Liberal said that it was the birthplace of Glen L. Martin, Atchison told the world that Amelia Earhart was born there, and Ellis said that Walter P. Chrysler walked her streets when he was a boy.
Bird City claimed to be Charles A. Lindbergh's old stomping grounds, and Kiowa advertised itself as the place where Carrie Nation began her anti-saloon crusade in 1900. Troy was proud of the 10,000 acres of apple orchards that surrounded it.
More American history is portrayed in the Famous Americans series. The most famous of our authors, educators, poets, scientists, composers, artists, and inventors are honored on these stamps.
The state of Colorado boasts about six million acres of farm lands. It boasts of 35 minerals, of which gold and silver lead; it is the chief beef sugar producing state and has over 16 beet sugar refineries; on account of its fine summer climate its tourist trade is very large.
Complete Line of ARROWS
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Q:
What brand of shorts do college men swear by but not at?
A:
ARROW SHORTS
BOW TIE
TRY Arrow shorts next time for real comfort. They come in oxford and broadcloth with gripper fasteners or buttons. Try Arrow undershirts too.
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Today:
2:30 p.m.-Johnny Jayhawk Keeps
Wells.
Glad to show you一
by Miss Anna Mae Nunnelce.
2:45 p.m.-Excursions In Science.
9:30 p.m.-Sharps and Flats
Sunflower VFW Entertains
Sunflower Veterans of Foreign Wars entertained about 50 members and their wives at the club-rooms recently.
The 'mixer', designed as a get-acquainted meeting, featured dancing, free cokes, popcorn, and beer.
Class Of '48 To Purchase
Stage Curtain For Fraser
The class of 1948 has set aside enough money to purchase a new curtain for the stage of Fraser theater.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
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An impartial poll covering all the Southern tobacco markets reveals the smoking preference of the men who really know tobacco—auctioneers, buyers and warehousemen. More of these independent experts smoke Lucky Strike regularly than the next two leading brands combined.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3,1948
The Editorial Page-
Politics And The ASC
One-third of the 30 members of the All Student Council can be prevented from voting on matters before the council by the vote of four representatives.
The A. S. C. constitution provides that the 10 organizational representatives on the council can be disenfranchised by a one-fourth vote of the 16 elected district representatives. This happened three times at a recent Council meeting.
The farce which goes on at many Council meetings will continue as long as rules such as this one remain in effect. The majority of the students will continue to think of the A.S.C. as a playground for would-be politicians.
There is no justification for such action. The organizational representatives, from such groups as Y.M.C.A., Inter-fraternity council, Inter-dorm council, A.W.S., are as important a part of the A.S.C. as the district representatives. They are more likely to be in a position to know the wishes of the students than are the elected members.
Organizational representatives serve on Council committees; they participate in discussions. In short, they know as much about what is going on as anyone else on the council. But they are not considered competent to vote on matters that a minority considers "too important."
Politics always can be expected to play a small part in Council business, but there should be limits. —John Riley.
- Letters To The Editor -
Friend In Nee
As a Chinese citizen, I am very much interested in your editorial article in the Daily Kansan Oct. 28. I would feel very sorry if it would be the idea of the American majority.
Dear Editor:
I am sorry not because China will be deprived of American aid, but because I hate to see such a short-sighted and selfish viewpoint even in the intellectual circle. Yes, I admit that China is weak and poor. She is weak materially, but fortunately, material culture forms only one part of the human culture.
To reconstruct China materially, 20 years will be plenty with foreign aids; 50 years will be enough for her to struggle alone, provided she is given a peaceful life. You might think that 50 years is a long time, but what does 50 years mean in the human history? And besides, it is the dirty world politics that is responsible in keeping China from having a peaceful life.
I need not emphasize the past glory of the Chinese history. It is only recently that she has been invaded; she has been knocked down before she could wake up. She has been exploited ever since. That is why she is weak and poor today. It takes time for her to adjust her strength and effort to be a living giant in this world again. We Chinese are trying hard to accomplish this goal.
Whenever we talk about friendship, we mean real and true friendship, as friendship that will not change even in extreme poverty and distress. If you are counting on the chance of success in bringing China as your valuable ally and decide that China is worthless to help. I would like you to know what we will think. We might have the feeling that you are turning us down after cheating us.
China can be your friend or your enemy. If she chooses to be your
friend, she will offer every effort for world peace and human integrity. If she should be compelled to stand on your opposite side, she would be ready to wait for your atomic bombs to knock out every one of her pepole.
"A friend in need is a real friend."
I am not trying to convert you to think about human relationship less materialistically. It takes a great philosopher and great statesman to understand it. Fortunately you still have such a great statesman.
I would like to tell you two Chinese proverbs:
"Never throw a stone onto somebody who falls into a well, he is liable to be your most dear friend and could be to your help in un-expected way."
Chai Yeh
I realize of course that others must share the views expressed by the editor concerning the atomic bombing of Hiroshima.
Now Russia
We might look at the other side of the picture. How many deaths did the bomb prevent? If the atomic bomb had failed, there was but one course America could have taken—the invasion of Japan.
Dear Editor:
As you know, we are now on the fringe of World War III. If all Americans are now haunted by the "dual spectre of guilt and fear," the solution is easy. Just beg forgiveness of the Japanese murderers. While they are debating their answer, we can all read Mr. Hersey's account of the Russian atomic bombing of your home town.
Donald A. Moser,
Freshman
Tryouts for the next University production "The Far-off Hills," by Lennox Robinson, have been announced by Tom Shay, director. All interested students are asked to tryout at 3:30 p.m. Thursday and Friday in Fraser theater.
DE SOTO
APPROVED
SERVICE
PLYMOUTH
Play Tryouts Tomorrow
DE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH Buckley GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQL
FINE
Paving
Dear Editor:
Your ideas for our campus parking lots, tennis courts, and grass sound most interesting. I would, however, like to make an additional suggestion to your program.
First and of primary importance, I suggest that we pave the entire campus and then paint it green. I can picture it all now, green grass all year. This would do away with the useless labor for cutting, trimming, and general upkeep of the grass. This also does away with the need for watering, and students could walk to and from classes without their umbrellas and raincoats.
With the campus paved as I have suggested, the parking problem is automatically solved. Cars could be parked anywhere, with the possible exception of the present sidewalks. And the needs for new tennis courts would disappear. A few black lines painted here and there with posts for the nets would provide enough courts to take care of all demands.
It might also be advisable to erect statues in place of all the trees and shrubs. Then as we walk to school each day, we would become acquainted with the great figures of history.
The Kansas State students would never vandalize our campus by painting a statue. There would be so many of them no one would be able to decide which one to paint. Now the way is paved for a revolutionary campus.
Patricia Wiggins, College sophomore.
University
Daily Hansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Ad-
dresser, and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Ad-
dresser Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York City, NY.
Editor-in-Chief ... James L. Robinson
Managing Editor ... Wallace W. Abbey
Asst. Man. Editor ... John Stauffer
Asst. Man. Editor ... Houser S.
City Editor ... John Wheeler
Asst. City Editor ... Leonard Snyder
Asst. City Editor ... Robert Newman
Asst. City Editor ... Mary B.
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Richard Barton
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Patricia Bentley
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Amary L.
Asst. Sports Editor ... Larry Funk
Society Editor ... Mary Lou Foley
Business Mgr. ... Paul Warner
Advertising Mgr. ... Bill Nelligan
Circulation Mgr. ... Bill Binter
Asst. Circ. Mgr. ... Ruth Clayton
Classified Mgr. ... Elizabeth Berry
Asst. Class Mgr. ... Jane Bell
Dad. Walden ... Don Tennant
Promotion Mgr. ... Don Tennant
Asst. Promotion Mgr. ... Charles O'Connor
Beaman's Radio
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JAYHAWKER NOW ENDS Thursday "How can I love you? You're the wife of the man I killed!" A great love story comes shining through!
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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Psych Tests Aid Students
One-eighth of the new students who took the psychological tests this fall have inquired about their results at the guidance bureau. William Cottle, counselor at the bureau, said that of the 1,660 students who took the tests, 220 have stopped in at the bureau for information regarding their scores.
Mr. Cottle said that the tests can help students by estimating their chance for success in college. A comparison is made of their strength or weakness in reading, English, and mathematics, with college freshmen that have taken the tests in the past and on whom records have been kept. This gives students an idea of the area of occupations in which they are most likely to be successful and helps remedy shortcomings of which they may not be aware.
"Being aware of the test results will help good students to gain more from college courses and give poorer students a better chance for success, by showing them how to distribute extra study over proper subject matter," Mr. Cottle said.
Gives Talk To WSSF
A first-hand account of conditions at universities in war-devastated countries was given No. 1 by Mr. Wilmer J. Kitchen, national executive secretary of the World Student Service fund. Mr. Kitchen spoke at a faculty luncheon at noon, met with cabinet members of the W.S.S.F. organization of the University, and conducted a forum in the Pine room of the Union.
"The surprising thing is the way that education goes on in China and India." Mr. Kitchen said in an interview. "There are twice as many students in China now as there were in 1937 when the war started.
He explained that the government puts great emphasis on education and subsidizes students, but because 90 per cent of the budget goes for war expenses, the subsidy is very small in view of the inflationary prices.
An annual drive is held on the KU. campus for the W.S.S.F. The funds are used to buy food, clothing, medical aid, books and housing for students in Europe and Asia. The drive this year will be held sometime during the spring semester.
Dance Club Moves To Larger Quarters
The Square Dance club, which has been meeting at 7 p.m. each Wednesday in the Union recreation room, hereafter will meet at that time in the drill hall of the Military Science building.
Bob Kent, organizer of the club, said it is growing so rapidly it needs more room than is available to it at the Union.
"The fees charged by the Union for rooms other than the recreation room are too much for the club." Kent said. He added that the square dancers were being given free access to the drill hall.
Members of the club will lead the square dancing at the annual YMCA.-Y.WC.A. party today.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
Special Prices to organized teams. This deal will really save you money.
KIRKPATRICK'S
Phone KU 376
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid at a later time, or during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University office. Journals bide, not later than 4 p.m. the day before publication date.
715 Mass. Phone 1018
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five
day days days
25 words or less ...35c 65c 90c
additional words ...1c 2c 3c
FOR SALE
1930 MODEL A roadster. New engine,
perfect, 46in wheel. wier 942 New Hamp-
bury.
CAMERA DETROLA; split 127, f. 4.5
flash. See at 308 E. 1919.
R Canterbury.
CANVERLEY.
NEW SPORT jacket, bought one month ago.
Size 38. Two-tone blue. Is too small for me. See at 905 Missouri or call
1631 after 7 p.m.
FIVE CIGARETTE machines in operation at good locations. Insures large, steep, acid work. Investment and little work. For information, call Jack Campbell, phone 730. 9
PORTABLE RADIO sale, new Motorola
6295ass, 188. B F. Goodrich,
9292 Mass, Phone 211.
NEW KELVINATOR refrigerators for immediate delivery, limited quantity, convenient term available. B. F Goodrich Store, 292 Mass, Phone 21. A
TWO ALTO saxaphones, 2 tenor saxaphones, 2 trumpets, 1 trombone, 1 cornet. All new and near new Martins, 1 King Silver Tone cornet, set 4 drums, Bass viol, dance band fronts. Call 1774R, after 6 p.m.
BUY HIGH-GRADE insurance by typing your work on a new Royal Underwood or Smith-Corona portable typewriter purchased at the Student Union Bookstore
AMMUNITION, Fishing Tackle. Guns and
batteries used by patrons. padrón,
Rutter's Shop. 1014 Mass.
PORTABLE MOTOROLA radios now at
$19.95 at B. Goodrich store, 922
Mass.
1945 JEEP, excellent condition. All-weather cab, five good tires, wonderful insensitive transportation. Call 1215. 4 × 10 AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHS 'Bird's-eye' for your photo album. Hurry down the hill to Rowland's or Keeler's bookstore. 8 TYPEWRITERS: Ribbons and stands, adding machines, calculators, study desks, taking posture and swivel filing cabinets, safes. Petersons. TW19% Mass. Phone 1312. TW27%
LOST
BROWN LEATHER notebook. Holds
Finder please call Chas Smith, KU 517,
Finder please call Chas Smith, KU 517.
PLAIN BROWN leather bill fold containing the name Ruthie M. Wagner. Finder keep money, return billfold to 1111 Miss, or call 1789J. 3
SHEAFFER PEN. Anniversary gift,
Green with horizontal white stripes.
Wednesday between F.S. and Green hall be-
come the venue for issues. Please call
2151W. Delbert Bengs.
BROWN LEATHER notebook containing lecture notes, trig assignments, quiz questions, project assignments, return of notebook; only its contents. Pione Dorothy Leary. 569. Reward. 5
SHEAFFER fountain pen Friday, Oct. 29.
Brown mottled color, can be identified.
Please call Joan Bremer. 860. Reward. 4
LOAFER JACKET, gray plaid with dark brown front. Reward. 1725 Indiana. Ph. 2631W.
PAIR OF HOM-Rimmed glasses in brown
morning. Please call Jim Lowther, 957
morning.
BUSINESS SERVICE
MOTHER, WILL CARE for your child in my home if you are working or contemplating a holiday job. Phone 2579J.
Address 13181' ew EMP. 5
A GRAY Parker 51 fountain pen between a
Reward offered. Finder call 27358
Reward offered.
PLAIN BROWN leather billboard containing papers of Bill Russo. Liberal reward. After keep money. 800. Hamp. PLAIN BROWN newspaper Oct. 16. Plain bus at 8th and Miss., or between Frank Strong and Journalism building. Sentimental value. Phone 755. 3
TYPNING DONE, immediate attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Phone 1601 or bring to 1209 Ohio, Mrs. Sheilds.
STUDENTS LAUNDRY wanted. Also
leasing them to 1205 Rhode Island.
Mrs. Mrs. Earl Jellison.
TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel. 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. Ask for Miss Helen. 11-9
ELECTRONIC PROOF of your money' worth in watch repair at Balfour's.
BUV OR RENT: Magnetic recorder-pro-
tapes and tape and wire. Entertaining at-
parties with a recording studio or in-语
languages; for practicing speeches or
violin. Peterson's 't1' $705; Phone 13
WHEN ALL FETS including dogs, birds, fish, cats, pigeons, skunks, parrots, squirrels, rats, mice, etc., go shopping for an outfit they go to Grant's Pet Shop, 1218 Conn. St. Phone 418. Everything in the pet field—their needs are our business.
EBERHART and Son, tailors. Finest samples made to measure, suits, topscapes and overcoats. Alterations, repairing and leather work. 831% Mass. 19
ALTERING SUITS, coats, and dresses,
Relining coats a specialty. Handmade
tailored button holes. Work guaranteed.
Call 2959R, 842 Indiana. 12
RIDE TO WICHITA, Friday afternoon or
saturday morning. Call B. Lamb, 86. 5
RIDE TO BEATRICE, near or vicinity,
vice. Call 5. Call Joan Peterson,
phone 164.
WANTED
FREEHAND drawings. Sketches that have been made in classroom and carry a perspective and shading required. Will pay $2.00 to $3.00 for each. Exchange pay $2.00 to $3.00 for each. Industrial Products, 217 Palm Ave., Santa Barbara, California, Clarent Middleton.
CAMPUS representative. By importer of English shoes designed for young men their apparel. For details write British imports. S3 Space Street, Brockton, Mass.
SALESMEN and women wanted: Full or part time. See Mr. Brooks at room 1, $831½ Mass. at noon or phone 1104 for appointment.
MISCELLANEOUS
AFTER THE show, drop in and have a
Friendly Fountain. Elden's
D pharmacy
Phone 407
SOAR WITH THE Skyline Dinner Club.
We specialize in chicken and other fine foods. Great band on Friday and Saturday nights. You'll not regret it. $3
Livengood-Nash Motors
MAGNETIC RECORDING machines,
typewriters, adding and calculating ma-
cabinets, cabinets, tables, soils, filing
cabinets, desks and tables, solids, reverbera-
tors at Peterson's, 710% Mass. Call 213-869-8050.
WILL SERVE evening meal to two boys
916 Kentucky, phone 1085R.
A new place to buy used cars . . .
FOR RENT
VACANCY FOR ONE boy; previous occupant pledged fraternity; 14 Tenn. TWO ROOM furnished apartment with a sink. Will accommodate 3 boys. 510 Ohio
DOUBLE ROOM with single beds for two men. Private bath. 2040 La.
FURNISHED apartment for two boys. Call 23291
Bremen, Ind.—(UIP) The cannon at the Bremen fair boomed and the crowd watched expectantly for the "human cannonball" inside to shoot through the air into a net 185 feet away. Minutes later, attendants found Hugo Zacchini unconscious inside the cannon. They said he was overcome by powder fumes. The charge wasn't powerful enough to lift him into the air.
Human Cannonball Misfires
1946 Nash with radio and
617 Mass.
El Toro, Cal.-(UP)-Through the combat zones of the Pacific went 1st Lt. James Magee, USMCR, of Dallas, Tex., and never received a scratch. While inspecting a Marine Reserve squadron, a fidgety private, presenting his rifle for the "once-over," dropped it. Result: one fractured toe for Magee.
This week's special:
Marine Gains A Toe Hold
heater . . . $1,650.00
FURNISHED apartment for two boys
Call 2329J.
Santa
K. U. STUDENTS ONLY! Clip this ad for a 15% Discount on all
Xmas Photo Orders Taken Before November 15,1948!
RACHELLE STUDIOS
730 Mass. Phone 302 Bob Karnes, student representative
---
REFERENCE
BOOK SALE 50-50
We split 50-50 with you on a huge stock of books!!!
Some new, some used—but all are bargains you'll want at 1/2 the price.
ENDS FRIDAY, NOV. 5TH
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1948
Industrialists Conference Starts Nov.18
"Industrial Relations in a Peak Economy" will be the general theme of an Industrial Relations conference to be held at the University from Thursday, Nov. 18, through Saturday, Nov. 20.
Chancellor Deane W. Malott will welcome the representatives Nov. 18, and Frank T. Stockton, dean of University Extension will preside over the session. The first topic to be discussed will be "Modern Management Philosophy as Applied to Industrial Relations." The speaker will be announced later.
The conference is sponsored by the Associated Industries of Kansas, Industrial Council of Kansas City, Kansas City, Kansas Industrial Development commission, and the Kansas State Chamber of Commerce.
"Industrial Relations Begin with Selection," will be the topic discussed at 1:30 p.m. Nov. 13 by Ernest R Esch, City National Bank and Trust company, Kansas City, Mo., and Austin H. Turney, professor of education. "Induction Sets the Stage for the New Employee," will be discussed at 3 p.m. by Ray Davies, Western Auto Supply company, Kansas City, Mo.; George Trombolb, Boeing Airplane company, Wichita and Raymond F. Wallace, associate professor of industrial management
The Nov. 19 session will begin with a talk by Dolph Simons, of the World company, Lawrence. At 9 am. 'Management Needs to Get Its Ideas and Plans Across to All the Personnel' will be discussed by James Hatch, Union Wire Rope company, Kansas City, Mo.; M. B. Goff, the Coleman company, Wichita, and Terrel E. Clarke, instructor in industrial management.
At 10:30 a.m. "Management Needs to Know How All Employees Think and Feel will be discussed by Edward T. McNally, McNally-Pittsburgh Manufacturing company, and W. W. Mason, Gleaner Harvester corporation. Independence, Mo.
The afternoon session will deal with the topic "What Do Workers Expect from Their Jobs and from Management?" Discussion on security, recognition, and management leadership will be led by J. Y. Jount. Industrial Union council, C.I.O.; Harold Edwards, United Steelworkers, C.I.O., Kansas City; Kan.; Samuel S. White, Kansas City joint board, International Ladies Garment Workers union, A.F.L. Kansas City, Mo.; George J. Harrison, Central Labor union, A.F.L. Kansas City, Kan., and Anthony Smith, assistant professor of psychology.
Fred Sharpe, University Extension lecturer, will speak Nov. 20 on "Industrial Relations and Public Relations Are Selling Jobs." The leaders of this discussion will be D. W. Harris, Trans-World Airlines, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert Lemon, Spencer Chemical company, Pittsburgh; Carol Ward, Mid-Continent Airlines, Kansas City, Mo., and J. B. Hann, Sears, Roebuck and company, Kansas City, Mo.
Bridge Club Picks Teams For Tourney
Several teams sponsored by the Four No Bridge club will represent K.U. in the 1949 intercollegiate bridge tournament.
The players will be chosen either by their number of points in regular Four No Bridge play, or a special elimination tourney will be held, said Charles Ciston, president of the Four No Bridge club.
A preliminary round will be played by mail in February. Two teams from each of eight geographical regions will meet in the finals Friday, April 22, and Saturday, April 23 at the Drake hotel in Chicago.
invitations to the tournament have been sent to 326 colleges and universities.' The title and silver trophy were won last year by Capitol university, Columbus, Ohio.
Fine Arts Juniors Will Give Recital
Five fine arts juniors will appear on the weekly student recital at 3 p.m. tomorrow in Frank Strong auditorium.
The recital will include four vocal numbers and one piano number. Bernadine Read will sing "Tu lo sai!" by Torelli; Eva Joyce Rohrer will sing "Plus de depit" by Gretry; Thelma Mims will sing "Fix me, Jesus," a spiritual arranged by Hall Johnson; Nancy Messenger will sing "Ritorna Vincitor," an aria from "Aida" by Verdi; and Roger Butts will play "Polonaise in E Major" by Liszt.
Federalists Map World Peace
How to prevent a destructive war of atom bombs and bacteriological warfare which seems powerless to prevent under present conditions was discussed at a meeting of the United World Federalists Tuesday.
W. E. Sandelius, professor of political science and John Malone, instructor in journalism, based the world's only hope on world government.
"I base my reasons on a self preservation level." Mr. Malone said, "From such weapons as the atomic bomb, and other scientific developments, there is no civilian escape. World government is the only solution to save the world."
All people agree that we do not want war." Mr. Sandelius said, "The question is how to take the next step to prevent it. I have received several letters from friends proposing different plans. A plan for the setting up of a United States of the World superimposed on the United Nations was one of the plans. Others feel that we should scrap the United Nations and begin again with a new organization.
"We are looking for something to disarm the world," Mr. Sandelius said. "I recently heard of a plan for a World Disarmament authority. Russia might be more willing to take part in this."
Student Architects Plan Modern Hall
Plans for a convention hall in a resort city in Colorado are on display in Marvin hall. The plans have been drawn by senior architecture students for their senior problem. They are one the third floor of Marvin.
There are 31 different plans for a convention hall. They include such features as an auditorium seating 1,500 people, cafes, meeting rooms, lounges, terraces, and pools.
The imaginary site is a plot of ground 400 by 500 feet with a lake on the south. The problems are prepared under the supervision of J. M Kellogg, professor of architecture.
The proposed convention halls are built of red brick, native stone, and architectural concrete. The designs are all modern with stainless steel trimming and use a large amount of glass.
The University Disciple Student fellowship is sponsoring a potluck dinner at 5:45 p.m. today in Myers hall. hall. Rhodes Thompson, national president of the fellowship, will speak.
UDS To Hold Dinner Tonight
All students who are members of the Christian church are invited to attend.
Marrocco In 'Musiklexicon,' German Musical 'Who's Who'
The name of W. Thomas Marroco, associate professor of violin and music history, has been included in Moser's "Musiklexicon," for his research and contributions in the field of musicology.
Democrats Take Control Of Congress
By UNITED PRESS
Democrats today captured control of both houses of congress.
The United Press tabulation at 11 a.m. showed the Democrats had elected 19 candidates in contests for the 32 senate seats involved in Tuesday's election. With 30 holdover Democrats in the senate, they were assured of the 49 seats needed for a majority of the 96-member senate.
At 10:15 a.m., the United Press count showed that the Democrats had won 234 house seats, 16 more than a majority. They were leading in 26 other districts.
Democratic nominees also were leading in five of the unsettled senate races. Victory in all of those would run their senate total up to 54.
Shortly before the Democratic house majority was nailed down, Sen. J. Howard McGrath, chairman of the Democratic national committee, issued a statement saying his party was sure of the house.
The 80th congress, which President Truman condemned as the "second worst" in history, had 45 Democrats and 51 Republicans in the senate. The present house lineup is 243 Republicans, 184 Democrats and two American Labor party members. Six house seats are vacant.
If the Democrats hold their own in the races where they now lead, they will have 260 seats in the house and 54 in the senate.
"This insures that the liberal progressive program of legislation proposed by President Truman will now be carried out with both houses of the congress safely in Democratic control," Mr. McGrath said.
SAM Plans Tour Of Organ Company
Members of the Society for the Advancement of Management will take a field trip Thursday to the Reuter Organ company in Lawrence, a member said today.
The purpose of the trip is to show various methods of production used in the plant. Attention will be given to systems of accounting and to the practical inside view of this type business house.
The group will leave at 1:15 p.m. from the Union. About 20 students will take part in the tour.
A field trip to Phillips Refining company in Kansas City has been planned for Wednesday, Nov. 10 as an advance project for the club.
Student Directory May Arrive Today
Richard Menueu, business manager of the Student Directory, said today, that the first shipment would arrive late today or tomorrow. The first shipment will be only 1,000 copies and will be distributed to the faculty.
Distribution to students will begin either Friday or Monday, Nov. 8 at the Student Union book Store. The day will depend on when the full shipments will arrive. The exact date will be carried in the University Daily Kansan either tomorrow or Friday.
To Commission 17 In ROTC
Seventeen R.O.T.C. students will complete their training and receive commissions at the end of this semester, Col. John Alfrey, R.O.T.C. commandant said today.
Men from the engineering school who will be commissioned are Richard C. Beach, James G. Bowman, Robert M. Riegle, and Charles W. Spieth, air force; Herbert W. Bucholtz, and Chester W. Spencer, artillery, and Edwin M. Stryker, infantry.
School of Business students are:
Clemeth A. Abercrombie, James L.
Baska, Eugene C. Bribach, James
D. McBride, Walter J. Michaelis,
and Marshal P. Warner, all of the
air force.
Frank A. Korber, College, will be commissioned in the air force.
School of Journalism students are Harold D. Nelson, and Larry D. Funk, air force.
Arthur A. Clevinger, School of Pharmacy, is in the air force.
Patton Will Talk To Y's
The Rev. John Patton, University pastor of the Presbyterian church, will speak Saturday at a conference of the Y.W.C.A. and the Y.M.C.A. of the University and Kansas State college. The conference will be held at 10 a.m. at Henley house
The Rev. Mr. Patton will speak on "The Christian in the University."
Eldon J. Fields, assistant professor of political science, will speak on "The Place of Universities in the World."
Experts Are Eating Words, Maybe Hats After Making Rather Hasty Statements
The commissions and committees of the two schools will compare activities. An informal recreation hour will precede the banquet, which will be held at 5:30 p.m.
By HARMAN NICHOLS
Washington, Nov. 3—(UP)—Today was a swell day to swallow a million words or eat a meal of a fat cow.
The experts in Washington wrote their stories in advance Tuesday. Some made their pieces an open letter to Tom Dewey, telling how the world ought to be run. Others wrote a fond farewell to Mr. Truman.
Then the boys retired to the Press club lounge to listen to the returns over the radio. Along about midnight, many of the scribes retired hastily to their offices to do some fancy hedging in substitute yards.
Washington, the home of presidents, was a sleepy town today—same as it was election day. Extra details of cops were called out for duty Tuesday night—in case of a wild celebration, but the city was so quiet the chief sent 'em home before 11 p.m.
Persons in the district, of course, are interested in who lives in the White House. But they have nothing to say about it since they are denied the right to vote.
I talked to a few of them Tuesday and they are pretty burned up about it. Maurice Cullati, waiter, for one. He lives less than 50 feet from the Maryland line. If he lived over there he could vote.
"I could see a polling place from my front window," he said.
John H. Wilson, a garage mechanic who works in the district but votes in Maryland cast a vote, all right, but he didn't like the way they do things over there in Montgomery county, Md.
The county advertises a secret ballot.
"But when you step up to get your ballot," says John, "A clerk shouts out: 'John H. Wilson—Democrat.'"
SDX Gets OK From Council To Publish Owl
By a vote of 10 to 8, the A.S.C. named Sigma Delta Chi, honorary journalism fraternity, as publisher of the University's official campus humor magazine. Sigma Delta Chi also was granted permission to call the magazine The Sour Owl.
The council also voted that more than one humor magazine may be published on the campus, although the Sour Owl will be the only official publication.
Thomas Milligan, representing a group which sought official status for a magazine and permission to use the name Sour Cwil, announced that his group still will publish, and that the name of the magazine will be announced soon.
Dorothy Scroggy, secretary, and Robert Thayer, inter - fraternity council representative, presented a report on the National Students association with the estimate that it would cost the University approximately $975 to join and play an active part. The council voted to send observers to regional and national conferences before making a final decision. Doris Then, College junior, and Austin Turney, College senior, were appointed to attend the regional conference in St. Louis, Saturday Nov. 13, as observers.
Ernest Friesen chairman of the traditions committee, announced that the student council of Kansas State college will be guests of the A.S.C. at a banquet Thursday. The banquet is an annual tradition designed to promote friendship between the two schools.
Craig Hampton, fine arts senior, and Robert W. Davis, engineering senior, new council members, were sworn in by Patrick Thiessen, president. They fill vacancies caused by the resignations of George Lowe, District IV, and Hugh Johnson, District III.
2
When asked by a member of the audience, if science would stop us ing the word "photosynthesis," Dr van Niel replied, "No, it serves a good purpose and is just what it says it is, a system dependent on light."
Dr. C. B. van Niel, professor of biochemistry at Stanford university's Hopkins marine station, discussed "The Comparative Biochemistry of Photosynthesis," at the Sigma Xi meeting last night in Bailey hall.
W Lit N
Chemist Talks To Sigma Xi
Dr. van Niel presented evidence that green plants are the climax of evolution toward self-sufficiency in the use of sunshine for energy.
Evidence has been found. Dr. van Niel reported, that certain pigmented bacteria make use of a similar type of photosynthesis. It is accomplished by a photochemical decomposition of water.
Modern green plants, with their chlorophyll, said Dr. van Niel, utilize the energy from sunlight to break down molecules of water. Hydrogen and carbon dioxide are changed by the plants into plant structures. They discard oxygen in the process which maintains the balance of nature and constitution of air.
W bran ceeo Mr. supe mas incr dela Hol
By study of the photosynthesis process, Dr. van Niel said, it is possible to postulate the "cell of life" through an evolutionary line of enzymes.
Change Men's Swimming Time At Robinson Gym Pool
The physical education department has announced a change in the men's free swimming periods. The periods are now from 7 to 8 p.m. on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, and from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturdays. There will be no swimming periods on the days of the Oklahoma-Kansas football game on Saturday, Nov. 20.
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Nov. 4, 1948
Lawrence, Kansas
STUDENT NEWSPAPER
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Will Complete Library Annex Next March
Work on the west end of the library, slow at first, is now proceeding on schedule according to Mr. E. O. Hollingsworth, building supervisor. Shortage of skilled stone masons, unfavorable weather, and increased building costs have caused delays in building procedure, Mr. Hollingsworth said.
Completion of the annex is scheduled for March 28, 1949. Mr. Hollingsworth said that barring further unforeseen difficulties the building will be finished by that time. Work has progressed to the point where sub-contractors can begin work on the building.
Plans for the $300,000 building include a sub-basement for a bindery, two reading rooms in the basement and on the first floor, and offices on the top floor. The space now occupied by the library supervisor's office will be used to provide extra space for the card catalogue. Because of increased costs, the appropriation will be insufficient to pay all the improvements formerly anticipated. Less than half the book shelves originally planned can be purchased.
Plans for other improvements include remodeling of the front entrance to include three doors instead of two.
BSA Plans Mixer At Sunflower
A mixer for students in the School of Business who live at Sunflower is being planned. Richard Yaple, president of the Business School association, said Wednesday that the mixer would be held in Sunflower so students enrolled in the school would have an opportunity to "join in the activities of the association." No date has been set.
Students Surprised At Election
The executive committee of the association and its member groups have decided to study revision of the association's constitution.
Comments ranging all the way from "I'm surprised," to "I told you so" buzzed across the campus Wednesday morning after Dewey had conceded the election of President Truman.
Everyone had an opinion which they willingly shared with anyone who would listen. Most comments were tempered with great respect for the president as they tried to explain or justify the results.
Among the statements and comments made were:
George B. Smith, dean of the School of Education: "This is a good example of overconfidence. The Republicans were not fighting or pressing in the campaign, thinking it was in the bag. Someone forgot to look into the bag. And someone overlooked Mr. Truman's training in politics."
Darrell L. Havener, first year law:
"Tm astounded. Mr. Truman did it
by himself and deserves a lot of
credit."
Emil L. Telfel, assistant professor of journalism: 'I'm not too surprised. I've believed all along it would be close and a new congress would be elected, and said so in my classes . . . It is a complete repudiation of the 80th congress and its record. Also,
the voters were not impressed with the stale, old clichés such as 'we need a new hand at the helm of the ship of state.'"
Louis Hammer, business senior:
"I like to see my vote count, so of course, I like the way the election went."
Harold G. Snyder, business senior:
"I like the results of the election,
but I hope that everything being Democratic won't be too much of a good thing."
Thomas B. Herring, College junior: "The election of a Democratic congress was due to reaction against the 80th congress, so I think the election of the same party to the administration is good."
Henry H. Reed, College junior: "I'm satisfied with the way the election went. The upset occurred because, although the people wanted a change, they didn't want to sacrifice prosperity to get it."
Robert Chaput, College sophomore:
"The Taft-Hartley act in the Democratic platform swung the country to Truman."
Marvin Arth and Robert Edman, College sophomores: "Since it seems there will be a democratic congress also. Truman's election will make
for more coordination in the government.
Patti Kennedy, College freshman:
"It was a total surprise to me. I had thought all along that there was no question about Dewey winning, even though I was for Truman.
Leonard Fields, fine arts freshman:
"I thought it would be a close battle, but I expected Dewey to lose because of the labor vote."
William Rosser, business junior:
"I voted straight Republican, but
I am relieved to see Truman win because it will make for a more unified government since both the house and senate went Democratic."
Arnold Brandt, business junior, "I think it was the best thing, but I was very surprised. I don't think the Republicans turned out very well because they thought they had the election won."
Dr. Edward Robinson, associate professor of philosophy: "Last year a lot of my colleagues told me that Truman's goose was cooked, and I said it was by no means impossible that he would recover because the public tends to be sympathetic to people who make mistakes and try to correct them. I was surprised at the outcome, however."
Faculty Will Give 5 Forums
"Power Elements in World Politics" will be the subject in the first of a series of five forums which start at 7:30 tonight in the auditorium of Liberty Memorial High school. All subjects will be of national interest.
The Rev. Harold G. Barr, dean of the School of Religion, will be moderator for the series.
Speakers include Thomas R. Smith, associate professor of geography; C.B. Realey, professor of history; Cecil G.L. Lalicker, professor of geology, and Walter Kollmorgen, professor of geography.
The fee for the five forums of the series is $1. D. E. L. Novotny, superintendent of schools said that tickets could be bought at the board of education office, or at the door of the auditorium.
Flu Shots Are 'Painless'— Get One Now At Strong Hall
By KAY DYER
Influenza immunization shots were given to 392 students Wednesday, the first day the vaccinations were being given. Dr. Ralph I. Canutson, director of University health service, said he considered the response "good." Three hundred of the shots were given in Marvin hall, and the rest in Watkins Memorial hospital.
Today and Friday the vaccination station is in Frank Strong hall. On Monday, Nov. 8, and Tuesday, Nov. 9, it will be in the Union. On Wednesday, Nov. 10 and Thursday, Nov. 11, the station will be moved back to Frank Strong hall, and on Friday, Nov. 12, back to Marvin hall. The vaccinations will be given in Watkins Memorial hospital every day through Nov. 12.
"There is no way to escape sticking a needle into the person who takes an influenza vaccination, but other than that, there really is nothing to be agraid of." Dr. Canuteson said.
Out of 8,000 doses given in 1947, less than 15 per cent showed any noticeable reaction, and in many cases the only reaction was a slight soreness or itching at the "site of injection," he said. If anyone does feel sick or has a slight fever a few hours after taking a shot, it will be because he is already coming down
To make the process less painful, the shots given by the health service are small doses. 1 of a cubic centimeter, injected into the skin rather than a larger dose injected under the skin. With the vaccine is a drop of local anesthetic to act as a "bain killer."
Dr. Canuteson warned that anyone who is allergic to eggs should not take the vaccination, as the vaccine is made on a chick embryo and there may be some egg protein left
TrumanWin Result Of Trend Congress, And Indifference
with a cold or influenza, Dr. Ca-nuteson said.
Any reactions should take place within four to eight hours following the inoculation, so that students who are vaccinated in the afternoon would react when one would normally expect them to be in bed,
The vaccination, which lasts from 60 to 90 days, may be repeated in case of a flu epidemic later in the school term.
Avoidance of issues by the Republicans, and the trend toward planning help to account for the Democratic victory in Tuesday's national elections according to two men who should know something about politics.
F. J. Moreau, dean of the School of Law, and Walter E. Sandelius, professor of political science, agree on certain specific reasons for the defeat of Gov. Thomas F. Dowey. Republi-
F. J. Moreau, dean of the School of fessor of political science, agree on co of Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, Republi- can candidate for the presidency, but differ in their overall interpretations of the elections.
Dean Moreau said, "In my opinion, Dewey's mistake was that he relied too much on the advice of pollsters who told him that he was assured victory and need not worry about discussing issues.
"Dewey therefore flaged the air for five months with vague words concerned only with generalities."
"A small group of people cannot face world public opinion on such a basic issue very long."
Professor Sandelius attributed the Republican candidate's defeat to the trend in the western world toward a "certain amount of planning against depression and for public welfare."
With the Dixiecrats carrying only four states. Dean Moreau said that " their first upheaval will probably be their last.
"The thinking southeners, while they believe themselves best qualified to handle their own problems, realize they are facing an irresistible force in the civil rights program," the dean explained.
Geological Survey Board Here Today
The Mineral Industries council of Kansas will hold its annual meeting today at the University. The council is the advisory body to the state geological survey.
Both men agree that the rising cost of living and Truman's persuasiveness in his constant attack on the 80th congress were important factors.
"If the president had vacillated and tried to hold the southern conservatives in line, he would have lost much of the liberal vote and perhaps the election," he said.
He said, "If the Republicans hold to their conservative position, we may well have another long tenure of Democratic administrations. If the Republicans move toward the left, the outlook may be changed by 1952."
Members expected to attend are Morris Breidental, Kansas City; O. W. Bilharz, Baxter Springs; Charles Cook; Concordia; John Garlough, Wichita; I. E. Messimer, Russell; Benjamin O. Weaver, Mullinville; W. L. Stryker, Fredonia; Brian O'Brian, Buffalo; Dr. John Frye, executive director of the survey; and Chancellor Dean W. Malott, ex officio director of the survey.
Dean Moreau believes that the fact that Democrats carried both houses of congress is conclusive evidence of the dissatisfaction of the electorate with the policies of the 80th congress.
As for third parties, Professor Sandelius said that Truman's leaning to the left-of-center had much to do with the deflation of the Wallace movement.
The council's function is to keep the Geological Survey informed on needs of Kansas mineral industries and water-users in agriculture. There are representatives from industry, finance and agriculture.
Greeks Sweep Freshman Votes; Guard Elected
The Pachacamac-N. O. W. ticket made a clean sweep in the freshman election Wednesday, easily electing he class officers and the Men's A.S.C. member.
A close battle developed in the race for the women's A.S.C. seat with Jean Haussermann, N. O. W. candidate, winning by a scant nine votes.
Officers for the freshman class are president, Donald Guard; vice president, Alice Ann Sellers; secretary, Gretchen Freeburg; and treasurer, Thomas Payne, all Pachacamac candidates.
The Greek ticket retained control of the A.S.C. by winning both freshman seats, James Martin will be the new men's representative and Miss Hausermann will represent the women. The Greek majority on the A.S.C. is now 10 to 7, by virtue of the election returns.
Freshmen women elected two representatives to the Associated Women Students' senate. They are Polly Owen, and Betty Brown, fine arts freshmen.
The Greek trend was evident from the start of the count as all Pachacamac candidates rolled up margins of almost two to one. This can be attributed to the very light vote, 766 freshmen out of a total of 1,803.
Wallace B. Foster, first year law,
Pachacamac campaign manager,
in speaking for the victors said. "We feel that the freshmen fairly expressed their preferences and we promise those who supported the Pach-N.O.W. ticket that we will do all in our power to further the interests of the freshman class."
Robert Bennett, spokesman for the defeated Independent party, commented. "We believe that the mandate of the freshmen was honestly presented with the exception of a few minor political maneuvers. We feel that our defeat was mainly due to inertia on the part of independent freshmen in this election, but we intend to make a comeback in the general election in the spring."
The president of winning N.O.W. Helen Heath, said, "Naturally, we are very glad to win the election and all of our candidates will do their best to live up to their obligations. Now, we must work toward the spring election."
The women's A.S.C. election was not only close but a thriller. At the end of the first count, Miss Haussermann led by one vote but several ballots were discovered in the box used for voting on A.W.S. seats. These votes gave her a larger majority.
Ask Army Or Anthropologist To Solve Economic Problems
Businessmen aren't exclusive. They want to know what a sociologist, an anthropologist, or an Army colonel thinks about economic problems today. That's the theory behind the University's graduate course, Human Relations in Business.
Edward G. Nelson, associate professor of accounting, who conducts the course, states that he doesn't con- sider himself an instructor but a mediator for discussions structors, businessmen
"We discuss and analyze actual case histories of business and community life to gain the ideas of individuals with varied backgrounds speaking on incidents from their own experience," he explained.
"No solutions are offered. What we are attempting to do is to start a bridge between academic life and actuality." he added.
Twenty graduates are enrolled in the course but other students, instructors, businessmen, Army, Navy,
and N.R.O.T.C. personnel take part in the discussions. Each week a member of the Command and General staff college at Fort Leavenworth sits in on the seminar.
WEATHER
Kansas—Considerable cloudiness with showers today. Clearing and cooler tonight. Friday fair. No important change in temperature.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1948
Official Bulletin
Nov. 4,1948
Delta Phi Delta, 5 today, 316 Frank Strong. Special meeting.
X.W.C.A. freshman commission,
7:15 tonight, Henley house.
Mortar Board, 8:45 tonight, Miller hall
A. W.S. senate, 4:30 today, Gamma Phi Beta house.
Quack club, 7:30 tonight, Robinson gym. Both old and new members.
K.U. Amateur Radio club, 5 today,
205 E. E. laboratory.
Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship,
7 tonight, 131 Frank Strong.
Deutscher verein wird sich Don-
nestag um vier und dreisig auf
Zimmer 402. Fraser, versammeln.
Delta-Sigma Pi business meeting for all actives, 7:30 tonight, recreation room, Union building.
Alteneo se reunira el jueves a las 7:30 en 113 de F. S. Elecciones de los oficiales. Senor Ricart hablada de Espana.
N.S.A. meeting, 7:30 tonight.
Frank Strong auditorium.
Owil engineers: A.S.C.E., 7:30 to
night, Lindley auditorium. Professor
Price, mathematics department
will speak and show pictures on
high level precision bombing.
Froshwacks, 7:30 tonight, 103
Frank Strong. Bring money for K-
State game tickets.
Alpha Kappa Psi professional meeting, 7:30 tonight, Pine room, Union. George Docking, speaker.
Y.M.C.A. today, 4 p.m., World Relatedness commission, Pine room,
Union, 5 p.m. Social Responsibility commission, Pine room, Union, 7:30 p.m., Freshmen Y's Men's club, East room, Union.
Two vacancies now exist in A.S.C. due to resignation of George Lowe, District IV, and Hugh Johnson, District III.
Pai Chi Theta business meeting,
7:30 tonight, Carbin hall.
University Women's club annual faculty reception, 8 p.m. to 19 p.m. Saturday, Union ballroom.
Gamma Delta initiation for new members, 5:30pm. Sunday, Immanuel Lutheran church. Banquet to follow. Castle Tea room.
Epicopi College club supper
5:30 p.m. Sunday, Parish house.
I. S.A. Council, house representatives and I.S.A. members, 5 pm Tuesday, Nov. 9, 16 Fraser.
Richard R. Davis, '47, recently passed the Illinois test for certified public accountant. Davis lives in Westmont, Ill., and received a B.S. degree in business here.
Easton To Speak To Teachers Today
Millard "Bill" Easton, Varsity track coach, will speak at 3:30 p.m. today before the Health and Education clinic of the State Teachers' meeting at Topeka. His topic will be "Track and Its Possibilities."
Grad Passes State Test
Fort Worth—(UP)—Nursing runs in the McCarthy family. Patricia is in pre-clinic work at St. Joseph's School of Nursing, Her sister, Catherine, is a senior student at the same school. Two other sisters, Josephine and Margaret Mary, both are graduate nurses in San Antonio. An aunt of the girls, Miss Katie O'Brien, is night supervisor at St. Joseph's hospital here.
He was one of 138 out of 500 candidates who passed the examination.
No Sickness In This Family
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"Most unprecedented" were the words used by Dr. John Ise, professor of economics, to describe the presidential election.
Also Amazing And Astounding
He elaborated by telling his class Wednesday, that the results were also "most extraordinary."
Police Recover Miss Habein's Car
The 1947 Chevrolet coach reported stolen from Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, has been recovered by the Lawrence police who found it parked in front of the post office at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday. Miss Habein said the automobile had been taken from her home at 1525 Louisianna sometime between noon and 2 p.m. Tuesday.
Other items taken from the home include a portable radio, a small Bolsey camera, one piece of luggage, an electric alarm clock, and a few small pieces of jewelry. Police report they have found no trace of this additional missing property.
Savor THE Flavor
Alumnus Buys Two Papers
Elton E. Carter, '38, has purchased the Norton Daily Telegram and the weekly Norton County Champion. He was originally from Elkhart, Kans.
University Daily Kansan
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Socially Speaking
Triangle Elects
The pledge class of the Triangle fraternity announces the election of the following officers: Eugene Kuehle, president; Harry Rogers, vice-president; and Robert Kleist, secretary.
The active members recently elected Lawrence Hyde chapter treasurer.
Sigma Pi Pledges
Sigma Pi announces the pledging of Glenn Bethany of Russell.
Triangle Pledges
The Triangle fraternity announces the pledging of William Garden of Nickerson.
Triangle Halloween Party
Triangle fraternity held a Halloween party Oct. 29 at the chapter house. Guests were Ethel Swart, Marilyn Lind, Jean Gordon, Nancy Smith, Doris Miller, Nancy McGraw, Dorothy James, Patti Sue McClatehey, Nanette Hyer, Elizabeth Stenzel, Marian Mills, Georgia Ginther, Jerry Clements, Jane Koalzer, Esther Williams, Patricia McGowney, Joanne Mannon, Shirley Jobs, Margery Kauffman.
Donna Lewis, Ruth Williams, Jackie Ogan, Shirley Lindquist, Carolyn Keith, Kittie Nite, Stella Budenosky, Barbara Zimmerman, Lois Cook, Jo Hoffman, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Aker, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Helm, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burwell, Mr. and Mrs. James Deveney, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Stein, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Frazer.
Chaperones were Mrs. Harry W.
Potts, Mrs. Fanny DeLozier,
Prof. and Mrs. Robert Lamberton.
Iota Sigma Pi Tea
Hostesses who poured were Mrs. Joseph Murray and Mrs. George W. Stratton.
Iota Sigma Pi, honorary chemistry sorority, held a tea Sunday afternoon in the English room of the Union.
Guests were women science faculty members, students of science, wives of chemistry professors, and the dean and assistant dean of women.
Hahn-van der Smissen Engagement
Foster hall announces the engagement of Ines Lorene Hahn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Loren Hahn of Dighton, to Eugene van der Smissen, son of the Rev. and Mrs. T. A. van der Smissen of Marton, S. D.
Miss Hahn is a College senior, Mr van der Smissen is also a College senior and a member of Phi Chi, medical fraternity.
The announcement was made monday night at Foster. Chocolates were passed by Dorothy Hahn and Wanda Good.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
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Today:
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2:30 p.m.-On The Flying Carpet- Tom Shay, story teller.
2:45 p.m.-Musical Matinee- Bob Cristman, narrator.
9:30 p.m.-The Dean's choir, transcribed.
9:45 p.m.-Salesmanship today.
9:45 p.m.—Salesmanship today— Fred Sharpe.
Law Wives Elect New Officers
Officers of the Law wives were elected Wednesday in the law lounge.
They are Mrs. Robert H. Royer, president; Mrs. Milo M. Unrush, vice-president; Mrs. Dwight O. Day, correspondent secretary; Mrs. John E. Honsinger, recording secretary; Mrs. Paul B. Watson, treasurer; and Mrs. Robert H. Gale, social chairman.
A dinner will be held in the Kansas room Wednesday, Nov. 17. Reservations must be made by Friday Nov. 12. The Haskell dancers will be on the program.
The next bridge meeting will be Wednesday, Nov. 10, in the law lounge.
Kansas Music Educators Convene in Topeka Today
Dr. Elin Jorgensen, associate professor of music education, was one of the speakers at the Kansas Music Education Association convention in Topcka this afternoon.
Business Sorority To Meet
Her address was "Helping the Classroom Teacher Build a Music Program via Principles Common to Child Development, Language, Arts, and Music." She also gave a demonstration to illustrate her speech, assisted by the children of the second and third grades from Polk school and the 6th grade from Lowman Hills school in Topeka.
Phi Chi Theta, women's business sorority, will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in Corbin hall. Marjory Eudaly will tell of her trip to the national convention last June.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
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Pre-Nursing Club Told About Music
"Music in therapy is one of the most important uses of music," Dr. E. Thayer Gaston, professor of musical education, told the Pre-Nursing club Wednesday.
Miss Elizabeth Hutchenson, obstetrical supervisor at the University of Kansas Medical center, will speak Nov. 17 and Miss Kathleen Black, education director at the Menninger foundation, will speak on Dec. 1.
"Music therapy is used in caring for persons who need to develop socially, for cases of pre-and-post insulin shock, and for those who withdraw from reality," Dr. Gaston said. "Music is a bridge toward reality."
"Use of music is divided into three main categories, recreational, music for diversion, and therapeutic. There are two general types of music, sedative music, which soothes the emotions and stimulative music, which arouses emotions.
"Music is being used more and more in hospitals. Now it is accepted chiefly in psychiatric hospitals."
YMCA-Faculty Forum Discusses Administration
People who voted for Truman voted for a middle of the road administration, Russell H. Barrett, instructor in political science, told the Y.M.C.A.-faculty-for-wednesday.
Members of the forum expressed the probability of price control, increase in social planning, and a limitation on private enterprise under the new administration.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FOUR
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4; 1948
Faurot, Tigers Are Confident Of Victory
Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 4—(UP)—The University of Missouri football squad goes through a final, light practice session today and then boards a bus for Kansas City tonight on its way to Norman, Okla., and the "game of the year" with the Sooners Saturday afternoon.
The Tigers will spend tonight in Kansas City and then will take a train early tomorrow for the Oklahoma engagement. A total of 35 will travel the traveling Missouri squad. Coach Don Faurat said.
Anticipating "the toughest one yet," the Tigers haven't overlooked a thing in their preparations, they believe. They respect Oklahoma's fast, powerful line as one of the best in the nation; they are well aware of Jack Mitchell's abilities to run back punts; they have heard all about Darral Royal's passing talents and the manner in which Bobby Goad snares passes.
"They're tough," the Tigers all agree. But there's another thing they agree on, too. "We're going to beat 'em."
There will be a record crowd of perhaps 38,000 persons in the stands when the game starts Saturday. If the weatherman doesn't listen to the pleas of that crowd and it turns out rainy and muddy, the Tigers believe they will be prepared for this, too. They practiced in a downpour Tuesday, got in another session on a soggy field yesterday and Coach Faurot came away "rather pleased" with his athletes' showing
The kickers got their first chance to handle a wet ball and the ends showed speed in getting down field under the punts.
Faurot has warned his ends that failure in this respect will be disastrous Saturday for the 174-pound Mitchell is the nation's No.1 ground gainer in punt backs.
But Mitchell is not the only threat in the Oklahoma lineup. The line, unquestionably one of the finest in football this season, boasts a murderous blocker in Buddy Burris at guard and a great pair of tackles in co-captains Wade Walker and Homer Paine.
Both teams come to the climax game of the Big Seven conference season after having gained major victories in inter-sectional competition. Each team lost its opening contest, but since those unexpected defeats each has racked up five consecutive triumphs.
Missouri moved into the upper
Caesar Sets Pace For Distance Men
That Coach Bill Easton is a smart guy.
Just so his runners won't get cooky after finishing in front of all the Big Seven teams this season, he recruited Caesar, Beta mascot, to trot over the cross country course with the boys to set the pace.
The Great Dane can lope along faster than the fellows can run. When he feels they need a little pepping up, he lets out his "gentle" bark which scares the runners into setting new records for the next 50-yards.
Chi O's Enter IM Quarterfinals
Chi Omega won the fifth division title in last night's volleyball games. They defeated Hausherr House 45 to 23. This means that Kappa Kappa Gamma, Kappa Alpha Theta, Pi Beta Phi, Locksley hall and Chi Omega will participate in the quarterfinal round starting next week.
Other winners last night were Gamma Phi Beta, who beat Sterling hall 58 to 35, and Corbin hall who defeated Watkins hall 49 to 18. There was one forfeit. Briar Manor forfeited to Alpha Delta Pi.
bracket of the nation's teams with victories over Southern Methodist's Southwest conference champions and George Sauer's Navy middies. Oklahoma has bowled over three straight Southwest conference rivals, Texas A. and M., Texas Christian, and Texas' defending Sugar Bowl champions.
While Kansas also remains undefeated in Big Seven competition, the winner of the Missouri-Oklahoma game is the odds-on choice to turn back the Kansas challenge and move on to the championship and a likely bowl bid.
The boys who lay the odds here today stamped Missouri as a seven-point favorite to conquer Oklahoma.
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In his debut, Ming kicked three-for-three and booted a field goal for good measure. It sold Wilkinson.
Ar. Kansas City, Mo. 8:15 pm 11:50 pm
Actually, he would rather be a fullback, but Coach Bud Wilkinson was so impressed by his kicking that he assigned him to the conversion chore. He was an all-state fullback at Oklahoma City.
All He Lacks Is Radar To Direct The Football
Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 4—(UP)—A fellow with a thumb tack, a hunk of rubber, three and a half feet of adhesive tape, and a quarter may be Missouri's edge over Oklahoma in Saturday's Big Seven headliner at Norman, Okla.
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He is Bob Dawson, who has left nothing to chance in kicking his last 19 extra points in a row and run. ◎
He is Bob Dawson, who has 19 extra points in a row and running up a six-game total of 28 conversions in 31 tries. He uses the tape to measure his stride. At one end of the tape is the rubber tee. The other end is weighed by the two-bit piece and the tack holds the tape straight.
On the other hand, a fellow named Bingo Ming may make the difference for Oklahoma. He kicks extra points, too. His record in six games this season is 22 in 25 attempts, plus one field goal.
Dawson, who really needs a caddy
to carry his stuff when he trots onto the field after a Missouri touchdown, trails only Mike Ghnouly and Howard Bonnett among his team's scorers. Ghnouly and Bonnett have each scored 30 points this season.
Dawson, who almost went to Illinois instead of Missouri, says he plants his toe one inch behind the end of the tape just before the ball is snapped.
Ming makes no elaborate preparations such as Dawson. He just kicks
You'd think a fellow like Dawson would watch the ball sail through the uprights. But he never looks up, just bends over, picks up his quarter and the rest of the gear and heads for the bench.
Please Dress formal occasions
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He says he gets the good or bad news from Missouri's quarterback, Bus Entsminger. If it is good, he prolies a bit; if the try for extra point fails, he walks off the field slowly, head down.
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4.1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Fraley Picks Missouri Over Oklahoma Saturday
By OSCAR FRALEY United Press Snorts Writer
New York, Nov. 4—(UP)—Mixing bunts and puns, Fraley's Follies and the weekend football winners while welcoming Frankie Frisch and "Fat Freddie" Fitzsimmons back to the New York Giants.
National
Pennsylvania over Penn State—this ranks even in the books and State makes a habit of knocking off the $ \textcircled{1} $ Quakers. Our hunch is that Penn!
Here, our hunch is that Penn will be geared higher than a kite for this one with a grim defense turning the tide in its favor.
Dartmouth over Columbia—Durocher will know his club.
The East
Army over Stanford—the Giants will be rough.
Cornell over Colgate—Frisch and Fitz will help.
Harvard over Princeton—it makes a difference.
Also: Syracuse over Temple, Yale over Kings Point, Georgetown over N.Y.U. Brown over Western Reserve, Holy Cross over Duquesne, Boston U. over Fordham and Rutgers over Lafayette.
The Midwest
Michigan over Army—pitching is a problem.
Notre Dame over Indiana — so Fitz is an asset.
Minnesota over Purdue — those int throws need it.
Northwestern over Wisconsin—can teach.
Also—Missouri over Oklahoma,
Illinois over Iowa, Michigan State
over Marquette, Nebraska over
Kansas State, Ohio State over
Pittsburgh, and Iowa State over
Drake.
Duke over Wake Forest—it's radio's greatest advance.
North Carolina over William and Mary.
The South
Georgia Tech. over Tennessee-
Frisch will tighten the infield.
Kentucky over Villanova—since Marconi.
Also: Clemson over Furman,
Georgia over Florida, Tulane over
V.M.I., Mississippi State over Auburn,
Mississippi over Chattanooga,
Miami over Cincinnati, Maryland
over South Carolina, Washington
and Lee over V.P.I. North Carolina
State over Virginia, George Washington
over Citadel, and Alabama
over Mississippi Southern.
Texas over Baylor—as a radio announcer.
The Southwest
S. MU. over Texas Aggies—Frankie was a great infielder.
Arkansas over Rice—he's hall of fame.
Oklahoma Aggies over Tulsa— not at the mike.
Also: Texas Tech over Texas Mines, and Arizona over New Mexico.
California over U.C.L.A.—imagine theumps.
The West
Oregon over Washington — how they must feel.
Nevada over Santa Clara—what a purple-farled parlay.
Washington State over Oregon State-Duprocher and Frisch.
Also: St. Mary's over Portland, Utah State over Colorado, Utah over Colorado Aggies, Detroit over Denver and Montana over College of Pacific.
Idaho over Montana State—and Fitz can roar, too.
Alumnus Buys Oakley Store
Kenneth Kost, '47, has bought a drug store in Oakley, Kan. Mrs. Kost is the former Miss Patricia Riggs, '42.
Glasses are Smart
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The schedule for the men's intramural handball tournament will be posted on the intramural bulletin board in Robinson gymnasium today.
Handball Schedule To Be Out Today
Men should check and see when they are to play as all games not played on time will be forfeited, Don Powell, director of intramurals, said.
Seventy-three men have signed up for the fall games.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1948
The Editorial Page-
How Strong Is France?
The French coal strike has seriously affected public opinion in the United States on the future of aid to western Europe.
Already planned as the next step in European recovery is the extension of military aid to Marshall Plan countries. This will require further economic aid since the heavy expenditures of public funds needed to support an army cannot be provided otherwise.
France would be the primary power in such an armament program because of her comparatively greater manpower and industrial strength. It is reasonable to expect that attention would be centered on her.
But there is a growing uneasiness in the United States about the advisability of military aid. The failure of the Greek program, realization that armies are economic liabilities, and American support of reactionary forces all have adversely influenced public thought.
Now the question of reliability is becoming increasingly evident. How strong an ally will France be considering her strong Communist element and weak government? The debacle of 1940 is not easily forgotten; the possibility of facing one's own arms is not pleasant.
The coal strike has augmented this feeling of doubt by showing the east with which French industry can be paralyzed. Its cost has exceeded the amount of Marshall Plan aid given to France.
In view of commitments made, military aid seems certain, but it will be accompanied by a rising tide of skepticism.
Keith Wright.
- Letters To The Editor
Justification
Dear Editor:
The bombing of Hiroshima is a good example of the adage "the end justifies the means." I can think of no other quotation that so adequately covers the controversial question which has arisen in the Daily Kansan as to the justification of the dropping of the atomic bomb.
I am sure even you will admit that many more persons than the total killed and wounded in the two bombings of Nagasaki and Hiroshima would have been exceeded had an invasion taken place.
The United States did not start this war. They did everything possible to prevent it. Yet, you say the people of America should feel guilty and sick at heart for stopping a war that was responsible for killing and maiming thousands and was threatening the lives of many more. I feel confident you will find yourself in a minority.
Mr. Hallman does not think the United States had a valid excuse for bombing Hiroshima. What then, in your opinion constitutes a just cause for going to war at all? You give the impression the United States should sit back and calmly let any aggressor take over who so desires.
After the dropping of these bombs, Japan realized she was through. Even the propaganda agency realized it was useless to go on trying to convince the natives they were winning the war.
I do not maintain that we should go on hating, but I think we ought to wait awhile before we turn deaf ears to the wailing of so many American mothers' hearts. At least let us wait until the ground has hardened that covers the graves of our American dead.
Curtis B. Harris;
313 east 17th street.
Pseudo-Patriots
Dear Editor:
The self-styled experts on respect to flag and country who have felt it necessary to give public instruction in the observance of customs pertaining to our flag are remarkably observing for persons whose attention was respectfully directed toward the rite of
flag-raising.
Obviously, they teach not by example.
An intense interest in the welfare of our fellow men and fellow women in these great United States could well replace the formal arder of the pseudo-patriot.
James Nelson,
545 East 19th Street.
Chicago's Retailers Do Good Business
Chicago—(UP)—Retail trade in Chicago is expected to pass the four billion dollars mark this year. The city's 50,000 retail stores did three billion, 700 million dollars worth of business last year and an Association of commerce survey indicates a sharp increase so far this year. Food store, auto and building material sales have shown the greatest gain, according to the survey.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
University Daily Hansan
Daily Hansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assm. Nati-
ward Assm., and the Associated Collegiate
Press. Represented by the National Ad-
vice Service. 240 Madison Ave.
New York, NY
Editor-in-Chief ... James L. Robinson
Managing Editor ... Wallace W. Abbey
Asst. Man. Editor ... Joe L.
Asst. Editor ... Hand D. Nelson
City Editor ... John Wheeler
Asst. City Editor ... Leonard Snyder
Asst. Editor ... Robert E.
Telegraph Editor ... Bill Mayer
Asst. Tel. Editor .. Richard Barton
Asst. Tel. Editor .. Patricia Bentley
Asst. Sport Editor .. Anne Murphy
Asst. Sport Editor .. James L.
Society Editor .. Mary Lou Foley
---
Business Mgr. Paul Warner
Advertising Mgr. Bill Nelligan
Circulation Mgr. Bill Binter
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Classified Mgr. Elizabeth Berry
Jane Belt
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Promotion Mgr. Don Tennant
Assst. Promotion Mgr. Charles O'Connor
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739 N. 2nd St.
Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
Don't Get Caught "Without a thing to wear"
Over Thanksgiving Vacation
---
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Send Your Cleaning
To
INDEPENDENT NOW
INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS
PICK-UP & DELIVERY
Phone 432
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THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 4.1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Bureau Conducts Restaurant Study
Better means of feeding Kansans will be studied by the bureau of business research.
Paul E. Malone, director of the bureau, said today that the Kansas Restaurant association had asked the bureau to prepare a survey of the business of feeding Kansans.
Efficient operation, employment problems, food economics, the optimum size plant for a given size town will be a few of the objectives of the survey to be financed by the association.
In a letter giving the bureau the go-abread signal, J. A. Wolf, association secretary, said in part: "Our board of directors voted unanimously to cooperate with you in this matter." Mr. Malone said a committee is being formed to act as liaison between the Loreau and the restaurant operators while an outline of the report and other operational problems are formulated.
Five projects with a total expenditure of $10,600 now are being conducted by graduate students in conjunction with the bureau. Mr. Malone gave Lawrence W. Van Meir as an example of a graduate student working on a project for the bureau.
Using the Consumers Co-operative association and Phillipsburg as case study in his thesis on the social, civic, and economic responsibilities of big business to the community, Van Meir is studying for his doctorate in economic theory.
Executive Director Speaks At OT Club
Benefits and obligations of members of the Occupational Therapy club were discussed Wednesday by Miss W. L. West, executive director of the American Occupational Therapy association.
Members receive the magazine on occupational therapy, registration privileges, and placement services, Miss West said.
Duties of the national office include the maintenance of the registry, the publishing of a directory of occupational therapists, keeping a membership file, operating a placement service and keeping a public relations bureau. An applicability survey is also being conducted, she said.
The work of the national organization is carried on by five standing committees: education, legislation, clinical research and services. The organization was founded in 1917.
Line Is Busy Over The Border
Fort Worth—(UP)—Travel south of the border, down Mexico way, has kept honorary consuls here busy the past summer. Walter H. Strong, Guatemalan honorary consul, estimated he signed some 400 tourist travel cards since Jan. 1. T he Mexican consul, Sproesser Wynn, averaged about 100 monthly.
Weatherman Since 1911
Alva, Okla. —(UP)—When Steve A. Stech, 88-year-old weather observer here, says it was hotter or colder "way back in" you can take his word for it. He's been on the job at the weather bureau here since 1911, and remembers first-hand the record high temperature of 120, July 18, 1936, and the coldest day on record. Feb. 8, 1933, when the mercury dipped to 16 below zero.
It's Easy to Join Our RENTAL Library
We take your name and address; 15c makes any one of our books yours for 5 days.
We'll be looking for you soon.
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1021 Mass. Tel. 666
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Phone KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that calls must be called in during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univertational Business office, Journalism bulb, postal box 4, 4 p.m. the day before publication date.
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FOR SALE
ALL LEATHER golf bag. Professional type, condition like new. Cost $55 sell for $20. Real bargain. Call at 914 New Hampton 8
NEW SPORT jacket. Call 1763R.
NEW SPORT jacket. Cait 1633k.
BLACK PLYMOUTH coupe, excelling
condition, $495. Also, refrigerator in
good condition. See at 1818 Miami after
a game.
1930 MODEL A roadster. New engine
to perfect, 16in wheel. 942 New Hump-
dale.
CAMERA DETROLA; split 127, f. 4.
iPad flash. See at 308 E. 1916.
P. Cantonetti
NEW SPORT jacket, bought one month ago.
Size 38. Two-toned blue. Is too small for me. See at 905 Missouri or call 1163M after 7 p.m.
NEW KELVINATOR refrigerators for immediate delivery, limited quantity, convenient term available. B. F. Goodrich Store. 929 Mass. Phone 21. 4
FIVE CIGARETTE machines in operation at good locations. Insures large, steady income for a small investment and can be used for information, call Jack Campbell, phone 730. 9
TWO ALTO saxophones, 2 tenor sax-
sons, 4 alto saxophone and 1 bass.
All new and new martins, 1 King
Silver Tone cornet, set 4 drums. Bass
dance band fronts. Catch 1774R, after
music by Johnny Hathaway.
AMMUNITION, Fishing Tackle. Guns and
masks used for making made in the
Butter's Shop. 1016 Mass. rfm
rfm
PORTABLE MOTOROLA radios now as
as $19.95 at B. Goodrich store, 925
W. Washington Blvd.
1945 JEEP, excellent condition. All-weather cab, five good tires, wonderful inexpensive transportation. Call 1213-8. $8 x 10 AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHS BINDING INSTRUCTIONS. Buy this for your photo album. Hurry down the hill to Rowland's or Keeler bookstore. 8
FOR RENT
LOVELY BASEMENT room in new home to two boys. Furnace piped into room; good ventilation, asphalt tile flooring, nearly private bath. Not near hill but several students in building near nearby residence might be arranged. $3.50 a week per boy. Phone 2151M.
ROOM SINGLE for girls. Conveniently located, only one half block from the AMC 7838N HVACANCY FOR ONE boy; preterm capped pledged fraternity; 1416 Tenn. 5. TWO ROOM furnished apartment with a sink. Will accommodate 3 boys. 510 Ohio.
DOUBLE ROOM with single beds for two men. Private bath. 2040 La. 4
FURNISHED apartment for two boys. Cell 2329J. 4
LOST
BULOVA MAN'S watch at Aggie game in student section. Reward. Ph. 1700. 8 I WOULD appreciate the return of my grey raincoat which was taken from the ballroom Tuesday noon. Name and address are given to WILLE WHT, 1725 ALSENA phone, h44132.
BLACK SHAFFER lifetime fountain
leave. Please please leave at Kansan
few. Reward.
8 8
BROWN LEATHER notebook Holds
Finder plaques. Finder phone.
Finder pleces call Cham Smith, KU 417,
KU 386, KU 382, KU 380, KU 379, KU 378,
KU 377, KU 376, KU 375, KU 374, KU 373,
KU 372, KU 371, KU 370, KU 369, KU 368,
KU 367, KU 366, KU 365, KU 364, KU 363,
KU 362, KU 361, KU 360, KU 359, KU 358,
KU 357, KU 356, KU 355, KU 354, KU 353,
KU 352, KU 351, KU 350, KU 349, KU 348,
KU 347, KU 346, KU 345, KU 344, KU 343,
KU 342, KU 341, KU 340, KU 339, KU 338,
KU 337, KU 336, KU 335, KU 334, KU 333,
KU 332, KU 331, KU 330, KU 329, KU 328,
KU 327, KU 326, KU 325, KU 324, KU 323,
KU 322, KU 321, KU 320, KU 319, KU 318,
KU 317, KU 316, KU 315, KU 314, KU 313,
KU 312, KU 311, KU 310, KU 309, KU 308,
KU 307, KU 306, KU 305, KU 304, KU 303,
KU 302, KU 301, KU 300, KU 299, KU 298,
KU 297, KU 296, KU 295, KU 294, KU 293,
KU 292, KU 291, KU 290, KU 289, KU 288,
KU 287, KU 286, KU 285, KU 284, KU 283,
KU 282, KU 281, KU 280, KU 279, KU 278,
KU 277, KU 276, KU 275, KU 274, KU 273,
KU 272, KU 271, KU 270, KU 269, KU 268,
KU 267, KU 266, KU 265, KU 264, KU 263,
KU 262, KU 261, KU 260, KU 259, KU 258,
KU 257, KU 256, KU 255, KU 254, KU 253,
KU 252, KU 251, KU 250, KU 249, KU 248,
KU 247, KU 246, KU 245, KU 244, KU 243,
KU 242, KU 241, KU 240, KU 239, KU 238,
KU 237, KU 236, KU 235, KU 234, KU 233,
KU 232, KU 231, KU 230, KU 229, KU 228,
KU 227, KU 226, KU 225, KU 224, KU 223,
KU 222, KU 221, KU 220, KU 219, KU 218,
KU 217, KU 216, KU 215, KU 214, KU 213,
KU 212, KU 211, KU 210, KU 209, KU 208,
KU 207, KU 206, KU 205, KU 204, KU 203,
KU 202, KU 201, KU 200, KU 199, KU 198,
KU 197, KU 196, KU 195, KU 194, KU 193,
KU 192, KU 191, KU 190, KU 189, KU 188,
KU 187, KU 186, KU 185, KU 184, KU 183,
KU 182, KU 181, KU 180, KU 179, KU 178,
KU 177, KU 176, KU 175, KU 174, KU 173,
KU 172, KU 171, KU 170, KU 169, KU 168,
KU 167, KU 166, KU 165, KU 164, KU 163,
KU 162, KU 161, KU 160, KU 159, KU 158,
KU 157, KU 156, KU 155, KU 154, KU 153,
KU 152, KU 151, KU 150, KU 149, KU 148,
KU 147, KU 146, KU 145, KU 144, KU 143,
KU 142, KU 141, KU 140, KU 139, KU 138,
KU 137, KU 136, KU 135, KU 134, KU 133,
KU 132, KU 131, KU 130, KU 129, KU 128,
KU 127, KU 126, KU 125, KU 124, KU 123,
KU 122, KU 121, KU 120, KU 119, KU 118,
KU 117, KU 116, KU 115, KU 114, KU 113,
KU 112, KU 111, KU 110, KU 109, KU 108,
KU 107, KU 106, KU 105, KU 104, KU 103,
KU 102, KU 101, KU 100, KU 99, KU 98,
KU 97, KU 96, KU 95, KU 94, KU 93,
KU 92, KU 91, KU 90, KU 89, KU 88,
KU 87, KU 86, KU 85, KU 84, KU 83,
KU 82, KU 81, KU 80, KU 79, KU 78,
KU 77, KU 76, KU 75, KU 74, KU 73,
KU 72, KU 71, KU 70, KU 69, KU 68,
KU 67, KU 66, KU 65, KU 64, KU 63,
KU 62, KU 61, KU 60, KU 59, KU 58,
KU 57, KU 56, KU 55, KU 54, KU 53,
KU 52, KU 51, KU 50, KU 49, KU 48,
KU 47, KU 46, KU 45, KU 44, KU 43,
KU 42, KU 41, KU 40, KU 39, KU 38,
KU 37, KU 36, KU 35, KU 34, KU 33,
KU 32, KU 31, KU 30, KU 29, KU 28,
KU 27, KU 26, KU 25, KU 24, KU 23,
KU 22, KU 21, KU 20, KU 19, KU 18,
KU 17, KU 16, KU 15, KU 14, KU 13,
KU 12, KU 11, KU 10, KU 9, KU 8,
KU 7, KU 6, KU 5, KU 4, KU 3, KU 2,
KU 1, KU 0, KU 0, KU 1, KU 2, KU 3,
SHEAFFER PEN. Anniversary gift,
Green with horizontal white stripes,
Monday, February 15 and Green hall be-
come on Friday 11 and 15 classes.
Please call **612** 91W, Delbert Bangs.
BROWN LEATHER notebook containing lecture notes, trig. assignments, quiz papers in Corbin hall. Not interested in return of notebook; only its contents. Plone Dorothy Lear. 569. Reward. 5 PAIR OF horn-immored glasses in brown leather case at Lindley hall Monday morning. Please call Jim Lowler, 957.
SHEAFFER fountain pen Friday, Oct. 29. Brown mottled color, can be identified. Please call Joan Bremer, 860. Reward. 4 PLAIN BROWN leather billfold containing papers of Bill Rusco. Liberal reward. Finder keep money. 821 N. Hamp. 7
A GRAY Parker 51 fountain pen between
a Woolworth. Finder call 2735M.
Reward offered.
MOTHER, WILL CARE for your child in my home if you are working or con-
taining. Phone 25798 Address 13181s, new Eamp. 5
STUDENTS LAUNDRY wanted. 5
also cleaning done. Phone 21498. 1205 Rhode Island St. Mrs. Earl Jellison. 9
TYPING DONE, immediate attention; accurate work and reasonable Pay-
ment. Phone Sheilds.
BUSINESS SERVICE
ELECTRONIC PROOF of your money's worth in watch repair at Balfour's. 4
TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel. 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. Ask for Miss Helen. 12-21
WHEN ALL PETS including dogs, birds, fish, cats, pigeons, skunks, parrots, squirrels, rats, mice, etc., go shopping for an outfit they go to Grant's Pet Shop, 1218 Comm. St. Phone 418. Everyone needs pet field—their needs are our business. 12-21
EBERHART and Son, tailors. Finest samples made to measure, suits, topcoats, and overcoats. Alterations, repairing and leather work. $831.\frac{1}{2}$ Mass. 19
Newman Club
ALTERING SUITS, coats, and dresses.
Reliming coats a specialty. Handmade
tailored button holes. Work guaranteed.
Call 29958. 842 Indiana. 12
WANTED
RIDE TO WICHTIA, Friday afternoon or Saturday morning, Call B. Lamb, 86. 5 RIDE TO BEATRICE, near or vlcimity, call 5. Call Joan Peterson, phone 164.
FREEHAND drawings. Sketches that have been made in classroom and carry a perspective and shading required. Will pay $2.00 to $3.00 for each. Exchange Service of Industrial Products, 217 Palm Bay Barbara, California. Clarem Diddleton.
Skating Party
Rollerdrome
Friday, Nov. 5, 7:30-10:00.
All Students Welcome!
For HEALTH'S sake!
use more
DAIRY PRODUCTS
Phone 182
handles only the Finest!!
FRITZEL JAYHAWK!
834 Vermont
College Students MOST WELCOME!
+
Make This Your Week-End RENDEZVOUS
Come and Meet Your Classmates
and Enjoy Yourselves
—TAVERN—
MARTIN'S HIGHWAY CLOVERLEAF
1 Mile west of Mission, Kans. $ \frac{1}{2} $ North of Cloverleaf U.S. 50 Kansas
AFTER THE show, drop in and have a coke on a friendly Friendship. Else
GET YOUR KICKS at the Skyline Dinner Club on date night. Fine food, soft drinks. Our "Hide Out" is now available for private parties. 4
MISCELLANEOUS
MAGNETIC RECORDING machines,
typewriters, adding and calculating ma-
cine cabinets, chairs, filing
cabinets, desks, and tables, renting
upto $10; Peterson's, 710%; Mass. Call 12345.
TRANSPORTATION
RIDES AVAILABLE to and from Kansas City. Kansas daily Monday through Satu-
rti Saturday through Sunday.
Breaks Necks, Finds Friends
Bildervide, Ill.—(UP)—Farmer Elmer Rubeck's neck was broken in a farm accident on Friday, Aug. 13, but he said it "was a lucky day for me." Rubeck said, "I didn't know how many friends I had until then." He was hurt while filling his silo. Rubeck's neighbors pitched in and finished the job.
Are Your Household Goods Insured?
10-Year Old Lands 10-Pounder
10-Year Old LUNAS 70-Poulfer
Schenectady, N. Y. (U.-P.) — Ten-year-old Richard McCaughan went fishing for sunfish while vacationing at Lake George. He took along a tote, and took a walleye, a stout string, Richard came home with a 28-inch, 10-pound 2-ounce pickerel, caught with his homemade rig. He landed it all alone, too.
See
Traylor & Calvin INSURANCE 1026 Mass.
Enjoy Good Food at LOW PRICES
No Waiting
Snappy Service at SNAPPY'S Across from Varsity
Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
Just Arrived at Adelanes
SHORE blouses you love
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so well. For biking, for hik-
those famous SHIP 'n
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Sizes 32 to 40
SHIP N SHORE
REG.
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$2.98
Adelane's
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE EIGHT
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1948
Douglas County Votes Republican And Repeal
Results released this morning by T. R. Gerhart, county clerk, showed that Douglas county went overwhelmingly Republican and wet in national, state and local levels.
The defeated Governor Dewey maintained a lead of almost two to one, particularly in the heavy precincts one and two of the second Lawrence ward. The final count showed these figures: Dewey 9,252; Truman 4,763; Wallace 174; Thomas 161; Watson 54.
Rep. Errett P. Scriner, Republican incumbent, won by a close margin over the challenger, Democrat Phillip Dergance. The heavy student vote which might have swung Douglas county to Dergance failed to materialize. The final count was Scriner 7,415; Dergance 5,748
As was expected, the student vote rolled a 700 margin for the repeal forces. The final Douglas county vote was in favor of repeal, 7,519; against 6,851. Rural precincts aided the dry vote much more than was expected but victory for the wets was assured with student voting help.
Two other races of interest to students were the contests between Richard Barber and George Melvin for state senator from Douglas and Jefferson counties, Melvin Miller and Glenn Kappelman, for county treasurer, Melvin and Miller both won by slim margins. The final count in the two contests was: for state senator: Melvin 6,904; Barber 6,684; for county treasurer: Miller 6,957; Kappelman 6,624.
The total vote in the county exclusive of absentee ballots was 14,930. An unofficial count of the vote in Lawrence was 10,121, which is a new record.
K-State Student Council To Be Guests Of KU ASC
Student council members from Kansas State college will be guests of the A.S.C. at a banquet at the University today.
The traditional dinner is planned to promote friendship between the two student bodies. The "peace pact" between K.U. and K-State prescribes such a meeting before the first athletic contest of the year between the two schools.
Nov. 22 Is PO Exam Date
The closing date for the substitute mail clerk-carrie r examination for the Lawrence post office has been extended to Monday, Nov. 22. Further information may be obtained from the civil service secretary at the post office.
--at
It's
Damask Rose!
dramatic,
romantic
new
pattern
Heirloom
Sterling
TRADE
MARK
ROBERT'S Jewelry Gifts
Audience Enjoys Players' Interpretation Of 'Hamlet'
By BETTY STEVENS
A thrilled audience accepted the University Players' production of "Hamlet" so enthusiastically that several times they interrupted the play with spontaneous applause and at the final curtain compelled the cast to respond to numerous curtain calls. University audiences have come to expect good plays in Fraser theater, and the present production more than met their high expectations.
The production moved smoothly and the many changes of scene were effected rapidly, thanks to Tom Shay and his crew of trained stage hands, who were also the actors. The scenery and costumes were colorful and harmonious. Allen Crafton directed the play, glued and painted the scenery. Milton Commons devised the effective lighting, and Frances Feist and Jessica Crafton provided the costumes.
The play was more of a living reality than some of the professional productions which feature stars. Direction was handled freshly and effectively. For example, the soliloquies were motivated and tied into the whole play. The audience never felt the change of going from a recited monologue into a spoken dialogue after a soliloquy.
Acting honors go to Tom Rea for his Hamlet. He was convincing and sympathetic. His "Now I am alone" soliloquy was the high point of his performance. If anyone doubts that he gave this speech power and meaning, let him first hear Rea, then play over the record of Maurice Evans' reading of the same speech.
Herk Harvy has appeared in many University plays, but never has he done such a fine job of restrained acting as in his role of the King. Harvey's best acting was in the prayer scene.
Bea Brady as Ophelia, once more proved herself a capable actress. Her mad scene was especially well done and well controlled. Her Ophelia drifted into a world of non-reality quietly and convincingly.
Of the minor characters, James Hawes in the role of Oscir was outstanding. He was never out of the character either vocally or physically.
Only one or two characters were weak. In only a few places was the tempo wrong. Twice the actors talked too rapidly, and the funeral scene was too slow. But all in all, directors, actors, and stage crew are to be congratulated
'Hill' Amazes New Student
A friendly customs officer and not so friendly New Yorkers were among the first impressions of Magda Berger, Czechoslovakian exchange student, when she arrived in the United States. Miss Berger spoke Wednesday at a meeting of the coffee and forums committee of the Union.
The customs officer helped ease her anxiety when she lost her keys. She soon realized the unfriendly attitude of New Yorkers was attributable to the largeness of the city.
"At first, radio commercials made me nervous," she said. "I was determined not to buy any of the articles advertised, but I soon found that there was nothing else to buy."
Miss Berger said she had been told Kansas was flat, so she walked to the campus from the bus station. She later wrote her friends in New York and set them straight on the Kansas topography.
"Kansas university is very unlike European universities," she said. "Here I am assigned a certain number of pages to read. In Europe no assignments are given.
To Bring Photos For Competition
The Camera clu bwill meet at 7:30 p.m. today in the Community building.
All club members and students interested in photography are asked to attend the meeting, said Marilyn Smith, chairman of the sports and organizations committee of the Student Union Activities.
Miss Smith said they were to bring any photographs for entry into the slide and color competition of the club.
the University shop
Across From Lindley
Tailor Made Clothing
Have your suit fitted to your own taste. Feel at ease and be well dressed in a suit especially tailored for you.
Ready Made Prices
the university shop
MEN'S APPAREL ACROSS FROM LINDLEY
Personalized or Plain 65c per box and up. Personalized—Gift Boxes
CHRISTMAS CARDS
THE LAWRENCE OUTLOOK
Phone 542
ED ABELS
1005 Mass. St.
HURRY LAST DAY
JAYHAWKER
Phone 10
VARSITY
12-39c
Ann Sheridan
as
"NORA PRENTISS"
ALAR LADD • Donna REED
BEYOND GLORY
FRIDAY SATURDAY
HURK JAYHAWKER Phone 10 Alar LADD·Donna REED BEYOND GLORY
FRIDAY-SATURDAY
It's Thrilling T.N.T. & Terrific
TRUCE story of Colorado STATE PRISON BREAK
TRUE story of Colorado
STATE PRISON
BREAK
CANON CITY
—STARTS— OWL SHOW SAT. NITE Jack Carson Dennis Morgan "Two Guys From Texas"
DOUBLE FEATURE
Michael O'Halloran SCOTTY BECKETT ALLEN ROBERTS
Hit No. 2—
JOHN WAYNE in
'West of the Divide'
Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
Where big pictures play GRANADA
TODAY Ends Saturday
SHOWS
2 -- 7 -- 9
Biggest and best for less
Year's Surprise Hit!
PATEE
A prize catch that's out of this world
William POWELL Ann BLYTH
Mr. Peabody and the Mermaid
NOW Thru Saturday
FIGHTING BACK
WITH
PAUL LANGTON
JEAN ROGERS
EX-GON
—Thrill No. 2—
Son of the Great West
Ridin', Singin', Shootin'
Thru Danger!
SON OF GODS
COUNTRY
THRILLS MONTE HALE
A marked man for life till he started—
FIGHTING BACK
EX-CON
PAUL LANGTON
JEAN ROGERS
Renewed for 10th Century Ame
SON OF GODS COUNTRY
THRILLS MONTE HALE
SAT. OWL and SUNDAY, 4 DAYS
P KO RADIO
THERE CAME A STRANGER ONE FINE DAY!
LORETTA WILLIAM ROBERT
YOUNG HOLDEN MITCHUM
Rachel and the Stranger
221
46t
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 5, 1948
Lawrence. Kansas
ers.
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
STUDENT NEWS PAPER
Foreign News Back On Top After Elections
With the national election already giving forth with the early stages of its dying quiver, foreign news is regaining the spotlight. Crowded out of top billing in the newspapers during the past week or so, it is back with a bang.
Bv UNITED PRESS
More than 200,000 Chinese Communist troops were reported massing today for an assault on the Nationalist capital of Nanking, and 4.000 Americans were told they had better get out of both Nanking and Shanghai.
Communist forces already were said to be "active" within 40 miles of Nanking. The offensive against the city is expected to start in about two weeks
United States authorities ordered 900 American military dependents evacuated from the Nanking-g-Shanghai area and advised 4,000 other Americans to leave as soon as possible.
Other world news included
Seoul, Korea — Police arrested 1,400 persons suspected of subversive activities during the past 24 hours in an attempt to forestall any Communist uprisings on the 31st anniversary of the Russian revolution next week. The U. S. army put a curfew on American troops and civilians for tomorrow night as a further precaution against disturbances.
Tokyo-The Far East war crimes tribunal held that the Japanese army alone was responsible for the Pacific war, even lying to Emperor Hirohito to get its way. The Japanese army also arranged for Japan to join the axis against Russia and the Western Allies, the court ruled.
United Nations, Paris—John Foster Dulles of the United States told the political committee that the United States is rearming because the world feats Russia and communism. He said, "our strength is not for us alone."
Tel Aviv—South Palestine reports said the Egyptian army has evacuated its big base at Majdal, 20 miles south of Tel Aviv. The Egyptians were said to have fled south along a road dominated by Jewish guns, but they did not open fire.
Landsberg, Germany — Fourteen former Nazis, including district party leaders and concentration camp guards, were hanged for the murders of American fliers and concentration camp inmates.
Stuttgart, Germany—The denazification ministry cancelled the acquittal of Hjalmar Schacht, Nazi financial expert, and ordered him tried for his Nazi activities on grounds that the previous court failed to consider major evidence. However, Mr. Schacht is now in the British zone outside the jurisdiction of the ministry.
Revival of the Eagle, campus political magazine, is being worked on by a committee composed of Bruce Bathurst, former editor and business senior, and Richard Menuet, engineering sophomore. Financial plans for the magazine have been completed. Menuet said.
Plan To Publish Eagle Again
A bipartisan expression of political opinions and philosophies will be the goal of the magazine this year. Besides discussions on political theory, student opinion and interpretation of campus politics will also be included in the Eagle. No date of publication has been set.
Little Man On Campus
By Bibler
INSTRUMENTAL TRYOUTS
2:00 P.M.
to
6:00 P.M.
SCHOOL OF MUSIC
J.B. BUGER
"By George, I laughed too, Hansen—but all it needed was a little tuning up!"
Irwin To Tell About Rules
Henry B. McCurdy, '21, was a visitor on the campus Wednesday and today. Mr. McCurdy is an executive of the Macmillan Publishing company in New York City.
Mr. McCurdy was active in student affairs while attending the University. He was a member of Phi Kappa Psi, Sigma Delta Chi, Phi Mu Alpha, Black Helmets, Sphinx, Ku Ku, Quill club, Dramatic club, AEF club, Follies, and Glee club. He was manager of the glee club in '13 and '14, editor of Oread magazine, on the YMCA cabinet, was vice president of the senior class and a member of the Kansan board. Mr. McCurdy is a former president of the University alumni association of New York and is now a member of the board of directors.
A Presidents' breakfast will be held at 8 am, tomorrow in the Union ballroom cafeteria. Presidents of all sororities, fraternities, and organized houses are invited to attend, John H. Scriver Jr., public laison committee chairman of the Student Union Activities, said today.
John J. Irwin, former president of the All-Student Council, will speak to the group. "He will show the extent of University control over the organizations' activities on the campus," said Sorviner.
Special guests at the breakfast will be: Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women; Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women; Donald K. Alderson, assistant dean of men; and Miss Hermina Zipple, director of the Union.
This is the second of a series of such breakfasts at the Union. The time and dates for others will be announced later.
The Presidents' breakfasts are sponsored by the Student Union Activities. Arrangements for this breakfast were made by Virginia Gargis, fine arts junior.
Graduate Of '21 Visits Campus
And Suddenly-
The Rains Came!
Sweater girls are a treacherous lot! At least this is the opinion formed by several aspiring lawyers this week.
Crowded on the steps of the law building, they were pursuing their favorite occupation when two buxom maids wearing sweaters came strolling their way. All lips were pursed in unison, and a long, loud whistle echoed over the campus. As if responding to a cue, the gals whipped out twin water pistols, and very effectively dampened the boys' ardor.
Officially confirming the appointment today, R. H. Wagstaff, supervisor of University patrolmen, said, "While there is actually no office of chief traffic control officer, the senior patrolman acts in that capacity."
Archic P. Dumas, University patrolman, has been appointed as chief of campus traffic control. He replaces Robert P. Corwin who resigned.
Dumas Heads Campus Cops
Both Mr. Wagstaff and Mr. Dumas denied the information printed in the Thursday's Lawrence Journal-World that Willard Anderson, night patrolman, would take over Mr. Dumas' position on the day patrol. Mr. Dumas said that his successor would not be known until this evening.
Mr. Dumas was a member of the county sheriff's office in 1946 and a plainclothesman and guard for three and a half years at Hercules powder plant at Sunflower. He came to the University more than a year ago and has been day patrolman until his appointment as chief today.
Robert P. Corwin, chief traffic control officer who resigned Oct. 25, stated he had "too many bosses." He is now employed by an air conditioning manufacturer in Kansas City.
KU--K-State Pass Resolution
This is the joint resolution passed by the Councils.
"Be it resolved that the All Student Council of the University of Kansas and the Student Governing association of Kansas State college renew their efforts to perpetuate the peace pact between these two schools and that the students of each school be called upon to do their part in the perpetuation of peace between the University of Kansas and Kansas State college."
Here's One Poll That Worked!
If George Gallup and Elmo Roper had used the election prediction described Thursday at the Mathematics club meeting, they might not be the embarrassed men they are today.
In his lecture on polling methods, Leslie Pihblad, College senior, said that the method devised by Louis H. Bean accurately forecast the Democratic victory in congress and called the presidential race between Dewey and Truman a toss-up.
The Bean system of election prediction demonstrates the historic view. By figuring the past voting records of each state, the approximate national vote can be calculated. Since Maine has early elections, tabulations from that state are the ones most often used.
For instance, if 37 per cent of the Maine vote goes to the Democrats, that party will receive 55 per cent of the national vote. If Maine goes 35 per cent Democratic, the Democrats will get 50 per cent of the national vote.
Pihiblad said that Been predicts another Democratic tide through the 1950's.
AWS To List Independents
The activity committee of the Associated Women Senate reports that the lists of women interested in certain types of organizations will go to those organizations next week. The precinct committee is to make a map of Lawrence and indicate with map tacks the residence of every woman student living in an unorganized house.
Two new committees were named Thursday. The high school leadership day committee consists of Joan Rusee, education senior; Carolyn Weigand and Patricia McClure, College sophomores. The campus leadership program committee includes, Grace Gwinner, College junior; Marie Schumacher and Wilma Shore, College sophomores.
A. W.S. will take applications for positions on the K.U. Cues, woman's handbook, until Monday, Nov. 15 Positions open are: editor-in-chief, art editor, business manager, general editorial work, and typists.
The next meeting of the President's council will be Thursday, Nov. 18.
NROTC Entrance Exams Must Be In By Nov. 15
Applications for entrance examinations into the Naval Reserve Officers Training corps program must be in before Monday, Nov. 15, Capt. W. R. Terrell, commandant of the University unit announced Thursday.
Applications go to the Naval Examining section of the Educational Testing service, Princeton, New Jersey. Blanks are available at the Military Science building and at high school offices all over the country, Captain Terrell said.
Councils Call For Perpetuation Of Peace Pact
A resolution was passed and the peace pact renewed at a joint meeting of the student councils of Kansas State college and the University Thursday. The resolution calls for renewed efforts by the students and the student councils to "perpetuate the peace pact" between the schools
Members of the Student Governing association of Kansas State college were guests of the All Student Council at a dinner in the Palm room of the Union. A business meeting followed in the East room.
The 1931 peace pact which was revised the past year, was renewed unanimously. Representatives from Kansas State college reported students from their college voluntarily had admitted painting the University's sidewalks recently. The offenders said in a letter they realized their act was a direct violation of the peace pact between the two schools. They sent a $50 check to the All Student Council to pay for the damages.
Both councils agreed the pact was effective only through its appeal to the morals of the students. The minimum penalty provided for in the pact is restoration of the damages. The maximum penalty is suspension from school for one semester and restoration of the damages. Any action is to be taken by a joint committee of the two student councils.
It was decided to hold future meetings at least a month before the first athletic competition between the schools. The peace pact says the meeting shall be held at least 10 days before the first game.
Robert F. Bennett, College sophomore, proposed the two councils do their best to foster good sportsmanship at the football game. It was agreed to do this.
Those attending the meeting from Kansas State college were Richard Lindbom, president; Harold Peffly, vice-president; Barbara King, recording secretary; Laura Belle Overley, corresponding secretary; Rodney Keif, treasurer; Robert Brewer; and Fred Cossman.
Members of the All Student Council present were: Aldo G. Aliotti, Robert F. Bennett, Joan M. Bushey, Roger L. Davis, Anne Ellis, James D. Petersen, Helen L. Piller, Dorothy J. Scroggy, Wilma L. Shore, Patrick H. Thiessen, president, and Elizabeth S. Webster.
Donald K. Alderson, assistant dean of men, and Evans J. Francis, president of Student Union Activities, also attended the meeting.
Two Englishmen To Debate Here
A British debate team will be guests of the University on Tuesday, November 9. One of the guests is a student at the University of Bristol and the other at the University of Birmingham.
This team will debate with two representing the University at 8 p.m. in Fraser theater, Tuesday, Nov. 9. The title of the question for debate will be "Should a world government be established?"
Students can be admitted to the program by activity tickets or by paying 50c.
WEATHER
Kansas—Partly cloudy and windy today, with occasional showers extreme north this morning. Colder east. Clearing and cooler with freezing temperatures tonight. Saturday fair. Warmer west. High today 45 to 50. Low tonight in 20's west to 32 east.
SCLP
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE TWO
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1948
Caesar Likes Football, Motorcycles, And Horsemeat
By VIRGINIA FROST
Caesar, Great Dane, defies social etiquette and University rules. He shakes hands with both his left and right paws, ignores the hourly whistle, and barks at K.U. traffic officers.
The dog, mascot of Beta Theta Pi fraternity, probably spends as much time on campus as any student. He wanders from building to building and dozes on the grass from 8 a.m.$^{8}$ to 3 p.m. daily.
Caesar was given to the fraternity last year by an alumnus and was named by a special fraternity committee. The Betas had a cocker spaniel named "Buddy" who died in 1944. As one member put it, Caesar just didn't seem like the "Buddy" type.
The dog has a heavy, weekend schedule since he usually attends the football games. He has gone to three of the five home games this season. He celebrated Homecoming by showing up for the Friday night pep rally in the stadium and the freshman-varsity basketball game in Hoch auditorium. However, he missed the Homecoming game.
The year-old Dane is a thoroughbred from the end of his lone nose to the tip of his long brown tail. He weighs 125 pounds and is still growing.
Caesar eats lightly—his daily raions are six pounds of horsemeat and two quarts of milk.
The dog shows a marked friendliness toward traffic officers on duty. One student told of the time he saw Caesar surprise an officer by leaping against him, putting his paws on the man's shoulders and licking his face.
Caesar likes to race down Jayhawk drive—after motorcycles. Last year in his enthusiasm he knocked a traffic officer from his motorcycle. He has an adventurous nature. Last summer the fraternity received a coil from a neighboring residence. The party complained that four persons were unable to get out of a car because Caesar was sitting—and barking—outside.
At the recent A.W.S. buffet supper which was for women Caesar spent the evening circulating around the roof-terrace and wolfing hamburgers.
Caesar's fraternity agrees that his dominant trait is his independent nature. The dog is allowed a great deal of freedom in the fraternity house.
However, his freedom may be short-lived. Jack Robinson, fraternity president, said that plans are being drawn for a house to be built
on the south side of the Beta house. A sign over the door will read "Caesar."
US Losing Resources, Ise Tells KU Dames
Resources in the United States are dwindling to the danger point, Dr John Ise, professor of economics, told the K.U. Dames Wednesday.
"Practical men have never respected the subject of conservation, but it is a problem here and now throughout the world," he said.
Dr. Ise listed lead, zinc, copper, iron ore, oil, and ground water as some of the natural resources which are nearly gone. He said that we won't have to worry about coal for 500 years.
"Our timber is nearly gone and farms are washing away at the rate of about 200,000 farms a year," he added.
He suggested that conservation should be more under the control of the state and national government.
Captain Terrell To Address High School Assemblies
Capt. W. R. Terrell, commandant of the University Naval Reserve Officers Training corps unit, said today that he would address high school assemblies at Valley Falls, and Baldwin City on Tuesday and Wednesday, Nov. 9 and 10.
He will also show a movie "The Liberal Education", a film showing how N.R.O.T.C. works in a large university. Captain Terrell will explain the navy program and tell of its advantages.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, University year and at Saturdays, university year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office, University Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
University Daily Kansan
Official Bulletin
Nov. 5, 1948
Two vacancies now exist in A.S.C. due to resignation of George Lowe, District IV, and Hugh Johnson, District III.
University Women's club annual faculty reception, 8 to 10 Saturday, Union ballroom.
Gamma Delta initiation for new members, 5:30 p. m. Sunday, Immanuel Lutheran church. Banquet to follow at Castle Tea room.
Episcopal College club supper
5:30 p. m. Sunday, Parish house.
Mathematical colloquium of department of mathematics, 5 p. m Monday, 203 Frank Strong, Dr. I N. Herstein to speak on "The Radical of a Ring."
Phi Sigma, Monday noon, 301 Snow. Election of new members. Dr. Charles D. Michener, "Orientation and Communication in Social Insects."
Entomology club, 4 p. m. Monday,
301 Miss. Miss Mary Larson of zoology department will speak on trip through European countries.
Y. M.C.A., Christian Faith and Heritage commission, organizational meeting, 5 p. m. Monday, upstairs classroom, Myers hall.
I.S.A. Council, House representatives and I.S.A. members, 5 p. m.
Tuesday, 16 Fraser hall.
Following cases will be heard in student court, 7:30 p. m. Tuesday, Nov. 9: Orin L. Strobel, Horace V. Edmonds, Melvin Muroff, William O. Richardson; Dean C. Banker, Andrew A. Zahner, Robert S. Clark, Maurice L. Wells, Richard H. Colburn, B. W. Barker.
Vigilantes Ride In Women's Dorm
Winnipeg—(UP)—Dr. A, H. S. Gillson, president of the University of Manitoba, has confirmed that male students raided the girls' dormitory and "saped and feathered" the sleeping coeds. But, he said, it was a "student prank" and there would be no punishment.
The story that came to light today was this:
Sunday night 80 male students went to the dormitory. A decoy squad lured the night watchman away. At a signal, the men rushed the girls' bedrooms and dumped the girls out of their beds. Some of them were sleeping in the nude.
The men, all wearing masks, then covered the girls with soap flakes, confetti, mud and feathers.
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Sun. 12 to 11 p.m.
lawrence, kansas November 5,1948
dead d ad
i though t i probably o ugh t to drop you a lin e about one of my grade s cause you might t get a let ter from the dean about it. t the instructor say s i do pretty good wor k but t he seems to thin k my typing isn't so hot.
frankl y, dad, it's thi s old typewriter. som e tim e s it doesn't space e right and it won't e v er make any capital s.
with christm as comin g u p i thought that you u might be interested in knowin g that the lawrence typewriter exchange has so me of the slickest royal portables y ou eve r saw for only y $89.50. those ne w machines are sure nice. i trie d one out the other day and i could hardly recognize m y own typing.
you r lovin g son
wilber
Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
1
Socially Speaking
Will Entertain Delta Chis
- * *
The pledges of Sigma Kappa will entertain the pledge class of Delta Chi with an hour dance today from 7 to 8 p.m. at the chapter house.
Hopkins Halloween Party
Hopkins hall entertained the following guests with a Halloween party, Oct. 30, Walter Cheng, Thomas Shannon, Robert Lindsay, Louis Eisele, David Thompson, Bruce Johnson, Loren Hepler, William Wilcox, Keith Wagerle, Hobart Michael, Harvey Snopp, William Sharp, James Kohman, Leo Groseclose, Gerald Hibbs.
The program was presented by Frances Pence, Phyllis McFarland, and Mary Alice Moore.
Chaperones were Mrs. Le lia Whiteford and Miss Avis Stoll.
- * *
Sigma Kappa Dinner
Sigma Kappa had an exchange dinner with Acacia Thursday from 6 to 7:30.
Kappa Kappa Gamma Dance
Kappa Kappa Gamma, will have an open house from 9 p.m. to midnight today in the Kansas room of the Union.
- * *
Alpha Kanna Lambda Dinner Guests
Alpha Kappa Lambda Dinner Guest Professor and Mrs. Henry Shenk, Marian Kysar, and Barbara Lux were dinner guests at the Alpha Kappa Lambda house, Sunday.
Forty - three per cent of the world's forest products come from the U.S.
On KFKU
Today:
9:30 p.m.—Listen to the Editors—
Radio Copy class and Emil
Illustrate
z:30 p.m.—Music By Radio—Mildred Seaman.
L. Telfel.
Washington—(UP)—The WAC of tomorrow will be a creature of rare streamlined beauty.
'Grace And Co-ordination Is Army Ideal For New WAC
Col. John Alfrey, commandant of the University Reserve Officers Training corps, and Col. Kenneth E. Rosebush, commandant of the air force unit, were inducted as associate members of Scabbard and Blade at a recent meeting of the honorary fraternity held in the Military Science building.
Alfrey, Rosebush In Scabbard-Blade
9:45 p.m.—K.U. Sports Parade
Mike Stewart.
The military ball to be held Friday, Dec. 10, was discussed. A smoker will be held on Wednesday, Nov. 10, in the Kansas room of the Union.
The Castle Tea Room
Open Daily 11:30 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Sundays 11:30 to 3 p.m.
Sunday Buffet 5:30-7:30 p.m.
Lieutenant Brewster, a native of Beatrice, Neb., has been to more colleges than most professors. She holds a bachelor of science degree from the University of Missouri and a master of science from Michigan. She also attended Christian
An exhibit showing how to assemble a book is now on display at the English department in Fraser hall.
Professor Stevens' Book On Display
—with or without reservations—
The rhythmic activities, according to the army, will be on the WACS own time. There will be folk and square dancing and basic steps such as the waltz, the polka and two-step.
Ballroom available for private parties or dances
Stages from the original copy to the final printing of the book are explained.
The book used in the exhibit is "Kansas Wild Flowers," by William Stevens, professor emeritus of botany.
Professor Stevens was chairman of the botany department from 1899 until 1931. He served as a botany professor until his retirement in 1936.
13th and Mass. Phone 149
Omaha makes more butter than any other city in the world.
e lady soldiers aren't sylph-like now; they'll just be more so.
A new deal is in the satirie for them, and one day soon you'll see him marching in review, with "graceful and co-ordinated bodies, competent in athletics and blessed with a fine sense of rhythm." What is what the college at Columbia, Mo., and the
The WAC program comes in three parts.
The army didn't take any chances in putting this program into effect at Camp Lee, Va. It placed Lt. Margaret E. Brewster, chief of the physical training branch at the camp, in charge.
A regular program of sports will be encouraged to develop skill in athletics and point up the importance of teamwork and good sportsmanship.
The first is body conditioning, "which will impart a knowledge of body mechanics." The idea is to improve the body in symmetry, flexibility and grace and correct defects in posture.
college at Columbia, Mo., and the University of California. She is a physical education instructor in her own right, and taught at Indiana University in Bloomington. After a long tour of duty during the war, at home and in India, she left military service to return to the quiet life of a civilian.
But she was recalled to active duty again to handle the new program.
The lieutenant practices what she teaches. She is out there every day, showing the girls how to keep the figures trim, the complexion beautiful.
Up and Coming
7:30 p.m.—Newman club skating and dancing party.
Tonight:
8 p.m.—Wesley Foundation, Ecke hall.
9 p.m.—Alpha Omicron Pi party.
9 p.m.—Kappa Kappa Gamma open house, Kansas room, Union.
Saturday:
2 p.m.—Lambda Chi Alpha tendance, chamber house.
2 p.m. - Delta Gamma tea-dance, chapter house.
3 p.m.-Alpha Omicron Pi teadance, chapter house.
3 p.m.—Sigma Alpha Epsilon teadance, chamber house
8 p.m.-Delta Tau Delta paddle-
party, chapter house.
8:30 p.m. - Phi Kappa party, chapter house.
9 pm- Monchonisia hall dance.
9 pm-Sigat Sigmata Epsilon dance
Competition building.
9 p.m.-Tau Kappa Epsilon gravediggers ball, Holcomb's grove.
9 p.m. Sigma Chi formal dance.
chapter house.
9 p.m.-Phi Gamma Delta party chapter house.
9 p.m.—Watkins hall dance.
Farm Agent Speaks To Linnaean Club
Soil losses in the United States would fill enough freight cars to circle the earth 18 times, Deal Six, Douglas county farm agent, told the Linnaean club Wednesday.
Putting this loss in dollars, he said,
it would come to $3,844,000.00.
Mr. Six discussed terracing, crop rotation, and grass economy as parts of the soil conservation program. Conservation districts have been established in Kansas to apply these methods.
The Linnaean club meets monthly in 417 Snow hall.
Jay Janes To Serve As Ushers At Ballet
The Jay James will usher for the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo Monday night at Hoch auditorium. Girls assigned to side A will meet at Hoch auditorium at 7 p.m. Monday, Nov. 8.
Uniforms are to be worn. If anyone cannot usher, she is responsible for getting someone to take her place, said Joan Strowig, notification chairman.
Announce Birth Of Son
Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth M. Taylor announce-the birth of a son, Bruce Kenneth, Monday at Lawrence Memorial hospital.
Dehydrated potatoes are a good substitute for grain feed for both hogs and sheep.
Dr. Taylor is an instructor in zoology. He came to the University this fall from the University of California at Berkeley.
PERRY COMO Sings Your Favorite Christmas Songs
I'll Be Home For Christmas
That Christmas Feeling
Winter Wonderland
Santa Claus Is Coming To Town
White Christmas
Silent Night
O Come All Ye Faithful Jingle Bells
BELL MUSIC CO
Though Fashionably Dressed Our Women Aren't 'Elegant'
925-27 Mass.
By BARBARA BUNDSCHU
New York—(UP)—Hardly any American women are elegant, Parisian designer Pierre Balmier bewailed today.
Most of the ones that are, are in Paris, Balmain said. And he starts that list off with Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt and the Duchess of Windsor.
Balmain, who has spent two months criss-crossing the United States lecturing to college students and $ ^{*} $
lecturing to college students and adapting some of his Paris designs for an American woman's average room full of American women is better and more fashionably dressed than any similar group in the world.
But to turn that beginning into real elegance—
It's like the de-Nazification of Germany," Balmain said "— Very difficult."
The trouble with the American woman, Balmain said, is that she
A room full of average middle-class Frenchwomen wouldn't display as fashionable dresses, Balmain said. "But each woman would stand out as an individual." That's elegance.
"You are afraid to be individuals," the dressmaker said.
goes right along with whatever "they" tell her is the thing. And the fashion magazines that do the telling usually pick styles that are spare and "hard" and unflattering to her.
Style changes can't be completely ignored, he said. No woman could look elegant today in a skirt hemmed around her knees. But neither should she wear a full skirt if she looks more herself in a slim one or a blue dress if she looks better in red.
Over two-thirds of Florida's land area is covered by forests.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1949
Truman Is 'Chief Forecaster As Pollsters Admit Mistake
By UNITED PRESS
As he lugged the last empty champagne bottle out of Democratic headquarters in New York's Biltmore hotel, the janitor said for the 17th time. "My gosh, Truman won."
The professional poll takers talked at more length. But what they said boiled down to "we were wrong"
Other people said it in other words. Gov. Thomas E. Dewey said he was "just as surprised as anybody else." Margaret Truman said she and her mother were "simply overwhelmed." $^4$
Not even the professional Democrats had got it just right. National chairman J. Howard McGrath had indicated he doubted Mr. Truman could win unless 55,000,000 to 60,-000,000 votes were cast. The actual total was nearer 47,000,000 and the president won anyway.
Only Mr. Truman had been right all the way. He had said over and over again that he would win. But Mr. Truman wasn't giving away any secrets about his forecasting methods. He just said he was "happy, very happy" that he'd been right. He didn't seem a bit surprised.
A lot of people were trying hard to explain two things: (1) Why the president won, and (2) why none of the dopesters thought he would.
Professional pollsters George H. Gallup and Elmo Roper made long statements. Gallup had said Dewey would win with 49.5 per cent of the popular vote. Mr. Truman getting 44.5. Roper's forecast was 52.2 per cent for Dewey and 37.1 for the president. What happened was that Mr. Truman got about 49.9 per cent and Dewey 45.8.
Dr. Gallup's explanation was: "It was the kind of close election that happens once in a generation and is a nightmare to poll-takers."
Roper nominated Mr. Truman for dean of forecasters. The president, he said, turned out "to be a far better predictor than the professional pollsters, politicians and pundits." As for Roper:
"I could not have been more wrong. The thing that bothers me most is that at this moment I don't know why I was wrong. But I certainly propose to find out."
Roper and some others thought perhaps organized labor, fighting against the Taft-Hartley act which Mr. Truman would repeal, had "turned the tables."
Fire Ends Town's Troubles
Big Piney, Wyo.—(UP)—A fire at Big Piney has eliminated both a cause and result of headaches to city officials. A raging fire destroyed the little county seat's jail the other day. Most of the jail's business was handling drunks. The fire also destroyed about 90 per cent of Big Piney's whiskey.
Pine needles that brown and drop in fall are three years old. Those one or two years old do not drop except during a severe drought, then the two-year-old needles fall off first.
Read the Want Ads daily.
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Ballet Russe Comes To Hoch Monday
The Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo, a company of 75 dancers and musicians, will appear at 8:20 p.m. Monday, Nov. 8, in Hoch auditorium. It will be the second regular feature of the University Concert course.
Four full-length ballets will be presented, "Mozartiana," "Cirque de Deux," "Pas de Quatre," and "The Blue Danube." They will be performed with costume and scenery and accompanied by a symphony orchestra. Alexandra丹ilova and Frederic Franklin will dance the principal roles.
The Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps Rifle team is firing a match by mail with Rochester university and Illinois university today.
NROTC Rifle Team In Triangular Meet
The unit lost their match with Idaho university last week by a score of 814 to 864.
The teams do not meet for the match. They fire a regular match; the instructor scores them and then they are mailed to the opponent. It is an honor system of scoring, said Lieutenant Bolts, the team coach.
Crystal Clear Vision
Fort Worth. Tex—(UP)—Elsworth Jones knows from experience that windows in the Rock Island Railroad offices are clean. Someone closed an open window. Then Jones heard a siren, and to stick his head out the window to see. Result: one broken window, one slightly cut head.
Father, Two Sons Attend College On GI Bill To Learn Farming
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Knoxville, Tenn.—(UP)—Joseph Frank Ogleby, 49. Clarksville, Tenn., sacked up and went along with his two sons to college this fall.
Already the professors are telling the boys their Dad is "quite a stimulating pupil."
When Oglesby decided to enroll at the University of Tennessee with his sons, Joseph Jr., and Milton, he took the family to Knoxville in a trailer so they would have living quarters.
Mrs. Oglesby does the cooking and "trailer-keeping" while Dad sits in classes as a freshman with 21-year-old Milton. Both are planning a five-year course leading to masters' degrees in agriculture.
Joseph, Jr., 22, helps Dad with his home work occasionally. He is a sophomore, a year ahead of his father and working toward the same degree.
All three are attending college under the G.I. bill of rights. They all served in the navy.
Oglesby, Sr., served during both World Wars. In 1918 he was an aviation rigger. Last time he was an engineering draftsman with the bureau of ordnance.
Joseph, Jr., served as an aircrewman, Milton as a ship's tailor.
Joseph, Sr., shows his boys the way in extra-curricular activities. He acts as the master of ceremonies for a show broadcast by the university's radio station WIZM. Joe, Jr., and Milton make it a family affair by holding down minor roles in the "Meetin" at Uncle Will's."
After they all graduate, the Oglesbys hope to run a farm together in Montgomery county, Tennessee.
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For Campus Wear "SADDLES" and hand sewn "loafers"
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Warming Centers' To Open Come Winter In Berlin
A Be win
won Fr the 50 off Re the crea 's by es el ha G for he a ha the F th ne pro F P am mo c p i k s B
Berlin—(UP)—Social life in blockaded Berlin this winter will revolve around unused restaurants, barracks, refugee camps, and air raid shelters. There Berliners will find reading material, cultural programs, sewing classes, and entertainment.
They will also find warmth. To accommodate Germans fleeing their
They will also find warm- cold homes, around 300 "warming centers" will be opened as soon as winter arrives. These buildings where people may go to keep warm, were set up in the severe winters of two years ago to combat the cold that German health officials estimated took more than 250 lives in Berlin.
Because of the Soviet blockade, Berliners, as well as Allied residents of the city, will not receive as much coal as they did last winter.
"Berliners will not freeze to death," said Wilmer Frostad, chief of the American public welfare branch in Berlin military government. "They will just freeze."
The exact amount of coal and wood Berliners will receive this winter has not yet been set, but Froistad expressed the opinion that the coal ration would be from 30 to 50 per cent less than last year. To offset this cut, Froistad, a former Red Cross official in California and the state of Washington, said that the centers would not only be increased but would open earlier than last year. He called the centers "social centers in a half frozen city . . . islands of warmth surrounded by cold."
The only hitch in the plan to reestablish the warming centers is the electricity shortage. Because Russia has cut off power to western sectors, Germans in western Berlin get only four hours of electricity daily—two hours in the day and two at night.
Unless special power allotments are given the centers, they will have to close down at nightfall when they die; their men might be greatest, Froisted said.
He said that in addition to heat the center would provide books and magazines, games for children, occasional entertainment and cultural programs in an effort to make them real community centers.
Fruit Trees Work Overtime Producing Second Yield
Ligonier, Pa.—(UP)—An apple and a cherry tree in the Ligonier valley near this community are working overtime—producing their second crop of fruit this season. Tree experts say many trees bloom twice in one year, but few have been known to grow two crops in the same season.
Flax Crop Brings $26,000,
And That's Not Hay
Watford City, N. D.—(UF)—Five combines harvested a crop valued at $26,000 on a 2270-acre flax field owned by Einar and Didrich Broderson near here. The field yielded an average of between 17 and 18 bushels per acre. It was the Broderson brothers' first attempt at flax raising.
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WCTU 'Deplores' Texan's Actions
Austin, Nov. 5—(UP)—Participation by Texas University's president and dean of women in a college stunt, to raise campus funds for charity, was condemned as "deplorable" today by the Austin chapter of the Women's Christian Temperance union.
The executive committee of the chapter of the W.C.T.U., Thursday, adopted a resolution stating:
"We deplore the incident of the president of the university and of the dean of women, accompanying a group of students to a bonky-tonk for a stunt, for a joke, for charity, or for other purposes."
The incident grew out of a campaign to raise funds at the university for world student relief, cancer research, books for China, and the University's Y.M.C.A.
The services of the president, together with other school officials and student leaders, were "auctioned off" as part of the fund-raising campaign. The university president had "a date" with the dean of women, and as part of the stunt, appeared with her at a tavern on Tuesday night in the company of two other student participants.
The Texas state W.C.T.U. president declined Thursday to accept an offer to appear at the same tavern for 30 minutes. It was announced that students had pledged contributions of $361.52 to the charity fund—if the W.C.T.U. officer would put in an appearance at the tavern.
Marketing Group Hears Nelson Discuss Research
Dr. Edward G. Nelson, associate professor of economics, and Jack Wickert, assistant professor of marketing, spoke Wednesday, before the Kansas City chapter of the American Marketing association in the Hotel President.
"Methods and Objectives of Case Research as Related to the University and Business Communities," was Dr. Nelson's topi. Mr.Wickert spoke on "Preparation of Cases on Advertising Effective for Clients in Divergent Fields of Business."
Sounds Like A Good Assignment
Recently in his Fundamentals of Geography lecture period, Dr. W. M. Kollmorgen, chairman of the department of geography, was explaining certain "sure" ways to perdict weather.
He said that blonde girls could predict weather, as their hair would not comb correctly if a storm was approaching.
From the back of the room a voice asked if. Dr. Kollmorgen could prove this statement.
He replied. "No, I can't prove it, but maybe you can. Find yourself a good blonde and work on it."
Semantics Appeals To All, Club Told
General semantics appeals to the housewife as well as the academic person, S. I. Hayakawa told the General Semantics club Wednesday night.
Robert L. Read, founder of the General Semantics club in Pasadena, Calif., spoke briefly to the group on the introduction of general semantics in Pasadena.
Dr. Hayakawa is a visiting professor at Kansas City university. He is a lecturer and author on general semantics, and is the author of "Language in Action."
Dr. Hayakawa defined plans and movies as "organized sequences of symbolic experience." We experience semantic reactions from movies, plays, and literature. General semantics appeals to persons in all walks of life. Policemen are being taught courses in it.
Union Will Sponsor Jitterbug Contest
The Memorial Union will sponsor a jitterbug contest in the Kansas room, Wednesday, Nov. 10, at 7:30 p.m. The contest is open to all students in the University, Harry Koons, committee — member announced. Prizes will be awarded to the winners.
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Hindus Worship The Snakes Which Very Often Kill Them
Bombay—(UP)—In India—land of strange and striking contrasts and rigid religious taboos—snakes, revered and worshipped by million of Hindus, cause the death of 50,000 persons every year, according to an expert source.
The death toll is heaviest among field laborers engaged in planting rice or other crops or cutting grass for their cattle.
In Malabar, South India, where snake worship is most prevalent, the snake is looked upon as the incarnation of God. Malabaris consider it sacrilegious, therefore, to cause the slightest harm or injury to a snake. In the gardens and compounds of their houses, snakes are allowed to nest and breed.
In homes in Malabar a room is kept apart for snakes that may wish to dwell there. Milk and other foods are offered the snakes who nest in these rooms. Some of them are deadly poison carriers while others are non-poisonous. But be they deadly or not, members of the household will not molest them for fear of incurring the wrath of the gods.
The dreaded cobra—whose sting means almost certain death for a human—is held in the highest regard among Hindu snake worshipers.
GL's who served in India during the war will recall the strolling Indian snake-charmer, blowing his reed instrument made out of gourd,
two wicker baskets containing snakes swinging from his shoulders.
A nod of encouragement and the snake-man will exhibit his wares. To the wailing notes of his reeds cobras slide out of their baskets, spread their hoods, rear their bodies and sway rhythmically to the time the "master" plays.
Crowds of gaping children and grown-ups look on. The melody ends, the snakes slither back into their baskets, the show is over and the snake charmer brings you back to reality with the cry, "Backsheesh, sahib."
South Indian snake worshippers believe that members of a household will never be needy as long as snakes make their abode there. They also believe that snakes disappear from a home the moment the owner runs into a spell of misfortune.
The ricksha used in the Orient today was invented by U.S. Marine Jonathan Goble, who visited Japan in 1854 with Commodore Perry.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1948
TAYLOR SMITH
Marilyn Smith, KU's Outstanding Woman Athlete
Future Women's Golf Champ Would Rather Hit A'Homer'
"I like people, especially 'characters.' I also like to pull practical jokes on others," declared Marilyn Smith, K.U.'s most outstanding woman athlete, who is never without a pleasant smile and a greeting for everyone.
Her ambition while at K.U. is to organize a girl's golf team. The popular golf star said baseball is her favorite sport and her parents had trouble getting her to change to golf. She is rated by intramural officials as one of the best softball players in the intramural program. she met in the second round of the National Amateur at Pebble Beach Golf, Belle Harbor, NJ.
Marilyn considers "Babe" Didrickson Zaharias the greatest of all women golfers, but she says Patty Berg is her ideal. She played "the Babe" in the quarterfinals of the Broadmoor tournament. She believes that was her greatest thrill.
Marilyn traveled to the Nationa Open Golf tournament this year with Patty Berg and was her roommate while they were playing in the tournament.
Marilyn, who is a physical education sophomore, does not limit her athletic activities to baseball and golf. She is a member of last year's undefeated field hockey team which played Washburn, Baker, and other colleges in this area. She plays intramural basketball and swam the backstroke in last year's meet with Kansas State and Washburn. She played in the semi-finals of both the tennis and ping pong tournaments, and she is very fond of badminton.
The two main points in Marilyn's life about which she is undecided are matrimony and turning professional after leaving college.
Among her extra-curricula activities, the blue-green eyed Wichita girl is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta, sophomore class president, hockey manager of the Women's Athletic association, and a member of the Quack club. As a freshman she was president of the 1948 Junior Pan-Hellenic.
Marilyn has won the state golf championship the last three years. Other famous women golfers Marilyn has met on the links are Grace Lenczyk, whom she played in the finals of the Intercollegiate Golf tournament; Dorothy Birk, who
she met in the second round of the National Amateur at Pebble Beach, Calif.; Polly Riley, whom she paired off with two years at the Broadmoor tournament.
Kappa Phi, Methodist women's club, will have a business and program meeting from 7 to 8 p.m. today in the First Methodist church.
Kappa Phi Meeting Todav
TKE's Remain Unscored On By Routing Acacia 72-0
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
Forward passing and high scoring dominated Thursday's Intramural touch football as fraternity "A" teams clashed in all but one of the games on the schedule.
The T.K.E.'s, the only undefeated intact and also remained unscorded and D.U.'s all marked up their third victory in five games. Kappa Sigma and Sigma Nu have won two and lost three.
Sigma Pi "B" has won two, lost four,
and Alpha KappaLambda "A"
has won one, lost four. Oread hall
"B" has won one game in six starts.
Delta Chi and Pi KA. have lost four games without a victory, and Kappa Alpha Psi, Lambda Chi, and Acacia have dropped all five of their games.
Delta Tau's 19, Delta Chi's 0
The Delta Tau's scored in every quarter except the third to defeat the Delta Chi'i 19 to 0. Rinehart tossed a short pass to Crahan for the first touchdown, and threw a long pass to Grimm for the second. McConnel passed to Dick Bradley for the third tally. Rinehart converted after the second touchdown.
TKE 72, Acacia 0
T. K.E. blasted Acacia T2 to 0 with Pres Wilson and Chuck Boulware setting the pace. Wilson figured in nine of the eleven touchdowns by passing for seven, receiving for one, and stealing an Acacia pass and running it over. Boulware threw one touchdown pass, received four, and ran for another after receiving a lateral from Bob Grissom. Other T.K.E. scorers were Walt Yoakum, Bob Grissom, and Ken Crowley.
Sigma Pi's Edge Oread 1 to 0
Sigma Pi “B” squeaked past a stubborn Oread hall “B” team 1 to 0 in an overtime battle. Both teams were within striking distance of the goal several times but lacked a scoring punch. In the overtime, Sigma Pi struck through the air for 38 yards after losing 10 yards on the opening play, giving them a net gain of 28. Oread hall was unable to match this total. Dennis Meade played an outstanding game for the winners on both offense and defense.
Kappa Sigs 27. Kappa Lambda 0
Kappa Sigma took to the air to defeat Alpha KappaLambda 27 to 0. The winners scored twice in both the second and fourth periods. John Goodson passed to Harlan Ochs for three touchdowns and to Estes for one touchdown and extra point. Goodson also kicked two extra points.
Sig Alphs 21. Lambda Chi 6
The Sig Alph's downed Lambda Chi 21 to 6, with all the scoring in the first half. Jerry Harkins passed to Jim Brilley for a touchdown in the first quarter, and connected with Al McKeever and Briley for two more in the second period. Harkins kicked the extra points. Lambda Chi scored in the second quarter as Al
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Sigma Nu 14. Pi K.A. 6
Sigma Nu defeated Pi Kappa Alpha 14 to 6. In the second period Harry Koons passed to Skip Williams for a touchdown and Walter Hulen converted to give Sigma Nu the lead. Just before the half Robert Miller passed to Robert Brownlee for the only Pi K.A. score. In the third quarter Koons passed to John Burnett to give the SigmaNu's the clincher. Pi K.A. rallied in the last quarter with several good passes but none paid off.
D. U.'s 1, Kappa Psi' s0 Delta Upsilon won by a forfeit, 1 to 0, over Kappa Alpha Psi.
D.U.'s 1. Kappa Psi's 0
More Than A House Shortage
Fall City, Neb.—(UP)—It's not only the housing shortage that's acute in Fall City. A local man advertised a W.P.A. structure of the type made famouse by Chic Sale. He got five calls and sold it for $50.
Moral: Lock Tools Up, Too
Salem, Orc.—(UP)—Safecrackers not only stole $500 from an au-
repair shop safe here but also used the firm's electric drill to open the safe.
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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5. 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
SPOTLIGHT on SPORTS
This is not an image to recognize. It looks like a barcode with some text below it. The text is too blurry and illegible to read clearly without zooming in.
By ANNE MURPHY Daily Kansan Sports Editor
One fellow who loses weekly on the football parley cards is firmly convinced the wrong people conducted the disastrous political polls. He is sure the football dopesters would not have been thrown by the Republican "big line." He has an empty wallet to back up his argument.
He also wonders if Gilman can now be a little less secretive when pulling the old "bootleg" play.
. . .
The parley boys are giving Oklahoma three points in the game with Missouri tomorrow. That is as good as a touchdown when you have two never-miss place-kickers like Dawson and Ming. This corner would not be too surprised to see the wise boys get fooled this time.
Missouri wants to spoil the Sooner's homecoming to return the 21 to 12 compliment paid them last year in Columbia by Oklahoma. But the Sooners, and particularly quarterback Jack Mitchell, will be out to even with Faurot who, with his spring eligibility coup, cut short Mitchell's college football career by one year.
The Tigers always have trouble with the Sooners even though Coach Bud Wilkinson's club uses practically the same "split-T system" as Faurt teaches. In fact, he learned the secret of the system when he was coaching the quarterbacks and centers for Faurt's Iowa PreFlight's Seahawks in 1943. The Tigers have beaten the Sooners only three times during Faurt's 12-years at Mizzou.
A Sooner victory would be appreciated by Kansas. Then the Jayhawkers' could concentrate on defeating Oklahoma on Kansas' home turf and be assured of at least a tie for the title regardless of the outcome of the game with Missouri in Columbia.
--the first quarterback to take on the first string job without a minute's varsity experience.
While the Big Seven "favorites" get ready to fight it out in the so-called game of the year, the Kansas Jayhawkers, who should not even bother to play the last two games according to the experts, go on practicing like fiends. The last two evenings Sikes had the fellows working on tricky new pass formations which may go a long wayward balancing the Tiger andigner running attacks.
People continue to call the Jayhawkers lucky. Maybe they are. They are lucky to have the finest coaching staff in Kansas history and one of the most spirited bunch of fellows ever gathered together. They may lose a couple of ball games, but Kansas fans won't be ashamed of them.
Their fourth quarter defensive stand, which cut short the powerful Aggie drive on the Kansas 20-yard line, certainly was not luck. Dame Chance is no substitute for a determined lineman.
If ever a team should have a psychological advantage, Kansas should have it in the Thanksgiving game in Columbia. Fambrough, Small, Hogan, Scott, Sherwood, and Mace, may determine what happens on that gridiron more than if they were actually suited up.
One last word before signing off as sports editor—
--the first quarterback to take on the first string job without a minute's varsity experience.
You fellows have been swell in tolerating a "mere girl" in this man's game. It has been fun. While I still can't get in the press box, there are places I can get in to which most of the boys in the press would give anything for a pass.
If you run across a headline in the next; few weeks like "Exams Throw Student for a Loss," you will know Murphy has not become completely reoriented—nor caught up on her lesson assignments.
2-Milers Face Tough Foe In MU's McGuire
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Columbia track fans will get a pre-view of the individual fight for the Big Seven two-mile championship at 11 a.m. tomorrow when Kansas and Missouri distance men meet on the Tiger track.
This race will bring three of the league's top distance runners, Bob Karnes and Hal Hinchee of Kansas, and M.U.'s Bli McGuire, together for the first time this season. Karnes, who added the National Junior AAU 10,000 meter title to his Big Seven mile and two mile crowns last summer, and Hinchee, recorded the lowest time of the season, 9:35.8, as the Jayhawkers defeated Colorado here the past Saturday, 12 to 26.
McGuire in 9:37.4 against Iowa State to whip another conference top-fighter, Gene Shaver, two weeks ago. His meeting with the Kansas pair Saturday and next week at the conference meet in Manhattan will provide the most interesting chapter of the fall track season.
Both teams are undefeated. In addition to Colorado, Bill Easton's defending champions have downed Nebraska, 10 to 30, and Kansas State, 11 to 28. The Tigers defeated Iowa State, 17 to 20, and Nebraska, 12 to 24.
Elwyn Dees, '35, has resigned as trainer of the University of Nebraska after 10 years service. He intends to farm in Kansas after Jan. 1, when his resignation is effective. Mr. Dees was a football and track star while at the University.
Dees Will Leave NU Post
MU Favored By 8 Points
Kansas City, Mo. Nov. 5 — (UP)— The fuse that will set off the Big Seven conference football bomb has been sputtering for six weeks, but it will make contact with the explosive tomorrow when Missouri and Oklahoma risk their unsilled records at Norman.
The largest crowd ever to see a game in Norman, perhaps 38,000 persons, will jam the stands by the 2:30 kickoff time. It will be homecoming for Oklahoma and among the spectators will be Gov. Roy Turner, who will be celebrating his birthday anniversary at the game.
It's the game of the year in the conference and most of the experts are predicting the winner will move on unmolested to the championship and a likely bowl invitation.
The odds-makers doubt that the Governor will receive a birthday gift in the form of an Oklahoma victory. Most of the men who lay the figures are quoting Missouri an eight-point favorite, probably because the golden-garbed Tigers rose to heights once in smashing the brilliant Doak Walker and Southern Methodist, Southwest conference champions. Having reached such a pinnacle once they believe Don Faurot's power-laden athletes can do it again.
The only other Big Seven conference game Saturday, hapless Kansas State will be trying for its first league victory against tough Nebraska at Lincoln. Kansas has no engagement and the other two conference elevens meet non-league opponents. Colorado will take on Utah State at Boulder, and Iowa State will clash with Drake at Ames.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Meet The 1948 Jayhawkers
Wilson—Future KU Star
M. L. C.
DON WILSON
--the first quarterback to take on the first string job without a minute's varsity experience.
Don Wilson, all-around athlete from Wyandotte High school, is coach J. V. Sikes No. 2 quarterback although he is only a sophomore. Early in the season, before Dick Gill m a n came through," it looked like 19-year old Wilson would be
So far this season, Wilson has played only on the offensive. He is an accurate passer, particularly at the shorter distances.
Coach Sikes' is more pleased with the way it has turned out perhaps than is Wilson, for he wants to bring the promising signal caller along slowly. Sikes figures it will pay off dividends to the team in the future if his development is not rushed.
While at Wyandotte High school, Wilson lettered four years in football, and three years in basketball and baseball. He was all-state quarterback for two years and captain of the all-state team his senior year. Only two of his passes were intercepted during his four years at Wyandotte.
Wilson has played Ban Johnson baseball. Two years ago he played on the Goldman in Kansas City, and since has played for a Slater, Mo., team.
The 170-pound, 5 foot $10.12 \frac{1}{4}$ sophomore, is a pre-business major. He hopes to be either a coach or to run a sporting goods business.
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Frosh Eleven Plays Tigers Here Tomorrow
Kansas and Missouri will match freshman T-formations here at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the first yearling football meeting between the two schools since 1930.
1906 Mass.
Both clubs will be seeking their first victories of the year, having dropped their openers to Kansas State and St. Louis, last month. The young Wildcats clipped KU., 25 to 19, while the first-year Billikens were scoring a 13 to 7 victory.
Coach Wayne Replogle will start a Jayhawker line averaging 190 pounds a man from end to end, or one pound larger than the Kansas varsity line. Coach Tom Botts' young Tiger forwards will come in at 194% pounds a man.
Admission will be $1.00 for adults, 50c for school children. Students will be admitted on their activity books. It will be the final game of the year for both teams.
Probable Starting Lineups
Missouri Kansas
B. Hampel LE B. Schaake
J. Woodson LT B. Holton
G. Machris LG R. Mercer
F. Fuchs C J. Eskew
D. Meagher RG R. White
O. Trittl RT W. Winter
D. Werner RE A. Linville
R. Beavers QB C. Stirclow
R. Henley LH D. Wells
R. Baumeister RH P. Murray
M. Kickman C. Sandefur
Time: 2 p. m. Place: Memorial stadium.
Officials: Maurice Fager (Washburn), referee; Jim Willcoxon (Colorado), umpire; Chet Davenport (Kansas State), head linesman; Gerald Barker (Ottawa), field judge.
Ping Pong Entry Deadline Is Today
Single Rifle Shot Scores In Triple Action
Burlington, Vt.—(UP)—When 13-year-old Maurice Brown fired his rifle at a squirrel, the shot killed the squirrel, went through a wall board of Erwin Bowley's home, pierced the aim of Dana Warbey who was fixing a wall plug in Bowley's home and dropped to the kitchen floor.
Entries for the K.U. Fall Table Tennis tournament will close at 7 p.m. today. The tournament will be held November 9, 10, and 11 at the Union.
The plans call for men's singles and doubles, women's singles and doubles, and a consolation bracket for the losers in the first and second round of the men's singles. Matches will begin at 6:30 p. m. Tuesday, Nov. 9.
See Anne Gage, tournament chairman, or drop in at the Student Union office before 7 p. m. today if you wish to enter.
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1948
'Death Smog' Could Blanket Los Angeles Or Brooklyn
Donora, Pa.—(UP)—A change in prevailing winds was blamed for causing a five-day "death smog" over this Monongahela valley community where 19 persons lost their lives.
The incident, one investigator said, might well have happened in Brooklyn, in northern New Jersey, or in Los Angeles, which also have smogs. It happened here because Democrats
is locked in a pocket of the industrialized river valley with mountain ridges on all sides of the town. Usually, it was explained, prevailing winds blow across the valley at this point and prevent fog, or smog, from developing for long periods of time.
A week ago fog began settling in the "pocket," but there were no prevailing winds that day. The fog settled more and more. Smoke and fumes from the tall chimneys of the American Steel and Wire company, particularly the company's zinc smelting plant, were trapped under the blanket that settled tighter and tighter upon the Donora pocket. For five days there were no prevailing winds.
Residents of this community began noticing a sweet taste in their throats. They coughed. They became ill. At least 19 died.
As investigations neared completion, the mystery began to clear. It was learned that a state department of health report will say that the smog contained chemicals, perhaps some sulphur dioxide, but not enough to be considered dangerous to health.
The report, it was said, may give the steel company a "clean bill," but may suggest changes before the zinc plant is put back into operation.
One chemist pointed out that prolonged exposure to polluted air is more dangerous than periodic exposure, even though the concentration of poison may be more during the brief period. In the case of Donora, it was pointed out, the smog went around the clock for five days.
Only those already ill were seriously affected. Of the 19 who died, one already was dying of cancer, another of tuberculosis, several of heart disease and the others of chronic bronchial asthma. A health board official said that perhaps "as many as five" may have died during the period, smog or no.
Numerous suggestions for preventing another serious smog here are being discussed. One is the installation of equipment which would keep constant check on the prevailing winds and the "danger point" of concentration of smoke or chemical particles. This would be for the whole valley, because there are numerous other smelting plants and blast furnaces along the river.
Lloyds Of London Raised An Eyebrow At Writing A 'Loss Of Memory' Policy
Hollywood—(UP)—Members of the movie colony have taken out insurance policies on bosoms, noses, and accents. Now comes the first "loss of memory" insurance.
Lloyds of London, raising its British eyebrows, wrote the policy for Jimmy the raven.
"He knows 53 usable words," his trainer, H. W. (Curly) Twierd said, and "a few we can't use. If he ever forgets me, I'm out $700 a week."
Without his vocabulary, Jimmy would be just another beak to feed in Twiford's sizable menagery. With it, he draws $500 a week for movie roles such as he has in Eagle-Lion's "The Spiritualist," and Twiford draws another $200 for taking him to work.
"He ought to be good for at least another century. What other actor can make that claim?"
"From a long-term view," Twi-ford said, "he's about the most valuable property in Hollywood. Ravens live 135 to 150 years, and Jimmy's only 15.
It takes a week to teach Jimmy a new word, Twiford said. If it's more than one syllable, it takes two weeks.
Like most movie stars, Jimmy is easily ruffled. When he's upset, he closes up like a clam.
That's why Twiford gets $200 a week. While the director and the other actors tap their feet impatiently, Twiford tries to get Jimmy to open his mouth.
"I use the same method a producer uses on a temperamental star." Twiford said. "Outrageous flattery."
"I tell him Lassie is only a third stringer, and Trigger is ready for one night stands.
See These Values!
- A-2 Horsehide Jackets ... $22.50
- B-15 Air Force Jackets ... $16.95
- Air Force Zipper Sweaters ... $3.95
- B-11 Parka Hood Jackets ... 24.95
- Paratroopers Boots ... $9.95
- Engineer Boots ... $10.95
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THE MOST INTERESTING STORES IN TOWN
A 20 year old flag is being flown from the turret of Fraser hall for the first time.
Flag On Fraser Announces 'Hamlet'
It belongs to the University players and is being used to indicate the production of "Hamlet" is being presented in the theater there.
During the Elizabethan period, a similar flag was flown from the turret of the Globe theater, famous for its Shakespeare plays, to tell the people of London a play was being given on the inside.
When the Players first moved into Fraser hall, Allen Crafton, professor in the speech and drama department, said: "Now, we can fly the flag as they did years ago in London when they gave a play" Years passed by and the flag was never unturped. It can be seen for the first time today on Fraser.
Capt. W. R. Terrell, commandant of the Naval Reserve Officers Training corps unit here, will attend the Association of N. R. O. T. C. colleges and universities, at Northwestern university, Friday and Saturday, Nov. 19 and 20.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
Terrell Will Attend NROTC Meet At Northwestern
He will be an observer at the yearly meeting of the organization.
Peeler Peels Squirrels To Be Champion Skinner
Salem, Ill.-(UP)-J. A. "Jake" Peeler is the nation's number one squirrel skimmer. In a championship contest here, he dressed 20 squirrels in 20 minutes, to finish 58 seconds ahead of his nearest competitor. Peeler has won the contest three consecutive years.
A cord of seasoned wood will give as much heat as a ton of coal.
The Best In Pictures at Your Commonwealth Theatres
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IN NUNNALLY JOHNSON'S
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and you should!
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ANN BLYTH
IN NUNNALLY JOHNSON'S
Mr. Peabody
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A Romantic Story Comes to the Screen LOUIS HAYWARD JANET BLAIR
estate or
book. I
o you he
because
felt, Dr.
that's bad
so good
admit
going to
Dicht
yze
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logical
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ultant
hears
people
food,
certa
ne next
ow wl
he'll
Dr. D
may
andid
them.
may
ng of
like it.
I'll ask
your
ich o
oresh
fh o
o'ye
Robert Louis Stevenson's
'The Black Arrow'
he mi
takers
average
e ave
to y
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Every
fe to:
The
to le
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to k
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vote
DAY, NOVEMBER 5,1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE NINE
he Poll Cats Must Change and An Analyst Tells Why
east work, Nov. 5—(UP)—Public opinion polls are going to get a look, Dr. Ernest Dichter said today.
o you know why the political poll takers were wrong?
because they asked the people what they thought instead of what I felt, Dr. Dichter said.
it's bad. The American people do good at fast talk, they won't admit to themselves what they going to do until the chips are in.
Dichter analyzes people who wize public opinion. Forty-one's old, with a doctors degree in biology, he calls himself a psychological market and communicator-researcher. A former program militant at C. B. S., for the lastears he has been finding out people buy certain kinds of food, books, magazines, and certain airlines.
ne next time a poll taker wants
ow whom you are going to vote
he'll do everything but ask
Dr. Dichter said.
may show you a picture of candidates and ask how you item.
may have you listen to a reing of their voice and ask how like it.
I'll ask which one you'd rather
your sleeping quarters with,
ich one would you trust as a
less partner?
Ih one would you rather try
money from?
o learn a person really feels,
about an hour, the analyst
he mistake this time was that takers took at face value what average person said."
average person said he was to vote for Gov. Thomas E. for president because;
Everyone else said he was going toate for Mr. Dewey.
The average person doesn't to leave himself open for criti- or lose face by saying he's to be different.
en the average person went out voted for President Truman see:
Although he made blunders, average man thought he bed almost the same way the aver- poter would behave if he were dent.
"The average voter had an unloved desire for a new champion, President Truman suddenly aped to him emotionally."
the one thing we've got to get tough our heads is that the Ameri-public does not react rationally, long as you do not search for the frirly emotions in people, you always go wrong," he said.
rence Lodge No. 6 A.F.&AM.
Stated Communication Mon., Nov. 8, 7:30 p.m.
Visitors welcome.
Samuel P Moyer, W.M.
Walter H. Varnum, Sec
TIME
specialize in it
our hands . . .
Ethan P. Allen, director of the bureau of government research, and Hobart Hanson, director of University extension, will attend the Kansas Peace Officers association meeting Monday, Nov. 8, through Wednesday, Nov. 10, in Hutchinson.
For precision work . .
Faculty To Outline Training School
fring your watch to
Samples
WATCH SHOP
2 Mary Ph.368
Faculty Gets Large Vote; Moreau In Constable Race
Chancellor Deane W. Malott received more write-in votes for justice of the peace in the election Tuesday than any student or faculty member.
Leroy E. Harris, Lawrence attorney, was elected justice of the peace with an overwhelming majority.
Dean F. J. Moreau of the Law school received only a few less votes than Chancellor Malott for the same office. $ \textcircled{4} $
Other faculty members who received write-in votes for justice of the peace were L. C. Woodruff, dean of men; J. B. Smith, professor of law; James K. Hitt, registrar; Guy V. Keeler, director of the lecture course bureau, and Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism.
Dean Moreau made a come-back for the office of constable, and received more votes than any other faculty member.
Others to receive votes for constable were John Ise, professor of economics; Emil L. Telfel, assistant professor of journalism; Fred S. Montgomery, director of the bureau of visual instruction, and Mr. Keeler. They did not get enough votes to endanger Dean Moreau's lead for constable.
Seventy-five students also received votes for constable or justice of the peace in the same precinct, but most seemed to have had only one or two supporters.
Although members of the election boards were pleased that K.U. students showed interest in the election, most board members soon failed to
see humor in the many futile write-in votes. They explained that each of these names must be recorded twice in poll books in addition to being listed for final tabulations.
Election board members said they were on duty before opening time at 6 a.m. Tuesday and worked without stopping until closing time at 7 p.m. Some of the board members said they were certain that most students would not write in the names of friends for constable and justice of the peace if they realized that board members had to list the single-vote contestants after approximately 35 hours of writing and counting.
Speech Therapy Seminar Sees Three Movies
Three movies were shown to the Speech Therapy seminar Thursday. Miss Margaret Anderson, associate professor of speech, reported on the annual meeting of the Kansas Society for Exceptional Children which was held in Topeka, Oct. 26.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News
College Students
MOST WELCOME!
Make This Your Week-End RENDEZVOUS
Come and Meet Your Classmates and Enjoy Yourselves
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Kansan Poll Accurate On National But Not On State Election
Other pollinators in the nation may have very bad faces as a result of Tuesday's election but the University Daily Kansan poll conducted on the weekend before election turned out to be surprisingly accurate in predicting student opinion on national issues. On the state election, the poll was not very accurate.
By BOB ROTER
Totals compiled for the first and second precincts of the second ward and the first precinct of the third ward showed the Daily Kansan poll to be within 4.33 per cent accurate on the presidential election. These wards contained the majority of the student vote and extended from 9th to 17th and from Massachusetts through West Hills.
Actual results showed that Dewey received 67.33 per cent of the votes; Truman, 30.6 per cent; and Wallace, 2.07 per cent. The Kansan poll predicted that students would vote: Dewey, 63 per cent; Truman, 33 per cent; and Wallace, three per cent. The differences are 4.33 per cent under, 2.4 per cent under, and 0.93 per cent under, respectively.
On the wet-dry vote, the Kansan poll did not fare so well, being off 14.7 per cent. This may be explained by the number of city votes. The Kansan poll predicted 77 per cent in favor, 23 per cent against, whereas the actual result was 62.3 per cent in favor, 37.7 per cent against.
The issue of raising legislator's salaries was 11.1 per cent incorrect. The poll prediction was 67 per cent "yes," 33 per cent "no." The actual result was 78.1 per cent "yes," 21.9 per cent "no."
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PAGE TEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5.
The Girl He Must Leave Behind Him
AMERICAN
DIPLOMACY
POLLY
TITICS
DAWNEL
BISHOP
By Daniel Bishop, St. Louis Star-Times
Introducing The Editor
The Editorial Page—
After 8 weeks and one summer session of grinding out editorials for the Daily Kansan, the editor retires with this issue to lick his wounds and catch up in his classwork. After the demonstration of lack of respect for the judgment of newspaper editors which the voters gave Tuesday, we wonder if perhaps we haven't been wasting a lot of time.
But newspapers without editorials would be as revolutionary as a Republican in the White House, so we take this opportunity to introduce the new editor of the Daily Kansan. Maurice Lungren. Maurice will head the new staff which is taking over the Kansan Monday.
We think you will welcome this opportunity to get a new and different editorial viewpoint. Maurice is a senior in the Journalism school, and we believe he has a few things to say which will be worth the readers' time and effort.
Since we have been writing the editorials for the Kansan we have acquired a couple of calloused fingers from our typewriter. We also like to think we have picked up a friend here and there on the campus. If we haven't acquired any enemies, it isn't our fault.
Since Maurice is a pretty good boy and has not yet lost all faith in humanity, we hope you will not saddle him with our mistakes. Maurice assures us that he will make enough of his own to keep you busy.
—J.L.R.
Now that the Kansas State football winning streak has been stopped there should be a noticeable decline in Manhattan paint sales.
Women's Air Force trainees now may choose their own undies. Imagine, a top sergeant in black lace.
Inflation has hit Russia too. The Soviets now propose 15 year plans instead of the conventional 5 year ones.
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Medical School Gives Examination To 166
Open 4 'til midnight everyday
Phone 260 12 to 2 a.m., Sat., and Sunday
One hundred sixty-six persons took the medical school examinations Oct. 30, the University Guidance bureau has reported.
The majority are students wishing to enter the K.U. School of Medicine. Others took the test for entrance in other university medical schools. The examinations have been sent to the Educational Testing service in New York for scoring.
Firemen Find 'Smoke' Is Bugs
Buffalo, N. Y. — (UP) — Fireman found the "smoke" but no fire when they reached St. Louis Church. A great cloud of insects, swarming about the steepe, appeared so much like smoke that a citizen had turned in an alarm.
Read the Want Ads daily.
Dear Editor
Scared
Dear Editor:
Freshman Donald A. Moser really scared me. I didn't know we were on the verge of World War III. His sensational revelation, together with his plastic presentation of Russians flying over the country and treacherously dropping atom bombs here and there, have made me shiver and look at the sky with a fearful eye.
I had to realize once more how simple life is for some lucky people without problems, without doubts, and without choices. And once more I had to feel guilty for useless discussions and futile attempts to keep the baby while throwing out the bath water.
Future, atom bombs, the Russian steppe, the oil of the Middle East, and the rubber of Liberia—all this belongs to men like Donald A. Moser. And still, after seeing the results of these November elections, I can't help wondering if really there is no room but for Hiroshimas and hard, efficient, wonderfully certain youths. No room for a "better" that is possible but has to be sought for, worked for, and even thought for.
Albert Roland
Firemen Are Shocked Twice
Tacoma, Wash.—(UP)—Ruth Paul reported to police that a burglar displayed signs of a guilty conscience even before he had completed his visit to her house.
The prowler took his time, raiding the icebox, exchanging a clean pair of socks for his own a and taking other items. When Ruth discovered the theft she also noticed a picture of her brother on the wall had been turned around. Her brother is a police officer.
Ware, Mass. — (UP) — Volunteer firemen fighting a fire on the Alston Cross farm were shocked when they aimed a large hose at the blaze. The shocking mystery was solved when it was discovered that the hose line had been stretched across live electric wires.
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Lawyers Elect Male 'Queen'
Grand Forks, N. D—(UP)—U versity of North Dakota law s dents traditionally choose one their number as queen of the nual lawyer's banquet.
n.
This year there were no taking law at the school, but didn't stop the embryo barrister They chose a man student, Wee Sando of Grand Forks, as "guere
University
Daily Hansa
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Editor-in-Chief... James L. Robbins
Managing Editor... Wallace W. Ab
Asst. Man. Editor... John Staple
Asst. Man. Editor... Harold M.
Asst. Editor... John Whee
Asst. City Editor... Leonard Sr.
Asst. City Editor... Robert Newell
Telegraph Editor... Bill M.
Telegraph Editor... Richie M.
Asst. Tel. Editor... Patricia Bell
Sports Editor... Anne Muir
Asst. Sports Editor... Larry F.
Society Editor... Mary Lou F.
Business Mgr... Paul War
Advertising Mgr... Bill Nellis
Curlupon Mgr... Bill Nellis
Rush Cltn... Rush Cltn
Classified Mgr... Elizabeth B.
Asst. Class Mgr... Jane
Natl. Adv. Mgr... Don W
Asst. Promotion Mgr... Charles Smith
Member of the Kansas Press Assn.
International Journal of
Architecture and the Associated
Colleg Press. Represented by the National
Press. 420 Madison A
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Topeka, Kansas
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
RIDAY, NOVEMBER 5.1948
PAGE ELEVEN
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Open Remodeled Art Galleries
The remodeled galleries of the pooner-Thayer Museum of Art were opened Wednesday night for preview showing of drawings by berbert Firk and an exhibition ofaintings assembled by the Kansas tate Federation of Art. The exhibit will be on display until Sunday, ov. 28.
Herbert Fink is a painting instructor in the School of Fine Arts. His handling of pen and ink displays excellent composition. The definess of his stroke testifies that he knows what he wants to express. The quality of his line gives solidity to arm.
The exhibition of the Kansas deration includes two oils by Mr. Amk, which show that he is capable of expressing motion in another medium.
One of his sketches is a study for its painting "Boy in Motion," which as reproduced in the Aug. 16 issue of Time.
A life-sized nude by Raymond astwood steals the show. It has the me clean color, strong drawing and studied composition so prominent in his other works.
Robert Green's abstract in tem-
suring a fine study in technique and
plot, but it lacks in design.
Resettion of form seems to be his
favorite trick of composition. He
as created an impression of depth,
et handled the scene with a flatness.
Dr. John Maxon, director of the museum, has rearranged the first pair exhibits. The show cases are escrowed and art objects are displayed better. Mr. Maxon has ranged the exhibitions to show the works of art to their best advantage.
former NY Yankee Boots Himself
Washington. Nov. 5—(UP)—An investigation into the death of Alin "Jake" Powell, former major-jague outfielder who shot and killed himself at police headquarters, was ordered today by acting interendent of police Clarence nutz.
Powell, who once played with the new York Yankees, Washington Senators, and Philadelphia Phils,ok his own life last night while ang questioned about bad check narges.
Time Could Have Been In The Thief's Hands
illadelphia (UP)—Frank Hessy, city weights and measures spector, didn't know who robbed a house but he has proof of the one entry. The loot was a table model radio and a suit of clothes. an electric wall clock was disconnected, but left behind. It stopped 3:20 a.m.
instrates A Bold Bandit
New York—(UP)—When a rob- confronted Mrs. Aileen Stone the elevator of her apartment hiding he asked her to take off clothes
"I can't unless you hold my packes-" she said.
The bandit stuffed his gun in his bucket and took her packages. When his hands were full, Mrs. one pressed the emergency but-a which set off a loud siren. The adit fled.
Read the Want Ads daily.
--to the point
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Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are acceptes with the understanding that the bill will be received during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University office, Journalism bldg, not later than 4 p.m. the day before publication date.
Phone KU 376
Classified Advertising Rates
e Three five
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25 words or less ...35c 65c 90c
additional words ...1c 2c 3c
FOR SALE
1949 FORD convertible, with all
airbags. See at Board and Moore,
Harrisons.
PORTABLE TYPEWRITER. Corona, good
condition, priced right. Call 3145 and ask.
for details.
URE BRED Cocker puppies. Particularly colors buff and white. Ready to take home. Males. 8 weeks old. 4 Drive. Sunflower. Kansas. 5
ORDER YOUR Christmas cards now for
Cindy Bubbs, deliverer. Cindy Bob McDonald, phone 991-364-
8052.
ATTRACTIVE furnished cottage. 5 rooms and bath. One of the cleanest homes in town; on zoned street. Just seven min'r hours of access. Possession $48,800. See owner at 718 Locus.
MUST SACRIFICE 1939 Chrysler Imperial sedan. New paint job, tires, battery, heater, and radio. $800. May be baked at Conoco station, 1901 Mass. 11
NEW SPORT jacket. Call 1763R.
ALL LEATHER golf bag. Professional type, condition like new. Cost $55 sell for $20. Real bargain. Call at 914 New Hampshire.
PLEU POUO, please oxygen or good condition $495. Also, see at 1818 Indiana after good condition. S
1930 MODEL A roadster. New engine.
Adjacent, 16 inch wheel: 942 New Hump,
102W
CAMERA DETROLA, split 127, f. 4.
HANDLE hash. See at 308 E. 4.19.
R. Canterbury
R. Canterbury
NEW SPORT jacket, bought one month ago.
Size 38. Two-tone blue. Is too small for me. See at 905 Missouri or call
1763J after 7 p.m. 5
FIVE CIGARETTE machines in operation at good locations. Insures large, steady income for a small investment and easy information formation, or Jack Campbell, phone 730
AMMUNITION. Fight Tackle. Guns are made in the USA and made in padie RAMMUNITION. Shop, 1016 Mass. rtfn
RATMUNITION. 1016 Mass. rtfn
8 x 10 AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHS Birds-see you of your campus. Just the thing for your photo album. Hurry down the hill to Rowland's or Keeler's bookstore. 8
FOR RENT
LOVELY BASEMENT room in new home to two boys. Furnace piped into room; good ventilation, asphalt tile flooring, nearly private basement near hill but so transportation might be arranged. $3.50 a week per boy. Phone 2151M. 18
ROGM SINGLE for girls. Conveniently
university at 1215 Oread. Call 7878H.
WISIH TO contact person driving to New
contact through Daly Kansan office.
WANTED
RIDE TO WICHTA. Friday afternoon on
SATURDAY morning. Call B. Lamm. 86. 5
VACANCY FOR ONE boy; previous occupant pledged fraternity: 1416 Tenn.
GLASSES LOST Friday, October 22, between Snow and Watson library. Pink plastic bricks. Brown leather case. Call 3487M. Reward.
LOST
PAIR OF blue plastic rimmed glasses last week. Call 3045. Beward.
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA sorority pln.
Frank Strong, Phone Edith Elam, 1262.
Reward
PHI HM ALPHA pin in cellphone GTC on the back. Reward. Call 2278M.
FRIDAY EVENING, a Parker lifetime fountain pen. It is black with fine white horizontal stripes. Reward. Finder return to Kansan office or call 2920M.
WATERMAN FOUNTAIN pen, black and
blue. If returned to Kansan
Business office.
BLACK SHAEFFER lifetime fountain pen. Please and please leave at Kansan of Japan.
BULOVA MAN'S watch at Aggie game in student section. Reward Ph. 1700. 8
I WOULD appreciate the return of my grey raincoat which was taken from the office on Tuesday noon. Name and address inside are Jane Wunt, 1725 Alabama, phone 24111.
SHEAFFER PEN. Anniversary gift.
Green with horizontal white stripes.
Monday between F.S. and Green hall between
F.S. and Junction Assess. Please
c 251W. Delbert Bangs.
BROWN LEATHER notebook. Holds 6 x $9 \frac{1}{2}$ paper. Contained valuable notes. Finder please call Chas. Smith, K.U. 517.
BROWN LEATHER notebook containing lecture notes, trig, assignments, quiz return of notebook; for interested in return of notebook; notebooks on Phone Dorothy Lorea, 569. Reward. 5
RUSINESS SERVICE
PLAIN BROWN leather billetifold contain-
tains the Pinnacle Wallet. Finder kee...
Finder keeps money. 821 N. Humbert, 7
MOTHER WILL CARE for your child in my home if you are working or contemplating a holiday job. Phone 2579J.
Address 13181, ew Hamp.
STUDENTS LAUNDRY wanted. Also Island St., Mrs. Fertil Jelliont. 1205 Roxhill.
TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel.
418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. Ask for Miss Helen. 12-21
WHEN ALL PETS including dogs, birds,
fish, cats, pigeons, skunks, parrots
squirrels, rats, mice, etc., go shopping
for an outfit they go to Grant's Pet Shop
Conn St. Phone 418. Everything the
pet field—their needs in the business.
12-21
EERHART and Son, tailors. Finest samples made to measure, suits, topcoats and overcoats. Alterations, repairing and leather work. 831 $^{1}$ Mass. IF
ALTERING SUITS, coats, and dresses
leathing coats a specialty. Handmade
alorred button holes. Work guaranteed.
Call 295R, 842 Indiana. 12
MISCELLANEOUS*
BRING YOUR date to the Skyline Dinner Club. Only the best food served. We serve soft drinks. Band on Fridays and saturdays. $
AFTER THE show, drop in and have a
little Friendly Fawn's Elda.
Idea Pharmacy
RIDES AVAILABLE to and from Kansas City, Kansas daily thursday Saturday. Contact Gerald Renner, Oread hall
TRANSPORTATION
CORDUROY
10
- Green
- Wine
Grey
CAMPUS SLACKS IN WINTER WEIGHTS
- Tan
$6.95 to
The Palace
843 Massachusetts
$8.95
The
German Invents Wrist Band Camera That Takes 400 Pictures On One Roll
Munich-(UP)—A 42-year-old German scientist said that he has perfected a wrist-band camera that will take 400 pictures on a roll of ordinary 35 mm. minicam film.
Dr. Rudolf Steinbeck, the inventor, has spent the last two years working on the first model.
---
The tiny camera weighs 1-1/6 ounces, looks like a wrist watch and is about twice as thick. Steinbeck says it is foolproof and so simple that it will take pictures at "a moment's notice," without being removed from the wrist.
He said he completed the first working model this summer and will go into production soon. He said his little camera is an answer to his wife's complaint that current cameras are too complicated for a layman. Steinbeck made simplicity the keynote of his invention.
NO NEED TO WORRY!
10
Your lovely washables are safe in our new Maytag washers
OPEN:
9-6 Weekdays
9-3 Saturdays
CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT
Risk's Help - Yourself Laundry
1900 III.
"Plenty of Line Space"
Phone 628
Short and
The shorter
VAN PRE
"Comfort"
The shorter-point VAN PREEN with "Comfort Contour" collar
Perk up your shirt wardrobe with Van Preen, a beauty of a shorter-point, fused collar—one of Van Heusen's campus-chosen collar classics. See it—wear it, on Van Heusen shirts famous for their fine, lab-tested, Sanforized fabrics . . . a new shirt free if your Van Heusen shrinks out of size! $3.50, $3.95, $4.95.
O
Van Heusen
You'll find college men's collar favorites in
the world's smartest
shirts
PHILLIPS-JONES CORP., N. Y. 1, N.Y.
MILANO BELGIUM
VAN HEUSER IS A TRADE MARK REGISTERED IN THE U. B. PATENT OFFICE.
Complete line of
VAN HEUSENS
AT The Palace 843 Mass.
PAGE TWELVE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1948
Research Group To Inspect KU Contracts
Dr. E. P. Morgensen, research scientist for the United States Air Force, will be the special guest at the annual meeting of the Research foundation tomorrow. Dr. Morgensen is conducting research and developing projects for the Air Force at the Wright-Patterson airfield, Davton, Ohio.
The annual meeting of the board of directors of the University of Kansas Research foundation will be held at 10 a.m. tomorrow in the Chancellor's office. After a luncheon, the members and guests will inspect the laboratories and research facilities of the University. They will meet the heads of departments and other members of the faculty engaged in research projects.
Dr. Morgensen will outline to the board of directors the important research projects being carried on by the Air Force. He is coming to learn about the University's system of conducting research and the procedure of handling contracts.
Members of the board who will attend are E. B. Black, Black and Veatah, Kansas City, Mo.; Dean T. DeWitt Carr, school of engineering; Chancellor Deane W. Malott; Walter Cross, Kansas City Testing laboratories, Kansas City, Mo.; Oscar Stauffer, Topeka, chairman of the board of regents; J. E. Schaefer, executive vice-president of Boeing Airplane company, Wighita; and George Oberfell, vice-president of Phillips Petroleum company, Bartlesville, Okla.
The Research foundation is a nonprofit organization incorporated under the laws of the state of Kansas. About $500,000 in contracts and projects are held by the foundation Dean Carr said.
The contracts come from various departments of the federal government, from the state of Kansas, and from private industry, Dean Carn explained.
Professors and scientists are given a chance to expand things that they have in mind. These men think up the ideas and the students do the work under their guidance, Dean Carr said. The students thus get a better education.
They have an opportunity to develop research talents under the guidance of faculty men and it gives the students a topic for their master thesis.
As a result of the foundation's program, Dean Carr said, the University turns out a greater number of scientists trained in research. These graduates are able not only to contribute to private industry, but can do work for the safety of the country.
Dean Carr emphasized that the safety of the country depends upon the development of such highly trained graduates in the universities. Dr. J. O. Maloney, professor of chemical engineering is executive director of the foundation, Dean F. J. Moreau, School of Law, is secretary, and Karl Klooz, bursar, is the treasurer.
Mrs. Malott, Mrs. Carr, and Mrs. Moreau will entertain wives of the members of the board during the meeting. They will visit exhibitions by students of the School of Fine Arts.
Mrs. Roy Cross, Kansas City, Mo. will be guest at the meeting. Dr. Roy Cross was president of the foundation when he died.
Geologist Visits Campus
Carle Dane, chief of the fuels division of the federal geological survey, Washington, D. C., is in Lawrence today consulting with Wallace Lee and other officials of the state and federal geological surveys here.
The conference is being held to discuss co-operation in the investigation being conducted on oil and gas.
5,000 End Tickets Left For OU Game
In the event that Oklahoma beats Missouri in the M.U.-O.U. grid battle in Norman tomorrow, ticket sales are expected to gain impetus.
Commission 17 In January
Five to six thousand end zone seat tickets for the Kansas-Oklahoma football game Nov. 20 are still available at the ticket window in Robinson gym, it was announced by the cashier at the athletic office this morning.
They will complete the equivalent of a four-year R.O.T.C. course in January. However, most of the men are veterans and received some credit for prior service.
Seventeen cadets in the University R.O.T.C. unit will receive commissions as second lieutenants in the air force and army reserves at the end of the fall semester.
Herbert F. Buchholtz, education junior; and Chester W. Spencer, education senior; will receive commissions in the army artillery. An infantry commission will go to Edmond M. Stryker.
The fourteen who will receive air force appointments are: Richard C. Beach, education junior; James G. Bowman, education senior; Robert M. Riegle, education senior; Charles W. Spieth, education junior; Clemeth Abercrombie, James L. Baska, Eugene C. Bribach, James D. McBride, business seniors; Walter J. Michaelis, education junior; Marshal R. Warner, business senior; Frank W. Korber, Harold D. Nelson, Larry L. Funk, College seniors; and Arthur A. Clevanger, pharmacy junior.
AK Psi Hears Local Banker
"The United States has been building a western industrial civilization which is admired all over the world." George Docking, president of the First National bank of Lawrence, told members of Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business fraternity. Thursday.
He said, "Ghadi tried to industrialize India; the Turks have tried to westernize their people and the Russians have tried a socialized industrial civilization."
Mr. Docking also said that due to industrialization, we are required to take better care of our land. He explained that power machinery had enabled the farmer to do this, and with power machinery, it is no longer necessary to raise food for work animals.
Music Fraternity Announces Pledges
The following are pledges of Phil Mu Alpha, professional music fraternity: Frank Kress, Loren L. Tumbleson, Howard D. Davies, William J. Hitch, Richard S. Bennett, Fred Palmer, Lyle Wolffrom, Don Owen, Ben White.
Thomas Stalzer, Raymond E. Orcutt, Robert Ausherman, Danny Orton, David Jones, Dean Gilley, Kenneth Tebow, Duncan R. Butts, Raymond Zepp, Bill Cole, Glenn Peterson:
John Wesley, Cecil Baker, George Francis, Jere Kimmel, William Flatt, Joel Fitzgerald, Gregory Simms James Johnson, Tom Lovitt.
A meeting of the Pershing Rifles will be held in the drill hall of the Military Science building at 4 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 11.
Robert Kipp, Davis Crawford,
Richard Lading and Jack Mohler.
Pershing Rifles Will Meet
Charles Molina, Barry McDaniel,
Keith Moore, Darwin Ruhnke, Clifford Delude, George McNeish, Guss Grimm;
A treasurer will be elected.
Malott Appoints 17 To Radio Advisory Council
Seventeen members have been appointed to the KFKU radio advisory council by Chancellor Deane W. Malott. The council, made up of representatives from all departments of the University, will provide KFKU management with ideas for the best methods of utilizing the radio station.
The council which will meet, Monday, Nov. 22, will consider four things, said Dean Frank T. Stockton, chairman. They are programming, possibilities of developing FM, development of more University courses concerned with aspects of radio, and an increased use of the studio for broadcasting practice in the use of transcriptions.
Members are Ethan Allen, professor of political science; Rollin H. Baker, assistant instructor in zoology; R. Q. Brewster, professor of chemistry; J. A. Burzle, associate professor of German; Allen Crafton, professor of speech; Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of education; Hilden Gibson, associate professor of political science and sociology; J. O. Jones, professor of applied mechanics; Paul Maline, professor of economics; Burton W. Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
John Maxon, assistant professor of art history; John H. Nelson, dean of the Graduate school; George B. Smith, dean of the School of Education; D. M. Swarthorst; dean of the School of Fine Arts; Miss Esther Twente, professor of social work; Donald G. Wilson, assistant professor of electrical engineering; and Tom Yoe, director of public relations.
"KFKU management is aiming at an increased use of the radio in academic radio courses," Dean Stockton said. "Remodeling of the five-room studio is almost completed and the new equipment is being set up now."
The new studio is situated in the electrical engineering extension building. The building was completed during World War II and was used for aeronautical engineering purposes.
Student In On Write-In
Harry Truman's wasn't the only surprise victory in the elections.
When several students decided to write fellow-student "Honest" Todd Seymour on the local ballot for constable, they considered it a joke. However, the joke took wings, and the Seymour bandwagon began rolling on the Hill. With true campaign enthusiasm, the students had cards printed urging Lawrence citizens to "Vote for Honest Todd Seymour, War Veteran." These cards were then properly distributed at the polls.
Early indications of a landslide vote for Seymour were confirmed yesterday in an official notification of his election. "Honest" Todd promised to fulfill his obligations as a peacemaker.
Seymour is a junior in the School of Journalism.
California Poet Talks Here Nov. 16
Kenneth Rexroth, poet from San Francisco, will be on the campus Tuesday, Nov. 16. He will talk on "Problems of the Young Writer" at 4 p.m. The place will be announced later.
Mr. Rexroth's appearance is being sponsored by the English department and is open primarily to persons interested in writing.
Several volumes of Mr. Rexroth's verse have been published; the best known being "The Phoenix and the Tortoise."
New Directories Out Monday
Student directories will be distributed in the Union bookstore beginning Monday, Nov. 8, Dick Menuet, business manager, said today.
There is a possibility of another delay, he added, because of difficulty in shipping the directories. The full shipment by mail is expected late today or early Saturday, but distribution will not start until Monday.
Alumna Given One Chance
Doctors have given Doradeen Perry, 45, only one chance to recover from an automobile accident which occurred July 17. The one chance lies in the skill of a brain specialist at Johns-Hopkins hospital in Baltimore, Md. Miss Perry has been supervisor of music in the Kinsley, Kan., public schools for two years.
She suffered a broken neck and after the accident was in an oxygen tent because of pneumonia and other complications. She has undergone two brain operations in a Wichita hospital.
Miss Perry has been unable to move since the accident and was unconscious for about two months after the accident. She is now able to chew and swallow food and move her eyes, but she can make no facial expression. The surgery at Johns-Hopkins is expected to relieve pressure from her brain.
Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alva Perry, have drained their financial resources due to the long illness of their daughter. To assure the services of the specialist it would take between $1500 and $2000. A chartered ambulance airplane would take $700 which is the only transportation the patient could survive according to a Wichita doctor.
Miss Perry, while at the University, played first trombone in the band, was band librarian, and president of Sigma Kappa sorority. She was a counselor in the Midwest music camp during the summers of '44 and '45, and a member of Pi Lambda Theta. She received a masters' degree in music education in 1946.
The Perrys are formerly of Coffeyville, but lived in Wyoming at the time of the accident. They returned to Wichita to be with their daughter. Donations toward hospital bills and the trip to Johns-Hopkins have been made by townspeople of Coffeyville and Kinsley, and the Sigma Kappa active chapter, and alumnae of the sorority in Kansas City, Wichita, Lawrence, and Tooseka.
Fred Waring Show Tickets All Sold
There has been a sell-out of tickets for the Fred Waring show on Monday, Nov. 22, in Hoch auditorium.
The last ticket for the two-hour concert of Waring and His Pennsylvanians was sold on the third day after general ticket sales opened Monday. Advance mail orders had taken nearly half the seats before the general sale opened.
Hoch auditorium seats 4,000. Only three other concerts had capacity audiences. They were concerts by Grace Moore, Fritz Kreisler, and Ignance Paderowski.
D. M. Swarthout, director of the concert course, said there are seats available for the Sunday, Nov. 21 Fred Waring performance in Kansas City. This concert will be in the Municipal auditorium in Kansas City, Mo.
Part Of 16th To Be Paved
C. G. Bayles, superintendent of buildings and. grounds, has announced that the segment of 16th street connecting Indiana and Indiana street road will be paved. The segment is now blocked off.
Receive Reports Of Russian Aid To Israeli Forces
Paris, Nov. 5- (UP) - The American intelligence service has received a number of apparently well-founded reports indicating that Russia has been supplying arms and airplanes to the Israeli forces by way of an air route from Czechoslovakia to Palestine. it was learned today.
Sworn statements have been filed by several deserters from the Israeli air force with American intelligence agents here, detailing operations of the aerial supply route to Palestine, the United Press learned in reliable sources.
The deserters also have given the same information in sworn statements to Dr. Ralph Bunche, American Negro who is acting Palestine mediator for the United Nations since the assassination of Count Folke Bernadotte of Sweden.
There can be little doubt, it was said, that arms and airplanes supplied by this route aided the Israeli in their recent successes against the Arab forces in the Negev and in Galilee.
One pilot who said he deserved from the Israeli air force after spending several months flying the secret supply route from Czechoslavakia to Palestine with arms visited Dr. Bunche at the mediator's Paris hotel on a recent night.
He dictated a statement to Dr. Bunche's personal secretary in which he indicated that as many as 200 or more aviators now are engaged on the shuttle supply line to Palestine.
This pilot now is being kept under cover in Paris by American agents, who are protecting him against possible reprisals. It is understood that he is an American citizen, as many of the men working the supply line are said to be.
This particular pilot was said to have deserted because he received during his service with the Israeli force a total of only $100, instead of the $1,000-a-month he had been promised. It was understood that a number of other American fliers also have deserted for the same reason.
According to the reports received by American agents here from this pilot and from other sources, Israel, with the aid of Russia, has built up a substantial air force.
Paris, Nov. 5—(UP)—The newspaper Figaro said today that Generalissimo Josef Stalin and other high Soviet officials presided the past June over the exploding of two test atomic bombs in the Caspian sea.
The newspapers' copyrighted dispatch said the two bombs exploded early and used only 25 to 30 per cent of their potential explosive power. Premier Stalin ordered a new technical research group to build a new bomb by this autumn, the article said.
Figaro attributed the information to a Captain Silov, who it said formerly was attached to the Russian general staff. He is now in South America working as a chemist, the dispatch said.
Figaro said the test took place on the Mangyshlak peninsula in the Caspian sea. The atomic material, weighing 150 grams in each bomb, was said to have come from Soviet "Oak Ridge" plants at Altai in the Ural forests and Slouidianka, neat Lake Baikal, in Siberia.
Claims Russia Has A-Bomb
16th
6th M LAW Th By Or
Figaro is a conservative newspaper of about 300,000 circulation.
Beg Your Pardon
The statement attributed to Henry H. Reed, College junior, which appeared in the University Daily Kansas, Thursday Nov. 4 under the headline "Students Surprised at Election", was not his. The name Henry H. Reed appeared by n take.
W J. P dict on c the "kid emp
T Tho "fal pay sent his won
said Mr day
pho sai ind
University Dailu Kansan
Monday, Nov. 8, 1948
Lawrence, Kansas
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
STUDENT NEWSPAPER
Thomas Indicted By Grand Jury On Fraud Charge
The indictment named a niece of Miss Campbell, Myra Midkiff, and Miss Campbell's maid, Arnette Minor, as the two "dummy" employees Mr. Thomas allegedly put on his payroll.
Washington, Nov. 8—(UF)—Rep.
J. Parnell Thomas, (R-N.J.) was indicted by a federal grand jury today on charges of conspiring to defraud the government by taking salary "kickbacks" from his congressional employees.
U. S. Attorney George Morris Fay said he would ask the court to set Mr. Thomas's arraignment for Tuesday, Nov. 16.
The grand jury also indicted Miss Helen Campbell, Mr. Thomas' formsecretary, on the conspiracy charge because she allegedly participated in the "kickback" scheme.
mr. Thomas, reached by telephone at his Allendale, N. J., home said he had "no comment" on the indictment.
The indictment also charged Mr. Thomas with violating the so-called "false claims statute" by filing three pay vouchers with house of representatives authorities for persons on his payroll who allegedly did no work.
Mr. Thomas, chairman of the house un-armed activities committee at least until the new house organizes, was indicted on one count of conspiracy and three on "false claims." He would be liable to 32 years in prison and $40,000 in fines if convicted on all.
The indictment charges that the alleged illegal acts were committed from Jan. 1, 1940 to Jan. 30, 1945.
Mr. Thomas had charged previously that the investigation was a "political smear" by attorney General Tom C. Clark. After demanding first that he be permitted to testify before the grand jury, he later refused on grounds he might incriminate himself.
English Team Will Debate
Two Englishmen will arrive on the campus tomorrow to take part in a debate with a University team, according to Kim Giffin, director of University debate.
A. 12 p.m. Tuesday in Fraser theater, the two teams will debate the question "Should a world government be established?" The visitors will support the negative, and the University team will support the affirmative.
Reginald Galer, from the University of Birmingham, and Anthony J. Cox, representing the University of Bristol, will appear under the auspices of the Institute of International Education. Mr. Galer, who has also attended the University of London, is chairman of the Debating society at the University of Birmingham. Mr. Cox, law student, is a member of the Bristol Old Victorian theater. He produced one of the University reviews there.
Representing the University in the debate will be Kenneth Beasley, graduate in political science, and Jean Moore, law student.
Friday the debaters from England appeared at the University of Iowa. They are tentatively scheduled to appear at the University of Missouri today. Approximately 40 other schools are on their itinerary.
Little Man On Campus
By Bibler
BiBier
A similar business occurred with Kelley except that the members of the Jayhawk Co-op were the instigators in this case.
Christian Science Party
"By the way, Hamsted, where did the dean pick up the new voice instructor?"
Seymour's election as a constable and Kelley's "E. P." position came about in much the same manner. Bob Beine and Everett Land, fraternity brothers of Seymour, cast the first two ballots for him. About noon Tuesday they decided to try to throw the vote to Seymour and called several other nearby houses, urging them to cast ballots for Seymour. The tide was in and the next constable got more votes than the next two men combined.
The Christian Science organization held a party in the Community building last Friday. Persons interested in Christian Science were invited.
Students Forced Into Politics By Collegiate Vote Bloc
By BOB ROTER
So you want to be a politician? In Douglas county it isn't hard. All you need is about four friends who have nothing better to do than vote and ask other people to do the same.
And it seems that you must be a student if you want an office. Such worthy gentlemen as Chancellor Malot, F. J. Moreau, dean of the School of Law, and Prof. Elmer F. Beth of the William Allen School of Journalism and Public Information, failed to secure the necessary number of votes to overcome the lead set by students.
Said Constable-elect Seymour. "I am quite surprised. However, I am grateful to the persons who voted for me and I will try to fulfill my duty as a law enforcement officer of the sovereign city of Lawrence." He didn't mention enforcement of the bone-dry law.
That is how Todd Seymour and Stanley Kelley were elected to posts in the government and law enforcement agencies of the. “sovereign city of Lawrence.” $\textcircled{4}$
Kelley, one of the two new justices of the peace, attributed his election "to the general liberal sweep all over the nation, and the fact that apparently no one else wanted the job."
The commissions of the Y.W.C.A. will sponsor a party for freshman women at 7 p.m. tomorrow at Henley house.
New Directories Out Tuesday
Distribution of the student directories will begin tomorrow morning at the Student Union bookstore, Dick Menuet, business manager announced today. Distribution will continue through Friday during the regular bookstore hours.
The directories were to have been distributed today but they did not arrive from Topeka.
Ballet In Hoch At 8:20 Tonight
The Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo will present four full-length ballets at 8:20 tonight in Hoch auditorium.
They will give "Mozartiana" with choreography by George Balanchine and arranged by Tschaikowsky; "Cirque de Deux" with choreography by Ruthanna Boris and music by Charles Gounod; "Pas de Quarte," choreography by Anton Dolin and music by Cesare Pugni; and Johann Strauss' "Le Beau Danube," arranged by Roger Desmores with choreography by Leonide Massine.
There are more than 75 dancers and musicians in the company, which was organized in 1938. The ballets will be presented with costumes and scenery, and will be accompanied by a symphony orchestra under the direction of Paul Strauss
Alexandra Daniilova, Frederic Franklin, Nathalie Krassovska and Leon Danielian will dance the principal roles in the four balllets. Director of the group is Sergei J. Depham.
Kansas—Considerable cloudiness today. Much colder west and central today and turning colder northeast late today. Mostly cloudy tonight, followed by snow late tonight or Tuesday, becoming mixed with rain. Much colder east tonight and extreme east Tuesday. Strong northwest winds west and central today. High today 35 west to 50 to 55 east. Low tonight about 30.
WEATHER
Student activity tickets will admit.
Freshman President Grinds No Axes Keeps Interests Of The Class In Mind
Donald Guard, newly elected president of the freshman class, is a friendly, unassuming farmer's son from Beloit, Kan., just a little bit amazed by it all.
"I don't have any idea why I was nominated," the little, 6-foot, 1-inch freshman said.
He does not intend to enter politics as a profession but intends to major in physical education. He wants to coach football after graduation.
Asked about the low vote at the election Wednesday, the 17-year-old president said, "Independents were not organized and did not know of the election." About 40 per cent of the freshman class are all that voted.
Guard is a member of Pi Kappa Alpha social fraternity and is now practicing with the fraternity's intramural basketball squad. He is in the R.O.T.C. at the University.
While in Beloit High school he won two letters in basketball, one in football as a quarterback, and one in track as a miler. He also was one of the 10 men chosen to the Beloit team that played in the Class A State basketball tournament.
1958
In his junior year in high school, he was elected vice-president of the Future Farmers of America in Beloit. He served as representative of that group to the student council of the school! He was also a member of the Hi-Y club.
DONALD GUARD
Groups Protest Discrimination In Local Cafes
A report protesting racial discrimination in cafes near the campus was sent today to Gov. Frank Carlson and Chancellor Deane W. Malott by four University organizations.
The report was sponsored by the Y.M.C.A., Y.W.C.A., American Veterans' committee, Negro Students association, and the Committee on Racial Equality.
A recommendation in the report asked that the University take steps to determine the story of hardships caused Negro students because of the lack of eating places, and asked that the Union fountain remain open in the evening
The report is the result of a poll taken among Negro students to determine the inconveniences they are subjected to because of a lack of eating places.
The poll showed that 46 per cent of the Negro students miss meals because their class work hours conflict with meal periods at the Union cafeteria, or because long lines prevent them from being served quickly enough to use their limited free time.
Eighty-three per cent feel that the Union fountain facilities are adequate for between meal refreshments, although they must go down town in the evening for refreshments after the Union fountain is closed.
Because of these inconveniences, students said they lost from two to 15 hours a week.
New ROTC In Medicine
The University Medical R.O.T.C. new to K.U. this fall, emphasizes military preventative medicine and new methods of army field surgery. Lt. Col. T. D. McCarthy, Medical R.O.T.C. instructor, said the course stresses medical military science, rather than military science.
"Participating students will be trained in all the latest developments in field surgery," he said. They will know preventative measures for diseases which might be contracted by American soldiers stationed in any part of the world."
Col. McCarthy said medical students are not required to drill as are other OAC students, but other military school students are substituted for military science.
The medical R.O.T.C. program was started at K.U. after Chancellor Deane W. Malott's request for such a unit had been approved by the War department.
Any student in the School of Medicine may enroll in the course and upon receiving his M.D. degree becomes a first lieutenant in the medical corps reserve. There is no obligation to serve in the army unless a national emergency arises.
Engineers Attend Education Meeting
Thirty faculty members from the School of Engineering and Architecture attended the annual meeting of the Kansas-Nebraska section of the American Society for Engineering Education in Lincoln, Neb. over the weekend.
George W. Bradshaw, chairman of the civil engineering department, was elected vice-president of the section for 1948-49. Harry L. Daasch, chairman of the mechanical engineering department, presided as the retiring president.
The society accepted K.U.'s invitation to be the host school for the sectional meeting next fall.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1948
Colleges Will Be Realistic In The Newer Movies
Hollywood—(UP)—Two young movie writers, who happen to have been to college, are erasing the Betty Grable co-eds and the last-minute touchdown from the Hollywood campus scene.
"With more and more people going to college," Mr. Sale said, "more people in the audience recognize what's phoney and what's real in a college movie."
There is a football hero in the picture, Bob Arthur, but he doesn't flunk his exams on account of Betty Ann Lynn just before the big game.
In "Mother Is a Freshman," Van Johnson is a professor, but far from absent-minded. He's hep enough to fall for Loretta Young.
In fact, there isn't any big game. This also does away with that stand- ard speech to the stam: "Get in there and fight!"
The writers, Mary Anita Loos and Richard Sale, Mr. and Mrs. and graduates respectively of Stanford and Washington and Lee universities are writing not one but two college pictures at 20th Century Fox.
The colleges in "Mother Is a Freshman" and "Belvedere Goes to College" looks like colleges, and the students act like students.
"I remember," Miss Loeo said disdainfully, "when college movies always had an Old Ox Road, kissing rock, chorus of Betty Gray chorines, and absent-minded professors. We're changing all that."
"Audiences don't go for that corn any more." Mrs. Sale said.
However, Mr. Johnson never claims she has to kiss him because they're standing under old' Whatzitname's statue, and it's college tradition.
Nobody has the line, once traditional in college flickers: "Jiggers, here comes prexy."
The unconventional humor of having Clifton Webb enroll at a university is supposed to keep the clichés out of "Belvedere Goes to College."
Nor will Alan Fall in love in
with a girl cheer-leader who looks
like Grable. Miss Grable was
graduated long ago and is working
elsewhere
In a revolutionary move, 20th is casting 17 and 18-year-olds as the college freshmen.
"We got tired." Miss Loaas said, "of seeing Bing Crosby, Richard Arlen and Jack Oakie taking college entrance exams."
The Sales' way of writing assures that these films will be two minutes shorter than the old-time college thrillers.
"We are skipping the last two minutes of the football game," they said, "in which the audience breathlessly wins for the winning touchdown."
British To Abolish Old Birth Custom
London—(UP)—The British government and people will have to take the royal family's word for it when Princess Elizabeth bears a possible heir to the British throne, in about two weeks.
Buckingham Palace announced recently that the ancient custom of summoning the home secretary to the palace for the birth will be abolished.
His attendance, to insure that no royal changeling has been foisted on the people, is "merely the survival of an archaic custom," the palace said in its first official announcement of arrangements for the royal birth.
Originally the home secretary was present during a royal birth. It had been anticipated that Home Secretary Chuter Ede at least would be summoned to the palace for the arrival of Elizabeth's baby.
"It is merely the survival of an archaic custom and the king feels it unnecessary to continue further a practice for which there is no legal requirement."
University Daily Kansan
Christian Group Has Discussion Panel
Mail subscription: $3 a semester. $4.50 a year. (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence. Attached the letter concerning the university year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 8, 1879.
A panel discussion on "quire time" was presented at the regular meeting of the Inter-varsity Christian fellowship recently.
The participants were Mrs. Helga Upham, circulation assistant in Watson library; William Herwig, business junior; Marvin Burnham, engineering junior; and Ralph Wood, College freshman. They discussed the subject matter, length, purpose, and time of quiet time for a college student, Dean Anderson, business senior, presided as moderator during the question period.
The University's debate team won top honors at an invitational tournament at Purdue university Nov. 5. Sixteen teams took part in the tournament.
Debate Team Wins Honors
William Conboy, College senior,
was chosen the best affirmative
debater, and Edward Stollenwerek,
College junior, won third place for
negative debaters. The subject was
"Federal Aid to Education."
Members of the winning fourman team were Conboy, Stollenman team were Conboy, Stollenior, and Keith Wilson, senior.
Other schools taking part in the two-day meet were Michigan State college, the United States Naval and Military academies, Notre Dame, Wisconsin, Chicago, Boston, Alabama, and Purdue.
E. C. Buehler, professor of speech and coach of the winning team. accompanied them to the tournament.
Actors Are Nuts, Movie Director Says, But The Strain Makes Them That Way
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Hollywood—(UP)—Director Robert Siodmak says positively that actors are crazy and he loves 'em that way.
Movie-making keeps them as tense all day as a drawn bow. At night, the tension comes off, there is a terrific release of energy, and that's what you read about in the headlines the next morning.
Nightclub brawls. Drinking. Marijuana. Divorces. Mr. Siodmak shrugs his shoulders. What can you expect?
"The rest of the country doesn't understand Hollywood," he said. "What it calls sins are not always sins here. If someone were to come here and live like movie people have to live, he either would go crazy—or go Hollywood."
In New York, he added, Hollywood's sins would be inconspicuous. New Yorkers sin just as much.
Most movie fans think it must be a breeze to make movies, Mr. Siodmak's been told. It isn't. It's a hard, tedious, nerve-wracking business.
"I go to bed at 9 when I'm on a picture," he said. "I'm awake again at 1. The cameras go around for the rest of the night." His current insomnia is over M-G-M's "The Great Sinner."
Actors and writers work among highly-charged emotions all day. Their own feelings are bottled.
"So they let them off at night," Mr. Siodmak said. "So they're hard to get along with, and they get divorced."
Even the car-hops in Hollywood are tense, he said. They're all frustrated beauty queen winners who couldn't get a job in the movies and are scared to go home without one.
A midwestern university announced recently that it had found that all actors were mentally abnormal and inclined to a split personality.
You don't have to go to college, Director Siodmak said, to discover that. Working in the movies would make anybody that way.
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8.1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Socially Speaking
Gamma Phi Beta Open House
The members of Gamma Phi Beta held their annual open house Oct. 29 at the sorority chapter house. Guests were James Street, Charles Kinzie, William Sharp, James Crawford, John Thiele, Paul Coker, Richard Peckenschneider, Robert Hanson, Paul Gordon, Richard Mason, Donald Peale, Paul Uhlig, Richard Hamilton, Robert Swain, James Sherman, Eugene Dagel, Hugh McCaughey, Paul Gibbs, Phil Hawkins.
Barney Graham, James Coffman,
Dean Miller, Fletcher Abbey, Donald
Price, Clifford McDonald, Seymour
Gordon Saunders, James Briley, Craig Hampton, Lee Carman, Guy Goodwin, Jack Emerson, Robert Howerton, Robert Blincoe, Richard Harris, Robert Shmalberg, Emerson Shields, Joseph McCaughey, Dent Hamilton, Keppie Johnson, Frank Limbocker, Charles Moffst, Richard Penfold, David Bradley, Stanley Nelson, Fred Firner, Burton Hall, Jack Crawford,
and William Gardner.
Chaperones were Mrs. C. H. Sautter, Mrs. Ralph Park, Mrs. Fred Ellsworth, and W. W. T. MacWilliams.
Williams
Phi Kappa Sigma Pledges
Phi Kappa Sigma announces the pledging of Leslie A. Welch, Kansas City, Mo., and Samuel M. Prochaska, Ellsworth.
Jolliffe To Hold Hour Dance
Jolliffe hall will hold an open house hour dance from 7 to 8 p.m. Wednesday.
Jolliffe Open House
Jolliffe hall held an open house Oct. 29.
Guests were: Billy Joe Price, Bob Stocheck, Walter C. Buckholtz, Jim Pfeifer, B.D. Callison, C.W. Lyne, Don Hohnberg, Bob Shearer, Charles R. Schmidt, Joe Nalty, Kenneth Ehilick, Jack Schaefter, James Ellis, Kenneth Jackson, Fred Doornbar, C.A. Shoebrook, R.L. Dyer, Bob Scott, Roy Hodley.
Roy Haskins, Woode Keller, Warren Ralston, W. W. Stewart, Richard A. Richards, John D. Matyas, Morgan Caraway, Scott Thompson Glenn Ruhle, Donald Rudd, R. G Jordan, Harold Thyrur, Leonard R Heash, Herb Whittimore, Frank Lee, Charles Shara, Mark Porch Jim Shelhaw, Ted Bueckland.
Judd Lanning, John Sandusky, B. Barnett, Jim Shields, Erie Meis, David Clark, David Hainer, Graham Jarson, Ronald L. McClure, Robert Walters, Bruce Aikin, Bob Miller, Jr., William John Flynn, Donald Shuler, Charles J. Middleton, Morris Becker, Paul Richardson, Tom McMahon, Larry Carcellus, Dory Fry, Ellis Reeda, Norman Ellis, Dale Owings.
Winston C. Spencer, John Frazier,
Glenn Wiley, Webster K. Smither,
H E. Simmons, Robert S. Larkington,
John Krisko, Frank L. Shrogin,
Henry Pinault, Richard Pfister,
Robert L. Scott, Robert Caper, Dan Whitaker, Lewis Schubb, Ervin Graub, Lou Unruh, Charles Weaver, Jim Burford, Glenn R. Farnsworth,
Disk Ottenod, Charles Arnold, Wilbur Spalding, Glen Hildebrand.
Chaperones were Mesdames Vivian Christian, Elizabeth Stanley and Julia Willard.
Pi Kappa Alpha Halloween Party
Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity entertained with a Halloween party at the chapter house. Oct. 27.
Guests were Ivy Mable Conderman, Mary Ann Hunt, Lillian English, Zelda Lynch, Margaret Cool, Eleanor Brown, Suzon Lapat, Lou Lobert, Beverly Scott, Jackie Gorie, Nona Brown, Mary Gillis, Lola Jean Oberhelman, Camille Colberg, Belle Pabodie, Mary Lee New-
Billie Ann Carter, Dorothy Stephenson, Dolores Goad, Betty Catell, Marilyn Jamison, Patricia Obenland, Ione Intrum, Elizabeth Townsend, Barbara Fletcher, Virginia Brown, Donna Griefe, Evelyn Brownlee, Winona Klotz, Rosalie
Mortar Board Entertains Juniors At 'Smarty Party'
Mortar Board entertained with a Smarty party at Miller hall Nov. 4 for junior women on the 1947-48 honor roll.
The following students were invited: Dolly Eloris Anderson, Jeanne Atkinson, Alla Beebe, Ruth Ann Belt, Margaret Belt, Norma Lea Bishop, Abigail Lois Bixby, Jeanette Bolas, Bernice Brady, Ruth Brotherson, Barbara Cleaves, Mabel Conderman, Diane Danley, Phyllis Debus.
Jamie Louise Estlack, Mary Katherine Joss, Jean Kirkham, Geraldine Koelzler, Ann Learned, Elizabeth LeSuer, Edith Malott, Donna Munn, Jo Ann Edwards, Elinor Louise Frye, Billie George, Shirley Gordon, Frances Joan Gray, Mildred Gregory, Joyce Harkerloak, Betty Jean Hayward, Colleen Helmlinger, Mary Frances Hercules, Zelina Higginbottom, Dorothy Hogan.
Mary Jewett, Esther McKinney,
Jo Ann Myers, Linda Niemeyer,
Mary L. Parman, Jeanne Peek, Sally
Pegues, Martha Pennock, Mary
Pickney, Elizabeth Regier, Marian
Rippeteau, Eva Joyce Rohrer, Shirley
Shriver.
Designer Hates New'NewLook
New York-(UP)—The man who gave American women that "new look" doesn't like it.
Christian Dior, the Parisian designer, said that, like skyscrapers and everything else, America went to extremes with his idea.
"I don't mean that I don't like skyscrapers. But those skirts — I never liked," he said.
He said he never intended that women should wear daytime dresses like those that have flicked the dust off stairs all over America for the last year.
The dresses he designed never came closer than 12 inches from the floor.
Lavonne Simpson, Doris Tihen, Judy Torrey, Nancy Van Bebber, Shirley Wampler, Kathryn Ward, Mary Susan Weimer, Faye Wilkinson, Patricia Williams, Ardyle Wilson.
But Dior doesn't believe short skirts will ever come back in style. There will not be another "revolution" in women's styles for five years, he said, and then "we will never go back to what we had before."
Dior is a big, quiet, almost shy man with thinning, sandy hair. He is in New York to make and show his first ready-to-wear line of women's apparel.
The new look was just a lucky idea, he said. It came, he said, when every woman was wanting to be a "different person."
Chaperones were Mrs. Clark Mandigo, housemother, Mrs. Ralph Baldwin, Mrs. Hugh T. Crawford, and Mrs. R. H. Wilson.
Bishop, Glendale Jones, Peggy Circle, Patricia Glenn, Kathryn Smith, Delores Dyer.
Other guests were Misses Margaret Habein, Martha Peterson, Marjorie Austin, Maude Elliott, Anna McCracken, and Mesdames Deane W. Malott, R. G. Roche, and John H. Nelson.
Entertainment consisted of introductions of Mortar Board members in skit fashion with a parody of each.
To
Spiced tea and doughnuts were served. Mrs. Malott and Mrs. Roche poured.
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Committees who worked on the party under the direction of Margaret van der Smissen, president, were Dorothy Scrooge, Harriet Harlow, entertainment; Jane Ferrell, Joan Rousse, refreshments; LaAnne Powell, Margaret Meeks, Dorothy James, invitations; Janet Williams, Hilda James, and Jeanne Cooper, reception.
All Watches Timed By ELECTRONICS
Music Frat To Play For Vets
Members of Phi Mu Alpha, professional music fraternity, will present a musical program to entertain veterans at Winter General hospital in Tooneka Wednesday.
Ben Shanklin, master of ceremonies, will introduce soles by Bill Wilcox and Barry McDaniels. The entire group will form a glee club and sing selected numbers.
Music by a six-piece be-bop combo will follow. Jim Sellers, trumpet; Danny Orton, alto sax; Bob Ausherman, tenor sax; Tom Stalzer, string bass; Bob Robertson, vibes; and Jimmy Johnson, drums, will make up the combo.
Dr. E. Thayer Gaston, professor of music education and faculty sponsor, will accompany the organization on the trip.
Yes, But We Men Would Prefer Lesser Evil Of War
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
Bromley, England — (UP) — Dr. Edith Summerskill, parliamentary secretary to the food ministry, gave a woman's viewpoint on how to avoid a third world war.
She told a women's conference here, "If women had the handling of affairs all weapons would be prohibited with the exception of the tongue."
Wieners For NSA—CORE
Members of the Negro Students association were invited by Ray Williams, C.O.R.E. chairman, to attend a winer roast to be sponsored by the committee. The winer roast has been scheduled for Sunday.
William Johnson, business senior,
was appointed to work with the C.O.R.E. representatives in arranging for all future activities sponsored by the two groups.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1948
Jayhawks Trim Mizzou In Last Game Of Season
By JIM VAN VALKENBURG Kansas' spirited freshmen, showing improvement over their first game, chalked up a well-deserved 13 to 12 victory over the Missouri freshmen Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
The small crowd received its share of thrills in a game filled with long, spectacular runs. The young Jayhawk line outcharged the Tigers much of the time as they opened big holes and allowed the fleet K.U. backs to romp to 17 first downs and 298 yards rushing. Missouri collected only six first downs and 166 yards along the ground.
Superior Missouri punting and punt returning helped the losers hold down the KU. margin of victory. Coach Wayne Replogle's team averaged only 23 yards on punts with one blocked. The Tigers chalked up an excellent 47.6 average.
Both teams lost their first game. Kansas was edged 25 to 19 by the Kansas State freshmen and the Tigers were surprised, 13 to 7 by St. Louis. Saturday's contest completed the schedule for both clubs.
Kansas outgained Missouri in the opening period but poor kicking kept the Jayhawkers backed in their own territory. The first K.U. punt was blocked on the K.U. 46. A minute later, halfback Bob Henley of the Tigers intercepted Chet Strehlow's pass and returned it 43 yards to the Kansas 17. A pass, Henley to Harold Carter, moved it to the K.U. 7-yard line but the 'Hawkers staged a stand and took over on their own two.
Kansas halted another drive on the 16 late in the quarter, but the Tigers grabbed the lead with two and a half minutes gone in the second quarter when halfback Harry Drager broke loose over his own right tackle and raced 76 yards to score Jenson's placekick was wide.
With Pat Murphy and Dean Wells racing for long gains, and Strehlow pegging passes to ends Bill Schaake and Aubrey Linville, the Jayhawkers came back strong. An interception stopped the drive, but KU, got another chance when guard Ron Mercer recovered a fumble on the M.U. 32-yard line. After a five-yard penalty, fullback Henry Laughlin blasted for 10 and 16-yard gains. Dave Bowersock sliced over in two plays behind good blocking. Jay Drake's perfect placeck sent KU ahead to stay, with three minutes to go in the half.
After stopping a long Kansas march at the start of the third quarter, Missouri charged back with Drager going 33 yards and Henley passing to Dean Werner for 23 more. A holding penalty slowed the drive and Kansas took over on their own 7-vard line.
On the first play, Jack Phillips took a pitchout in his own end zone, cut back over right tackle, and speed down the east sideline with a bevy of blockers. On about the 15, he reversed his field, shook off Carter's desperate tackle, and completed the stunning 93-ward play.
The Tigers recovered in time to score early in the last quarter. Henley returned a punt 15 yards to the Kansas 31. Drager lateraled to Mike Kickham, who ran to the 5-yard line. Three plays later Henley took a lateral and slipped over the goal, but Jenson's placekick was again wide.
K.U. M.U.
First Downs 17 6
By rushing 13 3
By passing 3 3
By penalties 1 0
Net yards rushing 298 166
Net yards passing 49 52
Net yards total off. 347 218
Passes attempted 12 11
Passes completed 5 4
Intercepted by 2 2
Yds. ret. of inter. 28 43
Number of punts 7 5
Punting average 23 48
Yds. return of punts 40 57
Yds return of kickoff 59 48
Ball lost on fumbles 0 1
Yards penalized 25 55
Score by quarters:
Kansas 0 7 6 0—13
Missouri 0 6 0 6—12
21 Perfect Records Stand
New York, Nov. 8- (UF)—It was getting almost as hard to find perfect record football teams as Mexican war veterans today as the list of hardy survivors was reduced to 21 after a very rough weekend
Gone were the North Carolina Tarheels and the Georgia Tech Yellow-Jackets who used to brighten up the Dixie section every Monday morning. Gone also was Pennsylvania, overpowered by the Mountaineers from Penn State.
And where was that Nevada Wolfpack that was supposed to be sweeting up its victory string for a Jan. 1 appearance in the Sugar bowl? Beaten by the little old Santa Clara Broncos, that's where they were.
Those were the big shot teams that tumbled from the perfect record ranks, leaving only Michigan and Notre Dame from the Midwest, California from the Pacific coast, Army from the cast, and Clemson from the South, not necessarily in that order.
Valley Crown To Aggies
St. Louis, Nov. 8—(UP)—Oklahoma A. and M. today held the clouded Missouri Valley football championship after its Saturday route of Tulsa, 19 to 0.
The Aggies, who played only two of the four other members of the conference, won both games, beating Wichita, 27 to 14, on Oct. 17. No more loop games remain on the schedule of Valley members so the Aggies' undefeated record is secure.
Runner-up for the title was Wichita, with Drake, Tulsa and St. Louis finishing in that order.
Saturday's games produced only one upset in Denver's 30 to 27 verdict over Detroit. In other games, Iowa State, heavily favored over Drake, was lucky to eke out a narrow 2 to 0 win over the vastly improved Bulldogs, Bradley crushed St. Ambrose 33 to 7, and the underdog St. Louis University Billikens played their best game of the season as they bowed, 21 to 14, to Wichita.
The new champions are idle next weekend but there is trouble in sight for the other Missouri Valley members. South Carolina, with only two victories to show for the season, still looks too tough for last year's champion, Tulsa. And the Hurricane, still huffing and puffing in quest of its first victory, probably won't find it next Saturday.
With only one loss in eight starts, New Mexico appeared to be a slight favorite over the Bradley Braves, who have one of their better teams. Miami of Ohio, another one-time loser, rated an edge of about two touchdowns over Wichita and St. Louis, entertaining Detroit, was expecting a gloomy Sunday.
The Standings:
Sunday's Pro Football
National Football League Chicago Bears 21, Los Angeles
W L T
Oklahoma A and M. 2 0 0
Wichita 2 1 1
Drake 1 1 0
Tulsa 0 1 1
St. Louis 0 2 0
Rams 6
Chicago Cards 56, Detroit 20,
Miami Ducks 38, Green Bay 7.
Philadelphia 35, N.Y. Giants 14.
Washington 23, Boston 7.
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All American Conference Cleveland 28, Baltimore 7. Ruffalo 26, Brooklyn 21. San Francisco 44, Chicago Rock-
N. Y. Yankees 38, Los Angeles Dons 6.
Karnes Paces Win Over MU
Turning in the best time of the Big Sven two-mile season, 9 minutes, 28.8 seconds, Bob Karnes, Kansas star distance runner, nosed out Missouri's Bill McGuele to lead the Jayhawker two-mile team to a 13 to 26 victory over the Tigers Nov. 5. McGuele's time was 9 minutes, 34.2 seconds.
This was the defending champion Jayhawker's fourth victory of the season. It was the Missouri twomiler's first dual-meet defeat since the fall of 1945. The Kansas team had previously defeated Kansas State, Nebraska, and Colorado. They will be the favorites in the Big Seven meet Saturday morning in Manhattan.
Hal Hinchee, Kansas, finished third in 9 minutes, 35 seconds, followed by Kansans Dave Breidenalt, Cliff Abel, and Bill White. Bill Chronister was the next Missouri runner to finish after McGuire. He came in seventh in 10 minutes, 11.9 seconds.
The race was run on the Rollins field track in Columbia in 50 degree weather with a 20-mile wind
This Week's Big 7 Football
This Week's Big 7 Football
Kansas at Kansas State.
Colorado at Missouri.
Nebraska at Oklahoma.
Mich. St. vs. Iowa St. at Ames.
Conn To Hit Comeback Trail Will Take Cue Out Of Rack'
New York, Nov. 5—(UP) —Billy Conn, a bitter young man who has brooded more than two years over a disgrace of his own making, was enroute back to the ring wars in a comeback which could lead nowhere—or to the heavyweight championship of the world.
The dragging days since the night of June 19, 1946 have been dark ones for the handsome Pittsburgh Irishman. That was a moment for which he long had waited and he failed miserably and ingloriously as Joe Louis battered him to the canvas.
It wasn't the losing which turned Conn from a hero into a bum, a fugitive from his own friends. It was the manner in which he lost. Stark fear was written on his face as for eight rounds he ran like a thief from those menacing fists.
"I'm putting the cue back in the rack," he told the pitying crowd in his dressing room that night through a heartsick smile of shame. "The kid hasn't got it anymore. I'm through for good."
Now the scorn which the sports world aims at a quitter has changed his mind and on Dec. 10 Conn will climb back through the ropes for a six round Chicago exhibition with the man who clouted him into ignorinious limbo. It could be a new beginning, or the end, for Conn.
If he can face those destructive fists fearlessly, Billy will regain that old brass confidence. If not, the brand will only burn deeper.
Certainly, at 31 and in a day when heavyweights are at a new low, Conn isn't too old to dream of a successful comeback. Jersey Joe Walcott was 32 when he went back into the ring and fought his way to two cracks at boxing's most cherished bable.
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moving the current Louis from the realm of greatness.
If Conn can regain that speed of foot which carried him to the light heavyweight championship and two heavyweight title bids, he must be rated a threat. Maybe not for Louis, but for whoever succeeds the Brown Bomber.
It is inconceivable that Conn could come back swiftly enough to crash into the contending circle by next summer. Louis will fight again in June, supposedly against the winner of the Ezzard Charles-Joe Baksi fight or the Lee Savold-Bruce Wood-cock brawl.
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MONDAY. NOVEMBER 8.1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
SPOTLIGHT SPORTS
1
By OZZIE BARTELLI Daily Kansan Sports Editor
We can think of no better time to slip into this column, especially with everyone so slap-happy over the result of the Missouri-Oklahoma game Saturday. In fact, as long as that tickled feeling persists no one will notice the change. A change which, though not for the best, is the best we could do since Murphy's big brogans would have been hard to fill under any circumstance.
To get on with the story. After listening to the broadcast of the game and reading about it in the papers, we wonder what happened. The Tigers were quoted as a high-scoring bevy. Some odds-makers went so far as to quote Missouri as eight point favorites. Yet, the Bengal scoring effort totaled less than the margin they were to have won by.
The only M.U. score came after recovering a fumble on the Sooner 36. Oklahoma actually seemed capable of scoring at will. It seems hardly worthwhile to offer albis with such a point difference at overcome. And no albis were offered. Except to mention that the Missouri team was worn down by a powerhouse Oklahoma line.
This comes as a surprise. The experts were chirping about the THREE first teams Faurot could throw into the game. A bigger surprise is that the wear came so early in the third period. After a half-time rest. It just doesn't make sense. Wasn't it a hard-charging Mizzou line which wrecked Southern Methodist not many games ago?
According to the results of Saturday's game, it would seem the Bengals are at one team outfit. All of which should make it worthwhile for the Jayhawks to play out their string after all. Maybe Faurot does have three teams, but forgot to use the right one against the Sooners. And maybe he may not use the right one against Kansas. Well, miracles can happen.
Working on the "miracle" theory a little longer sort of clears up a lot of muddy water. Just a guess, but Sikes may come up with some clever pass plays which could scuttle the Sooners and notch a Kansas win.
Comparison of scores against a mutual opponent gives Oklahoma a four point edge over Kansas. The Sooners twisted the horns off the T.C.U. Frogs by a close 21 to 18 score for a three point margin. The Frogs were just able to slip through a green Kansas team 14 to 13 in the season opener. All of which should hint at a close contest between the Sooners and Kansas.
Looking deeper into the pool gives us another slant on the possible outcome of the Oklahoma-Kansas game. Kansas is a scoring team. It scored only twice against T.C.U., George Washington University, and the Oklahoma Aggies. Then there's a picture of three or more touchdowns against Iowa State, Nebraska, Colorado and Denver. This should prove a point. The point being an average of plus 23 points a game for the season.
To further clear a muddy scene, Kansas plays State before its O.U. tussle while the Sooners tangle with a tough Aggie team from the Territory. This does make a difference. One game is a breather and the
Today's IM Football
“A” teams:
P K P vs. A T O, field 2.
P D T vs. Triangle, field 5.
B T P i vs. S P E, field 1.
S Chi vs. P G D, field 3.
Battenfell vs. A K P, field 6.
“B” teams:
P D T vs. S A E, field 4.
D T D vs. Pi K A, field 8.
other a rough-and-tumble battle of power-teams. Also, we know from experience, Kansas has a fighting team which doesn't like to lose. Hates losing so much it fights right down to the wire and still musters enough fight to want to return match if they do lose. This makes it all the harder to sell this team short just because of press publicity and advance knowledge of Sooner might.
LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS
Kansas chances you say? They look good from this corner. Of course, Kansas will have to play the type of game it is capable of playing when the chips are down. If the bogey about Sooner power causes the Sikes' boys too many 'anxious moments and loss of sleep, then look for a high-geared Oklahoma team to lampoon the daylights out of our favorites.
With Monroe, Johnson, the Sperry boys, Schmidt et al in the line-up the Sooners will find their wheels too great—greased to do any high-powered churning on Memorial turf. And if the "Grif" continues his galloping ways, or the Gilman riffle arm is constant enough to find such targets as McDonald and Norris within firing range, and if Dick can succeed in hiding his hand-offs to Bertuzzi, Amberg or "Heads-up" Moffet, the picture will be worth buying after-all.
We aren't overlooking French and the possibility of shaking him loose or of a returning Pattete to the line-up. It's just that it takes a lot of remembering to get everything on paper.
Also, we don't want to do too much remembering or a certain Jack Mitchell may pop into the picture. You see, it was lots better, dreaming without getting the dream cluttered up by a Mitchell galloping into the dream and turning it into a nightmare. And that Oklahoma line pops up again forcing us to face the issue. Well, we don't have to face it alone. We've a tough Jayhawk line making holes for us, a scat-backfield running interference and Sikes calling the plays. Maybe, just maybe, we'll set-off the fuse that can spell defeat for Oklahoma.
Hornets Still Top Central League
Bv UNITED PRESS
The honors will be split this coming weekend between conference and intersectional games in the Kansas Central Intercollegiate conference.
Emporia State, the current undefeated, untied league leader, will entertain cellar-dwelling St. Benedict's, while the Pittsburgh Teachers play Arkansas State Teachers on the Kansas grid Thursday.
Washburn draws Southwestern to the Kansas capital Friday, while Fort Hays State journeys to Las Cruces, N. M., for a contest with New Mexico A. and M.
Emporia State retained the lead in the Central conference last week-end, and with only two CIC games left to play, appeared a virtual 1948 winner.
Emporia State
Fort Hays
Washburn
Southwestern
Pittsburg
St. Benedict's
The CIC Conference Standings:
Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices
Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed .. 75c
Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed .. 79c
CASH AND CARRY ONLY
W L T
3 0 0
3 1 1
2 1 1
2 2 0
2 1 0
1 3 0
0 4 0
12 East Eighth
Iowa State won a thin, non-conference decision from Drake at Ames, 2 to 0, and Colorado took a 28 to 14 thriller from Utah State at Boulder to round out the Saturday slate.
Oklahoma's bone-crushing forwards and slick backs today eyed the Big Seven championship, but faced a wait of two weeks for their showdown with Kansas, only other team unbeaten in conference play.
Kansas State lost its fifth straight conference game last weekend when it was trampled. 32 to 0, by Nebraska at Lincoln.
But the headliner was at Norman. Oklahoma spotted Missouri a quick touchdown in the first period and then slammed the gates in one of the greatest demonstrations of power in many a conference year.
There was little likelihood that Oklahoma's record (3-0) would suffer next Saturday against Nebraska at Norman, or that Kansas (3-0) would meet more than token resistance from Kansas State at Manhattan.
The big blast came in the third period when Oklahoma, a seven-point underdog, scored four touchdowns. Les (Bingo) Ming, Oklahoma's extra point specialist, converted five times in six tries to run his string for the season to 27 in 31 attempts.
After Missouri's scoring thrust from the opening kickoff, Oklahoma refused to budge. Its roaring line checked Missouri's ground-gaining machinery to 114 yards by rushing
Kansas was idle last Saturday as Oklahoma wrecked Wreckon, 41 to Not Nomain in a contest that left Mississippi manned and everybody else surprised.
Offensively, quarterback Jack Mitchell, halfback George Thomas and fullback Leon Heath scored two touchdowns each, with fine assists all the way from halfback Darrell Royal.
Oklahoma's offense was explosive, it was no better than its tremendous line play. First dwells were even, 12-12, but the statistics didn't show how tackle Howard Paine and guard Budd Bury Rumis-gump up Missouri's attack, nor did they tell of the jobs turned in by linebacker Myle Greathouse and ends Eddie Anderson and Bobby Goad.
Oklahoma Nails Tigers, Must Face Kansas
By UNITED PRESS
CASH AND CARRY ONLY
The Oklahoma-Missouri clash made Iowa State's meeting with Drake appear to have been a Sunday outing. Iowa State cashed a Drake bobble in the fourth period for its margin of victory.
By OSCAR FRALEY United Press Sports Writer
North Carolina, Penn Georgia Tech Beaten
New York, Nov. 8—(UP) — There was more than the usual moaning and groaning on collegiate gridirons today and the chief Monday mourners held the classiest wakes in Philadelphia, Atlanta, and Chapel Hill, N.C.
An elusive young man named Francis Rogel was the villain from once-tied Penn State who romped 43 yards for one touchdown and then added injury to insult by taking the clincher on an end zone pass to bump Penn out of the ranks of the undefeated and untied.
In Chapel Hill, they probably had a point. The slippery footing derailed N. Carolina's express, "Choo Choo" Charley Justice. But you have to credit an assist to that rugged William and Mary line led by tackle Louis Creekmur and center Tommy Thompson.
At Atlanta they blamed a muddy field for Georgia Tech's 13 to 6 trimming by Tennessee and they had the same complaint at Chapel Hill for North Carolina's 7 to 7 dead heat with William and Mary.
The good citizens of Atlanta might case up on the weather man and put some of the blame on Tennessee's Hal Littleford and Bobby Lund. Hurryin' Hal booted Tech into constant trouble and fired the winning touchdown pass to Lund, who ran 47 yards to defeat the engineers and spoil their perfect record.
Some of the mighty enjoyed the weekend, however. The weather was fine for Army, Michigan, Notre Dame, California, and Clemson.
Iowa State threatened to score in the final period, but a pass from Don Ferguson was intercepted in the end zone, where the ball was fumbled and recovered by Drake for a safety.
Bobby Jack Stuart rated a saliva test as he went 6 and 60 yards for touchdowns as Army murdered Stanford, 43 to 0, to give the Cadets their seventh win.
Nebraska's drubbing of Kansas State was entirely anticipated. It was K-State's 20th loss in a row in Big Seven competition since the 1944 season. Fullback Phil Young scored three Nebraska touchdowns, half-back Dick Hutton added another, and Don Bloom, substitute half-back, turned in the day's dazzer with an 82-yard punt runback for the fifth and final touchdown two minutes before the end of the game.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
JAYHAWKER
GIRLS!
Don't Poison
Your Sweethearts!
Bring them to see:
WIDE-OPEN ENTERTAINMENT WONDER!
DENNIS JACK
MORGAN CARSON
TWO GUYS FROM TEXAS
TECHNICOLOGY
Extra:"Bugs Bunny"
THE ROBINSON FAMILY
VARSITY NOW
Ends Tuesday
SWORD SLASHING SPECTACLE OF REVENGE .. AND ROMANCE!
Robert Louis Stevenson's Great Novel
"THE BLACK ARROW with Louis Hayward & Janet Blair
Notre Dame took its seventh, 19th straight and 21st in a row belting bouncing Indiana, 42 to 6. Emil (Pinkie) Sitko was much in evidence again, handing out bruises to rival teckles.
Doak Walker went 40 and 12 yards for touchdowns, tossed another and kicked two points as S.M.U. smothered Texas A. & M. 20 to 14.
Michigan, too, copped its seventh straight and 21st in a row belting oarless Navy, 35 to 0. Charlie Ortmann was one of many standouts as he scored one touchdown and heaved a 60-yard pass for another.
Two other heroes, or villains if you were on the other side, were Jack Mitchell of Oklahoma and Mike Sprock of Wake Forest. Mitchell trucked 34 and 74 yards for touch-downs as Missouri was mauled, 41 to 7, and Sprock bolted 10 yards for the Wake Forest touchdown which upset Duke, 27 to 20.
Frosh Two-Milers Defeat Wisconsin
The Jayhawker freshman two-mile team won its third telegraphic meet of the season by defeating the University of Wisconsin distance men 10 to 2 in a race run recently.
The Jayhawker freshmen scored a clean sweep of the first four positions with Herb Semper finishing in 9 minutes, 47 seconds, Pat Bowers in 10 minutes, 7 seconds, Bill Kazmer in 10 minutes, 10.5 seconds, and "Red" Dinsmore in 10 minutes, 17 seconds. The young Jayhawkers have placed one-two-three in every race run this fall.
The first men to finish for Wisconsin sin were Ward, Firchow, and Curran, who tied for fifth position in 10 minutes, 27.6 seconds.
NOW
GRANADA thru Wed
Shows 2-7-9
SHE YERHRED FOR A LIFE OF LOVE AND
THEN ONE FAITELFUL DAY ... Along come a Tull,
a Wack Stranger!
LORETTA YOUNG
ROBERT MITCHUM
WILLIAM HOLDEN
Rachel and the
Stranger
Oh that
MITCHUM
MAN!
NOW GRANADA Athru Wed Shows 2-7-9
SHE YEARNEED FOR A LIFE OF LOVE AND THEN ONE FATEFUL DAY... Alerts come a Tall, Dark Stranger!
LORETTA YOUNG ROBERT MITCHUM WILLIAM HOLDEH
Rachel and the Stranger
Plus Pluto Cartoon — Next Attraction — "FEUDIN', FUSSING AND A-FIGHTIN'"
PATEE NOW Ends Tues Two Big Features
DEATH RIDES THE NIGHT WIND A 20TH CENTURY FOR RISE
MURDER I JANE DOE AUTH HUSSEY JOHN CARROLL MYSTERY
WED. - 4 DAYS
Out of the Storm THRILLS!
JAMES LYDON LOIS COLLIER RICHARD TRAVIS
Second Feature ROY ROGERS Smiley Burnette "Under Western"
Out of the Storm JAMES LYDON LOIS COLLIER RICHARD TRAVIS
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1948
Over The Wall Instead Of Through The Gate
OVER THE WALL INSTEAD OF THROUGH THE GATE
LET'S REDUCE OUR ARMED FORCES ONE-THIRD
SECRECY ON SOVIET ARMED STRENGTH
DANIEL BISHOP
Bv Daniel Bishop, St. Louis Star-Times
The Editorial Page-
Peace Pact
- Again, the peace pact between the student governing body of Kansas State College and the All Student Council of the University of Kansas has been renewed at the annual dinner. This occasion started with the original pact in 1931, which stipulated that it be renewed yearly to meet with changing conditions.
This is an example of constructive, co-operative action possible on the part of student governing bodies. It is an action that will cause more respect for those governing bodies and, in time, eliminate the idea some people have that such organizations serve no purpose.
Of course, some will say that such pranks as painting Uncle Jimmy Green break the routine of things. However, the pranks had grown so as to constitute actual vandalism and were no longer simple pranks.
It is to be hoped that now the Pioneer and Uncle Jimmy Green can continue their "at ease" positions atop their respective pedestals without fear of being doused periodically with varied hues of paint.
Repeal
On Nov. 2, the state of Kansas broke with a long standing tradition in a decisive manner. The people of the state, by a great margin, have voted to repeal the constitutional amendment prohibiting the sale and manufacture of intoxicating liquors.
The actual form of liquor control is now directly up to the legislature who should be able to cope with the problem in a satisfactory manner. The task should be eased for them because they can study the measures enacted in other states and avoid the pitfalls made by those states and pick out the good points.
There are several ways they can handle the problem. They can allow private sale, they can allow local option, or they can control the sale entirely through state-owned stores.
The first possibility, private sale, would be a drastic step for the state of Kansas with its long dry tradition. The plan of local option has been followed in some states but reports from those states indicate such a plan is sometimes worse than a uniform plan for the entire state. They find the bootlegger is still around, but operating on a smaller scale.
The use of state-owned liquor stores has many advantages and many disadvantages.
However, the people of Kansas have spoken, and in so doing, have placed a weighty problem before the state legislature that must be met at the next session.
Heard any new pollster jokes recently? At least since the one that says the pollsters are going to ask the Democrats to put a ceiling price on crow meat?
A nearby newspaper scribe maintains that his alma mater does not pay its football players. He must have been a foreign student.
Not only did the pollsters confuse us with a wrong prediction on the election, we also have to listen to corny jokes on the subject.
Dear Editor
Suicide Steps
Dear Mr. Mayor:
With school only eight weeks old, "suicide steps," located at the corner of 13th and Louisiana, have already claimed one victim. This student, probably a freshman unfamiliar with other routes to the campus, was returning from class when the law of averages caught up with him and he fell on the steps. Fortunately, his prolonged groans attracted someone in the Women's Faculty club, just across the street, and he was given first aid. He was luckier than most victims, however. He walked away from the scene of the accident. . . but not under his own power.
If you climb these steps twice a day, it would be a conservative estimate to say that your chances of going through the year without an accident are less than 50-50. And if you have made it through the first six weeks without a mishap, don't tempt fate by continuing this mad journey. Take another route.
Now, there are four possible solutions to this grave situation: (1) the steps could be avoided by detouring 10 blocks to Mississippi st., (2) students living east of the campus could quit school, (3) the University could give Purple Hearts to survivors and other suitable commemoration to the next-of-kin, or (4) the city could repair the steps.
Robert D. Snair 1312 Ohio
Kansas City, Kan--(UP)—A. H. Strickland, Wyandotte county license inspector, already has received two applications for licenses to sell liquor.
Daily Hansan
University
'Outlanders' Wont Licenses
The applications, Strickland said, were from men in Idaho and Colorado.
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Educational Foundation, and the Associated College Press. Represented by the National Ad-
mission Board. 420 Madison Ave. New York City.
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Editor-in-Chief Maurice C. Lungen
Managing Editor Hal D. Nelson
Asst. Man. Editor Anne Murphy
Asst. Man. Editor Bill F. Mayer
City Editor Rose Nolan
City Editor Nora Temple
Asst. City Editor Patricia James
Tel. Editor Richard D. Barton
Asst. Tel Editor Keith M. Wright
Sports Editor Desmond R. Bartelli
Society Editor Osmero L. Bartelli
Society Editor Rosemary Rospaw
Business Mgr. Bill Nelligan
Advertising Mgr. Don Tennant
Circulation Mgr. Ruth Clayton
Marketing Mgr. Dave Kauzner
Classified Mgr. Dwaldron
Asst. Class. Mgr. William E. Beck
Marketing Ward. Wendy
Promotion Mgr. Charles O'Connor
This Could Get Monotonous
Eighty-Eight, Ky. — (UP — Final vote tabulation today showed:
Truman: 88;
Dewey: 88.
That's the story at Eighty-Eight.
That's the story at Eighty-Eight.
Froshawks Amend New Constitution
Froshawks who speak out of turn at meetings will be fined 5 cents. The Froshawks in an effort to curb some of the boisterousness of club members, added this provision to their constitution at the Thursday meeting. Another amendment to their constitution provides for meetings on the first and third Thursdays of each month.
Freshman emblems were promised for the next meeting and $3 was collected from each member who will attend the K.U.-K. State game. All members were asked to be present at today's K.U.-M.U. freshman game.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
Expert Radio Service
Beaman's Radio
1200 N.Y. Phone 140
Quality
ENJOY Quality FOODS? Try the COURT HOUSE CAFE 1105 Mass.
Buy a meal ticket . . . Save 10%
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Call 3406 any night—Sunday thru Thursday—and order your Snack by Telephone.
Call 3406 for K.U. Food Service
The Bus-(Adv.)
-By Bibler
---
K.U.
MON
"It's my honest opinion, Reginald, that the co-eds as well as the Rapid Transit Company will find you just as attractive without a 'Fifty-mission' hat to wear."
Da
Term
with
be pa
durin
cept !
sity I
nalisr
day I
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8.1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
1
Phone KU 376
Classified Advertising Rates
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be delivered at your request during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journals can be sent for 4 p.m. the day before publication date.
One Three Five
day days five
25 words or less ... 35c 65c 90c
additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
A GOOD 36 Ford four door. See Ray-
nard's 540. at 545 Tempur-
mats. 12 x 9 inches. 12 x 9 in.
12 x 9 in.
FOR SALE
TWO TICKETS to K.U. K-State football game. Call 1328 between 12 and 4.
1935 CHEVROLET sedan. Engine completely overhaulated, all new parts from Chevrolet. Good valves. Good body. $25.40. Bob Burwell. 1017 North Hampshire, phone 2556.
PORTABLE TYPEWRITER, Corona, good
condition, priced right, Call 3145 and
visit us at www.corona.com
ORDER YOUR Christmas cards now for complete selection and delivery. Call 617-248-3035 or visit www.orderyourchristmas.com 991
1943 FORD convertible, new, with all
features. See at Board and Moore;
H.W. 5b/6b.
MUST SACRIFICE 1939 Chrysler Imperial sedan. New paint job jobs, bat cage, lift doors, and side mirrors be seen at Conoco店, 1901 Mass. 11 ATTRACTIVE furnished cottage. 5 rooms and bath. One is the cleanest. One is the street scene. Six minu- tions by bus downtown. Possession.
pts by bus downtown. Possession
90. See owner at 718 Locust. 11
ALL LEATHER golf bag. Professional type, condition like new. Cost $55 sell for $20. Real bargain. Call at 914 New Hampshire.
NEW SPORT jacket. Call 1763R. 8 BLACK PLYMOUTH coupe, excellent condition. $495. Also, refrigerator in good condition. See at 1818 Indiana after
FIVE CIGARETTE machines in operation at good locations. Insures large, steep acreage. Investment and little work. For Information, jack Campbell, phone 730. 9
AMMUNITION. F tackle Tackle. Guns and
masks. Made made made made made made made
Rutter's Shop, 1016 Mass. rfnf
FOR RENT
8 x 10 AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHS Bird-sight your of your campus. Just the thing your photo album. Hurry down the hall to Rowland's or Keeler's bookstore. $
LOVELY BASEMENT room in new home to two boys. Furnace piped into room; good ventilation, asphalt tile flooring, secure private toilet, secure kitchen with cars living nearby so transportation might be arranged. $3.50 a week per boy. Phone 2151M.
WANTED
ROOM SINGLE for girls. Conveniently
at University of 1215 Oread. Call 27888.
R
LOST
GLASSES LOST Friday, October 22, between Snow and Watson library. Pink plastic刷s. Brown leather case. Call 3487M. Reward. 9
WISH TO contact person driving to New
contact through Daily Kansen office. 9
AR OF blue plastic rimmed glasses
*week*. Call 3045. Reward.
d MU ALPHA pin with initials G.T.C.
on the back. Reward.card 2278M.
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA sorority pln.
Strong. Phone Edith Elam, 12623. 9
Phone Edith Elam, 12623. 9
FRIDAY EVENING. a Parker lifetime fountain pen. it is black with fine white horizontal stripes. Reward. Finder return to Kansan office or call 2620M. c
BLACK SHAEFFER lifetime fountain
please please please leave at Kansan 8
Reward. 8
I WOULD appreciate the return of my grey raincoat which was taken from the Tues day noon. Name and address include Charles Quaint, 725 ALESH bona. pham 241J1.
BUSINESS SERVICE
*LAIN BROWN* leather billiard contain-
ment, $21.99. Finder keep money, $21 N. Hamp; 7
DOES YOUR pen need repairing? Excellent service on my make or model. Bring your pens and pencils to Student, Union Book Store. 12
STUDENTS LAUNDRY wanted. Also
student from 2149R, 1205 Rhodes
Island, Ms. Mas Efremov.
TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel. 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. Ask for Miss Helen. 12-21
WHEN ALL PETS including dogs, birds,
stats, cats, pigeons, skunks, parrots,
birds, mice, rats, mice, etc., go shopping
outfit they go to Grant's Pet Shop,
1218 Conn. St. L. Phone 418. Everywhere the pet field—their needs are our business.
12-21
. BERHART and Son. tailors. Finest mats made to measure suits, topcoats, leather work, repairing and leather work. 831½ Mass. **19**
. TERTING SUITS, coats, and dresses. Specialty. Handmade red button holder. Work guaranteed. 842 Harden. 1295
TRANSPORTATION
RIDES AVAILABLE to and from Kansas
and Missouri. In the day, Contact Gerald Renner, Oralhall,
day.
MISCELLANEOUS
OUR BAND plays "Bop" and sweet music for your dancing and dining pleasure. The boys in the band invite you to the Skivele Dinner Club. $
Clave Is President Of Spanish Club
Robert Clave, College senior, was elected president of the Spanish club recently.
Other officers elected were: Ellen Patterson, vice-president; Bautista Murillo, assistant vice-president; Philip Smith, secretary; Rodrigo Solera, assistant secretary; Rita Swearingen, assistant; Juan Aguerri, refreshments chairman.
Official Bulletin
Senor Domingo Ricart, assistant professor of Spanish gave a summary of the historical importance of Spain.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
Nov. 8, 1948
Archery club, 5 today, Fraser theater. Moving pictures. All interested.
Y. M.C.A., Christian faith and heritage commission, 5 today, upstairs classroom, Myers hall.
Entomology club, 4 today, 301 Snow. Miss Mary Larson of zoology department to speak on trip through Europe.
I. S.A. council, house representatives, and I.S.A. members, 5 p.m. tomorrow, room 16 Fraser.
Mathematical collocium of mathematics department, 5 today, 203 Frank Strong. Dr. I. N. Herstein to speak on "The Radical of a Ring."
Two vacancies now exist in A.S.C. due to resignation of George Lowe, District IV, and Hugh Johnson, District III.
S. A.M., 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Frank Strong auditorium. O. M. Coffman, industrial engineer, Owen - Corning Fiberglas corporation of Kansas City, speaker.
Physical Therapy club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Waltkins hospital. Miss
Slide rule course, both sections,
7 p.m. tomorrow, 110 Marvin.
Sara Patterson, speaker.
Following cases will be heard in student court, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow; Orin L. Strobel, Horace V. Edmonds, Melin Murfoin, William O. Richardson, Dean C. Banker, Andrew A. Zahner, Robert S. Clark, Maurice L. Wells, Richard H. Colburn, B. W. Barker.
Y. M.C.A. cabinet, 5 p.m. tomorrow.
Fencing club, 7.30 p.m. tomorrow,
101 Robinson gym.
Pledges of Alpha Kappa Psi, 4 p.m. tomorrow, 210 Frank Strong. Pledge examination.
United World Federalists. 4 p.m. tomorrow, Pine room, Union building. Dr. W. W. Adams, president of Central Baptist seminar, will speak on "The Church and World Government."
Jay Janes, 5 p.m. Wednesday, Kansas room, Union. Bring money for K-State tickets.
All-Association meeting for Y.M.-Y.W.C.A., 4 p.m. Wednesday, English room, Union.
Snow Zoology club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 206 Snow. Informal initiation. Movie on evolution.
I.S.A. council, 5 p.m. tomorrow,
16 Fraser.
W. Y.C.A. party for freshman women, 7 p.m. tomorrow, Henley house. Mortar Board, 9 p.m. Wednesday, Kappa Kappa Gamma house.
A. W.S. senate will not meet this week.
Music Aids Mental Cases
Milwaukee-(UP)-The Milwaukee county civil service commission has announced it will hire a music therapist to help in the treatment of mental patients at county institutions. Experiments at the county mental hospitals have shown that music aids patients to readjust themselves.
DU PONT Digest For Students of Science and Engineering
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
They said,"You can't do it!"
But Du Pont scientists developed a synthetic rubber with superior properties
"Synthetic rubber is an impossibility at any price!" declared a noted European scientist a number of years ago. And most people were inclined to agree because for more than a century chemists had been unable to duplicate natural rubber.
Du Pont scientists knew that all rubber had bad qualities as well as good. "Why struggle to duplicate its faults?" they asked. "Why not find a new chemical compound with all the good qualities of rubber, but none of the bad?"
They took as their starting point a discovery by Dr. J. A. Nieuwland of Notre Dame in connection with the polymerization of acetylene. By modifying this process, they made monovinyl acetylene. Adding hydrogen chloride, they made a new chemical compound called chloroprene—a thin, clear liquid at low temperatures. Like isoprene, it polymerized to form a rubber-like substance. But the new material, now known as neoprene, required no sulfur for vulcanization and was superior to rubber under many service conditions.
Today neoprene production is measured in millions of pounds a
year, even though it is priced higher than natural rubber. Hardly an industry is not now using it, for such good reasons as these: neoprene products resist deterioration by oils and greases. They stand up under exposure to direct sunlight. Their aging and flame-retardting properties also are superior to those of rubber.
Three types of Du Pont research
Modern research involves time, money, manpower. To develop neoprene, for example, took six years of laboratory study, a research and development expenditure of millions of dollars, plus the work of skilled researchchemists, physicists,engineers, and other scientists.
At Du Pont, research is continuous. Some of it is designed to develop new products or processes; some to improve existing products or processes; and the balance is fundamental research to uncover basic facts without regard to immediate commercial use. Each of ten manufacturing departments has its own research staff and is operated much like a separate company. In addition, the Chemical and Engineering Departments, which are not engaged in manufacturing operations, conduct research in the interests of the Company as a whole.
What you want to know about Du Pont and the College Graduate
"The Du Pont Company and the College Graduate"—newly revised, fully illustrated—describes opportunities for men and women in research, production, sales and many other fields. Explains how individual ability is recognized and rewarded under the group system of operation. For your free copy, address: 2521 Nemours Building, Wilmington 98, Del.
A typical Du Pont research team
A. H. LEE
The new research man has frequent contact with experienced supervisors. Here M. Hayek, Ph.D., Indiana 47, discusses data obtained in an experiment with F. B. Downing, left, a member of research supervision, and M. B. Sturgis, a research group head.
Neopron, used in wire, cable and hose jackets, resists abrasion, oil, heat, and sunlight.
Neoprene gloves and protective clothing resist deterioration by chemicals, greases and oils
C
Milling and compounding neoprene in the rubber experimental laboratory.
A
may include physicists, chemists chemical and mechanical engineers each of whom brings specialized training to bear on a specific phase of the subject. The man who joins one of these teams finds himself associated with some of the ablest minds in the profession and receives the opportunity and friendly support needed to make fullest use of his capabilities.
DUPONT
460 W. PALESTINE
BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVING
... THROUGH CHEMISTRY
More facts about Du Pont—Listen to "Cavalcade of America" Monday Night, NBC Coast to Coast
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1948
Red Filibuster Delays UN Vote On Balkan Action
By UNITED PRESS
Communist delegates filibustered desperately in the United Nations session today to prevent a vote on charges that Yugoslavia, Bulgaria and Albania are endangering peace in the Balkans by large-scale aid to Communist guerillas in Greece.
But it appeared likely that the 58- nation political committee would take the showdown vote later today despite the delaying tactics of Jacob Malik of Russia and Ales Bebler of Yugoslavia.
They were submitting motion after motion on procedural questions, challenging rulings by the chair and belaboring evidence in the Greek case. Once put to a vote, the charges were certain of approval.
The U.N. Security council will be called into session tomorrow to decide whether to order Jewish troops also to quit the Gallilee territory they took from them late last month. On Nov. 4, the Security council ordered the Jews to withdraw from territory they seized from the Arabs in the Negev area of Southern Palestine.
Tel Aviv reported Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Shertok will inform the council that "practical difficulties" stand in the way of any Israeli withdrawal from the Negev. The Jews also said they have "documentary" evidence that the British are still shipping aircraft, tanks and guns to the Arabs despite the U.N. truce.
Other Foreign News:
Nanking — Chinese Communist forces struck more than 20 miles through the Great Wall from Manchuria and have reached Yugen, 85 miles east of Peiping, and Funing, 20 miles east of Chengwangtao. The two columns were said to total 30,000 men. Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek called on his people to prepare for another eight years of war.
Tokyo—The Far East war crimes tribunal blamed former-Premier Hideki Tojo for engulfing the Orient in war and for developing the Axis alliance which linked Japan with Germany and Italy. Both developments were opposed by Emperor Hirohito, the tribunal said.
Berlin—Field Marshall Viscount Montgomery, chief of staff of the European Western union, began a series of defense talks with Gen. Lucius D. Clay, Gen. Bryan Robertson and Gen. Pierre Koenig, respectively the American, British and French military commanders in Germany.
The middle of the road parties remained in control, however, with 140 of the 320 seats in the council. The Communists were down to 16 seats from their re-election standing of 84 seats.
Paris—Gen. Charles de Gaulle moved a step nearer leadership in France. His rally of the French people and groups allied with it captured 107 of the 262 contested seats in France's council of the Republic the upper chamber of its parliament
Presidents Discuss Campus Problems
The unnecessarily swift action used by the office of the dean of men in curbing fraternity and sorority walkouts was criticized at the monthly President's breakfast held Nov. 6.
Dealing mostly in generalities, the group failed to reach any definite conclusion other than those which have been previously brought forth in student-faculty conferences.
Among those present were Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women; Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women; Donald K. Alderson, assistant dean of men, and John I. Irwin, former president of the All Student Council. In addition, presidents or representatives, of most organized houses on the campus attended.
It's Almost Better Than Voting Twice
It seems that this dignified matron had forgotten her glasses when she went to vote. She was having trouble with the prohibition amendment.
There is a story circulating about the elderly lady in Lawrence who was misinformed during the general election Nov. 2.
"Which place do you mark to vote in favor of prohibition?" she asked a student standing nearby. - answered, "Yes," lady."
When last seen, the little old lady was marching confidently back to the booth with a smile of victory on her face, ready to place an "X" in the "Yes" square.
Liquor Drought Still In Effect
Topека—(UP)—There will be no "holiday" in the enforcement of Kansas' still-in-effect laws against liau.
This was made plain by the state's governor and attorney general.
They called on local law enforcement officials to continue their duties in respect to Kansas "bone dry law."
Kansas went wet in Tuesday's election, amending its constitution after 68 years to toss out prohibition. But still in force are anti-liquor laws enacted more than three decades ago which make illegal the transportation or possession of whiskey—even the tiniest amount.
Actually, the only place a Kansan can own whisky legally is inside him—and too great a quantity there makes him liable to a drunkenness charge.
The 1949 legislature, convening next January, is expected to repeal the "bone dry law" without delay, writing a liquor control statute.
"There will be strict enforcement of the liquor law, no change whatsoever until the law is changed." Gov. Frank Carlson said. "There'll be no enforcement holiday. We are still obligated by our oath of office to continue this effort until the law itself is changed. The policy of any law enforcement officer must be to continue the enforcement of this law to the best of his ability." Attorney General Edward F. Arn said.
8 Initiated Into Music Sorority
Sigma Alpha Iota, professional music sorority, initiated eight members at a meeting in Topeka recently
Those initiated were Ann Cowger, Gloria Maxwell, Joan Bauer, Georgia Ginther, Virginia Alburty, sophomores; Mary Carolyn Daugherty, Joan Bauer, Gloria Ginther, Virginia Alburty, Lyla Hyten, and Marie Bardwell.
Those who took part in the initiation service were Nancy Messenger, Marilyn Lee, Bernadine Reed, Lynn Lucas, Pat Barron, Kathryn Walter, Carol Terrill, Darlene Fiedler, Dorothy O'Connor, Maxine Alburty, and Martha Weed.
The Y.M.C.A. membership drive begins today with Frederick Henderson, education senior, in charge of the drive teams.
There are nine teams, each having 10 men, with a team captain in charge of an assigned district.
Team captains are: Rex Vickers Richard Moore, Dwight Oglebsie Daniel Leander, Robert Spangler Jerry Abercrombie, Stanley Sager Frank Lindemath, Bromleigh Lamb The drive will last two weeks.
YMCA Will Start Drive For New Members Today
Press Foreman's Father Dies
John J. Verburg, job printing foreman of the University Press, has been called to Oskaloosa, Iowa, by the death of his father, Herman Verburg, who died Nov. 6.
Funeral and burial will be a Oskaloba.
Keep Big Army For Protection, Russians Say
The policy set forth by Premier Josef Stalin in his recent Pravda interview was emphasized and expanded somewhat in the speeches of Soviet leaders at the anniversary celebrations.
Moscow, Nov. 8—(UP)—Russia's celebration of the 31st anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution set Soviet policy today on a course of full combat readiness for protection against alleged Anglo-American efforts to unleash a new war.
The most forright pronouncement was by Marshal Semyon Timoshenko, famous commander in the Civil war and in World War II. Standing atop Lenin's tomb in Red square, he said in the presence of the elite of communism and massed civilians:
He already had sounded the warning voiced previously by Premier Stain in his interview and by Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov at the outset of the anniversary celebration, that American and British warmongers were trying to foment a new war.
"The Soviet army must be in full combat readiness and must strive constantly to perfect itself in order to protect the Soviet Union."
He contrasted what he called the peacable, constructive labor of the Soviet Union with what he labeled the aggressiveness of the British and Americans.
The Soviets, he said, are willing to "work for peace and international collaboration on a basis of equality of powers and mutual respect."
He addressed the massed officers and troops of the Soviet army, drawn up for a great parade through the square. The army marched under a fleet of hundreds of four-motored bombers, fighters, assault bombers, and jet propelled planes. They roared low under overcast skies, the jets hardly visible.
Topeka — (UP) — Kansas Democrats, of all people, were a bit regretful today. Winning new strength in county courthouses, the state house of representatives and the state senate, they were sorry they didn't put up more candidates.
Interesting sidelights came out of the election in the 77th district. The race for state representative polled more total votes than either the controversial repeal issue or the presidential election. The district as a whole went Dewey-dry but by close margins. The vote on repeal showed a very interesting parallel to Bock's margin. The vote for representative was: Bock, 2,491; Erhart, 1,847. The vote on repeal was: No, 2,467; Yes, 1857.
If the party had done so, in all likelihood more Democrats would have won public office in Kansas.
"The Far-Off Hills," an Irish comedy, will be the next presentation of the University players. It has been scheduled for Monday, December 6 at Fraser theater. Thomas M. Shay will direct the play, which is from the Abbey theatre of Dublin.
Democrats Gain In Legislature
Late returns, with most of the counties heard from, showed that six of Kansas' 40 state senators would be Democrats where only one member sported the donkey emblem before. There'll be at least 27 Democrats in the House, a minimum gain of nine.
Players To Give Comedy Dec. 6
As it was the minority political group which normally gets only the leavings in the heart of America Republican stronghold grabbed a little of the white meat.
C. L. Huxman, well-to-do stockman from Sublette and brother of Kansas' last Democrat governor, ousted Sien. Buell Scott of Johnson, the man with more lawmaking service than any other state legislator. In the house, the Democrats knocked out the two leading Republican candidates for speaker of the 1949 legislature—Rep. Blake Williamsmian bowing to John D. Beasley in Kansas City, and Ralph Bolinger of Bucklin losing to W. R. Penland of Dodge City.
Bob Bock Likes Home Folks As Well As They Like Him
Robert Bock, College senior, popular in his home legislative district, Stafford county. For the second straight term he will be a member of the state legislature, elected by a margin of 643 over Everett E. Erhart of Stafford.
Bock is fond of his home. "Stafford county is a wonderful place to live," he said. "The people are mighty kind and they sure do things to you. I had just gotten out of the hospital when I started campaigning but I recovered very quickly once I got out there. There's nothing like home
Perhaps one of the reasons that Bock is so popular with his "home folks" is that he is always trying to learn the opinion of Stafford county voters. He will conduct a series of meetings in various parts of his district during the Christmas vacation to determine just what his constituents think of the various issues to come before the state legislature. He hopes to conduct the meetings on a question-and-answer basis.
The "baby" of the last Kansas legislature, Robert Bock of Macksville who served at the age of 21 while still a University of Kansas student, won re-election as a Democrat in Stafford county.
Bock's first try at politics in this normally Republican state two years ago showed that Democrats can win. He narrowly edged out the opposing candidate by 115 votes at that time. This year, the victory margin was greater. Bock carried four out of five Democrats into county offices with him.
cooking and home folks to help you get well."
Bock's hometown newspaper did not help his campaigning any by placing his advertisement under the sponsorship of the Republican central committee. The paper made amends by sending out postcards stating that Bob actually was running on the Democratic ticket.
Commenting on the general election as a whole, Bock quoted the much-used phrase of Abraham Lincoln, "You can't fool all of the people all of the time."
***
JEREMY PARKES
BOB BOCK
Social Worker Conference Here Nov 19
Problems of pre-professional training of the social worker will be the general topic at a University sponsored conference Friday, Nov. 19, Dean J. H. Nelson of the Graduate school said today.
464 Tu L1 F0 I1
Social workers and representatives of colleges and universities in Kansas and the greater Kansas City area will meet in the Pine room of the Union at 10 a.m. Dean Nelson will preside at the morning session and Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College in the afternoon.
Invitations have been accepted by Rockhurst, Ottawa, Wichita, Kansas City University, Pittsburg, Friends, Bethel, Kansas State, William Jewell, Baker, Emporia and Kansas Weslyan. Others are expected, Dean Nelson said.
"The Need for Personnel in the Social Work Field" will be discussed by three sections at 10 a.m. Earl Grisby, director of the Jackson county welfare office, Kansas City, Mo., and Claude Scott, director of the Sedgwick county social welfare department, Wichita, will speak on "Public Assistance: Needs in the Local Community."
Mrs. Dorothy Bradley, director of the division of child welfare of the state department of social welfare, Topeka, and Miss Marie Scott, state case supervisor, Kansas Children's Service league, Wichita, will talk on "Child Welfare." Miss Mary Avis Todd, assistant secretary of the Council of Social agencies, Kansas City, Kan., will speak on "Other Social Services."
At 11 a.m. representatives of each of the schools present will give a brief report on their present programs. Luncheon will be served in the English room of the Union.
The afternoon session will hear Miss Margaretta Frisbee, consultant for the American Association of Schools of Social Work, New York. She will talk on the "Present Trends in Pre-professional Education for Social Work." At 2:45 p.m. Prof. Paul Kochan, Baker university, will lead a discussion on "Strengthening Pre - professional Education in Kansas and Greater Kansas City Area."
Miss Marian Jersild, instructor in piano, and Miss Katherine Mulky, instructor in organ and theory, will present a two-piano recital at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Frank Strong auditorium.
Two-Piano Recital To Be Wednesday
Miss Jersild, who came to the University in 1947, recently gave her second piano recital. She is a graduate of the Chicago Musical college, and has studied under John Crown of Los Angeles and Rudolph Ganz of Chicago.
They will play compositions for two pianos by Bach, Mozart, Farnsby, Couperin, Milhaud and Rachmaninoff.
Miss Mulky also came to the University last year. She is a graduate of Mills college, and has an M.S. degree in composition from the Juillard School of Music in New York. She has studied piano with Benjamin Moore, the late Olga Samaroff, and Darius Milhaud.
The public is invited.
YM-YW Plan Lectures For Joint Meeting
Miss Helener Currier, associate director of the Wesley foundation, and Paul Sims will speak on "Student Christian Movement of Europe," at the all-membership meeting of the Y.W.C.A. and the Y.M.C.A. at 4 pm. Wednesday in the English room of the Union.
Miss Currier toured Europe the past summer with a Methodist caravan. Mr. Sims attended the Oslo conference of World Youth organizations in the summer of 1947.
University Dailu kansan
46th Year No. 38
Tuesday, November 9, 1948
Lawrence, Kansas
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
STUDENT NEWSPAPER
Fire Destroys Old Roundhouse In Kansas City
Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 9—(UP)—The old Milwaukee railroad round-house went up in flames here today causing damages estimated at $100,-000. It was converted to feed storage two years ago and was filled with hay, sack feeds, and concentrated alfalfa.
Five companies answered an alarm at 4:21 a.m. and the flames still were raging four hours later. Fire department officials said, however, that the blaze had been under control since 5:30 a.m. They expected the fire would "burn all day."
No one was injured, although several firemen were overcome by smoke and had to be treated at the scene.
No immediate estimate of the value of the contents was given by V.E. Wiltmoth, head of the feed company, but District Fire Chief John T. Lynch believed the loss would "be at least $100,000."
Both the feed and the roundhouse is a total loss, Chief Lynch said, but food stored in an adjoining building will be saved.
Freight trains were blocked for two hours early this morning, but there was no delay in passenger traffic as a result of the fire. The Super Chief, heading east, passed within 30 yards of the fire at 6:30 am, and was not delayed as the blaze had been brought under control at that hour.
There will be at least one company at the fire scene all day.
Firemen, who said the origin of the fire was undetermined, worked under a handicap as they began to battle the blaze. They had to string lines for three blocks and under railroad tracks, but within an hour they had it under control.
It was the second spectacular fire in as many days in Kansas City. Monday, derailed cars of a Missouri Pacific freight train burst into James at Dodson, Mo., at the south limits of Kansas City. Six cars were destroyed and three others were damaged, causing heavy loss.
Donald G. Wilson, chairman of the department of electrical engineering, attended the national electronics conference in Chicago. Nov. 4 to 6.
Wilson Attends Electronics Meet
Dr. Wilson read a paper on "The measurement of atenna impedance using a receiving antenna" in a technical session. The paper covered research work that utilized energy from a remote transmitter to drive a specially constructed receiving antenna.
The conference was a national forum on electronic research, development, and application. It was sponsored by the Illinois Institute of Technology, Northwestern university, University of Illinois, the American Institute of Electrical Engineers and the Institute of Radio Engineers.
Community Chest Drive
Continues, Short Of Goal
The Community Chest drive for $19,256.86 has reached a total of 15,739.54 after a month. This makes the fund $3,517.32 short of its goal.
University students have given $639.67 and solicitations will continue.
Pershing rifle club will meet at 4 p.m. Thursday in the drill hall of the Military Science building to elect a treasurer. All active members are required to attend.
Rifle Club To Elect Officer
Kansas Auto Tags Go On Sale Jan.1
Kansas automobile license tags for 1949 will go on sale Jan. 1, C.M. Voelker, state vehicle commissioner, announced.
The tags for the coming year will have black numerals on an aluminum background and will carry in black letters across the bottom of the tag a slogan, "The Wheat State."
Many Enroll In Extension Work
Nine hundred and forty enrollments in 39 off-campus extension classes during October were reported today by Gerald Pearson, director of the University Extension class bureau.
Mr. Pearson said that because of the large enrollment so far this semester, last year's record of more than 10,000 extension class students might be exceeded. He said that 1,236 persons have enrolled in extension classes this year.
The classes, most of which are offered at night, vary from 5 to 30 meetings. Subject matter include foreign trade, chemical thermodynamics, insurance, real estate, supervisory orientation, shorthand for legal stenographers, and packaging and architectural design, as well as the more common courses in speech, writing, accounting, and interior decorating.
"We are trying to take education to the places where people live and work," Mr. Pearson said. "That accounts for the wide variety of course offerings. Such education must be tailored to exactly what people want. Academic curricula are followed only when that is what people ask for."
Mr. Pearson also reported that 659 persons attended four conferences and clinics conducted by the University during October. All but one of the conferences were on the University campus.
Will Elect New Officers
The Future Business Leaders of America will elect a president and vice-president at 5 p.m. today in the east room of the Union.
The office of president was left vacant by Delma Nichols, business junior, who resigned because of illness. Marjorie Matzen, business senior, resigned from the vice-presidency.
Guests will include Deane W. Malott, chancellor, the deans of the University, and presidents and housemothers of all organized houses.
Members of the organization will discuss methods of presenting material to high schools and colleges who wish to start local chapters.
The Inter-dorm council will give a reception for Miss Marijorie Austin, social and scholarship director of Independent houses, from 3 to 5 p.m., Sunday, at Templin hall.
Inter-dorm To Hold Tea For Miss Austin
Members are asked to bring all old business text books to the meeting. These books will be sent to schools in the Philippine Islands.
The council gave a dinner Nov. 4 in honor of Miss Austin and Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women.
Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, will hold an election of members at 7 p.m. today in 101 Snow hall.
Siama Tau To Elect
Wets And Drys To Continue Repeal Scrap In Legislature
With the political trend away from ultra-conservatism and one-party government, the Kansas Republican party may face its stiffest test in history when the state legislature convenes Jan. 11. While the party is still in control of both houses, concessions will be made which were opposed this year.
Foremost among the issues is the re-opening of the liquor question. With the majority of Kansans in favor of the state going wet after 68 years of prohibition, the Republican legislature may be forced to accede to this majority and vote for legalizing liquor in Kansas.
While dry forces will try to block relaxation of controls and push through regulation of intoxicating beverages, Kansans will be able to get whisky without paying boot-leggers. Observers point out no matter what happens, some action will be taken. As the situation stands, the prohibition amendment adopted in 1880 automatically will be killed if the legislature adjourns without making some attempt to set up controls during the session. If the legislature fails to act, Kansas will be wide open as it was before the open saloon was abolished.
For this reason, drys as well as wets, will be dogging legislative heels to see that attention is given. And the drys thus have an even greater reason for wanting the repeal amendment given a high priority.
Faced with a crowded agenda dealing with social welfare, taxation, a long-range state highway program, and other problems, the legislators may rely upon the suggestion of the 25-member legislative council meeting tomorrow in Topeka to outline the session. A great portion of the council's time will be given over to a program for setting up liquor controls.
One phase of the repeal question will be what to do about "local option." With about 85 of Kansas' 105 counties voting for prohibition, "local option" may be the most hotly contested point of the amendment.
A poll taken by the Daily Kansan, and which may be as far off-base as most polls, indicates students feel that if counties were given "local option" control of liquor would become worse than now. Counties would have no more success enforcing prohibition than the state, but would complicate the situation by setting up county liquor patrols.
Pi Beta Phi and Corbin hall will be presented with a cup for having the highest scholastic records in the past school year. Kappa Alpha Theta and Locksley hall received the cup the previous year.
It is possible the handling and sale of liquor in Kansas could be made so unprofitable by strict regulation covering possession and transportation, large license fees, heavy taxation, or by interpretation of "local option" that the state would for all practical purposes, remain dry. When the 1949 legislative session gets under way, it seems certain Gov. Frank Carlson, the administration, and legislators will be in for criticism from both sides.
Scholarship Tea To Be November 17
Inter-dorm council and Pan Henlenic council will give a scholarship tea from 4 p.m. until 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 17 at Corbin hall.
All women's organized houses are invited to the tea.
Approximately 350 students wrote English proficiency examinations Saturday afternoon.
350 Wrote English Exams
Special mention will be made of the outstanding papers written on the test, said Mrs. Natalie Calderwood of the English department.
Slide Rule Classes End Tonight
The slide rule classes, sponsored by Tau Beta Pi, engineering fraternity, will hold their final meeting at 7 p.m. tonight in 110 Marvin hall.
The advanced and elementary classes will meet together to review everything covered in the course.
Tau Beta Pi sponsored the classes at the request of engineering students who complained that no course was offered in fundamentals of the slide rule.
John C. Sells, graduate student, organized the classes. Leo F. Spector, Edward P. Hansen, and Robert V. Sellers, engineering seniors are instructors.
Approximately 76 students will complete the course tonight.
Snow Ahead For Kansas
Topeka. Nov. 9—(UP)—The Kansasweatherman said today one of thecoldest, nights of the seasonwas ahead for the state. The forecast was for lows of 18 to 22 degrees inwesternKansas, 24 to 28 in the east.
Skies cleared and sunshine bathed nearly all the state today, but it was a chill sun as temperatures failed to climb out of the 40's in most places.
A few flakes of snow fell at scattered points in eastern Kansas early today, the first snow of the fall in that portion of the state. Traces of snow were reported at Atchison, Leavenworth, Kansas City, Olathe, Topeka, and Wichita.
The last of 500 miles of snow fence, was being put into place along Kansas highways today in preparation for winter's snows. O J Siler, maintenance engineer for the state highway commission, said the job should be completed in another week. Crews have been at work for some time on the project.
Kansas' highway department has a 1,000-man maintenance crew to man snowplows and work by hand to keep traffic moving during the worst of the winter weather.
Give Programs At Topeka Hospital
Mu Phi Epsilon, national music sorority, presented a program of vocal, violin, and trumpet numbers at Winter General hospital, Topeka, Sunday. The program was given in both the mental and surgical wards.
Those who participated are Georgiaiana Bennington, Billie George, Betty Jean Hayward, Jeanne Peck, and Joyce Rohr, fine arts juniors; Jeanne Aldridge, Betty Joan Tharp, and Bettra Rae Thomas, seniors. Harriet Ann Harlow, senior, was mistress of ceremonies.
Miss Harlow will return to the hospital Wednesday, Dec. 1, to give a program of auto-harp and vocal selections.
Kansas--Partly cloudy today, tonight and tomorrow. Warmer west, little colder today extreme west. A little colder tonight southeast, not quite so cold western third of state.
The programs are sponsored by the Red Cross.
WEATHER
New Comet To Be Visible Tomorrow
A newly discovered comet should be visible to Lawrence residents early tomorrow morning if the skies are not overcast.
The Harvard observatory in South Africa first reported sighting the new comet Sunday morning. It was seen again by astronomers in Mexico. The comet can be seen with the naked eye.
Dr. Harlow Shapley, director of the Harvard observatory, said the comet may be visible in this hemisphere tomorrow morning just before sunrise.
N. W. Storer, associate professor of physics, said that he had received no official record of the new comet, but that it will probably be there in the morning.
The comet is said to be visible in the southeast, just above the horizon. Dr. Shaplesy said it is as bright as the stars in the Big Dipper and has a tail 40 times the diameter of the moon.
The comet's closeness to the sun had prevented its earlier discovery.
Although it is not as spectacular as Halley's comet, last seen in 1910, it is one of the few that can be seen with the naked eye.
Encke's comet, which was reported for the 36th time in 1928, remains one of the last famous comets to be seen in this country.
Love Talks On Thursday
The first of a series of lectures on love and marriage will be given at 4 p.m. Thursday in Myers auditorium. Dr. Robert G. Foster, professor of home economics, will lecture on "Dating, Courtship and Mate Selection."
Other lectures scheduled are:
The lectures are sponsored by the home economics department.
"Mental Hygiene and Pre-Marital Relations," by Dr. Robert Murphy, psychiatrist at the University health service, on Nov. 18; "Religion in Marriage; Bond or Barrier?" by the Rev. Edwin Price, director of Wesley foundation, on Dec. 2; "The First Year of Marriage," by Dr. Foster, Dec. 9.
Eight student organizations are co-operating with the department of home economics in offering the lectures. They are Y.M.C.A., Y.W.C.A.. All Student Council, Associated Women students, Home Economics club, Sociology club, Pan-Hellenic council and the Inter-Fraternity council.
Commission Meets In Myers Monday
The first semi-monthly meeting of the Christian Faith and Heritage commission was held Monday in the upstairs classroom in Myers hall with Bob Chekys, Y.M.C.A. president, in charge.
The commission will study the ideas of the basic Christian faith and is working on the idea of having a forum series after the Christmas holidays.
Chemistry Club Will Meet For Election And Movies
The first meeting of the University Chemistry club will be held at 4 p.m. Thursday in 305 Bailey.
Logan Miller, College senior, urges that all students interested in chemistry attend. The program will include an election of officers and movies.
Dr. R. Q. Brewster, professor of chemistry, will be faculty advisor.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE TWO
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER, 9, 1948
Official Bulletin
Nov. 9,1948
Scarab.7 tonight; 205 Marvin.
I. S.A. Council, 5 today, 16 Fraser. W.Y.C.W. party for freshman women, 7 tonight, Henley house.
Physical Therapy club, 7:30 to night. Watkins hospital. Miss Sara Patterson, speaker.
Y. M.C.A. Cabinet, 5 today.
United World Federalists, 4 today
Pine room, Union, Dr. W. W. Adams
president, Central Baptist Seminar
to speak on "The Church and World
Government."
Piedges of Albuha Kappa Psi 4, day
210, frank Strong. Examination
Following cases will be heard in Student Court, 7:30 tonight; Orin L. Strobel, Horace V. Edmonds, Melvin Muroff, William O. Richardson, Dean C. Banker, Andrew A. Zalmer, Robert S. Clark, Maurice L. Wells, Richard H. Calburn, B. W. Barker.
Slide Rule course, both sections,
7 tonight. 110 Marvin.
S. A.M. meeting, 7:30 tonight, Frank Strong auditorium, Speaker, Mr. O. M. Coffman, industrial engineer, Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp., Kansas City. Moving pictures to illustrate speech.
Two vacancies now exist in A.S.C. due to resignation of George Lowe, District IV, and Hugh Johnson, District III.
Student Union Activities meeting,
7 tomorrow, Fraser.
Jay Janes, 4 p.m. tomorrow. Kansas room. Bring money for K-State tickets.
Y. M. - Y.W.C.A. all-association meeting, 4 p.m. tomorrow, English room, Union.
Mortar Board, 9 p.m. tomorrow Kappa Kappa Gamma house.
AWS Senate will not meet this week.
Alpha Phi Omega formal pledging, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Pine room, Union. All pledges and actives.
Newcomers club tea. 2:30 p.m.
Thursday, English room, Union.
Snow Zoology club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 206 Snow. Informal initiation and movie on evolution.
Episcopal College club, holy
communion, 7 a.m. Thursday, Trinity
Episcopal church. Breakfast to
follow at Parish house.
Pershing Rifles, 4 p.m. Thursday, Military Science building.
Le Cercle Francais se reunira jeude le 11 novembre a sept heures et demie dans la salle 113 Frank Strong. M. Albert Roland fera une causerie.
Y. M.C.A. love and marriage forum, 4 p.m. Thursday, Myers hall. Dr. Robert Foster, speaker.
W. Y.C.W. fresman commission will not meet this Thursday.
Bnai J'hudah special meeting,
7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 107 Frank
Strong, concerning national affiliation.
George Toll of Alpha Epsilon
Pi to be present. Attendance required.
S. A.M. field trip to Phillips refinery in Kansas City. Transportation to leave Union building 12:30 tomorrow.
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence aid) $0.10 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence and Kansas; year辰 year end. University year辰 Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class on Sept. 17, 1916, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
A clean, well-built farm pond offers possibilities for fishing, swimming and hunting in addition to providing a water supply for livestock.
University Daily Kansan
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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Weddings And Engagements
Goddard-Casselman Engagement
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Goddard,
Stanley, announced the engagement of their daughter, Madge Louise, to Donald Max Casselman,
son of Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Casselman,
Conway Springs, at an after-dinner coffee at Hopkins hall Sunday.
Miss Goddard's roommates, Joanne Vannum, Kathleen McKinney, and Mary Helen Clark passed chocolates. Members of Hopkins hall sang "Always."
Miss Goddard is a sophomore in the College. Mr. Casselman is a College junior.
RCA Man To Give Lecture Today
Cyril N. Hoyler from the laboratories of the Radio Corporation of America at Princeton, N. J., will give a demonstration lecture from 3 to 5 p.m. today in Lindley auditorium.
T. DeWitt Carr, dean of the School of Engineering, said the lecture would be especially interesting to students in the department of chemical engineering, chemistry, electrical engineering, and physics, particularly those in engineering physics.
He will have a demonstration decade of the electronic counter, an analogue computer for solving linear simultaneous equations by electronic means, completed counter-timer, and a demonstration of luminescent material used in television.
Graduate students should see the heads of their departments to arrange for an interview with Mr. Hoyler, Dean Carr said.
Ex-Dean's Widow Is Dead At 85
Mrs. Lena Van Voorish Templin, widow of Olin Templein, for many years was dean of the College of Liberal Arts, died Nov. 5 at Cresthaven hospital in Kansas City, Mo., after an extended illness. She was 85 years old.
Mrs. Templin is survived by two daughters, two granddaughters, three grandsons, and four great grandchildren, the oldest of whom is Robert Rankin Shaw, College junior.
Mrs. Templin was graduated from KU, in 1886 in the same class with Mr. Templin. They were married Aug. 6, 1886, and went to Germany to study in 1888. Both were members of Phi Beta Kappa, honorary scholarship society.
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The modest blonde smiled and shifted her paint brushes to the other hand as she voiced her opinion that K.U, women are taking an increasingly
Women Not Just Homebodies; Can Put Men In Their Place'
The modest blonde smiled and she hand as she voiced her opinion that K greater part in campus activities. A more intellectual level is being attained, she believes, as women show they aren't merely bridge playing home bodies.
- The women on this campus are proving they can put man in his place, stated Ellen Spurney, president of women's Inter-Dorm council, when stopped in Frank Strong rotunda between classes.
E. J., as she is generally known, is doing her share in the proving process. Besides her work on Inter-Dorm she is vice-president of the Newman club and song leader of Corbin hall. She also is one of Corbin's Jay James and a member of Delta Phi Delta, national art fraternity.
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A College senior, majoring in art,
E. J. plans to take added education courses after graduation. She wants to teach art in junior high or high school. "Anywhere, just so I teach art," she laughed.
This year her schedule is too full to include A Capella choir. She considers her three years in that organization as her most enjoyable activity on the Hill. Her greatest interests are art and singing, but she also enjoys playing the piano and crocheting.
$400 Offered in Contest
The heating, piping, and air conditioning contractors national association has announced a contest for engineering students. First prize is $300 and second prize is $100. Information can be obtained from the office of the School of Engineering, 113 Marvin.
There are 9,000 school districts in Minnesota.
Dean Leonard H. Axe of the Business school spoke at Salina, where Howard Engleman, '41, was elected president.
Eight Speak To Alumni
Eight faculty members spoke at six alumni meetings held throughout the state over the weekend in connection with the teachers meetings.
Dean Burton Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information and Dean George B. Smith of the Education school spoke at Wichita. Laurence Figge, '28, will continue as president.
Tom Yoe, director of public relations and Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, represented the University at Garden City, Mrs. Imogene Hill Burnside, 72, was elected president.
James K. Hitt, registrar, and Don Pierce, sports publicity director, spoke at Pittsburg, where William R. Hagman, '32, was elected president.
Dean Axe and Maud Ellsworth, associate professors of education, spoke at the Hays meeting. Kenneth R. Hinkhouse, '38, was elected president.
Read the Daily Kansan daily
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Falls 30 Feet To Cement Returns To Work In An Hour
St. Louis—(UP)—Rugged is the word for 42-year-old carpenter Joe Eaton.
Working on a 30-foot scaffold, Eaton lost his balance and plunged to the concrete sidewalk below.
Police insisted on taking him to the hospital for treatment of cuts and bruises, but within the hour Eaton was tempting fate again as he went back to work on the scaffold.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER, 9, 1948
Five Top Teams Hold On As Upsets Drill Ranks
By UNITED PRESS
New York, Nov. 9—(UP)—With their teeth still rattling from a bombardment of upsets during the weekend, the five remaining candidates for the national football championship were looking forward today to more wee next Saturday.
A tidal wave of surprises without parallel this season swamped the ranks of the hopeful and, when the ♂
A tidal wave of surprises with ranks of the hopeful and, when the flood had receded, only Army, Notre Dame, Michigan, California, and Clemson were left high and dry.
Of the five only Michigan, a 35 to 0 winner over Navy, can expect easy going again this week when it meets Indiana, one of the weaker Big Nine teams. On the other hand, Notre Dame, which trounced Indiana, 42 to 6, faces what may be its toughest game of the year in Northwestern, the team likely to play in the Rose Bowl.
Army, which breezed over Stanford, 43 to 0, will meet Pennsylvania, the major upset victim of the past weekend when it fell out of the unbeaten ranks at the hands of Penn State, 13 to 0. California, with a 4-0 record in the Pacific Coast conference after slugging U.C.L.A. 28 to 13, takes on Washington State, owner of a 4-2-1 record.
Clemson places its Southern conference hopes on the line when it tries to follow up a 41 to 0 win over Furman by beating Wake Forest. But Wake Forest figures to be tough off its 4-1 record in the conference.
In the Ivy League: pace-making Penn will play Army, while Cornell (3-0) and Dartmouth (3-1) meet in the headline clash, while the Yale-Princeton game will have little bearing on the loop standings.
In the Southeastern conference: Georgia, unbeaten in conference competition after a 20 to 12 win over Florida, will be heavily favored over Auburn, which has lost five, won none in the league. Georgia Tech, bounced from the lead when it was upset by Tennessee, 13 to 6, will attempt to get back on the victory trail against Alabama, which has won only one of five loop games.
Mississippi, which owns a 4-1 record like Georgia Tech's, will meet the same tartar in Tennessee. Tulsa will be out of the league against Baylor.
In the Big Nine: Michigan and Indiana will be the big clash of the day, in Northwestern hopes for prestige in its outside game against Notre Dame. Another leading intra-conference tilt sends Minnesota, with a 3-2 record and still hopeful of sneaking in as the Rose Bowl representative, against Iowa, with a 2-3 record. Also on the bill is the less crucial, but important, Illinois-Ohio State battle.
In the Big Six: Utah, unbeaten in four games in the conference, will be outside for a game with Oregon State. Colorado A. and M. (3-1) will meet Brigham Young (0-2) and Utah State (2-1) faces Denver (0-2) in leading loop games.
In the Big Seven: League-leading Kansas, unbeaten in three conference games, seemingly has little to fear from Kansas State, a five-time loser. Oklahoma, also unbeaten in three loop games, meets Nebraska (2-2), while Missouri, victim of a resounding 41-7 upset at the hands of
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Dklahoma, will try a comeback against Colorado.
In the Southwest conference; Southern Methodist sends Doak Walker against Arkansas and figures to stay unbeaten in the loop. While Brylor plays outsider Tulane, the loop's next best was Texas (3-1) against Texas Christian (1-2).
In the Pacific Coast conference: Oregon, unbeaten in five loop games and rivalling California for the Rose Bowl bid, meets U.C.L.A. A side-light is Southern California (2-2) against Washington (1-4).
Joe Louis Gets Shiner In Exhibition Bout
In other leading games, Penn State will meet Temple and Navy seeks its first win against Columbia.
Expert Watch REPAIR
Boston. Nov. 9—(UP)—As a result of their exhibition bout at the Arena, heavyweight champion Joe Louis had a "shiner" today while his rival, Johnny Shkor, had an increased stature as a heavyweight contender.
Beyond any argument, Louis won each of the four rounds of their bout last night. But Shkor put up a stubborn battle that packed more action than Louis' second clash with Joe Walcott.
Time and again the champion stunned the Boston giant with civious left hooks but Shkor continued to retaliate with solid punches, many of which landed. Louis said the hardest punch he received was a solid smash on the jaw, but the one that left the most effect was a left hook that nearly closed Louis' eye.
"That one on the jaw was an awful good punch," said Louis. "He really hits pretty hard."
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Shkor, his nose swelling from one Louis punch, said, "he's good all right, but I'd sure like to fight him for the title anytime, anyplace, anywhere."
Coffeyville, Kan., Nov. 9-(UCP) Thirteen-year-old Jimmy Thorne, Jr., a Sedan, Kan., high school freshman, broke 375 consecutive clay pigeons in skeet shooting here.
1 week or less service.
WOLFSON'S 743 Mass.
It was believed a record for Kansas marksmen of any age.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
Rose Bowl Pact Up For Big Nine Renewal Vote
Chicago, Nov. 9—(UP)—The Big Nine probably will vote to renew its pact with the Pacific Coast conference to send a team to the Rose Bowl every year despite several objections to terms of the agreement, a United Press survey indicated today.
Only one member of the conference, Minnesota, was definitely against renewal of the present agreement, but some other officials said they were opposed to New Year's day games on principle.
"Minnesota was against it the first time," athletic director Frank McCormick said, "and we'll be against it the next time.
Several other directors, who declined to be quoted, said they believed games on Jan. 1 extended the football season too long.
The present Rose Bowl five-year contract expires after the Jan. 1, 1951, game, and the fact that two full seasons remains before expiration caused several spokesmen to hesitate to express an opinion on the agreement.
"I don't have any particular feeling about it right now." Michigan's athletic director, Fritz Crisler, said.
Doug Mills, athletic director at Illinois, took a similar position. "I'm open-minded on it at present," he said.
Commissioner Kenneth L. "Tug" Wilson said he "hasn't thought much about renewal."
"It's been a very pleasant and satisfactory relationship so far," he added.
Ted Payseur, Northwestern athletic director, said he believed any expression concerning the fact should come from conference action.
Four schools were definitely in favor of the contract.
"The agreement is a fine arrangement as it is now," athletic director Pooch Harrell of Indiana said. Guy Mackey of Purdue said that it "suits me fine." Athletic director Paul Brechler of Iowa and athletic director and football coach Harry Stuhldreher of Wisconsin agreed.
Dick Larkins, of Ohio State, who made it clear that he was speaking personally and not as a spokesman of the university, said that "personally I don't believe in any post-season football games.
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Ray Evans Stars For Steelers
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Ray Evans, the University's 1947 All-American, ran and passed the Pittsburgh Steelers to a 24 to 0 halftime lead over the Green Bay Packers Nov. 7. The Packers weren't able to catch the Steelers and the Pittsburgh team won 38 to 7.
Wake Forest Is Dixie Bowl Host
Birmingham, Ala., Nov. 9—(UP)—Wake Forest, one of the Southern conference's surprise teams of the year,' today was selected to play in the Dixie Bowl here New Year's day.
Holt Rast, Dixie Bowl committee chairman, said that Peahad Walker, Wake Forest coach, and the school's athletic board had agreed to perform here. A contract will be mailed to Walker today.
Wake Forest has beaten George Washington, 27 to 3, William and Mary 21 to 12, Duquesne, 41 to 15, North Caroline State 34 to 23, and Duke 27 to 20.
The Deacons have lost to the powerful North Carolina Tarheels and to Boston College.
Rast said the Dixie Bowl committee is considering Oklahoma, Missouri, Baylor and Villanova as the other team here.
Some 18,000 fans saw Arkansas beat William and Mary, 21 to 19, here in the inaugural Dixie Bowl classic last New Year's day.
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TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 9, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Beta's, Phi Gam's, ATO Top Unbeaten 'A' League List
By JIM VAN VALKENBURG
four teams were knocked out of the undefeated class and four others remained unbeaten in Monday's Intramural touch football as the standings in their four divisions underwent important changes.
The Beta's, Phi Gam's, and A.T.O. made it five straight in their fraternity "A" leagues. All three are undefeated and unscored upon. Battlefield hall won its fifth straight in $ \textcircled{4} $
its independent "A" league, knocking Alpha Kappa Psi from the unbeaten ranks. The Sig Ep's, Sigma Chi's, and Phi Psi's had their perfect records smashed but have still won four out of five.
The Beta's lengthened their string of victories with a 35 to 0 win over the Sig Ep's. Hub Hall started the scoring for the winners by blocking a Sig Ep punt, which bounced out of the end zone for a safety. John Stites ran 15 yards with an intercepted pass for the first touchdown, then Al Lowrie connected with Jack Winter for the second, and place kicked the extra point. The winners scored three times in the fourth quarter. Bob Dowawle passed to Bill Jones, later ran 55 yards on an interception. Al Lowrie went 20 yards on a running play for the last T.D. Lowrie also added two extra points, kicking one and passing to Clair Gillen for the other.
Triangle has won two and lost three, Phi Delta Theta one out of five. Phil Delt "B" has won four out of five, Sig Alph "B" has dropped five out of six. Delta Tau Delta "B" wins its third victory in five games. Pi K.A. "B" has lost all five of its games.
The Phi Gam's scored in the last 40 seconds to edge Sigma Chi 6 to 0 in a thriller. It was a close, hard-fought battle, each team penetrating their opponent's 10-yard line many times. An 18-yard pass from Dryden to Bunten climaxed a late 50-yard scoring drive for the Phi Gam's. Ruell Rododd missed a field goal attempt from the 15-yard line for Sigma Chi.
A. T.O. seceded touchdowns in the second and fourth quarters to defeat the Phi Psi's 12 to 0. Herb Weidensaul hit Cliff Currier, all alone in the end zone, from five yards out for the first touchdown. A bad pass from center on fourth down to the Phi Psi 10-yard line set up the second touchdown. Weidensaul passed to Chet Laniewski and the extra point attempt was again wide.
Battenfeld hall defeated Alpha Kappa Psi 13 to 0 with both touchdowns scored in the first period. Hallman raced 30 yards down the sidelines with an intercepted pass, then passed to Frisby in the end zone from 15 yards out for the
second. Ehrlich kicked the extra point.
Triangle won by an 18 to 12 score over Phi Delta Theta in a rough, hard fought "A" game. Paul Thome intercepted a Phi Delt pass on the first play of the game and went all the way to score. Also in the first quarter, Charles Thomas passed to Elgin Thelen for the second Triangle score. Phi Delt tied it up in the second quarter as Clyde Burnside passed to Don McIlrath and Gordon Rock for touchdowns. Thomas passed to Thelen for the winning tally in the third quarter.
The Phi Delt “B” team defeated Sig Alph “B” 14 to 0. The winners scored early in the third period on a series of short passes thrown by Ed Marquis. Marquis tossed to Dick Cook for the touchdown and to Ray Irwin for the extra point. Irwin intercepted a pass from the Sig Alph's Bob Thompson in the last quarter to set up the second Phi Delt tally. Again it was Marquis throwing, Irwin and Cook receiving for seven more points.
Former K.U. Quarterback
Coaching At Ottawa High
Delta Tau Delta defeated Pi K.A. 20 to 0 in a "B" game. Deck, Young, and Diehl scored touchdowns for the winners. Robertson and Glasser added the extra points.
Marvin Vandavera, '42, who played football for the University in 1940 and 1941, is coaching the Ottawa high school team. His team has a strong line and a good backfield. There are no particular standouts, though. The former K.U. quarterback has coached his team to some very good victories.
Before going to Ottawa, Vandauer was coaching at Haskell Institute. At Ottawa, he has no more than two capable reserves at each position. In spite of this, the school has a good record this year.
Dean Barr Preached Sunday
The Rev. Harold G. Barr, dean of the School of Religion, delivered the sermon at the First Christian church Sunday in the absence of the Rev. H. M. Sippel. Dean Barr served the church as pastor from 1937 to 1944.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
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Emporia, Kan., Nov. 9-(UP)—The role of giant killer was available today to little College of Emporia, but there was some doubt that the Presbies of the Kansas conference could put over the performance.
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| | W | L | T | Pts | Op | Pct |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas | 6 | 1 | 0 | 87 | 21 | .857 |
| Okla. | 6 | 1 | 0 | 216 | 79 | .857 |
| Missouri | 5 | 2 | 0 | 227 | 71 | .854 |
| I. State | 4 | 4 | 0 | 102 | 135 | .500 |
| Colo. | 4 | 4 | 0 | 130 | 108 | .428 |
| Nebr. | 2 | 5 | 0 | 105 | 171 | .285 |
| K. State | 1 | 6 | 0 | 51 | 240 | .142 |
All Games
Emporia To Test Unbeaten Ottawa
Kansas 3 0 0 87 21 1.000
Okla. 3 0 0 116 13 1.000
Missouri 2 1 0 105 55 .666
Colo. 2 2 0 84 71 .500
Nebr. 2 2 0 64 61 .500
I. State 2 4 0 73 128 .333
K. State 0 5 0 134 194 .000
Conference Games
C. of E. entertains league-leading Ottawa Friday in the conference game of the week. Last week 'the Emporians clipped Bethel 14 to 6 for a third loop victory.
Defending titlists and favored to keep their crown, Ottawa's Braves boast an unbeaten record in conference play. They figure to stay all-victorious after meeting the Pressbies.
If Ottawa triumphs over Emporia, the Braves can do no worse than share the Kansas conference championship with Bethany. The Swedes have finished their league season with a 5-1 record, losing only to Ottawa. The Braves will have to face Baker after the C. of E game.
Ottawa went outside the conference last week to slap William Jewell of Missouri 28 to 6. Bethany blanked McPherson 31 to 0. Baker overpowered Kansas Weslevan 18 to 18.
Games this week: Friday—Eastern New Mexico at McPherson, Culver-Stockton at Bethany; Saturday—Rockhurst at Kansas Wesleyan, Central at Baker.
Kansas Conference Standings
Team Conference W L Pts Ops
Ottawa 4 0 106 12
Bethany 5 1 101 19
Baker 3 2 90 24
C. of E. 3 2 77 25
Kansas Wesleyan 2 3 53 45
Bethel 1 4 61 135
McPherson 0 6 8 236
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Oklahoma's victory over Missouri at Norman. Nov. 6, has given the sale of tickets for the Kansas-Sooner game another spurt, E. L. Falkenstien, business manager, said today.
"We still have plenty of reserved seats left," he said. "But this is a warning that fans should not wait until the day of the game to purchase their tickets."
If the Jayhawkers and the Sooners get by Kansas State and Nebraska at Manhattan and Norman, respectively, Saturday, they will move into the Nov. 20 clash here still tied for top place in the Big Seven standings.
Two Kansas crowd records already are a cinch to topple in the Sooner engagement. The Jayhawkers need only a crowd of 9,000 against the Sooners to erase last year's seasonal home mark of 113,200 established in five games. The defending co-champions have attracted 104,500 at home through their first four games this year.
The Winners of CARL'S FOOTBALL "Pick-em" Contest WEEK OF NOV. 6
1st Prize—Roger L. Ewing
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3rd Prize—Charles C. Fuller
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4th Prize—Ray Cox
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER, 9, 1948
The Cold War Reaches Zero
STARVATION
BERLIN
DANIEL RISHOF
By Daniel Bishop, St. Louis Star-Times
The Editorial Page-
Russian News
Stalin brands the United States and other Western Powers as "inspirers of an aggressive policy toward the U.S.S.R." His remarks were reported by an able newspaperman, Eddie Gilmore, chief of the Associated Press bureau in the Soviet Union.
American readers should be cautious before accepting Stalin's word as gospel. It should be placed in its proper light as an attempt to boost Henry Wallace. Wallace, of course, followed the party line in his campaign, after receiving the blessing of Stalin earlier in the year.
More reason to doubt the accuracy and sincerity of the pronouncement lies in the fact that Gilmore's release was transmitted after censorship by the Soviet government. Recently, H. E. Crondkite, who was United Press bureau chief in Moscow for two years, returned to this country. He indicated that foreign correspondents have no control over transmission of stories from inside Russia.
All dispatches, he explained, are given to censors in triplicate by foreign newspaper writers. The originators of the stories never see their work after this time. Consequently, they have no knowledge of how the stories are changed by Russian censors before being put on the wire. In addition, Crondkite said, it is a common practice for the Russians to change a meaning by the mere deletion of a word, phrase, or sentence. It is his belief that no release from Moscow can be judged accurate, notwithstanding the high reputation of the reporter who handled the original story. —Fred Kiewit.
- Letters To The Editor -
Lawyer's Canes
To the Kansan:
You raise the question of the origin of the senior lawyers' most honorable and exalted custom of carrying canes. I believe I can tell you of the origin of this tradition for I think it dates from the "Ise-Age"—the senior law class of 1911.
I remember it well. On the day the boys first brought their emblems of dignity to class, they dropped them too often. Dr. Burdick finally suggested that men who carried canes were usually lame either in the legs or in the head.
I was the only one who had an alibi.
John Ise Law, 1911
--for the Best Home- Made cherry pie in the state-a large piece in each serving .not a sample
Idealists
Dear Editor:
I have read several articles in the Daily Kansan, the Dove, and other campus periodicals which show a liberal loading of idealism regarding world affairs and world peace. Idealism is a good thing. We strive to make life better by it. But it isn't a good thing when it forces us to live under monstrous illusions.
Why don't you starry-eyed peace dreamers, One Worldists, Wallaceites, Socialists and Isolationists take a good course like "Fundamentals of National Power" and find out what is really going on in the world?
Larry Abbott Engineering junior.
Daily Kansan
University
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., Nah-
Asn., and the Associated Collegiate
Press. Represented by the National Ad-
dvance Office, 420 Madison Ave.
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Editor-in-Chief ... Maurice C. Lungen
Managing Editor ... Hal D. Nelson
Asst. Man. Editor ... Anne Murphy
Asst. Man. Editor ... Bill F. Mayer
Asst. Man. Editor ... Robson R. Moser
Asst. City Editor ... Nora Temple
Asst. City Editor ... Patricia James
Tel. Editor ... Richard D. Barton
Kevin, K. Wright
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Robert D. S.
Sports Editor ... Osherm L. Bartell
Society Editor ... Rosemary Rospaw
Alumna Will Speak On Newspaper Guild
The Farmers Union Grain Terminal Association, one of the largest cooperatives in the country, has 100,000 members.
Business Mgr. Bill Nellignan
Advertising Mgr. Don Tennant
Arrival Mgr. Ruth Clayton
Association Mgr. Donald Kane
Classified Mgr. D野戴隆
Classified Mgr. Wild戴隆
Natl. Adv. Mgr. William O'Connor
Promotion Mgr. Charles O'Connor
Miss Joy Miller, '44, wire editor for the Associated Press in Kansas City, will speak to students of the School of Journalism at 4 p.m. Wednesday in 102 Journalism.
LINE-UP!!
Miss Miller's subject will be "The American Newspaper Guild." Theta Sigma Phi, national honorary journalism fraternity for women, is sponsoring Miss Miller's appearance.
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The money savings of families in the United States last year amounted to $12,600,000,000.
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Fear Pound May Lose Value
Los Angeles-(UP)-In England, many people are investing in rare books because they feel that the pound may be devalued, report Miss Ellen Shaffer, whose business is lecturing on rare volumes for the University of California's extension here.
Although many hard-to-get editions were lost or damaged by the air raids, London is still the world's rare book center, Miss Shaffer says.
Annual weeds cause a greater loss in reduced crop yields each year than perennial weeds.
SORRY
But every seat is gone for FRED WARING
and his-Pennsylvanians.
SOLD OUT!
We appreciate the fine response in the sale of tickets. D.M. Swarthout, Mgr
HAVE YOU SEEN
"Baby Louis,"
the new fashion heel in ladies shoes?
Now being featured at
The Walker Shop
813 Mass.
Phone 259
100
It's O.K. if you Have Insurance!
But the policy on your car's performance is just as good as the care it gets.
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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Tells Why Polls Failed
Pro-Republican results in public opinion polls can be pinned on several causes, Anthony Smith, assistant professor of psychology, told his consumer and opinion research classes recently.
These polls are usually mail surveys and many groups do not answer.
Professor Smith added that the polls of this last election were taken almost two months prior to the voting. If the election had been held at that time Dewey might have won. Pollsters wrongly assumed that political opinions do not change once the mind is made up.
The pollsters, continued Professor Smith, may have believed that the two parties would wage the same types of campaign tactics. This belief did not hold true.
Professor Smith assured his class that the results of these polls should not affect the future of the consumer and opinion research business. However, he concluded, it should help in shaping the tactics used in the next presidential predictions.
Garden City Alumni Hear
Tom Yoe, director of public relations, spoke to 25 K.U. alumni Nov. 5 in Garden City. He gave a brief report of the University's progress and its needs in relation to the future program.
Paul Masoner, '39, presided at the meeting.
Lost or found something? Then the place you should go is the lost and found department, located opposite the ballroom entrance in the Union building, and sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity.
Lost Something? APO Has Recovered More Than 1,000 Misplaced Articles
With approximately 1,000 articles, varying from jewelry to haberdashery, the lost and found office is open from 11-12 a.m. and from 1 to 3 p.m. during week days.
Out of the 225 articles that have been turned into the department during this semester, 60 have been returned to their owners by the APO's. There are on file, for the first part of this semester, 75 "reported lost" articles.
Since the department began operation two years ago it has returned more than 2,500 articles. Harold Shigley, Fine Arts junior, originated the department. Shigley, now acting as the advisor, claims that there is on record more than 3,000 articles which have been reported lost in this two-year interval.
Situated throughout the campus in various buildings are several "pick up" points whereby a member of the fraternity checks for unclaimed articles. These are taken to the lost and found headquarters where separate cards are made out for each item, then filed alphabetically.
If the article has any means of traceable identification, the owner is identified and a card of notification is mailed to him. The person
calls at the lost and found office and claims the article.
Each University instructor cooperates with the lost and found department. Many times a forgotten item left in class can be retrieved before the instructor turns it in to his area "pick up" point. Dwayne Williams, engineering junior, is in charge of the pick up service.
The Alpha Phi Omega fraternity urges students to turn in articles found on campus to the lost and found office so that they may be returned to their owners. It also welcomes students to call and check when they lose items.
John Sarris, Engineering senior; serves as the department's present manager.
AK Psi Announces 26 Recent Pledges
Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business fraternity, has announced 26 recent pledges to the fraternity. They are.
William Black, James Blocker, L. R. Bond, William Caste, Bill Cole, Don Ely, Robert Falconer, Paul Goddard, Richard Hamilton, Fred Johnson, Ralph Kennedy, Guy Kidwell, William La Combe, Jack Lance, Don Madtson, Paul Maier, Frank Martin, James Martin, Walter Michaelis, Delmar Robertson, Fred Stelzner, Dean Stephenson, Kenneth Tyson, Charles Vocky, Byron Werges, and Donald Yolkey.
Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will promptly. Ads may be sent during business hours (e.g., p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univertor, journalism bldg., not later than 4 p.m. the day before publication date
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five
day days days
25 words or less...35c 65c 90c
additional words...1c 2c 3c
FOR SALE
OLDS SEDAN, 1938. Good condition.
Henderson, 1424 New York or
Call 1870W
**P IONTAC** 4-door, new transillation,
painless 3-way door or throne at 13"
Dibn. Inside pane or throne.
1935 STUDEBAKER SADEN. Cheap Body and motor. Heater. Call Dan Rank,
945 WILLYS Army Jeep. Good condition.
Rainbow, Reasonable. Chin
Shohee. 2003.
OD 36 Ford four door. See Ray-
time after 5:30 P.M.
Time after 5:30 P.M.
WO TICKETS to KU.-K-State foot-
ball. Call 1382 876-3450.
985 CHVEVROLET sedan. Engine completely overhaulied, all new parts from body, and all new valves. Good body. $25.00 Bob Burwell. 1017 New lamphsure, phone 2956.
ORTABLE TYPEWRITER: Corona, good price, priced right. Call 3148 and apo at Leo.
49 FORD convertible, new, with all
sports. See at Board and Moore,
W. 7th St.
LOST
DER YOUR Christmas cards now for delivery. Call Bob McDonald, phone 9911.
11 STUS SACRIFICE 1939 Chrysler Imperial sedan. New paint job, tires, baththeater, and radio. $800. May be Conoco station. Mass. 11 TRADE CENTER. Mass. 2 room bath. One of the cleanest homes in yn; on zoned street. Just seven mines by bus downtown. Possession. Car at 718 Location. VE CIGARETTE machines in open at good locations. Insures large,ady income for a small investment and little work. For information, call IMUNITON, Fishing Tackle. Guns and respaired. Keys made, padlocks, tetter's店, 1016 Mass. rtfn
N'S WRIST watch between 4:50 and
on the walk between Military
nee and the hospital. Reward. Please
Kansan Business office, 11
DYA SIZE black Parker 51 pen with
er top. Lost in Fraser Saturday, Shir-
Watson, 104 Fraser, Ph. KU 344.
SESLES LOST Friday, October 22, be
beth Snow hid Watson library, Pink
ice rims. Brown leather case. Call
M.Reward.
Rub plastic rimmed glass
week. Call 3045. Reward.
ALPHA pin with initials G.T.C.
Back. Reward, call 2728M.
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA sorority pin, pin.
Stirne, Phone Edith Elam. 1959.
FRIDAY EVENING, a Parker lifetime fountain pen. It is black with fine white horizontal stripes. Reward. Finder please return to Kansas office or call
GRAY GABERDINE raincoat. Either in Bailey Laboratory or the Union Cafeteria at 12:00 p.m. Wednesday. Have the dress code. Call 62434 for James W. Dull. 9
BUSINESS SERVICE
TASTE OUR fine steaks and chicken.
We serve nothing but the best at the St. Louis Funerary Club. Have a party in our "Hire-out".
**TYPING:** Reasonable rate. Prompt service. Ph. 1168R. 1028 Vermont. 13
$5.00 Your old battery on a new guaranteed Goodrich battery. Delivery at = Notification Fax. Phone 21. B. F. Goodrich Store. 929 Mass. 23
DOES YOUR pen need repairing? Experient service on all make or mirror your pens and pencils to Student Union Book Store.
STUDENTS LAUNDRY wanted. Also cleaned done. Phone 2148R. 1205 Island St. Mrs. Earl Jellison. 9
**TYPING DONE:** Proper attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Ask for Miss Helen. 12-21
WHEN ALL PETS including dogs, birds, cats, dogs, pigmets, skunks, parrots, squirrels, rats, mice, etc., go shopping at St. Louis Funerary Club. Phone 1218 Conn. St. Phone 418. Everything in the pet field—their needs are our business. 12-21
BERHART and Son, tailors. Finest saisons made to measure, suits, topcoats, dresses, apparel, and repairing and either work. 831½ Mass. 19 ALTERING SUITS, coats, and dresses. Alters coats, suits, handmade tailored button hoods, wool guarded Call 2959. $42 Indiana. 12
TRANSPORTATION
WANTED RIDE to Lawrence from Kansas City. Monday morning, Arrive Lawrence by 9 a.m. Call Bill McCormick, Phone 2230J. 11
WISH TO contact person driving to New Orleans or south at Thanksgiving vacation. Contact through Daily Kansan office. Box 1. 11
WOULD LIKE a ride to Champaign, Ill. or anywhere on leave. By Leaving Tuesday, March 16. Thanksgiving holiday share expenses and driving. Call 7389 at 6:00 p.m.
FOR RENT
SINGLE ROOM for boy, less bill to hill, 1012 Alabama. Call 2143J. 11
COMFORTABLE place for up to 4 men.
Private bath, cooking facilities. Adequate
room, kitchen. Everything fitted.
No smoking. Ph. 949. 11
LOVELY BASEMENT. room in new home to two boys. Furnace piped into room; bathroom. Enclosed by nearly private bath. Not near hill but several students with cars living nearby so transportation might be managed. $389 per month.
WISH TO contact person driving to New
Contact through Daily Kansan office. 9
WANTED
Get your CAR ready FOR WINTER!
To get your car ready for winter, just drive down to HUNSINGER garage and park it during cold spells.
24 hour wrecker service
922 Mass.
HUNSINGER MOTOR CO.
Phone 12
T A X I
Call 2-800 Ph. 2-800
DAY OR NIGHT
We have all new equipment.
UNION CAB
LINDELL'S KANSAS CLEANERS
12 East Eighth
Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices
Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed . . . 75c
Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed . 79c
CASH AND CARRY ONLY
The Book Book
1021 VA MASS.
PHONE 666
Fiction • Poetry
Drama
Non-Fiction
Children's Books
and
Rental Library
CRUSADE IN EUROPE
by Dwight D. Eisenhower
3888
Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
UNION PACIFIC
Streamliner
"CITY OF ST. LOUIS"
Through Service to the
WEST COAST
TOWARDS THE MOUNTAINS
Through Pullman and Coach service to Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland. For the finest in rail travel, ride the Streamliner.
(Daily Schedule) EASTBOUND
Lv St. Louis ... 4:00 pm (C.T.)
Lv Kansas City ... 9:30 pm
Lv Lawrence(*) ... 10:10 pm
Lv Topeka ... 11:27 pm
Lv Manhattan ... 11:27 pm
Lv Juncton City 11:55 pm
Lv Salina ... 12:45 pm
Lv Hays ... 2:30 pm
Lv Ellis ... 2:00 am (M.T.)
Lv Oakley ... 3:12 pm
Lv Sharon Springs 4:02 pm
Lv Hugo ... 5:42 pm
Lv Limon ... 6:01 pm
Ar Denver ... 7:40 pm
Lv Denver ... 8:00 pm
Lv Greeley ... 9:01 pm
Ar Cheyenne ... 10:20 pm
Lv Los Angeles . 9:30 am (P.T.)
Lv San Francisco 11:00 am (P.T.)
Lv Portland ... 8:10 am (P.T.)
Lv Cheyenne ... 5:30 am (M.T.)
Lv Greely ... 6:29 pm
Ar Denver ... 7:40 pm
Lv Denver ... 7:55 pm
Lv Limon ... 9:22 pm
Lv Hugo ... 9:40 pm
Lv SharonSprings 11:15 pm
Lv Oakley ... 12:01 am
Lv Ellis ... 2:15 am (C.T.)
Lv Hays ... 2:30 am
Lv Salina ... 4:15 am
Lv Junction City ... 5:10 am
Lv Manhattan ... 5:35 am
Lv Topeka ... 6:30 am
Lv Lawrence(t) ... 6:56 am
Ar Kansas City ... 7:45 am
Ar St. Louis ... 1:00 pm
(*) Steps only for passengers from St. Louis, or to Denver and beyond.
Lv Los Angeles . 9:30 am (P.T.)
Lv San Francisco 11:00 am (P.T.)
Lv Portland ... 8:10 am (P.T.)
Lv Cheyenne ... 5:30 am (M.T.)
Lv Greely ... 6:29 pm
Ar Denver ... 7:40 pm
Lv Denver ... 7:55 pm
Lv Limon ... 9:22 pm
Lv Hugo ... 9:40 pm
Lv SharonSprings 11:15 pm
Lv Oakley ... 12:01 am
Lv Ellis ... 2:15 am (C.T.)
Lv Hays ... 2:30 am
Lv Salina ... 4:15 am
Lv Junction City ... 5:10 am
Lv Manhattan ... 5:35 am
Lv Topeka ... 6:30 am
Lv Lawrence(t) ... 6:56 am
Ar Kansas City ... 7:45 am
Ar St. Louis ... 1:00 pm
(*) Steps only for passengers to St. Louis, or from Denver and beyond.
ALL COACH SEATS RESERVED
For information and reservations see your local Union Pacific Ticket Agent.
UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD Road of the Daily Streamliners
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER, 9; 1948
New UDK Staff Took Over Paper On Monday
The new staff of the University Daily Kansan took over for the Monday edition, Appointments were made by Hal D. Nelson, managing editor and Bill Nelligan, business manager.
New members of the editorial staff are;
City editor, Robert Newman; assistant city editors, Nora Temple, and Patricia James; telegraph editor, Richard B. Barton; assistant telegraph editor, Robert D. Snair; sports editor, Osmero L. Bartelli; assistant sports editor, Marvin L. Rowlands; and society editor, Rosemary Rospaw.
Appointments on the business staff are:
Advertising manager, Don Tenant; circulation manager, Ruth Clayton; assistant circulation manager, Dean Knuth; classified manager, Don Waldron; assistant classified manager, William E. Beck; national advertising manager, Don Welch; promotion manager, Charles O'Connor.
The editor-in-chief, managing editors, and the business manager are elected positions. They are Maurice C. Lungren, editor-in-chief; Hal D. Nelson, managing editor; Bill F. Mayer, assistant managing editor; Anna Mary Murphy, assistant managing editor; and Bill Nelligan, business manager.
Class To See Shipping Film
A film on "Bags and Sacks" and a discussion of that subject will be featured tomorrow at the University Extension's class on "Packaging and Shipping."
This is one in a series of lectures and discussions designed to reduce Kansas City's share in a national loss of two million dollars annually due to faulty packaging and shipping. The series is sponsored by the International Trade club of Greater Kansas City, and Associated Highway carriers. The film and lecture will be in the Hotel Continental Kansas City, aro.
The course is designed to reduce packaging and transportation costs, reduce loss and damages in transit, increase shipping room efficiency, increase customer good will, and to aid in packaging for export.
L. A. Goff, of Bemis Brothers Bag company, Kansas City, Mo., will be Wednesday's instructor. "Loading and Bracing Cars," will be the subject of C. A. Noffziger, superintendent of claim prevention for the Missouri Pacific railroad on Wednesday, Nov. 17. "Marking and Billing—Truck Loading," will be the subject of H. C. Downs, Western Weighing and Inspection bureau, and H. R. Logan, Watson Brothers Truck company on Wednesday, Nov. 24. Wednesday, Dec. 1, is the date set for a review by the staff.
Baur Will Speak At YMCA
In Faculty-Forum Series
E. Jackson Baur, assistant professor of sociology, will speak at 11:45 a.m. tomorrow on "Political Freedom and Social Responsibility" at the YM.C.A. faculty-forum.
The meeting will be held in the East room of the Union. This meeting is another in the series of Y.M. C.A. faculty-forums on "Freedom and Order."
Clean Swarthout Returns
From Music Meeting
D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, returned Monday from the executive meeting of the Music Teachers association held in Chicago.
Dean Swarthout has been an honorary life member of the association for the past year. The committee meeting was held in Boston last year.
By Bibler
Little Man On Campus
李丘良
Dancers Take Bows As Ballet Makes Big Hit With Overflow Audience
"At just what bookstore did you buy your engineering supplies?"
By NORMA HUNSINGER
An enthusiastic audience of 4000 greeted the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlos in its first performance here Monday night. The dancers, collectively and individually, were called back for bows again and again, and were interrupted several times with applause after particularly outstanding demonstrations of skill and technique.
In spite of a siick and treacherous floor, caused by a recent double coating of varnish, the dancers whisked and skidded through a difficult program without notable miscue.
Coffee shop comment after the performance by several of the dancers hinted that the floor was more dangerous than either the audience or the troupe suspected.
One of the most unusual programs to be offered on the concert course this year, the ballet group from France presented works of modern, classical, and American idiom for a thoroughly enjoyable evening. Four ballets were presented."Mozariana." "Cirque de Deux." "Pas de Quarte," and "Le Beau Danube." All four were performed authoritatively, and the "Pas de Quarte," especially was finely integrated and expertly done.
"Mozartiana," an orchestral arrangement of Mozart piano pieces by Tschalkowsky, is a gay and airy ballet. It begins with the vivacious dance by a young man, who is joined by a group of peasant girls to dance a minuet. Two classical dancers appear for a brilliant dance and then a slow and majestic adagio; the entire ensemble appears for a commanding finale. Outstanding in the number was the solo dance by Yvonne Cheutteau. Graceful and finished, her style and dramatic instinct was impressive.
The witty and stylish "Cirque de Deux" is the first choreographic work by Ruthanna Boris, who also danced the principal female role in the ballet. The music is from "Faust" by Gound and is used for a background to a classical interpretation of the circus. It was beautifully and cleverly done, and the grace and coordination which personifies ballet was outstanding in the movements of Yvonne Chouteau and Frank Hobi as well as Miss Boris.
The "Pas de Quarte" is a collection of solos and ensembles for four ballerinas and was perhaps the best of all the ballets. It was first performed in 1845 before Queen Victoria and only recently was rewritten and used again. The whole ballet is meant to be primarily beautiful and stylistic; each dancer has a solo dance in which to show her particular skill in technique and interpretation. This number had a little more finesse and was more smooth and controlled than any of the other ballets.
"Le Beau Danube," a story of old Vienna, was expressive and very well produced. The whole plot was portrayed unmistakably by the dancers, and although it seemed to move rather slowly at times, the combination of Johann Strauss' "Blue Danube" and the excellent choreography by Leonide Massine was effective and arresting. Miss Alexandra Danilova, prima ballerina, made her first appearance in this number. Her portrayal of the street dancer was authentic and spirited.
The backing up of gesture and dramatic action by the orchestra was superb. This synthesis of music, movement, and setting which goes with ballet is one of the most attractive things about it. Paul Strauss, the 30-year-old conductor, seems to know exactly what he is doing at all times, and keeps the orchestra in almost perfect complement to the dancer's movements.
The company was started 10 years ago in Monte Carlo, France, and has since appeared in tours all over the world.
On KFKU
2:30 p.m. Art by Radio—Miss Moud. ELLWorth.
TODAY
9:30 Symphonic Favorites—
Jack Robinson, narrator.
TOMORROW
2:30 p.m. Johnny Jayhawk Keeps Well—Mrs. Anna Mae Nunnellee.
2:45 p.m. Excursions in Science.
9:30 p.m. Sharps and Flats—Jack Robinson, narrator.
Only 2,000 Take Free Flu Shots
Fewer than 2,000 influenza vaccinations have been given to faculty and students by the University Health service. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the health service, said today he expected more people to take the shots and would like to give at least 5,000 by the end of this week.
The vaccination station will be in Frank Strong hall tomorrow and Thursday and at Marvin hall Friday. After Friday shots will be given at Watkins hospital.
Dr. Cauteson said the reason for the lack of interest by the students and faculty may be because there is no threat of influenza right now. He warned, "We can't have nice fall weather much longer and there will be illness when cold weather comes. When that time comes the people with flu shots can feel secure against influenza."
One person has reported to Watkins hospital with a reaction to the vaccination. Dr. Canutelson said. "He had a very small spot on his arm and his temperature was normal."
KU Grad Starts Oak Ridge Paper
Alfred G. Hill, '18, former student reporter and secretary of the University Alumni association, is reported by Newsweek to be starting a daily newspaper at Oak Ridge, Tenn., atomic industry city of 36,000
Hill's new paper will not publish news that involves atomic secrets, unless it is approved by headquarters. He will report births, deaths, marriages, and local articles about everyday doings.
Mr. Hill was urged by government representatives to undertake the Oak Ridge venture. The government wants a newspaper to raise the morale of the workers on the atomic project. The town has had a weekly newspaper and for a few weeks a daily but now has none.
The new paper may be called The Ridger and is expected to begin publication about Jan. 1.
After leaving the Alumni office here, Hill published the Arkansas City Traveler. Later he went to Colorado. He owned newspapers in Nebraska and went east to publish the Jamestown, N.Y. Post-Journal.
Salesmen's Approach Must Create Desire
The salesman must create a desire for the product to be sold. Laurence S. Staples, advertising man from Kansas City, Mo., told members of Delta Sigma Phi, international honorary business fraternity, at a Founder's day banquet Nov. 6.
Mr. Staples illustrated his talk with material compiled by the Advertising association of Kansas City.
Alumni members of the fraternity from Topeka and Greater Kansas City attended.
Esther Twente Returns
From Social Workers Meet
Esther Twente, chairman of the department of social work, returned recently from New York City where she attended the national board meeting of the American Association of Social Workers.
Miss Twente served as a member of the advisory committee on publications.
UN Seeks Full Armistice For Holy Land War
By UNITED PRESS
The United Nations Security council put off further discussion of truce violations in Palestine today to concentrate on an attempt to arrange a full-fledged armistice in the Holy land.
Dr. Ralph Bunche, acting Palestine mediator, will submit suggestions for an armistice at a private meeting of the council in Paris this afternoon. A public meeting of the council to discuss Israel's refusal to give up newly-captured positions in northern and southern Palestine was postponed indefinitely.
While th e United Nations discussed Palestine 12,000 railway workers struck in Shanghai, halting all service in and out of the city, to back up their demand that they be paid in rice instead of the plummeting gold yuan.
In the 58-nation political committee, the Soviet bloc still was filibustering in an attempt to prevent a showdown vote on a resolution indicating Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, and Albania for aiding Greek guerilla. Key paragraphs of the resolution are ready have been approved.
In Berlin, Col. Frank Howley, U.S.
Commandant, assured German district
mayors that the United States has
enough troops to thwart any Russian attempt to seize power by force in the American sector of the city. Gen. Lucius D. Clay said the Russian blockade has hit Western Berlin economy severely. Production and turnover in Western Berlin is down 80 per cent and nearly 89,000 persons are wholly or partially unemployed.
Premier Henry Queuille prepared to reshuffle his French cabinet as result of yesterday's election in which two popular Republican ministers were defeated for the upper house. They will have to be replaced, but Queuille had not decided whether merely to appoint their successors or appoint an entirely new government.
Magazine Honors KU Instructors
Reports from Palestine said the Arabs are withdrawing from Gaza, their main base in southern Palestine. It also was the capital of the Egyptian-sponsored Palestine Arab government.
Miss Ellsworth is described as a teacher "who has had a marked influence on the cultural life of Kansas." Miss Ellsworth was president of the Kansas State Teachers association in 1942.
George B. Smith, dean of the School of Education, and Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of art were recognized for their work in the November issue of the Kansas Teachers magazine.
Dr. Smith is recognized as a "prfessor of a genial personality which delights those who listen to his classroom discourses and his widest requested lectures." Dr. Smith is a graduate of Columbia university and came to this campus in 1941.
2
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Dean Marvin Will Attend Radio Directors' Convention
W deba and tern ever
Burton W. Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School Journalism and Public Information; will attend the national convention of the National Association of Radi Directors in St. Louis, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.
*Interest in this meeting is keeping with our wish to increase the radio curriculum in the 1900 he said.
Wii
Business Teacher Elected
Loda Newcomb, assistant professor of secretarial training, elected secretary-treasurer of Kansas Business Teacher's association at the annual convention lina Friday.
University Dailu Kansan
46th Year No.
Wednesday, Nov. 10, 1948
Lawrence. Kansas
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
STUDENT NEWSPAPER
Debaters Argue: World Union Now Or Later
World government is a good idea, debating teams from the University and from England agreed in an international debate held Tuesday evening in Fraser theater.
World government is the only hope of peace because sovereignty is doing us no good, was the argument of Jean Moore, law student, and Kenneth Beasley, graduate in political science, in upholding the affirmative on the question of "Should a world government be established?"
Reginald Galer, University of Birmingham, and Anthony J. Cox, University of Bristol, who upheld the negative side of the debate, contended the establishment of a world government is highly impractical at this time.
Moore, on the affirmative, retaliated by saying, "Although there are differences between Americans, Britains, and Russians, they all want world government. The stable governments of the world should try to help the unstable ones."
"The United Nations is a good example of how long it might take to start an effective world governmental system. Because of political instability in Europe today, this is not the time to institute a world government."
The English debaters asserted that if world government is set up, it will be on a basis of population or geographic location. In either case, they argued, Russia and the large nations of the earth would be the most powerful.
The English debaters proposed regionalism instead of world government. They suggested a co-operation of the western powers, such as Great Britain and America. But the affirmative threw cold water on this suggestion by insisting that America and Great Britain could not solve the problems of the world.
powerful. In reply, the affirmative insisted that the set-up should be proportional representation, as in America.
The two men from England are making a two-month tour of the United States, and will debate at approximately 30 universities. They were selected to represent Great Britain from debators of 12 universities by the Institute of International Education.
WEATHER
Kansas—Considerable cloudiness today, tonight and Thursday, with a few snow flurries north tonight*
That Vacation Begins Nov. 23
Thanksgiving vacation will begin after the last class on Tuesday, Nov. 23. Classes will resume at 8 a.m. Monday, Nov. 29.
Cuts on the last class before a holiday will be treated as those from any other class, the office of the chancellor said.
Twenty-three days will elapse between the end of the Thanksgiving vacation and the start of Christmas vacation on Wednesday, Dec. 22. Christmas vacation ends Monday, Jan. 3.
University Senate Picks Secretary
Dr. Calvin VanderWerf, associate professor of chemistry, was elected secretary of the University senate Tuesday. Dr. George Anderson was named associate secretary.
Chairmen and members of the senate's standing committees were ratified.
Responsibility for examining applications for new courses for possible duplication with existing courses was transferred from the senate's advisory committee to the graduate administrative committee for courses carrying graduate credit.
The advisory committee, with Dr E. O. Stene as chairman, was also authorized to prepare a systematic compilation of the senate rules and regulations.
The senate approved a detailed schedule for the fall semester final examination week, Jan. 20 to 27. The schedule, submitted by James K. Hitt, registrar, follows the same pattern existing since the war. No examination period will be longer than two hours.
Secret Formula For Beating Parleys Requires Willing Subject And Hypnotist
Three Will Present Recital Tomorrow
Mr. Hitt said testing periods could not be lengthened until noon, 4 and 5 o'clock classes were eliminated or the final week lengthened.
Three fine arts students will appear in the weekly student recital at 3 p.m. tomorrow in Frank Strong auditorium.
Florence Oberg, pianist, will play "Mazurka" by Hasselmann. Mary Lynn Lucas will sing the aria "Connais-ta le le-pays" from "Mignon" by Amboise Thomas, and Freeman Oglesby, pianist, will play three movements from "Sonata Op. 27, No 1" by Beethoven.
This statement can be verified by the personal experience of Calvin VanderWerf, associate professor of chemistry, who won WREN3 weekly football forecast contest by predicting the final score of the game between KJL and Oklahoma A. and M.
Hypnosis has a practical application which would enable a person to make a sure thing of such an unpredictable gamble as football parley cards.
Professor VanderWerf was in Philadelphia to attend a conference called by Smith, Kline, French and Company, a pharmaceutical firm. The conference was attended by approximately 30 other chemists, Professor VanderWerf said.
"After the conference," he continued, "we attended the dedication ceremonies for a recently completed chemical research laboratory building erected by the company. At a banquet afterwards, a well-known hypnotist was brought in to entertain us. He called for volunteers, and stepped forward."
Thus benefited by the phenomenon of hypnosis, Mr. VanderWerf sent his prediction to WREN. That Saturday he was awarded two tickets for dinner at a well-known restaurant in Topeka after K.U. took a 13 to 7 victory.
While hypnotized, the professor was asked what the scores of several football games would be. This was Friday, October 22. The following Sunday he was sitting in the train station in St. Louis when he remembered his guess on the outcome of the K.U. game.
144 Students Receive ROTC Appointments
One hundred forty-four students have earned cadet officer and noncommissioned officer appointments, Col. John Alfrery, commandant of the University Reserve Officers Training corps, announced Tuesday.
Platoon commanding officers are: Russell N. Barrett, John C. Monroe, and Edmond M. Strikyle, Company B; Chester L. Gillber, F. Buchholz, Company B; Platoon sergeants are: Thomas R. Franklin, Leland M. Srack, and Robert E. Krusch, Company B; L. Gibber and Edward J. McGillin, Company B. Platoon guides are: Thomas C. Sweet, Kenneth E. Carder, and Rob A. Krosch, Company A: Hugh A. Neidert and Tom P. Gallagher Jr., Company B.
Students commissioned in the ground forces battalion are: Grant H. Vonder-OBrian Jr., battalion executive; John Fencyk, commanding officer Company A; Robert E. Barnard, commanding officer Company A; Fred S. Jones, commanding officer Company B; James J. Jones, exECSTrom, commanding officer Company B; James E. Kestrom, first sergeant; Company B
Company A. squand leaders are: Homer M. Pinkard, Evan K. Wilson, Richard H. Lamb, James A., McKeen, Dannie E, Stueb William H. Edmonson, Guy R. Parkhurst, John C. Atherton, Joe Bailey, and Richier Robert D. Howard, Julian R. Robert, D. Howard, Julian R. Johnston, Clarence W. Gordon, Harley E. Webb, Jack D. Gillman, Myron M. Thomson, Thomas A. Lowe, Michael T. Thomas C. White III, William T. Skaggs, Wayne E. Beecher, and John C. Ward.
Company B squad leaders are: Addison D. Carr, Carl P. Trotter Jr., Roy E. Stephens, Theodore W. Clemens, and Max F. Mulek, Johnny J. Stang, and Max F. Pachl. Assistant squad leaders: Clinton E. Henderson, Rahb G. Henley, Howard A.ermi' 'ormi'
Johnson G. Gassmann, Robert C. Bransfield, Joseph W. Boyd III, and Theodore C. Finkeimer.
Students appointed to Air Force cadet commissions are: Hal D. Nelson, group commander, Arthur A. Clevergen, group executive, Clemeth M. Abercrombie, executive, A. Abercrombie, commander Squadron A, Walter J. Michaelis, executive, squadron A, Roy Twist Jr., first sergeant, squadron A, Julian F. Been, commander, Squadron B, Coldswain, executive, Squadron B and Walcock Y. Coakum, first sergeant, squadron B
druimur
Flight leaders are: Larry L. Funk, Eugene Bribach, and Hubert E. Strecker, squadron A; James A. Seelbinder, Jack B. Prignon, David D. Poehler, B. Assistant flight leaders are: Richard N. Getty, Robert M. Reigle, Charles W. Soieth, Paul R. Goddard, Robert B. York, and Joe C. Schoenberg, are: Boby D. Collison, Frank W. Korber, Roland Brunelle, Robert S. Clark, Charles K. Hinshaw, and Dale S. Romig, Flight guides. Eugene P. Porrey, Robert J. Parrish, Robert A. Parrish, Lester J. Schulte, and Francis E. Jones.
Element leaders are: Richard C. Beach,
James L. Baskie, James D. McBride, James
J. Bowman, Robert P. Carr, Howard E. Wurk-
rich, Richard L. Black, Charles L. Duvall,
Philip G. Williams, and George B. Kroos-
nig, Squadrion A. Wendell, Wendell V. Showalter,
Gordon Offenbacker, Gareid Webb, William
L. Worford, Earnest L. Elliot, Frank A.
Laubrock, David O. Cochran, and James
L. Eatmore, Squadrion B.
Two-Piano Recital To Be At 8 Tonight
Miss Marian Jersild, instructor in piano, and Miss Katherine Mulky instructor in organ and theory, will present a two-piano recital at 8 p.m. today in Frank Strong auditorium.
Assistant element leaders are: Harry R. Hurry Jr., Keith D. Wimmer, George Knighton Jr., William Stringer, Philip H. Stearns, David D. Maul, Donald H. Gordon, James L. Beaton, Joseph B. Murphy, and August F. Strateemie. Squadron A; William V. Winstel, Leander C; R. Stoffer, Charles E. Dutton, James F. Hastings, R. G. Haskins, Virgil C. Pieper, E. Ellis III, Frank W. Martin, and Walter R. Stockbrand, Squadron B.
They will play "Sheep May Safear from 'Suite' (Mozart), arranged by Graze" (Bach); four movement Saar; "Piece for Two Virginals" (Farnaby); "Allemande" (Couperin); "Les Songes" (Milhaud); and four movements from "Suite No. 2" (Rachmaninoff).
New Directories Ready Tomorrow
The first edition of the new student directories will be available at 8 a.m. tomorrow at the Union book store.
Two thousand directories have arrived and will be given out on at first-come, first-served basis. Students must present their activity books for stamping. Only one book will be given a student.
Shipping difficulties delayed arrival of the directory about three days. Another shipment is expected by Wednesday, Nov. 17.
GI Insurance Rebate Planned
Washington, Nov. 10—(UP)—The Veterans administration will disclose soon, possibly within two weeks, plans to split a vast insurance "kitty" among 16 million veterans of World War II.
The agency meantime has pinned a top secret label on the size of the fund built up because national service life insurance premiums proved higher than necessary to offset actual deaths.
The veterans agency has determined after more than six months' exacting work how much of its seven billion dollar insurance reserve can safely be kicked back in dividends, it was learned.
Best guess was it will run close to two billion dollars. Every G.I. who bought government life insurance—and almost every one did—will his cut. Payments probably will be made late in 1949.
An agency spokesman said the decision probably will be made pub-lice within two weeks. However, the job of figuring each policy holder's cut is so complicated no checks will go out for a year.
A total of 19½ million policies have been written so far, and the number is still growing slowly. (Some veterans have held more than one policy). The rebate on each must be figured separately.
Men who went into service early and young, and who kept their policies, can look for the biggest cuts, experts reported. Some checks may run as high as $250. Others will be too small to matter.
Bacteriology Club Hears Immunology History Review
Dr. N, P. Sherwood, chairman of the department of bacteriology reviewed the history of immunology at the Bacteriology club meeting Tuesday.
He cited the work of various contributors and told about some of his own research projects. Slids were used to illustrate his points.
Student-Advisor Talks To Start Monday, Nov. 15
All College freshman and sopno-mores are expected to confer with their faculty advisors during the mid-semester advising period Monday, Nov. 15, through Thursday, Nov. 18, Gilbert Ulmer, assistant dean of the College said today.
A list of advisors, their office numbers, and the hours they will be available for conferences will be posted on the bulletin board in the hall opposite the College office, 229 Frank Strong.
"If there is a conflict, the student should make an appointment with his advisor." Dean Ulmer said. "During this four-day period the advisors will have practically all the records which the College has on its students. This enables the student and the advisor to go over not only unsatisfactory reports, but also academic requirements, choice of subjects for next semester, and choice of majors."
Organizations that want reports on freshman and sophomore members who are doing unsatisfactory work must obtain those reports from the advisors, the dean said. For unsatisfactory reports on juniors and seniors the organization should submit an alphabetical list of members enrolled in the College to the College office.
"Copies of the unsatisfactory reports, D and F grades, will be sent to parents," Dean Ulmer added. "Some of the older, married students may want these reports withheld. If so, a request may be signed in the College office. These reports will not be sent to parents until after the advising period."
Dean Ulmer advised students to see their advisors early as there is always a rush near the end.
ISA Will Meet Dec.11
A state conference of independent student associations will be held at the University Saturday, Dec. 11. I.S.A. representatives from K-State, Emporia, Wichita, Baker and other schools are expected to attend.
It was decided at a council meeting Tuesday that discussion on the question whether or not I.S.A. should enter campus politics would begin at its next meeting, Tuesday, Nov. 16. If I.S.A. should enter politics, arrangement would be made for forums preceding All Student Council meetings. These forums will take up independent student matters to be placed before the A.S.C.
Two Former Students Now Working As Security Force Guards In France
Could Tallyrand, prime minister of Napoleon I revisit his favorite mansion today he might be challenged by two former K.U. students.
These guards, Wendell Gugler and Neal Ball were students here last year. They have been hired by the E.A.A. (Marshall plan) security force. They work at the main European headquarters which is the old palace of Tallyrand. Some of the fifty workmen remodeling the palace are Communists. Since they will do anything to retard the Marshall plan, Gugler and Ball have been stationed as guards to prevent incidents.
In describing the palace Gugler writes: "It's a magnificent place with a huge countyyard and rooms all done in gold gilt, paintings' and
tapestries. The rooms are filled with chandeliers and other antiques. There are hidden doors and stairways in abundance—about ten in all."
The hours of work are from 4 p.m. til midnight which leaves their days free. During this time the two go to U.N. conferences, and study French. Concerning their life there Gugler writes: "We live like kings. We have a two-room apartment with bath—all taken care of by a maid. we get our food and cigarettes from the army and the Embassy commissary for almost nothing (for example, cigarettes nine cents a pack.)"
Eventually the youth intend to return to K.U.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1948
Angry Boss Lets Employees Fix Plant To Suit Themselves
New York—(UP)—I. M. Strauss said today he believed his labor-relations problem was solved.
"Maybe I lost my temper," he said, "But we cleaned the place up."
maybe I lost my temper," he said, "But we cleaned the place up. Strauss is the man who called in the 100 employees at his auto accessories warehouse and said:
"I'm tired of your beeing about this place. Here is a check for $250,-000. Fix it up to suit yourselves. I want to see what you can do."
Today the employees showed him.
The employee-committee started collecting complaints and making changes.
Number one was the three flights of stairs. They installed an elevator.
Number two the workers didn't like the fact that there wasn't a decent place to eat in the neighborhood that didn't overcharge them for lunches. The committee built a dining room with three cooks who serve coffee, beer, and food at cost. The manager has an index of diet restrictions from the worker's wives. If they can't eat it at home, they can't eat it at the plant.
Number four, loured ceiling with light coming through the louvres to give an even illumination.
Number three, they enlarged the rest rooms and finished them in black onyx, complete with glassed in showers.
Number five loud speakers in every department connected with a combination record player and radio in the mail room. There is music most of the day, and each speaker has individual volume control so the workers can hear speeches and athletic events above room noises.
Jo Temple, the telephone operator and receptionist, said she couldn't see who was coming or going. They built her a layout that looks like a glass motor launch sailing down the hall.
One man wanted a turkish bath, but the committee voted that down because it might give the workers a cold. A secretary didn't like the looks of the dismal neighborhood, so the floor to ceiling windows were fixed to let in the light, but not the view.
Some of the boys said how about a place to bring their friends for a little social life. So the committee built a "conference room" next to the office with a 10-foot bar and a wood burning fireplace. Its upholstered furniture blends with the thick pile carpet. The workers can use it at night on a first-asked, first-served basis.
"The thing that stumped the committee most, but proved the cheapest item, was the handball court the clerks asked for," Mr. Strauss said. The committee moved two trucks to the other side of the warehouse, spent 10 cents for a can of paint, and marked off two courts on the wall and floor of the trucks.
Tamborines From Old Wills
Sydney, Australia — (UP)— Imported English tamborines being sold in Sydney are made of parchment from old wills because of parchment shortage. Many Australians now spend evenings studying old bits of English history.
University Dally Kansan
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $10 a semester-postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans. University, and Universityiversity year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class on Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
Official Bulletin
Nov. 10, 1948
A. I.C.H.E., 7:30 tonight Lindley auditorium. Movies.
Jay Janes, 5 today, Kansas room. Union. Bring money for K-State tickets.
General Semantics club. 7:45 to-tought, Seminar room, Frank Strong Annex F.
Archeery club, 4 to 6 today. Robinson Annex.
Square Dance club, 7 tonight, Military Science building. Instructions. Everyone welcome.
Special meeting, B'nai J'hudah fraternity, 7:30 tonight, 107 Frank Strong, concerning national affiliation. George Toll, Alpha Epsilon Pi, to be present. Attendance required.
Y.M. - Y.W.C.A. all - association
meeting, 4 today, English room,
Union.
Mortar Board, 9 tonight. Kappa
Kappa Gamma house.
A. W.S. senate will not meet this week.
Student Union Activities meeting, 7 tonight. Fraser.
Alpha Phi Omega, formal pledging,
7:30 tonight, Pine room. All pledges
and actives.
Snow Zoology club, 7.30 p.m. to morrow, 206 Snow. Informal initiation and movie on evolution.
Newcomer's club tea, 2:30 p.m. tomorrow, English room, Union.
Episcopal College club, Holy Communion, Trinity Episcopal church, 7 a.m. tomorrow. To be followed by breakfast at Parish house.
Pershing Rifles, 4 p.m. tomorrow,
Military Science building.
Le Cercle Francais se reunira jeudi le 11 novembre a sept heures et demie dans la salle 113 Frank Strong, M. Albert Roland fera une causerie.
Y. W.C.A. commission for freshman women will not meet this Thursday evening
Y. M.C.A. Love and Marriage forum, 4 p.m. tomorrow, Myers hall. Dr. Robert Foster, speaker.
Ku Ku meeting, 7:30 p.m. tomor-
row, Frank Strong auditorium .
Sociology club, 4 p.m. tomorrow.
106 Frank Strong. Students will discuss "Why We Are Here."
Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship,
7 p.m. tomorrow, 131. Frank Strong.
Frank Harris, China inland mission,
speaker.
Unitarian Liberal club, 6 p.m. tomorrow, dinner in Palm room for Clifton Hoffman, Boston. Reservations by calling 1705 before tomorrow noon.
Dutscher Verein wird sick Donnerstag um vier und dreisig auf Zimmer 402. Fraser versammeln.
Classical club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow.
Professor Seaver's home, 1629 Alabama.
Salt Lake City—(UP)—Sen. Elbert D. Thomas (D-Utah) says most of the nation's columnists should be honest with their readers and sign their articles "Philip Space."
sign their articles "Philip Space."
Senators Don't Mince Words
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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Socially Speaking
A K L Dinner Guests
Guests entertained at dinner Sunday by the Alpha KappaLambda fraternity were Dean and Mrs. Paul B. Lawson, Edrice McCarty, and Mr. and Mrs. Everett Simmons of Kansas City, Mo.
Bridge For Kappa Sigma Mothers
Judge For Kajabi SnMH
Judge for the Mother's Club
was entertained at the chapter
house Wednesday, Nov. 3, with a
bridge-tea.
Sixty-five guests competed for individual table prizes and the grand prize. A Mrs. Green from Eureka received an award for traveling the farthest distance to attend the affair
Hostesses were Mrs. Onita S. Miller, housemother, and Mesdames P. F. Vanderlippe, L. A. Fuller, Frank Carver, J. J. Harris, W. J. Estes. Mrs. Harris and Mrs. Estes poured.
Honor Housemother At Tea
Mrs. Ralph Park, housemother o. Gamma Phi Beta sorority was honored at a tea Sunday afternoon.
Jolliffe Hall Hour Dance
Jollie ball will hold an oper hour dance from 7 to 8 p.m. today.
Gamma Delta Dinner Guests
Guests for dinner at the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity Sunday were Ann Harms, Elizabeth Shears, Veda Spohn, Mary Helen Lewis, and Virginia Price.
Watkins Hall Open House
Watkins Hall entertained with an open house dance Saturday. Guests were: Clyde R. Wykert, James D. Williams, Wayne Davis, Donald Nicholson, Rex E. Thomas, Tom Carpenter, Tom Webb, William B. Smith, Max Morrison, Marcus E. Glover, Robert F. Bennett.
Maurice J. Fletcher, Roy H. Calihan, Donald D. McMurray, Robert D. Lindsay, Jack W. Hollingsworth, Kenneth B. King, Elmer Weigel John Robertson, Neil H. Arasmith John B. Egelson, James Kohman John Jordan, Robert W. Ramage, Dor Blinn, George L. Noll, Ralph Calvin, Brownell W. Landes.
Fred Scharahorst, Leon Abel,
Fred R. McCracken, W. W. Diether,
Tom Akers, Dick Hess, T. Charles
Bernard, Norman L. Bell, Ray Ste-
Dior Shows Wholesale Dresses -Prices $125 And Up
New York, Nov. 9.—(UP)—Christian Dior opened his first wholesale dress collection here last night with no shocker but plenty of "that looks like a Dior" in the display.
The Paris dressmaker clung closely to the full-skirted dresses and slim-skirted suits already associated with his name. Both silhouettes have been simplified to the demands of mass production without loss of elegance or excitement. University ASME To M
Dior said the greatest difference he found between his designing for a manufacturing firm and his Paris made-to-order collection was in fabric. He chose lighter weight materials for America, he said, "because here it is not so cold, indoor or outdoors."
outdoors.
The clothes, for spring and summer sale in America, will retail for about $125 and up.
Linen is widely used in both town navy and country colors. Pink linen is used for a full-skirted, short-sleeved dress whose wide pointed lapels reach to the edge of the arms framing a deep "fall away" V neckline.
A similar dress is made in navy wool with white pique collar and cuffs and a more restrained skirt. Another navy dress, labeled for Easter, has a cardigan-style neckline separated in a deep V over a bow-necked white pique dicky. Its skirt is full with unpressed pleats at front and back and huge patch pocketts on the back hip.
wart, T Mahon, Robert M. Shearer, Albert A. Kihm, Orion M. Mehus, K. E. Coffield, W. R. Mosse, Eugene G. Fetzel, Wred F. Wesemann.
Craig Cook, Herbert Skillman, Max F. Pachl, Robert Brown, Joseph Nalty, Edward J. Bray, Keaton Duckworth, Albert H. Blase, George J. Upham, Edward Osborne, Don Hohnberg, Charles Kohfeld, Elton B. Noble
Byron G. Strange, Jim Shaff, Walter R. Stockebrand, Robert W. Burnham, Walter C. Buchholtz, O. A. West, James V. Long, Charles F. Reiner, Roland M. Brunelle, Hugh Bennett, Loren C. Ford.
KU Dames To Meet At Union For Bridge Tonight
K. U. Dames will meet at 8 tonight in the English room of the Union. Mrs. Lee Sears, president, urged all members to attend.
Read the Want Ads daily.
THE MAN IN THE ROCKING CHAIR IS FURIOUS. A BOY WITH A TORCH HELPING HE OUT. A WOMAN SEEKS FOR SOMEONE TO LET THEM HIDE.
"Relax Mom,—You can save money at the Varsity Cleaners, across the street from the high school."
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University ASME To Meet With K-State, KC Chapters
The University branch of A.S.M.E. will attend a joint meeting with the A.S.M.E. branches of Kansas State college and the professional chapter in Kansas City at Manhattan tomorrow.
About 800 persons attended the faculty reception Saturday evening in the Union ballroom. The purpose of the reception was to acquaint new staff members and their wives with their colleagues.
800 Of Staff At Reception
F. L. Parrish, professor of history at Kansas State college, will speak on problems in the Far East.
Name tags for each guest identifying them with their department aided this purpose. Also heads of departments arranged for new staff members to be accompanied by present faculty members.
Coffee and cake were served the guests. The tables were decorated with chrysanthemums of varied colors.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Union Activities To Record Voices To Aid Improvement Of Speech Defects
Voice recordings will be made at a speech clinic from 4 to 5 p.m. today in the Student Union activities office in the Union lounge. All students interested in having recordings made of their voices for speech improvement are asked to attend the clinic, Steve J. Mills, announcements committee chairman, said today.
Each person's voice will be transcribed on a wire recorder and played back later, Mills said. Students who may have speech defects will thus be able to hear their mistakes. The announcements committee will probably have advance speech students or speech instructors at the clinic to offer criticism and corrections to improve each student's speech, Mills added.
The clinic is being sponsored by the announcement committee of the Student Union activities. The committee hopes to be able to record at least 20 students' voices before 4 p.m., but they will stay another hour if more students are on hand, Mills said.
Leroy Turner, pharmacy student; Charles La Vene, College sophomore; and Guy Goodwin, College freshman, will conduct the clinic and will operate the recorder.
- If this clinic proves successful, it will be permanently established as a committee function, Mills said.
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Engineering Wives Meet
The yearly program for the Engineering Wives club began Monday night with a bridge party held in the Pine room of the Union.
The next meeting will be a dinner bridge party for members and their husbands, 6:30 p.m. Nov. 19,
at the Hearth.
Meetings will include once-a-month bridge parties, held at the University, twice-a-month bridge parties in the women's homes, and "bright ideas" meetings for swing and knitting.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Officers/for this year are Mrs. W. E. Duggins, president, Mrs. Bruce Chadwick, vice-president, and Mrs. Charles A. Berthot, secretary-treasurer.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1948
Ettinger To All-NFL Team; Kansan Only Rookie Listed
Bv OSCAR FRALEY
New York, Nov. 10—(UP)—National Football League coaches, assistant coaches and scouts today selected an All-NFL team which explains clearly why the Chicago Bears, Chicago Cardinals and Philadelphia Eagles are riding the cleated crest in their circuit.
The men who have watched them all—and thus seen every player in
action to provide a sensible solution $ ^{ \textcircled{4}} $to the national nonsense of picking "all" teams—lay it on heavy for the NFL's Big Three of 1948.
Philadelphia, leader of the Eastern division, gets four places on the first team while the Bears get three spots and the Cardinals, currently deadlocked with the Monsters of the Midway for the Western division lead. get two.
But taking both your First and Second teams, dominated by the Cardinals with six spots, of the top 22 players in the league the Cards get eight places, and the Bears and Eagles each five.
The Pittsburgh Steelers, Detroit Lions, Los Angeles Rams and New York Giants each get one, with the Boston Yanks, Washington Redskins and Green Bay Packers all ignored.
The All-NFL Teams
Pos. Player And Team School
E. Mal Kutner, Cards. Texas.
T. Al Wistert, Eagles. Michigan.
G. Ray Bray, Bears. W. Michigan.
C. B. Turner, Bears. H-Simmons.
G. Don Ettinger, Giants. Kansas.
T. Dick Huffman, L.A., Tennessee.
E. Pete Phos, Eagles. Indiana.
QB. Tommy Thompson, Eagles Tulsa.
S. B. Van Buren, Eagles. L.S.U.
RHB. George Mcafee, Bears Duke.
FB. Pat Harder, Cards. Wisconsin.
Second Team Ends, Bill Dewell,
Cards; and Val Jansante, Pittsburgh;
Tackles, Walt Stickel and Fred Davis, Bears; Guards, Loyd Arms, Cards, and Howard Brown, Deproit; Center, Vince Banonis, Cards; Quarterback, Ray Mallouf, Cards; L. Helfback, Charley Trippi, Cards; Right Halfback, Elmer Angsman, Cards, and Fullback, Joe Muha, Eagles.
Ettinger, the red-haired young giant from Kansas who is regarded as/a throwback to the rough and tumble type lineman of old, is the only rookie who crashed the first team.
Navy Rifle Teams Compete By Mail
The Naval R.O.T.C. rifle team will fire a match by mail with the University of Marquette. Thursday.
Lt. L. E. Bolts, marine corps staff officer of the unit, said the team is improving each week.
The team fires a regular match which is scored by the instructor. The results then are mailed to the opposing team for comparison.
Dobbs Leads In Offense
New York. Nov. 10—(UP)—it takes more than a bruised and battered frame to stop Glenn Dobbs, the Los Angeles Dons' irrepressible "one man gang."
"Slowed down" by a set of injured ribs and a painfully bruised trunk muscle, the wiry Dobbs managed to gain 230 yards by passing and running as his team was beaten by New York, 38 to 6, Sunday, to take over the individual total offense lead in the All America football conference with 1,946 yards.
The one-time Tulsa tornado, who has handled the ball in 288 plays to rank as the workhorse of the A.A.C. has piled up 353 yards by rushing and 1,593 by passing to grab top honors from George (The Kid) Ratterman of the Buffalo Bills, last week's leader.
Dobbs also averaged 53.3 yards on three punts to widen his lead in the kicking department to 49.1 yards per boot in 48 efforts, according to statistics released today by league headquarters. In addition, the Dons' star ranked fourth in passing.
Refrigerator Bowl Bid To MV Vikings
Evansville, Ind., Nov. 10—(UP)—Missouri Valley College today ranked as the top contender for one of the bids to play in the first "Refrigerator Bowl" football game. Dec. 4.
A member of the planning committee was expected to fly to Marshall, Mo., this week to confer with officials of the school. Missouri Valley, which whipped Tarkio College Saturday 87 to 0, was reported interested in obtaining a bid to the Bowl game.
Graham Drills On Defense
Manhattan, Kan., Nov. 10- (UP) Coach Ralph Graham cracked down today on pass defense in preparing Kansas State for the invasion Saturday by the University of Kansas.
K-State, loser in six of seven starts this season, had trouble breaking up passes in yesterday's drill against Kansas formations,
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Norman, Okla. Nov. 10 — (UP)—The University of Oklahoma Sooners, alerted against a letdown after their smashing 41 to 7 triumph over Missouri last Saturday, have settled their sights on the Nebraska Cornhuskers who come to town this weekend.
The Sooners went through a long scrimmage against the Freshmen yesterday in a snapping cold afternoon, and Coach Bud Wilkinson indicated more stiff workouts through the week.
The O. U. players remember all too well their eyelash 14 to 13 edge over the Huskers last year at Lincoln, and memory is not too dim of Nebraska teams that kicked the Sooners around with monotonous regularity.
This year's Huskers haven't fared so well in their early games, winning two and losing five, but they have scored against every opponent, including such outfits as Minnesota, Notre Dame, U.C.L.A. and Kansas. Last week they maudled Kansas State 32 to 0.
The Sooners' lineup of the lame and limping figures to be shortened by game time. End Bobby Goad, center Pete Tillman and tackle Wade Walker—all big men in the rugged forward wall—are in good enough shape to scrimmage.
Beg Your Pardon
Sooners Wary Of Huskers
Letters will be sent to the University of Wichita, the University of Kansas City, and the Big Seven schools this week, to arrange fencing matches with the University of Kansas, Norman Ellis, president of the fencing club said.
Raymond Garcia, assistant physical education instructor, urged more University students to join the club.
Mr. Ellis, a former member of the Harvard university fencing team, will be one of the mainstays in the newly organized Kansas fencing team.
Kansas Seeks Fencing Matches
Yesterday we erroneously gave the all-game totals for Kansas as 87 to 21 for opponents. The correct totals are: Kansas 165, opponents' 42.
Heath leads in individual total offense with 1,754 yards and in yards gained passing with 1,758, the difference being explained by the fact that his few rushing attempts have resulted in a net loss of four yards.
On total yards gained, it's California third with 2.906, Notre Dame fourth with 2.847, and Miami of Ohio fifth with 2.675.
After Heath on total offence comes Charlie Justice, North Carolina with 1.147, Lindy Berry, Texas Christian —1.062, Andy Davis, George Washington —1.041, and Jim Finks, Tulsa —1.040.
After that, according to average, come Texas Mines, 335.0, Notre Dame—331.3, Michigan State—284.2, and Oklahoma—283.9. On total yards, it's Texas Mines—2,345, Notre Dame—2,319, California—2,170, and Utah State—2,077.
Nevada Tops In Yardage; Army, Notre Dame Close Up
New York. Nov. 10-(UP)-Still stunned and shaken by their surprise loss to Santa Clara last Sunday, the Wolf Pack of Nevada got some solid reassurance today that at least it has the ground-gaining championship sewed up.
Nevada owes its lofty position, of course, to bombardier Stan Heath and the rugged line that gives him plenty of time to toss. The Pack leads in passing both in total yards, 1,994, and in average per game, 284.9. No other team is even close in either ranking. On average it's Tula second with 173.0, Georgia Tech third with 168.4, San Francisco fourth with 167.3, and West Virginia fifth with 156.9.
Ranking them on average yards gained per game. Nevada is on top with 490.9 and Army second with 456.4. Then come Notre Dame—406.7, Miami of Ohio—382.1, and Missouri—378.3.
With a 241-yard lead over second-place Army and only two games to go, the Pack apparently can't lose out
If there is any validity at all in forecasting, the Pack figures to gain more against its last two rivals—Fresno State and Wichite—than Army does against Pennsylvania and Navy.
Nevada, the foremost exponent of the passing attack, has gained 3,436 yards in seven games while Army, the leader in yardage pounded out on the ground, has gained 3,195 yards, also in seven games, according to the latest statistics of the National Collegiate Athletic Bureau.
By JOHN GRIFFIN
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1948
UNIVERSITY, DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Beta B', Don Henry, Win To Stay Undefeated
Two teams remained unbeaten and one was dropped from the undefeated class in Tuesday's Intramural touch football as the fraternity "B" and independent "A" teams took over the gridirons.
The Beta "B" team made it six straight at the expense of the formerly undefeated Phi Psi "B." Don Henry racked up its fourth straight to stay undefeated with a victory over win- Dominoes Win 14 20 Less Army.
Beta's Edge Phi Psi's 7 to 6
The Beta's (6-0) edged out the Phi Psi's (4-1) by a 7 to 6 score in a thrill-packed "B" game. Bob Dare accounted for the Beta points in the first quarter by running for a touchdown and kicking the extra point. J. B. Davidson passed to Bill Richardson for the lone Phi Psi touchdown in the third period. Davidson tossed a long pass to Bob Arbuckle late in the fourth quarter to move the ball to the Beta one-yard line, but they failed to push it over.
Don Henry Downs Army 15 to 7
Interceptions were the order of the day as Don Henry (4-0) defeated Army (0-4), 15 to 7 in a rousing comeback. A 20-yard run with an interception sent the Army into a first quarter lead. Jim Stirling intercepted an Army pass on the 5-yard line and scored in the second quarter, then dropkicked the extra point. Don Boucher stole another Army pass and went 10 yards to the third period. The winners added the safety in the last quarter as an Army runner was trapped behind his own goal.
Sig Eps Defeat Phi Gam 24 to 12
The Sig Ep "B" (5-1) came from behind to defeat the Phi Gam "B" (4-2), 24 to 12. With Bill Porter passing, the Phi Gam's moved ahead 12 to 6 at the half, but the Sig Ep's could do nothing wrong in the second half as Medlock and Woodring led the way.
Sigma Nus Beat Silent Men
The Sigma Nu "B" (3-3) defeated the Silent Men (3-3), 19 to 0. Dick Ashley handled all the passing for Sigma Nu, tossing two touchdown passes to Earl Kopke and another to Harry Jetmore. Ed Hurlman was on the receiving end of the extra point toss.
Sigma Chi's Win 26 to 0
Sigma Chi "B" (4-1) out-passed and out-ran a determined A.T.O. "B" team (1-4) to win 26 to 0. Maupin passed to Stratton for the first tally in the third quarter, Stratton intercepted a flat pass on the A.T.O. 35-yard line and ran it over for another score. Holden passed 12-yard to Benton to climax a 90-yard march. Guard Venton Black caught a 15-yard pass in the end zone for the last touchdown. Holden and Maupin scored the extra points.
The Galloping Dominos (3-2) won by a forfeit, 1 to 0, over Wesley (1-4), when the Wesley team failed to appear.
Neyland Is UP's Coach Of Week
New York, Nov. 10—(UP)—He has reduced football to a military science and his maneuvers with players are a little tedious for spectators to watch.
Each year his critics demand that he streamline his offense and defense and go for the new fangled high scoring methods.
But he goes right on winning football games with his old fashioned single wing and his varied defenses, each well plotted in advance to stop whatever kind of plays the opposition features.
He's the United Press Coach of the Week, Gen. Bob Neyland of Tennessee, whose vigorous Volunteers knocked Georgia Tech out of the perfect record ranks Saturday in one of the major upsets of the year.
It was an upset, that is, for anybody who didn't know how Neyland operated. But for his long-time followers no Volunteer victory comes as too much of a surprise—they count on him to upset the nation's best teams regularly.
Things haven't returned yet to the golden era of Tennessee football when the Vols won 30 straight games under Neyland in the 1938, '39, and '40 seasons. And with a record of four wins, two defeats and a tie this season, nobody is talking about bowl games as they did in those three years when Neyland's boys performed the "hat trick" going to the Orange, Rose, and Sugar bowls in successive years.
But it could be that time will come again. This year's team isn't great but it's young. He has only four seniors on the squad and only two are regulars. He is working most of the time with 25 sophomores and the word is out down in the "hill country" that the Vols will be terrific come next season.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
UNION PACIFIC
BE THERE FOR THE KICK-OFF!
KANSAS U.
at
KANSAS STATE
NOV. 13
Leave Kansas City ... 10 a.m.
Leave Lawrence ... 10:55
Leave Topeka ... 11:45
ARRIVE MANHATTAN ... 1:15
Leave Manhattan ... 5:15
Arrive Lawrence ... 7:15
SNACK BAR ON TRAIN, BOTH WAYS, SERVING SANDWICHES—COFFEE—SOFT DRINKS
Louis Coasts In Number 2
UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD
New Haven, Conn., Nov. 10—(UP)
—Heavyweight King Joe Leuis had a much easier time boxing Bernie Reynolds in an exhibition bout last night than he had against Johnnh Shktor two nights ago in Boston.
The rugged Skhor lost every round to Louis but nailed him with several solid blows and left a "shiner" on the champ's face as a souvenir of the bout. But young Reynolds of Fairfield, Conn., didn't even give Louis a workout.
For four rounds the Brown Bomber disdained to use his right hand and kept jolting his blond rival with lefts to the face. Reynolds put on his best counter-attack in the last two rounds and in his behalf it was pointed out he weighed only 181 pounds to the champ's 220.
They're Here!
Meanwhile, in Columbus, Ohio, it was announced that Louis will fight a four-round exhibition against light-heavyweight Alabama Kid of Columbus at Cincinnati on Nov. 29.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
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Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
1=2
We've proved it!
Problem: To hold down costs, and speed the extension of telephone service.
Solution: High-strength wire whose use allows the span between poles to be increased from 150 feet to more than 300. One pole now does the work of two.
The problem, of course, is a continuing one for telephone people. High-strength wire with required electrical qualities is only one of many things they have developed to help solve the problem in these days of high construction costs.
In total, their developments are the reason why telephone service here is the best in the world—the reason why a telephone call
1=2
We've proved it!
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BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM
MINERAL ELECTRICITY & HYDROGEN
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ASSOCIATION OF MATERIALS
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1948
The Editorial Page-
Peace Pact
K-STATE—K,U, PEACE PACT. 1948
(As Revised from Peace Pact of November, 1931)
Preamble: We, the students of Kansas State college and of the University of Kansas, in order to safeguard the welfare of our students, to protect the property of our institutions and townspeople, and to insure the peaceful relations of our institutions, do hereby affirm this peace pact, a living charter of peace and amiability between Kansas State college and the University of Kansas to be reconsidered, modernized, and readopted each year at the KSC and KU Friendship dinner.
An Agreement entered into by the All-Student Council of the University of Kansas, and the student council of the Kansas State college, on behalf of their respective student bodies, to abolish forever all manner of school fights and undesirable pre-game activities between the two schools.
Whereas: To avoid such serious results the above named student councils covenant and agree on the part of each institution that this shall constitute a formal treaty, calling to a close all such fights and activities, to be in effect henceforth and forever, and binding all student councils in the future to recognize and enforce the said treaty.
Whereas: Such fights and activities endanger the friendly relations of the two institutions; unpleasant publicity results to each school; there is serious danger of grave personal injuries; and much property is damaged and ruined.
Whereas: If from time to time various members of either student body in violation of this agreement attempts to carry on, or do carry on such fights and activities, the student council of the offended school shall decide whether an offense against this pact has been committed. The minimum punishment shall be restoration of the damages and the maximum punishment shall be suspension from school for one semester and restoration of damages. The punishment shall be decided by a joint committee. This joint committee shall be composed of eight members, three members from each school from the respective student councils and one administrative official from each school. Both student councils shall take all action possible to reduce the publicity on acts of offense. Official publication should not be given without the consent of both student councils. The respective student councils pledge themselves to carry out the punishment to the students under their jurisdiction as prescribed by the joint committee so that the dignity and the intent of this document may be preserved.
Whereas: It is recognized that with changing conditions it may be desirable to revise certain articles of the peace pact. It is agreed that the entire bodies of both councils will meet jointly at the beginning of each year. This meeting will be held at least 10 days before any athletic competition takes place between the two schools. The meeting will be referred to as a friendship meeting or one of complete goodwill. It will be held alternately at the respective schools. During this meeting the peace pact will be reconsidered and agreed upon. The renewed peace pact will be duly published in the official newspapers of each school. The faculty advisors of the two schools will be responsible for setting a definite date for the meeting between the two councils next year.
Entered and Agreed Upon this 15th day of October, 1947, by the undersigned who act with full authority for the University of Kansas, and the Kansas State college.
Sees Meat Shortage For 10-15 Years
Hammond said the reasons for the extended shortage are:
Capetown, South Africa-(UF) The entire world will suffer from a meat shortage for the next 10 to 15 years, according to Prof. John Hammond of Cambridge university.
1. People are earning more money which they spend, first of all, on more meat.
2. Unemployment has been cut down, creating more meat consumers.
3. The world-wide swing among farmers to dairy products because they are more profitable than cattle.
4. War devastation set back the cattle industry.
Smokers Burn, Even If Their Fags Don't
Boston—(UP)—Commuters riding the M.T.A. rapid transit trains here almost need a watch and a compass to find out whether it's O.K. to smoke.
Signs on subway trains bear the following bewildering decree:
"Smoking in this vehicle, except when permitted, is prohibited by law. No smoking except on weekdays only between 5 a.m. and 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. and 6:15 p.m. in rear car of trains going toward Forest Hills and in forward car of trains going toward Everett."
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
SANTA
K. U. STUDENTS ONLY Clip this ad for a 15% Discount on all
Xmas Photo Orders Taken Before November 15, 1948!
Dear Editor:
This letter is to sooth the nerves of Albert Roland; the last thing in the world I wanted to do was to awaken him with my "sensational revelations."
Dear Editor
Nerve Soother
You are right Mr. Roland, from now on I won't believe what I read in the paper. It is only propaganda pointed at "hard, efficient youths" like myself. I will no longer believe it when Mr. Dulles says the U.S. is rearming because the world fears Russia; when the newspapers say that the Russians have had atomic trials in the Caspian Sea; and, of course, who would ever believe that the Communists are inciting riots in Korea, France, Germany and half the "civilized world."
RACHELLE STUDIOS
730 Mass. Phone 302
Bob Karnes, student representative
Your letter has brought me out of my stupor, for now I realize that I fought two years in the Pacific just to prove to the world how much I love my enemies, both past and future. From now on, Albert, you and I shall just worry about passing an exam in dandelion digging and let the rest of the world go to blazes. (Oh yeah). . . . .
Donald A. Moser Freshman
University
Daily Hansan
Member of the Kansas Press Assn, National Editorial Assn. Association, Associated Collegiate Press, Represented by the National Ad-Service, 450 Madison Ave., New York City
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Maurice C Lungren
Hal D. Nelson
Anne Murphy
Bill P. Mayer
Bob H. Foley
Nora Temple
Patricia James
Richard D. Barton
Keith M. Wright
Christopher G.
Osmoro L. Bartelli
Rosemary Rospaw
Business Mgr.
Advertising Mgr.
Circulation Mgr.
Classified Mgr.
Classified Mgr.
Natl Adv. Mgr.
Promotion Mgr.
Bill Nelligan
Don Tennant
Russell Thayton
Deeat Hoyt
Don Waldron
William E. Beek
Charles O'Connor
Charles O'Connor
Math Group Hears Proofs Of Algebra Theorems
His talk was concerned with groups and rings. Proofs of several theorems in modern abstract algebra were given.
Dr. I. N. Herstein defined the radical of a ring and showed its significance in characterizing a certain class of rings at the mathematical colloquium Monday evening.
Dr. G. K. Overholtzer will speak Nov. 15 on the subject, "A Generalization of a Divisibility Property of Sums of Powers." The meeting will be at 5 p.m. in room 203 Frank Strong hall.
LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS
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Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices
Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed . . . 75c
Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed . 79c
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The convention is being held in Milwaukee today, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. Robinson will leave today and return on Sunday.
Read the Want Ads daily.
Will Attend Journalism Meet
James L. Robinson, journalism senior, will represent the University of Kansas chapter of the Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalist fraternity, at its national convention.
1 week or less service.
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are our custom-made midnight blue suits.
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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10.1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone KU 376
Classified Advertising Rates
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be timely and promptly made upon arrival during the time specified in 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office. Journals must be submitted by 4 p.m. the day before publication date.
One Three Five
day days
25 words or less ...35c 65c 90c
additional words ...1c 2c 3c
FOR SALE
MASTER-DELUXE Chevrolet Club coupe, Radio, heater, new 1946 engine, 20,000 miles on new engine. This is a good clean automobile. Will sell reasonable. 16
OLDS SEDAN, 1938. Good condition.
Henderson, 1424 New York or
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41 PONTIAC - 4-door, new transmission
143J or call at 1518
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1963 STUDEBAKER sedan, Cheap Good
body and motor. Heater. Call Dan Ratt
Roll.
1945 WILLY'S Army Jeep. Good condition.
Call John Rohde, 2004.
A GOOD 36 Ford four door. See Ray-
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nighttime
TWO TICKETS to K.U. K-State football game. Call 1328 between 12 and 14.
1953 CHEVROLET sedan. Engine completely overhauled, all new parts from timing gear to exhaust valves. Good gear to be mounted. 1017 New brookshire, phone 2956.
UPER YOUR Christmas cards now for a complete selection. Will deliver. Call
a complete selection. Will deliver. Call Bob McDonald, phone 991. 11 MUST SACRIFICE 1839 Chrysler Imperial, heater, and radio. $800. May be seen at Conco station. 1901 Mass. 11 ATTRACTIVE furnished cottage, 5 rooms and bath. One of the cleanest homes in town; on zoned street. Just seven minutes by bus down street. Possession. By Sec. bus down T18 Street. AMMUNITION. Fishing Tackle. Guns and bikes repaired. Keys made, padlocks. Rutter's Shop. 1016. rftn
BUSINESS SERVICE
TASTE OUR fine steaks and chicken.
We serve nothing but the best at the Skylite Dinner Club. Have a party in our "Hide-out."
TYPING: Reasonable rate. Prompt service.
Pb. 1608_1628 Vermont. 12
$3.96 FOR YOUR old battery on a new
guaranteed Goodrich battery. Delivery
and installation free. Phone 21, B. F.
Goodrich Store, 929 Mass. 23
DOES YOUR pen need repairing? Excellent service on any make or model. Bring your pens and pencils to Student Union Book Store. 12
*WHEN ALL PETS including dogs, birds,
fish, cats, pigeons, skunks, parrots,
squirrels, rats' mice, etc., go shopping*
*1218 Corn St. Phone 418.* Everything in
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EBEBHART and Son. tailors. Finest samples made to measure, suits, topcoats, and overcoats. Alterations, repairing and leather work. 831% Mass. 19
ALTERING SUITS, coats, and dresses.
Relining coats a speciality. Handmade
tailored button work. Work guaranteed.
Call 2955R, 842 Indiana. 12
TRANSPORTATION
WANT RIDE to the East at Thanksgiving.
Must be in vicinity of Pa. or New York.
Ultimate destination, Wilkes Barre, Pa.
Fanwood office, B. O. L.
12
WISH TO contact person driving to New Orleans or south at Thanksgiving vacation. Contact through Daily Kansan office, Box 1. 11
WARREN DIPE TO Lawrence from KANSA City, Monday morning. Arrive Lawrence by 9 a.m. Call Bill McCormick,
Phone 2303L. 12
WOULD LIKE a ride to Champaign, IL,
or anywhere else by Leaving Tuesday.
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boys at 523 Louisiana. 1
SINGLE ROOM for boy, less hill 1
LOVELY BASEMENT room in new home to two boys. Furnace piped into room; good ventilation, asphalt tile flooring, nearly private room with cars living nearby so transportation might be arranged. $3.50 a week per boy. Phone 34273. 18
LOST
A PAIR of biocals with transparent horn rimmed frame at stadium in Kansas-Oklahoma A. and M. game $5.00 reward for anyone finding glasses intact. Contact
WILL THE person who removed the leather notebook from the top of the showcase in the Union, Tuesday, please send the notes to the Kansan office 12
GIRL'S GOLD class ring M.A.W. Letters
S.M. on set. Initials M.A.W, inside ring.
Reward. Leave at Kansan office . 12
BLACK SHEAFFER pen, lost Monday
around 12:30 in or between the Union and
Kansan office. 13. Please return
Kansan office. 10
MAN'S WRIST watch between 4:50 and
5:30 on the walk between Military
Science and the hospital. Reward Please
turn in at Kansan Business office, 11
WANTED
CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE now. To take orders for supplies available for Christmas gifts, Write Box 2461, Kansas City, Mo. 16
SMITH & WESSON 38. Special, preferably model or what have you.
Del. Sunflower. D. Robert D. Hill. F. Geh. Del. Sunflower.
NATIONAL BANK
Reservations
—NO EXTRA FARE—
FLYING IS THE WAY TO TRAVE Fly Home for Thanksgiving at 300 m.p.h in a TWA Constellation NO EXTRA EARE
Immediate reservations on ALL AIRLINES to any place in the United States. Please make reservations as far in advance as possible.
City Ticket Office The First National Bank of Lawrence Travel Agency
Miss Rose Gieseman, Mgr. 8th & Mass. Sts.
MISCELLANEOUS
BRING YOUR date to the Skyline Dinner Club tonight. Our fine food, soft drinks, and smooth dance floor are the ingredients for a swell evening. 10
Stolen Sign Raises A Delicate Point
It is a delicate question whether Monchonsia is a men's or a women's residence hall.
It seems K-State horseball started early this year. On Oct 11, the Monday after the Wildcats had snapped a 28-game losing streak by defeating Arkansas State, a sign saying "Monchonsia Hall" was taken from the organized women's hall at 1014 Mississippi Hall.
Georgia Hamman, College sophomore and member of the house, said that about midnight on Oct. 11 several of the women were awakened by a noise on the front porch but promptly went back to sleep. In the morning the two-foot, black and white, illuminated identification mark was gone.
On Oct. 30 several K.U. men reported seeing a sign amazingly similar to the mission one on the Manhattan campus. They volunteered to "liberate" the sign during the week-end of the K.U.-Kansas State game.
Latest rumor has it that a sign proclaiming in bold black letters "Monchonsia hall" is perched atop a recombined barracks at Kansas State and that the men in the building have applied for and obtained permission to form an organized hall called "Monchonsia."
Two-thirds of the industrial structure of Omaha is devoted to food-processing.
Love And Marriage Lectures Tomorrow
Dr. Robert G. Foster, professor of home economics, will speak on "Dating; Courtship, and Mate Selection," at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Myers auditorium. The lecture is first in a series of four talks on love and marriage to be given by the home economics department in cooperation with eight student organizations.
Engineers To Be Interviewed Nov.15
Mr. R. L. Fitzgerald, representative of the Atlantic Refining company, will interview interested petroleum, chemical, mechanical, electrical engineering, geology, engineering physics, and physical chemistry majors Monday. Nov. 15 and Tuesday. Nov. 16 in 111 Marvin hall. The company is interested in men with approximately a B or better average.
An interview schedule may be signed and an application blank filled out in the office of the School of Engineering.
Read the Want Ads daily.
Correction
Delta Sigma Pi, professional business fraternity, was erroneously referred to as Delta Sigma Phi, honorary business fraternity, in a story in Tuesday's Daily Kansan
University Post Office Will Be Closed Nov. 11
The University post office, located in the basement of Frank Strong hall, will be closed all day Thursday, Nov. 11, Mr. R. C. Abraham, superintendent of the University mail station announced today.
There will be neither a pick up nor delivery of mail at the University post office on Armistice Day.
FRAMES FOR YOU
V
Lawrence Optical Co
1025 Mass.
CHEF
When the Conversation centers around good food—then the conversation centers around
Bill's Grill 1109 Mass. Across from Court House
HERE'S ONE FOR ALL YOU WHEELS ON CAMPUS
STEER CLEAR OF TROUBLE BY HAVING YOUR WHEELS PROPERLY BALANCED: WHEN WHEELS ARE OUT OF LINE, TIRES WEAR, STEERING IS DIFFICULT AND HIGH SPEED DRIVING IS DANGEROUS. FOR THE MOST COMPLETE WHEEL BALANCING SERVICE IN LAWRENCE
VISIT
MORGAN-MACK
MOTOR CO.
609 Mass.
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1948
Reds Hint At Truman Visit
Moscow, Nov. 10—(UP)—Russian newspapers displayed prominently today a Tass dispatch from Washington quoting a Times - Herald commentator as saying President Truman might possibly come to Moscow to talk with Premier Josef Stalin.
Eben Ayers, a White House press secretary with Mr. Truman at Key West, Fla., said the president had "no such plan in mind."
Diplomatic observers in Moscow interpreted publication of the dispatch as another straw indicating Russian hopes of a closer agreement with the United States since President Truman's election.
All Russian comment regarding the election has indicated that Soviet leaders believe Mr. Truman's administration offers greater hope of agreement between the two nations than would election of a Republican president.
The commentator was quoted as saying Mr. Truman was so determined to carry out his peace program that he would go to Moscow if Stalin would not leave Russia.
The student court handed out $16 in fines Tuesday when it heard 15 parking violation appeals. Three of the appeals were reversed, and of the 12 affirmed, ninie were judgments by default.
The Soviet press seldom publishes unconfirmed reports unless some special significance is attached to them.
Students Fined $16
The court reversed one appeal each by Dean C. Banker, Orin L. Strobel, and Andrew A. Zahner. It affirmed one appeal each by Robert S. Clark, $2; Maurice L. Wells, $1, and Andrew A. Zahner, $1.
Appeals affirmed by default were those of B. W. Barker, one, $1; Richard H. Colburn, one, $1; Horace V. Edmonds, three, $3; Melvin Muroff, one, $1; and William O. Richardson, three, $6.
Jitterbug Contest Moved To Nov.17
The Jitterbug contest originally planned for tonight in the Union ballroom has been postponed until 7:15 p. m. Wednesday. Nov. 17, Marilynn Louise Smith, sports and organizations chairman of the Student Union Activities, said today.
Four winning couples will be chosen at the contest by Miss Elaine Selicovitz, instructor in physical education, and sports and organizations committee members.
The winners will compete in a final contest at the next Midweek dance, Wednesday, Dec. 1. Winners will be given prizes at that time.
All couples who are interested are invited to enter the contest, Miss Smith said.
Zoology Club Will Initiate Tomorrow
The Zoology club will initiate new members and see a movie on evolution tomorrow.
Bob Delphia, president, said that students who wish to become members must see him or Charles Smith in 216 Snow hall before Thursday.
Membership in the club is limited to students who will have 10 or more hours credit in zoology at the end of this semester.
Dean Smith In Nashville
George B. Smith, dean of the School of Education, will leave today for Nashville, Tenn. He will attend a meeting of deans of summer sessions of colleges and universities and will be gone over the week-end.
State May Call Special Session
Topeka, Nov. 10—(UP) — Sen.
Riley W. MacGregor, state legislature,
said today he would ask Gov.
Frank Carlson to call a special session to repeal the state's "bone dry" law.
He said he believed it should be left to the regular session meeting in January to work out a liquor control measure. Under MacGregor's plan, there would be no regulatory measure on the books pending the regular session.
Argues For World State
Like religion, world government is logical and practical, according to Dr. W. W. Adams, president of the Central Baptist seminary of Kansas City, Mo. Dr. Adams addressed a meeting of the United World Federalists Tuesday.
"My religion demands that I do something about world government." Dr. Adams said. "One of the fundamental beliefs of the church is that the human race is one brotherhood
"Material possessions and social organizations, such as government, are always a means to an end. They are of value in so far as they contribute to the advancement of human personality."
Dr. Adams blamed ignorance for retarding the advancement of world government. Selfishness and habit were also named as holding back the advance of world unity.
"Some believe preachers should be concerned only with the Bible and not interpret social and economic problems," Dr. Adams said.
Union Activities Meet Tonight
All 12 committees of the Student Union Activities will meet at 7 p.m. today in Fraser theater to plan activities for the next few weeks. Each of the 12 committees will hold separate meetings after the entire group assembles in the theater.
The entertainment committee will decide upon a band and special entertainment for the Pumpkin night, Saturday, Nov. 20, and for Prom to be held from 9 until midthe next Varsity dance.
The decorations committee will discuss ideas concerning the autumn theme for decorations at the Pump-Prom in addition to selecting ideas for decorations for the Varsity dance.
The social, publicity, art, and announcements committees will also submit ideas for decorations and publicity for the two dances.
The sports and organizations com-
mittee will plan a bridge contest to
be held later in the semester if there
is sufficient student interest.
The history of Student Union Activities will be discussed by the public liaison committee. The committee plans to publish the Union's history in a small pamphlet.
The special projects committee will decide how to conduct a photograph contest for students. All students later will be asked to submit favorite pictures.
An informal party will be held in the Palm room of the Union after the committee meetings. Refreshments will be served. The entertainment committee is sponsoring the party.
The Girls Want To Know One Thing: What Can You Do With .92 Of A Man
The chances of a man finding feminine companionship on the campus aren't so bad as the statisticians first thought.
Thus the men have actually a 15 per cent better chance of getting a date than they first thought. Or to put it another way, the women have lost their "driver's seat" advantage by the same amount.
The ratio of men to women in the student body of 9,750 is 3.44 to 1. But a check of the student directory just published shows that 1,665 men and 194 women are married. By removing them from the dating eligibles, the current "boy meets girl" ratio drops to 2.92 to 1.
Before the war when there were few married students the ratio was steady at slightly more than 2 to 1.
There are 8.6 times as many men students married as women. The question of what the wives are doing is easy. They're taking care of the children or holding a job to help keep dad in school. Some are doing both.
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Topeka, Nov. 10—(UP)—Purely a formality, of course, but. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower today registered for the draft in his home state of Kansas.
Brig. Gen. Milton R. McLean, Kansas director of selective service, said General Ike's registration, required of all officers and enlisted men in military service, arrived today.
The Columbia university president, on leave from the army, listed his rank as general of the army and his residence as Abilene, Kan.
'Child Welfare Not Adequate'
Present day facilities are not adequate to correct juvenile delinquency problems in Kansas, Floyd E. Sappington, acting director of the Receiving home at Atchison, told Phi Delta Kappa members Tuesday. Phi Delta Kappa is a men's education fraternity.
"The departments and institutions for child welfare in Kansas are under-staffed and over-worked," Mr. Sappington said. "There is no place, except in expensive private institutions, where a child can receive psychiatric treatment."
Archery Club To Practice Near Gym Annex Tonight
The Archery club will meet first 4 to 6 p.m. today on the field in front of Robinson annex for target practice.
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University Daily Kansan
46th Year No. 40
Thursday, Nov. 11, 1948
Lawrence, Kansas
STUDENT NEWSAPER
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Chinese Riots To Be Quelled By Martial Law
By UNITED PRESS
Shanghai, Nanking and the entire Yangtze valley of China went under drastic martial law today as the Nationalist government sought to quell spreading hunger riots and throw back advancing Communist armies.
Both the Nationalists and the Communists claimed military successes in the battle for Suchow, northern gateway to Nanking and 200 miles from the capital.
A Nationalist government spokesman said four Communist columns had been defeated on the approaches to Suchow and the situation stabilized there after a battle involving million men—the largest in the history of China. He said 15,000 casualties were inflicted on the Communists.
Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek's government announced its martial law decree for the Chinese heartland last night. It suspended all civil rights and authorized censorship of the mail and all publications, search and arrest without warrant and a ban on strikes, demonstrations and public meetings.
But the Communist radio reported Red forces had captured Haichow and Hsinpu, east of Suchow, and two towns west of the city. Another Communist column was said to have crossed the Grand canal and pushed within 25 miles of Suchow.
Paris—Secretary of State George C. Marshall, Defense Secretary James Forrestal and other U.S. officials began strategy talks on the proposed North Atlantic defense pact and other moves in the East-West cold war.
AP Editor Boosts Guild
A proposal to be brought before the American Newspaper guild at next national convention may
new graduates of accredited journalism schools to have one year's professional experience on their records for academic work, Miss Joy Miller, wire editor for the Kansas City bureau of Associated Press, told University journalism students Wednesday.
In explaining the guild, Miss Miller said its primary purpose was to get a living wage for workers in the editorial branch of newspaper production. She pointed out that for the first time on record, the editorial workers are receiving wages comparable to printers and pressmen. "But newspapermen still do not receive pay comparable to some of the other skilled labor groups," she added.
Miss Miller asserted the accusation that the guild is communistic was unfounded, and pointed to the record to prove her point. It has promoted freedom of speech and the press in all of the European countries. Harry Martin, president of the Guild, has worked extensively in Europe the past two years, aiding the press to get started again after the war, she said.
K-State Alumni Board Intertain KU Group
The University Alumni board will be the guests of the alumni board of Kansas State college at a lunchcon in Manhattan, Saturday noon.
Pep Rally At 10:50 Tomorrow
A pep rally will be held at 10:50 a.m. tomorrow in front of Robinson gymnasium. Come and give the team a good send-off.
Armistice Day Recalls The Men Who Died For A New Era Of Peace
Bv GERALD FETTEROLF
Thirty years ago today at 5 a.m. the armistice which stopped the fighting which had cost the lives of 236,117 men of the United States, was signed in a railroad car in a little wood a short distance from Compiegne, France.
Marshal Ferdinand Foch, commander-in-chief of the Allied forces in France, with Marshal Douglas Haig of Great Britain and Gen. John J. Rockefeller of the United States.
Marshal Ferdinand Foch, commar France, with Marshal Douglas Haig Pershing of the United States accepted the surrender of the German army by General von Gundell. The cease fire order was to be carried out by the armies at 11 a.m.
A short time before the 11 o'clock deadline, a troop of King Edward's horse, a cavalry unit, charged a German gun emplacement. This group is reported to have fired the last shots of the war. Most of the front line units kept firing most of the time until 11 o'clock.
the terms, laid down in President Wilson's 14 points. The terms required the German army to retire to a point beyond the Rhine river, and the payment of reparations to the invaded countries.
The German army had accepted
The Treaty of Versailles, which officially ended the war, was not signed for almost a year after the cease fire. President Wilson had struggled to have the covenant of the League of Nations incorporated into the Versailles treaty, but congress
refused to ratify it. The United States was never in the League of Nations, and did not sign a peace treaty with Germany until 1921.
Now, three years after another world war, peace treaties are still to be made. This war was more destructive of life and property than the bigger. Bigger and better engines of war are being constructed. Nov. 11, thirty years after, is and should be dedicated to a fervent wish for peace.
Today there are many more fields where the crosses stand row and row, on this anniversary of Armistice day. In memory of the dead, and with the failure of the past before them, Americans today are looking and hoping for a new era of peace.
Research Men Talk About Jobs
Two representatives from the Office of Naval Research, Dr. R. M. Hogan and Dr. N. W. Matthews, will talk to juniors and seniors in engineering, physics, and mathematics at 5 p.m. today in Lindley auditorium. The men will explain opportunities for college graduates in the Office of Naval Research, and qualifications necessary.
After the talk those students interested will sign up for interviews to be held tomorrow.
Dean T. DeWitt Carr of the engineering school said that seniors selected by the interviewers will be appointed to positions in the Naval Research office without examination. Juniors who qualify will get summer jobs and a certificate when they finish. This certificate will entitle the junior to a position in the Office of Naval Rsearch at a higher rating than he would get as a beginner, Dean Carr said.
After Election, No One Gives Odds
London—(UP)—A spokesman for Lloyd's of London said when asked what the odds were on whether Princess Elizabeth's child will be a boy or a girl:
He added further that the probability of the arrival of a boy or girl was uninsurable.
Band To Play At Manhattan
they will play with the K-State band for the flag-raising ceremony before the game. The first six minutes of the half-time break will be taken by the Kansas band to salute both schools with a K S and a revolving K.
"We do not quote odds. We sell insurance, but we do not, run a gambling establishment."
The University marching band will go to Manhattan Saturday to participate in pre-game and half-time ceremonies at the K-State-Kansas game.
New Directories Directed To Students By Indirect Route-Too Many Directions
Your student directory has been to Texas, Illinois, Missouri, and of course Kansas in its course of being completed.
The directory, or component parts thereof, has been in Dallas, Chicago, Kansas City, Topeka, and now Lawrence. Dick Menuet, business manager, said the main reason for shipping the materials to so many cities was to time. Last year the directories®
did not reach the students until mid-December. Distribution of the 1948-49 edition began today, more than a month sooner than last year.
From Kansas City they went to Dallas, the nearest point where there was an International Business machine of the kind needed. Through the use of electronic devices the IBM printed the names quickly into one long roll. The different type this year is the result of the use of the IBM. Last year the registrar's office typed the list which required more time.
Part of this time was saved by using a new technique in preparing the list of names. During registration students filled out a card for the student directory. These cards were arranged in alphabetical order and sent to an agent in Kansas City.
Back to Kansas City went the roll to be cut and made-up into pages. Advertising was inserted along with the list of the faculty and members of the School of Medicine. These names were set in the usual type. The work was done on oversized pages.
Work began immediately on binding the books and Monday the first 500 copies were ready. Wednesday 2,000 more copies will arrive with more coming after that until the entire 9,000 are here.
"There will be a directory for everyone who wants one." Menuei said.
Chicago was the next stop. Photographs of the pages were made, reduced, and used as a basis for rubber mats. The book was printed and blue covers were made. Still unb und the parts were packed into one huge box and shipped to Topeka. The shipment weighed 3,000 pounds. "They're used to doing things in a big way in Chicago," Menucet pointed out in regard to the one and one-half ton box.
Europe's Youth Looks To US
Asked about the cost of shipping to so many cities, Menuet replied he believed money had been saved by having the work done as it was, and that the directories were out two weeks earlier by following that policy.
The young people of Europe look to the young people of America for leadership. This was the essence of the speeches given Wednesday before members of the W.Y.W.C.A. and Y.M.C.A. by Paul Sims and Miss Helener Currier.
Paul Sims attended the Oslo conference of the World Youth in the summer of 1947. Miss Currier is the associate director of the Wesley foundation of the University. She spent last summer with a youth caravan in Europe.
The people of Europe do not understand about Christianity, democracy, and brotherhood. They know that the Nazis failed, but they know nothing else except that they are hungry and that they want bread. Sims said.
He said that if people choose Russia as their leader, they feel that they would have freedom from the fear of aggression by the United States; but if they choose the United States, they feel that they would still have to fear Russian aggression. Miss Currier said there is a larger number of Methodists in Czechoslovakia and Poland than there was before the war. More toleration there has brought about a greater degree of freedom for the
The Methodist ministers, who before the war could not conduct weddings and funerals, may do so now, she said.
Alpha Delta Sigma Pledges 22 Men
Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternity, informally pledged 22 journalism majors, Tuesday in the East room of the Union.
Students pledged were Robert Wormington and William Wormington, graduates; William Degen, Edward Voegele, Ira Gissen, Arlyn Smith, Thomas Sanders, Richard Reed, John Armel, Donald Marx, Richard Engle, Mathew Weigand, Paul Perucca, Paul Sokoloff, and William Neff, seniors; Robert Day, Thomas Jones, Charles Foster, Ray Irwin, Robert Bolitho, and Richard Hunter, juniors.
Classical Club Will Meet
The Classical club will meet at 7:30 tonight at the home of Dr. James E. Seaver, 1629 Alabama street, to hear records of the opera "Orpheus" and to discuss the mythology of the opera.
Officers will be elected. The club is open to all interested in the classical languages or history.
Three-Quarter Million Dollars To KU Research
Nearly three-quarters of a million dollars in research grants to the University of Kansas Research foundation over a five-year period, most of it in the last biennium were reported to the board of directors by Dr. J. O. Maloney, executive director, in his annual report.
J. Earl Schaefer, vice president of the Boeing Airplane company and general manager of the Wichita division, was elected chairman of the board at the recent meeting. He succeeds E. B. Black of Black and Veatch, consulting engineers, Kansas City, Mo.
Dr. Maloney reported that during the year just ended, the number of active sponsored projects grew from 43 to 54 with $437,017 available. K.U. departments participating increased from 16 to 22. Personnel engaged on sponsored research went from 92 to 137.
Research funds for the past fiscal year were 65 per cent more than the $264,000 for the preceding year. Five years ago sponsored projects had a dollar value of only $57,000.
For the current year, $318,642 is available. New allotments already total $155,000 and renewals are expected on several large projects.
Mr. Saher outlined three programs for expanding the scope and service of the K.U. Research foundation. First, he pointed to the critical need for more laboratories, work shops, and storage rooms. He said that the board would survey all possible means of obtaining a building to be devoted entirely to research.
He also said that the foundation should function as an area rather than local research agency.
Second, he said that research opportunities should be created, not merely taken when offered.
Directors present were: Mr. Schaeafer, Dr. Cross, Dr. Maloney, George Oberfell, vice president, Phillips Petroleum Co., Bartlesville, Okla.; Oscar Stauffer, president, Stauffer publications, Topeka; Dean F. J. Moreau, of the School of Law, Cancellor Deane W. Malott, Dean DeWitt Carr, of the School of Engineering, and Karl Klooz, Bursar,
Psychiatric Help Offered
The services of Dr. Robert Cushman Murphy, Jr., psychiatrist, are now being offered in connection with the University Health service. Dr. Murphy will work with the organizations of the University and with any individual student who wishes to talk over his problems.
Besides being a member of the health service staff, Dr. Murphy is teaching a graduate course in social work and will participate in the love and marriage lecture series at the University.
He received his doctor of medicine degree from Cornell university Medical college in 1942, and intermed at St. Lukes hospital in New York. From April 1946 until Nov. 1, 1948, he took a residency at the Meninger Foundation School of Psychiatry at Topeka.
WEATHER
Kansas—Fair to occasionally partly cloudy today, tonight and tomorrow.
No important change in temperature. High today 45-55, North, 55-60 south.
Low tonight in the 30's.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 194
Now Don't Forget, Gustav; Eat With But Three Fingers
Hollywood-(UP)—Movies may be boring, but by gosh they're authentic. They've dug up the 17th century code of etiquette to teach to actors who eat with their fingers.
When you eat with your fingers, it's only correct to use three of them. Who would care if a guy used four, we don't know. There aren't many high-class finger-eaters around$\textcircled{4}$.
Director George Sidney held a daily half-hour session with them during filming of "The Three Musketeers."
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer found the rules in the 17th century etiquette books, complete with printed illustrations on how to chew a chunk of beef. It gleefully called a school into session to teach its actors—Gene Kelly, Van Heflin, Vincent Price and Frank Morgan—to eat with their hands.
Society frowned on the count from the country who wiped the egg out of the shell with his fingers or licked it clean with his tongue. The ladies of the court held the shell daintily and scraped it with bread.
"When food was lifted from the serving dish to the plate," Sidney told them, "it had to be done with three fingers only. You use one hand, only, in taking the meat from the plate to the mouth."
*Currants in rose water. Egg soup with lemon broth. Cocks' combs. Boiled chicken. Boiled veal. Chickens roasted and then fried in bread crumbs. Jelly. Sugar horn filled with apricots. Sugared chestnuts in rose water. Preserved cherries.*
A gentleman, in 1625, never pressed butter onto bread with his thumb. He used a crust as a spreader instead.
"The only thing missing." said Sidney, "was a good dose of bicarbonate of soda."
Police Chief Fakes 'Fire' To Get Search Party
Grenville. Mich. —(UP)—Police Chief Jerry Sage knows how to round up a posse in a hurry.
When a two-year-old boy was lost and he needed a large searching party, Sage pulled the fire siren, directed the driver to drive the truck a few blocks and attracted hundreds of motorists to "the fire." He got 500 persons together and the child was found in the woods as dusk was descending.
Official Bulletin
Nov. 11, 1948
Art Education club coffee, 4:45 tolay. (no place designated).
Sachem, 4:15 today, 228 F. Strong
Sachlen, 4.19 today, 258 P. Strong
Quack club, 7:30 tonight, 202 Robinson gym. Pledging and business meeting. Required of actives and pledges. Bring $1 dues.
Geology club, 7:30 tonight. 426 Lindley. H.A.Ireland.West Texas Oil company. Refreshments.
Classical club, 7:39 tonight, Professor Seaver's home, 1629 Alabama. Election of officers. Records of opera "Orpheus."
Deutscher Verein wird sich Donnerstag um vier und dreisign auf Zimmer 402. Fraser versammeln.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship,
7 tonight, 131 Frank Strong. Frank
Harris, China Inland Mission,
speaker.
Ku Ku meeting. 7:30 tonight.
Frank Strong auditorium.
Sociology club, 4 today, 106 Frank Strong.
Le Cercle Français se remira a sept heures et demie, 113 F. Strong, M. Albert Roland fera une causerie.
Pershing Rifles, 4 p.m. today, Military Science building.
Y. M.C.A Love and Marriage forum, 4 p.m. today, Myers hall. Dr Robert Foster, speaker.
Snow Zoology club, 7.30 tonight. 206 Snow. Informal initiation and movie.
Episopcil College club supper, 5:30
p.m. Sunday, Parish house
Cabinet Retreat for Y.W.C.A. and Y.M.C.A. cabinets of KU and K-State, Saturday.
Alpha Kappa Psi pledges, 7 p.m.
Friday, Memorial Union lobby.
Froshawks, 7:30 tonight, 103 Frank Strong.
86
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Instructors 'Make' Kansas Magazine
Charles G. Pearson, instructor in journalism and Thad N. Marsh, instructor in English are the authors of articles in the next issue of the Kansas magazine.
Mr. Pearson's article is titled "The Inadvisability Of Being Earnest." It is the story of the visit of Oscar Wilde to Leavenworth, Kan., in 1882.
Mr. Marsh has written an article dealing with a vanishing American folkway, called "The Community Meeting."
University Daily Kansan
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1943
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Socially Speaking
Alpha Phi Alpha Elects
Alpha Phi Alpha Elects
The Upsilion chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha recently elected the following officers: Lawrence S. Lackey, president, Jack O. Williams, vice-president; Howard Brown, secretary; Alvin A. White, corresponding secretary; Wilburn E. Brown, treasurer; Chester Lewis, sergeant-at-arms; Carl Taylor, chapter editor.
Phi Kappa Tau Initiates
Initiation ceremonies were recently held for the following pledges of Phi Kappa Tau fraternity:
Clifton L. Smith, Fred B. Stoss, Jr.
George Gail Stout, Emory S. Williams, Earl F. Winn, James R. Wolfe,
Ugenee W. Haley, Robert O. H. Johnson,
Thomas A. Milne, Frank E.
Moses, Charles F. Moss, William R.
Park, Donald F. Powell, John M.
Powell, Robert H. Roberts.
Robert L. Rudraff, Richard F. Sanders, Courtney Y. Sloan, Keith J. Steinkamp, Harry Weddendorf, William R. Bell, Roger D. Butts, Jerry F. Byrd, Richard G. Dickerson, Richard S. Engle, Robert L. Ferber, Ormand R. Gillen
Delta Gamma Dessert Party
Delta Gamma Dessert Party Members of the Delta Gamma sorority entertained members of Delta Upsilon fraternity with a dessert party recently.
Dinner for National Secretary
Dinner for National Secretary
National traveling secretary of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity John Weaver is visiting the local chapter. Mr. Weaver is from the Drexel Institute of Technology. Dinner was held in his honor Wednesday.
Navy Appoints Committees For Dance; To Select Queen
E. J. Francis will be chairman of the navy committee for the annual army-navy military ball to be held Friday, Dec. 10. Assistant chairman is B. B. Bryant.
Photographs of queen candidates must be submitted to the office in the Military Science building by Friday, R. M. Shearer, publicity chairman said.
The Navy queen will be selected $ \textcircled{8} $
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from photographs submitted by midshipmen and from each organized women's dormitory. Judges will eliminate all but 10 candidates. These women will attend a series of meetings and teas where the navy dance committee will select the queen.
The midshipmen promise an adequate number of husky body guards will attend the queen to protect her from possible army kidnapping schemes.
Committees for the dance appointed by the navy R. O. T. C. members are:
VARSITY SATURDAY
Publicity, P. J. Uhlig, assistant chairman; L. E. Deniston; R. V. Bowersock; H. F. Speuhler, T. W. Oliver; H. C. Kohfeld; and J. C. Moore.
Decorations, E. C. Friesen, Jr., chairman; Charles L. Johnson, assistant chairman; C. E. Rice; L. J. Lenz; T. W. Francis; F. H. Whittemore; C. W. Ratner; A. R. Young; R. A. Heins; R. C. James; and W. A. Winter.
Refreshments, W. I. Brooks, chairman; H. H. Weidensaul, assistant; R. M. Rygh and K. J. Steinkamp; entertainment, H. R. Bailey, chairman; H. C' Donley, Jr., assistant; J. E. Dausman; H. H. Heinrich; R. C. Reymonds; R. M. Newman, and J. W. Scott.
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Sigma Kappa announces the double pinning of Miss Charlotte Reams, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. E. N. Farnham of Abilene, to Mr. George Benscheidt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Newton Benscheidt, of Hutchinson; and Miss Mary Lou Brewer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don E. Brewer of Kansas City, Mo., to Mr. William Akright, son of Mr. and Mrs. George F. Akright of Johnson County, Kan. Both men are members of Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Chocolates were passed by the Misses Phyllis Mowery, Peggy Miller, Billie Nave and Joyce Stehly.
For HEALTH'S Sake!
Mrs. Mary Younkman, housemother, made the announcement. She wore a corsage of gardenias and roses. Miss Reams and Miss Brewer wore corsages of baby orchid clusters. Their attendants wore talisman roses.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1948
Dine-A-Mite Rolls 50 To 0 In Independent IM Game
Long forward passes characterized the scoring in Wednesday's intramural touch football games as the independent "A" teams took over most of the schedule.
Dine-A-Mite, the only undefeated to play, romped to a lopsided victory for its fourth straight win. The Dix club and the J.O.'s F.O.'s, who included a homecoming ceremony in their $ ^{\textcircled{1}}$ game, have lost only one decision $ ^{N} $ soon.
Dix Club Wins 19 to 0
The Dix Club (3-1) led by the passing of George Medill, rolled over Phi Kappa Tuu (2-2), 19 to 0 Medill caught a 20-yard pass from Bob Sheley to set up the first touchdown, then passed to Gene McKee, who went over for the score. Medill passed to McKee and Al Duncan for two second half touchdowns.
Dine-A-Mite Has Easy Win
Dine-A-Mite (4-0) rumped over Spooner Thayer (1-3), 50 to 0. The losers were defenseless against a sharp passing attack. Bob Saavedra, Norman Yackle, and Bob Crahan led the potent Dine-A-Mite offense. Silent Men Defeat Sigma Pi
The Silent Men defeated Sigma Pi on a score by Murray. Nuttles made the extra point for the winning team. The final score was 7 to 0. J.O.F.'s HAVE Homecoming
In one of the most exciting games of the season, complete with a homecoming queen, convertible, and crown, the J.O.'s F.O.'s (4-1) won a last minute 12 to 6 victory over the Air Screws (2-3). Bill Chaney passed to Bill Wetz to send the Air Screws ahead in the first quarter. Les Cox tossed a touchtown pass to James Bowden to tie it up at the half. The last half was a passing duel, with neither team able to score until the last minute when John Gerety intercepted an Air Screw pass, and raced 20 yards for the winning tally.
Delta Tau Has Close Win
The Delta Tau's (4-2) won a tight 7 to 0 defensive battle from Kappa Sigma (2-4). Malcom Dryden passed to Dick Dodson for the touchdown and extra point in the first quarter. Both teams threatened to score several times but lacked the scoring punch in the last three periods.
Gushers Beat Navy 12 to 0
The Gushers (2-2) gained a 12 to 0 victory over Navy (0-4). The teams played on even terms the first half, which was marked by frequent interceptions. Dick Van Gundy tossed a 30-yard pass to Sears in the end zone for the first T.D. in the third quarter. In the fourth quarter, Van Gundy took a
Beta Phi, Locksley In Volleyball Finals
Pi Beta Phi moved into the final round of volley play after defeating Kappa Kappa Gamma 39-16 last night. The Pi Phil's led 20 to 6 at the half and continued to retain their lead throughout the game.
Texas Emphasizes Offense For TCU
The championship game will take place Monday night when Pi Phi meets Locksley Hall. In the quarterfinal play Locksley defeated Chi Omega 56-9, and Pi Phi beat Kappa Alpha Theta 31-25. The Kappas drew a bye.
Austin, Tex., Nov. 11—(UP)—Texas Longhorns today placed strong emphasis on a wide-open offense, designed to by-pass T.C.U.'s solid mid-line power when the two teams meet Saturday.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Expert Radio Service
Beaman's Radio
Phone 140
1200 N.Y.
Navy punt and passed 40 yards to Greene, who had out-maneuvered the Navy safety man and raced into the end zone.
Oread Wins Forfeit
Table Tennis Playoff Tonight
Oread won 1 to 0 on a forfeit by I.S.A. Wednesday.
Final playoffs in the men's singles and doubles divisions of the University's fall table tennis tournament will be held at 7 tonight in the Union recreation room.
Women's singles and doubles were finished Wednesday. Doris Then, defending champion, defeated number two seeded Ruth Henry, 21 to 19, 21 to 15, and 21 to 19. Caroline Crosier and Rita Carl teamed up to win handily over Anne Gage and Henry.
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THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 11, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
...
SPOTLIGHT SPORTS
MARVIN L. ROWLANDS Assistant Sports Editor
Saturday at Manhattan promises to be a double V-day for Kansas as Karnes and company are slated to cross the two-mile wire ahead of other Big Seven competitors, while the Jayhawk football squad continues its undefeated conference waves.
Kansas is favored to retain the two-mile title, despite expected close competition, because Bob Karnes and Hal Hinchee are riding the crest of leadership for Kansas in four consecutive dual victories this fall.
Karnes set a new school mark of 9:28.8 on Nov. 6, at Missouri and be unbeaten in competition this year. His running mate Hinchee carded 9:35 at Columbia, which promises to be worth a spot in the point circle at Manhattan.
Coach Bill Easton is long on two-milers who have finished in less than 10 minutes time during this season's dual meets. But all this can't be taken as complete insurance. Missouri and Oklahoma can't be written off so easily. The Bengals chief threat will be sophomore Bill McGuire who finished second to Karnes in 9.34.2 at the Mizzou final, while the Sooners will put a well-balanced team of 10-minute men into the running.
Advance publicity from Iowa State would seem to indicate they have conceded a Kansas win, but it's Iowa Gene Shaver, one-time Big Nine indoor mile winner, who will give Karnes a peck of trouble before the wire is crossed. Shaver posted an impressive 9:40 at the dual in Missouri and that's not bad for one who's new at the two-mile game.
As for Colorado, a guy named George Fitzmorris will carry their hopes. His showing last year should cause some Karnes and company anxiety. Fitzmorris finished second in last year's running and who knows what he intends to do about the big one at K-State?
Well, since predictions are still in season, we still look for a Kansas repeat of last year's Big Seven two-mile crown grap and a Jayhawk win on the football field.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
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Justice Can Break Record And Still Come In Second
New York, Nov. 11—(UP)—Charlie (Choo Choo) Justice, North Carolina's triple threat backfield star, can break a 12-year-college punting record and still wind up second to Bill Boston of Montana State this season.
Although Boston currently tops the nation's booters with a brilliant average of 45.3 yards on 27 punts, it is unlikely that he'll kick 50 times this season—the number required for establishing a record. Montana State has only two games remaining on its schedule.
That oddity was revealed in the major college punting and pass receiving statistics released today by the National Collegiate Athletic bureau. Here's how it shapes up:
Justice, however, has averaged 43.6 yards on 44 kicks and if he can maintain that pace in the Tarheel's final three games, he will set a new record
The existing punting standard is 43.3 yards on 65 kicks set by Lee Palmer of North Carolina state last year.
Behind Boston and Justice in
punting came Hall Haynes of Santa Clara with an average of 43.3 yards on 33 kicks; Paul Stombaugh of Furman was fourth with a mark of 43.1 yards on 57 kicks.
In pass receiving, John (Red) O'Quinn of Wake Forest regained top honors from Jimmy Ford of Tulsa after the lead in that specialty had changed hands six weeks in a row.
O'Quinn, who led three weeks ago, caught six passes for 149 yards as Wake Forest beat Duke, 27 to 20, Saturday, to take over first place with 31 catches that have covered 521 yards and produced six touchdowns.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1948
The Editorial Page-
Recreation Room?
It has been brought to the attention of the writer that on many occasions the recreation room of the Union is being used frequently at night for group meetings. This, it seems to us, defeats the purpose of having a recreation room.
There are many students who spend a good part of their free time at the Union enjoying a game of bridge, chess, or ping pong. And, for some of them, the only period of free time they have is in the evening.
On an occasion or two, we have noticed this room occupied by a meeting of only four or five people. This is not, of course, the rule, but it does point out that something is wrong when such a small group can completely take over the room for an entire evening. There are, no doubt, vacant classrooms in various buildings on the campus that could be used just as well.
Of course, some will perhaps say that students don't have time for such activities at night (and that is the editor's viewpoint). However, if there are those who do have time to use the recreation room at night, they should be permitted to use the existing facilities.
-M. C. L.
China's Inflation
China has finally accepted inflation as a "recognized fact." The Central Government has thrown in the towel by passing the buck to the local municipal governments. The price control program inaugurated so hopefully August 19 is dead after a short and unhappy life.
The Central Government will continue to set prices on a few staples such as cloth, coal, and salt, but the bulk of the problem is up to the municipalities who will deal with prices "in the light of local conditions."
Price control was abandoned in order to give public servants more adequate salaries to meet the rising cost of living and to offset a seller's strike that had caused critical shortages throughout a nation that is already too short of everything except population. A strong black market had operated during the short control period also.
What will be the effect of this new move? Experts say that the value of the gold yuan, Chinese money unit, will depreciate rapidly as food costs rise. The Central Government's threat to punish hoarders with death will probably not be very effective. The threat appears to be merely a gesture at maintaining some kind of order and it is doubtful whether the government will actively pursue this policy.
The most serious effect will be continued disorganization and lack of solidarity. The policy of letting each municipality set its own prices will be another obstacle in the way of a strong central government, one thing that China sorely needs.
German Club Sings, Eats Swiss Cookies
Miss Frieda Ziesch, Baker university sophomore, presented a program of German songs to the German club recently. The songs included "Sapphische Ode" and "Ded Tod und das Maeched."
Harold Ziesch. College freshman, told the club about some cookie forms brought from Switzerland by his grandmother. Their sister, Mrs. Ida Nornberger, baked some German cookies for the club.
The program was planned by Linda Niemeyer, College junior; Ziesch, and Richard Childs, College sophomore.
Steals Greek Typewriters
Chicago—(UP)—A thief who stole two typewritten from a Greek Orthodox church may have trouble disposing of one of them. It is equipped with Greek alphabet characters.
University
Daily Hansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Association of College Press Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advisory Board. 420 Madison Ave, New York City.
Editor-in-Chief ... Maurice C. Lungen
Managing Editor ... Hal D. Nelson
Asst. Man. Editor ... Anne Murphy
Asst. Man. Editor ... Bill Mayer
City Editor ... Robert Nathman
Asst. City Editor ... Nora Temple
Asst. City Editor ... Patricia James
Tel. Editor ... Richard D. Barton
Tel. Editor ... Michael K.
Tel. Editor ... Robert D. Snair
Sports Editor ... Omero L. Bartelli
Society Editor ... Rosemary Rospaw
Business Mgr... Bill Nelligan
Advertising Mgr... Don Tennant
Ralph Gates... Rick Emmett
Asst. Circ. Mgr... Dena Knuth
Classified Mgr... Don Waldon
William Clark... Willie Clark
Nail Adv. Mgr... Don Welch
Promotion Mgr... Charles O'Connor
Vander Werf Returns From Medical Research Meeting
Professor VanderWerf was among the 26 authorities in the fields of bacteriology, biochemistry, histology, microanalysis, mycology, organic chemistry, pharmaceutical chemistry, pharmacology, and physical chemistry who attended the meetings.
C. A. VanderWerf, associate professor of chemistry, has returned from Philadelphia where he took part in conferences on recent developments in medical research.
Dear Editor
How's That?
Dear Editor;
Likely candidate for the New Yorker's Raised Eyebrow department: a headline in a recent issue of the Daily Kansan, "British to Abolish Old Birth Custom."
William B. Bracke English Instructor
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It's Not Too Early To Make Your
CHRISTMAS CARD SELECTIONS
We have cards of excellent taste with simple yet sincere inscriptions.
Carter's Stationery
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Are You Ready for Xmas? We are. Come in now!
DOLL CARRIAGES in Blue, Green and Maroon, $4.95 up
ROCKERS, $1.95, $3.50 and $7.95.
CHILDREN'S CHAIRS
Priced at .59, .98
and $3.50.
TABLE AND CHAIR SETS, $3.89 up.
All These Items Are Scarce This Year
Hassocks, Lamps, Smokers, Sewing Cabinets,
Tables, Bendix Radios,
$19.95 up
All Wool Rugs 6x9,
$19.00; 9 x 12, $29.00
Toasters, Irons, Electric Corn Poppers, Coffee Makers, $6.95 up.
Bed Lamps, $2.95;
What-Nots, $3.50 up
FRANK'S
834 Mass.
FURNITURE COMPANY
Phone 834
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FASHION
WEDDING DRESS
I'm Ready... for Thanksgiving Vacation.
Are You?
Send Your Cleaning Now to INDEPENDENT and you'll be sure to look your best.
For Pick-up and Delivery Call 432.
There's only 11 more days until Vacation.
INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS
740 Vermont
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1948
4. 10.
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 mailed to you before the hour during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Dialy Kansan Business office. Journals and reports may be mailed by 4 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One-
day Three
days Five
days
25 words or less ...35c 65c 90c
additional words ...1c 2c 3c
FOR SALE
TWO TICKETS to K.U.-K-State game.
Regular price, Call 2800M by 2 p.m. 15 MASTER DELUXE Chevrolet Club Coupe.
Radio, heater, new 1946 engine. 20.000 miles on new engine. This is a good clean automobile. IT sell reasonable prices. State St.
A HOME that will fit the needs of a newly organized fraternity or sorority. Ideal location. Contact V. P. Wilson. 1542 Trem. St. 15
OLDS SEEDAN, 1938. Good condition.
Henderson, 1424 New York or
College Bust 1670 WL
FOR SALE or trade: 85 Ford, clean. $175.
Ford. Pontiac. with Rebuilt motor. Chevrolet.
Chevrolet with rebuilt motor. 1939
Plymouth, with rebuilt motor. Walt's
Used Cars, 739 North Fourth, North Law
*11 PONTIAC 4-door, new transmission,
*12 Oakhill 31485 or at 131
Ohioide, clean window.
1835 STUDEBAKER sedan, Cheap Good
motor and motor. Heater. Call Dan Ran-
kema.
494
1945 WILLS Army Jeep. Good condition.
1946 WARN Chester Jeep. Reasonable. C11
Hohn, 2003. Reuse. C11
A GOOD 38 Ford four door. See Ray-
King at 545 Tennis for an
amyline after 5:30 p.m.
ORDER YOUR Christmas cards now for
Tobie McCall, deliver to: Rob McCall,
Rob McCall, phone 991.
1535 CHEVROLET sedan. Engine completely overhauled, all new parts from timing gear to exhaust valves. Good paint. $20. Boost 101. New Hampshire, phone 2956.
MUST SACRIFICE 1939 Chrysler Imperial sedan. New paint job, tires, battery, heater, and radio. May be docked in 1901 Mass. ATTRACTIVE furnished cottage. 5 rooms and bath. One of the clearest homes in town; on zoned street. Just seven minutes by bus downtown. Possession, 200 bee stock. MAMUNITION. Fishing Tackle. Guns and bikes repaired. Keys made, padlocks. Rutter's Shop, 1016 Mass. rtfn
WANTED
RIDE TO New York or vicinity, on Nov. 19th. Call 3010. 15
CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE now: the horticulture firm offered linen handkerchiefs suitable for Christmas gifts. Write Box 2461, Kansas City, Mo. 16
SMITH & WESSON .38 Special, prefer your drop card to Robert D. Hill, Jr., Geel, Sunflower.
MISCELLANEOUS
APPLICATIONS for the Lawrence Flying
Pilots and beginners alike are welcome.
Our plan actually saves you $115. Call
the airport to out to Ware Aircraft,
*Piratical Airport.*
M-m-m-m-m talk about Southern Fried Chicken! We have just that at the Skyline Dinner Club. All you gotta do is ask! We serve it! 11
HE'S NOT NEAT!
HAPPY PIG
If you are in the same boat a call
BUSINESS SERVICE
TASTE OUR fine steaks and chicken.
We serve nothing but the best at the Skyline Dinner Club. Have a party in our "Hideout."
to
TYPING: Reasonable rate. Prompt service.
Ph 1168R, 1028 Vermont.
13 machines. Goodrich battery on a
guaranteed Goodrich battery on Delivery
and installation free. Phone 21, B
571-492-6140.
WHEN ALL FETS including dogs, birds,
fish, cats, pigeons, skunks, parrots,
squirrels, rats, mice, etc., go shopping
for an outfit they go to Grant's Pet Shop,
1218 Conn. St. Phone 418. Everything the
pet field—their needs are—follows
12-21
TYPING DONE; Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel. 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. Ask for Miss Helen. 12-21
EBERHART and Son, tailors. Finest samples made to measure, suits, topcoats, and overcoats. Alterations, repairing and leather work. 9211 Mass. 19
DOES YOUR pen need repairing? Excellent service on any make or model.
Bring your pens and pencils to Student Union Book Store. 12
ALTERING SUITS, coats, and dresses.
Relining coats a. specialty. Handmade
taffored button holes. Work guaranteed.
Call 2995R. R84 Indiana. 12
TRANSPORTATION
The Lawrence Laundry will solve all your cleaning problems.
1001 N.H. Phone 420
WANT RIDE to the East at Thanksgiving Must be in vicinity of Pa. or New York Ultimate destination, Wilkes Barre, Pa. Kansan office, Box 1. 42
WISH TO contact person driving to New Orleans or south at Thanksgiving vacation. Contact through Daily Kansan office. Box 1. 11
WANTED RIDE to Lawrence from Kansas City. Monday morning. Arrive Lawrence by 9 a.m. Call Bill McCormick. Phone 2330J. 12
WOULD LIKE a ride to Champaign, Ill.,
or anywhere else by Leaving Tuesday.
Thanksgiving holiday share expenses and driving. Call 7381 at 6:00 p.m.
FOR RENT
ONE DOUBLE room and 1 single shared room. One block from the campus. Call 581R.
16 ROOM fumished apartment for boys at 523 Louisiana. 16 SINGLE ROOM for boy, less hill to climb. 1012 Alabama. Call 2143J.
COMFORTABLE place for up to 4 men.
Private bath, cooking facilities. Adequate closets. Not a basement. Everything furnished. No smoking. Ph. 949. 11
LOVELY BASEMENT room in new home to two boys. Furnace piped into room; good ventilation, asphalt tile flooring, carpet and carpet pad. several students with cars living nearby so transportation might be arranged. $3.50 a week per boy. Phone 34273. 18
SLIDE RULE, K and E No. 952038, less case, somewhere in vicinity of Marvin, Friday. Finder please leave at Kansun office or call 1690R, after 6 p.m. 15
LOST
BROWN SPORT jacket in Bailey chemistry labs, Tuesday. Label inside reads, "Herman the Tailor, Kanass City, Mo." Kriminger, 1648W if found. Reward.
A PAR of bifolets with transparent horn rimmed frame at stadium at Kansas-Oklahoma A, and M. game. $5.00 reward for successful classes intact. Contact Daily Kansan office.
GIRL'S GOLD class ring letter. Letters S.M. on set. Initials M.A.W. inside ring, 5:10 on set. The letters MAYS WHIST watch between 4:50 and 5:10 on the walk between Military Science and the hospital. Reward. Please visit at Kansai Business office, 11 found.
Father, Son Save 2 Men Who Try To Jump In River
St. Louis—(UP)—A veteran St. Louis cop refused to be outdone by his rookie son.
The son, probationary patrolman Robert McLaughlin, got his name in the papers when he nabbed a man who tried to jump into the Mississippi from the MacArthur bridge.
A few days later, his father, Byron McLaughlin, prevented another man from taking the same plunga.
What A Day Grandma Had!
Manville, R. I.—(UP)—Thrice within 28 hours, Mrs. Hectarine Begin became a grandmother. The three babies were born to her two daughters and her daughter-in-law.
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Electronic Devices Shown Engineers
Roy ROGERS Smiley BURNETTE in 'Under Western Stars' HOLLASSE
More than 400 engineering students filled Lindley auditorium beyond its rated capacity Tuesday afternoon for a lecture and demonstration of several modern electronic devices.
The speaker was Dr. Cyril N. Hoyler of the Princeton, N.J., research laboratories of the Radio Corporation of America, Dr. Hoyler came here at the invitation of Dean T. DeWitt Carr of the School of Engineering and Architecture, who recently visited the R.C.A. laboratories.
Coffman Stresses Duties Of Managers
Most spectacular of the devices shown was the electronic counter or analogue computer, a machine which solves ten simultaneous linear equations with as many as ten unknowns. Problems which require several weeks of human computation can be answered by this machine in a matter of minutes.
Duties of industrial engineers in modern corporations were outlined Tuesday to members of the Society for the Advancement of Management.
The speaker was O. M. Coffman, an industrial engineer for the Owen-Corning Fiberglas corporation of Kansas City, Mo. He discussed the similar applications. Using his own observations as an example, he stressed the advisability of manufacturing of a variety of products.
CORE To Picnic Sunday;
Next Regular Meeting, Dec. 1
C. O.R.E. will meet again Wednesday, Dec. 1.
MANHATTAN EXCLUSIVE AT
The Committee on Racial Equality will have a picnic Sunday, Nov. 14. near Pioneer cemetery, west of Lawrence, Joseph Brown, social chairman, announced at the meeting, Wednesday.
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE KANSAS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1948
Phi Beta Kappa's To Meet Nov.29
The annual fall meeting of the Phi Beta Kappa council of faculty members will be held Monday, Nov. 29 to consider applications for membership, Raymond Nichols, Phi Beta Kappa secretary, said today.
If new members are chosen they will be initiated during the regular fall meeting on Monday, Dec. 6, in the Kansas room of the Union, Mr. Nichols said.
May Renew BSA Traditions
The straw hat and bow tie tradition may be revived by the School of Business.
In discussing means of building school morale, at a meeting Wednesday, the Business School association suggested reviving the "hick" garb as one way of uniting the students in a more closely-knit group.
"Maybe if we were to start wearing our straw hats and bow ties, these might do something for us."
"The law barn has its canes and stove-pipe hats," said Richard Yaple, association president. "The emblems seem to do something for them."
Suggestions for bettering Business School day turned into a discussion of the possibility of stretching the "day" into a week and presenting a business machines and methods exposition. The plausibility of asking a number of well-known business leaders to speak during the proposed Business Week was debated.
Council members appointed from the five business groups are: Edgar L. Johnson, Delta Sigma Pi; Keith Mead, S.A.M.; Robert A. Parrish, Alpha Kappa Psi; Thomas Porter, Future Business Leaders of America; and Ellen Wilson, Phi Chi Theta.
Directing the Business School association this year are: Richard Yaple, president; Ajas Kiaer, vicepresident; Meribah Barrett, secretary; and Park Pennington, treasurer.
Joe G. Schoggen, and Keith Weltner, instructors in economics, have been appointed faculty advisors.
Nurses, Therapists Should Co-operate
The next meeting of the club will be Tuesday. Dec. 14.
The nurse and the physical therapist must work together for the complete treatment of the patient, the Physical Therapy club was told Tuesday at Watkins hospital.
"The correct posture in bed for the patient and the correct use of crutches are two practical everyday problems in which the nurse needs the assistance of the physical therapist," said Miss Sara Peterson, assistant professor of home economics. "This mutual help means more rapid and complete recovery for the patient."
In answer to a question Miss Paterson said that the physical therapy field is open to men, but opportunities for them are limited, because "physical therapy is not a high paying field."
Miss Patterson is advisor to the student nurses and president of the Kansas Nurse association.
Missionary To China Will Speak Tonight
Frank Harris, a missionary to China, will speak at the regular meeting of the Inter-varsity Christian fellowship at 7 o'clock tonight in 131 Frank Strong. Mr. Harris, a native Englishman, is a member of the L.V.C.F. and is teaching in China through the China Inland Mission.
The I.V.C.F. is an inter-denominational group. All meetings are open to the public.
Sasnak To Hear Dr. Twente
Dr. J. W Twente, professor of education, will speak tonight at a banquet to be given by Sasnak, revived physical education organization.
The dinner will be held at 6:30 p.m. in the Kansas room.
Pumpkin PromVarsity Dance Plans Are Made
The Pumpkin Prom, which will be held Saturday, Nov. 20, was the major event discussed by most of the 12 committees of the Student Union Activities which met Wednesday.
The entertainment and social committees appointed planning boards for the Pumpkin Prom and the Varsity dance to be held Saturday. The board members will arrange for dance bands, special entertainment, and refreshments for the two dances.
Jeanne Peterson, College sophomore, was appointed chairman of the entertainment committee. She succeeds Jesse E. Stewart, College senior. Stewart resigned to spend his free time working on plans for the all-school musical, College Daze, to be produced next spring.
Dec. 10 is the deadline set by the K-Union committee for the publication of their next issue.
The sports and organizations committee have arranged to buy new records for the square dance club They also agreed to write to neighboring universities and colleges to ask if they wish to compete with K.U. students in a bridge contest.
Transportation for students going home for the Thanksgiving holiday was discussed by the coffees and forums committee. They plan to have a time-schedule bureau set up at a desk in the Union lobby before Thanksgiving. The bureau will list all bus and train schedules leaving Lawrence.
The next "Presidents' breakfast" will be held Saturday, Dec. 4, it was announced by the public liaison committee. James L. Robinson, editor-in-chief of the University Daily Kansas for the past eight weeks, will be speaker at the breakfast. They also made tentative plans to publish a pamphlet which will give a brief history of the Student Union Activities.
The special projects committee agreed to hold a photograph contest later this semester. A prize will be given for the best picture showing "the Student Union Activities in action."
'Players' To Give Three Plays Tonight
Three one-act plays will be presented by the University players laboratory at 8 p.m. today in the Little Theater of Green hall.
The plays are "The Lost Kiss," directed by Phyllis Mowery, College senior; "Balecone Scene," directed by Mary K. Booth, graduate student; and "Overtones," directed by Patricia Mother, graduate student. All directors are members of the players laboratory.
G. Criss Simpson, assistant professor of organ and theory, will present an organ recital at 4 p.m. Sunday, in Hoch auditorium.
Organ Recital To Be Sunday In Hoch
No admission change will be made
Mr. Simpson will play numbers from established organ literature and modern compositions, with selections from Bach, Mozart, Cesar Franck, Guilmant, Vierne, Dallier, and J. Stuart Archer.
Mr. Simpson is a graduate of the University; he studied under the late Charles Sanford Skilton and received his master of music degree from the University of Michigan. He has done advanced study under Albert Riemenschneider and Marcel Dupre in France and also studied under Palmer Christian and Arthur Poister. Professor Simpson has taught organ and theory at the University since 1930.
Wins Bacon, Cash,
And Now, Johnny
Marjo Shaw, '21, was married recently to John Vidal, Sr., in San Francisco.
Mr. Vidal has trained boxers for the past 24 years and at the present time is training Grant Butcher, light heavyweight. He is known as "Carration Johnny" because of the fresh flower in his buttonhole daily for the past 12 years.
Mrs. Vidal has won over 250 radio contests in the last five years. Her prizes range from a pound of bacon to $5,000 in cash. And now, Carnation Johnny.
Miss Marian Jersild and Miss Katharine Mulky, pianists from the School of Fine Arts faculty, appeared Wednesday night in the first two-piano recital of the year. The concert was presented in Frank Strong auditorium before a capacity audience.
Two-Piano Team Pleases Listeners
They gave a program ranging from "A Piece for Two Virginals," the first duet written for two keyboard instruments, to a modern composition by Darius Milhaud, contemporary French composer. Outstanding was the powerful and authoritative Rachmaninov"Suite No. 2." although perhaps the best-liked number was "Les Songes" by Milhaud, an effective and rhythmic scherzo, valse, and polka. Other numbers were the familiar Mozart "Serenade No. 7" arranged for two pianos by Saar; "Sheep May Safely Graze" by Bach; and "Allemande" by Couperin.
The whole recital was notable for clean enunciation, precise timing and balance. Each pianist remained individual in interpretation, but even in the fast and spectacular passages kept the movement coherent and balanced. Melodic passages were characterized by legato touch and finely-drawn expression. The audience was enthusiastic about the entire performance, and called Miss Jersild and Miss Mulky back for bows several times.
KU Student Sells Picture To Post
A sharp blow to the midsection of a tired fighter who, though on his feet, was too game to fall, made a picture that recently was sold to the Saturday Evening Post by Chris Butler, special student in journalism.
The picture was taken at a gathering of townspeople in Darmstadt, Germany. Two German boys had been boxing for some time and both were tired. One landed a hard blow to the midsection of the other. The boy was knocked out, but refused to fall down completely. He remained on his feet, but bent over so that his gloves both touched the canvas while he was counted out.
Butler was a photographer for the Stars and Stripes, the Army newspaper, for about fifteen months in the European theater, during and after the war.
Mortar Board Plans Area Conference
Members of the Mortar Board, honorary society for senior women, are planning an area conference to be held in Lawrence. April 2. Mortar Board chapters from Nebraska, Missouri, Colorado, Oklahoma, and Iowa will be invited to attend.
The group plans to attend the concert of Vladimir Horowitz, pianist, in Kansas City, Tuesday, Dec. 15, Betty van der Smissen, president said.
The local chapter will assist Sachem, honorary fraternity for senior men, in a student-faculty conference. The date for the conference is to be announced later.
UHS Dancers Will Perform
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University Dailu Kansan
Friday, Nov. 12, 1948
Lawrence, Kansas
STUDENT NEWSAPER
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Tojo To Hang With 6 Cohorts For Jap Crimes
Tokyo. Nov. 12—(UP) The architect of the 1941 "day of infamy" at Pearl Harbor, Hideki Tojo, was sentenced today to death by hanging for his leading role in the Japanese murder of millions.
The international war crimes tribunal which found the former Japanese premier guilty also assessed the death penalty against six of his co-defendants, gave life sentences to 16 more, and imposed shorter prison terms on 2 others. All 25 of the Japanese leaders who figured in the longest trial in history were found guilty in some degree.
Japan as a nation of aggressors was damned by the 11-nation court perhaps the strongest terms ever levied against a people. The Japanae were branded as slayers of millions in an aggressive pattern of conquest. Her soldiers even to officers rank were condemned as cannibals and as perpetrators of every manner of outrage and torture.
would be taken.
In a statement issued within minutes after the sentences were pronounced, General MacArthur demanded that all petitions in behalf of the defenders reach him by Nov. 19, and he summoned representatives of all the Allied nations to meet with him three days later to consider the verdicts and sentences.
No date was set for execution of Tojo and his six conspirators in mass murder, but Gen. Douglas MacArthur, supreme commander of occupation forces in Japan and the final court of appeal for the condemned men, indicated that swift action would be taken.
Not one of the Japanese defendants spoke a word as they were paraded, one after another, into the dock to hear their sentences pre-nounced by black-robed Sir William Webb of Australia, the stern president of the war crimes court. They had no time to speak. The whole routine of sentencing took just 20 minutes—less than a minute per man.
An intercollegiate tradition may be broken at the K.U.-M.U. football game, according to Sachem president Patrick H. Thiessen.
Sachem May Not Go To MU
Unless Sachem members acquire game tickets, the half-time "tomom" ceremony may be discarded this year. Senior men's honorary fraternities from both schools have cooperated in the past, donning Indian blankets to uphold the custom.
Negotiations for tickets continue, Omicri Delta Kappa members were told Thursday. Thiessen said that he hoped Sachem would send a delegation to Columbia to return the "tom-tom" trophy to K.U.
Geology Club Hears About Oil Development in Texas
Dr. H. A. Ireland, professor of geology, pointed out the fast progress of oil field development in west Texas, in a talk given to the Geology club Thursday.
Color slides accompanied the lecture.
I
WEATHER
FOR KANSAS—Mostly cloudy with occasional light rain east and central today and eastern quarter tonight. Otherwise partly cloudy today, tonight and tomorrow. A little cooler north and central tomorrow. High today in 50's, low tonight 25-35 west, 35-45 east.
These Teachers Enjoy Life
THE VINE GARDENERS
MISS FLORENCE BLACK (kneeling) and MISS WEALTHY BABCOCK
Gone is the "school marm" of yesteryear. Two of K.U.'s most active professors prove it.
Miss Florence Black and Miss Wealthy Babcock, associate professors of mathematics, swim, ride, motor, and probably root harder for the home team than any other two people on the campus. Recently, dressed in work clothes, the two calculus teachers helped painters redecorate the exterior of the Faculty Women's club, where Miss Black lives.
The two professors first became acquainted in 1918 when Miss Black was an instructor and Miss Babcock was a student. They became close friends when Miss Babcock became an assistant instructor in 1922.
Both women own horses and ride them as often as their time and the weather will permit. They ride sometimes on week-day afternoons and nearly every Saturday.
Miss Black took up riding when she acquired her pinto pony in 1941. Before this she had spent much of her free time playing tennis. She still likes to swim but likes more than anything else to pull for K.U.'s athletes. It has been 20 years since she missed a K.U. basketball game. She often goes to out-of-town games with the Jay Janes. Ray Evans was her favorite athlete at K.U.
her favorite athlete at K.C.
In addition to riding, Miss Babcock takes pleasure drives and does her share of throwing moral support to the Varsity boys. Occasionally she drives with Miss Black to out-of-town games. She lives at 701 W. 23rd where she has a house and a two-acre lot.
Miss Black lives with seven other women teachers at the Faculty Women's club, 1300 Louisiana street.
Pacific Battles Rage Again But This Time On Paper
New York, Nov. 12—(UP)—The Pacific battles of Tarawa, Makin, and Saipan were fought again on paper Thursday.
Nearly five years after the actual battles against the Japanese, marine and army generals were lobbing broadsides at each other over the tactical behavior of marine and army troops, and their commanders.
The bitterness between marin- and army forces in the wartime Central Pacific theater cropped out again in the public prints with a Saturday Evening Post series by retired marine Gen. Holland M. (Howlin' Mad) Smith, who as a lieutenant general commanded both marine and army divisions in the three battles.
The bitterness between marine $ ^{8} $
General Smith charged that army Maj. Gen. Ralph C. Smith, commander of the 27th Infantry division, lacked "aggressive spirit" at Salpan
and that the division had slowed the whole operation. The marine general relieved the army general at Saipan.
"After the battle of Saipan (in June and July of 1944) five army generals who had participated in the campaign wrote me official letters relative to Holland Smith's unfitness to command army troops." General Richardson said.
Moral: Profs Make Only Sure Bets
The controversy began when the journalism student, who is also an English minor, insisted that Byron had written the lines, "O wind if winter comes, can spring be far behind?"
Emil L. Telfel, assistant professor of journalism and an English major, dissented. Shelley wrote the lines, Mr. Telfel said, adding that he had 50 cents to risk on his statement.
The bet was on. Out came the English literature book to decide the issue. The book said Shelley.
The student was puzzled. "It's just one of two things," he said. "Either I had wrong instruction or the book has a misprint."
Will Look Into Discrimination
Governor Frank Carlson told the University Daily Kansan today that he planned to "talk to school authorities and some Lawrence businessmen" about the report on racial discrimination in Lawrence cafes.
The report was given to the governor Monday by the Y.M.C.A., the Y.W.C.A., the Negro Student association, the committee on Racial Equality, and the American Veterans committee. It recommended that the University take steps to determine for itself the hardships caused Negro students due to the lack of eating places which they are allowed to patronize; and asked that the Union fountain remain open in the evening.
Chancellor Deane W. Malott, who also received a copy of the report, said that he wished to study the situation further before he made a statement.
A super-committee, consisting of one representative each from the Y.M.C.A., Y.W.C.A., C.O.R.E., and the Negro Student association, has been formed to keep in touch with Governor Carlson and Chancellor Malott. William Johnson, Negro Students association representative, is chairman of the committee.
Navy Brass Studies Here
Twenty-seven regular navy officers are attending the University as special students. They are on assignment from ships and stations to complete their college training.
They are carefully selected and sept to the University of their choice for five semesters. This is a part of the navy's Holloway plan for supplying officers to supplement the junior ranks, said Lt. Comdr. W. A. Mann, assistant professor of naval science.
They receive full pay and allowances while attending college. After they have completed five semesters of work, they are sent to either Monterey, Calif., or to Newport, R.I. to the navy's general line school, before they return to general service. They are required to wear uniforms only at military functions, Commander Mann added.
Political Science Faculty Attend City Managers Meet
Three members of the political science department left for Salina today to attend a two-day meeting of city managers. They are Prof. Ethan P. Allen, Rhoten A. Smith, instructor, and Prof. E. O. Stene.
The program for a city managers' school which will be held here on the campus this spring will be discussed.
Sage Of Emporia Is Honored By Sigma Delta Chi
Milwaukee, Nov. 12—(Special to the University Daily Kansan)—Delegates of the Sigma Delta Chi national journalism fraternity, voted unanimously Thursday at the national convention to place a plaque in the office of the Emporia Gazette, newspaper founded by the late William Allen White, ramed Kansas editor. The Gazette was selected as the 1949 historic site in journalism. In a telegram to the University Daily Kansan today, James L. Robinson, representative to the convention from the University chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, said that the dedication of the site would be in
☆ ☆.
B. S.
☆ ☆
WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE
February with officials from the University and the Kansas City Press club presiding.
Robinson, supported the recommendation made by Robert W. Reed, assistant managing editor of the Kansas City Star. Mr. Reed attended 'the convention in place of Roy A. Roberts, honorary national president of Sigma Delta Chi.
Robinson told the convention he had the assurance of the University's chancellor that the University and its William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information "would see to it that the honor was not forgotten."
Chancellor Malott said today that the name of the school was designed to keep the name of the great Kansas editor alive.
The Milwaukee Convention is the 29th annual one of Sigma Delta Chi.
Mr. Reed told the convention, "No other figure in American journalism is as outstanding as William Allen White." He said that Mr. White had done more to build modern journalism than any other person.
Missionary Tells Of Chinese Christianity
The Chinese people are very receptive to the teachings of Christianity, the Rev. Frank Harris said at the meeting of the Inter-varsity Christian fellowship Thursday night. The Rev. Mr. Harris has been serving as a teacher at the University of Chingtu in Szechwan province.
He said that many of the converts are assisting missionaries in reaching the millions of Chinese who have never had contact with Christian doctrines.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Official Bulletin
Nov. 12. 1948
Alpha Kappa Psi pledges, 7 tonight,
Union lobby.
Cabinet Retreat for Y.W.C.A. and Y.M.C.A. cabinets of KU and K-State tomorrow.
Episcopal College club supper.
5:30 p.m. Sunday, Parish house.
Mathematical colloculum of mathematics department, 5 p.m. Monday, 201 Frank Strong Dr.G.K.Overholtz to speak on "A Generalization of a Divisibility Property of Sums of Power."
Military Society Holds Smoker
Scabbard and Blade, honorary military science society, held a smoker in the Kansas room of the Union for prospective new members Wednesday.
Entertainment was provided by Pat Davis, fine arts freshman, who played both classical and popular piano selections, and Phyllis Mowery, College senior, who gave a series of pantomime demonstrations.
Lt. Col. John Alfrey spoke to the group on the necessity of developing and improving qualities of leadership. Robert A. Coldnow, first year law student and commanding officer, gave a short history and stressed the purpose of the organization. Clem A. Abercrombie, business senior, acted as master of ceremonies during the entertainment.
YMCA Basketball Team To Organize Today
All persons interested in Y.M.C.A. basketball are asked to report to Robinson gym annex at 5 p.m. today. Don Clark, College sophomore, is in charge of the team.
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Reds Prepare Slav Says
Vienna — (UF) — A 26-year-old Yugoslav Communist political commissar has deserted the Yugoslav army and escaped, to the British zone of Austria because he is convinced Russia is preparing for war.
A British spokesman said the former commissar told the British that Marshal Tito has no intention of turning against Russia in favor of the Western world.
Rather, he quoted the Yugoslav is saying, that Tito is making every effort to patch up his quarrel with the Cominform. Then he intends to eliminate all remaining vestiges of freedom in Yugoslavia.
"I left my country," the Yugoslav told questioners, "because I am convinced that Soviet Russia is preparing for war against Britain, America, and the rest of the world not dominated by Russia."
The British spokesman said the Yugoslav refugee was questioned at Graz in the British zone after he slipped away from a Yugoslav frontier security brigade. His name was not disclosed because of possible retaliation against members of his family in Yugoslavia.
Plans to affiliate with a national organization were discussed Wednesday at the meeting of Bnei Blishah local Jewish fraternity.
Jewish Frat Plans National Affiliation
George Toll, of Alpha Epsilon Pi, national Jewish fraternity, told the group what his organization had done for its chapters, and explained affiliation requirements. Bnai Jhudah will hear from several other organizations before making a decision.
Plans for the installation of the following officers were discussed: Samuel Epstein, engineering senior president; Melvin Deleve, engineering junior, vice-president; Ira Gissen, College senior, recording secretary; Gerald Baru, engineering senior, treasurer; Irwin Block, business senior, sergeant-at-arms; and Fred Hissekorn, engineering senior, corresponding secretary.
Couples' Club Will Meet
The Married Couples' club will meet at 7 p.m. today at Henley house with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Becker as host and hostess. Becker is an engineering sophomore. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Wall will have the program.
Dry skim milk contains all the food values of whole milk except butterfat.
Not the hundreds of lines he had to memorize, nor the interpretation of one of the theater's most difficult parts, was the biggest worry Tom Rea had in his preparation for enacting the title role in "Hamlet."
The Fencing Scene, And Not The Lines Was The Big Worry For KU's Hamlet
"The fencing scene, which lasted only a few minutes, gave me more trouble than anything else," said Rea. "Tom Shay (Laertes) and I almost killed each other practicing our dueling scene. I lost a piece of a tooth, and Shay ended up with several sore ribs. Poor Herk Harvey (King Claudius), whom I also killed in the play, had recently undergone an appendectomy. I was always afraid I'd poke the sword in his incision.
Rea, who is 25, has been acting ever since he was old enough to know anything about it. He did the usual kind of high school drama, and had some experience in junior college at McPherson, his home.
"Playing Hamlet was a tremendous experience for me," Rea said. "It's my favorite role to date, and I think it always will be. Anyone who has a little ham in him always hopes to do the part. My ambition is to do it again, say 15 years from now, when I have more experience and know more about the play."
As yet, he has no definite plans for the future, but says he would like to "take a crack at the profession and perhaps starve for awhile."
Rea modestly says that when he thinks of "Hamlet," he thinks of the rest of the cast. "Everyone did so well," he said. "Several of us have been with the University players for a couple of years, and 'Hamlet' allowed us all to grow, both in ability and within ourselves."
He added that Allen Crafton, professor of speech, who directed the production, is a "wonderful man to work for."
"Professor Crafton," Rea said, "has a thorough knowledge and understanding of Shakespeare. He has the idea and the picture in his mind, and knows just how to get the effect he wants."
The memorization of the lines was a big job, made more difficult by Shakespeare's word order, but "once you begin it's not so bad; once you get it, you have it for good." Rea said.
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Playing Hamlet takes a great deal of physical energy. There are so many high spots in the show where the actor must "give" and it is hard to know just where to expand and save energy.
In the final scene, Hamlet dies and is carried off the stage by four soldiers. Rea said, "That part of the play was very pleasant. I was really glad to lie down on the floor for a little rest, and tired as I was, I knew that with the boys carrying me, I'd be able to make it off the stage."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
insu lluak. side ange rom
Socially Speaking
$ ^{ \textcircled{1}} $Delta Gamma Tea Dance
--ty Campton, Sally Stepper, Barbara Upson, Lois Lacy, Jane Lutz, Dorothy Williams, Terry Hadsel, Betty Marten, Nancy Seamens, Doris Furate.
** ** **
Delta Gamma sorority entertained the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity at a tea dance. Saturday.
Delta Tau Delta Paddle Party
Dela Tau Dela Paddle Party
An annual party party of the Dela
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Bettie Rae Thomas, Mary Power,
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Havekorst, Rebecca Davidson,
Jacqueline Walker, Gretchen Freeburg,
Jane Tibbetts, Jan Coretter,
F Jane Fox, Mary Margaret Lind, Ann Roehil, Lola Marie Branit, Retta Jo Landis, Mary Flo Spilman, Donna Fennimore, Helen Slaybaugh, Margaret Dickinson.
Guests were: Jane Kirchoff, Chig Sims, Barbara Parent, Carolyne Carnean, Carol Helmers, Doris Lyons, Maryln Hardin, Georgia Gunther, Bertie James, Mary Evert, Ruth Ann Dryden, Joan Goodjohn, Patricia Anderson, Libby Seitzers. Lynn Trusdale, Diane Durham, Mary Ann Kohman
Barbara Nesh, Geraldine Jones,
Patricia Ann Perkins, Martha Joan
Tragg, Joanne Wray, Sydney Aston,
Jo Anne Jacobs, Elizabeth Day, Betty Campton, Sally Stepper, Barbara Upson, Lois Lacy, Jane Lutz, Dorothy Williams, Terry Hadsel, Betty Marten, Nancy Seamens, Doris Furate.
Kay McClahan, Mariorie Malthoup,
Dou Fewler, Barbara Anne Wuerth,
Fritz Echbloche, Lila Smith, Frankie
Olburg, Florence Olburg, Patricia
Link, Barbara Ann Ackerman, Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest J. Rice, Mr. and Mrs.
William M. Layman, Mr. and Mrs.
William A. Summerour, and Mr. and
Mrs. Arlyn G. Smith.
Chaperones were Mrs. Nelle Hopkins, housemother, and Mr. ad Mrs. Robert Lee, and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Eiery.
Pi Deuteron Chapter of Phi Gamma
ma Delta held their annual Fiji Isla
land party Saturday at the chapter
house. Guests invited were:
Jold Fiji Island Party
Gloria Wasson, Norma Jean Guthrie, Barbara Ramsey, Edith Elam, Georgette Spears, Jane Belt, Dorothy O'Conner, Sis Hedricks, Barbara Bolin, Ann Galloway, Virginia Carter, Mary Helen Lewis, Mary Ann Suderman, Dorothy Poindexter, Susan Boyle, Sally Todd, Barbara Coats, Patricia Watson
Elizabeth Swigart, Beverly Bishop,
Jane Cunningham, Marilyn L. Smith,
Harriet Waddell, Eleanor Howell,
Carol Kendall, Marion Nearing, Marilyn L. Gibson, Joanna Scharn, Shirley Grounds, Margaret Granger,
Ileah Golden, Helen Reed, Margaret
Waddell, Ann Warner, Patricia Davis,
Ann Ackerman, Donna Lee
Harrison.
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A collection of Gordius A. "Chris" Ritter's paintings and lithographs have been showing at the Philadelphia Art Alliance since Oct. 26. The collection will be on display until Sunday. He has had six one-man shows in New York and has received several awards in national exhibitions.
Grad's Work Feted At Art Exhibit
Mr. Ritter was born in Kansas, and was graduated from the University in 1931. He did graduate work at Columbia university and has been an art instructor at Hunter college and at Cornell university.
Patricia Riggs, Barbara Bruaf,
Eleanor Frye, Virginia Lee Daugherty,
Martha Lou Dunean, Patricia Landis, Mary Ann Clardy, Anne Heider, Gloria R. Hill, Betty Shannon, Mary Margaret Moore, Priscilla Barron, Helen Marie Graves, Kathleen Larson, Mary Jane Merriman,
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Beatrice Buehler, Nancy Myer,
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Douglas, Marcille Parker,
Alice Appleton, Vedda Spohn, Mari-
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6:30 p.m. -Kappa Alpha Psi party,
Kansas, room, Union.
Up and Coming
Tonight:
/ p.m.—International club dinner dance. Myers hall.
8 p.m.-Sterling hall open hour dance.
8:30 p.m.—Delta Upson fall formal,
Eldridge hotel.
$ p.m.—Tennessee Terra open house.
8 p.m. Jayhawk Co-op dance.
9 kappa, Sigma dance.
9 p.m.—Corbin hall informal party.
Saturday:
9 p.m.—Sigma Kappa costume party.
ann Crosby, Louise Swigart, Dorothy Jean Hudson, Gail Bixby, Ruth Price, Jane Elizabeth Schmidt.
9 p.m.—Student Union activities dance.
Judy Hall, Carolyn Coleman, Betty Hammon, Jo Anne Vaughn, Marilyn Spruill, Virginia Price, Dolores Hunter, Marjorie Hershberger, Mary Louise McNerney, Marjorie Fisher.
KU Dames Play Bridge
The K.U. Dames played bridge in the English room of the Union Wednesday. Mrs. Lois Hiltibran won the door prize and Mrs. Mary Lou Hughes won high prize of the evening.
Miss Betty Yaple, social chairman, announced that Mr. W. W. Bracke, instructor in the English department, will review several new books at the meeting Nov. 17.
Hostesses for the evening were Mrs. Donna Jensen, Mrs. Betty Jensen, and Mrs. Norma Mauldin.
'Get Acquainted' Party Given For Union Groups
The officers of Student Union Activities held a surprise "get acquainted" party for the committee members Wednesday in the Palm room. Nancy Sewell, College freshman, was master of ceremonies.
J. R. Lovolette, 6 foot, 11-inch, 220-pound freshman basketball player, was featured in a skit in which he demonstrated his "technique in handling women."
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12
Arab Dissension Gives Jews Upper Hand, Student Says
Nochemiah Kronenberg dreams of a separate state for the Hebrew people in Palestine. To help realize this dream he became a member of Haganah, the former underground organization of the Hebrew people and now the nucleus of the Palestinian army.
to the University a year ago after studying at the Hebrew university in Jerusalem.
The stocky, brown-haired law student was born in Tel Aviv. He came
Kronenberg is proud of the trick he played on the British. While a member of Haganah, he was also a member of the British police force in the Hebrew section. He thus learned military tactics for use by the Hebrew army at the same time he was being paid by the British for doing police work.
"The Arab nations quarrel among themselves. They hate each other so much that they would rather see the formation of a Hebrew state than see one of the other Arab states get any part of Palestine. Once they agree on how much each shall get, they might be able to put up a combined front. As it is now, they fight among themselves too much," he explained.
Kronenberg said that the Hebrew nation could quickly and easily defeat the combined Arab nations but that it could not sustain a long war economically, and it realizes it, he said.
He chose Kansas because one of his former teachers suggested that he come to the midwest to learn to know the country and its people better.
He came here, expecting to stay for about a year and then go on to another school. However, he likes it so much that he wants to finish law school here and go to another school for graduate work.
Kronenberg was quite critical of what he termed a British paradox, a socialistic government with imperialistic motives. He said that the British are actively supporting King Abdullah of Trans-Jordan in his efforts to obtain the southern part of Palestine. The reason of this, according to Kronenberg, is that the British want this area for bases to defend the Suez canal.
"Arabic leaders are not representative of Arabic people. We can work with the people in peace but not with their leaders. The only way the Arabic leaders can control their subjects is through a stable peaceful condition in the country.
You'll Have To Go Home To Shower Now
An underground sprinkling system similar to that in the area east of Lindley hall will be installed in front of the library next week. Workmen have staked out the area for the ditching operation. Mr. A. E. Robinson, contractor for the work, said he would have a crew of 6 or 7 men on the job for about a month
The sprinklers will be just below the grass level, where they will not interiate with mowing of the grass.
Beer Meters Get Taxes
By HARMAN W. NICHOLS
NICHOLS
Washington—(UP) —I spent a whole day at the national gymnasium standards—trying to learn whether Uncle Sem gets all that’s coming to him in taxes when you skid a dime across the bar for a million of bucks.
The dollars and cents angle comes from the chief of the field inspection division of the alcohol tax unit. He reports that the 450 brewers in the country turned out $6,992,795 barrels of suds for the fiscal year ended June 30. Tax collections (at roughly $8.a barrel) added up to $937,925.28
Your uncle is doing all right thanks to a 270-pound hunk of bronze; machinery called a "been meter." More of that later.
In the old days, the tax man visited the breweries once a day to measure the beer in the tanks. Some beer men would see the revenoer comin' and tip the tank. Measurements would be made where the level was lowest. Uncle lost tax money.
That sort of thing doesn't happen today. Not with the beer meter system the bureau of standards operates for the internal revenue department. The meter division is bossed by a pleasant little lady who is a mechanical engineer. Simply stated, the meters are used to measure the number of barrels of beer put out by each producer. Everything going out of a brewery today flows through a meter. The vats won't tip any more either.
Should File Claims In Event Of Death
Any veteran who has been assigned a "C" number and feels that his beneficiaries might be entitled to compensation and pension after he dies is urged by the Veterans administration to make use of his "C" file.
To spare his dependents unnecessary legal delays, the veteran should send a certified copy of the public record of marriage, certified copies of previous marriages, copies of court records of divorce and annulment, copies of birth certificates of all children under 18, and a copy of his own birth certificate to the V.A. office.
The veteran's claim number should be written on all papers to insure positive identification.
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San Francisco-(UP)—The navy prepared recently to send a plane 1,500 miles out over the Pacific ocean to quell a "mutiny" led by eight baby elephants.
The ship reported that the "passengers" were complaining because food supplies were running low.
'Mutiny' By Elephants
The navy answered a distress call from the S. S. Swarthmore Victory, a modern Noahs ark with a cargo of animals for American zoos.
The floating zoo's passenger list included 17 crates of monkeys, 20 crates of birds, three crates of bears, and a crate of snakes. The passenger lists crates of snakes, and a crate of cats.
A navy plane loaded up with eight bales of hay—one for each elephant—and several crates of worms for the hungry birds. The ship reported that hundreds of exotic birds were raising a squawk because their worm ration had been cut in half.
But the baby elephants complained the most over short rations. A spokesman for the Pacific Far East lines said the youngsters, about four feet tall and weighing about 800 pounds each, were trying to "kick the ship to pieces."
They were joined in the din by the monkeys, bears, and cats. The navy plane will parachute the emergency rations into the
9:30 p.m. Listen to the Editors Radio Copy class, directed by Emil L. Telelf, assistant professor of journalism.
2:30 p.m. Music by Radio, Miss
Mildred Seagoon
On KFKU
9:45 p. m. K.U. Sports parade, Mike
Stuart Stewart,
O
TODAY
Miss Buchholtz has visited the states several times since she left at the age of 8. Her father is a chemical engineer for the Standard Oil company of New Jersey. During the war they were attacked several times. In 1942 they were attacked for the first time by German submarines. Five ships burned in front of the Buchholtz house.
The school Miss Buchholtz attended was taught by Americans, although the island is under Dutch jurisdiction. Aruba was protected by the United States during the war.
"The new look" is just beginning in Aruba. "Although I had never heard of cake mixes before, the food is somewhat the same. We have frozen meats and vegetables and dried milk. Lago colony has one movie house and one general store. She already has purchased dried milk because "it is thicker than raw milk."
2:30 p.m. News from Mt. Oread.
Tom Yee
She said life in Aruba is very similar to life here.
MONDAY
2:45 p.m. Musical matinee, Bob
Crisisman narrator
9:30 p.m. K.U. Brainbusters, Larry Edwards, moderator: Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism; Thad Marsh, instructor in English; Emil L. Telfel, assistant professor of journalism.
40 Companies To Interview
January Business Graduates
Preliminary interviews by firms with January graduates of the School of Business have started. About 40 companies have arranged to interview the 110 students registered with the bureau.
Christine Buchholtz from Aruba, Curacao, Netherlands West Indies. Lago colony, left a coral island in the Caribbean sea to step into campus life here in the center of the nation.
ocean, and it will be up to the ship's crew to fish them out.
One of the baby elephants is destined for the Sacramento, Cal., zoo, and another for a zoo at Madison, Wis. The rest of the cargo will go to pet shops and to private individuals for resale to zoos.
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University Represented At College Inauguration
E. F. Engel, professor emeritus German, represented the Univ at the inaugural ceremony for Columbia of Stephen's Columbia, Mo.
Over 100 representatives various schools were present.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
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Rifle Team Loses Matches.
The Naval Reserve Officers Training corps rifle team lost both of the matches which they fired Nov. 4, Lt. L. E. Bolts, coach for the team, said today.
The rifle team had fired a match by mail with the University of Illinois, and the University of Rochester. Rochester's score was 853, Illinois 850, Kansas 833.
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Browns,49ers Dominate All-America Pro-Teams
New York, Nov. 12-(UP)]-The Cleveland Browns and the San Francisco 49'ers are dominating the All-American football conference this season and the reasons are clearly evident in All-Star teams selected today by two of the circuit's coaches and their aides.
by two of the current coaches. Red Strader, the new coach who has revived the New York Yankees,
Offensively the first team lion's share-goes to the powerful Brown's, two-time champions of the conference, with five spots. The Los Angeles Dons and Baltimore Colts each take two places and Buffalo Bills and San Francisco each one.
Red Strader, the new coach who and Carl Voyles of the Brooklyn Dodgers huddled with their staffs and came up with selections for offensive and defensive teams.
Defensively. Cleveland shares honors with Sam Francisco with four berths each on the first team. New York took two spots and Brooklyn one.
The Offensive team:
E. Mac Speedie, Cleveland
T. Bob Reinhard, Los Angeles.
G. Dick Barwegen, Baltimore.
C. Bob Nelson, Los Angeles.
G. Ed Ullenski, Cleveland.
T. Lou Rymkus, Cleveland.
E. Dante Lavelli, Cleveland.
QB. Frankie Albert, San Francisco.
LH. Chet Mutryn, Buffalo.
RH. Bill Hillenbrand, Baltimore.
FB. Marion Motley, Cleveland.
The Defensive team:
E. Jack Russell, New York.
T. Martin Ruby, Brooklyn.
G. Weldon Humble, Cleveland.
C. Lou Saban, Cleveland.
G. Riley Matheson, San Francisco.
T. Arnie Weinmeister, New York.
E. John Yonakor, Cleveland.
QB. Jim Cason, San Francisco.
LH. Tom Colella, Cleveland.
RH. Paul Crowe, San Francisco.
FB. Norm Standlee, San Francisco
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Louis To Fight In KC Nov.24
Kansas City, Mo. Nov. 12—(UF)
Curt Kennedy 100 - pound
heavyweight from Wichita, Kan.
will meet Joc Louis in a four-
round exhibition bout here Wednesday, Nov. 24.
Promoter Tom McHugh said the card also will include three 10-round bouts featuring Major Jones, Levi Southall and Roy Miller.
Kennedy, McHugh said, has won 11 straight fights, five by knock-outs, since turning pro last May. The 21-year-old Irish-American boxer won the Junior National A.A.U. title in Kansas City last year.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1948
Tom-Toms Beat For Burris Rugged Sooner Lineman
Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 12—(UP)—Publicity tom-toms in the Oklahoma Indian country beat out a steady pull for Paul (Buddy) Burris for All-America guard honors, and they got amplification from several other football camps in the Midlands.
It was Burris, co-captain of many of the major blows in his team's crushing and shocking 41 to 7 victory over Missouri last weekend.
It was Burris, co-captain of this year's Oklahoma team, who dealt many of the major blows in his $^2$
Earlier this year, members of a beaten Texas Christian team said that "if Burris doesn't make All-American there just isn't any such thing."
Burris is roughly as wide as he is long, standing an inch under six feet and weighing 220 pounds. He played freshman football at Tulsa university, and was a high school end and tackle at Central high school in Muskogee, Okla.
He is one of the reasons George (Junior) Thomas, Oklahoma halfback is among the nation's leading ground gainers. Thomas says he just waltzes through the gaps Burris leaves in opposing forward walls.
Against Missouri last week, it was Burris who crashed through the Tiger line time after time to wreck Coach Dona Faurie's offensive patterns. And when he wasn't gumming up Missouri's attack, he was roaring through to nail helpless opposing linebackers and add power to Oklahoma's brutal assault on the Tiger goal line.
Burris has the faculty of making linemen opposite him fighting mad. It isn't because he plays dirty football, but mainly because he is so rough and apparently indestructible.
He is one of many of Oklahoma's bruisers who came out of military service to take up football after a long layoff.
Burris isn't bad with books, either. He is a "B" student in the college of business administration, where he is a senior.
When Faurot said of Oklahoma after the hurricane had frazzled his Tigers at Norman last Saturday, "they just beat the hell out of us," he was referring especially to Burris and the latter's rough buddies, though Oklahoma's fleet and tricky backs actually ran up the amazing 41 points which showed in the final count.
Burris, playing his usual game, contributed outstandingly to Missouri's sorry assortment of broken ribs, twisted knees and knocked-down shoulders.
OU Regents Face Gamble
Norman, Okla. Nov. 12—(UP)—University of Oklahoma regents, definitely behind a plan to enlarge the O.U. football stadium before next season, expressed doubts today that Soonerland will ever have a Bowl.
The University is too far removed from heavy population centers to draw the crowds needed to finance a stadium like that at the Texas State Fair grounds at Dallas, regents declared in informal discussions.
The type of addition to be made to Owen field remains to be decided. The regents, acting just four days after 38,500 people jumped the stadium last Saturday to see Oklahoma trample Missouri, voted late yesterday to extend the seating capacity.
Oklahoma has attracted such a crowd only twice before in the past 10 years, one member of the board said.
"We must approach this problem from a profit and loss standpoint," the regents said. "We cannot afford to gamble on having big drawing power to our football games year in and year out."
if the regents decide to accept a design leading to a circular grandstand, or bowl, the logical step during the coming 10 months would be the addition of a north curve, thus making the stadium U-shaped.
Walter Kraft, chief of the campus utilities department, said that such a plan would add about 20,000 seats to the stadium at a cost of around $15 to $20 per seat—or totaling between $300,000 and $400,000.
Prescott Completes Study Of Ground Water Resources
Glenn C. Prescott, member of the state Geological Survey, has been conducting an investigation of the ground-water resources in Lane county since the beginning of the past summer. He has completed the work and is expected back at the Survey office this week, according to V. C. Fishel, head of the ground water division.
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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
SPOTLIGHT SPORTS
By OZZIE BARTELLI Daily Kansan Sports Editor
Kansas is aiming for its fourth straight win over State tomorrow, and according to league railbirds and parlay boys, the coast is clear. They could be wrong, but State will have to do something more than mere wishful thinking to upset the Jayhawks this time.
That loss irked the Hawkers enough to carry them through such lopsided wins as 27 to 0, 34 to 0, and 55 to 0, during the past three years, to amass a total of 116 points while the Wildcats zeroed in each Kansas sweep.
We say "this time" because there have been times when K-State tripper the 'Hawkers, most recent being the 18 to 14 victory the men from Manhattan slipped-off with in 1944 when halfback Charlie Moffett's 82-yard touchdown run, in the last 12 seconds of play, was nullified by a clipping penalty. Maybe the Jay-hawks won a moral victory, but the record shows for the Wildcats.
The State boys have one consolation. Their last conference win was at the expense of the Jayhawks. So, if the Cats are doing the serious training our informers insist they're doing, then anything can happen.
Remembering that a Wildcat triumph would snap an embarrassing string of 2I consecutive conference setbacks, we want to warn against possible Kansas overconfidence lest a repeat of the Missouri-type surprise overtakes the Sikesmen.
Kansas will go into the game
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MV Vikings Eye Victory Number 40 For Ashford
Marshall Mo., Nov. 12 — (UP) Only a reversal now considered not even remotely probable would keep Missouri Valley college from running its siring of consecutive wins to 40 tonight, or one more than the string of 39 won by the University of Washington starting in 1908.
of Washington Missouri Valley has won 39 games in a row under coach Volney Ashford, including 10 before he left the school to serve the military and 29 since he returned.
The lapse, which included one game in 1941 and nine in 1942, saw the Navy take over football here. Naval trainees scheduled games from week to week, ran their own show and got their coaching from books which their football tutors bought in drugstores.
Missouri Valley will go after No. 40 at the expense of William Jewell college at Liberty, Mo. The Vikings are rated, conservatively, about seven touchdowns better than their MCAU rival.
The school contends stoutly that the V-12 team in no manner truly represented Missouri Valley on the gridiron, and refuses to consider its string of consecutive wins broken by the intrusion of Uclee Sam.
Confidentially, however, Missouri Valley looked forward today to a real test on Thanksgiving day against
concerned over its defense. Two rocks will be conspicuously absent, Dick Mourou, ole man Gibraltar himself, and Dave Schmidt, the immovable anchor. Monroe is still suffering from a wrenched knee, while Schmidt is nursing a lame shoulder.
shoulder.
The bright spot in the KU. line-up will be langy, pass-snagging Darell Norris', who will be filling Schmidt's shoes. Considering the Jayhawk habit of capitalizing on speed and aerial fireworks, Norris' circus-catches will round-out Kansas' plans of firing over the husky Wildcat law.
Down in Soonerland it's anybody's guess at what may happen to the Huskers when they face Mitchell, Burris, and company. The ponderous Nebraska line may make it worthwhile for at least half the contest, but there's little chance of its surviving the second half, and as Missouri will testify, that's what counts in any tussle with the Sooners.
The Woman's Place, Etc.
Manton, Mich. — (UP)—Manton voters decided a woman's place was in the home. They re-elected Leon Wilson treasurer with 336 votes, and gave his wife, who was running against him for the office, 49 votes.
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The Vikings were cheered this week by the return of Hugh Dunn, sensational one-handed Quarterback of last season, to the Missouri Valley coaching staff.
McMurry college, a team the Vikings whipped in the Ranch Bowl at Abilene. Tex., last December, 20 to 13. (Valley later defeated the West Chester, Pa., Teachers in the Cigar bowl at Tampa on New Year's day, 26 to 7).
Dunn, last year's winner of the
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There are about 2,000 stadium tickets remaining for the Kansas-Oklahoma game here Saturday, Nov. 20, E. L. Falkenstien, athletic business manager, said today.
Bleachers Built For OU-KU Game
Workmen have started to build temporary bleachers at the south end of Memorial-stadium as officials expect a crowd of over 35,000.
Paul Williamson trophy as the nation's Most Valuable player among small colleges, underwent an operation for the removal of his left eye at a Veterans' hospital. Doctors said there was no danger that he would lose his right eye. The injury was suffered in combat during the war.
Nickerson Victory String Has Severe Test Today
Kansas high school football longest victory streak is being put to a severe test this week.
Victory in the Friday night encounter would hand Nickerson the Mid-Kansas league championship.
Nickerson trying for number 34, faces a sturdy crew from Pretty Prairie, which has a great chance of spoiling a perfect record.
By flying, it now takes nearly 12 days less time to get from the United States to the Orient than it took in 1940 by ship.
Major games this week include:
Lawrence at Wyandotte, Great Bend
at Topeka, Salina at Junction City,
Hays at St. Joseph's, McPherson at
Manhattan, and Dodge City at Garden
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1948
Aces High Are Unbeaten As IM Play Nears End
By JIM VAN VALKENBURG
With the teams battling for playoff berths, Thursday's Intramural touch football games were characterized by close scores, with three games decided by one point.
Aces High, the only undefeated team to play, kept its record unblemished with a close victory. Sig Ep "B,"Phi Psi "B," and Phi Kappa "A" have lost only one game each to $^{10}$
Sig Ep's 13. Phi Delt 6
Sig Ep "B" team (6-1) defeated Phi Delt 'B' (5-2), 13 to 6. Lyle Woodring combined with Reynolds to lead the Sig Ep's passing attack. Aces High 7. YMCA 6
have lost only one game each to
in the running for the play
offs
Aces-High (4-0) edged out Y.M.-C.A. (3-2) by a 7 to 6 score in a thrilling overtime battle. Williams scored a touchdown for Aces Hi and Murphy for the Y.M.C.A., but Aces Hi added the winning extra point.
Phi Psi 15, Sigma Chi 6
The Phi Psi "B" team (5-1) fought back with two touchdowns and a safety in the last 16 minutes to hand the Sigma Chi B" ("4-2) a 15 to 6 defeat. Sigma Chi broke into the scoring column midway in the third quarter when Wally Benton took a pass in the flat from Bob Maupin and raced 50 yards to a touchdown. The Phi Psi's struck back quickly as Bill Richardson took a short pass from Jim Davidson to climax a 45-yard march. Davidson passed to Dorman O'Leary for the final touchdown to finish a 60-yard drive. In the late minutes the Phi Psi line broke through to tag a Sigma Chi passer in the end zone for a safety.
Phi Kappa 26. Phi Kappa SIG 0
Phi Kappa (4-1) bowled over Phi Kappa Sigma (1-4) by a 26 to 0 count, Jim Carroll's passing highlighted the winner's offense. He pitched two touchdowns to Bill Hart and Tony Hoffman. Phi Kappa dominated the game with a strong passing attack and driving forwardls. Phi Gam 18. Sigma Nu 9
Phi Gamma Delta "B" (5-2) defeated Nuga Sigma "Nu" (8-4) 18 to 9. Milt Fadler intercepted a pass and ran for the first Phi Gam touch-down. The Sigma Nu's scored a safety in the same period when Ed Todd was caught behind his own goal. The second half started with double reverse on the kickoff, Bob Reveillet racing 60 yards for
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the touchdown. Bill Porter passed to Bill Binter for the last Phi Gam score. Sandy Beeels tossed to Dick Ashley for the lone Sigma Nu T.D., and Hedgeworth added the extra point.
ATO's 7. Pi KA 6
The Alpha Tau Omega "B"队 (2-4) edged out the Pi KA, "E" (0-6) 7 to 6 in a close battle. Pi KA took a lead in the first quarter with a pass from Bob Yenders to Sam Busby, who was flat in the end zone. In the third period, Bill Weidensaul passed to Den Millikan to tie it up, and another pass from Weidensaul to Bill Houghton added the winning extra point. The Alpha KA 6-1.
Sig Alph 1, Oread 0
The Sig Alph "B" (2-5) won by a forfeit, 1 to 0, over the Oread Hall "B" team (1-6).
Ben Hogan Chosen Golfer Of Year
Chicago. Nov. 12—'UP) -Bantam Ben Hogan, who has finished in the money in every tournament he has entered this year, has added another title to his long list of honors as the Professional Golfers' association's "Golfer of the Year."
The P.G.A. announced that the nation's sportswriters almost unanimously selected Hogan for the title.
Lloyd Mangrum, runner-up to Hogan in official P.G.A. money winings this year, also ran second to him in the poll. The only other golfers even to receive mention in the voting were young Skip Alexander and colorful Jimmy Demaret.
OU Aggies Get 'Feelers' For Delta Bowl
Stillwater, Okla., Nov. 12—(UP) Oklahoma A. and M. college, losers to Kansas and Texas Christian universities but winners in five other starts, may be invited—and might accept the invitation—to a New Year's football game, it developed today.
Athletic Director Henry Iba of the Aggies confirmed reports that he had received "feeler" letters from bowl officials in more than one state. It was reported earlier yesterday that Delta Bowl sponsors at Memphis, who last week accepted Tulsa's withdrawal from that contest, were interested in Oklahoma A. and M.
The Aggies, winners over Denver,
San Francisco, Tulsa, Wichita, and
Temple, defeated Texas Christian
in the 1945 Cotton bowl and trounced
St. Mary's at the Sugar bowl a year later.
Iba said he answered the letters with the suggestion that any bowl consideration would be premature on his part until after A. and M. plays Kansas State on Nov. 20 and University of Oklahoma Nov. 27. They have an open date this week.
At Memphis, Delta bowl committeeeman Bill Brady said Iba had told him that A. and M. would be willing to consider a bowl invitation after the ends of its regular season, but not before.
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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE NINE
We Jeer Western Pulps; Not So With The English
London—(UP)—Pardner, the Old West may be dead where you hail from but it's still livin' here in the wide, open spaces of the North of England.
Tough hombres with slitted eyes and fingers itchin' for a trigger are as real to many of the kids growing up there as they used to be to the youngaters who read the Deadeye Dick novels in the States 40 years ago. Cow Sets A Record
Only the tight paper quota keeps these stories from turning even more boys into potential Colt-carrying cowhands. As it is, newstands sell right out of lurid-covered, paper backed yarns bearing such action titles as "The Two-Gun Terror" or "Reach for the Sky, Stranger!"
One of these, printed in prosy, smoky Manchester with nary a gulch, or a canyon, or yet a ranch in sight, has a cover apparently conveying a British artist's idea of a Western gunman.
This "startling drama," as it calls itself, would have startled even Buffalo Bill had he seen a ranch hand shooting left-handed with his gun spitting flame although there doesn't appear to be a finger on the trigger.
But it's only a mere detail.
The dialogue is early vintage Deadeye Dick. This is a fair example. Tex Wilson is riding home after a long absence and finally reaches his home range.
"Sixshot," he mutters to his horse, a pinto pony, "I'm powerful afraid things are bad wrong. I don't see any cow critters loping about the range."
Then he is framed for the murder of his girl friend's father and is about to be hanged by the crooked sheriff when a half-breed outlaw lurches into court and announces he has vital evidence.
Most of the books are in the same vein and are practically required reading, when available, for anyone under 17 and lots of adults, travel frustrated on this little island.
The sheriff, naturally, "falls into the a killer's crouch" and taunts the "baffles and loafers who ran from the room" as "havin' sand in yore craws."
The Old West dead? Pardner, when you say that in Manchester, smile!!!
Six-man football now played by approximately 1,700 small high schools in the nation. was originated by Stephen Epler in Chester, Neb. The first game was played Sept.26,1934.
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Cow Sets A Record;
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Garrison, N. D. — (UP)— Nick Krebsbach, Jr., who farms near here, has some magic formula when it comes to raising cattle—or so his neighbors think. An eight-year-old shorthorn cow recently gave birth to twin calves. Just 11 months ago, the same cow gave birth to triplets. All offspring are normal in every respect.
MEN! Earn extra money by selling these shoes to your classmates. Write for full details on this money-making proposition.
Gardner, Mass.—(UP)—Myron L.
Goddard, a man of his word, promised his wife when they were married he would take her to Niagara Falls. He did—in 1948. They were married in 1898.
Keeps Vow----50 Years Late
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PAGE TEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1948
The Editorial Page-
It's Dangerous
Did you ever take note of the activity at the corner of Jayhawk drive and Mississippi just a few minutes after the whistle that ends class periods? A little observation reveals a mixture of cars, trucks, motor-scooters, bicycles, dogs. and, a good many students.
This mix-up has been going on for some time and by a seemingly miraculous turn of events, no one has been hurt recently, not even one of the dogs. However, there seems to be an increasing tendency on the part of pedestrians to disregard the instructions of the traffic officer at the intersection.
Students are not usually in such a hurry that they have to save a few seconds by walking across the line of moving traffic instead of waiting until cleared across the street. Most jawwalking is perhaps done thoughtlessly, but at the same time it is rather foolhardy.
If you are guilty of jaywalking, why don't you slow up a little. After all, you won't lose much time, and you might save a great deal.
—M.C.L.
- Letters To The Editor -
An Old Problem
Within the limits of my ability, I try not to confine myself to dandelion digging, as Donald A. Moser suggests, but to glance over the news, now and then, and to understand what is going on.
Dear Editor:
And in the light of the present international situation, it would certainly be foolish to deny that the tension between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. is a threat to peace. Neither can be underestimated the many difficult problems that have to be solved if we are to have a chance of avoiding World War III, and atom bombs, and the destruction of most that we love of the confused civilization that is ours.
But I refuse to believe that getting rid of Stalin and Togliatti (and some hundred or hundred thousand more Communists) would be the solution of the problems of our times. The war over, the problems would be still there. I refuse to believe that, just as I refused to believe—while fighting fascists of my own country and from abroad—that getting rid of Mussolini and Hitler would in itself mean peace. The problems, it seemed to me, would have been still there with the war over. And there are still there.
Let's try Donald, along with the dandelion digging, to do what little we can for solving these problems, instead of assuming that war has to be, that we can't help it and must just get ready to fight once more.
Albert Roland Graduate student
I
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DUCK'S 824 Vt.
Constable Race
Dear Editor:
I wish to make a slight correction in a news story that was carried in the Daily Kansan concerning the election of the local constable.
Unknown to me, some of my friends, as a joke, put my name on some of the ballots and printed cards advertising my candidacy. It seems that some of the cards were rather indistinct and my name was read both as D. M. and D. H. Johnson.
Thus arose the rather singular condition of having one man running both second and third for the same office. So, it seems that Mr. Seymour did not win by so large a margin but simply beat out one man, not two.
D. M. Johnson Graduate
Illinois Housing Is Serious Problem
Champaign, Ill.—(UP)—The peak load of veteran students has passed at the University of Illinois, but the housing shortages caused by the influx of veteran students hasn't eased off.
The housing situation is still as tight as it was last fall when a peak total of 11,500 veterans enrolled at the university.
All available space for single men and women students was filled before the school year started. Some of the women, who don't have to work, have taken "room and board" jobs merely to get a place to live.
With only 46 vacancies in the university housing area for married students, there were 499 applicants waiting for space.
21st Century Man Will See Our Life
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
Minneapolis—(UP)—A detailed picture of present-day life in north central United States has been sealed in the cornerstone of the new Minneapolis Star and Tribune building.
Not to be opened until the year 2048, the cornerstone contains a stainless steel "century vault" crammed with pictures, documents and microfilms telling today's story of this section of America.
A highlight of the contents is the picture of a family chosen as typical of those who dwell in this region. Mr. and Mrs. Sigfred Nelson, a Fort Ripley, Minn., farm family, will give residents 100 years from now an idea of what rural life today is like.
Yet unborn sports fans will see shots of the University of Minnesota football squad in action, pictures of churches, farming operations and other phases that make the Northwest what it is.
Daily Hansan
University
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Editor-In-Chief... Maurice C. Lungren
Managing Editor... Hal D. Nelson
Asst. Man. Editor... Anne Murphy
Asst. Man. Editor... Bill F. Mayer
Asst. City Editor... Robot B. Martinez
Asst. City Editor... Nora Temple
Asst. City Editor... Patricia James
Tel. Editor... Richard D. Barton
Asst. Tel. Editor... Keith M. Wright
Spartis. Editor... Robot D. Martinez
Society. Editor... Bosmary R. Rosow
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the university shop Across From Lindley
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1948
UNIVERSITY, DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE ELEVEN
British Ballads Survive Best In US Backwoods Country
Washington—(UP)—The British may deny it. But the Library of Congress says it's a fact that English folk songs have survived better in Kentucky and Tennessee than in Britain.
Maybe the hills box up an echo better.
Maybe the mls box up an echo better.
When the library started collecting recordings of original English hallads
it looked south instead of across the sea. The records are included in 10 new albums issued by the library's folklore section headed by Duncan Emrich. The whole project started when the Carnegie foundation donated a large sum to establish a recording laboratory. Now when Mr. Emrich hears of a good original, he hustles out some fancy equipment to record it for posterity.
How some of the originals were recorded adds up to some interesting reading.
For instance a song called "Lord Bateman." Artus, Moser, a high school teacher and collector from Swannana, N. C., heard of a hill-billy singer and guitar player in Manchester, Ky., named Pleaz Moble-
Miss. Ada Swineford, who is on leave to do graduate work at Pennsylvania State college is also attending the meeting.
It was before the war and the young man never had been out of the Bluegrass state. Mr. Moser talked him into accompanying him over the state line to a spot in the
Dr. R. C. Moore, research director of the Geological Survey, and Dr John C. Frye, executive director of the state geological survey, are in New York attending the annual meeting of Geological Society of America.
Young Mr. Mobley slung his guitar around his neck, opened his mouth and cut loose. The song finished, he went marching off to war and wound up in the South Pacific.
hills near Harrogate, Tenn. Mr. Moser lugged along his recording equipment and one 25-cent cardboard record, with grooves on one side only.
Eventually, Mr. Moser got around to offering the record to the Library of Congress. Experts heard it and were impressed. Here, they said was an effort that would make "Lord Bateman" live through time.
After the war, the library gathered a crew of engineers and high priced equipment and hied for the hills. They took Mr. Moser and Mr. Mobley to a streamlined recording studio where the accoustics were just right.
The original, made on paper, now is one of the rarest in the library's collection.
Mr. Mobley took his new guitar and sang the song again. Somehow the results weren't the same. Maybe it was science butting in with fancy instruments. But most likely it was Mr. Mobley's association with the Pacific. He had pepped the thing up; even tom-tommed it in a few places.
KU Geologists Attend Meet In-NY Of Geological Society
One tune was called "Down,
Down, Down". The library was
especially anxious to get a good
recording of it.
A picked group of singers, all but one over 60 years old, was chosen from among the miners and the trook began.
Another time, a professional recording crew went to the Pennsylvania coal mines with instructions to bring back on wax a "distinctive Celtic" flavor in music.
The engineers approached an old-timer in coal-blackened shirt and pants who, looked as if he might possess a rich baritone. He had a dandy.
They asked him if he knew "Down, Down, Down."
"I do that," he said, "but I'm going to sing 'Mother Machree'."
The engineers explained patiently that "Mother Machree" was indeed a fine tune, but that wasn't the one the boss wanted. Whereupon the old man whipped out'a shotgun and thundered.
mourner "I'm singin' 'Mother Macree'"
Some say the old man was kidding. But "Mother Machree" was recorded. So was "Down, Down, Down"—later.
Read the Want Ads daily.
A lawrence Lodge No. 6 A.F.A.M
G
Special Communication Mon., Nov. 15, 7 p.m.
THIRD DEGREE
Visitors welcome.
Samuel P Moyer, W.M.
Walter H. Varnum, Sec
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
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. Journals may be mailed by 4 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five day day days five
25 words or less .35c 65c 90c
additional words .1c 2c 3c
FOR SALF
FWO TICKETS (together) to K-State
original original. Call Bob Reswing,
801-243-5670.
COLLECTION of Glenn Miller records.
Over 40 records in record case. Will sell
for highest reasonable bid. Phone 23771
and ask for Tex.
16
TWO TICKETS to KU- K-Sat game.
Regular price. Call 2860M after 2 p.m.15
MASTER DELUXE Chevrolet Club Coupe.
Radio, heater, new 1946 engine, 20,000
miles on new engine. This is a good
engine. Will sell reasonable
Art! 1,803% Mass. St. 17
FOR SALE or trade; V8 Ford, clean. $175.
1935 Pontiac. $125. 98 Hudson. $100.
1936 Chrysler. $95. 98 Plymouth, with rebuilt motor. Wall's
Used Cars. 739 North Fourth, North Law.
A HOME that will fit the needs of a newly organized fraternity or sorority. Ideal location. Contact V. P. Wilson. 1542 Teen St. 15
1835 STUDEBAKER sedan. Cheap Good
body and motor. Heater. Call Dan Rank.
517-296-0011.
A GOOD 35. Ford four door. See Ray-
anni after 5:30 p.m.
anvie丽 after 5:30 p.m.
1935 CHVEVROT sedan. Engine completely overhauled, all new parts from timing gear to exhaust valves. Good quality. Boe B200. 1017 West Hampshire, phone 2956.
AMMUNITION. Fishing Tackle. Guns and
tools made in Made, padlocks,
butter's Shop. 1016 Mass.
BUSINESS SERVICE
SPECIAL RATES: Time, 44 weeks, $37.7
Life, 39 weeks, $39.9; Fortune, 9 months,
$6.75. For limited time only at your
Student Union Book Store. 18
TYPNING DONE: Prompt work, reasonable rate, accurate work 1209 Ohio, or other.
4
TYPING. Reasonable rate. Prompt set.
12. 85.00 FOR YOUR OLD battery on a
guaranteed Goodrich battery. Delivery
from Store 21, B. 23
Goodrich Store, 929 Mass
DOES YOUR pen need repairing? Excellent service on any make or model Bring your pens and pencils to Student Union Book Store. 12
WHEN ALL PETS including dogs, birds, fish, cats, pigeons, skunks, parrots, squirrels, rats, mice, etc., go shopping for an outfit they go to. John St. Price 418. Everything in the pet field—their needs are our business. 12-21
FYPING DONE; Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel.
418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. Ask for Miss Helen.
12-21
ALTERING SUITS, coats, and dresses.
Relining coasts a specialty. Handmade
tailored button holes. Work guaranteed.
Call 2995.R4.824 Indiana. 12
HEART and Son, tailors. Finest saws made to measure, suits, topcoats, and overcoats. Alterations, repairing and softer work. 8211, Mass. 19
I LOST my black and silver Parker 51
sunday, the evening of 12. See "Call Bell
Boulevard" on Ph. 1100.
PAIR OF GLASSES in green case. Return to Kuth Hille, 1247 Ohio, for reward.
LOST
A PAIR of dark horned-ram glasses,
Thursday, at 8:00, in front of Frank
Strong, Please call Jeanne Peterson, Ph.
285. 12
SLIDE RULE, E and K. No. 952083, less case, somewhere in vicinity of Marvin, Friday. Finder please leave at Kansas office or call 16984 after 6 p.m. 15
BROWN SPORT jacket in Bailey chemistry labs, Tuesday, Label inside reads, Herman the Tailor, Kansas City, Myers Krimminger. 1654W is found, Reynard.
A PAIR of bifocals with transparent horn rimmed frame at stadium at Kansas-Oklahoma A. And M. game. $5.00 reward for anyone holding glasses intact. Contact
GIRL'S GOLD class ring Monday. Letters
to the editor about Reward. Leave at Kaiser office. 12
TICKET to the Fred Waring show. Bill Richardson. Ph. 306W. 16
WANTED
TO SHARE expenses with anyone driving to Chicago, Michigan, or vicinity during Thanksgiving vacation. Call Phil Oren. after 6 p.m. p.h. 2635W. 16
RIDE TO New York or vicinity, on Nov.
19th. Call 2010.
CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE now. To take orders for fine imported linen hand-
kerchiefs suitable for Christmas gifts, Write Boy 241, Kansas City, Mo. 16
SMITH & WESSON .38 Special, preferably Victory model or what have you. Drop card to Herbert D. Hill, Jr., Gen. Del. Sunflower. 16
MISCELLANEOUS
**FEWMAN CLUB** member who exchanged nuts with me at dance last Friday please join Benson Scardino at the "SOME" COME! room, dig our fine pomo at the Skyline Dinner club. We play "bop" and sweet for your dancing and listening pleasure, on Friday and Saturday.
APPLICATIONS for the Lawrence Flying Pilots and beginners alike are welcome. Our plan actually saves you $115. Call Airport Aircraft to Ware Aircraft at Municipal Airport
TRANSPORTATION
WANT RIDE to the East at Thanksgiving.
Must be in vicinity of Ps. or New York.
Ultimate destination. Wilkes Barre, Pa.
Kansas office. Box 1. 12
WANTED RIDE to Lawrence from Kansas City, Monday morning. Arrive Lawrence by 9 a.m. Call Bill McCormick,
Phone 2330J. 12
WOULD LIKE a ride to Champaign, Ill. or anywhere close by. Leaving Tuesday, September 14, Thanksgiving holiday. Shire coverage and driving. Call T38M at 6:00 p.m.
ONE DOUBLE room and 1 single shared room. One block from the campus. Cases 18-36
FOR RENT
LOVELY BASEMENT room in new home to two boys. Furnace piped into room; good ventilation, asphalt the flooring, tile the floor; several students with cars living nearby so transportation might be arranged. $3.50 a week per boy. Ph. 2151M. 18
TWO ROOM furnished apartment for boys at 523 Louisiana. 16
The corporation is interested in men with records above average to do research and development work. Application blanks may be filled out in the School of Engineering office before the interview.
Rayon Firm Representative Will Interview Man Nov. 16
A representative of the North American Rayon corporation, Elizabethton, Tenn., will interview chemical engineers, chemists, mechanical engineers, and physicists Tuesday. Nov. 16 in 11 Marvin hall.
College Students
MOST WELCOME!
MARTIN'S HIGHWAY CLOVERLEAF
Make This Your Week-End RENDEZVOUS
Come and Meet Your Classmates
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Oil Company Will Interview Chemists And Engineers
Mr. R. F. Baldaste, representative of the Standard Oil company of Whiting, Ind., is interested in interviewing chemists and chemical engineers Wednesday, Nov. 17 in 111 Marvin hall.
The Y.M.C.A. advisory, board will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 17, at Ned D. Linegar's home, 1245 New York street. The major items of business will be finances, personnel, program, and future developments of the organization.
YMCA Advisory Board
Will Hold: Meeting. Nov. 17
GOING HUNTING THIS WEEKEND?
GOING HUNTING THIS WEEKEND?
We have shells and cartridges of all sizes.
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DEAL
Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices.
Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed 75c
Ladies' Plain Dresses, CI. and Pressed - 79c
CASH AND CARRY ONLY
Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan.
WHEN YOU WANT FINE FOOD at the lowest in prices you'll want to go to Bill's Grill 1109 Mass. Across from Court House
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PAGE TWELVE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1943
Prince Charming Will Reign At Pumpkin Prom
"The best-looking couple on the dance floor" will be crowned as Prince Charming and Cinderella in a court scene during intermission.
The medieval court will be the theme of the decorations and entertainment. In addition to dancers and musical presentations, there will be a pantomine on the court actions of Madame Pompadour, mistress of Louis XV.
Dance music will be provided by Charles O'Connor's band.
Admission will be $1.25 a couple.
Tickets will go on sale at a desk in
Frank Strong hall Monday. Nov.
15. They also will be sold at the
Union the night of the dance.
All N.R.O.T.C. freshmen who volunteer are being given indoctrination flights at Oatlinate air base飞 Lt. Comdr. C. E. Jackson of the N.R.O.T.C. staff and naval officers who are students at the University.
Naval Frosh Take To Air
About six of eight students are taken each week-end. Commander Jackson said. They spend about three hours in the air, and when possible they are flown over their home towns. To get the feel of the ship in the air, students handle the controls in flight.
Students who will fly this week are Gerald L. Boyd, F. Bradley Keith, James P. Gillette Marvin L. Spencer, College freshmen; William D. Trump, Jr., education freshman; Duane E. Dunwoodie and Robert P. Bradley, engineering freshmen.
Refresher Course Begins Nov.15
A three-day refresher course in therapeutics and geriatrics will be offered starting Monday, Nov. 15 at the University of Kansas Medical center in Kansas City.
Monday's program will be devoted entirely to treatment of heart diseases. This category is now mankind's greatest killer. Geriatrics treatment of diseases of the aged constitutes the third day of the course.
Dr. Harry Gold, Cornell school of medicine, New York City; Dr. William B. Kountz, Washington university, St. Louis, Mo.; and Dr. Ferdinand R. Schemm, Great Falls clinic, Great Falls, Mont., will be guest instructors. Thirteen of the K.U. faculty will appear on the program.
Journalism Grads Take New Jobs
Wendell M. Bryant, 1948 journalism graduate, is now assistant professor of journalism and public relations director at the Agricultural and Technical College of North Carolina in Greensboro, N.C. Bryant is a former assistant telegraph editor of the University Daily Kansan.
Another former journalism student, Neal Sheehan, is now city editor of the Maryville (Mo.) Daily Forum. Sheehan, a veteran, was a special student in the Journalism school in 1945.
Business Frat Pledges LaRue,
Elects Instructors To Ranks
Delta Sigma Pi, professional business fraternity, has pledged Henry LaRue, business junior, Ronald G. Herd and Robert Morrison, instructors in economics, were elected to faculty membership.
By Bibler
Little Man On Campus
S. Bliss
"Well, I'll say this. Worthal—you were a perfect gentleman THIS evening."
THIS evening.'
Put Away The Cookie Tins, Hortense, The Store-Boughten Ones Are Better
Chicago—(UP)—The American housewife isn't above passing off factory-made cookies as her own, a cookie manufacturer told the annual convention of the biscuit and cracker association in Chicago.
Agard Billings, who learned to make cookies in Sweden and started his own factory in Chicago in 1917, said the ladies had given up making cookies because professionally made cookies are cheaper and better.
“Our cookies taste the same each time,” Billings said. “We don't have good results one time and bad results another.”
He said his cookies are cheaper because manufacturers buy in quantity and probably better because a quantity buyer can demand quality.
"If the housewife computed the costs of her ingredients she would (see our cookies are money-savers," he said. "But most ladies are too proud to admit they aren't economizing."
Billings said that there had been no great change in making cookies. "We use assembly line methods," he said, "but it's still the same cookie that grandmother made in her kitchen."
"There's no substitute for quality. I don't think you can fool your stomach, no matter what the chemists say." Billings concluded.
John Ise, professor of economics,
will speak on "Economic Attitudes"
at a supper meeting of the Trinity
Episcopal college club at 5:30 p.m.
Sunday.
Pep Clubs To Help Organize Cheering
The Jay Janes, Froshawks, and Ku Kui's will attend the KU.-K-State football game Saturday to help lead the Jay Hawkers in an organized cheering section.
The pep clubs, band, and students of the University will sit in bleachers placed on the cinder track. The section will extend from one 10-yard line to the other and no seats are reserved. The pep clubs will use the southwest entrance to the stadium, members into the local chapter of the Pi Epsilon Pi. They are John Hedrick, George Hopkins, Douglas Jennings, Ross Keeling, James Luther, Robert Miller, William Mills, Donald Otoway, Herman Phillip, Robert Reusser, Charles Reiner, Robert Wahstelt.
The club will meet at the parish house at 10th and Vermont streets. All students are welcome.
John Ise To Speak Sunday
To Episcopal College Group
Thirsty? Get A Twig, Find Your Own Well
To "water - witch" or "water-douse." Mr. Mann explained, you merely grasp two ends of the twig and walk slowly over the ground to be tested. When the third end suddenly points earthward, seemingly of its own accord—you've struck water.
Orchard Park, N.Y.—(UP)—Scoff if you wish, but Dr. Herbert C. Mann, a 61-year-old local physician, claims he can locate hidden water with nothing more than a plain Y-shaped twig.
Just how the twig is drawn to water, Dr. Mann admits he's unable to explain.
Discuss Political Freedom At YMCA Faculty Forum
Call
Political freedom is a relative thing, E. Jackson Baur, assistant professor of sociology, told the Y.M.C.A. faculty-forum Wednesday.
The main question of discussion at the forum was, "Does the common man have political freedom?" Mr. Baur commented that there are still some restrictions on political freedom, but freedom comes through social organization.
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Atomic Bombardier Recalls Chaos Of Three Years Ago
Fort Worth—(UP)—The bombardier who dropped the second atomic bomb on Japan stood near a gaint B-36 superbomber at Carswell air force base today. He recalled that moment three years ago when he watched the sprawling city of Nagasaki turn abruptly into smoking rubble.
"I pressed the release and . . . bingo! No more Nagasaki," said Capt. Kermit K, Beahan of Houston, who$\textcircled{4}$ this week reported for duty at they found it obscured by clouds Eighth air force headquarters here
"Three days later I was selected as bombardier for the Nagasaki mission," Captain Beahan said. "It's a day I'll never forget."
The Hiroshima raid had gone off with clock-like precision, and crew-men on his plane expected the Nagasaki mission to be another "near picnic" the captain recalled. But they were disappointed.
When they arrived over Nagasaki
'Look Around Dr. Foster Urges
Cautioning the more than 80 students present not to "jump at the first chance for marriage," Dr. Robert G. Foster, professor of home economics, opened the series of lectures on love and marriage Thursday in Myers auditorium.
Dr. Foster said it is wiser to date a number of persons before choosing a mate. "Adequate preparation for marriage is just as important as it is in learning a profession or trade," he said.
No accurate scientific test has been evolved for mate selection. However, Dr. Foster said, factors which sociologists and psychologists believe important are physical and occupational nearness, a person's conception of the perfect mate, and a healthy parental relationship.
He added that a stable family background, adequate sex education, and similar religious backgrounds are also important.
"The only test on which to base marriage is love, but it is not true that there is a 'one and only' for each of you." Dr. Foster explained. "One can not afford to be too choosie, or to wait too long."
Dr. Foster said that research indicates fewer marriages break up in direct relation to the length of time the couple goes together before marriage. The ideal length for the acquaintance is 18 to 24 months, with the engagement period lasting four months, he said.
Men outnumbered women 10 to 1 at the lecture.
Engineering Students With Poor Grades To Be Advised
Students with low grades in the School of Engineering will be scheduled to meet with their advisers beginning Monday, Nov. 15. The schedule will be posted on the bulletin board in Marvin hall.
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they found it obscured by clouds. Their orders were clear enough, though. The atomic bomb was to be dropped by sight and by sight only. No instrument bombing through cloud blankets.
As the plane veered toward an alternate target, Captain Beahan spotted a rift in the clouds. He could see the Japanese city clearly. Secondes later it was "bomb away."
Their mission completed, the airmen returned to their base on the island of Tinian.
Today, the captain is more interested in finding a home than in atomic bombs.
"We were celebrating the event when I suddenly remembered it was my 27th birthday," Captain Beahan said.
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, Nov. 15, 1948
Lawrence, Kansas
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
STUDENT NEWSPAPER
Expect 2200 At Church Meet Over Holidays
Taking opposite stands in an informal debate on "Resolved, Christians can accept the university as it is" will be J. Seelye Bixler and Dr. Arnold Nesh. Mr. Bixler is president at Colby college at Waterville, Maine. Dr. Nash is a visiting professor from England at the University of North Carolina, Dr. Nash the author of "The University in the Modern World," which has stirred considerable discussion on the failure of the "assembly-line" universities of America.
The Christmas holidays will not be days of "sack time" and lounging for the 2.200 Christians who will gather here for the first "world influencing" student conference Monday, Dec. 27 to Saturday, Jan. 1 1949.
...
The keynote address will be by John Mackay, president of Peacockon Theological seminary. He will lay the foundation for the program with his speech on "Church and Personal Faith." Other speakers will be D. Elton Trueblood and Dr. George Kelsey, of the Federal Council of Churches, and K. H. Ting, of China.
Students from 40 nations, a minister from China, a professor from England, a college president and representatives from the 15 church and student Christian association movements in the United States will meet to study "a movement toward unity in the church."
On the first day of the conference, the students will divide into groups of 20. Thereafter these groups will meet each morning for discussions and each evening for Bible study and group worship. Daily reports from these groups will be submitted to an analysis team of experts. They will study them carefully to discover the trends of conference thought in the issues the students raise.
By Bibler
These groups will be representative of all church denominations,ates, colleges and movements so that each student will have a chance to share the greatest variety of experience as well as to express himself.
As an experiment this year, another type of conference sub-division is planned. Each afternoon groups of 50 to 100 will meet to discuss the central themes of the conference: church and politics, church and university, church and the ecumenical (world influencing) movement, churcft and personal faith, and church and vocation.
The groups will draft statements of the central question raised about each theme. These statements will be carefully discussed, re-written, and, on the last day of the conference, submitted to a panel of speakers in the form of questions. After the conference these reports will be turned over to the committee of the United Student Christian council to be used for planning next year's conference.
The World Student Christian federation has commissions on politics, the university, and the ecumenical movement that will be deeply concerned with the thinking of these leaders of American stu-
WEATHER
Kansas—Fair today, high in the middle 60s. Low tonight in the upper 40's. Increasing cloudiness and mild tomorrow, high in the middle 60s.
Little Man On Campus
Bijjee
"...Well, O.K., if you take off your fraternity pin!"
Instructor Enumerates Differences In Education In Sweden And America
American and Swedish education differs in many ways according to Per-Hugo Sioegren, instructor of German.
Mr. Sjoegren is from Umea, a city about the size of Lawrence, in northern Sweden. He has master of arts degrees in English, French and German from the University of Uppsala. He said he came to America to learn about the country and its education.
"One difference is that our high schools last two years longer than do American high schools," he explained. "We have compulsory military service, as America does now, and generally the Swedish student has spent a year or more in military training before starting to the university. Consequently the Swedish university student is older than the American student."
"At the university, you study one subject at a time, and may study that subject for as long a time as you wish. When you pass the examinations over the subject, you leave it for good and start studying another. If you do not pass the test over a subject the first time, it is not regarded as a failure but it is considered the test was taken to learn what kind of quiz is to be given."
He added that degrees are granted by grade points. For a bachelor of arts degree, six grade points in three different subjects are required. Re-requirements for the points vary in different subjects but when one studies a language eight thousand pages of literature, plus additional work, are required for two grade points.
"Every student attending a university must have a student-examen—a high school diploma—to study the sciences, law, or theology," he said. "However, if you want to continue in business, engineering, agriculture, or dentistry you must have superior grades. That is because the schools do not have enough room to care for all the students."
"Studies in Sweden as a rule are free; there are no fees," he said. "The government gives students who have high marks in high school state scholarships or loans money to them without charging interest."
Influenza vaccinations will be given in Watkins Memorial hospital for students who failed to take the shots last week. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of University Health service announced today that students may take the shots from 8 a.m. to noon and from 2 to 5 p.m. every day except Saturday when the service will be open only from 8 a.m. until noon.
Flu Shots Available At Watkins Hospital
More Directories Out Today
Student directories are being issued again today at the Student Union bookstore. Only numbered activity books will be honored. Student faculty members who possess numbered activity books should obtain their directories at the bookstore. Only one copy will be given to each person.
be given to candidates. Directories will be issued to faculty members through their respective departmental offices.
Housemothers of all organized houses may obtain complimentary copies of the directory by calling at the registrar's office.
Regents Approve New Budget
The Board of Regents, in a meeting Friday, approved operating appropriations of $4,048,500 for 1950, and $5.023,500 for 1951, for the University.
This budget shows an increase of $3,696,400 over the past biennial amount. This increase is due both to increased operating costs and the decline in veteran enrollments, Deane W. Malott, chancellor, said today.
The total budget for eight state supported schools was $24,223,487, as compared with $15,283,814 for the current biennium.
These figures do not include appropriations for buildings. The building fund budgets will be presented at the December meeting.
courtesy
The University of Kansas Medical center received $1,093,000 for 1950 and $1,162,500 for 1951. This is a $1,946,500 increase.
Other schools which share in the total appropriation are: Kansas State college, Manhattan; Colby Experiment station; Garden City experiment station; Emporia State Teachers college; Ft. Hays Experiment station; Tribune Experiment station; Ft. Hays State college; Pittsburg State Teachers college; School for the blind, Kansas City; School of the Deaf, Olathe; and the Kansas Vocational school, Topeka.
Reading Courses Help Study Habits
If you want to improve your reading habits, visit the reading laboratory in the basement of Fraser hall, rooms 16 and 18.
The laboratory is open to all students from 3 to 5 p.m., Mondays through Fridays.
'New Look' Hits China Says Architect Comparing Campus Life Here And There
The New Look has hit the Orient too. Chung-Chi Yeh, graduate student in architecture, says the Chinese woman is wearing her "chee pah" much longer since the war. He observed that some of the college girls wear sweaters and skirts now.
Chung-Chi, nicknamed George by his Lawrence landlord, taught at Chungkun University and had his own business in that city in 1946-47 before he came to K.U. for advanced study. He designed the Chungkun library, a small high school, and several residences and shop fronts. After his graduation from National Central university in Nanking in 1542 he worked for the Chinese Architecture institute in Peking. From 1943-6 he was Chief of the Division of Design in the Ministry of the Interior.
Next fall George will study in London with Maxwell Fry, English architect. After a year he will return to Chungking. Now on leave
from the University, he must teach one year before devoting himself to his own business again.
The smiling bachelor is a member of the K.U. chapter of Scarab, national honorary architecture fraternity, and International club. He was chief cook for the Chinese dinner the club sponsored recently.
George has lived in cities all his life so American conveniences are not new to him. He finds the activity of Americans much different from the passive Chinese habits. "I like the go-ahead spirit you have and the way you don't worry" he laughed.
Asked to compare the school systems, George mentioned that the same textbooks are used in both countries. All Chinese are taught English in grammar school. Fewer women attend the universities but of those who do, the majority major in education, literature or medicine
Carr Succeeds Davis As Big 7 Faculty Advisor
Dean T. DeWitt Carr, of the School of Engineering has been appointed faculty representative of the University in the Big Seven conference, Chancellor Deane W. Malott announced today.
He succeeds Prof. W. W. Davis, chairman of the department of history, who has resigned effective Dec. 1, after having held the post for more than 20 years.
In announcing the change, Chancellor Malott said: "The University will always be grateful to Professor Davis for the long and faithful service he has rendered to the University's athletic program. He has stood for a high standard of administration of athletics and for unswerving integrity in dealing with all elements of our athletic program. Professor Davis has frequently asked to be relieved of his athletic responsibility, but I have urged him repeatedly to remain. He is now, however, approaching the retirement age for administrative activities, and I have no choice but to acquiesce in his desires."
U.S. NAVY
DEAN CARR
Last summer, Professor Davis led the Universities against the Big Seven ruling which declared five of KU. Varsity athletes ineligible. To do this, he had to give up the major part of his summer vacation.
Commenting on the appointment of Dean Carr, Chancellor Malott said: "The presence of Dean Carr as faculty advisor will assure a continuation of careful attention to our athletics into the life of the University. We are happy indeed he is undertaking the assignment as Professor Davis' successor."
As executive officer at the Great Lakes Naval Training station during the early years of the war, Dean Carr was in charge of a widespread sports program. In other navy commands, Dean Carr frequently was in charge of athletic activities.
Will Study Atoms With New Machine
The electrostatic generator being built at the University is one of the world's 224 known accelerators, and one of two between here and the Pacific coast.
Accelerators are the machines and atomic piles for study of the atom's structure. The one being built here will have 2,500,000 electron volts.
Other accelerators in this area are at Washington university, St. Louis,
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1948
This One Will Tickle Your Tonsils-At Least!
THE MUSICIAN
HAM - KAWANO COUNTY, MAY 1946
A. W.
University Daily Kansan
Appreciation of art adds quality to a person's life. Miss Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of education, said recently at the Art Education club. She explained that the purpose of art education was not primarily to train artists to enter the commercial field, but to give everyone a keener understanding of the beauty that surrounds them.
'Art Appreciation Gives Life Quality'
Most people have a talent for art, but few people exercise it to the point where they can fully enjoy it, she said. She pointed out that the merchant who uses art in displaying his wares will have the most successful business."
Another fact emphasized in the discussion was that art has a therapeutic value. Psychologists know that art can play an important part in relaxing the tensions of our modern life. "The individual integrates a part of himself into his art," ans Elsworth explained.
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Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, University year level and a semester year extent Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class for Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
A man of varied talents is Eldon Teft, fine arts senior, who is interested in sculpture, and lists sword-swallowing and fire-eating among his abilities.
Tefft, who lives at 1333 Connecticut street, is a war veteran of the Southwest Pacific, and probably ranks as the foremost sword-swallower at the University. He has swallowed a sword with a 17-inch blade, and has X-ray photographs to prove it.
He became interested in this rare art when a carnival came to Lawrence more than two years ago. After watching the performers he went home and before long became an expert at both sword-swallowing and fire-eating. His own mark of 17 inches is about 10 inches short of the record. Tefft says that you can swallow only the distance between your mouth and stomach.
Tefft is a quiet, unassuming young man who talks very little about himself. Interested in sculpture, he started last summer in an attempt to re-establish the lost art of bronze casting. He has discontinued the work for this fall, but plans to start anew in the spring.
The process, practice by the ancient Greeks and later resurrected by Benvenuto Cellini, famous 16th century sculptor, has become a trade secret practiced in only a few foundries over the world.
The process can be carried out in a foundry, but the high costs of this hollow bronze casting have kept it from being established as an art. The
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process is simple. A hollow wax pattern is prepared, and after plaster is poured on the inside and outside, the wax is melted out and bronze is poured into the model.
Tefft, who spent months of research at Tulsa university on the subject after returning from the army, believes the art has suffered through neglect and should be re-established.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Socially Speaking
Lambda Chi Alpha Costume Party
Lambda Chi Alpha Costume Party
Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity held a Halloween costume party October 29.
Guests were: Sally Sue Woodward, Mary Ann Sawyer, Joan Raney, Mary Jo Vershoyle, Claire Grothusen, Barbara Bell, Jean Pearson, Mary Joe Breidenbach, Dorothy Poindexter, Dolores Flasco, Kathryn Showalter, Marilyn Frizzell, Mary Ann Wolf, Dolores Dean
Zenith Barbara Nash, Jeanette Steiner,
Anna May Van Nortwick, Ellen
Charles, Grace Gwinner, Joy D.
Springer, Mary Lee Dawkins, Barbara
Bruflat, Ida Mae Woodburn,
Virginia Johnston, Patricia Grinnell,
Ada Hatfield, Evelyn D. Ykes,
Evelyn Wulfekuhler, Jo Ann Bousman.
Evelyn Joyce Friesen, Martha Carpenter, Jacqueline Brown, Margaret Moyer, Mary Flo Spillman, Mr. and Mrs. John H. Long, Judge and Mrs. Robert Pennington, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Fanestil, Mr. and Mrs. James Fuller, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Parsons, Mr. and Mrs. Robert McMahan.
Chaperones were Mrs. Gertrude Stuart. Mrs. O. L. Horner and Mrs W. S. Shaw.
The Kappa Psi Costume Party
Phi Kappa Fsi fraternity helps their annual fall costume party at the chapter house October 29. Guests were: Ruth Mullhear, Manhattan, Ann Simms, Donna Swartz, and Barbara Kasmeir, Kansas City, Kan, Phyllis Sears, Kansas City, Mo., Fannie Leopulus, Hutchinson
Helen A. Bender, Gwen Gupton, Betty Berry, Emelie Trickett, Marianne Gear, Janice Monteith, Joan M. Bushey, Mary Louise McNerney, Mary Jo Myers, Jo Ann Compton, Marcia Race, Judith A. Buckley, Barbara Ackerman, Nancy Ruthrauff, Barbara A. O'Neil, Doris Lvons.
Barbara Ramsey, Jacqueline Kreider, Mary Wilkins, Betty Boling, Jeanne Parrott, Nancy Hoffner, Shirley Kyle, Letitia Laming, Marilyn Sweet, Marjorie Stark, Marcella Driscoll, Nancy Goering, Marilyn Spruill, Margrette Lizie, Marilyn Swenson, Ann Ackerman, Jane Cunningham, Tishie Engle.
Patricia Brubaker, Patricia Ames,
Patricia Foncannon, Wade Wadsworth,
Laurie Birmingham, Mary E. Shartel, Carolyn Weigand, Judith Hall, Ann Hogue, Margaret Quigley, Margaret Hershberger, Eleanor Howell, Elaine Elvig, Patricia Perkins, Nancy Matteson, Joyce Newcomer.
Huanggrant
Saperiones were Mesdames, Edin
Ramage, J. A. Hooke, Christine
Akord, and Frank McCrearey.
Harman Co-op Halloween party
The members of Harman Co-op entertained at a Halloween party October 29. A special feature of the party was Baaqer Shirazi, engineering sophomore from Bombay, who read palms for the guests.
Guests were: Julian Been, Laverne McMillan, Carroll Sibe, Max Wilbur, Curtis Harris, Virgil Krutsinger, Howard H. Hobrock, Ronald Yomans, Leigh Wellborn. Fred L. Cooper, Warren G. Smith, Thomas B. Herring, Marvin Kinsey, Harold Shigley, Jack Lungstrum, David Wilkie, Ralph Mitchell.
The chaperons were Mr. and Mrs. Talbert Heibert and Miss Portteus Latimer, housemother.
Sigma Phi Epsilon Pledges
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity announces the pledging of Melvin E. Larson, Topeka.
Alpha Alpha class of Sigma Alpha
Epsilon fraternity entertained the
Chi Omega sorority pledge class at
dinner Wednesday.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon Entertainme
The Housemothers association will meet at 2:30 p.m. today at Templin hall. All members are asked to bring two new garments for a collection which will be given to needy persons of the community.
Housemothers Meet Today
Cover. Girls Must Have Brains Besides Grace And Beauty
Mrs. Thomas J. Pearson will review "Shannon's Way" by A. A Cronin.
Monchonsia Indian Summer Dance
Monchonsia hall held its annual Indian summer dance Nov. 6, Guests were: Patrick Sullivan, Dale Dunn, Gerald Boyd, Larry A. Murphy, Harry E. Robson, Eugene Tinberg, Jack E. Dauman, Ted Joyce, John A. Jacques, Melvin H. Keith, Mary L. Parman.
John E. Hickox, Robert E. Herriott, Jack L. Robinson, Ralph A. Zingaro, William V. Trekell, Warren Shaw, Royce D. Norburg, Leslie Fleming, Pete North, and Bill Mills.
Kanna Eta Kanna Halloween Party
Kappa Eta Kappa Kappa
Guests at the Kappa Eta Kappa Kappa
Guests at the Kappa Eta Kappa Kappa
Oct 29 were: Mary Jo Fullbright, Anita Phillip, Lavina Harkman, Dorothy Elaine Englund, Jane Hyele, Iris Van Wormer, Jean Black, Caralou Sheets, Martha Albers, Marian Cox, Esther McKinney, Sheila Wilder.
Areta Hemphill, Frances Jean Francisco, Barbara Smith, Verla Steffey, Rosemary Rospaw and Mesdames Lawrence Allred, Glenn Ford-bam, Dale Rummer, and Bertram Miller, Jr.
***
Pledge Class Holds Steak Fry
Pledge Class Holds Steak Fry
The pledge class of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity entertained the pledge class of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority with a steak fry at Lone Star lake November 7. Entertainment was provided by John A. Moorhead.
KU Will Be Ready When Winter Comes
When freezing weather comes the University will be ready for it, C. G. Bayles, superintendent of buildings and grounds, said today.
He explained that the work on the library additions and Fowler shops will all be enclosed soon. Storm doors have been installed where they are needed.
The University power plant does not expect a shortage of fuel, although shortages have occurred the last two years, Mr. Bayles said.
Gl Readjustment Allowance Will Expire July 25, 1949
The readjustment allowance for unemployed and self-employed veterans will expire July 25, 1949. Sherwin L. Derby, contract representative of the Veterans administration, said today.
Veterans who were discharged prior to July 25, 1947 must make all such claims before the expiration date, he said. Veterans discharged after the 1947 date will have two years after their discharge.
Charles Bayne, member of the State geological survey stationed in Winfield, has been in Lawrence this week conferring with officials in the survey's ground water division. He will be in Chase county doing geological work soon.
Winfield Geologist Here
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New York — (UP) — Mrs. Eileen Ford, who operates a $250,000-a-year model agency, said a successful cover girl must have "ego satisfaction." She also needs "individuality analysis" and "quality control."
"A girl has to have more than grace and photogenic beauty to be a top-notch model these days," Mrs. Ford said. "I have 34 of the best models in New York and they earn an average of $10,000 a year each. Many of them make as high as $25,000."
That's where Mrs. Ford comes in. Only 23 and pretty enough to be a model herself, Mrs. Ford said she was well trained in psychology while attending Barnard college.
"when I started the agency," she said, "I was quick to learn that models who ruined costly poses did so mainly because of their mental attitudes."
She said she immediately put a stop to the undy ad and leg art business.
"I insisted on stimulating 'quality control' by elevating modeling to a profession of which any model's mother would be proud," she said. "Ego satisfaction, I found, was just as important and I gave every effort to building up the confidence of our girls. We give them every attention and try to keep their minds free from worry."
Mrs. Ford said she uses psychology on her customers, too. "I have long talks with them on the telephone," she said, "and I try to analyze their moods. If the client is upset and disgruntled about something, it's easy to detect it. The problem then is, to send him a girl who is chic and refreshing. A blonde, perhaps, tall and slender, with a sympathetic smile."
German Students To Give Xmas Play
She said she rarely failed to send her clients the type of beauty they wanted—"consciously or sub-consciously."
Her formula, she said, brought her a booming business. "I have eight phones and take 200 calls a day," she said. "They're driving me mad."
A Weihnachtsspeil. (Christmas play) will be given by the German club in December. Twelve members of the club will take part in the program.
Off The Record' Is Confusing, Mystery Workmen More Amusing
Students To Be Interviewed For Work In Venezuela
Single geological or accounting students who wish to work in Venezuela may be interviewed by two representatives of the Standard Oil company of New Jersey today. The interviews will be held at 214 Frank Strong hall in the morning and at 111 Marvin hall in the afternoon.
Students in the Reporting II class were patiently listening to an explanation of "on the record and off the record."
Practice for the play will start early next month and continue for four weeks. Prof. J. A. Burzle, chairman of the German department, and other members of the faculty, will direct the play.
The representatives will give information concerning overseas employment.
Weddings And Engagements
planation of 'on the record and on the screen'
About 15 minutes after the class started, the door to the classroom quietly opened and a man clad in overalls and carrying a monkey wrench marched silently and majestically across the room. The class and the instructor stared.
Reaching the far side of the room, the man moved aside an old victrola, opened a door, and disappeared into the wall. Class resumed. Five minutes later, the performance was repeated by another overalled gentleman.
Approximately ten minutes later, the door on the far side of the room quietly opened and the first man carefully walked around the desk and disappeared into the hall. Five minutes later the performance was repeated by the second man.
The Reporting II class still doesn't have a very clear idea of "on the record and off the record."
Shidler-Strange Engagement
Mrs. F. C. Shidler, Carnegie, announces the approaching marriage of her daughter, Jessimar, Winchester, Kan., to Byron Gene Strange, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ira B. Strange, Winchester. The wedding will take place at 10 a.m. Saturday, November 20, at St. John the Evangelist church, Lawrence.
Following the ceremony a reception will be held at Watkins hall, where Miss Shidler has lived for the past two and a half years.
☆ ☆
Detter-Smith Engagement
The engagement of Marilyn Ruth Detter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Detter of Madison, to Warren G. Smith, son of Mr. A. C. Smith of Bakersfield, Calif., was announced Nov. 4 by Portteuse Latimer, housemother of Harmon Co-op.
Miss Vida Cummins and Miss Alita York passed chocolates. Both Miss Detter and Mr. Smith are College sophomores.
Sulzman-Hope Engagement
☆ ☆
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Sulzman of McCook, Neb., announce the engagement of their daughter. Miss Dolores Sulzman, to Clifford R. Hope, Jr., son of Rep. and Mrs. Clifford R. Hope of Garden City, Kan., and Washington, D.C.
Miss Sulzman was graduated from the University in 1946 and for the past two years has been city editor of the Garden City Daily Telegram. Mr. Hope was graduated from Harvard in 1947, and is now attending Washburn Law School in Topeka.
'Phys Ed Training Improves You'
A challenge exists for persons entering the field of physical education to bring physical standards of the United States to a higher level, Dr. John W. Twente, professor of education, recently told 98 physical education majors and their guests at a banquet given by Sasnak, physical education club.
"Physical education can coordinate the actions of teachers, pupils, coaches, teams, and the community." Dr. Twente added.
Group singing between courses of the dinner was led by Ina Lee Crabtree, education senior and Nancy Moore, College sophomore.
Bill Sapp, education senior, sang "Give A Man A Horse He can Ride," and "Invictus." Piano accompaniment for the singing was by Mrs. Reginald R. Strait, wife of Reginald R. Strait, assistant professor of physical education.
Russell L. Schon, education senior; was toastmaster.
Ronald Albrights Have Son
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Albright, Sunnyside, announce the birth of a son, Dennis Alan, Nov. 11 at the Lawrence Memorial hospital. The baby weighed 7 pounds. Albright is a third year law student.
Baby Sets Example; Speaks 3 Languages
Carrolltown, Pa.—(UP)—Amelia Margaret Swidergol has qualified for linguistic distinction at the tender age of 28 months.
The curly-haired blonde daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Swidergol speaks English, Spanish and Slovak with equal facility.
In And Out, And Everywhere,
Except On The Dining Table
She uses Spanish in conversation with her mother, an Arizona native who wants to retain fluency in the language of her forbearers. The child's father talks to her in English. Her grandmother, Mrs. Fred Svidergol, taught her to speak and understand Slovak.
Cohues. N. Y.—(UP)—A pessant celebrated the end of the hunting season by visiting the home of Leo Desautels. The day after the season closed, the bird crashed through Desautels' dining window, took off for the parlor, and crashed out through another window.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY. NOVEMBER 15, 1948
KU Weathers Aggie Storm To Eke Out A 20-14 Victory
The Jayhawkers scored three times in the first half to stay in the Big Seven pennant race with a 20 to 14 victory over the Kansas State Wildcats. A record breaking crowd of more than 18,000 persons saw the game in Manhattan.
- fourth down pass to Cliff McDonald from the 26-yard
Dick Gilman's fourth down pass line gave the Jayawackers their winning margin. The initial half ended as the fleet Kansas back raced across the goal线 to end the Crimson and Blue scoring.
The game, played in perfect football weather, was Kansas' 12th consecutive conference tilt without a defeat while the Kansas State conference victory drought was extended to 21. The only mar on the Kansas record is the 13-13 tie with Oklahoma in 1947.
From the penalty standpoint the game was one of the clearest played by Big Seven teams this year. Each team was charged with three penalties for delaying the game and one for clipping while Kansas was charged with holding, clipping and backfld in motion.
Kansas had little trouble in the first half as the Jayhawkers pushed the hard fighting Wildcats all over the field. Kansas showed a power that seemed destined to equal that of the other top Big Seven teams against the hapless Aggies, but the tables were completely turned in the second half.
Coach Ralph Graham had his squad keyed to perfection. Never did the Kansas State spirit show the slightest sign of weakening. The play demonstrated by the Wildcats in the second half easily equaled that of any team that the Jayhawkers have met this year. Not once in the final half did the Staters allow the Jayhawkers to penetrate into scoring territory.
The team fielded by the Jaya hawkers after the intermission looked like an easy push over for any other member of the Big Seven. Had the Wildcats held them in the first half, the outcome of the game would have been far different.
Although the Cats wound up on the short end of the score, they scored five major moral victories. They scored for the first time against the Jayhawkers since 1944 when they sent the Jayhawkers home nursing an 18 to 14 defeat. They out-played them in nearly every department of the statistics except the scoring. They held Kansas scoreless for a full half. They made a highly touted Kansas team look like a bunch of athletic bums. The Wildcats also joined numerous other football teams and the Democrats in making the dopsters look like amateurs.
The game will undoubtedly serve one of two purposes for the Jayhawkers. Unless Coach Sikes can whip them into shape by Saturday, they will be a completely disparited team that will not stand a chance against the Sooners or they will be completely rejuvenated and down to earth after Saturday's showing.
If the Wildeats had played an identical game against Kansas earlier in the season, the other Big Seven teams would probably have found themselves facing a much
tougher team in Manhattan.
Another serious blow was dealt to the Jayhawkers when Carl Ellis had to be helped from the bail game. This put three of Kansas' key players on the injured list. With Ellis and Dick Monroe possibly sitting out the Oklahoma game along with Frank Pattie, Kansas hopes for a victory are very slim.
Gilman threw his 14th touchdown pass of the season to remain among the top passers of the nation. His first touchdown aerial of the game came in the second quarter when he connected with Darell Norris for 35 yards. His other was to Cliff McDonald in the last second of the second period.
Wee Dana Atkins' passes kept the Kansans constantly on their toes. Atkins passed for the second State touchdown in the closing minutes of the game as Leo Rons gathered in the 42-yard toss in the end zone.
Jerry Hackney was the key man in the Wildcat attack throughout the afternoon. It was his 96-yard gallop in the third period that added fire to the Wildcats and set them on their desperate fight against the Jaya-hawkers. He consistently ripped through the Kansas line for substantial gains in the second half.
Kansas strictly stayed on the ground the second half as Gilman threw only two passes, both falling incomplete. The reason for this could be that the Kansans felt secure with their 20 point halftime lead and were taking no chances for an interception being turned into a score against them. Of course the Wildcats can easily boast that the Kansas State team so completely controlled the ball that the Jayhawkers had no chance to pass.
It was one game where the fans can not say that the other team had all of the "lucky breaks." There just weren't any. Each team intercepted only one pass. No charges can be placed against the officials as being unfair as Kansas State was penalized only 12 yards while the Kansans were receiving only 35 yards. Each team recovered one opponent's fumble. There was a quick exchange when Kansas fumbled on the Wildcat 42 and Atkins lost the ball on the next play on the 39 to give Kansas possession of the ball again.
Kansas scored first in 9 minutes and 40 seconds of the opening of the game. It took the Jayhawkers only 11 plays to drive 3 yards to pay dirt. French took the ball on the first play from scrimmage through the line for 4 yards, but Griffith lost an equal amount on the following play. Gilman connected with Dick Bertuzzi for 14 yards. French then skirted right end for 6 yards and Gilman went off tackle for 3 as Griffith hit the line for 1 yard. Gilman and Darell Norris teamed up to complete a 12-yard aerial. Ber-
tuzzi then went around right end for 11 and through the line for 8 more, placing the ball on the 2. French went off tackle for 1 and Griffith went over for the score. Ken Sperry added the conversion.
On their next scoring drive the Jayhawkers marched 90 yards after finding themselves penalized to the Kansas 10. This time it took only seven plays. French went off left tackle for 8 yards and Griffith immediately followed for 10 more. Bertuzzi tried the same thing but made only a yard. French picked up 11 and McDonald added 12. Griffith then went off right tackle for 12 yards. Gilman then connected with Darell Norris for 35 yards and the touchdown. Ken Sperry added the point to put Kansas ahead 14-0.
The next touchdown was set up in the closing minutes of the half when Ken Sperry intercepted Atkins pass to give Kansas possession on the Kansas 20. Dick Gilman threw a perfect pass into the outstretched arms of Darrel Norris, who was finally brought down on the Wildcat 26 for a 54-yard gain. Three Gilman passes were broken up by a tight State defense. Then with the hand of the clock pointing at the one second mark, Gilman hit McDonald who streaked into the end zone for the score. The conversion was no good. With the Kansas scoring ended the Jayhawkers were in the lead 20-0.
Then the praise-worthy attack of the Wildcats exploded. Dolph Simons, who has been handling the扑urging choices of Frank Patee since his injury, punted to Estes on the State 3. After a penalty had moved the ball to the Wildcat 1, Hackney went off tackle for 3 yards. Hackney then burst straight through the Kansas defense for his 96-yard touchdowr sprint. Atkins converted for the extra point.
With the ball on their own 34, the Wildcats started a 66-yard drive. Hackney erashed through the Jayhawker line for five consecutive gains to move the ball to the Kansas 41. Koontz lost a yard. Atkins then hit Rons in the end zone for the 42-yard touchdown pass. Atkins again added the point to end the scoring.
SCORE BY PERIODS:
Kansas 7 13 0 0—20
Kansas State 0 0 7 7—14
SUMMARY: K.S. Nets
First downs 14 15
Nets yards rushing 264 161
Forward passes attempted 16 14
completed 11 6
yards gained on passes 112 158
returned 0 1
Intercepted 1 1
23 37
32 27.1
Total yards kicks
returned 33 49
Opponents failures recovered 1 1
Penalties 3 3
Yards lost by penalties 12 35
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Four women remain in the women's intramural badminton tournament. Those competing in the semifinals to be completed Nov. 13 are: Elsie Lemon, Alpha Omicron Pi, winner of Division I versus Ruth Henry, Delta Delta Delta, champion of Division II and Mary Helen Shepard, Corbin Hall, winner of Division III versus Joan Lippelmann of Locksley who was the winner of Division IV.
Although there are more than 2,000 known species of orchids, orchid hunters still brave tropical jungles in search of new types and color combinations.
American Unitarian Youth Outlined In Director's Talk
The American Unitarian Youth was outlined at a special forum-type discussion group of the UNiversity Unitarian Liberal club recently by Clifton G. Hoffman, director of youth education for the national group.
The talk followed a dinner held in Mr. Hoffman's honor in the Palm room of the Union.
The next regular meeting of the local group will be at 4 p.m. Sunday in the Pine room of the Union.
Mr. Hoffman described the organization of the Unitarian church, showing the relationship of the young people's unit to the church as a whole. He also explained the work of the college group at Antioch college.
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MYSTERY of the Cats
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THE
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EDUARDO CIANNELLI
ONSLOW STEVANS
JUNE VINCENT
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Beta, TKE, Phi Gam, ATO Win As Playoffs Begin
The Beta's, Teke's, Phi Gam's, and ATO's advanced in the quarter-finals for the fraternity intramural championship Nov. 12. All of the winning teams protected their records against defeats in some of the closest fought battles of the entire intramural football season at the University.
The undefeated Beta “A” team downed once beaten Sigma Chi 13 to 9 in a play-off game Friday. The Beta's, unscored on in five games, pushed across two touchdowns in the second period and then held their margin over a rallying Sigma Chi that drove the length of the field three times in the last half only to be stopped all three times by the Beta defense.
Sigma Chi opened the scoring in the first quarter with an eleven yard pass from Lee Vogel to "Odd" Williams which climaxed a sixty yard scoring drive. Ruell Reddoch kicked the extra point.
The Betas fought back to score on a fifty-five yard pass from Bob Swanzie that bounced off to score the finger tips of John Stites and two sigma Chi defenders into the arms of Beta end "Chuck" Spencer, who was lying on the ground in the end zone. Bill Jones kicked the extra point which tied the score 7 all.
Again in the second quarter a titally deflected pass was snared by Beta John Stites on the eleven yard line to set up the final Beta tally. Swanzle passed to Clair Gillin in the end zone for the touchdown. With the frantic last half effortsigma Chi's Dick Shea broke through the Beta line to tag Swanzle in the end zone for a safety and the final score.
Teke 21. Sig Ep's 7
The Teke's (5-0) won a division play-off, 21 to 7, over the Sig Ep's (4-1).
The Sig Ep's took an early lead, scoring on a long pass on the second play after the initial kick-off. Don Wright passed to Paul Fink who streaked 50 yards for the touchdown. The extra point was also added by Fink.
The Teke's bounced back to tie the score only five plays later on a pass from Press Wilson to Bob Grissom. The extra point was made on another pass play from Wilson to Walt Yoakum.
The only score in the half was made by Jim Silvius who intercepted a Sig Ep pass and made a 50-yard dash to pay territory. Wilson then faded back and completed another pass to Don Korris for the a point to bring the final score to 21 to 7.
In the second period Wilson connected another touchdown pass, this time to Don Korris, then added the extra point by completing one to Jim Silvius.
The Phi Gams (5-0) squeezed out a 7 to 0 win over Phi Psi (4-1). The Phi Gams barely edged the Phi Psi in an evenly matched battle for playoff honors. The fiercely contested battle was typical of these two teams who fought for the game right down to the final whistle.
ATO 12. Phi Kappa 6
Phi Gam 7. Phi Psi 0
ATO (5-0) ended Phi Kappa's (4-1) playoff hopes with a 12 to 6 victory. The ATO's displayed their offensive punch by taking a strong Kappa team which threatened throughout the game but lacked the offensive drive to upset the stronger more versatile foes.
Refined Or Unrefined
Halloween Is Halloween
Binghamton, N. Y.—(UP)—Pupils of the Henry W. Longfellow school here staged a pre-Halloween play, to point up the moral that Halloween pranks are unrefined and dangerous. When heartened parents left the school, 15 of them found the air gone from their automobile tires.
Louis May Fight Bivins In June
Cleveland, Nov. 15—(UP)—Heavyweight champion Joe Louis said today he would fight Jimmy Bivins in New York next June for the title if Bivens proves himself a worthy challenger in their six-round, no-decision exhibition here Wednesday night.
It had been indicated that Louis probably would take on the winner of the forthcoming Joe Baksi-Ezzard Charles bout as the logical challenger, but the champ said that was not necessarily so. He said the Baksi - Ezzard fight would not be an elimination contest and that one of the fighters he meets on his current exhibition tour might be regarded as a better contender.
Louis said, "It's up to the people to decide who I'm gonna fight next June. If the people believe Bivins put up the best showing against me, then I'll fight him for the title."
Kansas Wins Big 7 Meet
The University's two-mile team broke their own record to win the two-mile race at Manhattan Nov. 13. Bob Karnes led the Jayhawkers to the wire as they set a new low of 19 points.
The previous record was set last year at Ames, Iowa by the Jayhawkers with "22 points.
Karnes ran the distance to *win* in 9:39.2 to finish ahead of Bill McGuire of Missouri and his teammate Harold Hinchee.
Placing behind Kansas were Oklahoma with 41; Iowa State 51; Colorado 60; Missouri 62; Nebraska, 100; and Kansas State, 107.
Individual finishers behind the first three were Gene Shaver, Iowa State; John Jacobs, Oklahoma; Dave Breidenthal, Kansas; Solcum, Oklahoma; George Fitzmorris, Colorado; Clif Abel, Kansas; and Bill Chronister, Missouri.
While the two-mile队 was winning at Manhattan, the University's freshman two-mile runners were declared the winners of the Big Seven telegraphic meet by Reaves Peters, executive secretary.
Herb Semper of KU, turned in the fastest time, a 9:46:2. He paced his mates to a total score of 15, low total winning. Missouri finished 2nd with 24 points; Nebraska followed with 65; Oklahoma, 67; Colorado, 69; and Iowa State, 79. Kansas State ran only one man and did not figure in the final results.
Seventy-six girls representing K.U. Ottawa and Washburn universities participated in the second annual Hockey Playday held since the war. Future plans include expansion of the event to include most of the schools which participated before the war, Marilyn Smith, hockey manager said.
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Four games were played in the intra-mural fields. Baker university was also invited but was unable to attend. The scores were: K.U. (A) 6, Washburn (A) 0. K.U. (B) 1, Ottawa (B) 2. Washburn (A) 2, Ottawa (B) 0. K.U. (A) 2, Ottawa (A) 0.
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Pro Football Results
American league
Cleveland 14. San Francisco 7
New York 21. Brooklyn 7
National league
National league
Philadelphia 40, Boston 0
Los Angeles 52, New York 37
Washington 46, Detroit 21
Chicago Bears 7, Green Bay 6
Chicago Cards 24, Pittsburgh 7.
It's The Pass That Does It
New York, Nov. 15—(UP)—For several bone-crushing weeks now the college football boys have been footing for yardage until the pig-skin pitchout had become almost as extinct as Mayan slang or the nickel Havana. No more did each weekend produce a new "slinging" Sammy Baugh, a Sid Luckman or a Davey O'Brien.
But they did a swifter turnabout Saturday than a defeated politician and the old aerial offensive had become so unfamiliar that it turned the tide in any number of games. All we'll mention is a half dozen.
Slingin' Pandel Savic of Ohio State, who curve-balled two six pointers as the Buckeyes upset Illinois. 34 to 7.
Consider the fireball flinging of:
Singin' Arnold Galifaia of Army, who picked Army up by the seat of its battered britches and throw the touchdown with 30 seconds to play which kept Army undefeated, 26 to 20, against gallant Penn.
Pitching Bobby Gage, who pitched a pair of payoff passes to keep Clemson undefeated as it kayoed Wake Forest. 21 to 14.
Slingin' Jim Noonan of Harvard, tossed three T.D.'s to give Brown the D.T.'s by an unset 30 to 19 count.
Flipper Gil Johnson, who fired a aouchdown pass as the gun sounded ot give S.M.U. a 14 to 12 conquest of Arkansas.
Flippin' Charley Justice, flipped two and caught one just to relieve the monotony as North Carolina steam roller moved. 49 to 20.
To be perfectly fair about it, though, some of the backward lads who hadn't heard about this new, quick air mail brand of football got along very nicely by the obsolete method of slugging it out on the ground. Representing the infantry were:
Billy (That's Me) Bye of Minnesota, galloped for three touchdowns as the Golden Gophers beat Iowa, 28 to 21.
And those two unheraided substitutes, Bill Gay and Johnny Landry, whose running saved the day and Notre Dame as Gay carried it over for the last period touchdown which tamed the Northwestern Wildcat, 12 to 7.
Jimmy Joe Robinson, who ankle for two touchdowns—one on a 100-yard kickoff return—as Pitt upset Purdue. 20 to 13.
Rockingham, N. H.—(UP)—The tombstone of Josiah White, in a local graveyard, is inscribed with the information that when he died at the age of 96 he left 386 descendants.
He Had A Busy Life
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Sooners Favored To Burst Kansas Big Seven Bubble
Oklahoma was a top-heavy favorite today to pick up the marbles in the 1948 Big Seven football campaign at the expense of Kansas, despite the fact the Jayhawkers still were unbeaten in conference play.
By UNITED PRESS
The Oklahoma-Kansas meeting is set for Lawrence, Kansas, next Saturday. Anything but a clear-cut Oklahoma victory would be downright dumbfounding.
Missouri, with still a mathematical chance for at least a tie, is matched against Nebraska at Lincoln in the other conference game, while Kansas State is booked against Oklahoma $ \textcircled{6} $
Kansas, a four-touchdown favorite, deat K-State its 21st conference loss, and had to put down a Wildcats surge in the second half to turn the trick.
A. & M. at Stillwater, Okla., and Iowa State is slated to meet Arizona at Tucson, Ariz., in other games. Colorado, through for the year in Big Seven competition, will call it a season against Colorado A. & M., at Boulder. Nov. 25.
The quality of the victory left doubt around the circuit that Kansas will escape unscathed when it tangles with Oklahoma next Saturday and then takes on Missouri five days later in a Turkey Day special at Columbia.
Oklahoma added strength to its claim for the championship last Saturday by smothering Nebraska at Norman. Okla. 41 to 14.
A Kansas triumph over Oklahoma and a loss to Missouri would throw the race into a three-way tie, providing Missouri defeats Nebraska this week.
Missouri's 27 to 13 victory over Colorado was made possible only when a fourth-string halftail and a "B" team fullback, Ed Stephens
Again it was Jack Mitchell, Oklahoma's candidate for All-America quarterback honors, who set the terrific pace. Oklahoma cruised most of the way, rolling up 549 yards on the ground and in the air and accumulating 22 first downs.
While Oklahoma was teaching Nebraska the fundamentals, Kansas was sweating out a 20 to 14 victory over poor but surprising Kansas State.
and Bill Houston, fired the tea.0,
The result was four second-ball touchdowns. The game was Colorado's last in loop play and left the club with a 2-3 record for its first season in the Big Seven.
Iowa State's dismal exhibition against the powerful Spartans drew only 8,000 fans, the season's smallest turnout at Ames.
Michigan State completely outclassed Iowa State, 48 to 7, in the latter's non-conference stand at Ames, Iowa. It was Iowa State's fifth loss in nine games and left only Arizona on the Cyclone slate for the season.
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE
Okla. vs. Kansas at Lawrence.
Okla. vs. Okla. A, & M,
Sillhater.
Stillwater.
Missouri vs. Nebraska, at Lincoln.
Iowa State vs. Arizona at Tucson.
Colorado, open.
THE STANDINGS Conference Games
All Games
W. L. T. Pts. Op. Pet.
Kansas 12 40 42 10.00
Okla. 4 0 157 27 1.00
Missouri 3 1 0 132 68 .750
Colorado 2 3 0 97 98 .400
Nebraska 2 3 0 78 102 .400
Iowa State 2 4 0 73 128 .333
K. State 6 0 6 0 28 124
W. L. W. T. Pts. Op. Pct.
Kansas 7 1 0 185 68.75
Okla. 7 1 0 257 93.875
Missouri 6 2 0 254 175.75
I. State 4 5 0 109 183.444
Colorado 3 5 0 143 135.775
Nebraska 2 7 0 119 212.225
K. State 1 7 0 612 260.125
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1948
The Long, Long Trail
RUSSELL LONG
SENATE
HUEY LONG
DANIEL RISHOP
By Daniel Bishop, St. Louis Star-Times
Caution Needed
The Editorial Page-
Democratic spokesmen now are prediting that major social reforms will be carried out by the 81st Congress when it convenes early next year.
It seems certain that several changes in the nation's laws are just around the corner. The Taft-Hartley act probably is doomed, a form of socialized medicine may be enacted, and social security benefits will be broadened, according to Democratic officials. It is also reasonable to expect some changes in the taxing structure, with increasingly high corporation profit and income taxes.
Home district voters should caution their representatives and senators to view with disdain any radical swings to the left. A slight revision in the labor law probably should be made, but it is clearly evident that there should be some check on the workers. Labor has little respect for wealth and would like nothing better than to wedge itself into all-powerful shoes in dealings with management.
Perhaps the old congress went too far, but it would not be in the best interests of the country to do a complete about face. Nothing could be more disastrous in these days of uncertainty than to create a stalemate between labor and management. Thus, it is urged that the incoming lawmakers practice restraint in this and other forthcoming proposals. —Fred Kiewit.
- Letters To The Editor -
Theater Seats
Dear Editor:
From what I have heard, the production "Hamlet" given by the University players was very good. To my knowledge, however, there were at least ten persons, including myself, who were unable to attend because seating was not available.
If I am forced to pay for a seat to these productions, it seems only fair that seats should be available.
Name withheld by request.
Editor's Note: Allen Crafton, professor of speech, who is in charge of University productions has pointed out that tickets for Hamlet were on sale five days before opening night and that approximately 170 seats were vacant at this performance. A few seats
Mr. Crafton said he regretted that anyone was unable to see a performance but added that in the past, attendance had not justified more than four nights.
were vacant the second night but the other two nights were sold out.
(The amount added to the cost of the activity book for dramatics is approximately 32 cents which entitles the holder to presentations.)
A Correction
Dear Editor:
9? If so, the following corrections are in order:
"We plan to put on five or six performances when attendance is sufficient," he said.
1. No statement was made to the effect that the "Pro-Republican results in public opinion polls can be pinned on several causes." I did not pretend to know the answer but did discuss the functioning of several factors that are known to distort poll results in the direction indicated.
May I have the opportunity of clarifying a "news" article entitled "Tells Why Polls Failed" that appeared in the Daily Kansan Nov.
2. It was not stated that presidential polls, i.e., Roper, Gallup, and Crossley, are now conducted by mail. Earlier mail surveys were demonstrated to be very inadequate and the majority of survey organizations have discarded the approach. Mention was made, however, of Dr. Whan's mail survey on the repeal question to demonstrate the errors involved.
3 The statement that "the polls of the recent election were taken almost two months prior to the election" is also reported incorrectly. Roper did conduct his only survey about two months before the election. However, Crossley and Gallup continued polling until immediately before the election.
4 It is not true, nor was it stated in class, that the "Pollsters wrongly assumed that political opinions do not change once the mind is made up."
Inidentally, was this "news" story turned in as an assignment for a reporting class or for a class in creative writing? If it is presumed to be "reporting" is it too much to expect that these articles might be checked for accuracy?
The remainder of the article appears to be accurate.
Anthony Smith,
Assistant Professor,
Psychology
We Got More Than Gold As Result Of Seward's Folly
New York—(UP)—Alaska, which the United States bought from Russia "for a song," promises to give scientists the answers to many mysteries of the early American man.
Read the Want Ads daily.
The most recent find has been reported by Dr. Henry B. Collins, Jr., archeologist of the Smithsonian Institution, who reported the excavation
of a prehistoric, partly subterranean Eskimo village along with evidence of two ancient cultures.
The village, according to Dr. Collins, consisted of one-room houses with walls of stone and whale bones, and with whale bone roofs. The dwellings, he said, were erected in excavations two to three feet deep in the permanently frozen soil, with the roofs above the surface. The scientists entered the dwellings through underground passageways. They surmise that through the long Arctic winter the ancient inhabitants must have lived buried under the drifting snow.
The evidence of ancient cultures—or artifacts—were arrow points, harpoon heads, skin scrapers, and other instruments made of stone, ivory, bone, and antlers.
Dr. Collins said that by far the greatest number of finds were large, somewhat crudely fashioned implements which are characteristic of the so-called "Thule" culture, the prehistoric Eskimo culture ancestral to the modern in much of Greenland, the Canadian Arctic, and Alaska.
The Thule culture is believed to have originated in Alaska and to have spread eastward along the Arctic coasts, probably about 800 years ago.
However, the Smithsonian scientists found other implements, mixed with the Thule artifacts, that apparently were made by the people who preceded the Thule people. Some of the implements may have been made by the earlier migrants from Siberia.
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-
vocacy Service, 425 Madison Ave.
New York City, NY
Editor-in-Chief ... Maurice C. Lungren
Managing Editor ... Hal D. Nelson
Asst Man. Editor ... Anne Burphy
Man. Editor ... Billy M. Davis
City Editor ... Robert Newman
Asst City Editor ... Nora Temple
City Editor ... James Lannes
Tel Editor ... Richard D. James
Asst Tel. Editor ... Larry Funk
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Robert D. Snair
Orchestra ... Owen D. Wynn
Asst Sports Editor ... Marvin L. Rowlands
Society Editor ... Rosemary Rospaw
Business Mgr... Bill Nelligan
Advertising g. Mgr... Don Tennant
Circulation Mgr... Ruth Clayton
Asst. Circ. Mgr... Dena Knuth
Classified Mgr... Don Waldron
Classic Mgr... Yvonne Cummins
Asst. Class. Mgr... William E. Beck
Natl. Adv. Mgr... Don Welch
Promotion Mgr... Charles O'Connor
Fire Lashes Farms More Than Cities
St. Paul, Minn.—(UP) If you are a farmer, fire is a greater potential danger for you than it is for your cousin in the crowded city.
At least, that is the story told by statistics at the University of Minnesota agricultural extension service here.
Only about one-fifth of the people in this country live on farms, yet fully one-third of the number killed each year by fire live on farms, the statistics show.
In 1947, 11,000 persons died by fire in the U.S. Of these, 3,500 were farm residents.
Monetarily, fire loss last year came to $700,000,000. Twelve per cent of the loss was on farms.
According to extension officials, the main reason for the higher toll on farms is the higher number of fire hazards to be found there than in cities. Farmers store larger quantities of gasoline and kerosene; improperly cured hay is another hazard not common to the city.
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Klondike,1908,Was Scene Of Blizzards And Dog-Sleds
In 1908 the Klondike was a country of game, wolves, dogsleds, blizzards, and adventures.
Albert Scott, genial, gray-haired janitor of the annexes behind Frank arrived mail by dogteam for two years in northwestern Canada that it was unsettled, frozen country early in th
Oklahoma-born Mr. Scott likes to tell about the dogs which were his only means of locomotion during the winter. A man with a good team in good weather could make about 25 miles in a 10-hour day, he estimated.
His favorite dog was his lead dog called Don. "Don was gray and brown and weighed about 95 pounds. He would do anything I asked him to do. Sometimes I would drop something on the trail. All I had to do was to unhitch Don and send him back over our path." Mr Scott said.
"The dogs up there don't forget," he asserted. "You've got to be good to them all the time or not at all, because they don't forgive. As long as you treat them right, they'll work hard for you."
Mr. Scott went to Alaska in 1908 as owner of a Seattle canning factory. They left in March. After sailing through Unimak Pass in the Aleutians their ship, the "Victoria," was ice-bound for 22 days. During that time the men camped on the ice around the boat.
At the end of that time a government cutter, the "Bear," dynamited the Victoria out and they proceeded to Port Moller on the Alak peninsula. While there Mr. Scott met a grizzled old-timer named Archie Barnard who persuaded him to stay over the winter to hunt.
"Those Kodikai bears are five foot high even when they they're standing on all four legs," Mr. Scott said. "They're brown with little silver tufts of fur on their shoulders like second lieutenants. Why, the hide of one animal will measure 18 feet from tip to tip after it's stretched."
After another winter of hunting, Mr. Scott moved on to Nome, then to Fairbanks, down the Yukon, and into Canada and the Klondike.
"You had to know the snow. You had to know how it would drift, how it would slide, and especially when it would slide." Mr. Scott had brought this knowledge with him from his
He applied for and obtained a job as a mail carrier from Dawson to Horse. The main thing needed in that is a knowledge of the snow, he said.
Organ Recital Given Sunday
By NORMA HUNSINGER
G. Criss Simpson, assistant professor of organ and theory, gave an organ recital Sunday afternoon in Hoch auditorium.
He presented a program of primarily classic music, including "O Man Bemoan Thy Grievous Sin" and "Prelude and Fugue in A Minor" by Bach, Frank's "Andantino in G Minor," and arrangement of "Allegro" from the "Sixth Violin Sonata" by Mozart, and two movements of Vierne's "Second Symphony." More modern numbers included J. Stuart Archer's "Caprice de Concert," and Dallier's "Stella Matutina."
Mr. Simpson has outstanding technical ability, especially in pedaling and fast, spectacular passages. The first part of the program was characterized by rather unsteady tempo, however, and the Bach prelude and fugue lacked the majesty and control associated with his organ music. The 'Vierne movements were better, and the difficult rhythms and cadenzas were handled impressively.
Mr. Simpson does not use particularly unusual combination of stops, and neither does he use a variety of stops just for effect.
So quote from a prepared re-
view signed H. R. H.
"Mr. Simpson (this is in recognition of his careful notes of sartorial elegance in his own reviews of other artists) wore a suit of grey flannel, neatly tailored, a white shirt, black dress oxfords, and a gorgeous red tie, a Tibetan design from the atelier of the Countess Mara of New York City."
experiences with Barnard.
The janitor recalled that he had to blacken his face around his eyes with burrt cork to protect himself from snow blindness.
Usually he took from three days to a week to make the run from Dawson to White Horse but one load of mail did not get through for four months.
A blizzard piled the snow so deep on one of his trips that the dogs couldn't go on. Mr. Scott headed for the nearest tall tree, pulled the sled against it and unhitched the dogs.
He strapped himself to the tree with a long belt to keep from being blown away. As each layer of snow came down he tramped it down and moved the dogs around making them do the same. Otherwise the snow would have covered them.
For 26 hours Mr. Scott moved about before the blizzard stopped. It was another 24 before scouts from Dawson came on foot to find him. By then the sled and mail were deeply buried and were not recovered until four months later when the snow melted.
Though he escaped from this experience without injury, he was not so fortunate on another. While hunting one day, he became so cold that he collapsed. Friends found him during the night but his legs were frozen to the knees. Mr. Scott refused to let them be amputated and now has normal use o fthem. He admits, however, that when a change in the weather is coming he can forecast it to his family three days ahead.
Wolves were common sights along his route, Mr. Scott said. Some carriers believed in letting them come close before shooting, but Mr. Scott said he could never "bring myself to look at it that way."
"When I saw a wolf I grabbed my carbine and took a shot at him. I missed sometimes but I always had time for another shot which I wouldn't have had if the wolf had been close."
Malott Gives Advice On Liguor At KU
Mr. Scott hopes to go back to the Klondike in 1950. He wants to show it to his sons. He also wants to see if the government still keeps cabins every five miles for travelers' protection. Especially he wants to see the roads. In 1910 the longest road in Alaska or the Klondike was one near Fairbanks which ran seven miles out of town, coming to a dead end.
The recent vote on the Kansas prohibition amendment has resulted in comment from Chancellor Deane W. Malott to all organized houses concerning University policy regarding liour.
In his letter, the chancellor said: "The use of liquor or its possession in any fraternity, sorority, dormitory, organized house, or approved rooming house is not and will not be permitted by the University under any circumstances."
The chancellor said that most of the local and national organizations have regulations against the use of liquor and that these regulations will continue to be enforced. He expressed a belief that students and the University "shall in the future as in the past work together to prevent misunderstanding and embarrassment in the social life of the University."
Official Bulletin
Nov. 15, 1948
Mathematical Colloquium of department of mathematics, 5 today, 203 Frank Strong, Dr. G. K. Overholtzer, "A Generalization of a Divisibility Property of Sums of Power"
Fencing club, 7.30 p.m. tomorrow,
Robinson gym, room 101.
Kansan Board, 4 today, 107 Journalism.
A.S.C. regular meeting, 7:15 p.m.
tomorrow, Fine room.
O. T. club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 332 Frank Strong. Affiliation students of last summer to speak.
YMCA representatives from fraternities, 4 p.m. tomorrow, 200 Frank Strong for short meeting.
S.A.M. senior seminar, 4 p.m.
Wednesday, Pine room, Union,
Speaker, K. Wade Bennett, John
Taylor's in Kansas City. Subject
"The Employer's Side of the Job-
Seeking Picture."
Square Dance club, 7:30 p.m Wednesday, Military Science building. Instruction for beginners.
Archery club, 4 to 6 Wednesday. Robinson Annex. inside.
Pre-Nursing club, 4 Wednesday,
Fraser dining hall. Speaker, Miss
Elizabeth Hutchinson, obstetrical
supervisor at K.U. Medical center.
S. A.M. field trip, Vendo in Kansas City. Leave Union 12:30 p.m Wednesday or Thursday.
All I.S.A. members signed for dance planning and decoration, 7 p.m. Wednesday, 222 Frank Strong. Plans for Christmas formal.
Alpha Chi Sigma, 7 p.m. tomorrow, Bailey Chem. lab.
Sunflower Students Use Thumbs To Help Beat High Cost Of Living
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
University students who live at Sunflower village have found a new use for their thumbs.
Of the 800 students who live at Sunflower, two or three hundred hike- hike to and from school. Estimations by students on the savings each week range from $2 to $4.
The greatest factor which started many students thumping rides is the lack of good bus transportation. At one time commuters busses made getting to and from Lawrence quite easy. Last fall the Santa Fe bus line petitioned for the right to take off as many busses as possible. Now only one early bus leaves each morning
For many of the students it goes too early, for others, too late. This results in a line of students waiting on the highway for rides. Motorists seldom pass without picking up a student or two, and all students who drive cars load up before leaving. Books under a person's arm serve as a ticket for the first obliging motorist.
Many enjoy the hitch-hiking because it affords them a chance to meet interesting people. Others enjoy it because they can go and come at the time they please, but most students enjoy it because that four bucks they save weekly will buy at current prices, 27 loaves of bread, 20 quarts of milk, or 8 pounds of hamburger.
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Copies of the booklet are free and may be obtained at the survey's office, 206 Lindley.
Primarily intended for use in the schools and by boy and girl scout organizations, the material also will be informing to those who are in doubt about the native rocks and minerals of Kansas.
Rocks And Minerals Described In Booklet
The booklet was written by Laura Lu Tolsted and Ada Swineford, members of the survey. The publication lists methods of identifying rocks and minerals and describes the locations where they may be found. A general description of the contributions of mountains, seas, volcanoes, and other natural phenomena is included.
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be delivered promptly. Ads may be sent during the business hour or by p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University office. Kansan Business office, Journals and Media, 4 p.m. the day before publication date.
For those who are curious about the various formations and distribution of rocks in Kansas, the State Geological Survey, has published an explanatory booklet entitled "Kansas Rocks and Minerals."
Phone KU 376
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five
day days days
25 words or less ... 35c 65c 90c
additional words ...1c 2c 3
FOR SALE
COLLECTION of Glen Miller records.
Over 40 records in record case. Will sell
for highest reasonable bid. Phone 2377J
16 and ask for Tex.
TWO TICKETS to KU.-K. U-State game Regular price, Call 2860M after 2 p.m.15 MASTER DELUXE Chevrolet Club Coupe, Radio, heater, new 1946 engine. 20.000 miles on new engine. This is a good clean automobile. Will sell reasonable.
A HOME that will fit the needs of a newly organized fraternity or sorority. Ideal location—all inquiries should call E. P. Wilson. 15
FOR SALE or trade: V8 Ford, clean. $175.
FOR SERVICE: Chevrolet with rebuilt motor. 1939
Plymouth, with rebuilt motor. Walt's
Cars; 739 North Fourth, North Laurel
France.
AMMUNITION. Fishing Tackle. Guns and
made in the U.S.A. made in the
Rutter's Shop. 1016 MACH. rfnf
BUSINESS SERVICE
CONTACT US for all airline information.
City ticket office. First National Bank, Miss Rose Giesman, Mgr., 8th and Mass. Phone 30-17
*TYPING DONE: Prompt attention to term papers. Accurate work. Call 18477 or bring to 645 Michigan after 6 p.m. **15 SPECIAL RATES:** Time, 44 weeks, $3.87. Life, 39 weeks, $3.90; Fortune, 9 months, only at you. Student Book-Time at 18
YPING DONE: Prompt work, reason-
accurate work, 1209 Ohio, or
Phone 1601
$5.00 FOR YOUR old battery on a new guaranteed Goodrich battery. Delivery and installation free. Phone 21, B. F. Goodrich Store, 923 Mass. 23
WHEN ALL PETS including dogs, birds,
fish, cats, pigeons, skunks, parrots,
squirrels, rats, mice, etc., go shopping
for an outfit they go to Grant's Pet Shop.
1218 Comm. St. Phone 418. Everything in
the pet field—their needs are
12-21
TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. Ask for Miss Helen. 12-21
EBERHART and Son, tailors. Finest samples made to measure, suits, topcoats, and overcoats. Alterations, repairing and leather work. 831½ Mass. 19
LOST
WILL THE person who picked up the light brown top coat in front of the Palm room Wednesday noon please call Charles Molina at 1555? 15
EXCHANGED flight jackets with somebody at Classics Club. Phone 2425J. 17 ONE GRAY-fur-lined coat with wool. 18 ONE generous reward. Call Brush Joseph.
PAIR OF GLASSES in green case. Re
POUR OF HILLE, Hille 1247, Ohio for reward P.
3338.
SLIDE RULE, K and E No. 962038, less case, somewhere in vicinity of Marvin, Friday. Finder please leave at Kansas office or call 1698R after 6 p.m. 15
BROWN SPORT Jacket in Bailey chemistry labs, Tuesday. Tableau inside reads "Herman the Tailor, Kansas City. Mo." Krimminger, 1654. If found, Reyard.
A PAIR of bifocals with transparent horn rimmed frame at stadium at Kansas-Oklahoma game $5.00 reward Kansan games intact. Contact Daily Kansan office.
MISCELLANEOUS
BRING YOUR party to the Skyline Dinner Club. Our "Hide-out" is ideal for groups of about 50. Phone 3339 for more information. 15
NEWMAN CLUB member who exchanged hats with me at dance last Friday please phone Weldon Scardino at Ph. 1555. 16 APPLICATIONS for the Lawrence Flying Club are still available so don't delay. Our plan actually saves you $115. Call 314, or come on to Ware Aircraft, Municipal Airport. 17
Read the Daily Kansan daily
WANTED
Enjoy Good Sight
Lawrence Optical Co.
1025 Mass.
TICKET to the Fred Waring show. Bill Richardson. Ph. 306W. 18
TO SHARE with anyone driving to Chicago, Michigan, or vicinity during Thanksgiving vacation. Call Phil Oren. after 6 p.m. phone. 2635W. 16
IDE TO New York or vicinity, on Nov.
9th. Call 2101.
CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE now. To take orders for fine imported linen hand- made dresses, please write Write Box 2461, Kansas City, Mo. 16 SMITH & WESSON .38 Special, preferably Victory model or model have you chosen. Berbert D. Hill, Jr. Gerl Del), Sunflower.
TRANSPORTATION
ROOM FOR 2 or 3 men students with one other in a large, well heated sun room. Bed with tub or shower. Phone 2880J. 1129 Vermont. 17
SLEEPING ROOM. single or double bed with camcorder. Call 709R. 17
ONE DOUBLE room and 1 single shared room. One block from the campus. Call 587R. 17
FOR RENT
WOULD LIKE a ride to Champaign, Ill.,
or anywhere else by Leaving Tuesday.
Thanksgiving holiday.
share expenses and driving. Call 7398
t 6:00 p.m.
TWO ROOM furnished apartment
bore of 523 Louisiana
LOVELY BASEMEN room in new home to two boys. Furnace piped into room; good ventilation, asphalt tile flooring, windows with metal shutters, several students with cars living nearby so transportation might be arranged. $3.50 a week per boy. Ph. 2151M. 18
TRANSPORTATION
LIKE RIDE to town City. Des Maines or vicinity Wednesday, 24th. Will share drinks and expenses. Call M. Leventhal, shine at 5:00 p.m. on any day by Tuesday.
Opera Star Slips, Stabs Leading Man
Pittsburgh. Nov. 12-(UP)-Operatic star Gladys Swarthout flavored her performance in Bizet's "Carmen" with a dash of realism at the Syria mosque last night by accidentally stabbing her Don Jose.
Miss Swarthout drew blood from the wrist of Raoul Jobin, who performed the male lead, as they struggled over possession of a dagger near the end of the wild third act. The metal knife flashed down on his wrist and missed an artery "by a fraction," an attending physician said.
The incident passed unnoticed to the audience, although the fourth and final act was delayed several minutes while Dr. Frank Bailey of West Penn hospital hurriedly dressed the wound. Three stitches were needed to close the gash after the performance.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Expert Radio Service
Expert Radio Service
Beaman's Radio
1200 N.Y.
AP
Visit our shop during CHILDREN'S BOOK WEEK
Nov.14 to 20
We have a fine lot of books for babies, young nieces and nephews, brothers and sisters.
You will be most welcome to come in and browse.
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. Phone 666
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE EIGHT
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1948
Chinese Reds Drive For Key Railroad City
Nanking, Nov. 15—(UP)—Chinese Communist forces stabbed within five miles of Suchow's main airfield today and smashed through to the center of Suhsien, key to Suchow's only rail link with the Nationalist capital of Nanking. Suchow is a major rail hub, loss o f which would open the way for a drive to Nanking.
The Nationalist government claimed a major victory in a tank-supported counter-attack in the Nienchuang area. 33 miles east of Sichow. But the Communist thrust into Suhisien threatened to isolate the government forces and expose them to attack from the rear.
All civil air flights to the airfield southeast of Suchow were suspended and air force officials conceded they were prepared to evacuate the field at a moment's notice. A smaller airfield north of Suchow still was operating, however.
Thus Suchow, 200 miles north of Nanking, appeared in greater peril than ever. Should the Communists encircle the city, they might rush on toward Nanking itself without waiting to complete the conquest of the gateway city.
A government communique admitted that the communists have broken through the outer defenses of Suhien, 45 miles south of Suchow on the Suchow-Nanking railway. Reliable sources said fighting was raging in Suhien's railway station and the town's plight was critical.
The National Defense ministry reported that two Nationalist army groups have hemmed in the Communists from two sides in the Nienchuang district east of Suchow.
In addition to tanks, the Nationalist government also was throwing its entire first-line air strength into the battle for Suchow. Bombaden B-17s, twin-engined mosquito fighter-bombers and P-51 Mustang fighters roared in and out of Nanking airfield on a round-the-clock basis for bombing and strafing attacks.
Reinforced government columns also were reported to have smashed three Communist columns near Tamiao, 10 miles east of Suchow on the railway to Nienchuang. A government spokesman said 4,000 Communists were killed or wounded and 3,000 captured.
It was believed the battle Nienchuang, 33 miles east of Suchow, has entered the decisive stage. Its fate may determine that of Suchow. Altogether, 400,000 Nationalist and Communist troops were locked in battle there.
Faculty Members Visit K-State
Five faculty members of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information attended the annual editor's conference at Kansas State college Nov 13.
They are Elmer F. Beth; professor; Emil L. Telfel and Walter Ewert; assistant professors; Charles G. Pearson, instructor; and T. C. Ryther, superintendent of the University Press.
The visitors to the conference inspected the television equipment and saw a television production at Kansas State. The television station, WOXBV, is the first in Kansas.
They were guests of Kansas State college at a luncheon in the journalism building. They were also guests of the college at the K-State-K.U. football game.
Girl Born To Gillispie's
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Gillispie
12A Sunnyside, are the parents of a daughter, born Nov. 12 in Falls City, Neb. Mr. Gillispie is a pharmacist at Watkins Memorial hospital and a graduate of the University
Apt Observation By Paper Boy
The carriers of the University Daily Kansan try heroically to deliver their armful of papers to the box in front of Watson library, in spite of the news-hungry student who claw papers from their arms en route.
A new carrier, evidently from the farm, stood back to survey the mad scramble for papers.
"Gawd, jest like sloppin' th' hawes," he said in awed tones.
England Hails Birth Of Prince
United Press Correspondent
London. Nov. 15—(UP)—Princess Elizabeth rested comfortably at Buckingham palace today after the birth of her first son, a prince who may some day be king, and all Britain threw off its austere reserve for a rousing celebration.
The prince, second in line to the British throne after his mother, arrived at 9:14 p.m. (3:14 p.m. C.S.T.) yesterday. Elizabeth, 22, was in labor less than two hours, and the delivery was understood to have been relatively easy.
A bulletin this morning from the palace, signed by two royal physicians who delivered the baby, said:
Her Royal Highness the Princess Elizabeth had some sleep during the night. Her condition and that of the infant prince is satisfactory."
Buckingham palace announced shortly after 1 p.m. today that the prince weighed 7 lbs., 6 ounces at birth. No mention of the baby's weight had been made in the first two bulletins, but newspaper reports had said the father, Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, first had been told his son weighed just over 8 pounds.
The royal physicians, Sir William Gilliatt and Sir John Weir, who stayed at the palace during the night, left directly after their morning bulletin was issued. Their departure was taken as a sign that they were eminently satisfied with the condition of both the princess and her son.
Several hundred persons gathered this morning before the palace where 10,000 massed last night when the birth was imminent and shouted their regard for the members of the royal family. Of Philip they roared in unison, "For he's a jolly good fellow."
The birth was celebrated from Land's end to John O'Groats with the pealing of church bells, while British ships in the seven seas cannonaded the respects of the royal fleet.
PETER C. MEYER
Jerry Osborne prepared to wipe off pie-faced M. Dale Arvey while I. L. Baird (left center) and Charles Smith show their ivories.
'Truth Or Consequences' Winner Throws Pie At Zoology Instructor
Jere Osborne, College junior, fulfilled a wish that many students have long had, the desire to throw a slushy cocoanut cream pie in the face of one of their instructors.
He was given this opportunity during the initiation of 34 new members into the Zoology club, Nov. 11. As winner of a "Truth or Consequences" game, he was given the chance to $ \dagger $
game, he was given the chance to toss a pie into the features of M. Dale Arvey, assistant instructor of zoology,
Shown in another part of this issue are the results. Mr. Arvey is the pie-covered individual at the left while Osborne is on the right. Standing in the background are Charles Smith, vice-president of the group, and Irwin L. Baird, graduate student. Baird and Smith are assistant instructors in zoology.
The purpose of the group is to promote better relations between members of the faculty and students, Smith said. The organization also has programs which bring out fine points of the science of zoology and provides a club for persons interested
Geologist Says US Getting Smaller; May Disappear-In 300,000 Years
New York—(UP)—A war department geologist said today that the United States is getting smaller by about 6,400 acres a year. Erosion along the 52,000 miles of the country's shorelines is causing the shrinkage.
Another geologist, Dr.C. W.Wolfe Boston university, offered a new theory on how mountains were
A little arithmetic, based on those figures, shows that if the erosion continues the United States theoretically would cease to exist in about 300,000 years. ◎
In some areas," he said, "the loss is general and excessive. For example, the Chesapeake Bay area, where entire islands have disappeared by erosion within the memory of man, and where the unprotected shores of both developed and agricultural land are now being lost at a rate as high as 15 feet per year."
The geologist, Dr. Martin A. Mason, of the war department's beach erosion board, however, made no such predictions. He made a plea at the 61st meeting of the Geological Society of America that something be done to stop the erosion.
The erosion over a period of record, he said, is causing "an average annual loss of land of the United States equivalent to about a one-foot strip out our entire 52,000 miles of shoreline, a loss in land area of approximately 6,400 acres per year."
n zoology.
formed. He admitted that many theories had been offered, but none proved to the satisfaction of "seasoned geologists."
"The high continent of Africa with its rift zone," he said, "may constitute the roof of a blister. The fact that the northern half of the Pacific is 3,500 feet deeper than the southern may be accounted for by the assumption of a complete blister collarse in the north."
Dr. Wolfe believes that enormous "blisters" on the face of the earth may have resulted in the formation of mountains. Such blisters, he said, may have been caused by heat phenomena in the earth, with big "bubbles" being formed. The blisters, he theorized, broke, leaving the mountains and mountain ranges.
There have been some theories advanced that the earth was once oar-shared, and that the top end broke off the earth to form the moon, leaving the Pacific basin.
The game, which Osborne won, was a part of the informal initiation of the new members. The new members were divided into groups with the winner of each group competing in the finals. All questions were on zoology. Also on the program was a movie on evolution.
Faculty Recital At 8 p.m. Today
Mrs. Janet Turk, pianist, and W.
Thomas Marrocco, violinist, will present a joint recital at 8 p.m.
today in Frank Strong auditorium.
Mrs. Turk is an instructor in piano and Mr. Marrocco is associate professor of violin.
Mrs. Turk is a graduate of the University, and received a master of music degree in 1940. She has done advanced study in piano under Ernest Hutchinson, and before coming to the University in 1946 was on the faculty of Mary Hardin Baylor and Lindenwood colleges.
Professor Marrocco also came to the University in 1946. He was graduated from the Royal Conservatory of Music in Naples in 1930, and received his master of music degree from the Eastman School of Music, Rochester, in 1940.
Darby Elected To Research Board
The recital is open to the public
Election of Harry Darby, Kansas City, Kansas indusrialist, engineer and financier, to the board of directors of the University of Kansas Research foundation was announced today by Chancellor Deane W. Malott.
The Kansas Citian takes the places of Ernest W. Reid of New York City, a chemist and vice president of the Corn Products Refining Co. Dr. Walter Cross of the Kansas City, Mo., testing laboratories will serve another two-year term on the board.
UN Suggests Peace Talks West Says No
RV UNITED PRESS
Top representatives of the United States, Britain and France decided today to meet tomorrow in Paris to discuss how best to reject the United Nation's appeal for a Big Four peace conference.
The U.N. appeal came from Herbert Evatt of Australia, president of the general assembly, and Trygve Lie. U.N. secretary-general. They urged the three Western powers to meet with Russia to try to work out a truce in the East-West cold war.
The United States and Britain want to reject the appeal. France is not so certain. And all three must consider world opinion, especially how any rejection would react on the small powers within the U.N. The British cabinet was meeting to discuss the problem today.
2
U. S. Secretary of State George C. Marshall, British Minister of State Hector McNeil and French Foreign Minister Robert Schuman will meet in the latter's office tomorrow to take the fateful decision.
The U.N. general assembly, meet time, ordered an immediate debate of the long-postponed question of Palestine. The 58-nation political committee will begin the debate later today, but neither the United States nor Britain is likely to speak until tomorrow.
Israel was expected to reject the order from Dr. Ralph Bunch, acting Palestine mediator, to give up the territory it won in the Negev area of southern Palestine to permit it to be turned into a demilitarized no man's land pending a final Palestine solution.
Athens: Liberal leader Themistocles Sofoulis agreed to serve again as premier after former Foreign Minister Constantin Tsaldari found himself unable to complete a new cabinet.
Operetta Cast To Be Picked
Gerald M. Carney, musical director of the guild, said that tryouts for the cast will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday, November 17, in Frank Strong auditorium.
The Gondoliers, Gilbert and Sulli-
van operetta, will be presented by the K.U. Operaetta Guild, February 8 to 11. in Fraser theater.
Tryouts for the chorus will be held from 4 to 5 p.m., Thursday, November 18, in studio 10, Hoch auditorium Students can pick up the operetta scores at the music education office, 35 Frank Strong hall. The results of the tryouts will be announced, Friday, November 19.
"The Gondoliers," a two-act musical comedy, has its setting in Vienna about 1750, and is a parody democracy, according to Mr. Carney.
The plot is based on a romantic search for the missing heir to the throne of a monarchy.
Don Dixon, assistant professor of speech is the stage director for the production.
"The Gondoliers" is unusual in that it has no lead parts, although there are 11 predominant characters, Mr. Carney said.
The K.U.器械馆 guild is sponsored by Phi Mu Alpha, men's music and Sigma Alpha Iota and Mu Phil Baptism sororities, women's music groups.
Organized last winter, the guild made its debut by presenting the first all-student operetta, "The Mickado," by Gilbert and Sullivan.
Mr. Carney said that "there is a place for light opera" on our campus. He believes there are many operetta fans among the students and Lawrence townspeople.
Harry Spencer, education senior is the student chairman of the guild.
Nichols Is Ill With Flu
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to the chancellor, was unable to attend work today. Mrs. Nichols said he was ill with influenza.
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Nov. 16, 1948
Lawrence, Kansas
STUDENT NEWS PAPER
Local Officers Ban Parlay Card Bets
As the result of a move made by the Douglas county attorney's office the past week, students may be forced to spend Friday nights studying textbooks instead of football parlay cards.
Robert B. Oyler, county attorney, said Monday he has received several complaints that parlay cards are being displayed in Lawrence, and that he
complaints that parlay cards are bem has asked Will Johns, sheriff, to "notify any persons who might be taking bets on parlay cards to discontinue or face prosecution."
Mr. Oyler said:
"The taking of bets on parlay cards is in violation of the law. If the practice is continued, there will be no further warning. We will issue warrants for arrest."
Some students surmised the complaint against the card was made by disgruntled bettors who had not "paid off" by one particular parlay ring.
Although the sheriff's office reported it knew of no parlay cards issued the past weekend, students said that while the cards were difficult to obtain, a few establishments "kept them under the counter instead of on it" as they had in the past. They said only two cards were out this weekend, whereas more than six had been available in the past.
past:
When asked about parlay cards, the proprietor of one establishment said:
Parlay cards? What parlay cards? Don't even mention that word in here. They're even going to arrest students if they find cards in their pockets."
Mr. Oyler said betting on the cards is against the law, but merely possessing them is not.
Blame Reds For Strikes
Paris, Nov. 16—(UP)—The French government decided today to air in parliamentary debate its detailed charges that the Communist information bureau (Coinform) has fomented and subsidized France's two-month series of labor conflicts. At the same time, the government introduced in parliament a series of tough measures cracking down on saboteurs, strike agitators, and black market profitteers.
market prize.
In a four-hour meeting just before parliament convened after its annual holiday, the cabinet of Premier Henri Queuille authorized Rules Moch, minister of the interior, to agree to debate right-wing questions asking details of his recent charges that international Communism supported the recent French strikes.
French strikes.
The debate was to begin today and was expected to last two or three days.
Whether Premier Queuille would seek a vote of confidence for his coalition government's handling the coal strike, which was smashed largely by use of security guards and troops, was uncertain.
the cabinet did not authorize the premier to seek such a vote of confidence, but government sources indicated he might do so if the debate becomes stormy.
Strong forces of police and mobile guards surrounded both the assembly and the council of the republic, the upper house of parliament, as they met, taking precautions against any possible demonstrations.
WEATHER
Kansas — Partly cloudy west, mostly cloudy east today. Occasional light drizzle with strong southerly winds extreme east this forenoon. Northerly winds 25 to 30 miles per hour over most of state by evening.
Men's Quartets Will Harmonize
Ten men's quartets have entered the barbershop quartet contest which will be held at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Fraser theater. The contest is sponsored by the Y.W.C.A.
The contestants will draw for the order of appearance on the program. The groups are as follows:
Beta Theta Pi; Wayne Atwood, Byron Bohl, Bob Dare, and Ralph Simmons. battenfelt hall; Fred Doornobos, Wallace Abbey, Darrell Brown, and Douglas Kent.
Delta Tau Dellia: Dave Deliae, Bob McDaniel, Four Bobs: Bob Dunwell, Bob Kite, Bob Casad and Bob Date, Judy J., Miller, Perry Prissach, Cloud Nichol, and J. D. Dressé
Phi Delta Theta; Marvin Martin, Dean Kaiser; David Lloyd, Keith Pi Kappa Alpha; Bob Flatt, Eric Eriksen, Jim Dray, and Jim Small. Kappa Sigma. Bob Swain, Bob Swain, Billy Sapp, and Woolley Keller.
Sigma Chi: Todd Seymour, Bob Dubo,
Bill Richardson, and Benny Kramprath;
Bobby Warblers: Tommy Lovitt, Loren
Tumbelson, Dewane and Dwight Optiq-
bee.
Ed Stolenwerck will be master of ceremonies. Oliver Hobbs, Corlett Cotton, and Gerald Carney will be the judges. First prize will be an engraved beer mug.
Intermission entertainment will be a song, "By the Sea," sung by Barbara Coats, Pat Foncannon, Marianne Gear, Betty Armstrong, Joyce Newcomer, and Janet Maloney.
Milt Commons is the stage manager and Mary Swanson will give the tonal pitch to the quartets who will not be accompanied by musical instruments.
Admission is 30 cents. Tickets may be obtained at the business office or at the Y.W.C.A. office in Henley house. Mabel Conderman is the ticket chairman. Other chairmen are Emily Stewart, publicity; and Betsy McCune, posters.
KU Debaters Win 19 Out Of 20
NOV. 15
The affirmative teams from the University included Charles Hoffhaus, College junior; Jim Gurley and Tom Payne, freshmen; Orville Swander, journalism junior.
Eight University debaters won 19 of 20 debates at a triangle tournament with Kansas State college and Wichita university at Manhattan Nov. 13.
National Officer Will Visit SAI
Dorothy According to Kim Giffin, director of debate, Miss Garland was judged the best speaker.
On the negative team were Lee Turner, College junior; Guy Goodwin, sophomore; Sally Garland and Dorothy Hilbert, freshmen.
Miss Christine Springston, national second vice-president of Sigma Alpha Iota, will visit the local chapter of the music fraternity for women, Friday and Saturday.
Miss Springston has charge of establishment of new fraternity chapters and serves on the national executive board. At present she is on the faculty at the University of Redlands and San Diego State college.
Banker Endows Medical School Research Fund
Establishment of the Dixon Fagerberg fund for medical research for the University School of Medicine was announced today by Chancellor Deane W. Malott.
The fund, a "living endowment," was set up with a substantial initial gift to the K.U. Endowment association. The amount was not disclosed. It is to be used for any current medical research selected by a board of which Dr. Franklin D. Murphy, dean of the School of Medicine, will be chairman.
Dixon Fagerberg, the donor, is a native of Olsburg, Kansas, in Pottawatonie county, where his father operated a store and was active in the implement and grain business. Mr. Fagerberg has lived in Prescott, Ariz., since 1902. For 20 years he was a food broker and a wholesale grocer for another decade. More recently he has been engaged in investment banking.
Mr. Fagerberg had no previous connections with K.U. other than a niece, Verne Wagner, now Mrs. Howard B Bratton of Waco, Texas, who was graduated in 1931. He wrote that through the Kansas City Star he had learned of the progress being made in the K.U. medical school and wished to help further it.
school and wish to "Mr. Fagerberg's gift is most valuable in several respects." Dean Murphy said. "First it is of sufficient size and can be used now to give material impetus to a research project. He did not confine us to use of interest on the principal, which in these days does not support much research.
"Mr. Fagerberg also has allowed freedom of action in selecting the problem to be benefited by his aid. Grants from public agencies, which currently support most of our research, are earmarked and their use restricted."
Dean Murphy expressed the hope others would follow Mr. Fagerberg's example. "An investment in medical research promises no dollar return, but no other investment can return so much in the alleviation of human suffering and prolonging of life. The challenge of medicine is too great to be met alone by public agencies. Gifts by individuals such as Mr. Fagerberg's, which can be used immediately, speed the day of relief for more human beings."
University alumni will be contacted by letter in the campaign to raise the final $50,000 for the World War II memorial. The decision was reached in a meeting held Nov. 11 by the memorial association.
Letters To Alumni Will Seek $50,000
A bell founder from the Netherlands will be interviewed soon by the carillon committee to make a decision on the bells.
decision on the bells.
Those present at the meeting were Hugo T. Wedell and J. Wayne McCoy, Topeka; Edward Tanner and Homer F. Neville, Kansas City, Mo.; Carl V. Rice, Kansas City, Kan.; C. B. Holmes, Alton Thomas, and Fred Ellsworth, Lawrence; and Chancellor Deane W. Malott.
Truman Gives Alumnus Medal
Dr. Robert D. Coghill, 21, recently received the president's medal from President Truman for his wartime work in promoting the production of penicillin. Dr. Coghill is director of research for the Abbott laboratories, Chicago.
Walkout Ban Dies; Propose New Plan
By BOB NEWMAN
Fraternity pledges may walkout again, but the sororities don't want to. Joe McCoskrie, president of the Inter-fraternity council, said this morning that the executive committee of the council and L. C. Woodruff, dean of men, had drawn up a set of rules governing the new walkouts.
This new walkout plan will be presented to the Inter-fraternity
Alexander Will Speak Tonight
William Hardy Alexander will give the second lecture of the Humanities series at 8 p.m. today in Fraser theater. "The Classics and Survival Values" is the subject of his lecture.
Dr. Alexander, a naturalized citizen from Canada, is president-elect of the American Philological association. He is a member of the Royal Society of Canada and became its president in 1945.
On June 30, 1948, he completed 49 years of teaching and was retired by the University of California as professor emeritus.
Dr. Alexander graduated with first class honors in Classics from the University of Toronto in 1899. He received his master of arts degree one year later and his doctor of philosophy degree seven years later from the University of California. In 1933 he received a doctor of laws degree from the University of Alberta.
He taught at the University of Western Ontario and the University of Alberta from 1906-1938, and was dean of the faculty of arts at the latter university from 1936-1938. He became a professor of Latin at the University of California in 1938 and was chairman of the department from 1942-1948.
During the first world war, he served as commandant of the officer's training corps, University of Alberta, for two and one-half years. In 1917 he was a delegate to Washington.
Wisconsin Surveys Enrollment Drop
Mrs. Mark Toroxal, dean of women, University of Wisconsin, is gathering data on the enrollment of women in American colleges. She will try to determine the cause of the decrease in the enrollment of women.
women.
While the trend over the country is for decreased enrollment in women students the University has an increase of 46. There were 2263 last year and there are 2309 this year. The increase in women is in both the undergraduate and graduate classes. There are 2134 undergraduate women this year as compared with 2101 last year and 178 graduates as compared with 162 last year. Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, could give no reason for the increase.
reason for the interest
The report by Mrs. Toroxal is expected to be completed some time in the spring.
The reports of the Washington office of education show there are 2,410,000 students in American colleges this year, 72,000 more than ever before. Only 1,122,000 of the total are veterans, 100,000 less than last year.
The increase in total enrollment this year was only 3 per cent while the increase last year was $12 \frac{1}{2} \%$ per cent.
$ ^{*} $ council, Monday, Nov. 22 for vote and will be published after that time.
"I feel sure," McCoskrie said, "that the regulations will be passed by the council since they have been approved by both the administration and representative fraternities."
On the other hand, the sororities have expressed a desire to leave things "just as they are."
Dean Woodruff expressed satisfaction with the new plan and added: "I'm pleased that the council is realizing its responsibilities in managing its own affairs in this connection."
Jane Ferrell, president of the Pan- hellenic council, said the new plan had been presented to a meeting of sorority presidents who in effect, said: "We don't want walkouts— leave it to the men."
"I feel, however, that the Interfraternity council has some very good ideas on the matter," she added.
Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, said the girls had expressed the same opinion to her. Miss Habein thinks walkouts should be banned, unless they are kept under strict control.
Walkouts originally were banned by the council Oct. 1 by order of the administration, following overexuberant antics by the pledges of several fraternities and sororities.
US Route 40 Being Fixed
The construction project is at a point on the Blackwater river in Saline county. The new route will eliminate a section of highway which often has been closed because of high water.
Western Kansas football fans who plan to drive to attend the Kansas-Oklahoma game here Saturday will find U.S. highway No. 40 closed because of construction, the highway department reported today.
All motor car and truck traffic has been detoured at the junction of highway 40 and Kansas highway No. 13, and also at the junction of U.S. highways Nos. 40 and 65.
Highway department spokesmen said the new road probably would not be opened until early next summer. The detour was put into effect Monday.
Sigma Nu Barn Damaged By Fire
Fire destroyed part of the roof on a barn at the Sigma Nu fraternity house shortly before noon today.
Members of the fraternity fought the blaze with buckets of water and gunny sacks until two fire engines arrived and put out the fire. The job was completed by 12:15 p.m. It was estimated that about 50 square feet of the roof was destroyed.
Although fires in themselves are usually pretty important, it was a fireman who stole the show today. One of the smoke-eaters stuck his head through a hole in the roof to survey the damage. Undoubtedly mistaking his red helmet as a rebirth of the fire, an alert comrade played the hose on his head.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1943
Official Bulletin
Nov. 16, 1948
Alpha Chi Sigma, 7 tonight, Bailey Chen, lab.
fternational Relations club,
monthly dinner meeting, 6:15
tonight, Kansas room, Union.
XMCA representatives from fraternities, 4 today. Frank Strong.
Regular A.S.C. meeting, 7:15 tonight, Pine room.
Fencing club, 7:30 tonight, Robin-
son Gym, room 101.
O. T. club, 7:30 tonight, 332 Frank Strong. Affiliation students of last summer, speakers.
S. A.M. senior seminar, 4 tomorrow, Pine room, Union. Speaker, K Wade Bennett, John Taylor's in Kansas City. "The Employer's Slide of the Job-Seeking Picture."
Square Dance club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Military Science building Instruction for beginners.
Archery club, 4 to 6 tomorrow Robinson Annex. Inside.
Pree-Nursing club, 4 tomorrow,
Fraser Dining hall. Miss Elizabeth
Hutchinson, obstetrical supervisor,
KU.F. Medical Center, guest speaker.
S. A.M. field trip, Vendo in Kansas City. Leave Union building, 12:30 p.m. Wednesday or Thursday
All LSA members signed for dance planning and decoration, 7 p.m. tomorrow, 222 Frank Strong, Plans for Christmas formal.
K U. Dames, 8 p.m. tomorrow, 101 Snow, W, W. Bracke, speaker.
Jay James. 5 p.m. tomorrow, East room, Union.
El Ateneo se reunira el jueves a las 7:30 in 113 Frank Strong. El Senior George Schanzer y los estudiantes de "Spanish 7" presentaran un programa riplatense.
General Semantics club. 7:45 p.m.
tomorrow, seminar room, Frank
Strong Annex F.
Christian Science organization
7:30 a.m. Thursday, Danbury abovel
Alpha Phi Omega, 7:30 p.m. tom-
recreation, Room 160, Union.
Christian Science organization,
7:30 p.m. Thursday, Danfort chapel.
Sigma Delta Chi, 5 p.m. tomorrow,
107 J. Attendance required.
The Women's Athletic association, Fun-fest, at 7:15 p.m., in the men's gymnasium.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News
Patton To Head USCC Meeting
Dr. John Patton, director of the Westminster foundation, will head the United Student Christian Council conference to be held at the University Monday, Dec. 27, to Saturday, Jan. 1, 1949. The Rev. Dale Turner, minister of the Plymouth Congregational church, and D. Ned Linegar, executive secretary of the University Y.M.C.A., are local advisers to the Rocky Mountain region recreation committee which is planning the program for the conference.
The theme of the conference is "World Churchmanship-1949."
Twenty-two hundred students and faculty members from colleges and universities in the United States will attend. Housing facilities are badly needed to house the delegates since the conference is possible only if the people of Lawrence make sufficient housing space available.
Hobart Hanson, director of institutes and conferences of University Extension, said that for every student housed, the homeowner will receive $5 at the close of the conference. The delegates will eat at the Union.
Organizations taking part in the conference will be the Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A. student volunteer movement, interspersely movement, Lutheran Student Association of America, and student work departments and movements of the Northern Baptist, Southern Baptist, Protestant Episcopal, Disciples of Christ, Presbyterian U. S., Congregational Christian Evangelical and Reformed, Methodist, and Evangelical United Brethren churches.
He Lost His Youthful Appeal
Hollywood—(UP)—Time marches on. Police are hunting a thief who stole former child star Jackie Coogan's $85 toupee.
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Ise To Address Sphinxmen
John Ise, professor of economics,
will speak to the Sphinxmen club,
pledge organization of the Alpha Phi
Alpha fraternity, at 8 o'clock tonight
at the fraternity house. His subject
will be "Our American Foreign Policies."
University Daily Kansan
CROSSOVER
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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Socially Speaking
Sigma Phi Epsilon Bowery Brawl
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity entertained Nov. 6 with its annual Bowyer Brawl costume party. The decorations featured an old time "bar" and a casino.
Prizes for the best costumes were awarded to Mary Ann Cruse and Lyle Woodring; Irene McConnell and D. L. Hart won prizes for winning the most "money" from the "gambling" devices. The floor show included the Bowery quartet, an impersonation of Al Jolson, and gay-nineties group singing; master of ceremonies was Zack Farha.
Chaparrons included Mrs. O. L. Horner, Mrs. Mary Younkman, Mrs. Mary Carby, Mrs. Virginia Brammer, and Mr. and Mrs. John Selig.
Alpha Phi Omega Dance
Alpha Phi Omega held its annual fall dance at the Castle Tea Room, Nov. 6th.
Guests were: Camille Colberg, Diane Johnson, Marjorie Hampton, Joann Webster, Rhoda Lucas, Dorothy Lear, Rowena Pile, Georganne Dee, Mary Lee Newton, Patricia Lung, Betty Robinson, Rachiel Parkes, Nancy Taggart, Dorothy Bready, Alla Beebe, Pat Onbland, Peggy Scott, Mr. and Mrs. Tal Hiebert, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Allred.
Chaperones were Mrs. Clark Mandigo, Mrs. Grace Collier, and Mr and Mrs. Carl Klaus.
Sigma Kappa Hour Dance
The pledge class of Sigma Kappa sorbidity entertained the pledges of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity with an hour dance Friday.
Hold Exchange Dinner
Hold Exchange
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and
Alpha Tau Omega fraternity held an
exchange dinner Wednesday.
Lambda Chi Alpha Entertains
Dean and Mrs. L. C. Woodruff were dinner guests of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity Thursday.
Thayer Museum Gets New Picture
An 18th century Venetian drawing has been given anonymously to Spooner-Thayer museum in memory of Miss Anna Sweeney.
Miss Sweeeny graduated from the University in 1906 and was an assistant professor of piano in the School of Fine Arts from 1908 until her retirement in 1930. She died on December 21, 1945.
The drawing is done in pen ink, and wash and is thought by Dr. John Maxon, director of the museum, to have been made by a follower of G. B. Pittoni, a famous artist of the 18th century. The subjects of the drawing are the Virgin Child and Saints Lawrence and Francis Xavier.
"The drawing is typical of 18th century Venetian draftsmanship and is probably a study for an altar piece." Dr. Maxon said. It is on display in the small south galley of the museum.
KU Dames Will Hear New Novels Review
The KU. Dames will meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday, in room 101 Snow hall. Mr. William Bracke, English instructor, will give sketches from some of the latest novels.
Hostesses for the evening will be Mrs. Gretta Watts, Mrs. Mary Calkin, and Watts. Madeline Chandler.
Newcomers Club Tea
Ine Newcomers club met Thursday in the English room of the Union building. Sixty-five members heard Mr. Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, discuss traditions of K.U.
Mrs. Gerald M. Carney sponsored the tea. Mrs. Harold L. Kipp and Mrs. Maurice Gross were co-chairmen for the tea.
★ ★ ★
Gamma Alpha Chi Rush Party
Gamma Alpha Chi, professional women's advertising fraternity is having a rush-party for women interested in advertising and commercial art. The reception will be 4 to 5:30 p.m. Wednesday at Templin ball.
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Weddings And Engagements
Spotts-Arnspiger Engagement
Alpha Chi Omega announces the pinning of Betty Spotts, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don Spotts, Ashland, to Richard C. Arnspiger, Wellington.
Miss Spotts wore an orchid corsage. Her attendants, Misses Jane Stanley, Edith Carey and Joan Vermillion received corsages of roses. Mrs. Frank MacCreary, housemother, wore white gardenias.
Mr. Armspiger, an engineering sophomore, is a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity. Miss Spotsis is a fine arts sophomore.
Katherman-Post Engagement
Kappa Alpha Theta announces the pinning of Mary Katherman, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. C. A. Katherman of Sioux City, Iowa, to Neal Post, son of Mr. and Mrs. Neal A. Post of Independence.
Miss Katherman's corsage was three orchids. Mrs. Christine Alford, housemother, and the attendants, Ann Warner and Patty Clardy received baby orchid corsages.
Miss Katherman is a senior in education. Mr. Post is an engineering junior and a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity.
Ross-Thiessen Pinning
Kappa Alpha Theta announces the pinning of Lorraine Ross, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ross of Wichita, to Patrick Thiessen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Thiessen of Hutchinson.
The pinning was announced by Carolyn Weigand. Attendants were Mary Jean Oliver and Marilyn Smith, Attendants and Mrs. Christine Alford, housemother, received blue and gold carnations. Miss Ross and her mother wore talisman roses.
Miss Ross is a college sophomore. Mr. Thiessen is a law student and a member of Sigma Chi fraternity.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1948
Aces Hi, Dine-A-Mite Win As IM Playoffs Continue
Aces Hi, Dine-A-Mite, Law School, and Dix club turned in victories in the quarter-final round of the independent "A" team intramural playoffs Monday.
Aces Hi and Dine-A-Mite Battenfeld hall and Don Henry were In the only 'B' game, the Phil Delt's won second place in their division to assure them a place in the playoffs.
Aces Hi and Dine-A-Mite remained undefeated for the season, but Battenfeld hall and Don Henry were knocked from the undefeated class. In the only 'B' game, the Phil Del's $
Dix Club 12. Battenfeld 6
The Dix Club (4-1) edged out Battenfeld hall (5-1), 12 to 6 in a hard fought game. Neither team could dent the scoring column in a rough first half, Jim Zimmerman sent the Dix Club ahead in the third quarter when he intercepted a pass in the flat and ran 35 yards for a touchdown. Battenfield struck back a few plays later as Roger Davis, on a deceptive play through center, broke into the clear and scampered 50 yards to tie the score. A fourth quarter 25-yard pass, George Medill to Frank Marchefski, gave Dix Club the victory.
Ai Hi 30 AK Pei 6.
Aces Hi (5-0) defeated Alpha Kappa Psi (4-2) by a 20 to 6 count. Bob Clark passed to Francis Followell in the first quarter for the first Aces Hi touchdown. In the third quarter, Lou De Luna intercepted a pass to set up the second tally, which was scored by Clark on a pass from Jim Williams. Clark, a lefthand, pitched to Harold Duke for the third T.D. Frank Galbraith booted two extra points for the winners. With 40 seconds remaining in the game Alpha Kappa Psi scored on a pass from Carl Campbell to Bob Faulkner. Law School 13 Don Henry 0
The Law School (4-1) defeated Don Henry (4-1) to 10. Jim McKay passed 10 yards to Charles Forsyth for the first touchdown. Bernie Nordling intercepted a pass and ran 30 yards for the second. McKay's pass to Hunsucker accounted for the extra point.
Dine-A-Mite 26, J.O.'s F.O.'s 6
Undefeated Dine-A-Mite (5-0) rolled over J.O.'s F.I. (4-2), 26 to 6 to establish themselves as one of the top independent teams. The J.O.'s F.I. took the lead in the first period with a pass from Don Luffel to John Gerety. The try for the extra point failed. Dine-A-Mite tied it up at half time as Bob Saaveed passed to John Reber for a second quarter touchdown. Saaveed added the extra point to put his team ahead. Jack Crahan connected with Reber to make it 13 to 6 after three quarters. Another Crahan to Reber pass, and a 10-yard run with an intercepted lateral pass by Joe Olenchalk racked up the last two scores. Saaveed converted the extra point. Phi Delt 6, Phi Gam 0
The Phi Delt 'B' (6-2) eked out a 6 to 0 win over the Phi Gam 'B' (5-3). Ed Marquis passed for the lone tally in the third quarter.
Read the Want Ads daily.
OU Denies Rumor Of Loop Change
Oklahoma City, Nov.16- (UP)— The rumor that the University of Oklahoma is looking for a spot in the Southwest conference got nowhere today with O.U. officials.
The story was that the O. U. board of regents had given Walter Kraft, faculty representative in the Big Seven conference, and Bud Wilkinson a go-ahead on dickering with the Southwest loom.
Kraft denied the rumor in Norman, and Wilkinson said he knew nothing about it.
Officials of the conference said the only schools that have applied for admission are Texas Tech and Hardin-Simmons.
CIC Crown To Hornets
By UNITED PRESS
With only one game left to play in the conference, the 1948 standings in the Kansas Central Intercollegiate conference were well established today.
The lucky squad that was sure of assuming the C-I-C crown come coronation day was Emporia State. The E-Staters cinched challenged title to the Kansas league crown last Thursday with a 72 to 0 rout of poor little St. Benedicts. It was Armistice day, and the Ravens were ready for an armistice.
In the only other loop go-round of last weekend, Southwestern college turned in a surprise 14 to 13 win over powerful Washburn University in the Kansas capital. That one dropped the Ichabods from a possible second place tie to a poor fourth.
In intersectional results, Fort Hays dropped one, 14 to 27, to New Mexico A & M at Las Cruces; the Pittsburg State Teachers dropped another to visiting Arkansas State Teachers. 12 to 16.
Emporia State and Pittsburg clash next Saturday in the only remaining conference game of the C-I-C at Pittsburg. The uncrowned champions were easy early favorites. Central Intercollege conference
reconhecitate conference Standings
Emporia State
Fort Hays
Southwestern
Washburn
Pitburg
St. Benedicts
W L T
4 0 0
3 1 1
3 2 0
2 2 1
1 3 0
0 5 0
"High Card Wins Me"!
PETER WESTON
You'll howl yourself hoarse when Macdonald Carey, who never gambles, plays Paulette . . .
winner take all!
San Francisco, Nov. 16—(UP) — Ignoring Oregon demands for a playoff game with California, Pacific Coast Conference Commissioner Victor O. Schmidt said today that a teleographic vote to select the Western Rose bowl representation would start immediately after Saturday's games.
The ballots will be cast by faculty representatives of the 10 schools in the P.C.C. who have until noon Monday to get their votes into the commissioner's office in Los Angeles, where they will be tabulated and announced.
Paulette Goddard in "HAZARD" with MACDONALD CAREY Plus
Meanwhile, University of Oregon officials pushed their request for a play-off with California to decide the P.C.C. championship in case the two clubs end up in a tie. The Webfoots have won six, lost none in the P.C.C. and end the season against Oregon State Saturday.
一
Oregon Asks Pacific Playoff For Rose Bowl
ARTIE SHAW MUSICAL AND NEWS
California has won five, lost none and finishes against Stanford. The Bears have the best over-all record, being undefeated in nine games this year and working on a stretch of 13 in a row. Oregon has lost only to powerful Michigan, 14 to 0.
JAYHAWKER Ends Tonite
Athletic Director Brutus Hamilton of California yesterday flatly rejected a suggestion from Leo Harris, Oregon Athletic department head, that the two teams engage in a playoff in Berkeley to decide the crown. Hamilton said California did not engage in post-season games.
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Bale Wins In Ping Pong
UNIVERSITY OF MADRID
Jack Bale upset Frank Bayless to win the singles championship of the University fall table tennis tournament in the Union Nov. 11. Bale took three out of four games.
"Lefty" Keeton and Bob Liem teamed up to win a close match from Harry Wampler and Lee Fettig for the doubles championship. Keeton and Liem lost the first tilt 17 to 21 but took the next three 21 to 19, 21 to 12, and 21 to 19.
Bale took the first finals game with several lucky net shots and consistent smashes. Throughout the match his serves to Bayless' backhand seemed to keep the number one seeded player on the defense. Bale's game scores were 21 to 15, 21 to 16, 10 to 21, and 21 to 13.
Keeton and Liem used smooth teamwork and more consistent smashes to down Wampler and Fettig in doubles play. Both the second and fourth games went the limit without decuing.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
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VARSITY 12,39c ENDS TONIGHT
Volleyball Crown To Locksley Hall
Locksley hall captured the championship of the volleyball tournament last night defeating Pi Eeta Phi 34 to 16.
IM Basketball Meeting
At the end of the first half the score was 17 to 10 with Pi Phi trailing by only seven points. During the second half Locksley's consistent spiking finally cracked the able Pi Phi defense.
All persons interested in entering a team in intramural basketball should attend a meeting at 4:15 p.m. Thursday, in 201, Robinson. Entry blanks will be passed out and all aspects of the intramural basketball will be discussed.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
SPOTLIGHT SPORTS
By OZZIE BARTELLI Daily Kansan Sports Editor
The easiest way to come up with acceptable answers for any football game is to wait until Monday morning. This being the case, the Tuesday quarterback should have better answers—he's had a long time in which to compile data and other's theories.
It would be folly to assume such a claim to "intelligence." The answer to any Saturday afternoon game is often too complicated to be resolved by second-guessing. Maybe the Jayhawkers were doing too much wool-gathering. But it could be that the Aggies were throwing caution to the winds since their conference string was being played out. Visions of up-setting a league leader and in-state rival started a wild four alarm blaze which no one cares to deny.
duty.
Kerry Hackney and Dana Atkins did everything "right." Given a few more minutes and they may have caused serious damage. It seems though, we are overlooking the noteworthy pass-snapping Darell Norris and Clif McDonald displayed, plus some fancy running by Dick Bertuzzi and the impressive first half marching made possible by a first-rate Kansas line.
However you choose to regard the K.U. showing, we must call to mind an important factor. It's been a long time since the Oklahoma A. and M. game. A team that's been without competition for two weeks naturally shows a little rust when the call to action comes.
By next Saturday, Sikes may be thanking the Wildcats for snapping his Jayhawkers back to reality. Surely the team will dispense with sleep-walking when it faces the formidable Sooner powerhouse.
If the State contest serves its real purpose it may result in a possible short-circuit for the Sooners. Nice dreaming. Such a K.U. win would be sweet frosting for anyone's cake.
Over Missouri way, things didn't look so bright either. Harry Narciassian is quite a potent opponent. But there were too many Braznells, Stephens' and Houstons in the Mizzout backfield.
the MZLZR arena.
Last paragraphs are often left to forecasting. Next Saturday's Sooner-Jayhawk contest being an advance look into the Big Seven Crown winner, we might as well make our choice now. Here it is. Citation at Santa Anita.
Drake To Salad Bowl; Nevada 'Maybe' In Hawaii
New York, Nov. 16—(UP)—Officials of minor football "Bowl" games, trying to get teams to sign on the dotted line, got two acceptances, two refusals, and one "maybe" today.
refusals, and one maybe The acceptances were from Illinois State Teachers College for the Corn bowl game at Bloomington, Ill., on Nov. 25, and from Drake for the Salad bowl game at Phoenix, Ariz., on New $ \textcircled{4} $
bow game at Phoenix, Ariz., on New Year's day. The "maybe" came from the University of Nevada for a post-season game in Hawaii, Dec. 17.
In the Corn bowl clash, Illinois State will meet Illinois Wesleyan, champion of the College conference of Illinois. J. W. Scott, spokesman for the game's promoters, said that Dr. C. P. Lantz, president of Illinois State, had accepted for that school.
scotch Coach Joe Sheeketski of Nevada said his team had received an offer to play the University of Hawaii at Honolulu.
"I cabled them back our terms immediately," said Sheeketski, "but I've heard nothing from them since. If they agree to the terms we gave, we'll be delighted to play."
A flat rejection of a bid came from Duluth, Minn., Junior college in response to an invitation to play in the Texas Rose bowl game at Tyler, Tex., on Thanksgiving day. The Minnesota school gave no reason for its
Golf, Tennis Finals Near
Three minor intramural sports are moving into their last week of play. Semi-finalists in golf and horseshoes have been decided with tennis not far behind.
James E. Sallee, Phi Gamma Delta, and Cliff Currier, Alpha Tau Omega, will meet in the first bracket of the golf division with Dave B. Dennis, Alpha Tau Omega, and Clyde G. Layton facing each other in the lower bracket. Winners of the two matches will be paired in the finals.
Bernard Beatty, Alpha Phi Alpha,
has a bye in the upper bracket of
the horseshoe division and so will
automatically become a finalist. He
will oppose the winner of the Fred
Shelton, Beta Theta Pi-Claude Mason.
Alpha Tau Omega, match.
Two semi-finalists have been decided in tennis. John S. Ransom, Phi Gamma Delta, will oppose Charles T. Crawford, also a Phi Gamma Delta, in the first bracket. The lower bracket is still in the quarter-final stage. Fred Shelton, Jess W. Van Ert, Phi Gamma Delta, Robert G. Swartzell, independent, and Mason are those still in.
declination, but was believed to be trying to land a burth in the Little Rose bowl game at Passadena, Cal.
METROBOLT BALANCE
CAR IN SHAPE FOR
VACATION TRAVEL?
SEE
CHANNEL-SANDERS
TO BE SURE!
622 Mass. Phone 616
Meanwhile, the Texas Rose bowl officials were waiting for word from Kilgore, Tex., Junior college, which has also been invited to play.
At Middletown, Conn., Dr. Victor L. Butterfield, president of Wesleyan University, said his school would "probably" turn down bids to the Tangerine bowl or any other post-season games. It was believed that Wesleyan, with 22 straight victories, could get a spot in several bowls, but Dr. Butterfield said Wesleyan has never played a post-season game and "probably won't break this precedent."
AUTO PARTS
New & Used Parts for All Cars
ACCESSORIES
-
We Buy Old and Wrecked Cars
- Auto Glass
- Mirrors
- Glass Table Tops
AUTO WRECKING AND JUNK CO.
Phone 954 712 E. 9th
NOW YOU CAN AFFORD A VOICE RECORDER
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THE WIREWAY
- Recordings last indefinitely.
- Same wire can be used over and over.
- Regular phonograph records can be played.
- Recordings can be made direct from radio or phonograph records.
- Can be used as public address or a miniature broadcasting station.
$149.50
PETERSON'S
Headquarters for Office Equipment
7101/2 Mass. Phone 13
Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
EARLY?
It's NEVER too Early to Buy Your CHRISTMAS GIFTS.
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE We Have A Complete New Stock of
PARKER Pens and Pencils
The World's Most Wanted Gift!
at
STUDENT Union Book Store
AGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1948
he Editorial Page-
Sorry Budget
She made out her budget for the year. Relatively, she marked $17 for national defense, $8 for wines and whiskies, and $3 for little John's education. Little "John" is the boy in the public schools. "She" is the United States.
This budget is the guilt of the American people. We will spend billions to perfect weapons for physical destruction. We will spend half as much for physical and mental slovenliness. We will spend only a sixth as much for the institutions from which the leaders of a future generation come.
Americans must realize that the future of America and the world lies in the education of the younger generation. Yet she consistently spends less for education than she does for the lesser needs of the people.
Education must be advanced to keep up with changes in the various fields. Money is needed to purchase new equipment and to build modern buildings for the alert and aggressive young person. For those who are not so alert, nor so aggressive, there is a need for special teachers and equipment to help them self-sufficient.
America owes it to the future to provide a better and a broader education for its youth. Education is expensive, but to deny proper education now will only be costly for future generations.
—Gerald E. Edgar.
- Letters To The Editor -
Realism Again
Dear Editor:
It is often amusing to hear or read the conventional remark of the so-called "hard headed realist" to the "starry-eyed, visionary idealist."
One individual, apparently a member of the former group, recently had a letter printed in which he asked the idealists, Wallaceites, World Federalists, and others, to pull their heads out of the clouds. I would like to ask, however, that the "realists" do something like that—pull in their heads, at least, and look at the facts.
The world for centuries has been following the philosophy of "realism." The result has been a constant stream of events wherein murder, slaughter, pillage, hate and confusion were and are rampant. The world is about to commit suicide trying to be realistic.
I wish to declare it is time the world became "realistic" by becoming "idealistic."
Neal D. Nichols Education junior
An Answer
Dear Editor:
Well, it has happened again. By some quirk of fate, an engineering student has strayed from his chosen field and enrolled in Foundations of National Power and after one-half semester feels he now qualified to tell us how the world should be run.
In Mr. Abbott's opinion, "starry-eyed dreamers" vary from *ballaceites* to Isolationists inclusive That should include nearly everyone who has any political
views. I wonder what Mr. Abbott considers himself that he falls outside this grouping.
He is very much concerned about having everyone "find out what is really going on in the world" and beware of "idealism." With a major in International Relations nearly complete, my knowledge of world affairs is naturally more limited than Mr. Abbott's but I'll try to do my best.
As I see it, the only "realistic" view of the present world situation is that under the present system of sovereign states, we are headed for a third world war in which the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. will destroy each other and take most of the remainder of the world with them. The only "realistic" solution is a Federal World Government strong enough to enforce peace. This view is shared by Mr. Winston Churchill and thousands of other "starry-eyed peace dreamers."
Instead of criticizing others for their political views, I should like to humbly suggest to Mr. Abbott that he stay in his own field and put his engineering talents to work on "realistic" methods of counteracting the effects of such instruments of mass destruction as the atomic bomb. In that way he will be doing us all a great service.
Lawrence Morgan College Senior
Library To Remain Open
HOLLYWOOD
The library will be open during the Thanksgiving vacation at different hours, Ray Janeway, assistant directo of the library, said today. The change in schedule will be announced later.
One 8x10 Black and White Portrait for
XMAS SPECIAL!
only 98c!
Only one per person-two per family. Offer expires Nov. 22-Come in Now!
RACHELLE STUDIOS
Phone 302
730 Mass.
West Wins Story Award
One of the 1948 O. Henry awards has been given to Ray B. West, associate professor of English at the University. Mr. West's story, "The Ascent," will be included in the book "The Best Short Stories of 1948."
University
Daily Hansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn, Nahawana, and the Associated College Press. Represented by the National Ad-Service. Service. 420 Madison Ave., New York, NY.
Editor-in-Chief ... Maurice C. Lungren
Managing Editor ... Hal D. Nelson
Asst. Man. Editor ... Murphy A.
City Editor ... Bill F. P.
City Editor ... Robert Newman
Asst. City Editor ... Nora Temple
City Editor ... Patrick James
e. Editor ... Richard D. Rhoe
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Larry Funk
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Robert D. Snair
Asst. Office ... Owen S.
Asst. Sports Editor ... Marylin V. Rowlind
Society Editor ... Rosemary Rospaw
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Business Mgr... Bill Nelligan
Advertising Mgr... Don Tennant
Circulation Mgr... Ruth Clayton
Asst. Circ. Mgr... Deca Knuth
Asst. Wardron
Asst. Class. Mgr... Yvonne Jones
Asst. Class. Mgr... William E. Beck
Natl. Adv. Mgr... Don Welch
Promotion Mgr... Charles O'Connor
The Winners of CARL'S Football "Pick-em" Contest
Week of Nov.13
Week of Nov. 15
1st prize—John Leslie
2nd prize — Mrs. Emmett Green
3rd prize—Miss Ella Sellers
4th prize — Junior Christensen
Forensic League Speakers
Give Rules For Happiness
Enter Now
New Contest Every Week
CARL'S
905 Mass St. Phone 251
"My Formula for Happiness" was the title of speeches given by members of the Forensic league recently.
Clarence Atkins, College senior, was awarded a prize for the best idea. He said that happiness is found in living for other people. Robert Bennett, College junior, was awarded a prize for the most humorous speech. Charles Oswalt, College sophomore was given a prize for the most entertaining speech.
The next meeting will be Thursday. Four faculty members in the speech department will give talks.
Julius Caesar designed the first calendar 2,000 years ago.
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WOLFSON'S
743 Mass.
1
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PUMPKIN PROM
November 20
9-12 Union Ballroom
Charlie O'Connor
and his Orchestra
Thanks, K. U.
for your welcome! We're sorry there aren't enough seats for everybody. The personal appearance of FRED WARING and his PENNSYLVANIANS at the HOCH AUDITORIUM is SOLD OUT.
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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE SEVE
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Phone KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the customer will be called in during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the e-visit. Business office. Journal blog, not later than 3 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five
day days days
25 words or less...35c 65c 90c
additional words...1c 2c 3c
FOR SALE
SUN LAMP Special! Get a Florida sun tan while you study. GE Sunlamps to fit standard sockets now. Only $8.50. F. Goodrich, 929 Mass. 3
STANDARD ROYAL Typewriter. Late model in perfect condition. Priced 20 per person; similar used machines at dealers. Call Jack Campbell. Phone 792 or see at 1127 Ohio. 22
TIRED OF WALKING! Come to the Putt-Pupp店 at 311 East 9th. I have a new motorscooters for sale there. It's cheer and safe transportation. 22
1936 PLYMOUTH Sedan. Light blue, blue spot, radio and heater. A good automobile for $420. Wallace, 743 La. Phone 2239. 18
COLLECTION of Glenn Miller records.
Over 40 records in record case. Will sell for highest reasonable bid. Phone 23773
and ask for Tex. 16
K and E LOG LOG Duplex. Contact 18
MASTER DELUXE Chevrolet Club Coupe,
Radio, heater, new 1946 engine. 20,000
miles on new engine. This is a good
clean automobile. Will sell self-reliant.
17 St.
R SALE or trade. V8 Ford, clean. $175.
635 Pontiac. 600 Hudson, 1935.
Plymouth, with rebuilt motor; 1939
Plymouth, with rebuilt motor. Walt's
Used Cars, 739 North Fourth, North Law-
ence. 17
BUSINESS SERVICE
MAGNETIC RECORDING machines,
typewriters, adding and calculating machines,
posture and swivel machines, linoleum
cabinets, desks and tables. 7 in. Mass. Call 13.
18 in. Mass. Call 13.
AMMUNITION, Fishing Tackle. Guns and
made in India made in Padia.
Butter's Shop, 1016 Mass. rfft
rfft
TYPING: REASONABLE rate. Prompt
service. Phone 1168R. 1028 Vermont. 22
ONE ONE is best—Balfour's for watch
routic. AU West 14th. rtfn
CONTACT US for all airline information.
City ticket office, First National Bank,
Miss Rose Giesman, Mgr., 8th and Mass.
Phone.30.17
TYPING DONE: Prompt service, reasonable rate, accurate work 1095 Ohio, or
SPECIAL RATES: Time, 44 weeks, $3.87.
Life, 39 weeks, $3.90; Fortune, 9 months,
$7.75. For limited time only at your
Libri Book Store. 18
$$$.06 FOR YOUR old battery on a new
guaranteed Goodrich battery. Delivery
an installation free. Phone 21, B. F.
Goodrich Store, 923. Mass. 23
WHEN ALL PETS including dogs, birds, fish, cats, pigeons, skunks, parrots, squirrels, rats, mice, etc., go shopping for an outfit they go to (1218 Comm. St. Phone 418. Everything in the pet field—their needs are our business). 12-23
TWIPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel.
418 or bring to 1218 Comm. St. Ask for Miss Helen.
12-21
a c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
HERHART and Son, tailors. Finest sam-
made to measure, suits, topcoats,
overcoats. Alterations, repairing and
leather work. 831½ Mass. 19
LOST
FOOTBALL near field No. 5 Thursday
evening. Name on field. Ira Phone
number.
PAIR OF BLUE shell-rim glasses, somewhere between Frank Strong and Hoch auditorium. If found, please notice Billy George at Corbin hall. Phone 851. RI 18
PAIR OF men's brown leather. fur-lined gloves. Size nine. Never worn. If found, please return to Bill McDonald. 1020 Office, Phone 3213. 16
EXCHANGED flight jackets with somebody at Classics Club. Phone 2425J. 17 ONE GRAY-fur-lined coat with body armor in generous reward. Call length 552.
PAIR OF GLASSES in green case. Re-
cords Hille, 1247 Ohio, for reward.
3398
3398
1 LOST my black and silver Parker 51,
Monday, December 1, 1977. 17 Call Bobs
Parker at Ft. Bliss 065.
A PAIR of biloches with transparent horn rimmed frame at stadium at Kansas-Oklahoma A. and M. game. $5.00 reward for anyone finding glasses intact. Contact 1014-787-2600.
MISCELLANEOUS
AGAIN THIS year, by popular demand, a college SKI PARTY is being formed—this is for the fellows and gals who would like to learn skiing from the very best, and enjoy the atmosphere at Ski Country. Your'e you've spent—all meals, transportation (our own special car on the Colorado Eagle), skis, boots, poles, 4 hours of lessons every day, an unlimited pass on all lifts, Boaring Fork lodging accompanied by dance, moonlight skating party, steak dinner at the Red Onion cake, New Year's at the Silver Queen Ball, and the Aspen Intercollegiate Ski Meet having one of these agents for further information. Fig Newton, 2018; Don Schaake, 565.
NEWMAN CLUB member who exchanged hats with me at dance last Friday please phone Weldon Scardino at Ph. 1555. 15
APPLICATIONS for the Lawrence Flying Club are still available so don't delay. Pilots and beginners are welcome. You save you $115. Call 314, or come on out to Ware Aircraft.
Municipal Airport. 17
WANTED
TWO PEOPLE want rides to Chicago or St. Louis Thanksgiving vacation. Will share expenses. Leave name at Kansan office. 22
offices.
PRIET to the Fred Waring show. Bill Richardson, Ph. 3064k. 16
TO SHARE expenses with anyone driving to Chicago, Michigan, or vicinity during Thanksgiving vacation. Call Phil Oren, after 6 p.m., 26339.
REPRESENTATIVE now. To take orders for fine imported linen handkerchiefs suitable for Christmas gifts. Write Box 2461, Kansas City, Mo. 16
SMITH & WESSON 38 Special, preferably Victory model or that Hill, Jr. Gou Del, Sundowner.
TRANSPORTATION
WOULD LIKE a ride to Champaign, Ill., or anywhere close by. Leaving Tuesday, Nov. 23 for Thanksgiving holiday. Enquiries and driving. Call 7398 at 6:00 p.m.
FOR RENT
NICE SINGLE room for boy at 825 Illinois. If interested please call 2939R. No smoking or drinking. 22
FURNISHED ROOM for man students ROW FOR MR MAR 22 ROOM FOR 2 - 3 men students with one other in a large, well heated sun room. Bath with tub or shower. Phone 2880J.119 Vermont. 17
SLEEPING ROOM, single or double, three blocks from campus. Call 799L. 17
ONE DOUBLE room and 1 single shared room. One block from the campus. CALIFORNIA. 17
TWO ROOM furnished apartment for
house of 532 Louisiana.
TRANSPORTATION
LOVELY BASEMENT room in new home to two boys. Furnace piped into room; good ventilation, asphalt tile flooring, near water; large student students with cars living nearby so transportation might be arranged. $3.50 a week per boy. Ph. 2151M.
RIDE HIDE to Iown City. Des Moines or vicinity Wednesday, 24th. Will share lodgings and expenses. Call M. Leventhal, phone 355 at 6:09 p.m. any day. bt 1755.
the atmosphere of old Russia prevailed at the home of Sam Anderson, instructor in Russian, as the Russian club held its weekly meeting recently. Traditional Russian tea was served from a steaming samovar which dominated the meeting room.
Russian Club Meets At Instructor's Home
Club members practiced several songs which they will present at the German department's Christmas program.
Former students of Russian who are interested in taking part in this program are invited to attend the rehearsals being held at the club's regular metings, Mr. Anderson said.
Recordings of the Russian Orthodox church formed an authentic musical background.
The largest railroad shops in the world were founded in Altoona in 1849, when the first railroad was being built over the Alleghenies. They are still the world's largest.
For Tasty Meals For Delicious Drinks For All Around Good Food Its the
All 115 dinner guests were surprised by an Indian dessert, which was frozen spaghetti, with cinnamon and raisins.
All this and more was heard recently at an authentic Chinese dinner supervised by Chung Chi Yeh, graduate student from Anwei, China. The dinner was given for the members of the International club.
Tcha Huey, a soup course, opened the dinner and was a novelty to all but the Chinese guests. The soup consists of peas, giant mushrooms, and ham. The main course consisted of a meat plate, Hung Hau Tho, which boasted of red roast, pork, eggs, mushrooms, potatoes, turnips and several stalk type vegetables. A soybean sauce made of celery ieaves, cinnamon, vinegar, garlic, salt and red pepper was used as garnish for the pork.
Tcha Huey At Chinese Fete
A short talk by Heinz Friedrich Kretschman followed the dinner. Mr. Kretschman is a graduate student in law and a former lionsof officer in Germany. He studied at the University of Berlin and the University of Heidelberg before coming to the United States.
Pass the Tcha Huey—and a little more Hung Hua Rho, please.
Mr. Kretschman stressed added student exchanges with Germany as one of the possible ways to cement friendship between the youths of the two nations.
GREEN LANTERN CAFE 745 Mass.
Baaqr Shirazi, master of ceremonies, closed the dinner with the presentation of Mr. Yeh. Dancing followed the dinner.
Three Generations Intact
Prague, Okla.—(UP)—When Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Licklider celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary here they could also celebrate a fact unusual for golden wedding couples. With all their children the Licklider's gave thanks that in three generations of the family there has been no death.
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Portland, Maine—(UP) — Three times on the same day Police Chief John Mulkern of Portland became a grandfather. The wives of two of his sons gave birth to three children—one of them having twins.
Gorgeous pot plants and cut flowers For ALL occasions PHONE 312
MYER'S GREENHOUSE
"ALWAYS OPEN"
Two blocks north of swimming pool
435 Mich. Phone 312
A FRESH START
Call
On that trip home for THANKSGIVING-
1001 N. H.
LAWRENCE LAUNDRY
Send that laundry you have been collecting to
46.
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Featuring: Used cars, nearly new. See Them Now.
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DRIVE a Good USED CAR on your VACATION
BARBERSHOP QUARTET CONTEST
FRASER HALL ~ 7:30 P.M.
WED. NOV.17 ~ ADM. 30¢
SPONSORED BY Y.W.C.A.
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1948
AFL Names Kansas Senator On'Purge List'
Cincinnati, Nov. 16—(UP)—A report by the political league of the American Federation of Labor, made at the union's 67th national convention Monday, named seven Republican and two Democratic senators to its "Purge list." All are up for reelection in 1950.
They were Sens. Homer E. Capabart, Ibn; Forrest C. Donnell, Mo. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, Iowa; Eugene D. Milliken, Colo.; Clyde M. Reed, Kan; Robert A. Taft, Ohio and Alexander Wiley, Wis. all Republicans, and Walter F. George Ga, and Lillard E. Tydings, Md. both Democrats.
All of them voted for the Taft-Hartley labor law. The league report called them "exceptionally bad public servants." To this list will be added eight other Taft-Hartley senators whose terms expire in 1950 and all house members who voted for the law or who fail to vote for its repeal next session, league officials said.
The convention's political action session was fixed for tomorrow afternoon.
A proposal to establish a third political party for labor will be made to the convention today but top officials of the union said it "hasn't got a chance" to win.
A. Philip Randolph, president of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, said he would argue on the floor for adoption of his resolution to set up a national independent labor party.
George M. Harrison, president of the Brotherhood of Railway Clerks, predicted the A.F. of L. will reject the third party idea.
The 725 delegates today will hear a message from President Truman and addresses by presidential-assistant John R. Steelman, Commander Perry Brown of the American Legion and Commander Lyall T. Beggs of the Veterans of Foreign Wars.
Maurice J. Tobin, secretary of labor, who Monday pledged repeal of the Taft-Hartley law by next March 1, completed a round of conferences with top A.F. of L. leaders He scheduled a noon news conference.
One Per Cent Named Smith
There are Smiths aptly at the University of Kansas. Ninety-four students, or approximately one percent of the student body, answer to that name.
Although the Smiths increased their listings in the current student directory from last year's 82, the Smiths in the faculty section decreased from 16 to 13.
The Brown's continued their hold on second spot among surnames. However the 68 this year is four less than a year ago. In third place is the Johnson clan with 62, the same number as last year. The 54 Millers edged up to fourth place ahead of the Joneses, who dropped from 58 to 52.
Aside from Brown, the "color" names do not predominate. There are 34 Whites, 14 Blacks, 9 Greens and 9 Grays. There isn't a single Blue.
Other names of 20 or more students are Williams, Wilson, Young, Thomas, Thompson, Ward, Anderson, Baker, Campbell, Clark, Davis and Harris.
Missourians are first and last among the more than 10,000 names in the directory. Gattail B. A bart, an engineering senior from 4228 Virginia, Kansas City, Mo., is the first student listed. Last is John R. Zweers, engineering junior from 2632 Folsom, St. Joseph, Mo. However on the Kansas City campus there is Samuel Zweifel from Luray, a senior in medicine.
By Bibler
Little Man On Campus
FIRE DEP.
PROF. SNARF.
BIDLER
"The Board of Regents certainly will be sorry to learn of the loss of this beautiful old ivy-covered chemistry building, with its leaky roof, sagging floors, cracked walls, and outmoded equipment. And by the way, professor, are you sure the oily rags and gasoline cans were destroyed in the blaze?"
If It's Psychology You're Interested In You May Take The Pig's Place
Guinea pigs, human and otherwise, romp through rooms 13 and 21 of Frank Strong hall, running mazes, getting charged with electric shocks, learning nonsense rhymes—and all with equal spirit.
General psychology labs, designed to apply learned theories of motivation, discrimination and performance to everyday acts, use both students
and guinea pigs as subjects. For the pigs successful completion of an experiment is rewarded with bran mash, the sirloin of ratdom. For the student, the only compensation is knowing that his mental process works just a little more rapidly than his neighbor's.
In the past few weeks, students have traced pictures backwards by watching their hands in a mirror, gotten electrically shocked and conditioned to the point of jumping whenever the key word was said, and memorized and recited nonsense fingles.
Some students react differently then they're supposed to. One or two students braced themselves and didn't budge when shocked and others make a few mistakes on the first trial of a learning test.
This past week, students have been learning nonsense syllables in such a manner that everyone half-expects Dizzy Gillespie of be-bop fame to appear. And no one would be shocked if he did.
That Was 20,000 Years Ago
Chancellor Deane W. Malott will attend the national convention of the Association of Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps Colleges and Universities in Chicago Friday. Accompanying him will be Capt. W. R.Terrell, commandant of the University N.R.O.T.C. and T. DeWitt Carr, dean of the School of Engineering.
Malott, Carr, Terrell To NROTC Meeting
Captain Terrell will attend the convention as an observer for the N.R.O.T.C. schools in this area. Dean Carr will accompany the chancellor as a representative of the University to the convention.
Burlington, Vt. — (UP) — Lake Champlain was an inland salt-water sea 20,000 years ago, according to geology professor Charles G. Doll of the University of Vermont.
Flower Fund Aids Students
Short term loans have been made to 178 students in the first two months of this semester from the flower fund, a student emergency loan fund, held by the University Endowment association.
Irvin Youngberg, endowment association secretary, reported that the fund has borrowed $1,000 from another fund, but that the note will be paid now that veterans are receiving their checks. Veterans whose subsistence checks are late have been the chief beneficiaries for several years.
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Battenfeld started the fund in 1939 when they requested donations to the fund instead of flowers on the death of their son, John C. Battenfeld, who had been a student here. Other donations are building the fund, Mr Youngberg said.
The fund has had a turn-over of 1.8 in two months. Loans totaled $7,488.95 in September and October from assets of only $4,098.31. During the 1947-48 school year loans totaled only $8,568.
The William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information and Homecoming are the features of the Graduate Magazine for November.
Graduate Magazine Features J-School
Dean Burton W. Marvin of the Journalism school describes the views and aims of the school. A short biographical sketch of the dean is included.
Pictures of Homecoming and a list of many of the graduates who attended are included in this month's issue.
Not A Painting By Dali; Just An Architect's Model
Meet the "space modulator." This is an example of the toy-size models built by students in Architectural Design I to get an approach to structural design from the emotional standpoint.
The space modulator is not the plan for a building, but merely a study of space relationship which might be used if suitable for a particular building. It is built of balsa wood, celluloid, wire, sponge, and other materials which represent those used in building construction.
A fairly new teaching device, the space modulator made its debut at the University this semester. Instructors hope it will pave the way toward the modern ideal in architecture—lines which carry the eye along, suggest freedom, yet order.
There are 102 students in beginning architectural design. Their next assignment was to construct miniature display booths for local products in which they tried to attract attention by architectural form rather than by the use of neon lights, fancy letters, or bright colors.
The course is taught by Paul de Albuquerque, Charles Stribye, Kenneth Coombs, instructors, and Donald Palmer, assistant instructor.
Washington, Nov. 16-(UP)-Official reports from China revealed today that vast stores of undamaged munitions have fallen into Communist hands.
Officially, there is a "secret" label on the exact amount of materiel which Nationalist forces abandoned intact to the advancing Reds in Manchuria. But authoritative quarters said it was tremendous.
Informed quarters said the arms and ammunition, some of American make, are being used now in the Communists' North China offensive.
Loss of this priceless equipment served to deepen official gloom over the military plight of the Nationalist government. It strengthened Communist striking power at a time when Nationalists strength was at a new low.
These quarters were critical of the apparent failure of government troops to destroy the equipment. It included some aircraft but the bulk was in small arms, machine guns, howitzers, ammunition of all kinds and tanks and other vehicles.
Chinese Reds Capture Guns
Heretofore, officials said, the Communists had relied primarily on arms taken over from the Japanese armies at the end of the war. They also were believed to have made use of former Japanese arms factories which the Russians moved from Mukden.
The United States embassy in Nanking advised Americans today to get out of China while they can because of the "generally deteriorating situation."
Ise Says Commies 1,000 Years Behind
Communism is a reactionary movement taking up a form of government and economy Western countries discarded a the thousand years ago, said guest speaker Johnise, professor of economics, at a supper-meeting of the Trinity Episcopal college club, recently.
Dr. Ise spoke on "Economic Attitudes," covering reactionary, conservative, liberal, and radical views
"We should have little to fear from Communism," he said, "for to be a Communist is to work hard and accept orders without question."
A general discussion followed the speech. Students showed marked interest in the relationship between economic attitudes and Christianity.
The Trinity Episcopal college club will hear Bishop G. R. Fenner in the parish house at 10th and Vermont streets next Sunday at their weekly supper-meeting.
No Battle, Only Water For Grass
Year
Inesda
No we're not 'digging in' to withstand a siege, and we aren't expecting a pitched battle with the English majors at Fraser.
k
All those trenches in front of the Journalism building are the beginnings of a new way of watering the lawn. It's an underground watering system. We won't need to bring a towel to school with us next summer.
Final preparations are being made for the all-school play, "We Shook the Family Tree," which will be in the Little Theater of Green hall, Thursday and Friday night. The play concerns a teen-ager who is "fed-up" with being a wall-flower.
op
or S
fB
"Censorship of Literature, Movies, and Radio," will be the topic of a panel discussion tomorrow members of the junior class at UW S. The discussion will take place before an all-student assembly.
Book reviews, written by Gerald Snyder and David Johnson, University High school sophomores, have been selected to represent that school in connection with National book week. Two reviews were chosen en fro Haskell High, Lawrence Junior High, Liberty Memorial High, and University High schools. The eight reviews will be printed in a local newspaper.
UHS Students Give Reviews
Topeka.Kan—(UP)—A 2.8 per cent decline in retail food costs in Kansas during October was reported today by state Labor Commissioner P. G. Baird.
He said meat market items, bacon excepted, led the way in the price dip welcomed by Kansas housewives.
The October food cost index, based on 41 items checked in stores throughout the state, remained 4.1 per cent above the price level of October, 1947, Baird disclosed.
Kansas Food Prices Decline In October
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During the period, 30 food items had retail price decreases, nine were higher and two unchanged.
Will Speak On Man And Acv
At YMCA Faculty Forum
William J. Argersinger, assistant professor of chemistry, will speak at 11:45 a.m. tomorrow on "Man and the Atom" at the Y.M.C.A. facultyforum.
The meeting will be held in the East room of the Union.
Daily Kansan
wrence, Kansas
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
STUDENT NEWSPAPER
Peal To Power for Settlement Berlin Crisis
made book in hall. The o is wer.
instant ask at andulty
per s in re com-
aris, Nov. 17—(UP)—Top United leaders appealed again to Russia and the Western Pow- to settle the Berlin crisis with least possible delay."
their new appeal came in a statement issued only a few hours after United States, Great Britain, and France had blamed Russia for the tainting Berlin dispute and had acted flatly all suggestions for set negotiations with the Soviet on until the blockade of the man capital is lifted.
the United States, in its note, said direct negotiations under duress blockade would "endanger the se of the world" by compromis-
the U.N. charter principle that we shall not be used for attainment of national objectives."
in Trygve Lie, secretary-general Herbert V. Evatt, General Asbury leaders were not dismayed by American, British and French negatives to their letter suggesting mediate" four-power conversation to solve the Berlin crisis.
believing that their letter had cited a "chain of events" which it soon lead to at least a truce in the cold war, they issued a promptement in which they noted "with taction" that all the great powers their replies "indicate in one form another their desire to reach a element of the Berlin question." The president of the general assembly and the secretary-general "their statement said," that this umon desire will find expression in the least possible delay in further attempts to find a solution actable to all parties."
indicating that, as had been ex-ted, the next attack upon the problem would be made through a compromise proposal in the U.N. security council, which still has the question on its agenda, Lie and Evatt in urged in their statement that four powers give "full and active sport" to the efforts of Juan amuglia, security council presi-ster, to mediate the dispute.
brief Lie-Evatt statement
statement later
and "further comment" later in main aspects" of the replies given from Russia and the West-Powers.
in their notes of rejection, the eastern powers took the concerted and that the Berlin dispute must main in the hands of the council al Russia lifts the blockade or council takes other action to tle it.
Bramuglia has devised a new forlina behind which Lie and Avatt currently now are prepared to row their weight. Bramuglia's plan was being modified from hour hour in minor details. It wasOWN to call for simultaneous lift- by stages of the Russian block-e of the western sectors of Berlin introduction of the Soviet-assured Eastern mark as the only currency in Berlin.
The use of Soviet currency in the fire German capital is the mainussian demand in the dispute.
second 'Love' Talk hanged To Today
Dr. Robert Cushman Murphy, Jr., I speak at 4 p.m. today in Myers ditiorum on "Courtship Customs Other Countries Compared to the United States."
The second lecture in the series on
and marital relations will be
today instead of tomorrow so
not to conflict with Mr. Murphy's
module.
The other two lectures will be
c. 2 and Dec. 9 as scheduled, he
A. S. M. A.
L. R. Lind, (right) associate professor of Latin congratulates Dr. William Hardy Alexander after he spoke at the second Humanities lecture Tuesday.
Classics Give Perspective To Civilization Of Today
The value of the classics to modern society is that they give a vantage point from which to view our present civilization.
This was the theme of the address, "Classics and Survival Values," by William H. Alexander, professor emeritus of the University of California. He spoke to a near-capacity audience at the second Humanities lecture in
Career Meet Starts Feb.22
The second annual Women's Careers conference, a project of the Associated Women Students, will be Thursday, Feb. 24. The theme of the conference will be the application of a college degree in everyday living
Conference committees will meet Wednesday, Dec. 1, to plan the outline of the meetings. Women interested in helping with the conference should see their A.W.S. representative or Nancy Kastman.
Positions are open for editor, art editor, business manager and general editorial writer for the woman's handbook, "K.U. Cues." Applications must be in by Friday. Qualifications must be listed as to major, past experience and the reasons for being interested.
Committees for the conference and their chairmen are: social—Donna Munn, College junior; hostess, Grace Vaniman, sophomore; mechanical arrangements—Shirley Rice, sophomore; publicity, Margie McCulough—fine arts senior; tea for speakers—Nancy Kastman, College senior; secretarial—Lorraine Ross, sophomore; program-Bernice Brady, education junior.
Heinz Friedrich Kretschman, graduate student in law, is a foreign exchange student from Germany and was not a liaison officer in Germany, as was stated in Tuesday's University Daily Kansan.
Three members of the University department of mathematics attended a meeting of the Kansas State chapter of Pi Mu Epsilon, honorary mathematics fraternity, in Manhattan Tuesday.
They are G. W. Smith, professor of mathematics; and Israel N. Hermstein, and Otho Rasmussen, instructors.
Three Teachers Attend Math Meeting At K-State
Correction
Kretschman is one of the first exchange students sent to the United states by the American Military government in Germany. He formerly was a correspondent for the London Times.
*Fraser auditorium*. Mr. Alexander limited the classics to meaning Latin and Greek literature only.
Mr. Alexander pointed out the true survival values of the classics are often misinterpreted today. He denounced the idea that a knowledge of Latin is helpful in the spelling of difficult words.
"Latin was fairly phonetic," he said. "The more difficult words are of Norman French and the Later Court French!"
He added that "democracy is a true prelude to fascism if education is based on the lowest intellectual level of the students." He said that vague courses in citizenship and technical studies have pushed the study of the classics to the wall.
In speaking of requiring the study of the classics, Mr. Alexander said, "The American school or college should be a place where students study what they wish. No one should be compelled to study the classics."
"Too often a student may go through college, getting a doctor's degree, without any contact with social and political study." Mr. Alexander said.
Quoting from Harold Nicholson of the London Spectator, Mr. Alexander said that the classics "offer a lovely irrelevance in providing an escape from material living. They develop the power of self-detachment from a modern machine world."
Everyone tries to prove the value of the classics by showing they have a practical value to fit our modern society, he added, but the real value is that they do not fit into this utilitarianism.
Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, was presented $175, Monday, at her home in order to replace the radio that was stolen from her Nov. 2.
Women's Houses Give $175
For Miss Habein's New Radio
The money was given by all the organized women's houses. Betty van der Smissen presented it.
Dean Habein said, "It came as a complete surprise and I haven't recovered from the thrill of it yet." She will choose her own radio.
The radio that was stolen was a portable radio and phonograph combination.
Hold Contest For Jitterbugs Today
A jitterbug contest will be held at 7:15 p.m. today in the Union ballroom.
Four winning couples will be chosen by Miss Elaine Selicovitz, instructor in physical education, and by sports and organization members of the Student Union Activities.
The winner will compete in a final contest at the Midweek dance on Wednesday, Dec. 1, when prizes will be given.
First Vespers In Hoch Sunday
Six University music organizations will take part in the first allmusical vespers of the year at 4 p.m. Sunday in Hoch auditorium.
Organizations to be heard are the 80-piece symphony orchestra and the 100 piece symphonic band, both directed by Russell L. Wiley; the 62-voice Women's Glee club, directed by Miss Irene Peabody; the 60 voice Men's Glee club, directed by Joseph Wilkins; the 110 voice A cappella choir, directed by Dean D. M. Swarthout; and the string quartet, assisted by Miss Marian Jersild, pianist.
Four all-musical vespers will be presented this year. The programs were started 25 years ago by Dean Swarthout when he came to the University. The performance Sunday will be the 97th in the series, and will open the year's appearances for each of the six musical groups. Nearly 350 students and faculty members are included in these ensembles.
Seven To Perform In Music Recital
Six vocal students and one pianist will appear on the weekly student recital at 3 p.m. tomorrow in Frank Strong auditorium.
Gene Jennings, graduate student,
will play three movements from
"Sonata in C Major" by Mozart.
Nancy Messenger, and Mary Carolyn
Daugherty, fine arts seniors,
will sing the duet "Mira O Norma"
from the opera "Norma" by Bellini.
Other vocal numbers will be by Martha Weed, education junior, who will sing "When I am Dead, My Dearest" by Rasbach and "The Three Cavaliers" arranged by Schindler, Shirley Esplund, fine arts sophomore, will sing "Come, Sweet Morning," an old French song, and "La Gigrometta" by Sibella Charles O'Connor, journalism senior, will sing "Il Lacerato Spirito" by Verdi, and Andrew Klapis, College senior, will sing "The Prologue" from "I Pagliacolo" by Leonecavallo.
German Club Will Meet Tomorrow
Michael Hernandez, engineering sophomore, will speak at the German club meeting at 5 p.m. toorrow in 402 Fraser hall. He will talk on "Conditions in Germany Shortly After the War."
Kansas--Fair cast, partly cloudy west, warmer today. High today mid 60's. Partly cloudy tonight. Cooler west. Low tonight near 30 west to 35 to 40 east. Increasing southerly winds today, becoming strong and gusty and shifting to northwesterly tonight. Thursday generally fair Little change in temperature.
The program has been prepared by Robert Clave, College senior and chairman of the program committee.
WEATHER
KU Professor Gets $25,000 For Geology Survey
Raymond C. Moore, professor of geology and research director of the State Geological Survey, has been granted $25,000 by the Geological Society of America to compile a comprehensive treatise on invertebrate paleontology.
Professor Moore will be editor of the new reference work, and will select his own committee from leading paleontologists of the world. The society has made $7,000 available now, with the remainder set aside for future withdrawal. Professor Moore said that three years would be needed to prepare the copy for a publisher. He has already appointed Cecil G. Lalicker, Professor of geology, to the committee.
Professor Moore joined the University faculty in 1916 and has held the rank of full professor since 1919. He is also chairman of the American Commission on Stratigraphic Nomenclature, and has been a member of an American Association of Petroleum Geologists committee to survey oil-bearing regions.
Professor Moore has been working on the project since he was tentatively asked to direct it three years ago. He has just returned from a four-month tour of Europe, where he consulted with European paleontologists.
Waring Aide To Drill Choir
Don Craig, choral assistant to Fred Waring, will take over the afternoon rehearsal of the University a cappella choir on Monday Nov. 22. Fred Waring and His Pennsylvanians will appear at 8 p.m. that night in Hoch-auditorium.
The students of the choral conducting classes have also been invited to attend the rehearsal, in which Mr. Craig will direct the choir and drill them in the fashion Mr. Waring does in preparation for radio performances.
Mr. Craig is heard on the Waring radio show as soloist, announcer, and in Mr. Waring's absence, as master of ceremonies. He succeeded Robert Shaw as assistant director of the glee club, and is a principal instructor for the Fred Waring Workshop held every summer at Shawnee-on-the-Delaware, Pa.
To Represent KU At IFC Meeting
Ralph E. Kiene, and Joseph W. McCoskrie, engineering seniors, will represent the University Inter-Fraternity council at the meeting of the national I.F.C. to be held in New York Thursday, Nov. 25 to Saturday, Nov. 27.
The regional meeting of the I.F.C. consisting of groups from 16 states, will be held here in February.
Topics to be covered by the two men at the New York meeting will include rushing procedures, pledge training, and fraternity financial policies.
Inter-Varsity Group Will Discuss Divinity Doctrine
Paul J. Christian, graduate student, will lead a discussion on the doctrine of divinity at the regular meeting of the Inter-varsity Christion fellowship at 7 p.m. tomorrow. The meeting will be held in 131 Frank Strong hall. The group is inter-denominational and is open to all college students.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 1
Official Bulletin
Nov. 17, 1948
Sigma Delta Chi, 5 today, 107 Journalism.
Pershing Rifles smoker tonight at V.F.W. building, 8th street and New Hampshire.
Engineering Council, regular meeting. 5 p.m. today, Dean's office, Marvin hall. Election of secretary-treasurer.
Coffee and Forums, 4 p.m. today,
East room, Union. Mrs. Frances
Feist of speech department, "I Saw
That Rabbit Myself."
K. U.D.F. cell group meet with Love and Marriage forum, 4 p.m. today. Mvrs hall auditorium.
General Semantics club. 7:45 to tonight, seminar room, Frank Strong, Annex F.
K.U. Dames, 8 tonight, 101 Snow.
W. W. Bracke, speaker.
All LSA. members signed for dance planning and decorations, 7 tonight, 222 Frank Strong Plans for Christmas formal.
Alpha Phil Omega, 7:30 tonight,
recreation room, Union.
Jay James, 5 p.m. today, East room,
Union.
Archery club, 4 to 6 p.m. today.
Robinson annex.
Square Dance club, 7:30 tonight Military Science building Instruction for beginners.
S. A.M. senior seminar. 4 p.m., today, Pine room, Union, Speaker, K Wade Bennett, personal director, John Taylors in Kansas City. "The Employer's Side of the Job-Seeking Picture."
S. A.M. field trip, Vendo in Kansas City. Leave Union, 12:30 p.m. tomorrow.
Y. W.C.A. cabinet, 4 p.m. Friday. Miller hall.
El Altenzo se reunita el jueves a las 7:30 en 113 Frank Strong El
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638 Mass.
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Senor George Schanzer y los estudiantes de "Spanish 7" presentaran un programa rioplatense.
Christian Science organization,
7:30 p.m. tomorrow,丹福orth chapel.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7 p.m. tomorrow, 131 Frank Strong.
Mathematics club, 5 p.m. tomorrow, 211 Frank Strong, Richard Harrington, speaker. "Unsolved Problems of Mathematics."
Episcopal College club, Holy Communion, 7 a.m. tomorrow, Trinity Episcopal church, followed by breakfast at Parish house.
Delta Sigma Pi, 8 p.m. tomorrow,
222 Frank Strong, for actives, pledges and faculty. Prof. Malone, director of Business Research bureau,
speaker.
Mortar Board, 9 p.m. tomorrow,
Delta Gamma house. Dress for picture.
Phi Chi Theta, 7:30 pm. tomorrow,
Corbin hall. Mrs. Malone, speaker.
Christmas party plans.
Ku Ku meeting, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 9 Frank Strong.
Wesley Foundation radio and talent party, 8 p.m. Friday, Eckhall.
All Baptist students planning to attend Baptist Student Fellowship Thanksgiving banquet, 5:30 p.m. Sunday, may obtain tickets from Dale Fields, 1220 Oread, phone 2988.
Jewish Student Union religious services 7 p.m. Friday, Danforth chapel. Business meeting following immediately in Union.
K-State Blind Vet Has 2.85 Average
A 25-year-old veteran who lost his sight while fighting in Belgium with General Patton's army started his second year at Kansas State college this fall. He completed his freshman term with a grade average of 2.85—only .15 of a point from perfect.
He is John Slachen of Arkansas City, who since he was in high school, hoped to study livestock farming. Despite the war and his blindness, he is reaching his goal with the help of the vocational rehabilitation act (public law 64).
Slaceen studies by listening to textbook material read into a recording machine by four "readers." One of the readers is his wife. He uses the records to review his work or to prepare for examinations.
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $10 a semester-postage), published in Lawrence, University after admission, and the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examinations. Entireed as second class matter. November 17, 1898, at the Court at Lawrence, Kans., under the Order of March 3, 1879.
University Daily Kansan
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NESDAY, NOV. 17, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Socially Speaking
a Kappa Founder's Day
members of Xi chapter of Sigma a and alumnae groups in the celebrated Founder's day Sun-with a banquet and program in anas room of the Union.
a Alpha Epsilon Tea Dance hosts at a tea dance held by a Alpha Epsilon fraternity Novel: Merry Waterman, Patty Dorothy Edson, Mary Ann Aber, Barbara Howard, Jeanne Abbers, Judith Veach, Alice Apn, Marcene Dameron, Carlesh. Anne Gage, Deloresah.
thleen Larson, Joan Bigham,
a Daniels, Georgianne Dutton,
on Putney, Mary C. Daugherty,
hyl Hudson, Virginia Osborns,
arest Doll, Kathryn Walters,
edes Muir, Mary Wilkins, Mari-
Rogers, Mary Margaret Moore,
a Webb.
Oria Maxwell, Marion Nearing,
a Hill, Suzanne Hoyt, Molly
Barbara Ramsov
aperons were Mrs. Esther Reed.
H. J. Overholser, Mrs. Treva
n, and Mrs. Ralph Park.
maghai Beta Founder's Day
miss Phi Beta sorority held
annual Founder's day dinner
sday. Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes,
of the founders of this Univer-
of Kansas chapter was the prin-
speaker.
ests were Mesdames Leo Sam-Fred Ellsworth, George M. Robert W. Lamberton, Terry
urbin, Pi Phis Get scholarship Cups
teer-dorm and Pan - hellenic
teers will give a scholarship tea
orbin hall from 4 to 5:30 p.m.
All women on the campus and
argaret Meeks, vice-president of biopedal Women Students, will ent scholarship cups at 4:30 to gin hall, dormitory with the best scholarship for the year -48, and Pi Beta Phi, sorority in the highest scholarship for the period.
the reception line will be: Miss
margaret Habein, dew of women;
e Ferrell, president of Pan-helic-
cille; Ellen Spurnear, presi-
tion of Inter-dorm council; and
van der Smissen, president of
oustesses and general chairi at. Margaret Meeks and Jerry nev, education seniors.
committee members are: invita-
tion, Jeanne Hillier, chairman; Con-
gee Kendall, Eleanor Bradford;
Graham, and Miss Marjorie
tin, social director of dormi-
ties; refreshments, Roselyn Skon-
chairman; Dottie Jones, Bar-
Nash, Dorothy Johnson, and
Martha Peterson, assistant
of women.
serving, Hortense Bedell, chair;
Myrtle Spensley, Betty Boling,
anne Rose, and Miss Peterson;
gram, Mary Spillman, chairman;
rsha Baker, Mary Jane Merrin,
Marian Kysar, and Miss Aus-
iller hall and Watkins hall,
charismat residence halls, donated
Interdorm council scholarship.
The Pan-hellenic scholarship
has been in use for several
years.
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WOLFSON'S 743 Mass.
Turn About Is Fair Play
Revere, Mass. — (UP) — When Patrolman Ralph D'Ambrosio flagged down an automobile for speeding, he discovered the motorist was his former teacher.
"I ought to make you write 'It pays to drive safely' 100 times on the blackboard," D'Ambrosio told her. But he let her off with a warning.
E. Relihan, Robert M. Rymph, Richard L. Ashley, Gerald M. Carney, John Skie, Jack Greer, Larry Bowman, Olive K. Petefish, Hovey Hannah, Don Brown, Delbert Perkins, Frank Pattee, Miss Maud Ellsworth, and Miss Beverly Fox.
Kappa Eta Kappa Smoker
Kappa Eta Kappa, professional electrical engineering fraternity, held a smoker for prospective new members Thursday.
David Thomson, president, welcomed the guests. Dr. Donald G. Wilson, chairman of the electrical engineering department, spoke on the necessity for electrical engineers to keep abreast with the new defelopments in electronir research. Offilers of the fraternity spoke on various phases of fraternity life. Jack Hollingsworth, social chairman, was master of ceremonies.
Theta Phi Alpha Entertains
The pledge class of Theta Phi Alpha entertained the pledge class of Triangle fraternity with an hour dance Nov. 5 at the chapter house.
Weddings And Engagements
Herrera-Steinke Engagement
Theta Phi Alpha sorority announces the engagement of Miss Connie R. Herrera, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Kayser of Wichita, to Mr. Leroy A. Steinke, son of Mr. and Mrs. Steinke of Colby.
The announcement was made Nov 10 by Mrs. Mary Carby, housemother. Miss Herrera wore an orchid. Miss Geraldine Koelzer who passed chocolates weed talisman roses. Mrs. Carby received gardenias.
The date for the wedding will be December 27 in the Catholic church here.
Miss Herrera is a graduate student and an instructor in the department of romance languages. Mr. Steinke is a junior in business and a member of Alpha Delta Sigma fraternity.
Powell-Bennett and Klotz-Townsend
☆ ☆
Alpha Chi Omega announces the double pinning of Virginia Powell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. Glenn Powell, Kansas City, Mo., to James G. Bennett, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Gordon Bennett, Kansas City, Mo., and Winona Klotz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. V. A. Klotz, Coffeyville to James W. Townsend, son of Mr. and Mrs. P. S. Townsend, Coffeyville, house-
Mrs. Frank MacCreary, house-
mother, announced the pinnings
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Miss Klotz is a senior in education. Mr. Townsend is a College senior and also a member of the Phi Kappa Alpha fraternity.
October 30, at the chapter house. Miss Powell and Miss Klotz were assisted by Rosalea Bishop, Janice Monticich, and Patricia Rutledge, who wore corsages of red roses. Miss Powell and Miss Klotz wore corsages of baby orchids, and Mrs. MacCreary wore gaudienas.
Miss Powell is a senior in the college, and Mr. Bennett is a senior in business and a member of the Phi Kappa Alba fraternity.
- Short Orders
Open 4 'til midnight everyday
Phone 260
12 to 2 a.m., Sat., and Sunday
Richard R. Harrington, College senior, will speak on "Unsolved Problems in Mathematics" at the Mathematics club meetings at 5 p.m. tomorrow in 211 Frank Strong hall.
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Hopkins Hall Hour Dance
Hopkins Hall Hour Dance Hopkins hall will hold an open hour dance from 7 to 8 p.m. today.
Lawrence Optical Co.
1025 Mass.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, NOV.17.
Phi Delts, Sig Eps Win As Betas Lose First Game
The Phi Delt's and Sig Ep's won 'B' team indivisional playoffs in Tuesday's intramural touch football games. The Phi Delt's won a shutout in the last five minutes of the game as a blocked punt set up a scoring chance. Passes were the feature of the Sig Ep's win over the Phi Psi's.
The Phi Delt 'B' (7-2) edged the Beta 'B' (6-1) 6 to 0 for the Beta's first defeat of the season. With five minutes remaining in the game, Bufford Bissel blocked a Beta punt on the Beta 15-yard line to set up the touchdown. On the third play Ed Marquis passed to Joe Wolfe in the end zone for the tally. Both teams threatened to score throughout the game but the defensive play was too tight.
Sig Ep 13, Phi Psi 6
Sig Ep 'B' (7-1) won the other divisional playoff with a 13 to 6 victory over the Phi Psi 'B' (5-2). A 15-yard pass from Jim Reynolds to Cletus Kappleman scored the first Sig Ep touchdown. Charley Medlock passed 40 yards to Lyle Woodoring for the second score and Reynolds place-kicked the extra point. A 30-yard run with an intercepted pass accounted for the only T.D. for the losers.
9 Stations To Air Kansas-OU Game
A record tying number of nine radio stations plus C.B.S. will broadcast Saturday's Kansas - Oklahoma Big Seven football title game here before an expected sellout throng of 39,000.
C. B.S. will supply reports of the contest at brief intervals spaced throughout the full game. The Jayhawk-Sooner clash will be one of several standout battles all over the country which this national network will pick up in this manner.
In addition to C.B.S. these stations will carry the championship affair: KOAM, WDAF, KIOA, KVGB, KCKN, WREN, KMBC, KFH, and KWHK.
Houston May Be Faurot's Answer
Columbia, Mo., Nov. 17—(UP) —Bill Houston, 220-pound back, today appeared to be the answer to coach Don Faurius's prayer for a power to round out his split-T attack.
Sugar Bowl Bid To Cowpoke Milers
Stillwater, Okla., Nov. 17—(UP)
—The Oklahoma Aggies had a Sugar bowl bid today—for the mile relay.
Track Coach Ralph Higgins four-man relay team won the Sugar bowl Mile championship last year, and will compete again Dec. 30 at New Orleans. Two members of last year's winners, Maurice Fuquay and John Voight, are out of competition—Fuquay by graduation and Voight with a football injury—but Dick Stolpe and A. J. Fritz are back.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
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Finalists in intramural tennis and horseshoes have been determined on the basis of games played Monday and Tuesday. One finalist has been selected in golf.
IM Finals This Week
John S. Ranson, Phi Gamma Delta,
will meet Robert G. Swartzell, independent,
for the tennis championship.
Ransom defeated Charles Crawford, Phi Gamma Delta, 7 to 5 and 6 to 3 in the semi-finals. Swartzell knocked over Jess W. Van Ert, Phi Gam, 6 to 4, 5 to 0, to enter the finals.
In horseshoes Bernard Beatty, Alpha Phi Alpha, who had a bye in the semi's, will take on Fred Shelton, Beta, in the playoff. Shelton outplayed Claude Mason, ATO, two straight games, 21 to 10, 21 to, 15, in his semi-final match.
715 Massachusetts Phone 1018
Cliff Currier, Alpha Tau Omega,
tipteod past James Sallee, Phi Gam,
one up to enter the golf finals. Dave
B. Dennis, Alpha Tau Omega, and
Clyde G. Layton, also Alpha Tau
Omega, have not yet played their
semi-finals contest to determine
Currier's finalist opponent.
Give The Guy. A Brake!
Duluth, Minn. — (UP) — Matt Kieslerling, who won the state council's $100 prize for coining a winning slogan, was just another accident victim today. He landed in the hospital when a car struck him and broke his leg.
Big Teams Can Relax
By UNITED PRESS
New York, Nov. 17—(UP)—The five teams which rank as the leading contenders for the oh-so-mythical national collegiate football championship could afford to relax just a little today—the worst was over.
That was a comforting thought for at least three of the quintet—Notre Dame, Army, and Clemson—who needed fourth period rallies to stay unbound last Saturday. From here on, the competition didn't look nearly so tough.
This week contender California closes its out season with Stanford, a team that can be stubborn but probably will prove an easy mark. The Golden Bears, with a 5-0 record in the Pacific Coast conference, after beating Washington State, 44 to 14, will be trying for an impressive performance that might lock up the Rose Bowl bid.
Michigan, 54 to 0 winner over Indiana, will wind up proceedings for the year (being barred from the Rose Bowl because they played in it last year) by playing Ohio State this weekend in a Big Nine tilt. Clemson, which beat Wake Forest 21 to 14, will go out of the Southeastern conference to meet independent Duquesne.
While neither California, Michigan, or Clemson figured on much trouble this Saturday, Army and Notre Dame have it even easier—an off day. The Kaydets, who dumped Penn 26 to 20, will be polishing up their two platoons for what promises to be a field day against winless Navy next week. Notre Dame, victor over Northwestern 12 to 7, still has Washington and Southern California to go.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
The Best in Pictures at Your Commonwealth Theatres
GRANADA
NOW thru Thursday
Love and Learning under the G.I. Bill!
More Laughs per second than pickets in a fence!
DO YOU KNOW THAT 57% OF MARRIED PEOPLE SLEEP IN DOUBLE BEDS?
APARTMENT For Peggy
STARRING
JEANNIE WILLIAM
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and EDMUND GWENN
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Mrs. Paradine is on Trial for Her Life!
"She is bad,bad to the bone. If ever there was an evil woman,she is one." Louis Jourdan
"I hope she goes free—free to take other wives' husbands!" Ann Todd.
THE CRITiCS SAY "IT'S GREAT!"
LOUELLA O. PARSONS says: "It's superbly acted, finely directed and produced. It's one of the best mystery melodramas ever filmed."
GREGORY PECK
ANN TODD
THE PARADINE CASE
Directed by ALFRED HITCHCOCK
CHARLES LAUGHTON
CHARLES CORURN
ETHEL BARRYMORE
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"CLOAK and DAGGER"
The picture that introduces LILLI PALMER
VARSITY
12-39c
TO-DAY and
Thursday
WEDNESDAY, NOV: 17, 1948
UNIVERSITY-DAILY-KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVB
Sooners At Full Strength For Saturday's Title Game
S
Norman, Okla., Nov. 17—(UP)—The Oklahoma Sooners had bad news for Kansas today. Everybody on the O.U. squad will be available for Saturday's go with the Jayhawkers at Lawrence.
Tackle Nute Trotter scrimmaged yesterday for the first time since the Oklahoma-Texas Christian battle. Hot whirlpool baths finally had taken the kinks out fo his injured leg, and $ \textcircled{2} $
If that information doesn't disturb the Kansans, they can chew over this additional fact: The current Sooner crew is running up the highest scoring average in modern O.U. history.
Both Trotter and co-captain Wade Walker, also a tackle, are scheduled to see some service in the tussle with the Jayhawkers for the Big Seven championship.
Coach Bud Wilkinson's rugged outfit has averaged 32.1 points a game so far this season. The modern record for Oklahoma teams is 27.5 points, set by the 1946 team coached by Jim Tatum.
Bv. UNITED PRESS
If it's any consolation to Kansas, the 1948 team is still considerably behind the 1916 edition of the Sooners, which piled up 42.9 points per game.
Pass Attack Nation's Best
New York, Nov. 17—(UP)—Of the nation's top 10 individual stars, only one of them—Fred Wendt of Texas Mines—is a running back. The rest of the boys tote the ball now and then just to deceive the opposition, but they write their headlines with passes.
Stan Heath of Nevada, the nation's leading ground gainer with 1.846 yards, gained all but three of those yards in the air.
Number Two man in the nation,
Lindy Berry of Texas Christian has
gained 1,280 yards this season—
1,146 of them passing.
Charley Justice of North Carolina, third-ranking individual ground gainer, has done a little better running. Of his 1,207 yards, only 726 came through the air. That makes him a better ball carrier than the other two. But Justice still does not rank among the first 20 in rushing alone, even though he is third in the nation in total offense.
Only Wendt, of the 20 leaders in total offense, is strictly a runner. Wendt leads the nation in rushing with 1,057 yards, and is fifth on total offense with 1,084 yards--only 30 yards through the air in eight games this season.
On the team side of the statistics scoreboard, Michigan State's rise was the big news. Two weeks ago the Spartans were not even ranked in the first 20 on total offense. Now they're fourth, behind Nevada, Army and Notre Dame.
Michigan State has averaged 401.8 yards per game in losing only to Michigan and Notre Dame and tying Penn State—a trio of the seven major teams still unbeaten. Nevada has averaged 484.8 yards, Army 429.6 and Notre Dame 402.0.
Ottawa, Kan., Nov. 17—(UP)—One more hurdle lay ahead today for Ottawa University, but by the record the Braves should cross the finish line unbeaten champions of the Kansas conference.
Army is the nation's leading rushing eleven with a 344.5-yard average per game. Texas Mines is second with 337.0 and Notre Dame third with 328.4. Michigan State is fifth.
Assured of a share in the title, Ottawa plays host Friday to the Baker Wildcats whose conference efforts stand at three victories and two defeats.
In passing, it's still Nevada with a 268.9 average. Georgia Tech is second with a 167.9 average and Georgia third with 164.5.
Ottawa Title Share Safe; Win Or Lose
Ottawa clinched at least a tie for the title with Bethany by beating C. of E. 26 to 13 last Friday.
Bowls Have Big Increase
New York, Nov. 17-(UP)—The post-season bowl game fad has had such fantastic growth that 32 games with probable attendance in excess of 800,000 have been arranged for Thanksgiving day to New Year's day, a United Press survey showed today.
Many of the opponents for the games already have been selected, but for the major attractions the final lineup won't be determined until after next Saturday's games.
The nation's three top teams, Michigan, Notre Dame, and Army will not indulge in any kind of post season competition.
Michigan, which has clinched a tie for the Big Nine title, is denied a repeat trip to the Rose bowl under terms of the pact between its conference and the Pacific coast loop. Army and Notre Dame are flatly opposed to post-season competition.
Excluding these titans, the most likely lineup for the major New Year's game days as of today appears to be California vs. Northwestern in the Rose bowl, Tulane vs North Carolina in the Sugar,
Honor Humanities Lecturer
The Y.W.C.A. and the Y.M.C.A. honored William H. Alexander at an informal coffee Tuesday night at Henley house. Mr. Alexander, professor of classes at the University of California, spoke at the second of the humanities lecture series preceding the coffee.
1
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Bleacher Seats On Sale
PUMPKIN PROM
November 20
9-12
Union Ballroom
Bleacher seats are now on sale at the athletic office for the Kansas-Oklahoma game Saturday. All reserved seats have been sold. If all 2,500 bleacher seats are sold, 1800 standing room tickets will go on sale Saturday.
Charlie O'Connor and his Orchestra
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 17, 1948
The Editorial Page-
Rushing the Season
On a Saturday night nearly two weeks ago, it was rather startling to see the show window of a Lawrence store decorated with a lighted Christmas tree. It brought us up short with the realization that the Christmas holidays would soon be here, or would they?
This little piece of capitalization on the holiday spirit, and there were others, occurred almost two months before the event. Of course, people have been advised repeatedly to do their shopping early but usually by more subtle means. The subtle approach doesn't last long, of course, but the display of a Christmas tree two months before hand just doesn't seem quite right.
The Christmas spirit can possibly be described best as a mood and the repeated observation of symbols of the season long before the occasion leads to a certain amount of disrespect, or at least a lessening of the effect of the original idea of the holiday. Commercial use of the holiday seasons has come to be an accepted thing, but it becomes destructive when it obscures the real and abiding reason for the celebration.
It will certainly be our misfortune if we allow the ringing of the cash register to drown out the ringing of the Christmas bells and so destroy their meanings that have come down to us through the years.
With our present world situation unsettled by cold wars and hot wars, the commercial side of Christmas seems more out of place than it would normally. It seems to be a time when it would be appropriate for each of us to make an effort to enjoy the holiday in a manner meeting with the original idea of "Peace on Earth, Good Will Toward Men."
—M.C.L.
--feature came on and I was still uneasy of conscience. I felt a little better, however, when some strong points on racial tolerance were made in the picture.
It's natural for a girl to want to hold her youth, but she should be careful when he's driving through traffic.
- Letters To The Editor -
Open the gates Dear Editor:
It has been the conservative, traditional and out-moded policy of the University to open the gates at noon for a football game. With interest intense for the Oklahoma game, there will undoubtedly be long lines and gate-crashing, which could be eliminated by simply opening the gates earlier, preferably around 8 or 9 a.m. Saturday.
Such a step would be logical for three reasons: (1) Those who go early would not have to stand in long lines for two or three hours before the gates open. (2) Late-comers would not have to fall in at the end of a long line because the early-birds would already be in the stadium. (3) A ticket-taker at each gate could handle a trickle of students for five or six hours easier than a number of ticket-takers would be able to handle a mob of students between noon and 2 p.m.
I certainly hope that some action will be taken to prevent the long lines and the gate-crashing that existed at the Missouri game of 1947.
Warren W. Grass Business junior
Dear Editor:
Unfair
My wife and I were standing in line for tickets Sunday evening at a Lawrence theater. There was a long line and it had taken us some time to get up to the window. A well-dressed Negro standing ahead of us, when about three persons away from the window, was informed by the ticket-taker that "his" section was filled.
He was also buying tickets for two other Negroes. When told this, I could see an expression of despair on their faces. They shrugged their shoulders and walked slowly away.
My wife in, and I had no trouble getting in, and shortly after taking our seats, the cartoon flashed on. I didn't enjoy it because I was still smarting from the treatment given these negroes. The main
The Negroes at the University have proved to all of us that they are our intellectual and cultural equals. Why, then, don't we grow up? Why doesn't the management of the theaters abolish this segregation? If it does, would the townspeople refuse to patronize the movies? No, they certainly would not.
Harold Reddock Journalism senior
Help Wanted Dear Editor:
This is my first letter to the Daily Kansan.
On Nov. 5 while I was working out in Robinson gymnasium, someone took $15 from my trousers which had been placed in a locker in the basement. This person missed $5 that was in a secret compartment of my wallet.
Well, if this quick-fingered male student of the University of Kansas still desires the rest of the money, he is welcome to it. But, he must work for it.
Boxing is my hobby and I need a sparring partner. Perhaps I could use him.
Honorato S. Echavez Engineering junior
Night Car Pool Is Being Formed
Arrangements are being made to form a car pool for students who wish to come to the campus for activities at night.
--only 98c!
Students who own cars and live at Sunflower are asked to turn in their names to the "Villager," the Sunflower newspaper, if they are interested.
Faculty Pair Gives Concert
By NORMA HUNSINGER
Mrs. Janet Turk, pianist, and W. Thomas Marocco, violinist, presented a joint faculty recital Monday night with a program that was predominantly modern, though the recital began with the Brahm's "Sonata in D Minor" for piano and violin.
Mrs. Turk played "Rhapsody in E flat minor" by Dohnanyi, "Ten Bagatelles" by A. Tcherepine, and "Reflets dans L'Eau" by Debussy. Mr. Marrocco played "Concerto in B Minor" by D'Ambrosio. "Capice" by Pagani-kreisler, "Piece en Forme de Habanera" by Ravel, and "Hoe-down" by Copland.
Both were poised and reserved in their manner of playing and worked smoothly together in the pianistic Brahm's sonata.
Mrs. Turk plays with a light, smooth but sure touch. She is a technically competent pianist, although she does not have the "concert" manner.
Mr. Marroco is not a strictly technical violinist, but in matters of rhythm and phrasing he is unusually adept. The emotional D'Ambroso concerto was perhaps the best-liked number he played.
New Tags Advertise Wheat
Toppea—(UP)—Kansas will advertise its grain growing supremacy in the nation next year with 1949 motor vehicle licenses bearing the caption "The Wheat State" in black letters on unpainted aluminum background.
University Daily Kansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn. Na-
tional Ad-
smission Assn., and the Associated Collegiate
Press. Represented by the National Ad-
scription Service, 450 Madison Ave.
New York City, NY
Editor-in-Chief ... Maurice C. Lungeen
Managing Editor ... Hal D. Nelson
Asst. Man. Editor ... Amee Murphy
Asst. Supervisor ... Robert B. Fowler
City Editor ... Robert Newman
Asst. City Editor ... Nora Temple
Asst. City Editor ... Patricia James
Asst. City Editor ... Richard D. Kushner
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Larry Funk
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Robert D. Snair
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Olivia Ward
Asst. Sports Editor ... Marvin L. Rowlands
Society Editor ... Rosemary Rowsapw
Business Mgr .. Bill Nellignan
Advertisling Mgr .. Don Tennant
Circulation Mgr .. Ruth Clayton
Asst. Circ. Mgr .. Dean Knuth
Classified Mgr .. Don Waldron
Adm. Jo Clarkrand
Asst. Class. Mgr .. William B. King
Natl. Adv. Mgr .. Don Welch
Promotion Mgr .. Charles O'Connor
SANTA
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The image provided is too blurry and low-resolution to accurately recognize any text or graphics. Therefore, it is not possible to determine what the text is or where it might be located from this image.
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 17, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepts with the understanding that the bill will be completely mailed to him during the company or at 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan office. Journals may be later than 4 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five
day days five
25 words or less...35c 65c 90c
additional words...1c 2c 3c
FOR SALE
$1.00 DAY SPECIAL: Christmas greeting cards, boxes of 21 assorted cards. Sells regularly at 79%, this sale only, 2 boxes for $1.00 at Gamblets. 19
BOY'S BICYCLE, excellent condition,
new tires, 601 W. 23rd, after 6 p.m.
FOR SALE wire recorders Brand new,
39" Racer, brand new, and up to
Collins Bank Phone 22343.
ARGUS A2 camera, good condition, new case.
Eugene Searl, 1037 Tenn. Street,
9246
Maryland
HOT ROD, 37 motor in perfect shape.
Coll Jack, 2095. 19
1945 WILLY'S Army Jeep. Good condition.
Auctioneer: heater. $500.00
Lobbe Job罗德。
81.00 DAY SPECIAL: 81x99 bed sheets,
64x64 thread count, 2 for $5.00. Also 42x36
pillow cases, this sale 2 for $1.00 at Gam-
19
SUN LAMP Special; Get a Florida sun伞 while you study. Gear SunLamps to fit standard sockets now. Only $8.50. B E Hardcover 923, Mass.
STANDARD ROYAL Typewriter. Late model in perfect condition. Priced 20 per cent below similar machines at机床公司 Bok Campbell. Phone 734 or visit at 1127 U.S.A.
TIRRED OF WALKING: Come to the Putt-
Putt shop at 311 East 9th. I have a new
motocquoters for sale there. It's cheap
and safe transportation. 22
1936 PLYMOUTH Deluxe Sedan. Light blue, with 42" engine, seal beams, light rims, spot, radio and heater. A good automobile for $420. Wallace, 743-105-185
TOYS: BIGGEST selection; lowest prices
use our convenient a-bay-a-way plan. Gam-
ble now!
Krand E LOG LOG Duplex. Contact
Kratan offga 18
FOR SALE or trade: VS Ford, clean. $175.
1935ontail. vs used. 1935
vs with rebuilt motor; 1939
Plymouth, with rebuilt motor. Walt's
Cars, 739 North Fourth, North Law
17
AMMUNITION, FISHing Tackle. Guns and
bikes repaired. Keys made. padlocks.
Burrito filled.
AN IDEAL GIFT: 5 tube table model
radio, choice of ivory or walnut. Regularly at $28.95. Dollar Day Feature
$24.00. Use our lay-a-way plan. Gam
BUSINESS SERVICE
USED CARS bought and sold. 6 blocks north of underpass. Phone 3005. Mid-West Motors, 709 North Second.
MAGNETIC RECORDING machines, and calculating machines, posture and swivel chairs, filing cabinets, desks and tables, sold or rented at Peterson's, 710 Mass. Call 13. 18 TYPING: REASONABLE rate. Rate
TYPING: REASONABLE rate. ONE ONE is best -Balfour's for watch repair, 411 West 14th. rtfn
CONTACT US for all airline information. City ticket office, First National Bank, 320 Rose Gleesman, Mgr, 8r. MID-WEST Bank, 320 Rose Gleesman, Mgr, 8r. SPECIAL RATES: Time, 44 weeks, 8r. LITE, 39 weeks, $3.90; Fortune, 9 months, $6.75. For limited time only at your Student Union Book Store. TYPING DONE: Prompt service, reason accurate work. 1269 Ohio, or Phone 1601. rtfn $5.00 FOR YOUR old battery on a new guaranteed Goodrich battery. Delivery and installation free. Phone 21, B. Goodrich Store, 929 Mass. 23 WHEN OUTSIDE, feeding dogs, bird squirrels, rats, mice, etc., go shopping for an outfit they go to Grant's Pet Shop, 1218 Conn. St. Phone 418. Everything in the pet field—their needs are on file. 12-21
TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel. 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. Ask for Miss Helen. 12-21
EbbRHART and Son, tailors. Fittest samples made to measure, suits, topcoats, and overcoats. Alterations, repairing and leather work. 831 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. 19
LOST
$50 REWARD for return of KE slide
Stringer, 309 E. 19th Street. Phone
PARKER 51 blown pen. Name eng-
graved. Robbins L. Bock. Spooner
Jones.
FOOTBALL near field No. 5 Thursday evening on ball. Ia Ra Phone Bureau Browns
PAIR OF BLUE shell-rim glasses, somewhere between Frank Strong and Hoch auditorium. If found, please notify Billie George at Corbin hall. Phone 860-185. RM
WOULD LIKE a ride for two to New York or vicinity for Christmas vacation. Call 2803J or leave name at Kansan of 19
WANTED
EXCHANGED flight jackets with somebody at Classics Club. Phone 2425J. 17 ONE GRAY-fur-lined coat with hose and a leather reward. Call Joe Joseph. 552
4 OR 4 RIDERS to Wichita Thanksgiving;
leave at 5 p.m. Tues. Nov. 23. Return
Sunday evening. Contact Daily Kansan
office, Box 3. 19
GIRL VOCALIST wanted for 'hill' dance
ball. Call 2436R after 6 p.m. 15
TRANSPORTATION
WOULD LIKE a ride to Champaign, Ill., or anywhere on leave. By Leaving Tuesday, Nov. 23 for Thanksgiving holiday, share expenses and driving. Call 7398 IM
TWO PEOPLE want rides to Chicago or St. Louis Thanksgiving vacation. Will share expenses. Leave name at Kansan office. 22
TO SHARE expenses with anyone driving to Chicago, Michigan, or vicinity during Thanksgiving vacation. Call Phil Oren, after 6 p.m. Ph. 2835W. -19
WOULD LIKE ride to vicinity of Long-
view, Texas for Thanksgiving vacation.
Will share expenses and driving. Call
8759 19
COMMERCIAL PILOT flying 4 place plane--Jackson, Miss and set out to point general route or 150 mile radius. Jackson Bishop Eldridge Hotel or Yellowstone.
URGENTLY NEEDED ride. To share expenses and driving to Philadelphia or eastern city and return. Will leave to suit driver after December 17. Call B29-845-6830.
LIKE RIDE to Iowa City. Des Moines or vicinity Wednesday, 24th. Will share driving and expenses. Call M. Leventhal, phone 1555 at 6:00 p.m. any day b17
MISCELLANEOUS
THE SPORTS committee of the Student Union Activities is sponsoring a Jitter bug contest this Wednesday night. The four contestants chosen for the competition will be in a Varsity midweek on Dec. 18t. The contest will begin at 7:30 and will be held in the west end of the Ballroom at the Union. Prizes will be given at the final judging in Decem-
AGAIN THIS YEAR, by popular demand, a college skiing team formed, using the follows and gifts, would like to learn skiing from the very best, and enjoy the atmosphere of a ski resort. The team has all meals, transportation (our own special car on the Colorado Eagle), skis, boots, poles, 4 hours of lessons every week, and a Fork lodge accommodations, smorgasbord dinners, square dance, moonlight skating party, steak dinner at the Silver Queen Bail, and the Aspen Intercollegiate Ski Meet having 17 schools represented. Contact any one of these agents at 212-896-3550; Fig Newz 2039; Don Schanke, 565.
APPLICATIONS for the Lawrence Flying
Plane Pilots and beginners alike are welcome.
Our plan actually saves you $115. Call
Ware Aircraft at Ware Aircraft
Municipal Airport.
FOR RENT
NICE SINGLE room for boy at 825 Illinois.
If interested please call 2939.8
No smoking or drinking. 22
FURNISHED ROOM for man student.
1340 N.H. Phone 1374R. 22
OR FOR 2 or 3 men students with one other in a large, well heated sun room. Bring tub or shower. Phone 2880 Vernon Vermont.
VILLAY BASEMENT room in new home to two boys. Furnace piped into room; good ventilation, asphalt tile flooring, nearly private bath. Not near hill but several students with cars living nearby so transportation might be arranged. $3.50
SLEEPING ROOM, single or double,
three blocks from campus. Call 7918. 17
Winslow Homer's Art Shown In Museum
Paintings of one of America's greatest artists, are being exhibited in a small gallery on the second floor of Spooner-Thayer Museum of Art. You do not have to be an art lover to appreciate the paintings of Winslow Homer.
The healthy, objective world of Homer will appeal to young America today, more than the decorative, sophisticated output of Matisse or Picasso.
"When I have selected the thing carefully I paint it exactly as it appears," said Homer. A draftsman of tremendous power, who was hardened by years of Civil war illustration, he sensed the large contours of nature and applied his color with the skilled hand of a dramatic artist.
Visits to Europe in his mature years didn't alter his naturalistic attitude or his Yankee spirit. Homer maintained his quality of realism, illustrative quality, lack of conscious aesthetics, with reverence for the seen fact and humility before nature. He made nature work for him. He painted the things he saw —America.
Considered one of America's greatest watercolorists, Homer handled the medium with a canny hand. Two typical examples may be seen in the Thayer collection.
Faculty Shows Art At Museum
Four of the University of Kansas drawing and painting faculty are represented in the second annual exhibition of oil paintings by artists of the Missouri valley now being held at the Mulvane Art museum at Washburn university. Topeka.
Dwight Burnham, instructor of drawing and painting, has two pictures accepted by the jury, "Still Life" and "Provinetown Landscape." Professor Raymond Eastwood's entry is a Navajo scene, "Tseh di Jolilh." Herbert Fink, instructor, has entered a landscape and Robert N. Sudlow has entered "Landscape at Santa Cruz."
Six prizes, including several purchase prizes, will be announced later this week.
To Head Phoenix Mutual
Benjamin N. Holland, "21, has been elected president of the Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance company, Hartford, Conn. He has previously been vice-president and counsel for the company.
LAUREN NATIONAL TANK BANK
Reservations
AIRBUS
FLY HOME FOR THANKSGIVING
Please make reservations as far in advance as possible
Compare these advantages to rail Fare 5% reduction for round trip-50% discount for wife and children No extra fare. Constellation.
City Ticket Office
The First National Bank of Lawrence
Travel Agency
8th & Mass. St.
Miss Rose Gieseman, Mgr.
Tel. 30
Overholtzer Speaks At Math Colloquium
Gordon Overholtzer, instructor in mathematics, spoke on "A Divisibility Property of Sums of Powers" at the Mathematics colloquium, Monday.
Classical Club Elects
The Classical club elected these officers at its November meeting; Don Glasco, president; Harold Hixon, vice-president; Elizabeth Lesuer, secretary; and Mary Klooz, treasurer.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, NOV.17, 1948
PAGE EIGHT
Extension Has Top Program In US Colleges
A great emphasis will be placed on non-credit courses for adults in evening colleges and university extension divisions throughout the country, 40 extension deans decided in New Orleans recently.
"In this regard," said Dean Frank T. Stockton, who attended the conference for K.U. "our Extension has the most substantial program in the country.
"Many state universities are situated in large cities and their extension or evening colleges stress courses which can be taken for credit toward a degree. But K.U.'s extension program is state-wide and emphasizes courses which a person can take to aid him or her in the home, or for self-improvement in general," he said.
Dean Stockton spoke at the conference on "Looking Ahead." He explained the need of giving a different name to university extensions.
"We should adopt the name that the University of Maryland uses," he said. "The name of their extension implies a continuation of study beyond day-college work. The name is 'College of Special and Continuation Studies.'"
He said Harvard, California, and Illinois universities use K.U.'s title, "University Extension."
"Indiana university has at least three areas in which state programs are coordinated with those of local schools. University Extension has two such co-operative programs with the University of Wichita." Dean Stockton said.
Battle Rages Near Suchow
Suchow, Nov. 17—(UP) — This north Kiangsu defense bastion of the Chinese Nationalist government is as quiet today as if it were hundreds of miles from a battle zone.
A casual visitor dropped here would have no inkling that nearly one million men, Nationalists and Communist troops, are locked in desperate see-saw battles east and south of this city that may determine the fate of Nanking, capital of Nationalist China. Along the front extending from a point 25 miles east of Suchow at Sunken to Sinanchen, 50 miles east of Suchow, one of the biggest battles of the China war is being fought.
Within 20 miles south of Suchow, the big guns of both sides are roaring in artillery duels, towns are afire, Nationalist tanks and armored cars are lobbing shells into Communist-held villages in a steady rain and Nationalist air forces bombers are swooping in low over Red artillery positions and dropping demolition bombs.
Flying into Suchow, one can see how the fighting already has slashed the government's lifeline railroad from Nanking at vital spots. Long steel spans over river after river are in ruins. Long strings of loaded railway cars lie overturned, little more than pieces of twisted wreckage Locomotives lie spilled on their side
Lt. David Tang, a fighter pilot of the Third Nationalist Fighter group, described the situation as he saw it from the cockpit of a P-51 Mustang. He has been flying strafing missions during the past 48 hours.
"It's been quiet all around Suchow for two days now," he said. "The situation is getting better. The Reds closest to Suchow, about 20 miles, are to the south. But it's in the east where most of the fighting is now going on.
"Fifty miles east of here at Sianchen, the Communists have trapped three army groups under Gen. Wing Pa-Tao with about 40,000 men. Our main forces in Suchow are now fighting eastward to try to relieve them.
Travel Bureau To Arrange For Rides
If you need a ride or a rider to your home town for the Thanksgiving holidays, leave your name, address, telephone number, and destination at the Student Union Activities office in the Union.
The travel bureau of the coffee and forums committee of the Union will give this information to drivers of cars and to passengers. The office will be open daily from 10 until noon, and from 1 to 5 p.m.
When rides cannot be secured, the travel bureau has information on air, train, and bus travel.
Chaperons Will Pick Royal Pair
The method of selecting Cinderella and Prince Charming at the Pumpkin Prom was announced by the Prom planning board Tuesday. The dance will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday in the Union ballroom.
Each of the eight chaperons will pick one couple as the best looking pair on the dance floor. This will be done between 8 and 10:15 p.m. The chaperons will choose Cinderella and Charming from this cup. The princess will be seated on a decorated throne in front of a large cardboard pinwink.
Cinderella and Prince Charinning will be the gifts dounded, business firm
Entertainment for the prom, which will have a medieval court theme, was also announced, Nancy Sewell, College freshman, will present a pantomime as Madame Pompadour, Bobby Larson, College sophomore, will sing "Papa Don't Preach to Me." Georgia Haun and Shirley Kyle, College sophomores. will be a "booogie blues" dance. Heywood Davis and Win Koerper, College freshmen, will play several guitar and accordian numbers. The master of ceremonies will be Dean Banker, business junior.
Tickets for the prom will go on sale at a booth in Frank Strong hall today or Thursday. Tickets are now available in each organized house and will be sold at the door on the night of the dance.
Navy Bulletin Is 'Sea Hawk'
Staff members of the paper are:
James J. Connell, Jr., editor-in-chief; Robert M. Newman, managing editor; Evans J. Francis, city editor; Harold C. Donley, Jr., sports editor; George A. Youngstrom, feature editor; Charles A. Stephens, business manager; Charles W. King, circulation manager; Robert C. James, art editor; George T. Swift, Thomas O. Oliver, Jr, Jack G. Kay, and Robert A. Heins, reporters.
The Sea Hawk is the name given the new Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps news bulletin. The paper is published on the 16th of each month by students in the N.R. O.T.C. It is a mimecographed, tabloid-size paper.
The paper is being published to give the other students on the campus an idea of what is going on at the N.R.O.T.C. unit, to provide an outlet for the journalistic talents of the students, and to provide a means of exchanging information both within the unit and with other units, Commander Mann said.
Condr. W. A. Mann, of the N.R. O.T.C. staff will be faculty advisor for the publication.
Yard workers, fountain workers, clerks, waiters, dishwashers, and cabinet workers are in demand in Lawrence, Donald Alderson, assistant dean of men, said Tuesday.
Placement Office Has Lots Of Jobs
He said there now more job openings than the University is able to fill.
The student employment office is in 228 Frank Strong hall.
The Industrial Relations conference which begins here tomorrow and ends Saturday will cover all phases of modern industry. Representatives from management and from organized labor will meet to study "Industrial Relations in a Peak Economy."
Labor Relations To Be Discussed At Conference
Tomorrow morning's session, with Dean Frank T. Stockton of University Extension presiding, will get under way after registration and a welcome by Chancellor Deane W. Malott. George F. Moredock, Jr., assistant manager of labor relations of International Harvester company, Chicago, will be the first speaker. His subject will be "Modern Management Philosophy as Applied to Industrial Relations."
Wayne McCoy, district manager of Southwestern Bell Telephone company, will preside over the afternoon session. Section A of that session will deal with "Industrial Relations Begin with Selection." Ernest R. Esch, personnel director of City National Bank and Trust company, Kansas City, Mo., and Austin H. Turney, professor of education and director of the guidance bureau, will be discussion leaders.
Section B will deal with "Induction Sets the Stage for the New Employee." Discussion leaders will be Ray Davies, director of personnel, Western Auto Supply company, Kansas City, Mo.; George Trombold, personnel director, Boeing Aircraft company, Wichita, and Raymond F. Wallace, associate professor of economics.
Tomorrow's session will end with a tour of the campus, dinner in the Union, and a concert in Hoch auditorium.
Organized labor representatives will speak Friday.
Professor Storer Sees New Comet
The new comet which aroused the interest of astronomists everywhere last week, has been seen by N. W. Storer, associate professor of physics, from the University observatory.
Professor Storer was furnished information on the comet's location by Harvard observatory. He says the comet has faded until it is no longer visible without the aid of a powerful telescope.
John Ise, professor of economics,
will speak before a meeting of Sunflower students and their wives tonight in the grade school auditorium at Sunflower village.
Ise To Speak At Sunflower
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The Square Dance club will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in the Military Science building.
All students who are interested in square dancing, even though they may not know how to square dance, are invited, said Marilyn Louise Smith, sports and organizations committee chairman of the Student Union Activities. The club has its own callers and instructors to help new members learn square dancing, she added.
Frank T. Stockton, dean of University extension will speak tonight at the Hotel President in Kansas City. He will address the Board of Directors of the Industrial Council of Kansas City.
The club plans to take a trip to the psychiatric ward of the State hospital in Topeka to give a square dancing program. It also hopes to go to some of the Big Seven schools to give dancing exhibitions.
Stockton To Speak In Kansas City
Dean Stockton's subject will be "Cooperation Between the Council and Universities in the Development of Industrial Educational programs."
Raymond Nichols, executive-secretary to the chancellor, returned to work today after a two-day illness with intestinal influenza.
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Thursday, Nov. 18, 1948
Lawrence. Kansas
STUDENT NEWS PAPER
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Kappa Sigma Quartet Sings Best Of All
The men's quartet of the Kappa Sigma fraternity placed first in the second annual barbershop quartet contest Wednesday night in Fraser theater. The contest was sponsored by the Y.W.C.A.
Members of the winning quartet were Eddie Green, Bob Swain, Bill Sapp, and Woody Keller. They sang "Evaline," and a medley. Upon receiving first prize, an engraved beer mug, they sang "May I Print."
Quartets from Battenfeld hall and the Beta Theta Pi fraternity received honorable mention. The quartet from Battenfeld sang "Dear Old Girl," and "Fishing." Members were Fred Doornosb, Wallace Abbey Carrell Brown, and Douglas Kent
The quartet from Beta Theta Pi was dressed in white bar coat with black bow ties, and carried beer mugs. The men gave a stiff bow at the end of each number. They sang "Behold the Bridegroom Cometh," and "Never Throw a Lighted Lamp at Mother." Members were Wayne Atwood, Bob Dare, Byron Bohl and Ralph Simmons.
Straw hats, white shoes and dark blue suits were worn by the quartet from Phil Delta Theta. The men sang "Honey," dedicated to Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, and "Sleep, Kentucky Babe."
The Sigma Chi quartet dedicated its last number, "The Lost Chord," to the Kansas "sweet dry law. A cloud of smoke rose, behind the men from offstage during the number. The quartet also sang "I Can't Give You Anything but Love." The men were dressed in tan sweaters and brown trousers.
The quartet representing the Lutheran Student association sang "Lie Low" and "Mood Indigo." The Four Bobs quartet also sang "Mood Indigo", and "Coney Island Baby."
The Delta Tau Delta quartet sang "Strolling through the Park" and "I Want a Girl."
During the intermission Virginia Daughterty and Jeanne Peterson sang "Temptation" as Jo Stafford is supposed to sing it.
The Pi Kappa Alpha quartet swayed in unison to "Honey Moon," and "Coney Island Babe." Each man wore a dark brown coat, light trousers, and a dark red tie.
is supported. Six other women, three dressed as sailors and three as muscle men, gave their version of "By the Sea." The women were Barbara Coats Pat Foncannon, Marianne Gear Betty Armstrong, Joyce Newcomer and Janet Maloney.
Straw hats and bow ties will be brought back to the campus, the Business School Association decided Wednesday.
BSA To Don Straw Hats
The decision to revive the traditional "hick" garb came after council members reported hearty response to the suggestion made Nov. 10 by Richard Yaple, association president, that the emblems could develop school morale.
Pointing to the law school with canes, stove-pipe hats, and strong school morale, Yaple said. "Our straw hats and bow ties could do much in uniting business students into a more closely knit group."
Council members said students had been trying to place orders with them. Meribah Barrett, association secretary, said she had been asked by many students where the straw hats could be bought.
You Better Wear Longies At Game
Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 18—(UP)
The first snow storm of the season whipped into western Kansas today on a northwest gale. By tomorrow it was expected to encompass the rest of Kansas and all of Missouri, the weather bureau said.
Ey mid-morning the snow area had moved as far east as Hill City. Goodland and Garden City reported snow at 9:30 a.m., swept up by 45-mile-an-hour winds from the northwest.
Moderate to heavy snow with strong northerly winds and gales and much colder temperatures were forecast for all of Kansas tonight.
Holiday Service To Be Nov.22
A special committee of the Student Religious council is planning two 30-minute Thanksgiving services to be held in Danforth chapel on Monday, Nov. 22. They will begin at 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.
Maxine Albury, committee chairman, said the programs will be patterned after church worship services, opening with organ music and scripture reading. The organists will be Georgia Ginther, fine arts sophomore, in the morning and Marilyn Barr, fine arts freshman, in the afternoon. Ira Gissen, president of the Jewish Student Union, will read the scripture.
will speak briefly at both services.
Calvin Glover, fine arts senior, and a mixed quartet from the Methodist church will sing at the morning service. Special music in the afternoon will be by Thelma Mims, fine arts junior, and the mixed quartet of the First Christian church.
Miss Alburty said the purpose of having two services is to allow more students to attend.
Phi Kappa Tau To Get Charter
The local group will be the Beta Theta chapter. Phi Kappa Tau has more than 60 chapters and colonies on college compuses. The fraternity colonized here the past spring and began operating a chapter house this fall. There are 35 members and pledges, all living in the house at 1408 Tennessee.
The University of Kansas Colony of Phi Kappa Tau, national social fraternity, will achieve chapter status tonight when Roland Maxwell, national president from Pasadena, Calif. will present the charter at an installation banquet.
Ray W. Wilson, administrative assistant to the city manager of Kansas City, Mo., will be toastmaster at the banquet. L.C. Wooddruff, dean of men, will welcome the new chapter to the campus.
Chapters at the Universities of Nebraska and Oklahoma will send representatives. Other guests will be alumni, representatives from organized houses on the campus, parents of members, and several university administrators.
Alan J. Pickering, business senior from Joplin, Mo., is president of the colony.
Dr. John Ise, professor of economics, will speak in the Sunflower grade school auditorium tonight, instead of Wednesday night as appeared in Wednesday's Daily Kansan.
There are now 22 national social fraternities at the University.
Correction
Student Seats For OU Game Are Assured
In cheeking the rumor that students' seats for the O.U. game were being sold to the general public, the University Daily Kansan found the rumor to be unfounded, although a near record breaking crowd is expected.
Chancellor Malott assured the Daily Kansan that there would be enough seating space for the students. "The press of outside requests is so great that we must utilize all the available space, but there will be adequate space for the students." he said.
E. L. Falkenstien athletic business manager, guaranteed that no student would be turned away for lacking of seating space. Sections A and B on the student side have been sold but they will be roped off to cut any migration to the better student seats, Falkenstien said.
The capacity of the stadium for the game will be 36,978 seats. Fifteen hundred to 1,800 standing room tickets will be sold. There are 34-558 seats in the stadium. Two thousand more have been added by placing bleachers at the south end four-hundred twenty box seats said he sold.
Approximately 9,156 seats have been reserved for students.
Psychiatrist Talks On Dating Period
The transition from romantic love to a mature marital relation is a big problem for the young people of the United States, Dr. Robert C. Murphy, Jr., said at the second lecture on love and marriage Wednesday.
Dr. Murphy, University health service psychiatrist, told the students that "culture pressure places an overemphasis on sex in the dating period.
"This can be overcome largely by better education of children on sex matters. There should not be a Victorian hush-hush nor a flood of material on the subject, but direct, casual answers as are given on other subjects."
"Dating in the United States is characterized by romantic love," Dr. Murphy said. "It's theme is 'they lived happily everafter.' This is peculiar to Anglo-Saxon culture and is not a problem in others parts of the world, such as in France where some marriages are arranged by parents."
A question and answer period followed the lecture. No general rules could be given couples reaching the marriagable age and who are unable to get married because of economic reasons. Dr. Murphy said each case would need to be studied individually.
Commenting on his speech title, "Mental Hygiene and Pre-Marital Relations," Dr. Murphy said he was afraid students would think it meant pre-marital sexual relations.
"And judging from the eager expression on many faces, I am afraid I was right. It is not to be a premarital sexual relation lecture."
Kansas—Cloudy, with light snow west, light rain east, strong northerly winds and colder today. High today mid 30's west to mid 50's east. Partly cloudy, with rain east, clearing west, windy and colder tonight. Low tonight near 20 west, 25 to 30 east. Friday fair, Warmer west.
WEATHER
Rally Tomorrow In Fowler Grove
A 15-minute rally for the Oklahoma football game will be held at 9:45 a.m. tomorrow in Fowler grove. Dorothy Scroggy, head cheerleader, said today.
A whistle will sound at 9:45 to begin the rally and at 10:05 another whistle blast will end the rally, Chancellor Deane W. Malott announced.
Jay Janes and Ku Ku's will lead the cheering. A pep band will play.
Bill D. Barger, journalism senior, Wednesday was elected editor of the Sour Owl, official campus humor magazine, at a meeting of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity which publishes the magazine.
SDX Elects
Sour Owl Editor
Don L. Tennant, journalism senior, was elected business manager, and William C. Von Maurer, journalism senior, was elected assistant editor. Charles G. Pearson, journalism instructor, was elected faculty adviser.
The first issue of the Sour Owl will go on sale the first week in January, Barger announced. He asked that students who want to submit cartoons and manuscripts of fiction and humor stories should do so immediately.
James L. Robinson, president of Sigma Delta Chi, gave a report on the activities at the national convention of the fraternity which was held in Milwaukee Nov. 10 to 13. Robinson attended as representative of the Kansas chapter.
A new pledge class for Sigma Delta Chi will be elected at the next meeting Wednesday, Dec. 1.
Truman To Face Grave Problems
Key West, Fla., Nov. 18—(UP) James Forrestal, secretary of defense, brought critical world problems to President Truman's vacation retreat today.
Nationalist China's desperate military plight was assured top billing at their luncheon conference. The White House confirmed yesterday that Mr. Truman had received a letter from Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, reportedly on appeal for a strong expression of U.S. support.
On the eve of his flight to Key West, Mr. Forrestal told newsmen in Washington that another major tonic of discussion would be U.S. military aid to the five-nation western European union.
Mr. Forrestal, who returned to this country Tuesday from a European inspection, said he also would discuss strengthening of the Berlin airlift, the need for better housing for U.S. troops and means of strengthening the unified defense structure.
Although Mr. Truman was supposed to be on vacation at this Florida naval base, the tense world situation was steadily encoaching on his pleasure time. Telephone wires between the temporary White House and Washington were being kept busy.
And political considerations, such as when Mr. Forrestal will leave the cabinet, faded into the background. Mr. Forrestal has decided he will not stay through another four years in Washington. But at the same time he is leaving up to Mr. Truman the date of his departure.
Malott Opens Labor Relations Meeting Today
The first annual Industrial Relations conference got under way today with a welcome by Chancellor Deane W. Malott. He told 40 representatives of management and labor that the most important problem facing the world today is human relations.
"We know more about Chevroletis and Fords than we do about human emotions," he said. "We have labor problems and trouble with Russia because we have not learned to work together.
"The fact that you are meeting here today is indicative that industry is eager to advance its understanding of the complex problems facing the world today," he said.
George E. Mordock, Jr., assistant manager of labor relations for International Harvester, Chicago, gave the keynote address.
"Good industrial relations do not come automatically from good union relations," he said. "Good relations come from the good attitudes of well-informed employers directing well informed employees. There must be employees and employer relations apart from union relations.
"The policy of industry must be air and equitable for employees, customers, and stockholders alike," he said. "The employees must be informed. That is why International Harvester has an employee information department. The employee is a well informed member of the team."
To Entertain Industrialists
A wide variety of entertainment, produced by University talent, will be offered to the 50 Kansas industrialists attending the Industrial Relations conference which begins today and ends Saturday.
A program, which will be presented for the group tonight in Hoch auditorium, includes Ruth E. Russell, graduate student, who will sing "Un bel di" from Madame Butterfly (Puccini) and "Miranda" (Hageman); and Andrew T. Klapis, College senior, who will sing "The Prologue" from "Il Pagliacei" (Leoncavallo), and "Without a Song" (Youmans).
The University orchestra, directed by Prof. Russell L. Wiley, will play the three movements of the "Chausson Symphony, No.1 in B flat major."
Tau Sigma, modern dance group,
will present a recital consisting of
Russian and Mexican dances, a Voodoo
rite, a character sketch of Liza
Jane dance, country style dances,
and a tap dance.
An added specialty of the recital will be an oriental dance by Betty Press, 6-year-old daughter of John M. Cress, graduate student.
A dinner for the assembly will be held at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Palm room. Following this, movies of the Nebraska and Kansas State football games will be shown by Henry Shenk, associate professor of physical education.
Kansan Board Plans Party For UDK Staff Members
Ruth Clayton, journalism senior, was appointed chairman of a committee to plan a Christmas party for the staff of the University Daily Kansan.
Other members of the committee are Anna Mary Murphy, College senior, Eleanor Bradford and Orin L. Strobel, journalism seniors.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1948
Official Bulletin
Nov. 18. 1948
Pershing Rifles initiation. 7 to-
night, Kansas room, Union.
Ys Men, 7:30 tonight. East room Union.
Student Religious council. 4 p.m today. Myers hall.
Quack club, 7:30 tonight, Robinson gym. Attendance required.
Deutscher Verein wird am Donnerstag um vier Uhr dressig auf Zimmer 402. Fraser versammelt.
Women's Rifle club, 7 to 9 tonight. Military Science building. Dues payable.
Ku Ku's, 7:30 tonight, room 9
Frank Strong.
Phi Chi Theta, 7.30 tonight, Corbin hall. Mrs. Malone, speaker, Christmas party plans.
Mortar Board, 9 tonight, Delta
Gamma house. Dress for picture.
Delta Sigma Pi. 8 tonight, 222 Frank Strong, for actives, pledges and faculty. Professor Malone, director of Business Research bureau, speaker.
Mathematics club, 5 p.m. today.
211 Frank Strong, Richard Harrington,
"Unsolved Problems of
Mathematics."
Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship. 7 tonight. 131 Frank Strong.
Christian Science organization 7:30 tonight. Danforth chapel.
El Ateneo se reunira el jueves a las 7:30 en 11 F. S. Eil senor George Schanzer y los estudiantes de "Spanish 7" presentaran un programa rioplatense.
Y.W.C.A. cabinet, 4 p.m. tomorrow,
Miller hall.
The Four-No Bridge club will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Union ballroom.
Wesley Foundation radio and talent party, S p.m. tomorrow, Ecke hall.
Jewish student union religious
services. 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Danforth chapel. Business meeting following in Union building.
A.W.S. Senate dinner meeting,
4:30 pm, today, East room of Union.
All Baptist students planning to attend Baptist Student Fellowship Thanskgiving banquet, 5:30 p.m. Sunday, may obtain tickets from Dale Fields, 1230 Eadre, phone 2988.
Untarian Liberal club. 3:30 p.m.
Sunday, Pine room, Union, Program,
discussion of case in juvenile delinquency.
Episcopal College club supper 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Parish house.
Mathematical colloquium of department of mathematics, 5 p.m. Monday, 203 Frank Strong. Dr Mina Rea, Washington, D.C., "The Work of the Mathematics Branch of the Office of Naval Research."
Sigma Xi, 7:30 tonight. 210 Blake. Dr. Paul Gilles will speak on, "New Synthetic Flements."
4 Students Injured In Intramural Games
Four students were treated this week for injuries received in Intra-mural football games.
Ray Pleasant, engineering sophomore was treated for a lacenated eye. Ramon Trennepohl, Education freshman, was treated for a bruised nose which he received in the Don Henry co-op and Law School game. Milton Fadler received a bruised arm in the Phi Gamma Delta-Phi Delta Theta game, and Donald Frisbie, engineering senior, is in Watkins Memorial with a bruised thigh.
Albert R. Lowiec, College sophomore was treated Nov. 12 for a scalp laceration which he received in the Beta Thta Pi-Sigma Chi football game.
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Columbia, Mo., Nov. 18—(UP)— Defense counsel for E. K. Johnston, dismissed University of Missouri professor, today changed his plea from not guilty to guilty of sodomy charges as his trial began in Boone county circuit court.
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Meetings are held each Tuesday and Thursday at 7 and 8 p.m. The group is divided into four sessions so that the women may benefit from individual instruction.
Forty-eight women students have attended the meetings of the women's rifle team sponsored by the Reserve Officers Training corps at the University, said Col. Kenneth E. Rosebush, coach for the team.
During the first two meetings instructions were given in safety measures and proper sighting of the weapon. Colonel Rosebush said.
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Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1 a semester-payage), published, Lawrence Kans. after afternoons in University year extension for Saturday and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class at Lawrence, Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18. 1948
PAGE THREE
Socially Speaking
Delta Gamma Hour Dance
The pledge class of Delta Gamma sorority entertained the pledges of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity at an hour dance Friday.
Interdorm Tea
Inter-dorm council held a tea in Templin hall Sunday in honor of Miss Marjorie Austin, social and scholarship director for independent women's dormitories.
Tau Kappa Epsilon Halloween Party
The pledge class of Tau Kappa
Epsilon entertained the active chapter and their guests with a Halloween party Nov. 6.
\* \* \*
The theme of the party was centered around a mock burial ceremony complete with body, casket and pall bearers.
The chaperones were: Hrs. M. P.
Ramage, Murs. C. L. Veach, Mrs.
Treva Brown, and Mrs. R. B. Roche
The other guests were:
Mary Jeanette Covey, Phyllis Mowery, Ann Preble, Dorothy Kolb, Nancy Sewell, Freida Sahm, Margaret Miller, Lynn Wingett, Barbara Hume, Norma Mendenhall, Betty Jean Waters, Joan Cooper, Marjorie Peters, Keith Marcia, McCullough, Joan Mitchell.
Dolores De Fries, Rosemary Landrarey, Susan Woodward, Elda Lou Phillips, Phyllis Meden, Betty Lou Brown, Clo Warner, Judy Buckley, Joyce Ryan, Ruth Dudley, Marlyn Swenson, Maggie Harness, Norma Haase, Jo Ann Ogg, Pat Brown, Barbara Bara, June A翠, Alice Holmann, Betty Jo Bloomer, Marilyn Brown, Joan Rodgers, Doris Greehaus, Marilyn Jamenson, Kathryn Smith, Margaret Townsend.
Harriet Harlow, Nancy Jackson, Rosemary Egle, Carla Haber, Evelyn Kepler, Virginia Zigler, Shirley Spalding, Shirley Linderauer, Beverly Jennings, Ardice Jones, Stella Gabrielson, Betty Hall.
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ROTC Names Committees; Will Select Cadet Colonel
Army R.O.T.C. members have appointed committees for the joint Army-Navy ball to be held Friday, December 10. Men in both branches are devising plans to select two queens, one to be called the Cadet Colonel, the other the Midshipman Captain.
There are about 750 students enrolled in the University cadet training
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Spidel, Mr. and Mrs. Howard McClellan, Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Bolitho, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Bowman, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Keenan, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Watson, Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Mull, Mr. and Mrs. James M. Stiller.
\* \* \*
Corbin "Levi Leap"
“Levi Leap” was the title given Corbin Hall's informal party. Friday. The ranch theme was carried out in decorations which converted the dormitory to the "Bar Nuthin' Ranch."
Clad in western garb, the guests were served hot dogs and cokes following the intermission skit, "Shooting of Dan McGrew."
Chaperones for the party included Mesdames Treva Brown, H. P. Rammage, C. L. Veatch, and R. B. Roche.
Guests were Don Curry, Pat Calahan, Dean Williams, Phillip Martinek, Donald Blachly, Bob VanCitter, Austin Harmon, Robert Sauvan, Frank Kress, Warth Arthur, Dave Lovette, Tom Ackerman, Robert Hughes. Brownnell Landes, Robert Argambright, Robert Bowersock, Eugene Dittemore, Gerald Stutz, William Maze.
Robert Newton, James Gulifoyle,
Speuer Yohe, George Hawkins,
Robert Bennett, Robert Kunert,
John Twente, Richard Stavely,
James Griffith, Duane Wilderson,
Charles Wilderson, Fred Henderson,
LaMar Davis, Robert Kuckelman,
Kenneth Miller, Richard Royer, Ray Boardman, Robert Stevenson, Robert Godfrey, Thomas Keiser.
Lois Qualls, Boyd Lotimer, John Kapfer, Marcus Glover, George Prlain, Charles Warden, William Johnson, Melvin Reuber, Steven Resovich, Philip Woodward, Wesley Hall, Neil Peterson, Ernest Leachy, Dave Bryant, John Lukert, Ralph Beaume, Robert Howard, Roy Smoots, Winton Studt, Kenneth Philo, Fred Howard, William Ruth, John Meyer
Dudley Potter, Dwight Hunter,
Morgan Wright, Marvin Liggett, Gillette Demars, Lester Main, Lee Hutcheson, Gene Kuehnle, Don Blakeslee, Keith Smith, Robert Hardin, Don Lieben, Ernest Meis, William Evans, Jack Moler, Bradley Keith, Eddie Beins, David MacNaughton, J. W. Dickey, Delmer Harris, Wayne Strong.
V
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program. Through past years the ball has been one of the most colorful in the University's social whirl because of uniforms and the glamour of women's formals.
Chairmen of the army committees are Thomas E. Franklin, decorations; Charles Hinshew, refreshments; Keith Wilson, entertainment.
Faculty advisors for the ball are Lt. Com. William A. Mann and Capt. William E. Hensel.
Candidates for Cadet Colonel will be chosen in each women's organized house. Pictures must be submitted to room 203 Military Science building by Monday. The only qualification the candidate must have is that she be escorted to the ball by an Army or Air force cadet.
Haney Scott, Paul Seiwdol, Joseph Brown, Ned Hoover, Walter Diehl, James Gilliland, John Matyas, William Ries, Harley Holladay, Robert Austill, Mark Hondley, Robert Rebin, Lloyd Trace, Jack Scott, Jim Murphy.
Sigma Kappa Entertains
The pledges of Sigma Kappa sorority will entertain the pledge class of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity with an hour dance Friday from 7 to 8 p.m. at the chapter house.
Hausherr Hall Open Hour Dance Hausherr hall 1247 Ohio, will hold an open hour dance from 7 to 8 p.m. Friday.
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T
A farm in a valley. A barn and house are visible. Trees line the hills. A fence surrounds the field.
these —
The green beneficence of trees,
The kindliness of rain, the birth
Of springtime from a barren earth —
The earth that bears the bread we break
In gratitude for Thy sweet sake.
Thanksgiving
Lord God, we give Thee thanks this day.
Humbly, in our simple way,
For all the gracious gifts which Thou
Hast deigned so richly to endow —
For life — for every passing minute —
For this, Thy world, and all things in it!
We give Thee thanks, dear Lord, for
We thank Thee, Lord, for healing song,
For courage, wise and tall and strong;
For all the laughter and the tears
That mold the pattern of our years;
For truth and trust and constancy,
For faith that lets us lean on Thee!
We give Thee thanks for ears to hear,
For feet to tread Thy pathways here,
For hands to touch, and lips to sing
Thy name in every lovely thing —
For friendship with our fellow men —
But mostly for They love.
AMEN
Pumpkin
THE KANSAS
ELECTRIC POWER COMPANY
PAGE FOUR
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1948
Little Man On Campus
By Bibler
罗伯特·贝克尔
"Trick play-trick play!"
Man Is Outrun By Birds And Beasts, But He Still Surpasses Snails, Worms
Washington—(UP)—Rocket-propelled man easily walks off with the world's speed record of 1,000 m.p.h. Jet man follows closely with 670.98. Third place is taken by the frigate bird, which travels at 261 miles per hour.
Honors are won also by the falcon at 200 miles per hour and the dragon fly, an insect which travels at nearly 60. The deer botfly almost cost man his record. It was credited with a speed of 300 m.p.h. until scientific experiment showed that at 64, the insect would become invisible and at greater speeds it would "burn up."
Aquatic man is a mere octopus. He is able to travel at the rate of four miles per hour by the aid of four appendages, barely keeping pace with a sea creature which is handicapped by as many more. Both are left far behind by the swordfish, fastest thing on fins, at nearly 70 mph.
Man, the land animal, can do 22 miles an hour. To the hunting leopard who makes 70, and the antelope who registers 60, that is a disdainfully slow pace. In fact, the antelope looks with scorn on the race horse which clocks off at 48 m.p.h. The lazy thing is almost as slow as a man.
Even man, however, must concede the sloth prize to the burrowing earthworm, which is slower than the snail. The snail travels at 23 inches an hour.
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Chicago — (UP) — A 58-year-old dairy foreman said today he would "take it easy" for the rest of his life on the $600,000 he inherited from an aunt he had never met.
Rich Aunt Leaves 3 Million Kroner
Erik Gunnar Seaburg said he probably will give up his home here and his $79-a-week job so he can enjoy the money.
That's the catch in the inheritance.
Mr. Seaburn said he probably would go to Copenhagen about Dec. 1 to check with the bank about the inheritance, which he was told would be available at that time.
Mr. Seaburg said a dispatch from Copenhagen, Denmark told him that he would inherit three million Danish kroner, or about $800,000, from a wealthy aunt, Mrs. Heba Hansen, who died there recently at the age of 81.
"It's like a dream. I've been a working man all my life."
But the Danish National bank is expected to refuse to transfer the money to this country.
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Fraley's Follies Shows Sooners Over Kansas
By OSCAR FRALEN
New York. Nov. 18—(UF)-Frasley's Follies and the weekend football winners.
National
Michigan over Ohio State—The buckeyes are fired higher than the price of butter but Michigan off the record just has too much for them. State has a great pass defense record, but not against this kind of pin point pitching.
The East
Harvard over Yale — Persians started eating fish in 3,000 B.C.
started eating his fish in 3,000 B.C.
Columbia over Syracuse—Bowling
originally was a German religious
ceremony.
Penn State over Pitt—China's Emperor Shun made the first parachute jump in 2,300 B.C.
Princeton over Dartmouth—Civilized people now shoot arrows mostly at inanimate objects.
Also: Iowa over Boston U., Boston College over St. Mary's, Villanova over San Francisco, Holy Cross over Temple, Rutgers over Fordham, Muhlenberg over Buckness, NYU over Kings Point and Lafayette over Lehigh
Mid-West
Northwestern over Illinois—Ever
bear of Tauronania?
Oklahoma over Kansas—It's the official name for bull fighting.
Purdue over Indiana—Chess is the most universal game.
Minnesota over Wisconsin—"White Feather" comes from cock fighting.
Also: Tulane over Cincinnati,
Michigan State over Washington
State, Missouri over Nebraska,
Idaho, over New Hampshire.
State Passion over Nebraska
Toledo over New Hampshire.
Toledo over New Bansbury,
Marquette over South Dakota
Arquette over South Dakota and Oklahoma Aggies over Kansas State.
North Carolina over Duke--England outlawed golf in 1491.
Georgia over Furman—Was that xvgr wife wishing?
Alabama over LSU—Mary, Queen of Scots, was the first woman golfer.
Tennessee over Kentucky—The Irish originated handball.
Also: Vanderbilt over Maryland, Florida over Miami, William and Mary over North Carolina State, Georgia Tech over Citadel, Clemson over Duquesne, West Virginia over Western Reserve and Georgetown over George Washington.
The West.
California over Stanford—Harness sulkies weigh only 26 pounds.
Oregon over Oregon State-An
"Aloon-Aloon" is a bull racing track.
USC over UCLA—Racing grey-
hounds leap about 12 feet.
Washington over Idaho—Curling is too shuffleboard.
Also: Colorado over Colorado Aggies, Brigham over Wyoming and Montana over North Dakota.
TCU over Rice—A hockey puck
60 to 80 m.p.h.
SMU over Baylor—A billiard ball can be hit 20 mph
The Southwest
Arkansas over Tulsa—A golf ball 120 m.p.h.
Iowa State over Arizona—And a tennis ball 151 m.p.h.
Also: Hardin Simmons over Tempe State and Texas Tech over New Mexico.
In South Africa the word "Afri-
kander" means cattle; "Afrikaner"
—that is, without the "d"—means a South African of Dutch descent.
KU-Georgia Gator Bowl?
Probable lineup of teams for bow football games according to a United Press release:
(All games on New Year's day unless otherwise designated):
Rose, Pasadena, Calif.
California-Northwestern Sugar, New Orleans.
Tulane-North Carolina. Orange. Miami.
Orange, Miami
Michigan State-Oklahoma
Coiton, Dallas
Clemson-Southern Methodist,
Shrine, San Francisco.
East-West All Stars.
East-West All Stars
Gator, Jacksonville, Fla.,
Corvus, Kaneas
*Wake Forest-Texas Tech.
Sun. El Paso, Tex..
Georgia-Kansas.
Divie Birmingham. Ala..
Texas Mines-Dayton.
Harbor, San Diego, Cal., Nevada-Okla. A. & M.
Wm. and Mary-Utah.
Bainin, Fresno, Calif.
Fresno State-Colo. A. & M.
Glass, Toledo (Dec. 4).
*Toledo-Washington (Mo.) Pineapple Honolulu.
*Oregon State="Hawaii.
Cigar, Tampa, Fla.
Missouri Valley Heidelberg.
Tor, Rose, Tusa. (Dec. 4 or 11).
Tex. Rose, Tyler. (Dec. 4 or 11).
Tyler. J.C.-Hutchinson, Kan.
Tyler J.C. Hutchinson, Kan.
Lakewood, Dec 11
Little Rose, Pasadena (Dec. 11),
Compton, Cal.-Duluth, Minn.
North-South All Stars.
10
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Salad, Phoenix, Ariz.,
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*Team already selected.
(It will be noted that several schools are listed for more than one game and have indicated they may be available on each occasion).
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1948
Kansas Milers Bid For NCAA Cross Country Title
The University of Kansas will be represented by Bob Karnes, Hal Hinchee, Dave Breidenthal, Clif Abel and Bill White in the tenth running of the N.C.A.A. 4-mile cross country championship meet Monday, Nov. 22, at East Lansing, Mich. Karnes and Hinchee are veterans of last year's team which competed in the N.C.A.A.
Bill Easton, University track coach, was coach at Drake University when the Bulldogs won the N.C.A. A.c. cross country championship in 1944, 1945 and 1946 with the three lowest point scores in the history of the meet. The scores were 25, 50 and 42 respectively. He moved to Kansas in 1947. His team won the Big Six conference cross country championship and set a low score meet record of 22 points in 1947. This year the Jay Hawkers again won the conference title and broke their previous record by scoring 19 points. Bob Karnes was individual champion for both 1947 and 1948 to set a conference record.
In the N.C.A.A. meet last year 153 men started and 152 finished. Kansas was represented by Karnes who placed 5th, Harold Moore, 24th; Robert Morris, 44th; and Harold Hinchee who came in 87th.
The meet was first run in 1938, discontinued in 1943, and resumed in 1944. The team champions were: Indiana university in 1938, Michigan State in 1939, Indiana university in 1940, Rhode Island in 1941, Indiana
university and Penn State tied in 1942, Drake in 1944, 1945, and 1946, and Penn State in 1947.
Individual champions were: Greg Rice, Notre Dame in 1938; Walt Mehl, Wisconsin in 1939; Gil Dodds, Ashland in 1940; Fred Wilt, Indiana in 1941; Oliver Hunter, Notre Dame in 1942; Fred Wesleyan in 1946; and Jack Milne, North Carolina university in 1947.
Fred Feiler of Drake university, is the only runner ever to win the individual championship twice, and he did it in successive years. Drake is the only school to win the team championship three years in succession. Bill Easton was coach at Drake when these records were set.
Kansas wasn't counted in the team scoring last year at the N.C.A.A. meet because only four men were sent. A school must send five men in order to be counted as a team.
Coach Easton regards Horace Ashfelter of Penn State as this year's probable individual champion. Ashenfelter placed second last year.
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Women's Tennis Final This Week
The women's tennis and badminton intramural contest is in the last round of competition.
In tennis Ruth Behrlburn of Watkins hall will play Mary Helen Shepard of Corbin for the championship. These girls came out of the semi-finals the victors over Ruth Mitchell of Corbin hall and Betty van der Smissen of Locksley respectively.
Elsie Lemon of Alpha Omicron Pi won over Ruth Henry, Delta Delta Delta, in the badminton semi-finals will play Joan Lippelmann of Locksley hall who made the finals by way of her victory over Mary Helen Shenard.
The finals will be completed by Monday, Nov. 22.
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THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 18. 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN; LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Aces Hi, Dix Club, Beta's, Phi Gam's Win Semi-Finals
The Beta's and Phi Gam's turned in victories in the fraternity division, and Aces Hi and Dix Club won in the independent games Wednesday as the intramural playoffs moved past the semifinals. The Dix Club and the Beta's got early starts on their leads, but Aces Hi waited until the fourth quarter to get their victory drive started.
Three of the losers in the semi-final battles, A.T.O., T.K.E., and Dine-A-Mite, were knocked from the undefeated class. Three winners, Beta, Phi Gam, and Aces Hi, remained undefended for the season. The Phi Gam's are also unscored uron.
Dix Club 12. Dine-A-Mite 7
Dix Club (4-2) won over Dine-A-Mite (5-1), 12 to 7, in a hard fought game marred by many penalties. Dix Club scored early in the first period from the one-yard line on a pass from George Medill to Gene McKee. Medill tossed to Al Duncan in the second period to give the winners a 12 to 0 halftime lead. Dine-A-Mite rallied in the third quarter on a page from Bob Saavegra to Jack Crahan for a touchdown. Saavegra kicked the extra point.
Phi Gam's 14. Teke 0
The Phi Gam's (7-0) defeated T.K.E. (6-1), 14 to 0. Woody Dryden passed to Bill Bunten in the end zone for the first Phi Gam touchdown in the second period. The rest of the game was a passing duel, with Press Wilson and Chuck Boulwer doing the work for the T.K.E.'s until the final period, when Jack Sheilds intercepted a pass and ran for a touchdown. Jim Sallee converted both extra points.
Beta's 2: ATO 6.
The Beta's (7-6) racked up a 20 to 6 triumph over A.T.O. (6-1). The winners capitalized on a bad A.T.O. punt in the first quarter. Big Clair Gillin leaped high to pull down a pass from Bob Schwanzle for the touchdown. Schwanzle passed to John Stites for two more touchdowns, and Al Lowery kicked two extra points. Late in the fourth quarter the A.T.O.'s started a drive
Cleveland, Nov. 18—(UP)—Jimmy Bivins was enjoying a suddenly fatter reputation as a heavyweight challenger today but the suspicion lingered that champion Joe Louis may just have been toying with him in their six-round exhibition bout.
which payed off in Chet Laniewski's touchdown pass to Herb Weidensaul.
Bivins, Cleveland Negro who has coveted Louis' crown for years, startled a crowd of 10,086 at the Arena last night as he carried the fight to the champion for the first four rounds, even opening a gash in his left brow.
Aces Hi 14. Lawyers 0
The fact that Louis rallied in the last two sessions and rocked the Cleveland with stiff shots to the jaw failed to erase the good impression created by Bivins' early attack. Whether, as Bivins hoped, that impression was good enough to gain him a title bout next June remained to be seen.
Aces Hi (6-0) exploded in the fourth quarter to win 14 to 0 over the Law School (4-2). Jim Williams passed the winners to the first touchdown, pitching to Dean Duke for 8 yards to climax the drive. Williams then added the clincher when he intercepted a pass and raced down the sideline for 25 yards and a touchdown. A lawyer was tagged in his own end zone to give the Aces a safety late in the game.
Bivins Impressive In Loss To Louis
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
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The Kansas freshman two-mile team, winners of the Big Seven Conference championship last week end, are also undefeated in eight dual telegraphic meets this fall. These meets were competed against Missouri, Michigan, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Colorado, Wisconsin, Texas A. and M., and Maryland State.
Two-Milers Win 8 Meets
Herb Semper finished in first place in all the meets. His fastest time was 9:46.2 against Michigan State and Texas A. and M. Pat Bowers ran the two miles in 10:00.7 to take second place against Oklahoma and Nebraska. Bill Kazmer moved up to take second place against Michigan State and Texas A. and M. with a time of 9:59.4. "Red" Dinsmore and Dave Fisher ran well to take fourth and fifth places giving Kansas low scores to win.
The summary of the team scores are: Kansas 12, Missouri 25; Kansas 22, Michigan U. 13; Kansas 17, Nebraska 38; Kansas U. 11, Oklahoma 28; Kansas 10, Colorado 29; Kansas 10, Wisconsin 27; Kansas 16, Texas A. and M. 39; Kansas 19, Michigan State 36.
Montana State Ace Tops Punt Parade
New York, Nov. 18—(UP)—Bill Boston of Montana State topped the nation's large college punter with an average of 44.4 yards on 29 boots, according to statistics released today by the National Collegiate Athletic Bureau.
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Jerome Kern Songs 3.94
Dry Bones ... .79
Pennsylvania ... .79
Winter Wonderland .79
White Christmas ... .79
Come In-and choose your favorites from our large selection of Fred Waring albums and single records.
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1948
Oh, For That 'Carefree' Summer School
THE WATER
Persons who have vacations in the summer don't know what they are missing by not attending summer school. A Summer Session Kansan survey disclosed that most of the students spent their mornings in hot water in the classroom and their afternoons in the cool water of the city plunge. So their time would not be wasted, the males concentrated on developing their "swimming pool technique," while the girls cooperated by agreeing "clothes don't make the bathing beauty." The above picture shows Larry Simmons trying to entice Jane Topping into the water.
Christmas Inspiration
give beautiful Daniel Greens!
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Watch the look on her face as she opens your gift! For when you give beautiful Daniel Green slippers you are certain to please the woman who gets them. Because she knows that Daniel Green means—the very best in beauty, comfort, and "stay in shape" quality.
Daniel Gree
COMFY SLIPPERS
Daniel Green uses Skinner's famous rayon satin and the American Felt Company's fine wool felts.
Royal College Shop 837-39 Mass.
Lick Any Man In The House
New York, N. Y. — (UP) — Freeman Chum's Chinese restaurant is featuring a special Harry Truman cocktail, a mixture of sloe gin, scotch, creme de menthe and mui kwai lu whisky.
A sign promises customers: "One drink and you take on the whole country."
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in a story more wonderful,
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A
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18. 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE NINE
Truman Plans Cabinet Job For Social Welfare Head
Washington, Nov. 18—(UP)—President Truman is reliably reported to be planning a new cabinet post to direct a vastly expanded social welfare program aimed at making America healthier and happier.
Creation of such an executive department would require congressional approval. But capital observers believe the new democratic congress will go along. $ \textcircled{*} $
Administration sources told the United Press that Mr. Truman will ask congress to set up the new welfare department in his state of the union message. The message will be delivered to congress shortly after it convenes Jan. 3.
Closely allied to the welfare program are relatively shorter range projects in the field of housing. The President and his lieutenants want rent controls extended for at least another year, and government-backed construction of low-cost, low-rental housing.
Mr. Truman's welfare program in some respects is more far-reaching than anything of the kind proposed by the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt. It embraces:
1. Extension of social security benefits to millions of persons not now covered, and higher payments to the needy and aged.
2. A long-range national health insurance, to provide adequate medical care for millions the government says can not now afford it.
3. Bigger federal grants to the nurses for construction of hospitals and other medical facilities and for
medical research.
4. Increased federal financial aid for education.
5. Possible government fellowships for medical students as a solution to the current shortage of doctors.
If Mr. Truman is successful in putting over the program, it would add millions of dollars to the government's annual welfare bill, which already tops one billion dollars. Most of the added cost, however, would be met by increased income from social security taxes. Congress appropriated over a billion and a quarter dollars this fiscal year for government welfare and education activities'.
Congress probably won't go as far as the administration would like in establishing the 10-year national health program. But it is believed at least a modified plan will be approved.
Oscar Ewing, federal security administrator, is plugging hard for the health plan. He has estimated that 68 million Americans cannot now afford adequate medical care.
LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS
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Bonn, Germany, (UP)-Customs officers at the Belgian-German border reported today that they had foiled a pork smugging scheme involving drunken pigs.
PLUS!
Creeping Horror in the Night . .
As the "creeping killer" strikes—and strikes again!
The Creeper
Produced by
BERNARD SMALL • JEAN VARROUGH
A Rellonage Picture
Released by 20th Century-Fox
For some time the guards have checked trucks bound for Belgium by poking sharp sticks into the cargo. Answering "oinks" betrayed any contraband hogs.
The last few days all was quiet along the pig-smuggling front. Today the guards found that three pigs didn't even flinch when prodded. The smugglers confessed that the pigs had been lulled into silence with alcohol.
NROTC Names 10 For Rifle Team
Ten men have been named regular members of the Naval Reserve Officer's Training Corps Rifle team.
They are Harold R. B. Bailey, Kuel E. Rains, engineering junior; theodore W. Tober, pharmacy junior; William W. Meier, business junior; Edward K. Maxwalt, College sophomore; Harold J. Keeling, engineer; homecoming John C. Edgar, education freshman; Kenneth A. Harris, engineering freshman; and James P. Gillett, and Eddie R. Maag, college freshman.
The rifle team meets from 4 to 6 p.m. on Tuesday and Thursdays. They have gained an average of 53 points each match this first month, Lt. L. E. Bolts, team coach said today.
Moreau Opens Drive For Burdick Fund
F. J. Moreau, dean of the School of Law, will attend a luncheon in Atchison today in an effort to interest lawyers there in the proposed William L. Burdick memorial.
DE SOTO
APPROVED
SERVICE
PLYMOUTH
Sunflower car owners wishing to join a car pool to bring students to night activities of the University are asked to see Mrs. Betty Lou Collins, 1 Douglas Road, Sunflower, not the Villager office as was stated in Wednesday's Daily Kansan.
Correction
Members of the executive committee of the Burdick Memorial corporation. Richard Barber of Lawrence, F. C. Bannon of Leavenworth, and Henry W. Buck of Kansas City, Mo. met in Green hall Sunday to discuss solicitation methods for the fund. A plan of personal solicitation of alumni throughout the state was agreed upon by committee members.
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Phone 75 NewYork Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCE
Glamour Portraits for your Christmas Gifts
Gifts
They are new and different, Styled by Graham. Make your appointment now and get the consideration that a Gift Portrait deserves. The prices are Reasonable, Quality Superb, and Satisfaction Guaranteed... or no sale.
The Graham Studio
211 West 8th Street
Phone 3199
PAGE TEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1948
The Editorial Page-
Where Do We Stand?
"Lay 'em on the table, face up" was often heard in the days of the Wild West, calling for a look at all the cards after the chips were down. With much talk of war, it is time for the citizens of the United States to have a peek at our cards, even if the last one has not been dealt.
Mr. Truman, who talked frankly with the people during the recent campaign, should sit down for a fireside chat to inform America how close we are to another conflict. Plain talk, if the situation is serious, should eliminate some of the complacency in the country, and plain talk, if the situation is not serious, should relieve some of the nervousness. Either way, it would smooth some of the troubled waters.
Those who believe war is inevitable and imminent point to the information disseminated daily on what cities in this country probably will be attacked, and which locations in Russia are particularly vulnerable. The crashes of military aircraft, they point out, are caused by rushing the planes from the "mothballs" without proper checking. The sending of air crews and maintenance men to wartime bases in England is also among sure signs of impending war, they say.
At the other extreme are those who sit on their atomic bombs, believing we are the sole possessors of the secret, and say that no power would dare enter a struggle with the United States. They also believe our tremendous air reserve could be marshalled and put into action in time to ward off an attack on the United States proper. This is the same group that predicted the American navy would sink the remnants of the Japanese fleet 90 days after Pearl Harbor.
With all the uncertainty in the world, and with professional gamblers waging 10-1 there will be a war, the people need a quick look at the real situation.
How about it. Mr. President, where DO we stand?
-Chris Butler.
- Letters To The Editor -
Abuse
Dear Editor:
I believe it has been mentioned before, but having fallen victim to what I consider a gross injustice to the student, I should like to once more bring the issue to attention.
I have been unable during this semester to obtain two books, for which I have had imperative need, because these books have been in the possession of instructors for periods of ten months and four years respectively.
I think the average persons, both faculty and students, will agree that this is a decided demonstration of irresponsibility and abuse of privilege. For the benefit of the student and in the name of fair play, I suggest that some immediate action be taken to prevent such practices in the future. Every book in the library is the property of the University community and should not become the private possession of any individual member of that community merely because his rank does not require of him the responsibility imposed upon every student.
As an instructor entitled to this privilege, I seek for the great majority of the student body to correct this malpractice.
Ralph A. Zingaro Graduate student
Representation
Dear Editor:
I was interested in your editorial comment of approximately a week ago wherein you condemned the existing A.S.C. rules which allow the elected representatives to disenfranchise organizational representatives. I think I'm correct in saying that you called it "undemocratic."
Undemocratic? What could be more undemocratic than allowing the balance of A.S.C. voting strength to lie in the hands of a small clique of organizations rather than in the hands of the students themselves.
Perhaps you don't realize that
the organizational representatives actually sit on the A.S.C. as a matter of privilege. They don't represent the student body as a whole, but rather the small segment who happen to be members of some privileged body. As a matter of fact, organizational representatives constitute legalized pressure groups.
It would seem that the logical step to take would be to further remove power from this lobby clique and return it to the students as a whole where it belongs.
Kent Shearer
A.S.C. representative
College
A Bouquet
Why is it that more Kansans don't stick up for their state? The way most Kansans talk, it's no wonder that a majority of Easteners have the idea that Kansas is half sunflower wilderness and half dust bowl.
Moreover, I don't believe that all of the students here at KU have eyes in their heads. If they did have, they would appreciate this beautiful campus and take a
Radio Tops List Of Study Courses
Radio and other forms of communication are the most popular subjects among World War II veterans taking correspondence courses under the G. I. Bill, a Veterans administration statement said today. Engineering courses rank second, followed by courses in business.
About 59 per cent of veterans enrolled in correspondence courses take these three subjects. Other subjects in the order of their popularity are mechanical, refrigeration and air conditioning, art and design, humanities, electrical courses, construction and related courses, metal work, journalism, and architecture.
Vets Will Get Rest Of Money
Veterans who have not received full compensation checks so far this month, may get the rest of their money on a supplementary pay roll after Saturday, E. R. Elbel, director of veterans affairs, said today
"Only three per cent of the veterans have failed to get full compensation." he said. "Those veterans who have met all the requirements at this office will likely get their checks sooner than those who have failed to supply us with supplementary letters of entitlement or other needed information."
keener interest in telling people of its merits.
When I return home to Virginia for Christmas vacation, I intend to spread the good word about this state—not only of its scenic beauty, but also of the friendliness of the people.
Mary Louise Fischer College sophomore
University
Daily Hansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assm., Nahawks Assm., and the Associated College Press. Represented by the National Ad-
missory Association 420 Madison Ave. New York City.
Editor-In-Chief
Managing Editor
Editor Editor
Asst. Man. Editor
City Editor
Asst. City Editor
Editor el.
editor el.
Asst. Tel. Editor
Asst. Tel. Editor
Asst. Sports Editor
Society Editor
Business Mgr...
Advertising Mgr...
Circulation Mgr...
Asst. Crc. Mgr...
Classified Mgr...
Asst. Class. Mgr...
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Maurice C. Lungen
Hal D. Nelson
Bob E. Nelson
Bill F. Mayer
Robert Newman
Nora Temple
Richard D. Barton
Larry Funk
Robert D. Snair
Onae Trelac
Marvin L. Rowlands
Rosemary Rospaw
INTI-FREEZE
Bill Nelligan
Don Tennant
Ruth Clayton
Desa Knuth
Don Radford
Yvonne Jossen
William E. Beck
Don Welch
Charles O'Connor
PREPARE and
PROTECT
Stop in and get
with
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Crowning glory for a merry week beginning with the Jayhawk-Sooner Game and ending with that Thanksgiving vacation at home. Exquisitely waved—soft and lustrous.
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Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 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 processed during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journals may be mailed at 45 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five
day days days
25 words or less ...35c 65c 90c
additional words ...1c 2c 3c
FOR SALE
A KNEE-HOLE desk with 4 drawers.
Good condition. Call Clair Gillin, 2470R.
SIX TICKETS for the Oklahoma game
for sale. $3 each. Call 13863. 18
$1.00 DAY SPECIAL: Christmas greeting cards, boxes of 21 assorted cards. Sells regularly at 79c, this sale only, 2 boxes for $1.00 at Gambles. 19
BOY'S BICYCLE, excellent condition new tires, W 10. W 23rd, after 6 p. h. FOR SALE w/ recorder and brake discs $80.00. And up Call Hank Black, phone 23243, 29
ARGUS A2 camera, good condition, new phone 3346, Eugene Searle, 1537 Tenm or phone 3346
HOT ROD. 37 motor in,perfect shape
Cail Jack,2095. 19
1945 WILLY'S Arm Jeep. Good com-
fort, better heater. $5000.
Call John Rohde, 2903.
41.00 DAY SPECIAL: 81x99 bed sheets
64x64 thread count, 2 for $5.00. Also 42x36
allow cases, this sale 2 for $1.00 at Gamers
19
SUN LAMP Special: Get a Florida sun-tan while you study. GE SunLamps to fit standard sockets now. Only $8.50. B E, Goodrich 929, Moss
STANDARD ROYAL Typewriter. Late model in perfect condition. Priced 20 per cent below similar machines at机的 Campbell. Pho 790 or e-mail at 1127 Ohio.
TIRED OF WALKING: Come to the Putt-Putt shop at 311 East 9th. I have a new motorcobots for sale there. It's cheap and safe transportation. 22
1405 PLYMOUTH Deluxe Sedan. Light blue, with 42 engine, seal beams, white rims, spot, radio and heater. A good price for $420. Wallace. 743 LB Phone # 2283.
TGYS: BIGGEST selection; lowest prices,
our convenient l-n-way plan. Game
bies.
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What would Santas do without Oomphies? Definitely the Christmas gift for her! Such a variety of elegant and classic styles in so many wonderful fabrics! Scuffs, slings or closed backs . . . in brocades, satins, corduroys! For the perfect gift, give Oamphies!
Walker
THE
813 Mass.
K and E LOG LOG Duplex. Contact
Konsum office 18
Phone 259
SHOP
AMMUNITION. Fishing Tackle. Guns an
batteries. Boats made. Made
padlocks. Ship, Shop 1019.
AN IDEAL GIFT: 5 tube table model,
radio, choice of ivory or walnut. Regular at $29.95. Dollar Day Feature.
$24.95 Use our air-i-way pin. Gamble.
BUSINESS SERVICE
USED CARS bought and sold. 6 blocks
North Motors, 700 North Second.
Mid-West Motors, 700 West Second.
MAGNETIC RECORDING machines,
typewriters, adding and calculating
machines, posture and swivel chairs, filing
cabinets, desks and tables or rented
TYPING: REASONABLE rate. Prompt service. Phone 1618R. 1028 Vermont. 2 ONE ONE is best -Balfour's for watch repair. 411 West 14th. rtfn
SPECIAL RATES: Time, 44 weeks, $3.87.
Life, 39 weeks, $3.99; Fortune, 9 months,
$6.75. For limited time only at your
Student Union Book Store. 18
TYPING DONE: Prompt service, reasonable rate, accurate work. 1209 Ohio, Chicago, Detroit.
5. 00 FOR YOUR old battery on a new warranty GoodDry battery. Delivery and installation free. Phone 21, B. F. goodDry Store, 929 Mass. 23
WHEN ALL PETS including dogs, birds,
ish, cats, pigeons, skunks, parrots,
quirrels, rats, mice, etc., go shopping
or an outfit they go to Grant's Pet Shop,
Conn. St. Phone 418. Everyone needs
the pet field—their needs are our business.
12-21
TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel. 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. Ask for Miss Helen. 12-21
EBERHART and Son, tailors. Finest samples made to measure, suits, topcoats and overcoats. Alterations, repairing and leather work. 831 $\frac{1}{2}$ Mass. II
LOST
K.E. SLIDE RULE, left in room 401
Lindley, Name. J. R. Bowden inked
inside of case. $5 reward. 309 E. 19th.
1919M 19
PARKER $1 brown pen. Name en-
tire. L. Bock. Spoon.
TRAYER Pk. F84. 544
FOOTBALL near field No. 5 Thursday
2851 Rewind on ball. IPA Pho
Rossi 1, Rewind
PAIR OF BLUE shell-rim glasses, somewhere between Frank Strong and Hoch auditorium. If found, please notify Billy Carbine at Corbin hall. Phone 860-18. Reserves
WANTED
WOULD LIKE a ride for two to New York or vicinity for Christmas vacation. Call 2803J or leave name gt Kansan office. 19
3 OR 4 RIDERS to Wichita Thankking;
leave at 5 p.m. Tues., Nov. 23. Return
Sunday evening. Contact Daily Kansan
office. Box 3. 19
GIRL VOCAST1 wanted for "hill" dance band. Call 2436R after 6 p.m. 19
TWO PEOPLE want rides to Chicago or St. Louis Thanksgiving vacation. Will share expenses. Leave name at Kansan office. 22
RIDERS WANTED to share expenses.
Leaving early Tuesday afternoon for thanksgiving. Location: Going route
to Tuskegee Desert in Springfield, Ohio. Phone: 1323R
TRANSPORTATION
WOULD LIKE a ride to Emlid, Okla., or
Jamestown, Nov. 23. Call Rosie Ro-
wheel, phone 345-789-6010.
WOULD LIKE two riders to Dodge City
City Phone 2107 and for White Jerry
Phone 2107 and for White Jerry
MOTHER AND 7-week old child would like ride, Monday or Tuesday to Stockton, Kansas or vicinity. Will share expenses. Call Leonard Brokaw, phone 29848. 29 Great Bend, Kansas over Thanksgiving. Share expenses. Phone 29848, 1132 Tenn
WANTED: Ride to Russell, Kans., Tuesday afternoon. Nov. 23. Would like to share expenses. Call Jack Campbell.
Phone 730. 22
WOULD LIKE a ride to Champalim, Ill., or anywhere close by. Leaving Tuesday, Nov. 23 for Thanksgiving holiday, she is driving. Call 7398 11:40 a.m.
IO SHARE expenses with anyone driving
o Chicago, Michigan, or vicinity during
thanksgiving vacation. Call Phil Oren,
after 6 n.m. Ph. 2635W. 19
WOULD LIKE ride to vicinity of Long-
view, Texas for Thanksgiving vacation.
Will share expenses and driving. Call
875R. 19
UGENTLY NEEDED ride. To share expenses and driving to Philadelphia orCurrently and return. Will leave to visitier after December 17. Call Bee Te84 284.
COMMERCIAL PILOT flying 4 place giving. Take passengers any point general route or 150 mile radius. Jackson 3360s Kansas City Hotel or Yellowstone 3365s Kansas City
AGAIN THIS YEAR, by popular demand, a college SKI PARTY is being formed—this is for the fellows and gals who would like to learn skiing from the very best, and enjoy the atmosphere. Your skis will never spent—all meals, transportation (our own special car on the Colorado Eagle), skis, boots, poles, 4 hours of lessons every day, an unlimited pass on all lifts, Roarboard gassard dinner, square dance, moonlight skating party, steak dinner at the Red Onion café, New Year's at the Silver Queen Ball, and the Aspen Intercollegiate presented. Contact any one of these agents for further information. Fig Newton, 2039; Don Schanke, 565. . 22
MISCELLANEOUS
LARGE. quiet, comfortable downstairs
K-18. upland K-19 and town closet
K-25. K-18. upland Vermont.
FOR RENT
room for men. Modern, close to K.U. and town. 1305 Vermont. 22
NICE SINGLE room for boy at $25 Illinois. If interested please call 293-8060. 22
FURNISHED ROOM for man student. 1340 N.H. Phone. 1374R. 22
LOVELY BASEMENT room in new home to two boys. Furnace piped into room; good ventilation, asphalt tile flooring, carpet. Wash basin with several students with cars living nearby so transportation might be arranged. $3.50 a week per boy. Ph. 2151M. 18
Russian Club Learns Songs,
Combines With Lab Period
The Russian club learned two Russian Christmas songs at its weekly meeting recently. The club, which has been combined with the speaking laboratory, met with Sam Anderson, German instructor, in his home at 1236 Louisiana street.
Mr. Anderson urges all former Russian students to attend the club meetings, particularly within the next few weeks.
The Big Fisherman
The Story of Simon Peter
by
LLOYD C. DOUGLAS
$3.75
"Leather Is Our Specialty"
BLUE RIBBON SHOP 820 Mass.
1078-1089 AD.
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. Phone 666
made to order ALL LEATHER LINED $24.00
HYER JODPHER BOOTS
Makeup To Disfigure Actor In Fight Film Costs $25,000
Hollywood—(UP)—The casting department at RKO started looking for a prize-fighter tough enough to last four rounds with one of their stars, and surprisingly, it took them three months.
The talent find from the prize ring is 29-year-old, 200-pound Hal Fieberling. The movie star is Robert Ryan.
Housewives Enjoy Food 'Coupon War'
Indianapolis, Ind.—(UF)—Indiana-
polis housewives rushed to stores to
take advantage of a two million dollar
"coupon war" being waged by
chain grocery stores and indepen-
dent proprietors.
Independent grocers retaliated by offering to honor the chain's coupons. One stocked up on the bargain type items and waged an intensive campaign to latch on to the customers enticed by the chain.
A local chain fired the first gun in the battle by mailing every metropolitan home a book of coupons worth $5.20 in trade. Most of the coupons were worth 10 cents toward the purchase of a single item.
Another chain joined the fight by cutting its prices outright 10 cents on all coupon items for one week.
"Why monkey with coupons?" the second chain asked in an advertisement. "We'll give you the coupon price right over the counter."
It was estimated today that the value of coupons floating around the city had reached two million dollars.
Grad Employed By Eastman
Ralph W. Hubbard has taken a position as physicist in the research laboratories of the Eastman Kodak Co. Rochester, N.Y. Mr. Hubbard received his master of arts degree in physics last spring.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
"And there," said Fighter Fleibelling, who has bruises to back up his statement, "is an actor who can go more than two rounds in the Moambo."
The winner, Mr. Fleberling, is a one-time amateur champ who retired from professional fighting last year after breaking his hand on Dutch Culbertson. He had been thinking about going into the movies, anyway.
Mr. Ryan, 193 pounds, fought in college and for a year afterward. He's hard and fit and he knows his way around the ring. The man who fought him in RKO's "The Set-Up" had to be good, and harder to find, he had to be close to Ryan's six feet and three inches.
Mr. Fieberling and Mr. Ryan stage one of the most brutal battles in movie history for "The Set Up," the story of 80 minutes in a worn-out fighter's life.
What the actual blows fail to do, the make-up man does. Ryan comes out with purple eyes, puffed lips and a cauliflower ear.
"The make-up is costing the studio around $25,000," Mr. Ryan said. "They're using a new kind of plastic that was developed for disfigured veterans. It looks so much like skin you can't tell the difference."
Actor Ryan says "The Set-Up" gets along without the usual boxing cliche. There are no shots of the heroine dashing to the ringside in time to spur her man to victory.
"In fact," he said, "there's no heroine to the fight at all. There's no championship at stake. It's just the final bout on the card, after the main event It wasn't at Madison Square Garden, either.
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PAGE TWELVE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1949
DANCE
Mary Ellen Batie, art education senior, and Chester Lewis, College sophomore (above) were one of the three couples selected to participate in the Dec. 1 finals of the jitterbug contest. The selection was made last night at the elimination contest in the Union ballroom.
The other winning couples are James M. Patterson, graduate student, and Mrs. Patterson; and James L. Eaton, engineering sophomore, and Virginia L. Dressler. College sophomore.
About 60 persons watched the contest. Judges were Miss Elaine Selicovitz, instructor in physical education, and nine members of the sports and organization groups of the Student Union Activities.
Bibler Book On Sale Soon
The fifth edition of the Bibler book will be on sale Nov. 24, and during the week following Thanksgiving vacation. Books also will be sold during the KU-MU game, in Columbia, Mo., Thanksgiving day.
This book, which is published by Alpha Delta Sigma, national advertising fraternity, has gained recognition among many universities and advertising agencies during the last five years.
The edition this year is twice as large, according to Don Tennant, president of Alpha Delta Sigma. It contains a calendar of all school events and organizations' activities in addition to 62 Bibler cartoons.
Paul E. Warner, college senior, is chairman of the sales committee.
A new process of offset type is being used on the book this year.
Plenty Of Jobs Nurses Are Told
"There are more opportunities in the field of nursing now than ever before." Miss Elizabeth Hutcheson, obstetrical supervisor at the University of Kansas Medical center, told the Pre-Nursing club Wednesday.
"Nursing has made great advances in the past 75 years, and the same is true of obstetrics," she added. "Until the last few years medicine was used only for curing, now it is being recognized as a preventative measure."
"Obstetrical nursing is very interesting, and has many branches. Requirements are a well rounded nursing course and post-graduate courses in hospital and maternity work.
"Obstetrics can be fun, it certainly isn't dull," Miss Hutcheson said.
Hamilton Is New Officer
Billy H. Hamilton, engineering senior, was elected secretary-treasurer of the Engineering council Wednesday.
The date of the engineering banquet will be set at the next meeting of the council Wednesday, Dec. 1.
A preliminary examination in Western Civilization will be given at 2 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 4. Hilden Gibson, director of Western Civilization, said today.
Trial Test Dec. 4 For Western Civ
"We wish to emphasize that the purpose of the examination is to give the students an idea of the work they are doing," said Mr. Gibson. "It will in no way affect the final grade."
Those students who wish to take the test should consult their proctors by Wednesday, Dec. 1, to learn where they will take the examination.
Two Models To Pose For Camera Club
All members, and other interested in photography and who own a camera are invited to attend this meeting. The studio will be well enough lighted to enable box cameras to be used, if they are loaded with super xx film.
Two female models will pose for camera addicts at a meeting of the Camera club at 7:30 tonight in the Community building, Ted Crane, president of the club, said today.
Chest Drive Nets $749
The community chest drive raised $749.89 at the University this year. The women's division, headed by Hilda James, College senior, totaled $380.95, and the men's division, headed by Hugh Gibson, graduate student, raised $368.94. This year's total is a $118 increase over the total of $631.38 collected last year on the campus.
Organizations which helped the two chairmen included Y.M.C.A., Y.W.C.A., Alpha Phi Omega, Jay Janes, and Associated Women Students.
Irvin Youngberg, executive secretary of the Endowment association said, "We are particularly proud of the amount collected in view of the fact that the drive was made in the latter part of the month when student finances are notoriously low, and before veteran checks had arrived." He added that the two chairmen had done an excellent job on the campaign.
Plans for the chest drive next year are to include a one or two day campaign making use of tags to be worn on clothing rather than the red feather.
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ASC Will Pay Only Debts For Sour Owl
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The A.S.C. decided Tuesday that it will not be responsible for the debts incurred of any campus humor magazine other than the official Sour Owl to be published by Sigma Delta Chi, honorary journalism fraternity.
The question arose when William Conboy, chairman of the publications committee, asked if a bill passed last week, authorizing the publication of more than one humor magazine, would entail financial backing by the Council of any group other than the Sour Owl. Thomas Milligan, engineering junior, had announced that his group would publish another magazine.
Robert M. Foster, business junior, and James Martin, College freshman, were sworn in as new council members by Patrick Thiessen, A.S.C. president.
A resolution was passed giving Council support to the tuberculosis seal drive which begins Dec. 6. Dr. Ralph I. Cantueson, director of health service explained the nature of the campaign to the council.
The report protesting racial discrimination in campus cafes was presented to the Council for consideration by Negro Students' association.
Robert Bennett, treasurer, announced that the Council's balance on han dwas $5,179, with the student printing bill yet to be paid.
Malott To Talk In St. Louis
Chancellor Deane W, Malott will speak at a meeting of the St. Louis KU. alumni association in St. Louis at 7 p.m. today. John J. Miller, '37, is in charge of the meeting.
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University Daily Kansan 48th Year No.46 19 1948
Friday, Nov. 19, 1943
Lawrence, Kansas
STUDENT NEWSAPER
Informed Help Eliminates Ads Hatch Believes
James Hatch, vice-president of Union Wire Rope company, Kansas City, Mo., told the Industrial Relations representatives today that you don't have to buy newspaper space to tell the community about your life of the story. Mr. Hatch spoke on "Communication."
"If you keep an informed personnel," he said, "they will tell the community your story for you."
He said the lawyer would either feel important to his suitor more than to take home a potter toy envelope.
Take a look at how company books reflect the last year's hike in revenue. We asked in the show committee elected the employees, save them figures showing how much the hike would mean to the company in a year, how much the material would cost to operate for that year, and how important it was for the business to show a profit on its books.
Ernest R. Eich, personnel director of City National Park and Trust company, Kansas City, Mo., explained "the injury and Application," said that the investment in a new employee sometimes ran into "astronomical figures."
"The shop committee asked us to rent these furniture into a wire receiver so that they could re-tell our share to the other shop members. In the next month our production in enterprise considerably, even though our did not grant the bike."
"When you select a new employee that is 6 potential investment of $20,000 to $50,000," he said. "If your choice is a bad one, you may get only $8,000 back from your investment."
Mr. Each stressed the public relations aspect of the interview. He said customers will talk about your firm either favorably or unfavorably, depending on the impression you make on them at the interview.
Representatives from the C.I.O. and A.F. of L. unions were welcomed, repeatedly recognized, and management leadership mean to the worker.
New Building Only A Rumor
Gov. Frank Carlson will be a guest tomorrow at a luncheon meeting of the board of directors of the research foundation in the East room of the Union.
Denying a rumor that governor Carlson's presence at the luncheon had anything to do with the chemical research building reported earlier as "about to be built," Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, said, "The research foundation did not say that a new building would be built. The board only pointed out the need of such a building.
"Most of us realize that the University could use more space; but needing it and getting it are not the same thing.
"At this time I can foresee no new building unless the money for one comes as a gift," he asserted.
1.
WEATHER
Kansas—Snow flurries, with strong northerly winds and considerable drifting and blowing snow today.
Colder east. Clearing and colder with diminishing winds tonight.
High today near 30. Low tonight five to 10 west, 15 to 20 east. Tomorrow generally fair and warmer.
Pumpkin Prom Is Tomorrow At 9 p.m.
The Pumpkin Prom will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight tomorrow in the Union ballroom.
Dress is informal, suit dresses for women, suits for men.
Charles O'Connor's orchestra will provide dance music.
The chaperons will be Dr. and Mrs. George B. Smith, Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Twain, and Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth Anderson.
Admission is $125 a couple.
Tickets are being sold today at a booth in Frank Strong hall and will be sold at the dance.
Raging Blizzard Moving East
Dodge City, Nov. 19—(UF)—One of the worst blizzards in many years howled into its second day in Western Kansas today.
Throughout this area communications that were ripped away by the 5- mile road. Highway traffic was palpable. Trains were moving at a parallel pace. Power lines were down in numerous areas. Dulce City had only emergency power for police and the local radio station.
Police received a number of calls from relatives of persons unreported in the blinding storm, seeking volunteers to help search. Chet Winters reported his two children had not returned home. "Thursday night they were last seen near a booster station at the edge of the city."
The storm slowly was moving eastward from the wind-and-snow buffeted western plains. Wichita reported blowing and drifting snow with visibility of one-eighth mile today. Hutchinson reported similar conditions. Blowing and drifting snow continued at Goodland, with a 42-mile wind and a temperature of 19.
Much cooler weather was on the heels of the storm, characterized by old-timers here as the worst early blizzard they could recall. The weather bureau warned the mercury night dip to 5 above zero in North-west Kansas tonight.
Tom Glasscock, highway patrol captain, reported he was unable to communicate west of here. The Garden City highway patrol radio was off the air. Captain Glasscock said he was receiving "scores of calls" from persons with unreported relatives.
While roadways in the rolling plains area of Southwest Kansas had their white covering dotted with the snow covered bumps formed by marooned vehicles, highway maintenance equipment was having difficulties too. Capt. Glasscock said "a lot of it" also was stuck.
A Santa Fe train, creeping west-
ward, last night picked up 25 persons who abandoned their cars and trucks on a highway paralleling the track. Another 40 persons spent the night in a tiny railroad depot at Wright.
Nine Naval Reserve Officers Training corps students have earned places on the unit's rifle team, Lt. L. E. Bolts, coach for the team said today.
Nine Earn Places OnNROTC Rifle Unit
They are Ruel E. Rains, engineering junior, Edward K. Maxwell, and Robert B. Newton, College sophomores, Kenneth A. Harris, and Clyde A. Williams, engineering freshmen; William D. Fincke, Richard H. Humphreys, and George A. Youngstrom, College freshmen; and Robert C. Reynolds, pharmacy freshman.
Social Ban On Gamma Phi For Overpledging
Gamma Phi Beta sorority has los its social privileges, Jane Forrell president of the Pan-Hellenic council, said today. They join four fraternities who were restricted recently.
the neck, which prohibits the gustory from having parties of any sort, was taken by the Pan-Hellenic council because the Gamma Phi's had ever-phabbed one and this fall two men will host for three weeks.
The College Phil's pledged 18 girls
this number being added to the 32
girls they lead, making a total of 51.
According to Pan-Bellencio rules all competitors are guaranteed a pledge class not to exceed 15. A soccer nage player more than this number only if the group's total does not exceed 40 points.
Mike Marcia Peterson residential
cleaner of women explained how that
the Clinton Party had overblamed
reconstructionally, shaming that our
prize member need not be counted
seven houses and
moderately James, president of Canaan Fid Belt, had no state even to make concerning the matter.
Research Group Will Inspect
The board of directors of the University Research foundations will inspect the physical facilities of the physics and chemistry departments and the Engineering school tomorrow morning, Chancellor Deane W. Malott said today.
Among those who will attend are Eril Schaefer, president of the foundation, Boeing Airplane Co., Wichita; Dean Ackrens, president of Kansas Power and Light Co., Topeka; Walter Cross, Kansas City Testing laboratories, Kansas City, Mo.; Oscar Staunier, publisher of the Topeka State Journal, Topeka; E. B. Black, Black and Veatch, Kansas City, Mo.; George Oberfell, Phillips Petroleum Co., Bartsville, Okla.; Harry Darby, Darby Corporation, Kansas City.
Representatives from the University will be Dean T. DeWitt Carr of the engineering school, Dean F. J. Moreau of the law school, J. O. Maloney, director of the research foundation, and Karl Klooz, bursar. The board of regents will be represented by Mr. Stauffer.
After the inspection in the morning they will be luncheon guests of the University and then attend the K.U.-Oklahoma football game.
The preliminaries of the 22nd annual Campus Problems Speaking contest will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wed., Dec. 8, in 3 Green hall. The finals will be held at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 15. The location will be announced later. The speeches must concern some contemporary campus problem.
Speech Prelims Set For Dec. 8
All undergraduate students are eligible to participate. Speeches for the preliminary contest should be four minutes long, and final speeches will be from eight to ten minutes long. The same subject must be used in both the preliminary and final contests.
For further information on the contest and for suggestions regarding subjects see Orville Roberts, instructor of speech, in 1 Green hall.
Conference Title Hangs On OU Tilt
The Big Seven title hinges upon the outcome of the most important football contest of the conference year when the light, fast Kansas Jayhawkers meet the powerful giants of Oklahoma at 2 p.m. tomorrow in Memorial stadium.
A Kansas victory would assure the Jayhawks of at least a share of the
Halftime Show By KU Band
The University marching band will take the entire half-time period at the game tomorrow to put on a formation show.
The first part of the show will have the theme of the opening of the Cherokee strip into Oklahoma. The band will play "Home on the Range" then as a pistol shot who out band members will scramble into the formation of L, a covered wagon. The wagon will move down the field as the band plays "Wager: Brakes."
The impressions will also be recognized when the band forms 'UHF' and plays "Three Blind Miles." The band will then move into the formation of HI and play "Newlydroo Everybody." The band next will form a big OU and play "Boomers Sooners."
The snow will end with a revolting "K", which will cover the whole field, and the band will play "I'm a Jayhawk" and "The Crinson and the Blue."
Word was received in Lawrence today which should prove quite interesting to Jayhawker football fans who plan to attend the game tomorrow at Memorial stadium.
Oklahoma Not Worried
A Tulsa newspaper this week printed a brief interview by its sports editor of Buddy Burris, Oklahoma's All-American guard candidate. In two quotations attributed to the Sooner lineman, he said that he expected the Kansas team to show fight but that he was not worried as to the outcome of the game. He referred to the Jayhawker eleven as a team "of good substitutes," and expressed the opinion that no man on the Kansas squad could "break into the first string for either Missouri or Oklahoma."
Burris closed by saying he admired the Kansas fire and hustle but that superior manpower could not help but determine the game. The article was written for Tulsa readers, but many Kansans, since hearing the slighting statements, would give anything to make the Sooner guard eat his words.
'Miss Missouri'
To Attend Prom
"Miss Missouri of 1948" will help six chaperones choose "Prince Charming and Cinderella" at the Pumpkin Prom tomorrow night in the Union ballroom.
Miss Dorothy Jean Smith, 19, who won her title in statewide competition last summer, was a contestant to the Atlantic City "Miss America" beauty contest early this fall.
Presently attending the University of Kansas City, Miss Smith is a junior studying music and dramatics. She won a special award as "best supporting actress of 1947-48" in the K.C.U. dramatics department.
title—regardless of the outcome of the Kansas-Missouri game on Turkey day at Columbia. An Oklahoma victory would clinch a clear-cut Sooner claim to the conference title. Pro-game predictions show Oklahoma as 14 point favorites on the backs of their low-sided victories over such opponents as Missouri, Nebraska, Iowa State, and Kansas State. Kansas compares favorably in the season's win-lost columns and has an equal number of conference wins, but can boast of no such scoring totals over the same conference teams.
An overflow crowd of about 99,000 fans is expected to pack the University's bierhose stadium to break all attendance records for an Oklahoma-Kansas contest. If the demand for tickets continues, tomorrow's attendance total may even surpass the all-time Memorial stadium last year of 49,032 recorded during last year's games with Missouri.
Coonin Bud Willittman's Scooners are rated as one of the greatest teams in Oklahoma history. At least two Southern quarterback Jack Mitchell and guard Bucky Burke are ranked as possible all-America contenders. Other slantback players include half-back Donald Thomas, who is threaten-able; Joe Golden, all-time Oklahoma rushing record, both more half-Lindell Pearson, ranking third in conference rushing statistics, and Darrell Royal ranking second to top man Mitchell in the punt returns column.
Coach J. V. Sikes' Jayhawkers have compiled several important offensive masks of their own. Dick Gilman is the most potent passer in the conference with a total net gain surpassing both the rushing and passing competitors. Gilman also has completed 14 touchdown passes. Another Kansas first, pass receiving, is held by End Bryan Sperry, while Darell Norris rates seventh in the same category. Kansas' Forrest Griffith and Clif McDonald are among the first four in the pout returns and leading scorers columns.
Both squads will be in good physical condition. Oklahoma fares a little better in this respect as the entire Sooner team will be available for action tomorrow while the Jayhawkers will be missing the services of halfback Frank Pattee. Coach Sikes hopes to balance the loss of Pattee's services with the indomitable fighting spirit and fast-breaking speed of the entire Kansas team.
Tomorrow's game will be featured as "Dad's day" for fathers and sponsors of Kansas players.
KU To Honor Late Governor
Lawrence, Nov. 19 — (UP) — The University of Kansas tomorrow will honor the memory of a former governor of Missouri.
An oil portrait of the late Herbert S. Hadley, University of Kansas graduate, who later served two terms as governor of Missouri, will be presented to the school by John M. Hadley, St. Louis, a nn. The painting is the gift of John Hadley, his sister, Mrs. W. B. Lambert, St. Louis, and an aunt, Mrs. John W. Lyman, Kansas City.
Herbert S. Hadley was graduated from the University of Kansas in 1892. He served two terms as attorney general of Missouri and in 1908 became governor. Later he was chancellor of Washington university at St. Louis. He died in 1927.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1948
Official Bulletin
Nov. 19, 1948
K. U. Disciple Student fellowship hobo party, 7:30 tonight, Myers hall. All Christian church members invited. Prize for best costume.
University Players, 5 today, Little theater, Green hall.
Mr. LaPoe of Armatrong Cork company will be on the campus, Nov. 29. to interview June graduates in industrial management who are interested in sales engineering activity or industrial engineering work. Those interested sign before vacation with Mrs. Strong, 214 Frank Strong.
Wesley Foundation radio and talent party, 8 tonight, Ecke hall. Y.W.C.A. cabinet, 4 today, Miller hall.
Jewish student union religious services, 7:30 tonight, Danforth chapel. Business meeting following in Union building.
Baptist Student Fellowship Thanksgiving banquet, 5:30 p.m. Sunday. Obtain tickets from Dale Fields, 1230 Oread, phone 2988.
---
Unitarian Liberal club, 3:30 p.m.
Sunday, Pine room, Union.
Episcopal College club supper.
5:30 p.m. Sunday, Parish house.
Gamma Delta, 5:30 p.m. Sunday.
Castle Tea room, 13th & Mass.
Phi Sigma. Monday noon. 301 Snow hall. Dr. N. McClung, "The Electron Microscope."
Mathematical colloquium, 5 p.m. Monday, 203 Frank Strong, Dr. Mina Rees, Washington, D.C. "The Work of the Mathematics Branch of the office of Naval Research." Delta Sigma Phi, 7:30 p.m. Monday, English room, Union.
Sour Owl staff meets 8 p.m., Monday, news room of Journalism building.
Moral To Hunters: Don't Dry Damp Shells On The Furnace
Topeka. Kan.—(UP)—With quail season here. Paul Lichtenstern wanted to dry out a few boxes of shotgun shells, so he put them on top of the furnace.
When firemen arrived at the Lichtenstern home, they said the noise of exploding shells "sounded like a sham battle." Fire damage was estimated today at $300.
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Conboy, Campbell To Write Comedy
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William Conboy and Carolyn Campbell, College seniors, and Craig Hampton, fine arts junior, have been appointed script writers for "College Daze," an all-student musical comedy.
The opening date for the showing of "College Daze," will be April 5, said Jesse E. Stewart, director of law. It will be given in Fraser theater.
"College Daze" was produced by Student Union Activities the past spring for the first time. Approximately 60 students participated in the comedy.
Worcester, Mass.—(UP) -Edgar R. Andrews of Holden was fined $5 for showing his 1905 automobile driving license when stopped by a policeman.
It Shouldn't Happen To Rip Van Winkle
University Daily Kansan
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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19.1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Up and Coming
1.
TONIGHT
6 p.m.—Tau Kappa Epilon pledge dinner dance.
60%—Department of Music Education party, Kansas room, Union.
7:30 p.m.-Christian Church Disciple fellowship party, Myers hall.
8 p.m.-Carruth party.
8 p.m.—Wesley foundation party;
Ecke hall.
8:30 p.m.—Alpha Phi Alpha party,
chapter 10
9. p.m.-Phi Delta Phi dance,
country club
9 p.m.-Harmon Co-op open house.
9 p.m.-Alpha Tau Omega costume party model schoolhouse
9 p.m. Locksley open house.
9 p.m.-Sigma Pi costume party,
Lakeview school.
TOMORROW
7 p.m.—Inter-varsity Christian fellowship, Moments of music, auditorium, Mvers hall.
9 p.m.—Pumpkin Prom, ballroom,
Union.
Socially Speaking
Hopkins Faculty Tea
Hopkins hall entertained several faculty members at a tea Sunday. Guests were: Miss Louise Cochran, Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Hahn, Mr. and Mrs. George Floro, Miss Barbara Craig, Miss Connie Herrera, and Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Burzle.
Two Houses to Give Dance
Hauserrh hall and Campus house plan to combine to give a Christmas formal dance. The date for the dance has been set for Friday, Dec. 3.
***
Sigma Kappa Dinner Guests
Sigma Kappa sorority will entertain several faculty members at dinner tonight. Guests will be Mr. Irwin Baird, Mr. and Mrs. R. Q. Brewster, Miss Edna Hill, Miss Dorothy Martin, Mr. C. P. Osborne, and Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Stratton.
* *
Hopkins Dinner Guest
Hopkins hall entertained Miss Marjorie Austin at dinner Monday.
Jolliffe Dinner Guests
Carolee Eberhart, Charles Lyne, Margaret King, and Duane Postlewaite of Burlingame, were dinner guests of Jolliffe hall Sunday.
Harman Co-op Open House
The members of Harman Co-op will entertain with an open house today from 9 p.m. to midnight.
Delta Chi Dinner Dance
Delta Chi fraternity entertained the Alpha Delta Pi sorority with a dinner dance Tuesday at the chapter house.
--plus tax
Hold Exchange Dinner
Delta Delta Delta sorority and Alpha Tau Omega fraternity held an exchange dinner Wednesday night.
Sigma Kappa Sadie Hawkins Party
Sigma Kappa sorority held a Sadie Hawkins party Nov. 13. Guests were: William Akright, Dwight Aldridge, Gene Allen, Ted Amberg, Lewis Bales, George Benscheid, Richard Capps, J. Carby, Jack Dalton, Bernard Domann, Clifford De Lude.
Robert Ferguson, Forrest Gifford,
Gary Goodwin, Eugene Hatfield,
Chan Hiebert, Arthur Hamilton,
Charles Inderwiesen, Pat James,
Clarence Jenkins, Wesley Keating,
Don McDaniels, Donald Millikan,
Tate Morgan, Bernard Nordling,
James Neuner.
Tom Jones, Roger Parland, Alan Pickering, Victor Pirnie, Robert Powers, Don Reeves, Bob Reusser, Arthur Riordan, Robert Snair, Dan Stark, Eugene Talbot, Gail Stout, Robert Vignery, John Wilcox and Roger Yost.
Ketchums Have Daughter
Mr. and Mrs. William Ketchum are the parents of a daughter, Diana, born Nov. 15 at the Lawrence Memorial hospital. Mr. Ketchum is a sophomore in the school of Engineering.
Correction
Leroy Steinke, listed in the Herrera-Steinke engagement announcement is a member of Delta Sigma Pi, professional business fraternity not Alpha Delta Sigma.
In the Powell-Bennett and Klotz-Townsend pinning announcement both Bennett and Townsend belong to Pi Kappa Alpha, not Phi Kappa Alpha. Townsend is the son of Dr. and Mrs. P. S. Townsend. He is a senior in education.
New York's subways and vehicular tunnels contain enough ceramic tile to pave a street more than 40 miles long.
Weddings And Engagements
Dixon-Nichols Engagement
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Dixon of Superior, Nebr., announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Charlotte Dixon, to Robert E. Nichols, son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Nichols of Mankato, Kans.
The engagement was announced Sunday at the Delta Upsilon fraternity house by Cooper Rollow, vice-president.
Miss Dixon wore a corsage of 5 baby orchids. Mrs. James A. Hooke, housemother, wore roses.
Miss Dixon is a student at the University of Nebraska and a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Mr. Nichols is a pharmacy junior and a member of Delta Upsilon.
A
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1948
Former Exchange Student Lives In Fear Of Russia
Among the foreign exchange students who attended the University in 1920 and 1931 was Johann F. Wiedemann, a German. Mr. Wiedemann came to K.U. with a doctor's degree and did research work in zoology and bacteriology. He recently sent the following letter to Mrs. James Scott, alumna, who lives in Mankato, Kan.:
Dear Mrs. Scott:
Believe me, I was very glad to hear from you again. Everytime I read your letters it is as though I were again for a short time at KU.
There is always something happening here, something that goes rather close to the roots of one's existence. We are worried by the situation between Russia and the Western Powers. We try to act as if everything were all right, but in some remote corner of our consciousness is a fear of the monster Russia knocking us down absolutely.
It is rather hard for me to speak it out, but now with another winter coming, could you possibly give my address to one of the charitable organizations who send supplies to Germany. We need any kind of clothing from footwear to hats. My children are a boy, 13, a girl, 11, and
This money reform a few months ago set us back after we had recovered a bit. Money is so scarce employers don't know how long they will be able to employ anybody. I lost my job in the Interpreters Bureau and for some time, I didn't even earn enough money to buy a stamp.
two boys, 9 and 6. My wife needs a pair of shoes with full rubber soles as some days she is unable to walk at all after standing in line for hours and carrying home heavy loads of foodstuffs, and all in a pair of wooden "klappers."
Sometimes I think it is not right for human beings to have to worry about these nasty questions of base life when you want to do some mentally or spiritually important work. Just to keep up a little mental training, I study English literature, science, and philosophy.
These past days have been fine ones for autumn. All our children are out in the woods gathering mushrooms. The eldest is a keen botanist and can tell the poisonous ones from the good ones. We all enjoy going out to collect berries which we can for the winter.
I have been rather reluctant to re-open correspondence with students I knew in Kansas. The task of an exchange student was to establish friendship and understanding between the nations. I am afraid my activities in this respect were
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Jewish chapel services will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in Danforth chapel. The services will be led by students.
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A business meeting for Jewish Student Union members will be held in the recreation room of the Union following the chapel services. A report will be given by the delegation which attended the state-wide convention of B'nai Brith at Witchita recently.
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not successful enough to avoid the last war, and maybe some of my old friends resent it.
Hoping to hear from you about your doings.
I remain your sincere friend,
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British zone
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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19. 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
SPOTLIGHT SPORTS
By OZZIE BARTELLI Daily Kansan Sports Editor
Tomorrow's contest between Kansas and Oklahoma will decide who walks away with the Big Seven bunting. Last year the Jayhawkers had to whip a fighting Missouri team and battle to a 13 to 13 deadlock with O.U. to share the title. Two years ago it was a fighting Sooner team which Kansas had to tame by scoring a stunning 16 to 13 win to gain a share of the title. The margin of victory being a Paul Turner fieldgoal during the last minutes of play as rain and darkness almost obliterated the battling crews from the spectator's view.
Without taking anything away from the Mitchell-Royal and Griffith-French type of action the crowd comes to see, it will be interesting to note that a possibly greater show may be in the offing during tomorrow's tussle. The clash between a couple of top guards, Kansan Dick Tomlinson and Sooner Buddy Burris may well be the outstanding show of the day, Burris, as you know, is an All-America candidate, but maybe Tomlinson can't read well enough to be affected by Buddy's publicity.
Another interesting highlight, which could attract some attention from the Tomlinson-Burris duel, will be the immovable object type of line back Dick Monroe will display tomorrow. A lot depends on Monroe's return to action. The 208-pound pivot will be playing for the first time since coming out of the Oklahoma A. and M. game with a twisted knee.
Whatever happens tomorrow, it's a safe bet to say every man on either team will know they've been in the game of the season. When captain Hugh Johnson leads his men, and he will be leading, against the grinding Sooner队, the fans can just dispense with trying to "sit" through the game. Few ends, not quite the Sperry and Norris type will know the feel of the Memorial stadium boards after the kick-off.
1
The wide-open brand of aerial attack Kansas will throw into the game may be just the kind of
Phi Delt's Win Title
The Phi Delt's won the "B" team championship by defeating a determined Sig Ep outfit 20 to 7.
During the first quarter the two teams exchanged possession of the ball several times, but neither team was able to make the final drive into scoring territory.
In the second period Ed Marqui intercepted a Sig Ep pass to set up the Phi Dell's for their first touchdown. Two plays later Buford Diesel completed a pass to Rey Irwin for the first score of the game, then tossed to the same receiver for the extra point.
With only 3 minutes remaining in the first half, Rev Irwin intercepted another Sig Ep pass and made a brilliant 30 yard return to once again set up the Phi Delt's for a t.d. The score was made on a hand-off from Marquis to Bissel, who passed into the end zone to the ever-present Irwin. The extra point was supplied by Marquis on another pass, this time to Joe Wolfe, to bring the half-time score to 14 to 0 for the Phi Delt's.
After the half, the Sig Ep's drove to the 4 yard line, only to lose the ball on downs. The Phi Delt's punted out of the hole, then intercepted another pass on the Sig Ep 30. On the fourth dowl Marquis found Joe Wolfe in the end zone with his third touchdown pass, but the attempted point was no good.
Determined not to be held scoreless, the Sig Ep's came back in the final period to score on a pass from Charlie Medlock to Bob Reece, with the extra point added by Jim Reynolds on a place kick.
Navy 7. Army 0
The Navy returned a punt for a touchdown and added the extra point to defeat the Army in a game scheduled by the two teams. It was their annual grudge battle with the Navy winning this year, 7 to 0.
sky-writing which will spell victory for the Jayhawkers.
Coach Sikes wasn't kidding when he said the team could win. Kansas can win. . . and this corner is going out on the well-known limb betting the Jayhawkers can keep the Sooners from sawing-off that limb.
Well? Don't say we didn't tell you or that we have any faith in perla card predictions.
Purdue Accuses Indiana
Lafayette, Ind., Nov. 19—(UP)—Purdue university officials believe today that Indiana university football fans were responsible for a plane dropping leaflets on the campus here, depreciating the school, its president, the football team, and the coaching staff.
The pamphlets said;
"What the hell can you expect with a kid prexy from deah old Oxford, with a bunch of hick students with no spirit, with an inexperienced high school coaching staff with 11 old men—flops of the yeak?"
The pamphlets predicted that the score of tomorrow's game would be: "IU. 40, College college 0."
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1948
Meet The 1948 Jayhawkers Moffett-UDK Pride
[Name]
Charles Moffett
When the Jayhawkers meet the Oklahoma Sooners in Memorial stadium tomorrow they will be hoping that Charlie Moffett will be able to intercept another pass and run it for a touchdown. Charlie was able to do that in his last appearance in the stadium against Oklahoma A. and M. His 45-ward
the hero of the K.U.-Aggie game. This is Charlie's fourth year of football with the Jayhawkers. Two years in the army helped space out his college education which started here in 1943.
In 1944 he was on the Associated Press All-Big Six football team. That was the year Kansas State defeated K.U. 18 to, 14 in a game Charlie still remembers. He broke through the line and ran 82 yards to a touchdown in the last 20 seconds of play and it looked as though he had saved the game for K.U. The touchdown didn't count as a penalty brought the ball back and the game ended after two less successful plays.
While in the army Moffett played football on the Fifth Replacement depot in Manila. On Jan. 1, 1947 he played with the Philippine All-stars in the Bamboo bowl at Rizal stadium in Manila. The Philippine team defeated the Hawaiian All-stars 13 to 7.
1954-yard run and touchdown made him the bare, head of the KWJ.
In 1943 and 1944 Moffett was a high scoring forward on the Jayhawker basketball team. He was given honorable mention in conference basketball in 1943.
The 23-year-old left halfback is a senior in the School of Journalism. He is working towards a career as a sports writer and has hopes of owning his own newspaper some day. In the summers he has done newspaper work in Peabody, his home town.
In high school at Peabody, Charlie lettered three years in football, three years in basketball and one year in track.
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Kansan To Have Scores Saturday
The University Daily Kansan will provide late scores of football games tomorrow afternoon. Call KU. 251, 252, or 253 for scores of the major football games as they come into the Kansan newsroom.
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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19. 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Sikes Sees Kansas Chance To Snare Big Seven Title
By UNITED PRESS
A minority group, headed by Coach J. V. Sikes, today gave the University of Kansas a chance to beat Oklahoma in the Big Seven football championship showdown at Lawrence Saturday.
But if there was a chance, it was conceded by most fans and experts to be exceedingly thin.
Oklahoma will blow onto Memorial stadium's grassy lot in top physical condition and try to pulverize the Jayhawk, only remaining obstacle in its bruising, power-drive to the title.
The only other conference game on Saturday's card will match Missouri and Nebraska at Lincoln.
Kansas State will meet Oklahoma A. and M. at Stillwater; Iowa State is matched against Arizona at Tucson, and Colorado is booked against Colorado A. and M. at Boulder in other games.
Despite the fact Oklahoma and Kansas showed identical records for all games (7-1) and similar results in Big Seven play (4-0), the Oklahomaans were rated from 14 to 18 points better than their rivals.
One reason was Oklahoma's tremendous power on the ground, a force which has netted the club 296.5 yards per game in eight starts.
Kansas could by topping Oklahoma win the Big Seven championship, providing Missouri loses one of its remaining games. And if Kansas should beat Oklahoma and lose next Thursday to Missouri, the latter could tie the Jayhawks for the title.
Missouri, to figure in any of the various championship combinations, must first whip Nebraska, a chore which didn't promise to be easy regardless of the edge given the Tigers by the bookmakers. Missouri was rated a bulge of about three touchdowns over the Huskers.
Some of the handicappers figured Colorado one touchdown better than the Colorado Aggies, while Iowa State was rated a few points ahead of Arizona.
Kansas State, enthused over its surprise showing against Kansas last week, was expected to bow to the Oklahoma Cowpokes by some 28 points.
Announce Members Of Rifle Team
Members of the first team in the Men's Rifle club have been announced by Sgt. Michell Wojcik, manager and coach.
The first team members are:
Jack Bale, engineering senior;
Joseph W. Boyd, College junior;
Richard L. Bradley, College freshman;
Lowell L. Davis, engineering sophomore; Charles F. Dougherty, engineer freshman; Theodore C. Finkmeier, engineering junior;
Arthur O. Kaaz, engineering freshman; Richard Kummer, engineering sophomore; Lloyd McClure, College junior; John M. McKinley, engineering sophomore;
Martin Norduf, College freshman;
Arthur L. Riggs, College junior;
Elmer D. Shipley, engineering freshman; and Stanley M. Wilbur, engineering sophomore.
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Golf, Tennis, 'Shoes Over
Three intramural sports winners have been determined. John S. Ranson, Phi Gamma Delta, trounced Robert G. Swartzell, independent, two straight sets, 6 to 1, and 6 to 2, to take the tennis championship, Fred Shelton, Beta Theta Pi, won the horseshoe crown by defeating Bernard Beatty, Alpha Phi Alpha, 21 to 15, and 21 to 13. In golf Dave B. Dennis, A.T.O., defeated Cliff Currier, A.T.O.
In 1469 the English tenant farmer was first protected from having his property seized for the landlord's debts, beyond the amount of rent due.
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1943
Volleyball Play Begins
Interclass girls' volleyball play started last night with the senior "A" team swamping the freshman "A" team 47 to 13. At the half the scored was tied 13 to 13.
The opposite was true in the "B" team game. The freshman "B" defeated the senior "B" 38 to 23.
Junior "A" and "B" teams were both successful in the other games. In a close game junior "A" edged out the sophomore "A" team 32 to 31. Second half scoring enabled junior "B" to defeat the sophomore "B" 31 to 24. The score at the half was 15 to 14 in favor of the sophomores.
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Rose Bowl Race May End Tomorrow
New York, Nov. 19—(UP) —The race for the Rose bowl winds up Saturday and the three top survivors — Northwestern, California and Oregon—were favored today by two or more touchdowns to end their regular season campaigns on a note of victory.
If they all come through, all that remain are the ballot battles among faculty representatives of the Big Nine and Pacific Coast conferences to "elect" their standard bearers for Pasadena on New Year's day.
Undefeated California (9-0) was favored by 21 points over Stanford (4-5) and Oregon (8-1) had a spread of 13 points over Oregon State (3-3-3). A defeat for either Coast leader probably would make the billotting a mere formality in favor of the other.
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New York. Nov. 19—(UP)—Promoters of the so-called minor bowl games were busy with a lot of business today, much of it consisting of rejection slips.
Kansas To Harbor Bowl?
The one big signing reported was that of the University of Nevada, the nation's leading team in total offense, for the Harbor bowl at San Diego, Calif., on Jan. 1. Paced by seven out of eight games with one passer Stan Heath, Nevada has one more to go against Wichita.
Nevada is also considering a postseason game against the University of Hawaii in Honolulu, Dec. 17, in which they may also play if Hawaii meets the terms asked.
No opponent has been picked for Nevada in the Harbor bowl, but officials said they were hoping for Kansas, Missouri, or Oklahoma.
In Philadelphia, the Philadelphia 1949 cancer crusade asked unbeaten Army to meet unbeaten Notre Dame on Jan. 1 in a charity game in any city acceptable to the two teams. No reply had been received to the invitations.
Unbeaten Florida A. and M. accepted an invitation to meet Union university of Richmond, Va., in the Orange Blossom bowl for Negro schools at Miami, Fla., on Dec. 4. The Aggies are also trying to get a post-season game against Wilberforce of Ohio.
Promoters of other bowls were also getting answers—but unfavorable ones.
At El Paso, Tex., officials of the Sun bowl had their invitation turned down by Texas Tech, leader of the border conference, and the bid was promptly re-extended to Texas Mines of the conference. The Miners were expected to accept and being prominently mentioned as opponents were Maryland, Lafayette, West Virginia, Utah, Miami of Ohio, Cincinnati, St. Bonaventure, Lechigh, and Dayton.
Intramural football schedule Today
Phi Gam's vs. Beta's, field 1, 4 p.m.
Aces Hi vs. Dix Club field 3, 4 p.m.
Monday
The winner of the fraternity division plays the winner of the independent division for the intramural championship.
Complete AT The Palace 843 Mass. line of VAN HEUSENS
a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a
Here's a model you'll go for!
Regular P
Regular Button-Down with "Comfort Contour" collar
Van Heusen builds extra good looks into this campus favorite. Low-setting for that casual look, for a wonderful feeling around your neck. In smooth white oxford, lab-tested, Sanforized —a new shirt free if your Van Heusen shrinks out of size. Ask for Van Heusen DeLuxe Oxfordian, $3.95. Other Van Heusen shirts $3.50, $3.95, $4.95.
You'll find college men's collar favorites in
Van Heusen the world's smartest shirts
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"VAN HEUSEN" IS A TRADE MARK REGISTERED IN THE U. S. PATENT OFFICE
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7
Featuring
Try Our Delicious Chicken Dinners
WITH ALL THE TRIMMINGS
featuring HOME MADE PIES, CAKES, and HOT ROLLS.
2. 179.4
at the
24-40 club
(5 miles Northeast of Lawrence on Hwy.40)
CHICKEN DINNER SPECIAL
Served from 5:00-8:00...$1.50
Orchestra
Sat Nov.20 9:00-12:00
Ph. 733-K3 for reservations by Sat.noon Admission $1.00 per couple
E L V
si l c y w h y n e b o p f s r t f l e s s H O U R L I N G i s l o v e r s o u l l e d
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19.1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE NINE
If You Think It's Lousy, What About Hiawatha?
X
Editor's note—About this time every year, hunters take to the woods of Westchester county, New York, armed only with bow and arrow. When United Pressman Leo (Tecopa) Turner heard of this novel way to hunt deer, his Cherokee blood was so stirred he decided to try his luck.
Any similarity between what follows and Longfellow's stately poetry is by chance.
Armonk, N.Y.—(UP)—When the sum touched the Gowanus, hung like a red ball over Brooklyn, climbed to light Manhattan's canyons, a hunter entered Westchester's wildness.
Far from Oolagah, Okla., far from his Cherokee homeland, from years of over-eating, he looked nothing like Hiawatha. Yet he stalked the buck deer with a store-bought bow and arrow.
The bow cost $9.98 at Macy's, another 79 cents for the arrow, complete with broad steel head and feathers. The clerk wanted to sell several arrows. "One deer, one arrow," said the hunter.
In his wigwam making faces, sat the veteran game protector, Edward Townsend, gaunt and grizzled, who for 30 years has worn the warden's green. Once Mr. Townsend was husky, weighing 210 pounds in his sock feet. Now he weighs 165 but he still charges $1.25 for a hunting expense.
This is not good for bear or horses, do not shoot the crows and rabbits, do not harm the farmer's cattle and do not aim at other hunters."
One hundred other hunters already had trekked the woodland, shooting darts in all directions. None had killed a deer.
In the morning he saw three deers. Two were does and the third was frightened. Then came back the wisdom of his father. "Sit like a stump," his father told him. "Deers are all near-sighted."
So like a stump sat he, that his own wife wouldn't know him, wouldn't nag him, wouldn't vex him, asking where he left his rubbers, warning him against the giggling water. So like a stump was he, three other hunters passed without remarking. Lunchtime also passed unnoticed.
Softly the deer came toward him, softly in the evening shadows, looming bigger in the half-light, coming closer every minute.
Stealthily he unsheated his arrow, quietly fitted it to the bowstring, pulled back on the sinew,
Lawrence Lodge No. 6 A.F.A.M.
Special Communication
Mon., Nov. 22, 7 p.m.
FIRST DEGREE
Visitors welcome.
Samuel P Moyer, W.M.
Walter H. Varnum, Sec.
G
and
AUTO PARTS
ACCESSORIES
New & Used Parts for All Cars
M30
We Buy Old and Wrecked Cars
- Auto Glass
- Mirrors
- Glass Table Tops
but alas he couldn't budge it.
AUTO WRECKING AND JUNK CO.
but alas he couldn't bury
With a quick glance about him,
he placed both feet on the strong
bow, put both hands on the bow-
string, pulled with arms and back
and shoulders.
Onto his back he toppled. The arrow zinged skyward. He was on his hands and knees when it speed back earthward, and hit him where he wasn't looking.
Phone 954 712 E.9th
To the nearest inn he staggered, propped his typewriter on the mantel. Across the forest primeval the
'Prince' To Prison For Stealing Car
Wichita—(UP) A 27-year - old Hawaiian who claimed he is a Polynesian prince today was under a one to five year prison sentence.
Matthew Duarte, of Honolulu,
told Wichita police he was a direct
descendant of South Sea island
royalty.
The Hawaiian was sentenced to the state penitentiary at Lansing on a charge of car theft. Police said he stole a car owned by Dan W. Thurston of Wichita in June. Several days later he was arrested by a night marshal at Oxford, Kan.
Duarte disarmed the officer and escaped. He was later arrested by Summer county deputies in a barn loft.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
TURKEY
sun was setting, but the hunter wasn't.
Have A Nice Thanksgiving
Here's a supermessage for You students who are thinner. The Rose's want you all to try Their special chicken dinner. (all choice pieces—no backs or necks)
ROSE'S RANCHO
JOIN THE THRONG OF AFTER-THANKSGIVING DEPOSITORS!
More & more students are finding it convenient and much more economical to have a local bank account. Budgets are easier to keep and no argument as to where the money went.
Many are bringing larger checks from home after Thanksgiving and depositing them
in
Remember - you are welcome too.
The Lawrence National Bank
The
"Fly home and back during the Thanksgiving vacation"
Livengood-Nash Motors
VALUES BARGAINS SAVE QUARANTIZED BUY NOW USED CARS
Featuring: Used cars, nearly new. See Them Now.
DRIVE a Good USED CAR on your VACATION
Livengood-Nash Motors
Phone 407
Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan.
"A DISTINGUISHED PICTURE"
the critics say you'll say, it's swell Entertainment
Gregory Peck Ann Todd
Valli Charles Laughton
Charles Coburn Ethel
Barrymore Louis Jourdan
Entertainment
The PARADINE CASE
JAYHAWKER TO-DAY ENDS SATURDAY
CONSTRUCTED FOR LAUGHS! ERECTED FOR FUN!
Cary Builds His Dream House . . .
But Can't Keep the Wolves Away.
CARY
GRANT
IT'S ALL FUN!
Mr.Blandings Builds his Dream House CARY MYRNA MELVYN ANT LOY DOUGLAS
OWL SHOW SAT. NITE 11:15. SUN thru THURS.
VARSITY Ends Saturday
12—39c
DOUBLE PROGRAM
Hit. No. 1
IT'S HEP . . HAPPY AND HILARIOUS!
SWINGING...SINGING...ROMANCING!
Music Man
Freddie STEWART • June PREISSER
Jimmy DORSEY • Phil BRITO
Plus
THE NEW YORKER
Eddie DEAN
The Hawk of
POWDER RIVER
with
Roscoe Atas
Jennifer Holt
June Carlson
Also
SUPER-MAN SERIAL
PAGE TEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1948
The Editorial Page-
Low Wages
"As far as that KU. outfit is concerned, I'm getting everything out of it that I can." That is the comment made by one of the business men of Lawrence.
Whether that remark was made about one particular group or the entire University is not known. However, it seems to express the relationship that has developed between employers and part-time student help.
In normal times the pay scale in Lawrence would be on an equal plane with the rest of the state if it were not for the University. There are no major industries to create a great demand for labor. However, when 9,000 students come into the city and when many have to work to continue their education, the law of supply and demand comes into play and wages go down. The drop is especially noticeable in jobs that can be done as part-time work such as clerks, ushers, salesmen, waiters, and similar occupations.
Those who work are entitled to a fair wage, as fair play demands, because the University adds to the prosperity of the city by providing a potential 15 million dollar market for Lawrence firms. These same firms pay part-time help an average wage of 55 cents, which is low. If there were a corresponding drop in retail prices, it would not be quite so bad. —Gerald E. Edgar.
- Letters To The Editor -
Dear Editor:
I think, or at least I hope, that the argument started some time ago in the Daily Kansan has finally come to an end.
I am glad, Mr. Roland, that you have agreed that there is obviously a definite threat of war at present between Russia and our nation. I, of course, agree that the United States has years of work cut out for itself in solving the problems as to the future use of the atom bomb.
I believe that some where along the line you have misinterpreted one of my letters. I have never advocated war. I merely wished to stress its ominous presence. I do not know where you have come upon the idea that I think the solution to the whole problems would be to eradicate Stalin and his Communist followers. The killing of a leader of a totalitarian empire has proved useless time after time throughout the history of the world.
The only answer can be in mutual understanding. I believe it is up to us to find the medium through which we can enter the minds and hearts of all war-like people, and show them that it is easier to count our defects over a council table than to total our war dead in the records of mankind.
Donald A. Moser College freshman
I would like to thank the American way of life that permitted the Editor, Mr. Roland, Mr. Harris and myself to express our views freely and without fear of punishment. I hope that some day within my life span I shall see this type of freedom of expression throughout the entire world.
Food
Dear Editor:
When, I ask, is some responsible person going to do something about the preparation of meats and eggs that are now being served at the Union cafeterias? Why is it the cooks are stumped by the preparation of meat?
They are indeed in an enviable position in that they can make life more enjoyable for the students. They have shown with salads, vegetables and desserts, a capability of preparing good food.
It is very discouraging to go through the line, thinking of all the good things you will soon be eating, only to lose your appetite when you see the main course, meat, regardless of type, soaking in a half inch of grease. Certainly one of the cooks should be able to prepare the piece de resistance in a more appetizing manner or at least know enough to drain off the grease before presenting it for consumption.
I realize the tremendous responsibility of preparing food for several thousand people and I want to commend the fine job that is being done. The prices are fair, the cleanliness and sanitation of utensils is beyond question, and
Daily Hansan
University
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn. Nati-
Asn., and the Associated Collegiate
Press, Represented by the National Ad-
dress Association 420 Madison Ave.
New York City.
Editor-In-Chief ... Maurice C. Lungren
Managing Editor ... Hal D. Nelson
Editors ... Marilyn M. Murphy
Asst. Man. Editor ... Bill F. Mauger
City Editor ... Robert Newman
Asst. City Editor ... Nora Temple
Asst. City Editor ... Joan T.
el. Editor ... Richard D. Barton
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Larry Funk
Asst. Te. Editor ... Robert D. Snair
Sports Editor ... Oscar S. Orsay
Asst. Sports Editor ... Marvin L. Rowlands
Society Editor ... Rosemary Rospaw
Business Mgr ... Bill Nelligan
Advertising Mgr ... Don Tennant
Circulation Mgr ... Ruth Clayton
Asst. Grc. Mgr ... Dena Knuth
Asst. Mgr ... Don Waldron
Asst. Class. Mgr .. Yvonne Joward
Asst. Class. Mgr .. Willie H. Arndt
Natl. Adv. Mgr ... Don Welch
Promotion Mgr ... Charles E. O'Connor
last but not least, the courtesy of the employees is indeed a tribute to the college.
Curtis B. Harris Journalism freshman
Number Of Doctors Decreasing In State
The number of doctors in the state is decreasing while the population is increasing. Dr. Franklin D. Murphy, dean of the University of Kansas School of Medicine, told the Sixth District Nurses association in Wichita.
He said that the population has increased 25 per cent while the number of doctors has decreased 30 per cent. Eighty doctors are lost in Kansas each year through death and retirement. Although about 80 doctors are graduated from the school of medicine, about 15 leave the state to enter government services or practice in other states.
It's The COURT HOUSE CAFE 1105 Mass. For Those Quality Meals Try Our TEMPTING Sandwiches
Many a Tom will peep when you wear the "ACME QUALITY LOOK"
ACME QUALITY LOOK
1. Discount for cash and carry on dry cleaning.
2. Free bachelor service on all small repairs.
ACME BACHELOR LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS
Phone 646
1111 Mass.
CORDUROY SLACKS
For Campus And Sport
Sturdy Winter Cords in your favorite shade of grey. Zipper fronts.
$7.60
The Palace
843 Mass.
Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
The single gift that gets a double welcome!
PARKER "51"
Pen with matching pencil in handsome gift set, $2750, plus tax.
What could make a more inspired gift this Christmas than this beautifully matched set. The world's most wanted pen—the pen that "writes dry with wet ink"—and its exquisitely matched pencil. Four distinctive colors. Custom points.
Otlier sets $1750 to $8000
STUDENT
Union Book Store
The single gift that gets a double welcome !
"51" PARKER "51"
The single gift
that gets a
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"51"
PARKER "51"
Parker "51"
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STUDENT Union Book Store
GOOD
WHEN
fish,
squirr
(1218)
he p
less.
TXPII
bread.
418 or
Miss I
GRR,
c and
jeathe
TRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE ELEVEN
Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
n
Phone KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be mailed to you during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univer-
sity Business office. Journalism bldg, not the University, 45 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One day Three days Five days
5 words or less...35c 65c 90c
additional words ...1c 2c 3c
FOR SALE
40 STUDEBAKER Champion. 2 door
excellent condition. Call Bob Elbel, 228-755-4911.
FORDOR DE SOTO. 35. Good transpor-
tation, need the money. Must sell, cheap
11th Ohio.
106 Ohio.
THREE OU-KU football tickets. Call
314-285-4791 for snacks.
ONE STADIUM ticket on the goal line
for Saturday's game. Price $3.00. Call
192. Jim Dull.
A KNEE-HOLE desk with 4 drawers
Good condition. Clair Clill Gairn, 2470R.
1830 S. 5th St.
$1.00 DAY SPECIAL: Christmas greeting
boxes, boxes of 21 assorted cards. Sells
regularly at 79c, this sale only, 2 boxes
for $1.00 at Gambles. 19
BOY'S BICYCLE, excellent condition
new tires. 60W. 12rd, after 6-paint. 19
mm.
receive code block new
implete, ready $90.00 and up
ill Hulk Black, phone 23431
ARGUS A2 camera, good condition, new
phone 3346, Jugene Searl 1307 Teun,
phone 3346
HOLL ROD. 37 motor in perfect shape
ck. 2095. 15
**SPECIAL WILLYS' ARMY Jeep. Good con-
trol, and excellent heater. $500.00**
Call John Rohde, 286-739-1414.
Calibr Call John Rohde, 286-739-1414.
41.00 DAY SPECIAL: 81x99 bed sheets;
4x4x4 thread count, 2 for $5.00. Also 4x36
pillow cases, this sale 2 for $1.00 at Gatings.
19
STANDARD ROYAL Typewriter. Late
model in perfect condition. Priced 20
per cent below similar machines at
the Rockwell stack Campbell. Phone
or visit at 1127 UQT 8145.
SUN LAMP Special: Get a Florida sunl伞 while you study. GUE SunLamps to fit standard sockets now. Only $8.50. B F Goodrich, 929 Mass.
AIRED OF WALKING: Come to the Putt-
patt shop at 311 East 9th. I have a new
motorcooters for sale there. It's cheap
and safe transportation. 22
BOYS; BIGGEST selection; lowest prices;
we see our convenient lay-a-way plan. Gam-
mon is a fun way to learn.
MMUNITION, Fishing Tacile, Gums and
butter's Shop, 1016 Mass. rtfn
AN IDEAL GIFT: 5 tube table model radio, choice of ivory or walnut. Regularly at $28.35. Dollar Day Feature. Use on lay-a-way plan. Garage Use.
BUSINESS SERVICE
USED CARS bought and sold. 6 blocks north of underpass. Phone 3095 Mid-Middle Fork Second. Phone 2994 Prom service. Phone 1168R, 1028 Vermont. 22 ONE ONE is best—Bailou’s for watch repair. 411 Vest West. rffn DOPM Open form service, reasonable rate, accurate work. 1209 Ohio, rffn Phone 1601.
60 FOR YOUR old battery on a new
Goodrich battery Delivery
battery
COLLEGE, A SCORE, 925 mass.
12-11. Fish, pigeons, skunks, dogs birds, fish cats, pigeons, skunks, parrots squirrels, rats, mice, etc., go shopping or an outfit they go to Grant's Pet Shop. 1218 Conn. St. Phone 418. Everything in pet field—their needs are 12-21.
TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. Ask for Miss Helen. 12-21
HART and Son, tailors. Finest sample made to measure, suits, topcoats, and overcoats. Alterations, repairing and leather work. 831% Mass. 19
LOST
WILL THE person who found Bill String-
ing have the name or address. Since I do not
have name or address
WILL PERSON who accidentally took my Strong-Ellywyn Human Neurology book from Union lower cafeteria Tues. morning, less please in the office? Please needed Grace Horton for PLEASE BRING back our book—he hadn't finished reading it; and if you read the Daily Kansan you know we need to refer to the new Webster dictionary we need to proof-reader's desk in the journalism building. It had "University of Kansas Press" stamped all over the fly leaf. 22 EXCHANGE TOPCOATS with person who mistook one at the palm room. Wed. Nov. 10. Call 1553. Charles Inna. 11-19
MAN'S WRIST watch left in Room 310 Fraser Hall at 11:00 a.m. Thursday morning. Please leave at Kansan office for reward. Edna Cobb. 2734-M. 29
K.F. SIDE RULE. left in room 401
inside of the master bedroom.
inside of case. $5 reward. 300 E. 19th.
800 F. 2nd floor.
PARKER dj. brown pen. Name en-
tire L. Bock. Spooner
Taylor, Phi. 884.
WOULD LIKE a ride for two to New York or vicinity for Christmas vacation. Call 2803J or leave name at Kansan office. 19
WANTED
OR 4 RIDERS to Wichita Thanksgiving,
leave at 5 p.m. Tues., Nov. 23. Return
Sunday evening. Contact Daily Kansan
office. Box 3.
GIRL VOCALIST wanted for "hill" dance.
band. Call 2436R after 6 p.m. 19
TRANSPORTATION
WISH TO SHARE the ride between Kansas City and Lawrence. Arrive Lawrence anytime. Leave Lawrence 4 p.m. Call Va 4722. 10
RIDE WANTED for two to Wichita on vicinity Wednesday evening, Nov. 24th after six. Will share expenses. Call Bob Cott, 1961M. 22
LIKE RIDE to Columbia, Missouri on
24th for Thanksgiving holiday. Will share
expenses. Leave name at Kansan office,
box 4, or 304 Fraser. 22
COUPLE WANTS TO Salina, Kansas
2349W and ask for Bob or Velma.
2349W and ask for Bob or Velma.
RIDERS WANTED to share expenses.
Leaving early Tuesday afternoon for Thanksgiving vacation. Going route
destination is Springfield, Ohio. Phone number: (215) 847-6900.
WOULD LIKE two riders to Dodge City
November 2017. Nov. 217.
Phone 2107 and ask for White.
WOULD LIKE a ride to Enid, Okla. or
Would like a ride to Nov. 23. Call Rose
Wohnke, phone 356-789-1043.
MOTHER AND 7-week old child would like ride, Monday or Tuesday to Stockton, Kansas or vicinity. Will share expenses. Call Leon, Brucker.
WANTED: Ride to Russell, Kans., Tuesday afternoon. Nov. 23. Would like to share expenses. Call Jack Campbell Phone 730.
Call Leonard Brokaw, phone 2288J. 22
WANTED. Two students want ride to
Great Bend, Kansas over Thanksgiving
share expenses. Phone 2894R, 1132 Tenn.
TO SHARE expenses with anyone driving to Chicago, Michigan, or vicinity during Thanksgiving vacation. Call Phil Oren, after 6 p.m. PH 2635W. 19
WOULD LIKE ride to vicinity of Long view, Texas for Thanksgiving vacation. Will share expenses and driving. Call 875R. 19
URGENTLY NEEDDED ride. To share expenses and driving to Philadelphia or eastern city and return. Will leave to the car after December 17, Call Bell Tee 284.
COMMERCIAL PILOT flying 4 place
giving. Take passengers any point general route or 180 mile route. Jackson
Gasper Hotel or Yellowsville
3305. Kansas City.
FOR RENT
SLEEPING ROOM. 2 singles. Ideal study room, 3 blocks from campus. Call
139K. 29
LARGE. quiet, comfortable downstairs
room for men. Single, modern, close to
Merrimack Valley, Vermont.
NICE SINGLE room for boy at 825 HI-
nois. If interested please call 2939R.
No smoking or drinking.
FURNISHED ROOM for man student.
1340 N.H. Phone 1374R. 22
MISCELLANEOUS
AGAIN THIS THIS, by popular demand, a
chance for the fellows and gals who would like
it is for the fellows and gals who would like
to learn skiing from the very best, and enjoy the atmosphere of a ski resort. In addition, you'll spend—all meals, transportation (our own special car on the Colorado Eagle), skis, boots, poles, 4 hours of lessons every week, Fork lodge accommodations, smorgasbord dinners, square舞, moonlight skating party steak dinner at the Red Rock Resort in Queen Ball, and the Aspen Intercollegiate Ski Meet having 17 schools represent for further selection any one of these agents for further training. Fig New2093; Don Schanake, 365.
Guys, Not Gals, Are Clothes Bugs
Washington—(UP)—The average husband spends more money on clothes than his wife does.
The labor department reports that in the average city household, the husband's clothing expenses range from $128 to $159 a year. The wife spends from $111 to $139.
Aside from incidentals that go to make up the average family's clothing budget, the department found that the missus buys a heavy wool coat every four years, and four dresses and three pairs of shoes a year.
Husbands, the report said, average one heavy wool suit every two years, one light wool suit every three years, and five shirts and two pairs of shoes a year.
The department said it wasn't at all surprised by the results of its survey. Men have been out-spending women on clothes "since grandma's day," the department said, but they never would admit it.
Alumni Achieves National Indian Award For Work
Archie Phimney, '26, has been awarded the Indian Council Fire achievement. This bronze medal is awarded annually to the Indian considered most worthy of national recognition.
Mr. Phinney was the first Indian to earn a degree at the University. He is one of the founders of the National Congress of American Indians. He also studied at George Washington university, Washington, D.C. New York university at Columbia, and in Leningrad.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
MARCO BOLLONI
"What do ya mean you sent her clothes to the Varsity Dry Cleaners!!!
Your Neighborhood Dry Cleaner
Varsity Cleaners
1405 Massachusetts
"across the street from the high school"
Phone 400
Sudlow Wins $500 Prize
Robert N. Sudlow of the University of Kansas fine arts faculty. Wednesday received the $500 Topeka Junior league purchase prizes at the second annual exhibition of oil painting by artists of the Missouri valley.
Sudlow's winning painting is titled "Landscape." Former Gov. Harry Woodding presented the award, the largest given in this area for many years.
Sudlow, an instructor in drawing and painting, painted the winning picture while at Santa Cruz, Calif., last summer. It was shown for the first time in Topeka.
Alumni Meetings Planned Over US
Several University alumni meetings will be held in various parts of the United States in the next few weeks, Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, said today.
University alumni in New Jersey will meet Sunday, Dec. 5, in the A. F. Welsh home, 4 East Reid Place, Verona.
Ray Evans will be guest of honor at the Book-Cadillac hotel in Detroit Sunday. Jack Minor is president of the alumni association in the detroit area.
The Continental hotel in Kansas City, Mo., will be the meeting place for the annual greater Kansas City rally before the Missouri-Kansas game. The rally will be on Tuesday, Nov. 23.
FLYING HIGH?
be sure
AVIATION INSURANCE
you have the right kinds of AIRCRAFT HULL and LIABILITY Insurance. We offer the broadest policies which protect against practically ALL PERILS both IN THE AIR and ON THE GROUND. Get
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HAVE
"COVERAGE FOR THE AIR AGE" from
CHARLTON INSURANCE
Phone 689
Across from the post office
Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan.
No Job Is Too Tough
BONNIE MURRAY
When the trouble lies deep in the motor of your car, you can depend upon our experienced mechanics to get to the bottom of it. Drive in today for cold weather checkup.
MORGAN-MACK
MOTOR CO.
609 Mass.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19.194
PAGE TWELVE
Musical Therapy Meet Dec. 6-7
The first annual conference for hospital musicians will be held at the University on Monday and Tuesday, Dec. 6-7. The conference is the first of its type known, and is being held for the purpose of unification and discussion of hospital music and its problems.
Dr. E. Thayer Gaston, chairman of the department of music education, is charge of the conference.
The conference program will be primarily for hospital musicians, music therapists, and music technicians. Several sessions are also open to doctors who are working with this type of medicine.
The program will include an observatory visit to the Winter Genesys hospital in Topeka which has one of Goeut outstanding all-around programs using functional music in the United States.
- Conference leaders will include men who have done extensive work in the field of toxic therapy. They are Dr. Leon L. Burstein, chief of department of neuro-surgery, Dr. Howard D. Greenwood, attending physician of the department of physical medicine rehabilitation, and Dr. Harry Wachenheim, chief of physical medicine rehabilitation all at Winter General Hospital.
Dr. A. P. Siegmann, professor of clinical neurology, Dr. William P. Roth, de. chairman of department of psychiatry and neuroscience, and Dr. Glen R. Shierbach, all from the University Medical Center in Kansas City; and Michael Dumal, faculty member of the Menninger Institute for psychological medicine.
Harvey Did Turn-About
Harvey was first a couny and later a rabbit. Mrs Eugene Felt instructor of speech aid Wednesday in telling of her experience a last summer as Veta in the stage production of "Harvey." She smoke at the meeting of the coffee and orums committee of the Student Union Activities.
Mrs. Feist said she was the sixth woman to play the part of Veta originally the leading port of the play.
Mrs. Feist first took part in the play last spring when students and faculty members, directed by Prof. Allen Crafton, presented the play in Fraser theater, with Brock Pemberton in the lead role.
When Miss Marion Lorne, who then was playing the part of Veta in New York, was ordered to leave the show by her doctor, Pemberton, producer of the show, signed up Mrs. Felist.
The stage name of Mrs. Feist was Frances Lawrence. Mrs. Feist played in "Harvey" from May 31 until Aug. 28, when she returned to the University.
Offer Scholarship For Mortar Board
Active members of Mortar Board, honorary society for senior women, are eligible to apply for the $500 Kathryn Wills Coleman scholarship. The award provides a fund for the winner to work on her doctor's degree after being graduated next June.
Applications for the scholarship will be sent from Mortar Board chapters throughout the nation. One woman receives the award each year. Several members of the local group are expected to apply for the scholarship.
Expert Radio Service
Beaman's Radio
1200 N.Y. Phone 140
2.
Doodle, Don't Dawdle, Life Away; For Relaxing, It Beats Scotch, Soda
New York—(UP)—How do you dooled?
There's a question that someday may pop up in your conversation. The care-free doodle has progressed to a work of conscious, accepted art.
Or so says the blonde and comely Zita Miller, operator in New York of what probably is the world's only school for chadshusure
Miss Miller, a talented artist, said she founded her school on the premise that doodling was good for talks. She claims it relaxes them more than the movies or even a Scotch and soda.
"Furthermore," she said, "I've discovered that almost all doodlers have artistic talent. Although many of them could become fine artists, the majority are interested only in developing doodling as a hobby. For most, it's an ideal outlet for peut up, nervous energy."
Miss Miller said people who stitched still life were among the more touted doodlers. However, even those who drew airless lines might have "surprising cabistic sense."
She said good "catastic" doodlers could commercialize their talents, by sketching designs for wallpaper or broken
"The idea of doolling for fun really has caught on." Miss Miller said. "We've been swamped with medications for enrollment."
The students must for a two-hour session each week. They pay $2.50 per lesson.
Miss Miller said that although live models are used in her doodlebug classes, sketching them is optional. One student sketched nothing but ducks for weeks while another sketched the sketcher, she said. Those who graduate from the doodlebug class may choose any art course they like.
"In order to promote the idea of relaxing while doodling," she said, "We serve elder and doughnuts and play light classical music on a recorder during classes."
Most of the doodle classes, she said, are dominated by students from the business world. However, some are Housewives, deburtantes and advertising executives.
And so now it is possible for anyone to do a beautiful doodle. Pet haus after one easy lesson.
Oscar Stinney, member of the state board of regents and Topeka newspaper publisher, will be the speaker at the commencement exercises at Kansas State college Friday, Jan. 28, 1940.
Stauffer To Talk A K-State
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Daily Kansan
Monday, Nov. 22, 1948
Lawrence, Kansas
STUDENT NEWSAPER
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Managers Hear Labor's Opinion Of Industry
Labor leaders gave their side of the labor-management story on Nov. 19.
They spoke at the first annual Industrial Relations conference held at the University from Nov. 18 to Nov. 20. Management representatives presented their views Nov. 18.
H. J. Yount, secretary of the Kansas State Industrial Union council, CLO, Kansas City, Kan., said management had to live and be built but the worker had to be built up too.
He listed as one of the biggest "gripes" the worker has is his fore-
"According to a poll we made," Mr. Yount said, "the workers in many instances considered their foreman a dictator. He doesn't stand by them and he belittles the worker's union.
"In a few cases, however, the foreman is well liked. He gives responsibility to workers, he gives proper instructions, and he assists them. He often discusses changes with the employees before he makes them. If he has all these qualities, the workers respect him when he is firm."
Willard Murphy, president of the Kansas State Industrial Union council, C.I.O., said that a guaranteed wage is the solution to the deep-rooted fear" which the worker has about losing his job.
He pointed out that there had been concessions of late along this line, but charged:
"Management should open its books to the union. They should make appointments at the bank and we would bring our own auditors to see what happens to the dollars."
Samuel S. White, manager of the Kansas City Joint board, International Ladies Garment Workers union, A.F. of L., Kansas City, Mo., declared that "uids weren't organized to aid management. They were organized to aid the worker."
to aid management. He organized to aid the worker."
He cited the report of a survey which placed the desire for money seventh among the things workers want.
"You men of management think just because the worker isn't asking for more money he is satisfied. Not so. He wants more favorable working conditions, more security, and more recognition.
"One of the biggest mistakes the Taft-Hartley law makes is that it protects the worker from his union leader." That argument is a dead duck."
Mr. White charged: "You also say 'I like my own employees, but not outsiders.' Well, you don't mind calling in an outside lawyer to help you get an injunction against us, do you!"
The conference ended with speeches by J. B. Hann, Sears Roebuck and company, D. W. Harris, Trans-World airlines; and Carrol Ward, Mid-Continent airlines, all of Kansas City, Mo., and Robert Lemon, Spencer Chemical company, Pittsburg, Kan.
Each empasized the necessity of making long-term employment attractive. Turnover is costly to the employer and often to the individual worker, they said.
Mr. Ward said "There is increasing recognition that employees are the most valuable resource of any business enterprise. An enlightened industrial relations program with sound policies offers a major hope for making our economy work."
P
(University Dally Kansan Photo by Sam Jones) MISS THANKSGIVING of 1948 is the title given this coed astride the big bird. She's real and so is the turkey. The photographer is responsible for the "fowl" play. The turkey is of the ordinary variety blown up double size with the girl superimposed on it's back.
When You Eat Your Turkey Thursday Remember To Count Your Blessings
By GERALD FETTEROLF
The snow-blocked highways have been opened to traffic. The weather promises to be reasonably clear. The prospect of a vacation is pleasing to most students, and wishes for a bountiful meal on Thursday may be heard on the campus.
The Pilgrim fathers in 1621 set harvest that gave them food for the coming winter. That was the beginning of the annual family feast day in the United States.
University Daily Kansan
Won't Publish Tomorrow
The Pilgrim fathers in 1621 set aside a day of thanksgiving for the there food for the
During the Revolutionary war, Thanksgiving days were recommended by the congress. In 1784, Thanksgiving day was dedicated to the return of peace, and the successful prosecution of the war.
In 1789, George Washington made the first presidential proclamation of Thanksgiving day. The country then gave thanks for the creation of the new nation.
New England is credited by some sources as celebrating Thanksgiving with more zest than any other section of the country. Disagreement with this idea might come if the experts had ever witnessed the satisfaction with which a mid-western sits down to eat his Thanksgiving meal. The Mid-Western table is usually top heavy with turkey, Virginia ham, yams, cranberry sauce, vegetables both cooked and raw; dressing; mince pie, pumpkin pie, puddings, cakes, and fruit, the whole flavored with steaming cups of coffee.
The same year, the Episcopal church recognized the authority of the government to proclaim a day of thanksgiving. This set the precedent, and a national day of thanksgiving has been celebrated since then.
Since 1863, presidents and governors of the states have proclaimed the day. It is an official holiday in all the states, in the District of Columbia, and in all the territories.
The University Daily Kansan will not be published tomorrow. The next issue will be published Monday, Nov. 29, when classes resume after Thanksgiving holiday.
The theme of the bountiful table on Thanksgiving was begun with the Pilgrims who put some of all their edible stores on the table. Today's Thanksgiving carries on the tradition and among the favorite visions in the United States is the picture of the family table, with its load of food.
Library Schedule Over Thanksgiving
The schedule for Watson library and the departmental libraries during the Thanksgiving holiday will be as follows:
tomorrow—Library closes at 6 p.m.
Wednesday—Open 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Thursday—Closed all day.
Friday—Open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Saturday—Open 9 a.m. to noon.
Sunday—Open 6 to 10 p.m.
The departmental libraries will follow their regular schedules except for Thursday and Sunday when they will be closed.
Kansas—Partly cloudy and slightly warmer today; considerable cloudiness and warmer tomorrow. Highs today 35 to 40.
WEATHER
Waring May Play KU Song He Wrote
Memories of an old K.U. hymn may be revived when Fred Waring and his orchestra appear in Hoch auditorium at 8 p.m. tonight.
Eight years ago, Waring wrote and dedicated a song to the University. The first performance of "The Banner of Old K.U." was on a nation-wide radio broadcast on May 3, 1940. It was repeated on a program by Waring on Dec. 20, 1940.
Since no fixed program has been announced for the show, Waring may play "The Banner of Old K.U." in honor of the school.
Waring Show Tonight At 8
Fred Waring and His Pennsylvania will appear at 8 tonight in Hoch auditorium in an informal concert. Though there will be no programs, the following numbers may be included, according to the office of the School of Fine Arts:
"Sleep"-the entire organization;
"Smoke Gets in Your Eyes"-Glee club;
"Nutracker Suite"-Glee club and orchestra; "Fiddle Faddle"-Glee club; "You'll Never Walk Alone"-Glee club; "My Blue Heaven" and "It's Magic"-Joe Marine; "I Loved You" "My Hero," "The Last Rose of Summer"-Jane Wilson:
"Land of Degradashun"-Gordon Berger; folk songs and "Lord's Prayer"; Stuart Churchill; "It's a Most Unusual Day" and "My Heart Sings"; Joan Wheatley; "Tree in the Meadow" and "Diane"-Gordon Goodman; "Blue Danube" and "Rosenkavalier"; Livingston Gearhart and Virginia Morley.
The 4,000 tickets for the concert were sold out three weeks ago, and there will be no standing room tickets available tonight.
The group gave a concert in Kansas City, Mo., Sunday, and will go to St. Joseph, Mo., tonight after the concert.
Sachem Still Searching For KU-MU Tickets
Spectators at the K.U.-M.U. game will miss the traditional tom-tom ceremony unless Sachem members succeed in getting tickets.
The M.U. honor fraternity which co-operates with Sachem to present the colorful event, so far has failed to obtain any tickets. Sachem members still hope that the rest of the tribe may join William A. Conboy, College senior, in the trip to Columbia.
Campus Jesters Invited To Compete For Sour Owl Prizes: Deadline Dec.13
With hoarse murmurs of "Keep it clean" and "Little children may read our magazine," bleary editors of the Sour Owl, humor magazine of the University's journalism fraternity, Sigma Delta Chi, this morning announced a contest for campus humorists.
Prizes totaling $20 will be given for the best entries. A prize of $10 will be given for the best humorous short story or fiction article; $5 for the best cartoon, $2 for the best cartoon idea, $2 for the best humorous verse, and $1 for the best joke.
"We haven't anything printable except one Mitchum, three Pat and Mike, and Five Kinsey report jokes," said editor Bill Barger.
The deadline for the contest is Monday, Dec. 13, and is open to all students of the University. All contributions will become the property of the Sour Owl. Articles must not contain more than 2,000 words.
Contributions may be left at the Sour Owl office on the balcony of the Journalism building, or mailed to the Sour Owl, P.O. box 517, Lawrence; given to Bill Barger, editor of the Sour Owl, or to Charles Pearson, faculty adviser, in 5 Journalism building.
The first edition of the Sour Owl will appear Tuesday, Jan. 4.
The cost will be 25 cents.
Research Group Favors New Science Building
Directors of the University of Kansas Research foundation, meeting here the past weekend, voted strong support of the University's need for a new science building.
The University will present its case for construction of a science building at the December meeting of the board of regents. Such a structure would house the departments of chemistry and physics, replacing Bailev laboratories and Blake hall.
J. Earl Schaefer, chairman of the board, described the proposed structure as the first practical step toward obtaining ample research facilities. It does not supplant the idea of an eventual research building. Schaefer is vice president and general manager of the Wichita division of the Boeing Airplane company.
The directors inspected the chemistry, physics and engineering departments. They expressed belief that new facilities are necessary for continuance of an adequate teaching program as well as research.
The foundation's directors approved the following resolution: "In view of the severe shortage of laboratory and class room space for teaching and research in the fields of the physical sciences, and further in view of the excellence of the staff and the effective teaching and research program now underway at the University of Kansas, be it resolved that the board of directors of the University of Kansas Research foundation express its strong endorsement of the University's need for a new science building to take the place of the long outmoded and fire hazardous chemistry and physics buildings, both built before the turn of the century, as the first step in providing adequate research facilities.
"And in view of the importance of these great and dynamic fields and of the fact that enrollment in these fields has increased by thousands since the present inadequate facilities were first created, the board offers its services to the administrative officers of the University in bringing to the attention of the industrial and business leaders and officials and civic grouns in Kansas, the urgency for this facility commensurate with the teaching and research needs of Kansas and the Middlewest, and its growing importance as a strategic industrial area."
Seven Seniors Win Army Internships
Seven seniors at the University School of Medicine have been appointed by the U.S. army surgeon general to begin internships in army general hospitals July 1, 1949, it was announced by Lt. Col. T. D. McCarthy, assistant professor of military science and tactics.
Colonel McCarthy said that appointments were made on a nationwide competitive basis and were given those with high academic standings.
Those receiving appointments are: Robert L. Corder and Charles E. Shopnfer, Fitzsimons general hospital, Denver; James M. Cuthbertson and Warren C. Miller, Letterman general hospital, San Francisco; Bruce L. Livingstone, Madigan general hospital, Tacoma, Wash; George H. Keene, Percy Jones general hospital, Battle Creek, Mich., and Elias M. Throne, Walter Reed general hospital, Washington, D. C.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
State Legislators Face Problem In Liquor Control
By JAMES MORRIS
Speculation on what the state legislature will do about re-opening the liquor control question during the 1949 session has been running rampant since Nov. 3. While most observers are certain that action will be taken to prevent the state from returning to wide open status, opinion is divided on the exact action that should be taken.
The situation is no clearer in the so-called license states. California, Connecticut, Delaware, and South Carolina issue state licenses. The other 24 states also-allow county and municipal governments to issue permits. Seven states license only retail package sales. Twenty-one can license anyone but usually restrict certificates to drug, grocery, and package stores.
In 23 states, sales by the drink are not restricted. Taverns are kept in line by regulating hours of sale, Sunday's sales, sales with or without food, sales while consumers are standing or seated at bars or tables, and sales to women and minors. The five states not allowing alcoholic beverages to be sold by the drink vary restrictions. Three allow only beer, the other two allow beer and wine.
Idaho, Michigan, Maine, Ohio,
Utah, Washington, and West Virginia
have private dealers in addition to state outlets. Nine monopoly states have open saloons, four permit wine and beer to be sold by the drink, four others permit only beer. Only four monopoly states have no provision for local option. In Pennsylvania, local option is limited only to the question of permitting by-the-drink sales.
Legislators will not be able to turn to other states for guidance. No consistent means of regulating liquor traffic exists. While 17 states have constitutional provisions on the sale and manufacture of alcoholic beverages, almost twice this number regulate by statute.
Twenty license states have local option. Eighteen leave it up to voting units to decide whether they want local prohibition. Two limit local option to forbidding the open saloon. Six license states have no provisions.
Five states have outlawed the open saloon. Thirteen forbid selling distilled spirits by the drink. Seventeen adapted the monopoly policy but liquor is sold in state-operated stores in only eight of these states. Maryland, a license state, has nine counties operating package stores, Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota have given cities the right to monopolize retail package sales.
Lack of uniformity among the wet states in controlling liquor manufacture and sale seems to indicate the situation is strictly on an individual basis. Kansas legislators will have to decide what controls are best for the state without any real outside help.
There are enough atomic bombs in existence today to destroy the world, William J. Argersinger, assistant professor of chemistry, told the Y.M.C.A. faculty-forum recently.
A-Bomb Could Destroy
Professor Argersinger and the members of the forum discussed the use of the atom in peace and war.
Read the Want Ads daily.
Scholarship Cups Presented At Tea
Approximately 500 University women attended the Inter-dorm and Pan-helenic scholarship tea on Nov. 17 at Corbin hall when a scholarship cups were presented to the sorority and the organized house with the highest grade average for the 1947-1948 school year. Margaret Meeks, vice-president of the Associated Women Students, presided.
The cups were presented to the presidents of the winning organization by the presidents of the organizations which were in possession of the cups this past year. Mary L. Varner received the cup for Pi Beta Phi from Geraldine L. Koelzer, Theta Phi Alpha. Bernelda M. Larsen received the cup for Corbin hall from Joan Cockreham, Lockes hall.
The reception line at the tea was formed by Miss Margaret Habein dean of women; Ellen J. Spurney president of Inter-dorm; Jane H Ferrell, president of Pan-hellenic; and Betty van der Smissen, president of A.W.S.
Background music was furnished by Mary S. Stayton, Marion H. Nearing, and Jeannette C. Leuth, pianists, and Isabelle R. Gaddis, violinist, accompanied by Virginia R. Albury.
A darkroom which will complete the metallographic laboratory is just about finished Kenneth E. Rose, associate professor of mining and metallurgy, said today.
New Darkroom For Metallurgy Class
The room will have facilities to develop plates used in photomicriography and X-ray film used in radiography. The classes have been using a dark room on the second floor of Lindley hall.
Baltimore — (UP) — Enraged at seeing men sitting down in a street car while women had to stand, pedestrian Joseph Fitzpatrick, 19, rapped on the window as a gentle hint.
Photomicrography is used in studying the structure of metals at high magnification and reveals things about metals that chemical analysis can not. Radiography is used to look for defects in casting and other metal parts that will be used under stress.
Broken Glass, $139.75 Fine
Prove That Chivalry Is Dead
The two passengers were cut by flying glass, and street cars were tied up for four blocks while a maintenance man swept up the debris. Mr. Fitzpatrick was fined $139.75.
When two men inside ignored him,
Mr. Fitzpatrick rammed his fist
through the window.
Wending down Jayhawk Drive taking things cool when am running into this apparition in green corduroy trousers. Asking it what doing in such monstrosities. It, turning out to be Leonard Suder, journalism senior, giving following answer:
Green Journalist In Green Pants
"I demand recognition for journalists. The lawyers have their canes; the engineers have their slide rules; the business students are talking about wearing straw hats again."
Leaving him with averted eyes and journeying over to shack, Todding to University Daily Kansas files and checking story. Finding 1919 clipping saying, "the tradition of wearing green corduroy pants is being revived by journalism students this year."
"I am spearheading a drive to renew an old journalism tradition. In the past journalism students wore green corduroy trousers."
Discovering also that women in journalism had habit of wearing brown corduroy skirts to distinguish them from the common herd.
Alice Wismer, education senior, has been appointed chairman of the Independent Student association's state conference to be held here Saturday, Dec. 11. I.S.A. representatives from K-State, Emporia, Wichita, Baker and other schools are expected to attend.
Dunno.
Wismer Heads State ISA Meeting
Discussion on whether I.S.A. would enter politics was postponed until Thursday, Dec. 2. On the political question a forum will take up these points; the value of a ward or precinct system; the possibility of entering politics as a party with its own candidates, or having a political action committee get out voters and give a good survey of the candidates.
They will also discuss how the constitution can be revised in keeping with the change.
The I.S.A. plans to survey about 70 other colleges and universities in order to learn how other schools have dealt with campus politics.
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22.
Donald Giffen, College sophomore, was appointed to be LSA's representative at a future meeting of the Negro Students association.
Group To Honor Rabbi
The Congregation Bhai Jehudah of Kansas City, Mo. will honor Rabbi Samuel S. Mayerberg at a banquet in Kansas City on Friday, Nov. 26. It will mark his 20th year as rabbi of the synagogue.
Dr. Mayerberg commutes to Lawrence every Tuesday to teach two University classes in Hebrew history.
Read the Want Ads daily.
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4aow a year, (in Lawrence add $1 a semester- postage). Published in Lawrence. Kansas at law school. University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class on Sept 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kens., under act of March 3, 1879.
University Daily Kansan
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Attorney Explains Case
With Help Of Blackboard
Fort Worth, Texas — (UP) — The case was so confusing that the defense attorney used a blackboard to explain. Three of the four defendants were brothers. All were charged in federal court with the theft of three automobiles.
Plainville, Ohio—(UP)—Plainboasts a neat little brick posto believed to be the smallest structure in the United States, for postal use. The building measures $9 \frac{1}{2}$ feet wide by 11 feet long. F trains daily bring mail to this four class postoffice, and four others it away.
Postoffice Is Small, But Bus
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Musical Thieves Get Rich keep Out Of Hoosegow
By HARMAN W. NICHOLS
Washington—(UP)—Seems there are very few original tunes anymore,
"The Eyes of Texas"—anthem of the proud Lone Star state—is billed
original. Phoooey. It's a theft from "I've Been Workin' on the Railroad,"
nich, in turn, is a steal from "I've Been Workin' on the Levee."
So what would you all expect for "Hail to the Redskins?"
So what would you-all expect for "Hail to the Redkins," the marchy
one-tingler which is the theme song
the Washington professional football
team? A steal?
You said it, and you can say it gain. It's a whole flock of steals. The composer of the song is an old older named Barnee Breeskin, who 18 years has had a band in the ue room of the Shoreham hotel. Like other musical thieves—ing the word on advice of counsel Barnee checks his sources before steals.
But pifering of this kind is within the law.
Stealing, in the musical profession popular. Not to mention profitable. here do you suppose "Moonlight and Doses" came from? Original! uh! Right out of the semi-classics of the long, long ago.
The library of congress operates department called the folklore dian, headed by our old friend Dun-Emrich. It's Duncan's job to look up the history of various tunes and ale whether they should be deared "public domain." In other
or, whether swiping them would be copyright violation. If a song is lived through the ages, it's supposed to belong to all of us.
It seems there are few, if any, violations in most of the songs we wear at the concert hall and over the radio.
And if Enrich ever had a look it "Hail to the Redskins" he'd have haffled of research ahead of him between Bandleader Breeskin and Orinne Griffith, wife of Mr. George Marshall, who owns the Redskins, they ran the scale. Mrs. Marshall wrote the words.
Washington being a border town,
Barnee thought he ought to straddle
the fence. So the first 16 bars are
copied from "Dixie," or "I Wish I
was in The Land of Cotton."
He balanced it with part of "Yan-
nee Doodle."
The fiddler thought it would be nice to get something Indian in the piece so he hit upon a tom-tom he remembered for the middle part. By accident he struck one of the radio give-away mystery tunes. But don't ask him the name of it—he doesn't know and wouldn't have if they'd called him with 30 thousand dollars or so at stake.
There's also—by mistake, according to the dark-haired, Chubby leader—a steal from a Sunday school song.
To be eligible for the examinations which will be given soon, a person must have lived in Kansas for two years.
And for a punch—one of the big bettails of all. From the stirring national song, "The Marseillaise."
You can't blame Barnee, though. He never went to school to learn music. His pappy taught him the violin and what he knows about the piano he taught himself. He played "Hail to the Redskins" for me on the upright in his home. It wasn't bad.
Application forms and further information may be obtained from the Kansas department of civil service. 801 Harrison, Topeka. Applications must be submitted by Friday, Dec. 3.
You can't blame the lovely Mrs. Marshall, either. She took time out to write the words for the Redskin song. What she's really working at is a book she's writing about her friends' favorite recipes. She's gonna call it "Eggs I Have Known."
Civil Service Has 7 Jobs For Kansans
Seven positions with the civil service are open, the Kansas department of civil service has announced. The positions include highway radio supervisor, radio engineer, radio operator, radio dispatcher, guard, port of entry inspector, and law enforcement inspector.
The starting salaries for these positions range from $150 to $341 a month.
Sunflower Students Will Display Hobbies
A hobby display for students will be held at 7 p.m., Friday, Dec. 3, in the Sunflower community building, Philip Fleming, chairman of the Sunflower Civic association said today. Students with hobbies may have display space assigned by contacting the office of The Villager.
The event is held annually to give students with hobbies an opportunity to sell their products and to enable interested persons to buy the articles for Christmas gifts, Fleming said.
Ex-POW's Should Beware Hucksters
Sherwin L. Derby, district representative of the Veterans administration, today warned all former prisoner-of-war veterans not to fall for schemes which offer intervention in their behalf in making claims against the government.
"Private organizations are soliciting funds to finance possible future claims of P.O.W.s," he said. "The last session of congress made provision for all such payments and any private organization offering such help is not authorized to do so."
He said that full clarification of the new law has not yet been received, but that it will be made known to veterans just as soon as information comes in.
"In the meantime," he urged, "veterans should not make any payments to private organizations in exchange for the promise of intervening in their behalf. Such intervention is unnecessary in order for former POW's to receive any monetary consideration due them under the law."
University Extension Offers Class At Wichita
University Extension, in co-operation with the Wichita Bar association, will offer a class in "Taxation," Monday, Dec. 6 and Tuesday, Dec. 7, in the Lassen hotel, Wichita.
F. J. Moreau, dean of the School of Law, will speak at a Bar association luncheon Dec. 7. L. T. Tupy, professor of law, will lead a general discussion of the 1943 revenue act.
Registration for the class is limited to members of the legal profession.
Alumni Office Receives Building Plans From Grad
Several architectural plans of Juan F. Nakpil, 22, have been received in the alumni association office. He was sent here to study by the Philippine government.
The Manila Evening News printed his plans of a 7-story office building soon to be built in Manila. Mr. Nakpil has drawn plans for libraries, schools, office buildings, hotels and government buildings. One of the plans received at the alumni office was of his own home.
Make That Train or Bus on Time for Thanksgiving Vacation Have a nice time.
We will be waiting for you when you return
KU
JAYHAWK TAXI
Phone 65
KU
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0
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE KANSAS
MONDAY. NOVEMBER 22.
Girls Drive Manufacturers Mad Demanding Longer Skirts
New York—(UP)—The difference between a woman and a girl today may be the length of her skirt.
the longer ones, it appears, belong to the girls.
it's the word from St. Louis, where dress manufacturers set both and their prices for the college girl and her working sister.
While most New York manufacturers were busily cutting at least an inch off their dresses to them between 12 and 14 inches from the floor, the St. Louis folk came up with an apology for the shortness of one costume hemmed at that modest mid-calf length.
The right skirt, as they figure it is about 10 inches off the floor.
"The girls seem to want them that way." a spokesman for the industry said. "They can always hack them off, after all, if they change their minds."
Other ideas the girls appear to have sold their dressmakers are simplicity and low prices.
All the costumes showed modification of last season's exaggerated styles. Back "interest" and skirt fullness have both toned down. There are no bouncy bustles and the peplums ripple with extreme modesty.
A few dresses have wide panels of un stressed pleats or all around lightly gathered skirts. As many are outright slim. The majority stick to a happy in-between of flared skirts or achieve softness with a few pleats or gathers. New is a slim skirt with fullness in pleats or flare beginning just above the knee.
Weddings And Engagements
Spaulding-Garrett Engagement
Mr. and Mrs. Jo C. Spaulding of Concordia, announce the engagement of their daughter, Joann to Norman D. Garrett, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Garrett of Independence.
The announcement was made Thursday by Mrs. P. H. Klinkenberg, Alpha Omicron Pi housemother, Miss Spaulding wore a corsage of roses. The Misses Beverly Emerson, Betty Tice, Beatrice Sebor, and Shirley Hobbs who passed chocolates wore corsages of gardenias and red rosebuds. Mrs. Klinkenberg wore talaisman roses.
Miss Edith Williamson, accompanied by Miss Patricia Young, sang "Lover" and a satette composed of Sylvia Hawkinson, Patricia Obenlain, Virginia Johnston, Miss Williamson and Miss Young sang "Sweetheart of Alpha-O."
Don't Worry About Lana Leave Your Hair Long
By PATRICIA CLARY
Hollywood—(UP)—The movie stars' milliner says short haircuts have been the biggest boon to hat business since the three-propeller beanie.
Most movie queens who have their hair cropped on Monday rush to Kenneth Hopkins on Tuesday. They want a bonnet to cover up the damage.
"An actor's wife came in," Hopkins whispered, "and begged for a hat to match her nightgown. She said* she'd rather her husband saw her!."
Personally, Hopkins likes the short bobs, and he's turning out seads of little hats to make pert-haired women even perter. But he says the girls have to face facts: Jane Russell just doesn't look good in Barbara Stanwyck's hair-do.
"Short bobs can make a glamour girl look wonderful," he said, "but they can make her look pin-headed, freshly scaled and bottom-heavy."
"Some girls feel as embarrassed as a cocker spaniel who has been clipped for the summer."
Irene Dunne had her hair cut short and shrank when she looked in the mirror. She now wears a heavy braid to cover the dabble.
One woman who buys Hopkins hats even had to see a psychoanalyst as a result of her haircut.
"The short haircut is no more for every woman," Hopkins said, "than the butch haircut is for every man. Imagine James Mason with his hair cut an inch from his skull. Even his cats wouldn't recognize him." Venus de Milo, for instance, is the type that shouldn't wear short hair. She'd look like the bottom part of a triangle. Many actresses, unfortunately, now do.
"She felt like she had to have a lot of new clothes, she and her husband started quarreling, and she couldn't stand the sight of herself in the mirror," he related. "So she went to a psychoanalyst.
"Now her hair is growing out, and she thinks the psychoanalyst is wonderful."
If you're thinking of cutting your hair, Hopkins suggests you pin it up and see how you look—in a full-length mirror.
From a business standpoint, Hop
If you're extremely tall, heavy, or well-endowed like Jane Russell, you probably won't like it. The short bob just does something to well-endowed women, fore and aft
"It's foolish to follow the fad if it isn't becoming." Hopkins said. "Stick to your long hair, as plenty of stars are doing—and don't worry about keeping up with Lana."
kins ought to keep quiet about it. Short-haired women are rushing in for hats to hide things the way people rush to a drugstore for aspirin.
You Can't Escape Them— Even Within a 35-Mile Radius
Las Vegas, Nev.—(UP)—Link Waters, a farmer of Fort Dodge, Ia., decided he wouldn't drive all the way into Los Angeles on a visit because he had heard the accident rate there was high.
On the return trip he was driven back to his car and headed for Las Vegas. When he stopped for a traffic light in the desert town, another automobile plowed into him
Instead, he parked 35 miles outside town and had relatives drive out to pick him up.
It was a Los Angeles car
MYER'S GREENHOUSE
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Kappa Sigma announces the initiation of two men, Richard Bibler, Elkhart, and Robert Drumm, Centralia.
Kappa Sigma Initiates
Two blocks north of swimming pool
Socially Speaking
435 Mich.
Phone 312
Delta Gamma Desert Dance
the members of Delta Gamma
sorority and attended the members
of Battentfeld hall with a dessert
dance Wednesday.
Delta Gamma Dessert Dance
Guests at dinner at the Kappa Sigma fraternity house Nov. 14 were Marcia Godding, Yvonne Swenson, Hary Helen Keller, Betty Dearmond, Joline Nelson, Mary Frances Cooney, Annalou Pope, Donna Wiggans, Phyllis Kring, Marjorie Dowers, Norma Meicher.
乖 乖 白
Kappa Sigma Dinner Guests
The annual Kappa Sigma Red Dog inn was held Nov. 13 at the chapter house. The house was decorated as a saloon-gambling house of the gay nineties. The pledge class presented entertainment.
Kappa Sigma Red Dog Inn
- * *
Guests included: Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Ochs, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Beal, Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Held, Mr.
and Mrs. A. Simmons, Nancy Gor-
enson, Barbara Bolling, Evelyn
Friesen, Margaret Hershberger,
Suzanne Hoyt, Barbara Adams, Jane
Gray, Mary Douglass, Mary Kay
Kottman, Patricia Ames.
Susie Van Slyke, Marilyn Gibson, Mike Hegarty, Vina Lou Godding, Evelyn Dykes, Dolores Brown, Marilyn Glover, Alice Appleton, Marion Nearing, Arnd Angst, Analou Pope, Nancy Seaman, Alberta James, Ann Guyer, Mary Wilkens, Barbara Ackerman, Doris Greenbank.
Janis Fronkier, Ann Harms, Florence Oberg, Franc Oberg, Jean Siler, Mary McGuinty, Patricia Glove, Robert Jo Landis, Patsy Landis, Mary Lou Peckenschneider, Dorna Wiggans, Nanette Hyer, Marjorie Crane, Mary Frances Cooney, Patricia Creech, Beverly Rhodes, Margaret Leisy.
Virginia Daniels, Janice Monteith,
Wanda Brown, Betty Jo Greenwood,
Dorothy Wood, Barbara Howard,
Joan Bushey, Peggy Philbid, Betty Dearmond, Alice Swenson, Martha Nickles, Mary Ann Sawyer, Norma Nicken, Jean Nonken, Jane Fox, Betty Rolfs, Phyllis Kring, Gloria Hill, Louise Delay, Mary Selig.
Joan Happy, Yvonne Josserand,
Patricia Cheatham, Mary Jo Myers,
Margaret Lutrick, Marilyn Miller,
Jayne Mater, Norma Melcer, Billy
Jean Alexander, Peggy Paker, Suzanne Neff, Lanna Hensley, Mari V. Stout, Mrs. Ralph Kron.
Chaperons were: Mrs. H. M. Miller, Mr. T. Wayne Harris, Mrs. H. J. Overholser, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Inman, and Mr. and Mrs. William Eaton.
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NDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
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New City Managing Course prepares Men For Office
the city manager training program begun this semester is proving able in the opinion of the five students and supervisor of the course. One months of training on the campus and nine months of internship a thesis are required to be graduated with the recently established officer of public administration degree. E. O. Stene, professor of political
soft thought that "the program does a compromise between the rational English position of train-a man from birth for an office
the classes emphasize the prac-
problems of a city manager, not
academic side." James Bibb com-
ted. Bibb, along with Donald
ey, Herb Holt, Harold Horn,
Dale Judy are the five students
ing the training.
we supervises the course. He is head of the Government Reh Bureau at the University.
the Jacksonian position
ry man could hold public office
his course we receive specialized
work in a limited period for a
calized job."
ast last the Carnegie foundation funded $50,000 to be used for fellowships in the University program, ringing the nine-month internship se men selected as winners of fellowships will be given $1,000.
typical of the other comments was of Horn. "The program furnishes road background for our future sk and gives us something con- go on."
fellowships will be given each
or Dr. Stene said. Winners are
ected on a competitive basis.
Dr. Stene is pleased with the rest of the training. On the campus, includes classes in public administration, public law, business law, tistics, municipal engineering, and uniques of municipal administra-
Of these, the last two are the most usual. The municipal engineeringarse combines lectures with fieldss. Recently the class inspected her latakes on the Kaw.
another project was laying out 1 surveying a hypothetical street, oosing types of materials, cost, and imputing special assessments on the ordering property. This course has ever been offered at any other university.
nity.
In the techniques of municipal administration course, city managers of surrounding towns meet with the residents to discuss problems.
The city manager form is new in unicipal government but in the st few years has become widely accepted. Dr. Stene said that 50 acres within a 200 mile radius ofrance have adopted the city system.
racke Reviews our Modern Books
"The Plague and I", a non-fiction novel by Betty McDonald, was one of the books reviewed by William W. Bracke, book reviewer for the Kansas City Star and English instructor, at the K.U. Dames meeting recently.
Mr. Bracke told how the plot in The Plague and P' progressed from the author was a child until she was cured of tuberculosis "Rainte County" by Ross Lockridge Jr., a book of the month selection which won the M.G.M. prize of $50,000; "Remembrance Rock" by Carl Sandburg; and "Green Grass of Wyoming" were the other books reviewed by Mr. Bracke.
The club will be given demonstrations on how to make inexpensive Christmas decorations. Tuesday, Dec. 1.
The Caspian is the world's largest island sea.
They Get Around To It Eventually
Different remarks could be heard throughout the room. "Oh, no, not another one before vacation." Then a sigh of relief as he continued writing, n-t-a-n-i-l-l-a. Louis Quintanilla he explained was the author of "A Latin American Speaks." He recommended the book to the class.
Prof. Herman B. Chubb of the political science department walked into his Current American Foreign Policy class and began to write on the front board, Q-u-i-
Professor Clubb then made an announcement, "Tomorrow, the day before Thanksgiving vacation, would be a fine day for a quiz. It will cover the first eight chapters."
If You Can't Hear See Your Dentist
Dr. Manion, a dentist, said he had been able to help the hearing of three out of four patients by making dental corrections. He said one 64-year-old woman came to the hospital with extreme facial pain and loss of hearing.
Dr. Manion emphasized that there are various causes of deafness besides poor teeth and correction of dental troubles is not a cure. But he said experiments have shown that hearing does improve if it is caused by bad teeth and the teeth are worked on.
Announce Plans For Leadership Day
The outstanding girl student in each of the Kansas high schools has been invited to the University for a High School Leadership day on Saturday, March 19.
New Orleans—(UP)—Dr. William J. Manion of the Eye, Ear and Throat hospital believes that missing teeth or poorly fitted dentures affect the hearing of 3,000,000 people in the United States.
Her false teeth were fitted poorly, he said. She was given a new set of teeth. Her pain soon stopped and her hearing improved.
sunday, March 13. Associated Women Students, sponsors of the Leadership day, plan a tour of the campus for the girls, a dinner, and a panel discussion. The subjects of the panel will be "Role of the Woman," and "What to Expect at K.U."
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The United States foreign policy for peace is leading the country into war, John Ise told Sunflower students recently. His talk was the first of a lecture series to be made at Sunflower this year by University faculty.
factory. In these world-wide discontent by hure-nots, the scum and riff raff who want a decent living. By scum and riff raff I mean the lower 98 per cent of the people of the world." he said in his usual ironic manner
1200 New York
Dr. Ise said American policy of bolstering reactionary governments abroad may be helping Russia. People may be choosing communism because this country is backing regimes such as King Peter in Greece, Chang Kai-shek in China, and making overtures to "butcher" Franco in Spain.
Phone 140
'Peace Leads To War' - Ise
"The common people of America can't do much to avert war. They can't affect foreign policy."
Turning to Germany as an example of poor judgment abroad, Dr. Ise asserted the United States apparently is helping to stifle German liberals.
"In seeking able administrators to stem the Communistic tide in Europe, the men who put Hitler into power are being called on to administrate."
Before his talk, Dr. Ise told the Daily Kansan reporter, "I am for American institutions. Be sure to get that in somewhere."
KU-Haskell Baptist Banquet Is Nov. 28
Baptist students at the University and Haskell institute will celebrate their annual Thanksgiving fellowship banquet on Sunday, Nov. 28, at 5:30 p.m. at the First Baptist church.
The program will be in charge of the students with Loren B. Corliss presiding.
"Thanks be to God" will be the subject theme of four talks. William T. Fuqua will speak on "Thanksgiving Yesterday and Today." Annette Smith will present several ideas under the topic, "Name Ten," Mildred Simpson will talk on "Thanksgiving Christians." Dale Fields will speak on "Thanksgiving."
$10,000 A Year And On Relief
Des Moines—(UP)—A family that earned from $700 to $1,000 a month has been taken off the relief rolls after 24 years. Polk county Welfare Director Leland Ahern said today.
He said the parents had "covered up" the fact that seven of their 17 children were employed, although members of the family were riding in taxicabs and wearing "dressy" clothes while the welfare department gave it $50 to $60 a month in groceries and furnished clothes for the children.
Ahern estimated total relief payments, which began shortly after the couple was married, at more than $10,000 in cash in addition to food and clothing. He said the family "managed to remain on relief through political pressure."
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22.194
11 54 29 23 47
Darrell Royal (11), Oklahoma's driving left halfback, is shown taking Dolph Simons' punt early in the first quarter and starting his 73 yard return for a touchdown. Kansas players, John Amberg (54), Bryan Sperry (28), Carl Ellis (22), Dick Tomlinson (48), and Hugh Johnson (47) are shown converging on Royal. No. 67, Oklahoma's Paul Burris is coming into view as the Oklahoma players formed a beautiful screen to move the Kansans out of play and allow Royal to go on to score. Royal later met three Kansas players on about the Kansas 35 where he cut back sharply to the center of the field and went on untouched.
Mo-Valley Card Ends Saturday
St. Louis, Nov. 22—(UP)—The Missouri Valley's weekend football games followed form with the notable exception of the Bradley Braves, who bowed to Louisville by a surprising 31 to 14 margin.
The Cardinals throttled the Bradley running attack and threw up an alert defense against the potent passing attack of the Braves to hold them to five completions in 21 tries. The unset scored at Louisville in the only Saturday night game on the Valley schedule, attracted a crowd of 7,000.
Elsewhere the games went according to the handicappers' blueprints. St. Louis trounced Rolla, 19 to 7; Wichita overpowered西南western, 39 to 13; Oklahoma A. and M. ran over Kansas State by a 42 to 6 count, and Arkansas closed out Tulsa, 55 to 18.
Only four games remain on the Valley agenda as the fans are turning their thoughts from the gridiron to the basketball court. Thanksgiving, formerly a big football day, offers two of the remaining contests, with the finale set for Saturday.
St. Louis is expected to find easy going in a Turkey day game against Kansas State but Wichita will probably fall by a big score before the onslaught of Stan Heath and his Nevada playmates. The Wolfpack, defeated only by Santa Clara, figures to beat the Shockers by about four touchdowns.
In the Saturday pair of setts Tula will probably wind up its dismal season with a final defeat. Buddy Brothers and the Hurricane, without a single victory this year, figure to lose to the Detroit Titans in a game that may be close. But the big game of the day will put the mighty Oklahoma Sooners against their neighbors, the Valley champion Aggies.
The Sooners figure to defeat Oklahoma A. and M. to win the state championship but they will find the Aggies far tougher than Missouri or Kansas. It should be a rugged battle with Oklahoma winning in a photo finish.
Cup Of Coffee Cost $10
Gallipolis, Ohio—(UP)—Lawrence Hysell played a practical joke in a restaurant which made his cup of coffee cost $10. Hysell pulled a live snake from his pocket and tossed it on the counter when asked to pay for the coffee. He was fired $10 for intoxication.
MU-KU To Play For Second Place
By UNITED PRESS
Oklahoma owned the Big Seven football championship outright today, and each of its conference rivals was glad the race was finished.
Kansas, unbeaten in conference play, ran out of borrowed time against Oklahoma. It was reduced to a pitiful shambles by Coach Bud Wilkenson's wrecking crew, 60 to 7.
Next and last on Oklahoma's list in the regular season is Oklahoma A. and M. at Stillwater next Saturday.
Kansas survivors will be shipped to Columbia, where the annual Thanksgiving day game against Missouri is booked.
Missouri showed further signs of recovering almost fully from its contact with Oklahoma by whipping Nebraska last weekend at Lincoln, 33 to 6, in a 30-degree chill.
What happened to Kansas State against the Oklahoma Aggies at Stillwater last Saturday was not a new story. K-State lost, 42 to 6, in an exhibition which was notable chiefly for its boredom. It was Kansas State's eighth loss in nine starts.
The K-Staters will call it a season on Thanksgiving day in a meeting with St. Louis university at St. Louis, while Nebraska, showing a dismal 2-8 record to date, will end the year against Oregon State at Corvallis.
Another game last weekend caught Iowa State playing under the lights at Tucson against the University of Arizona. The outcome was a 14 to 7 heartbreaker for the Big Seven squad.
The day ended the year for both Iowa State and Colorado, who finished fourth and tied for sixth, respectively, in the Big Seven.
The Missouri-Kansas game will decide second place in the conference. Each has a 4-1 record in the circuit and each shares a 7-2 record in all games played this season. Kansas bowed to Texas Christian in
Still another game ended in a 29 to 25 defeat for Colorado at the hands of Colorado A. & M. at Boulder.
Lots of JAYHAWKER Sweat Shirts at Kirkpatrick's PORT SHOP
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Northwestern Gets Rose Bowl Call
Chicago, Nov. 22—(UP)—Northwestern's football team has been named as the Big Nine's representative in the Rose bowl. Commissioner Kenneth L. "Tug" Wilson announced today.
Then both teams were run through the Oklahoma shredding apparatus.
Some 40,000 fans at Lawrence witnessed Oklahoma's job on Kansas, though many thousands of them had to run to the hills before the final gun.
its opener, while Missouri was beaten by Ohio State to start the season.
Joan Lippmann, Locksley hall,
won the badminton championship
for the second year by defeating
Elsie Lemon Alpha Omicron Pi the past week. Her winning scores were
11 to 0 and 12 to 11.
Joan Lipplemann Wins Badminton Title Again
Missouri used both air power and ground work to down the Huskers on a field made soggy as the result of a six-inch snow.
Coach Don Faurot's split T made hash of the Nebraska line and the 434 yards gained by Missouri on the ground was certain to keep the team high among the nation's leaders in that department.
Mary Helen Shepard, Corbin ball, defeated Ruth Heibrium, Watkins ball, for the tennis intramural championship crown. Her winning score was 6 to 0 and 6 to 1.
Two University students will spee Wednesday, Nov. 24 at the Kiwan club in Kansas City, Mo. They are Robert Bennett, College junior, ar Frederick Cross, College sophomore They will talk on "Who Killed Cot Robin", and give interpretations of the 1948 election. Kim Giffin, assis ant professor of speech, will be master of ceremonies.
Two Students Will Speak To Kansas City Kiwanis
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Alpha Delta Sigma - University Daily Kansan
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Sooners Smother KU 60-7 For Big Seven Championship
Oklahoma's Sooners roared into Memorial stadium to end the Jayhawkers' winning streak with a 60 to 7 rout and take home the Big Seven title with them. A record crowd of 40,000 fans watched in awe as the powerful Sooners scored nine touchdowns almost at will. It was the first defeat for the Jayhawkers in conference play since Nebraska beat them at Lawrence in 1946.
The defeat was the worst the Jayhawkers have had in conference play—worse than the 53 to 2 win Nebraska had over Kansas in 1940. It was the first defeat for the K.U. team since the 13 to 14 loss to Texas Christian in the opener. They had won seven straight when they met the Sooners.
About the only thing that wasn't working perfectly on the Oklahoma team was Les Ming's toe. The placekick artist missed three conversion tries during the game. Everything else was working according to schedule for the Sooners as the line and the backs charged and ran furiously for 'the win.
The victory, besides giving the Sooners the title, almost definitely assured them a major bowl bid for New Year's day.
For the first few minutes of the game the Kansas line charged hard enough to cause the heavier Oklahoma team team some trouble. But the heavier line of the Sooners soon began to show its superiority. A look at the statistics will show the difference that almost perfect blocking, running, tackling, weight, and reserves made in the game. Kansas was able to get 92 yards by passing while the Sooners were picking up 152 through the air. The Oklahoma team was forced to punt only three times in the game compared to the 11 punts of the Kansans.
A bright part of the Kansan's performance was the punting by Dolph Simons. He punted 11 times and had a 38 yard average. He consistently punted out of bounds deep in Oklahoma territory, Gilman, Amberg, French, Moffett, and Griffith did some fancy running returning kickoffs. French nearly broke loose on Ken Tinsn second kickoff.
Kansas came out of the game with no serious injuries to hamper them in their battle for second place in the Big Seven with Missouri on Thanksgiving day. Reece McGee Oklahoma end, was carried off the field on a stretcher in the fourth quarter with a knee injury. George Brewer, Sooner left halfback, who had missed most of the season with a broken foot, reinjured the foot early in the second half.
Kansas' only touchdown came just before the initial half ended. The chance for the score came when Dick Bertuzzi intercepted an Oklahoma pass on his 30 and ran it back 15 to the Kansas 45. Gilman was thrown for a loss but it was nullified by a penalty against O.U. which moved the ball to the midstripe. French carried the ball through left tackle for a 20 yard gain. Forrest Griffith added five more yards to the effort.
Then Don Wilson, who was in for Gilman at quarterback, threw a 24-yard pass to French who was running into the end zone. Ken Sperry stepped back and converted for the extra point.
It took the Sooners less than three minutes to start their touchdown parade. Dick Gilman, Kansas' quarterback, fumbled on his own 32-yard line the first time the Jayhawkers had the ball in play. Bobby Goad recovered for Oklahoma and on the second play Leon Heath carried the ball from the 29-yard line for the first score of the game. Jack Mitchell had caught the Kansas defense off guard with a beautiful handoff. Ming failed to convert.
The second touchdown by the Sooners clearly showed their almost perfect blocking. Darrrell Royal took a 46-yard punt by Dolph Simons on his 27. Cutting across field he faked beautifully, then started down the right side of the field. The entire big line of the Oklahoma team formed a perfect screen before him. They removed all of the Kansans that came their way.
On the Kansas 35 Mallon, French, and Simons looked as though they had Royal caught. He switched the ball to the other hand, took off for the center of the field and went the
remainder of the way for a 72-yard return of the punt and the touchdown. Ming again missed the conversion.
The Sooners scored again before the first quarter ended. The third score was set up by a 50-yard pass from Lindell Pearson to Frankie Anderson which carried them to the Kansas 21. The drive was aided by a penalty against the Jayhawkers which put the ball in play on the 6. Jack Mitchell went over for the score. For the first time Ming converted. The first quarter ended with Oklahoma leading 19 to 0.
The team from Oklahoma didn't let up in the second quarter as the hard charging line and backs pushed the Jayhawkers around to score three more touchdowns. It often took two and three Kansas men to pull one Oklahoma man down. It was as the Sooners were covered with grease as they slid out of the grasp of the Jayhawkers. On the other hand when a Kansas back snaked into the Oklahoma secondary he was met by a driving Oklahoman who pushed him back almost to where he started.
Lindell Pearson scored on the sixth play after the Sooners had taken over on their 35. Ming missed this conversion, but from here on he had perfect aim with his toe.
The next Sooner score came three minutes later when Mitchell ran a punt back from the Oklahoma 33. Once again there was perfect blocking down the field as he weaved along the west sideline. Ming made the conversion good.
The first half ended after the Jayhawkers' score with Oklahoma leading 39 to 7.
Bud French took Ken Tipp's kickoff to start the second half. He ran it back to the Kansas 38 before finally being brought down. He nearly broke away from his tackles to score.
Oklahoma added only one touchdown in the third quarter. George Thomas carried the ball over from the 21- to climax a 74-yard drive. Once again Ming converted for the extra point.
Just after the last period got under way Tipps took a 39-yard pass from Claude Arnold on the Kansas 8 and went over for the eighth O.U. touch.
Some Say OU Just Got The Breaks; Anyway-There's Always Next Year
The result of the game affected various persons in various ways.
With three minutes to play and the score 60 to 7, Kansas took over the ball on their own 30. A classic remark from a somewhat partisian spectator was, "Come on boys, let's tie this ball game up."
Simplicity itself was the opinion of the big fellow on the 50-yard line after the third Sooner tally. "Wow" he gasped.
One student sobbed, "Sikes said we'd get it—well, we got it"
Perhaps the most critical observation came from a girl who said, "They just got the breaks."
One fellow kept repeating on the way home, "60 to 7. 60 to 7. . . ." Finally another fellow turned on him and snapped, "Why don't you shut up."
Overheard in the silence that followed the game was the question, "Do you think it will snow. Bill?"
Then there was the disillusioned soul who was walking down Massachusetts street when the storekeeper asked him the score. "Sixty to 7," he replied shortly. "Oh, who won?" the storekeeper asked.
Overhead in the press box, a comment by Missouri scout: "Kansas will continue using the same five man line defense in spite of its obvious ineffectiveness."
There was one fellow who didn't let the results get him down. As the squad filed into the locker room, some little guy yelled, "Hold that tiger!"
Don Pierce, K.U.'s publicity director who played with the Chicago Cardinals, said "He's going all the way" when Royal took Simons' punt. Royal had run only about three yards by then. Asked later how he knew, Don said, "whenever they get a screen of interference like that, they always go all the way."
Another sports writer was heard to remark sadly "We held them that quarter." He was referring to the third quarter, when Oklahoma made only one touchdown.
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down. Ming converted again to make the scoreboard read 53 to 7.
THE
COURT HOUSE CAFE
The Sooners got their ninth touchdown nine plays later after Ed Liscac had intercepted a pass on the Kansas 19. Les Ming went over from the 5 for his first touchdown of the season. He also converted to put the score at 60 to 7.
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GAME SUMMARY
After Dolph Simons had kicked out of bounds on O.U.'s 10, Tommy Gray carried the ball to their 18. On the next play he broke through to run 82-wards for a touchdown. It was called back though, and a holding penalty was charged against the Sooners.
Charlie Moffett intercepted a pass late in the game and ran it back to the Kansas 42. Wilson passed to Joe Mendenhall to carry the ball to the 47. A fumble on an attempted lateral was recovered by Arnold Stricker. Then a bad pass from center went over Simon's head as he was standing back to punt. He recovered it on about the 8. A holding penalty against the Sooners gave Simons a chance to kick 22 yards and out of bounds on the Sooner 4.2.
Calvin Steinberger carried the ball to the 48 as the game ended.
The White mountains of Arizona, located in the eastern part of the state, are a trout fisherman's paradise. Through this area are miles of trout streams running through heavy forests.
Summary O.U. K.U.
First downs 21 7
Net yards rushing 346 24
Forward passes attempted 14 29
completed 7 8
Yards gained on passes 152 92
Intercepted by 3 2
Yds. interceptions ret. 21 20
Punts, number 3 11
Returned by 166 42
Own fumbles recovered 0 2
Penalties 8 7
Yds. lost on penalities 80 55
Score by Periods:
Oklahoma 19 20 7 14-60
Kansas 0 7 0—7
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SKI
Again this year through popular demand a Collegiate Ski Party is being organized. Last year's party proved most successful and we anticipate having a bigger and better party this year.
Starting in K.C.the day after Xmas Return to K.U. on January 2
- All Meals (What an appetite1)
- All Transportation (our own special railroad car)
- All Masks (What on an apptite!)
- All Equipment. (The best skis, boots and poles).
- Lessons Every Day. (Under famous Friedl Pfiefer School)
- Smorgasbord Dinner and Square Dancing. (At Quaint Four Seasons Club).
- Ski Lift Pass. (Unlimited on all lifts).
- Gala New Year's. (At the "Gay Nineties" Hotel bride)
- Moonlight Skating Party. (2 1/2 Mile Sleigh Ride
(stoke)
- Steak Dinner. (At Famous Red Onion Cafe).
- Aspen Intercollegiate Meet. (Jumps and all)
- Superior Accommodations. (Roaring Forks
Lodge).
This offers the fellow and gal an opportunity to learn America's newest and most exciting sport.
Anyone can learn to ski with the proper instruction.
Contact one of these representatives for further
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Ron Roberts 284 Jack Black 726
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE EIGHT
MONDAY. NOVEMBER 22,1948
Aces Hi, Betas Win Titles; Play Today For IM Crown
Aces Hi won the independent intramural football championship, 15 to 7, by scoring a couple of touchdowns and a safety. Beta Theta Pi defeated the Phi Gam's 22 to 13, for the fraternity division championship. It was a hard fought contest with Bob Schwanzel's passes spelling the difference in the score.
Aces Hi 15. Dix Club 7
The Aces Hi (7-0) scored first to defeat the Dix club (4-3) 15 to 7 for the independent championship. Clark passed to Lou De Luna for the first touchdown. De Luna converted for the extra point.
De Luna starred again for the winning team as he ran 20 yards for their second touchdown. The conversion was not good. Jay Hampton was trapped behind the goal line for a safety as the Aces Hi finished their scoring.
In the fourth quarter McDonald passed to Duncan for the Dix club's only score. The conversion was good.
Beta's 22. Phi Gam 13
Beta Theta Pi won the fraternity "A" football championship by defeating a fighting Phi Gam team, 22 to 13 in one of the most exciting games of the season. It was an evenly matched contest throughout, but the Betas in capitalizing on all the breaks of the game, managed to stay in the undefeated class.
The Phi Gams took the opening kick off, but after three downs were forced to kick. From there the Beta's worked the ball into scoring position, but the threat ended on a last down desperation pass, which Woody Dryden intercepted in his own end zone. After a series of incomplete passes and penalties, a fumble cost the Phi Gams a safety, and the Betas led 2 to 0.
Early in the second quarter, Bob Schwanzel, the Beta ace passer, connected with a long pass to John Stites, who ran the ball over and the conversion made the score 9 to 0.
The second half started with an explosion of Phi Gam power as Bill Bunten intercepted a Beta pass and one play later Woody Dryden ran the ball into the Beta end zone. The conversian was no good and the Beta's still led, 9 to 6. The series of plays that followed ended in one of the exciting moments of the game, when another third down pass from Schwanzel to Clair Gillin was completed after the ball bounced off a Phi Gam's hands. The extra point try failed, but the Beta's strengthened their lead to a 15 to 6 score.
In the fourth quarter, the Phi Gams once again came back. A sustained drive from midfield ending with a pass from Dryden to Bill Duncan in the end zone, and Jim Sallee's kick put the Phi Gams within two points of their opponents, 15 to 13.
The remaining minutes of the game were filled with incomplete passes by both teams as each tried desperately to score once more. The first touchdown was another Schwanzel pass, which was snatched out of the darkness in the end zone, and the conversion made the final score 22 to 13.
Bia Seven Schedule
This week's schedule for Big Seven teams will end the regular season for each of five clubs. Iowa State and Colorado finished their schedules last weekend.
Thursday. Nov. 25
Kansas vs. Missouri at Columbia.
Kansas vs. State vs. Louis U. at
Boston.
Thursday, Nov. 21.
Oklahoma vs. Okla. A. & M., Still-water
Saturday, Nov 27
Nebraska vs. Oregon State at Corvallis, Ore.
THE STANDINGS Conference Games
| W | L | T | Pts | OpP | Pct |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Oklahoma | 4 | 0 | 217 | 34 | 1.000 |
| Missouri | 4 | 1 | 165 | 74 | .800 |
| Kansas | 4 | 1 | 114 | 95 | .800 |
| Colorado | 2 | 3 | 97 | 98 | .400 |
| Nebraska | 2 | 0 | 84 | 135 | .333 |
| Iowa State | 2 | 4 | 73 | 128 | .333 |
| K. State | 0 | 6 | 28 | 214 | .000 |
Build Your Own Antique
Albuquerque, N. M.—(UP)—No-thing like a custom-built antique. A sign on an Albuquerque store reads: "Antiques made and repaired."
Bowl Scramble Clear As Mud
By UNITED PRESS
New York. Nov. 22—(UP) California appeared to have the edge over Oregon for the right to meet Northwestern in the Rose bowl as the Pacific Coast conference decided the issue by ballot today.
At the same time, Southern Methodist was assured the home team berth in the Cotton bowl.
But otherwise, the nation's major New Year's day classics still were open house as Father Football wearily plodded down his last mile of the 1948 season.
Northwestern clinched the Big Nine half of the Rose bowl with a 20 to 7 victory over Illinois Saturday. California licked Stanford, 7 to 6, and Oregon beat Oregon State, 10 to 0, to wind up in a tie for the Pacific Coast conference honors. But California was reported to have the bowl edge on the basis of its undefeated record. Oregon has lost to Michigan.
Southern Methodist rolled into the Cotton bowl with a 13 to 6 conquest of Baylor. The Methodists still must play Texas Christian and could be tied by Texas for the Southwest conference title, but they'd go to the bowl anyway because they defeated Texas this season.
Therefore, the S.M.U. players were to vote today on who they'd prefer to play at Dallas New Year's day. Top prospects were North Carolina, Clemson, Tulane, and Oklahoma, not necessarily in that order.
But this wasn't the only spot where Oklahoma found itself welcome. The Sooners, beaten only by Santa Clara, clinched the Big Seven championship with a 60 to 7 win over Kansas Nov. 20. That placed them number one for both the New Orleans Sugar bowl and the Miami Orange Bowl.
The Sugar Bowl people as much as said Oklahoma was "in" if it beats Oklahoma A. and M. in their traditional battle this week. For an opponent, the Sugar Bowl will pick Georgia if the Bulldogs lick Georgia Tech Saturday. But should Georgia lose, then the Sugar bowl would swing to undefeated but once-tied North Carolina.
Georcia downed Furman, 33 to 0,
Saturday while North Carolina
licted Duke, 20 to 0, and now closes
its season against Virginia.
1940
FORREST GRIFITH, Kansas fullback, played an outstanding defensive game against a heavy and relentless Oklahoma team in Saturday's game with the Sooners.
Five Major Teams Remain Unbeaten
New York, Nov. 22—(UP)—Just 15 perfect record football teams were left in college ranks today out of the thousands which started out last September in high hopes of unbeaten, untied glory.
Five teams—Notre Dame, Michigan, Army, California, and Clemson—were so-called major elevens but all of the little toughies, Heidelberg, Denison, Alma, Michigan Tech, and Missouri Valley in the Midwest; Bloomsbury, Pa., Teachers, Wesleyan, and West Liberty. W. Va. State in the East; Sul Ross State in the Southwest; and Occidental in the Far West, had reason to hold up their heads just as proudly.
Of the five major teams, only Michigan's Wolverines could be absolutely certain of remaining in the perfect record class. They wound up their second straight unbeaten, untied season Saturday by drubbing Ohio State, and are barred from any form of post-season play.
Army still must meet Navy in the service clash, Notre Dame plays Washington and Southern California, Clemson has to meet Auburn and the Citadel; while California is almost certain to be the host team against Northwestern in the Rosz bowl.
The Orange bowl likes Oklahoma best of all, but a good bet is Clemmon, which retained its undefeated, untied record with a 42 to 0 win over Duquesne Saturday.
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Winners of their second straight Big Seven two-mile championship Saturday, Bill Easton's tracksters will try for national laurels Monday at East Lansing, Mich., when they go to the post in the tenth annual NCAA cross-country trials.
KU 2-Milers In NCAA Bid
Most of K.U.'s bid will be carried by the veterans Bob Karnes and Hal Hinchee, who finished one-three in the Big Seven meet last Saturday at Manhattan. Karnes, the durable Overbrook Flier, must be considered for the individual title.
headquarters for your
How well the young Jayhawkers will stack up against such veteran crews as Michigan State, Penn State and Wisconsin remains to be seen. Three Kansans, sophomores Cliff Abel, Dave Breidenthal and Tom White, will be running the longer four mile distance for the first time in their careers.
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He didn't miss it far last year as a sophomore while leading, Karnes took a wrong turn in the snow just 200 yards from the finish and wound up fifth behind Jack Milne, of North Carolina, the champion; Horace Asenheller of Penn State; Quinton Breslord, Ohio Wesleyan, and Jerry Thompson of Texas.
DAIRY PRODUCTS
Karnes's most formidable foes for the individual title will be Bob Black, last year's NCAA 10,000 meter king from Rhode Island State; Ashefeltter, who finished second to Thompson in the NCAA 5,000 meters, and Don Gehrmann, bespectacled Wisconsin ace, who was America's No. 1,1,500 meter competitor in the Olympic Games last summer.
Black won the IC4A cross-country title last Monday in New York with Ashenfelter running second. Gehrmann won the Big Nine championship on the same day pacing the Badgers to the league team crown.
Practiced What He Preached
Michigan State will be favored for the team crown with Wisconsin rated second. Bill Mack, one time Easton pupil at Drake, guided the Spartans home in front of the IC4A field with only 55 points. Nearest competitor, Penn State, scored 125.
Woodward, Okla.—(UP)—E. Ryan, secretary-manager of the Woodward chamber of commerce, practices what he preaches. He spent his two-week vacation in Woodward with this explanation. "It's the best place in the world to be."
Haskell Dancers Entertain At Law Wives Dinner
The Haskell Indian dancers entertained the Law Wives' club at the dinner for law professors, students, and wives recently.
Prof. Arvid Jacobson, associate professor of design, will speak at the club's next meeting Wednesday, Dec. 1.
TAKE YOUR
Thanksgiving Trip
by GREYHOUND
The low furies s-t-r-e-t-c-h your allowance
On Thanksgiving trips - visits home, football jousts, or other college events - Greyhound offers more for your travel dollar . . . more enjoyment, more comfort, more greenery, more satisings! Ask your Greyhound Agent for complete travel information for a trip.
GET THE GANG TOGETHER!
Charter a Greybound bus. Have fun all the way. Arrange your own schedule-rates are even lower!
TYPICAL LOW FARES
Omaha, Neb. $ 3.55
K. C., Mo. .85
Denver, Colo. 11.35
St. Louis, Mo. 5.70
Salina, Kan. 3.25
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE NINE
From Concentration Camp To College In Six Days
Six days after returning to Hungary from Auschwitz concentration camp. Tibor T. Szabo, chemical engineering sophomore, was in school.
Szabo, among the first Hungarians to return from a concentration camp, was urged to enter a hospital for treatment. "But I was in a hurry to complete my education so I immediately entered medical school. I did not like to cut the bodies and $\textcircled{2}$ changed $\textcircled{3}$ to chemical engineering which I like [pensive that he] lot better." he said.
His mother and sister were killed in the gas chamber at Auschwitz and his father was shot at Dachau. "I soon saw that if I remained in Hungary I would be a victim of the Russian circumstances as I had the Germans before, so being alone I decided to leave," the student said.
He slipped across the border to an Austrian displaced persons camp and finally to the United States. Szabo hopes to remain in the United States under the new displaced persons law. This law permits people to stay here when they are afraid to return to their home country because of religious or political reasons.
"I went to a DP camp in Germany from Austria and then my problem was to get into France. It was really quite simple. I put a chocolate candy bar and a bar of soap on the desk of a German secretary to an American army captain. She gave me a permit to enter the French zone of Germany to visit relatives. The army captain never saw the permit and I still don't know who signed it, but it did get me into the French zone.
"I will always love the French, because they understood the problems of the displaced persons. I arrived without any official papers and the French police got all the necessary papers and documents for me."
He went to Paris where he studied at the Sorbonne, then to London from where he flew to the United States. Eighteen months ago he enrolled in Bergen Junior college, Teaneck, N.J. and later transferred to New York university. It was so expensive that he looked in a reference book and found that the University of Kansas was among the lowest in expenses and among the best in the grading system, Szabo said.
Asked if there had been any disappointments at the University, he said, "When I left New York, friends told me there would be Indians here in their uniforms and that people here didn't wear shoes. I arrived here and it is civilized. I was not disappointed but very surprised.
"I like the University very much. I have studied math at the Sorbonne, Bergen, N.Y.U. and K.U. has the best department of them all."
Staff Geologist To Talk Today
Dr. Thomas S. Lovering, staff geologist of the United States Geological Survey, will speak on "The Drive For Minerals" at 2 p.m., today, in 426 Lindley.
Dr. Lovering's speech is being sponsored by the University Lecture series. The doctor is a world authority on mining geology and mineral economics. He did work on metalliferous deposits and strategic minerals during the war. In addition, he has written extensively on the physiography and pre-Cambrian geology of the Rocky Mountains.
Dr. Lovering's talk should be of special interest to students of mining, metallurgy, geography, and geology. The lecture is open to the public.
Edwin Kelley, '45, has been awarded the Elsa Larson Memorial scholarship for the current academic year, Dean J. H. Nelson of the graduate school said today.
Mr. and Mrs. Kelley are studying now in Sweden and his scholarship will enable them to continue their work. The scholarship was established by Misses Mary and Edith Larson in honor of their mother. Miss Mary Larson is an assistant professor of zoology at the University.
Graduate Of'45 Gets Scholarship
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
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Arlington, Tex.—(UP)—An Arlington merchant got a bitter taste of inflation by paying $2 a dozen for eggs. He bought a case for $12 from a stranger and found later that only the two top layers of the crate were filled. The rest was empty and he was short by 24 dozen.
Pioneer Remembers When Ice Was 10 Cents A Pound
Lawton, Okla. — (UP)— Maybe things in this "inflationary" day aren't so bad after all, young Lawtonians have decided after hearing recollections of a pioneer woman. Mrs. Abe March remembers when she came here in 1901, water was sold from wagons at 20 cents a bucket. Ice cost 10 cents a pound.
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CLOSE THE BACKGROUND.
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PAGE TEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1948
The Editorial Page一
Thanksgiving, 1948
This week, citizens of the United States will take off a day from their labors to celebrate Thanksgiving. 1948. It has been an eventful and trying year, but as a nation, this country is perhaps better off than any in the world.
A short review shows that this year has seen a bumper wheat crop and many other crops in the same proportion: 60 million people gainfully employed; schools crowded with students seeking to improve their status; and factories working at top production.
We, the people of the United States, express our alms in terms of shiny automobiles, television, and modernistic furniture and plumbing. We live in a country that has not seen the physical destruction of war with the disruption it brings. With us,privation and hunger is the exception rather than the rule. We do not have the austerity of the British,the civil war of the Chinese,or the governmental insecurity of the French.
On the other hand, many people of the world speak only in terms of mere existence and the source of the next meal. Nearly every newspaper today brings us pictures of the strained, uneasy face of the Berliner as he gazes skyward to catch a glimpse of the planes that supply him with food. His very existence hangs by the slim blade of the many propellors of the transports that have been put to use to nullify the edicts of a ruthless power trying to increase its sphere of influence. The whole air life can be perhaps classed as an example of the benevolence of a people imbued with the spirit of Thanksgiving.
Our blessings have not been without problems. Most of the problems we face, however, are those brought on by evolution and progress. We have released the power of the atom and its control is up to us. And, upon how well we succeed with this problem, may depend the very existence of the world. We also have the problem of high prices, housing, and the maintenance of a prosperous economy. Again, these problems seem to be the growing pains of a nation striving for maturity.
The United States, being one of the two great powers in the world, also has numerous and weighty problems of leadership at the peace table. For this, we, and all the people in the world should be thankful. At least we can assume that the decisions made by our representatives will be tempered by the sentiments of a people who see fit to use one day of the year for the express purpose of giving thanks in the name of a supreme being for the blessings that are ours. —M.C.L.
- Letters To The Editor -
Intolerance
Dear Editor:
I will add an "amen" to Mr. Reddock's communication of Nov. 17 to the Daily Kansan concerning the miserable manners of one of the local theaters toward patrons whose choice of ancestors was at slight variance with that of a majority of the people of this city. I had a similar experience the past summer while eating in one of the better restaurants downtown.
It has been pretty hard for me to eat in any downtown restaurant since that time. Every time I see the little notice, "We reserve the right—" the face of that nice young kid comes before me. In my eyes the business firms and perhaps most of the citizenry of this smug little city are about a un-American and intolerant as any this side of Alabama or Oklahoma.
The members of a softball team from a nearby town came into the restaurant to eat. They were all high school-age boys. The prophetor refused to serve the one little chap who happened to have dark skin.
Name withheld by request.
Illusions
Dear Editor: .
As a "peace dreamer" and "One Worldist" (Larry Abbott's terms), I am quite puzzled by his letter of Nov. 9. If he had quoted from the "several articles—in campus periodicals" perhaps I could comprehend how idealism is forcing us to live under monstrous illusions.
We all have illusions, it is true, and possibly some of them are fantastic. But, if the choice is between the illusion that we can solve our problems by power politics and military alliances, which
have solved nothing permanently, and the illusion that One World and lasting peace can be achieved by means of a world government. I find the latter far less monstrous.
I am not acquainted with the course Mr. Abbott recommends, but some course in history of political science is in order to teach him not to equate Isolationists and One Worldists. On this point, Mr. Abbott obviously does not seem to know what is really going on in the world.
Betty Compton Graduate school
Agreement
Dear Editor:
Incidentally, this being your (Nichols and Morgan) exclusive field, you might be the two people who bring this wonderful thing to pass.
I have read the comments on my letter to the editor and agree with the writers, Nichols and Morgan, in spite of the fact that they wrote in a number of ideas that were not mine.
What they say is true; We should and could live in peace. But, it is still a dream.
Doyle L. Buckles, class of '20, was among the members of Sigma Delta Chi for whom memorial services were held at the national convention of the organization in Milwaukee Nov. 13. These members of the professional journalism fraternity had died within the past year.
Services To Doyle Buckles
Held By Sigma Delta Chi
Have you ever read Voltaire's "Candide?"
University
Larry Abbott Engineering junior
Daily Hansam
At the time of his death, Mr. Buckles was field representative of the Alabama Press association, and was a member of the faculty at the University of Alabama.
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn, Nava-
dale Assn., and the Associated Collegiate
Press. Represented by the National Ad-
ministration Service. 420 Madison Ave.
New York, NY
Editor-in-Chief ... Maurice C. Lungen
Managing Editor ... Hal D. Nelson
Asst. Man. Editor ... Bill F. Mason
Asst. Man. Editor ... Bill F. Mason
City Editor ... Robert Newman
Asst. City Editor ... Nota Temple
Asst. City Editor ... James Gaines
el. Editor ... Richard D. Bartlett
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Larry Funk
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Robert D. Snair
Asst. Otto Osswald
Asst. Sports Editor ... Marvin L. Rowlands
Society Editor ... Rosemary Rowsaw
Business Mgr. Bill Nelligan
Advertising Mgr. Don Tennant
Circulation Mgr. Ruth Clayton
Asst. Circ. Mgr. Dena Knuth
Assist. Grad. Wendy
Asst. Class. Mgr. Yvonne Jonesen
Asst. Class. Mgr. William E. Beck
Natl. Adv. Mgr. Don Welch
Promotion Mgr. Charles O'Connor
French Scholarship Student Delayed in Reaching US
Andre Delamare, French student who received a University scholarship will not arrive until the second semester, J. H. Nelson, dean of the Graduate school, said today.
Delamare was unable to reach the United States because of transportation difficulties, the dean said. His scholarship was granted for the 1948-49 academic year.
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General Semantics Elect Agnes Lilley
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Miss Agnes Lilley, University High school teacher, has been appointed chairman of the membership committee for the Lawrence chapter of the General Semantics club. The appointment was made by John Rynnerson, president.
Ph.834
Other members of the committee are Sally Garland, College freshman, Russell W. Annis, College sophomore, A. Phillip Persky, graduate student, and Jean Murray, secretary of the bureau of business research.
The committee will study the possibility of forming a word study chapter of Lawrence citizens.
The purpose of this undertaking is to promote wider knowledge and understanding of the science of word study among the students and the residents of Lawrence. The study of General Semantics is designed to aid the solution of individual and social problems of all levels of human experience.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
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AUTHORIZED COPY
Phone 432
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22. 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE ELEVEN
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
---
Phone KU 376
Terms. Cash. Phone orders are accepted under understanding that the bill will be paid promptly and should be received during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univertex office, Journalism bldg., not later than the 45 p.m. day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five
day days days
25 words or less...35c 65c 90c
additional words ...1c 2c 3c
FOR SALE
1947 4-DOOR Fleetmaster Chev. 12,000 actual miles. Radio, heater, seat covers, undershelf柜. Private owner, reasonable insurance. 100 W, 8 wth or phone 1840-7535 MUST SELL.
1934 CHVELOWT Deluxe Sedan, heater,
good tires, motor just overheated. See at
www.chavew.com.
140 STUDEBAKER Champion. 2 door excellent condition. Call Bob Elbe, 238
FORDOR DE SOTO. 35. Good transport.
Gives the money. Must sell cheap.
1196 Ohn
A KNEE-HOLE desk with 4 drawers
Good condition. Call Clair Gillin. 2470R
FOR SALE wire recorders Brand new,
5000 and 20
Coffin Hank Black, phone 23244
3600
图
ARGUS A2 camera, good condition, new
Eugene Searl, 1317 Tenn. 30tn,
phone 3346
SUN LAMP Special: Get a Florida sun-tan while you study. GE Sunilamts to fit standard sockets now. Only $8.50. B. Goodrich. 929 Mass.
per cent below similar used machines at
the same rate Jack Campbell. Phone
1-877-553-1127 or 1-877-553-1128
TIRED OF WALKING: Come to the Putt
Putt shop at 311 East 9th. I have a new
motorcopters for sale there. It's cheap
and safe transportation. 2%
BUSINESS SERVICE
AMMUNITION. Fishing Tackle. Guns and
padlocks. Rutter's Shop, 1014 Mass
MATHENATICS. Need help? Miss
the town most of the
Thanksgiving holidays,
strengthen points you're weak on. Phone
for appointment 304-89M. Maine 22
USED CARS bought and sold 6 blocks
2003-2005 3005 Midwest
Motors, 709 North Second.
BILL'S ROAD service and delivery serv-
ice include a curved car that flattes,
start your car, anywhere in or out,
within fifteen miles of Lawrence. Will
provide a free car care up to
say size. Phone Lawrence 252-873-4500.
USED CARS bought and sold. 6 blocks.
CARERS demand. Phone 3005 Mid-
West Motorway 708 New Second
TYPING: REASONABLE rate. Prompt
service. Phone 1168R, 1192 Vermont.
ONE ONE is best - Balfour's for watch
on Monday 14th. rfmf
TYPING ONE Prompt service, rescu-
able rate, accurate time, 1209 Ohio,
or Phone 1601. rfmf
WHEN ALL PETS including dogs, birds,
fish, cats, pigeons, skunks, parrots,
squirrels, rats, mice, etc., go shopping
with the go to Grant's Pet Shop.
1218 Conn St. Phone 418. Everywhere
the pet field—the needs are our busi-
ness. 12-21
TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. Ask for Miss Helen. 12-23
EBERHART and Son, tailors. Fittest samples made to measure, suits, topcoats, and overcoats. Alterations, repalring and leather work. 831 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. 19
LOST
WILL THE person who took the wrong windbreaker with red and black lining from ballroom cafeteria Nov. 17, call 3251W. I have your jacket. 30
BILFLOLD: Red leather. Duck's Tavern
BILFLOLD: grocery money Joe
Redd. 4243W.
PAIR OF brown horn-rimmed glasses on campus Monday. If found, please notify Duval. Home number 888. Reward. 22 Will Duncan, you must have a strong-Ellynw Human Neurology book from Union lower cafeteria Tuesday noon, please return it to Kansan Urgently need! Grace Horst. 29 MELANIA, your book we hadn't finished reading it. We read the Daily Kansan you know we need it! (we refer to the new Webster dictionary which disappeared from the building. It had "University of Kansas Press" stamped all over the fly leaf. 22 MAN'S WRIST watch left in Room 310 Fraser Hall at 11:00 a.m. Thursday morning. Your office for forward, Eanna Cobb, 2734 haw.
FOR RENT
ONE ROSE for three men students, and
one NORA for another man student,
1340 M.H. Ph., 1747 A.H. Ph., 21
SLEEPING ROOM, 2 singles. Ideal
room, 3 blocks from campus.
793RK. Cipro 29
LARGE, quiet, comfortable downstairs room for men. Single, modern, close to KU. and town. 1305 Vermont. 22
NICE SINGLE room for boy at 825 Illinois. If interested please call 2938R.
No smoking or drinking.
FURNISHED ROOM for man student.
1340 N.H. Phone 1374R. 22
3 OR 4 HIDERS to Wichita. Leaving 4 or
5 on Monday. Returning Sunday 21:
evening. Cal Aibel, 190643
TRANSPORTATION
WANTED: Passengers to Great Bend,
Kansas for Thanksgiving, Leave Tuesday,
4:00. Return Sunday night. Phone 2831W.
Earle E. Brehmer.
Earle E. Brehmer.
RIDE WANTED for two to Wichita or vicinity Wednesday evening, Nov. 24th after six. Will share expenses. Call Bob Cull, 1961M.
LIKE RIDE to Columbia, Missouri on 24th for Thanksgiving holiday. Will share expenses. Leave name at Kansan office, box 4, or 304 Fraser. 22
RIDERS WANTED to share expenses.
Leaving early Tuesday afternoon for Thanksgiving celebration. Going route to Indiana University. Springfield Ohio. Phone 1333R.
WOULD LIKE two riders to Dodge City
Nov 26th, 2017
Phone 2107 and ask for White
WOULD LIKE a ride to Enid, Okla, or
La. Nov. 23. Call Ros
Waken, phone 3658.
MOTHER AND 7-week old child would like ride, Monday or Tuesday to Stockton, call Leonard Brokaw, phone 22884, 22 WANTED. Two students want ride to Great Bend, Kansas over Thanksgiving. Share expenses, phone 2984R, 1132 Temp
URGENTLY NEEDED ride. To share expenses and driving to Philadelphia or eastern city and return. Will leave to car after December 17. Call Bob Teel 284.
WANTED: Ride to Russell, Kans. Tuesday afternoon, Nov. 23. Would like to share expenses. Call Jack Campbell Phone 730. 22
COMMERCIAL PILOT飞降 4 place
Return Thanksgiving.
Take passengers away.
Evaluate oral route or 150 mile route. Jackson
Hotel or Yellowstone.
390s, Kansas City.
MISCELLANEOUS
ONLY ONE is best - Balfour's for watch
repair. 411 West 14th. ff
AGAIN THIS year, by popular demand, a college SKI PARTY is being formed—this is for the fellows and gals who would like to snow skiing from the very best, and enjoy it in the snow. For the finest New Year's your wonders-spent—all meals, transportation (our own special car on the Colorado Eagle), skis, boots, poles, 4 hours of lessons every day, pass on all lifts, Roaring Fork lodge, Fork lake, gasbord dormers, square dance, moonlight skating party, steak dinner at the Red Onion cake, New Year's at the Silver Lake, Aspen Intercelli-collegiate Ski Meet having a social, presented. Contact any one of these agents for further information. Fig Newton, 2039; Don Schanke, 565. 22
KU Students See Comet
Four students at the University have been getting up at 5 in the morning to observe a new comet.
Claude Harwood, College junior,
Don Monger, sophomore, and Deber
Robb and Russell Magg, freshmen,
saw the astronomical body twice.
They first read about it in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World and decided to try to find it. Only two attempts have been successful because of the cloudy weather.
When they first saw the comet it had a tail about 4 or 5 degrees long. It was found moving southwest and is now low in the south. Monger fears that they will be unable to see the body again because it was dropping and there have been several days of bad weather.
He said that astronomy had been his hobby for the past six years and that he plans to major in that field. He stated that the comet had been named and numbered 1948 I. He explained that comets are named after the year in which they are found and are given a letter to designate the order in which they are seen.
Tyler, Tex., Nov. 19—(UP)—The Texas Rose bowl football game will be played here either Dec. 4 or Dec. 11 instead of Thanksgiving day, it was announced today.
Texas Bowl Feelers Out
Duluth, Minn., Junior college and Hutchinson, Kan., Junior college have been sent bids to meet Tyler Junior college, the host team.
Duluth and Hutchinson, each has an ear tuned to the Little Rose bowl game in California and if either receives a bid to play there, the other will accepted the Texas bid, it was reported.
The Tyler game was started last year when Compton, Calif., Junior college beat Tyler 20 to 19. The Tyler Rose bowl seats 16,000.
Official Bulletin
Inter-Dorm, 5 today, Miss Habein's house.
Nov. 22,1948
Mathematical colloquium of department of mathematics, 5 today, 203 Frank Strong, Dr. Mina Rees, Washington, D.C., "The Work of the Mathematics Branch of the Office of Naval Research."
Delta Sigma Phi, 7:30 tonight,
English room, Union.
Archery club initiation and supper Wednesday, Dec. 1. New members pay initiation fee at Miss Stapleton's office before that date.
Mr. LaPoe of Armstrong Cork company will be on the campus Monday, Nov. 29, to interview June graduates in industrial management interested in sales engineering activity or industrial engineering work. Those interested sign by tomorrow with Mrs. Strong, 214 Frank Strong
Flora Should See Almanac
Washington—(UP)—It's a rare thing around the big cities.
But get out where the pigs squeal, the cows moo, the coyotes howl, the crickets crick and the pump handle squeaks and you'll find folks still looking at the "Old Farmer's Almanac" to find out what's comin' next.
The latest edition just came out. The 15th consecutive one. Word comes down the line that the little yellow-bound booklet (which now sells for two-bits) hasn't changed any more than the moon and stars from which the forecast come.
Most interesting review of last winter's weather was the account of the green rain which fell on Dayton, Ohio, March 28. All this happened the day after three moons were seen in Boston—"the real moon with a 'dog moon' on either side."
There are the usual features, including the weather, astronomy planting, fish and game, tides, and so on. The blurb on the 1949 copy advertises an enlarged recipe section, many of the new scientific developments on the farm, cartoons by Francis W. Dahl and a story about track star Gil Dodds, the trottin' parson, "who runs for the Lord."
This winter, the almanac says, it won't be as drippy or as cold as last year. However, it'll last a little longer into March when we can expect rain, sleet and snow.
The Almanac was started by Robert B. Thomas, publisher and philosopher. Perhaps he was thinking of the 1948 election forecasts when he wrote in 1802:
Fan mail is nothing new, either.
Many years ago, Mr. Thomas's fine
journal was published a letter from
one F. C. Cawthrop of Nashua, N.H.
which read:
"Read newspapers, but consider, before you believe; for common report is often a great liar."
"I have read the 'Old Farmer's Almanac' these many years and I wish the damn fool that changed the reading of the moon's column had died before he done it."
Design Institute Offers $250 Prize
Students in architecture are eligible to compete for prizes totaling $250 by designing an elementary school and kindergarten in which special attention is given to the use of clay tile.
October and November are the months for a fall application of nitrogen fertilizer on bearing apple trees
The national contest is sponsored by the Beaulux-Arts Institute of Design in co-operation with the Tile Council of America. First prize is $100, second $75, third $50, and fourth $25. The competition closes Monday, Dec. 20, and judging will begin Tuesday, Jan. 4, 1949.
Students from universities and colleges in the United States, Canada, and Cuba may submit entries.
Progress In Polio Research Points Eventually To Vaccine
New York—(UP)—A polio expert reported today that evidence from research projects is pointing more and more toward the day when a vaccine against infantile paralysis in human beings will be developed.
Weaver said that in years gone by it was "generally agreed that infantile paralysis is a mysterious disease that did not behave in accordance with fundamental laws governing all other contagious and infectious diseases."
The gains in polio research were made known by Dr. Harry M. Weaver, director of research of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis.
"The results of National Foundation-supported studies have largely exploded this concept," he said. "It has been shown that monkeys can be effectively and safely vaccinated against the experimental disease, and that poliomyelitis antibodies do develop and function like other bacterial and viral anti-bodies."
Once medical science finds an overall vaccine that will be effected against the types of polio in monkeys then it should help with the development of a human vaccine.
Dr. Weaver said that medical science has learned that "clinical polyomyelitis is not a single disease, but rather a family of diseases."
"This," he said, "has led to an effort to develop methods for determining exactly how many different viruses cause the human disease and what percentage of human cases is caused by each virus."
Dr. Weaver also recalled the progress made in determining that destruction of nerve cells and consequent crippling is not associated with every human case of infantile paralysis.
In fact, Dr. Weaver said, it is now recognized that for every diagnosed case of the disease there may be from five to 100 additional individuals who harbor the virus without recognizable symptoms.
Sporting Instinct Bests Lonely Mate
Police fqund Burkhart dressed in a red cap, plaid shirt, breeches and boots and carrying a rifle thru city streets.
Denver—(UP)—When Claude W. Burkhart felt the call of the wild it cost him a fine in police court.
Burkham told them he was sitting up waiting for his wife when the lure of the hunt swept over him.
Driver Travels 1 Block; Smashes 12 Parked Cars
Denver—(UP)—Paul J. McCarthy, 44, was picked up by police after his car had struck 12 parked cars in one block. McCarthy was charged with driving under the influence of liquor, careless and reckless driving, leaving the scene of an accident and destroying city property.
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1
PAGE TWELVE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22. 1948
97th Vespers One Of The Best Musicals Of Year
By NORMA HUNSINGER
The first all-musical vesper program of the year was presented in Hoch auditorium Sunday with the appearance of the six major music organizations of the University. It was the 97th in the series of all-musical vespers, and was one of the outstanding music programs offered so far this year.
The recital was opened by the University Symphony orchestra, directed by Prof. Russell Wiley. They played the first movement of "Symphony in B flat" by Chausson. The performance was notable for the extremely solid string section and the almost-professional control.
The Men's Glee club sang "May Day Carol" arranged by Deems Taylor, and "The Creation" by Willy Richtor. The group is directed by Prof. Joseph Wilkins. Although their pitch was bad at times, the men exhibited good balance and effective range of volume.
The faculty string ensemble, Waldemar Gutch, W. Thomas Marrocco, Vincent Bleeck, Raymond Stuhl, and Miss Marian Jersild, presented the Dvorak "Quintet, Op. 81." The full tone of the cello and the control of the piano made this piece expressive as well as technically outstanding.
Th Women's Glee club, directed by Miss Irene Peabody, sang "Valse Fathetique" by Arensky-Kramer and "Body and Soul" by Kramer-Barlow. The women also exhibited good balance.
"The A Cappella Choir presented "She is So Decar" by Praetorious, "The Lord's Prayer" and "Hear My Prayer" by Gretchaninoff. The choir, directed by Dean Swarthout was unusually expressive for a 110 voice group. The striking ending of "Hear My Prayer" was especially effective.
an adaptation of Bach's "Tocata and Fugue in D Minor" for organ was the selection of the symphonic band, directed by Professor Wiley. The number requires superior technical ability and control; the band's presentation was excellent in both respects.
The next all-musical vesper program will be given in December.
2 Students Pose For Camera Club
Two K.U. women students, including Yvonne Veverka, attendant to the homecoming queen, served as models for portraiture study at Camera club recently.
A contest will be held to judge the best portrait taken of each model. Judges will consist of members and professional photographers from downtown studios. Winners will be announced at the next club meeting.
All future meetings of the Camera club will be held in the Wren building, Ted Crane, president, announced. They will feature such topics as movie projecting, cheesecake photography, candid and action shots, and photographic surrealism. Professional photographers will be present at each meeting to discuss the topic and preside over a session where examples will be shown.
Clear Sight for Safety
TAX CARE
Lawrence Optical Co.
1025 Mass.
By Bibler
Little Man On Campus
BETTER
"1 believe the dogs have led us on a wild goose chase for your sorority sister—this is the home of the dean of men."
Pemberton Takes 'Harvey' To London To Visit The Queen, And The 'Oi Polloi'
Brock Pemberton is in England preparing for the first presentation there of his four-year Broadway hit "Harvey," the play about the invisible rabbit.
"Harvey" appeared at the University for four nights last spring. The cast was led by Mr. Pemberton, who played the lead role of Elwood P. Dowd. The proceeds, $1,100 went$\textcircled{4}$the Memorial fund.
Mrs. Frances Feist of the speech department played the part of Dowd's sister in the K.U. production. Pemberton liked her work and when Josephine Hull of the original company went on vacation, he called Mrs. Feist to New York to take her place.
An English production of the play has been planned for more than two years. Sir Field, Britain's leading comic actor, has been assigned the role created in this country by Frank Fay.
The British plans call for a provincial tryout, then a London opening early in January. Mary Coyle Chase, author of this Pulitzer prize play, also is in London.
Band Will March At Game Thursday
The University marching band will go to Columbia Thursday for the Missouri-Kansas game. They will combine with the University of Missouri band for a half-time ceremony.
As Thursday is Homecoming day at the University of Missouri, the bands will take part in the queen crowning ceremony at the half. The band will also present formations saluting both schools.
The band will leave at 5:30 Thursday morning. They will travel in three buses, and will return to Lawrence that night.
Get Yearbooks After Vacation
The first issue of the Jayhawker magazine will be available to students on Monday, Nov. 29.
"This issue, originally intended to be released last week, has been delayed at the printers due to a conflict with other contracts," said Bill Conboy, editor.
The second edition should be ready before the Christmas vacation. This will crowd the first two copies into a period of less than a month.
A high-speed recording strip chart potentiometer has been purchased for the mining and metallurgy department of the School of Engineering.
Buy Heat Recorder For Metallurgy Work
"The machine will record temperature rate changes as high as 400 degrees a second." Kenneth E. Rose, associate professor of mining and metallurgy, said. "It will give a continuous curve and will be used to determine the cooling rates and especially the quenching rates for hardening iron and other metals.
"It is an electronic device that operates on a vacuum control circuit," he said. "It will be used in research projects and regular courses."
100
The Union cafeteria will remain open throughout the Thanksgiving holiday for students remaining in Lawrence.
UM! THAT'S EATING Yes, you'll always find excellent food and service at
Union Cafeteria To Remain Open
Bill's Grill
Wednesday through Saturday
Breakfast 7:30 to 8:30 a.m.
Lunch 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Dinner 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.
Breakfast 8:30 to 9:30 a.m.
Lunch noon to 1 p.m.
Dinner 5:30 to 6:30
1109 Mass.
The Palm room will close for the holiday after serving lunch tomorrow. It will reopen for the noon meal Sunday.
They Ruled At Pumpkin Prom
Eleanor L. McHarg, business senior; and James E. Schwensen, pharmacy senior; were chosen Cinderella and Prince Charming at the Pumpkin Prom Nov. 20.
Across from Court House
They were picked as the bestlooking couple on the dance floor by the six chaperons and by Dorothy Smith, who is Miss Missouri of 1948.
The program during intermission included a pantomine of Madame Pompadour by Nancy Sewell, College freshman; Roberta Larson, College sophomore, who sang "Papa Don't Preach to Me," and several guitar and accordion numbers by Heywood Davis and Win S. Koerper, College freshmen.
Dean C. Banker, master of ceremonies, crowned the winning couple and seated them on a throne during intermission. They were then presented with a number of prizes which had been donated by business firms of Lawrence.
Approximately 415 students attended the dance. The ballroom was decorated with cornstalks and behind the bandstand was a drawing of beautiful Cindrellas watching a homely winner being fitted with the glass slipper.
Former Instructor Dies
Funeral services will be held tomorrow for Dr. Clinton K. Smith, 65, widely-known urologist of Kansas City.
Dr. Smith was a former instructor in urology at the University Medical school.
Marshall Home To Talk Policy With President
The Bus-(Adv.)
Washington. Nov. 22-(UP)—Secretary of State George C. Marshall returned home today by plane and was met personally by President Truman to begin momentous foreign policy discussions.
It was raining as the secretary's big plane touched down at national airport at 9:05 a.m. C.S.T. after a flight from Paris where he attended the United Nations General assembly meeting.
Also to be discussed will be the Berlin blockade and American participation in the North Atlantic Security alliance. Not the least of the subjects under discussion will be Marshall's own future in the cabinet. He has expressed a desire to retire, but the President reportedly wants him to stay.
Mr. Truman, tanned and rested from two weeks at Key West, Fla., returned to Washington by plane yesterday. He will also confer today with W. Averell Harriman, roving ambassador for the European Recovery program, and probably with James Forrestal, secretary of defense.
President Truman, who drove out to the airport to meet Marshall, was the first to greet the general.
The President and his secretary of state were ready to plunge immediately into discussions of the Berlin problem of what to do about China.
The books were recommended by a sub-committee headed by Joan Webster. Members are Wilbur Noble, Dale Spiegel, Mary Douglas, and Glenn Varenhorst. Faculty advisers are Ray B. West, associate professor of English, and L. R. Lind, associate professor of Latin.
The Union library has been enlarged by 150 titles.
As for the United Nations meeting, Marshall said that he thought a "great deal of understanding has resulted from what already has happened" at the Paris meeting.
The library has been combined with the music room to form a browsing room.
150 Titles Added To Union Library
-By Bibler
THE RAPID TRANSIT
"Sure, Reginald, the company will like the saving on gas but 483 winds' up the hill would hardly make an 8 o'clock class."
University Dailu Kansan
Monday, Nov. 29, 1948
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Lawrence, Kansas
Violence Seen As Reds Demand New Berlin Rule
By Bibler
Berlin, Nov. 29 - (UP)—Col. Frank L. Howley, American commandant in Berlin, charged today that Communists who have called for a new Berlin government are attempting to get control of the city by "violence and revolution."
Howley termed the move part of the Communist plan "to rule by force." He said any action of the "undemocratic bloc", Communist-dominated coalition the Russians sponsored in their sector and called the "democratic bloc", would be recognized only in the Soviet sector.
Howley said it was difficult to predict whether the Communists would proclaim their bloc the legal government in the city before or after next Sunday's municipal elections, which are barred in the Russian sector.
The Socialist Unity party has demanded that a new government be substituted for the present anti-Communist executive council. The Berlin Communist party demanded that the city's "democratic forces" meet immediately to form a new executive committee that would "re-establish unity in Berlin."
"It is a question of the ballot box versus force," Howley said, "and in western Berlin we recognize the ballot box."
The British-licensed newspaper Montages Lolo said the "democratic bloc" would present nominations for the new council at Soviet headquarters today. The nominations originally were slated to be presented last Thursday, the newspaper said.
If the Russians proclaim a new administration, Berlin will have two city governments, each claiming to be the legal government for the whole city.
The Russian press quoted Lt. Gen. Mikhail Dratvin, deputy chief of the Soviet military administration, that American troops were patrolling Berlin streets to force Germans to vote in the Dec. 5 elections in the Western zone.
The statement was circulated by the official Tass news agency.
Shortly before the statement was issued, Communist agitators invaded western sector political meetings in force in an effort to break them up.
Delegates Named To State Meet
The University council for U.N.E.
S.C.O. elected Barbara Lamoreaux,
College junior, delegate, and Billie
J. Nave, College sophomore, alternate,
to represent the organization
at the second annual conference of
the Kansas commission for U.N.E.
S.C.O. to be held in Topeka Thursday,
Friday, and Saturday.
The universities and colleges of Kansas have no official voice in the conference but may send representatives from their councils. These representatives attend with the official representatives of the county in which their school is located. They attend the meetings as observers. John Sjo, of Kansas State college, is chairman of the intercollegiate committee.
Any members of the K.U. council interested in attending the convention should contact Miss Lamoureux.
Richard Parker, executive secretary of the Kansas commission for U.N.E.S.C.O. announced that Rees Hughes, chairman of the committee on higher education, will conduct a special dinner meeting at 6 p.m. Thursday at the Kansas hotel.
Little Man On Campus
UNIVERSITY OBSERVATOR
"Light up two more sparklers, Worthal. Old Professor Snarf's going nuts!"
Phillips System Analyzer Reproduces Full-Scale Powerplant Operation
Voltage current and power of the system is measured by three large meters in a center table. The meters can be connected at any point in the main distribution system by means of selector switches in the center panel.
The University is one of seven universities and colleges that possesses a Phillips system analyzer. There are 20 of the instruments in use in the United States. The inventor, E. B. Phillips, professor of electrical engineering, is in charge of the K.U. instrument, located in the electrical engineering laboratory.
Electrical engineering students use the instrument to solve problems of electrical power distribution. Power companies may use it on a rental basis.
WEATHER
How the system behaves when lightning strikes the power line or when other trouble occurs can be determined by fault studies.
Miniature power stations generate about 100 volts and this voltage is applied to the network, duplicated in the analyzer, at the same places that real power stations supply voltage in the actual distribution system. A center panel has controls which regulate the miniature power stations and meters which tell the amount of power each is producing.
Sizes of generators, transformers, and other electrical equipment required for expansion of a power system can be determined by studying the results of the meters on the analyzer. The most advantageous place for transformers and generators also can be determined by studying the results.
In making the studies, the operator of the analyzer duplicates in miniature the actual power system by adjusting some of the 540 knobs and switches making up the switchboard. Power stations, transformers, transmitter lines, loads, and so forth are presented by circuit elements within the analyzer. The circuit elements are connected by a switchboard similar to that used by telephone companies.
Kansas—Fair and warmer today.
Fair east and partly cloudy west
tonight and Tuesday. Not quite so
cold tonight. High today 46 to 54.
New Dorm Bids Will Be Let Jan. 1
The state architect's office in Topeka has reported that bids for construction of a $500,000 addition to Corbin hall will be let by January 1, Raymond C. Nichols, executive secretary of the University, said today.
The addition, which will accommodate about 200 women students, will be built north of the present structure. Although the addition is a complete dormitory in most respects, the dining facilities of the older unit will be used for all the women.
Plans for the building have been delayed because of the large number of construction jobs the state architects have been required to approve recently, he said.
Irish Comedy Will Be Given Dec. 6-9
"Far Off Hills," an Irish comedy by Lennox Robinson, will be the next production given by the University Players, Tom Shay, instructor in the speech and drama department and director of the play, said today.
The cast will include Betty J. Holmes, Nancy L. Sewell, Phyllis G. Mowery, Mary K. Booth, Gene Courtney, Milton Commens, Craig Hampton, Suzon Lapat, Harold N. Hales, and Shay.
The play will be presented on Dec. 6,7,8,and 9.
Students Die In Car Crash
Funeral services were held over the week end in Hoisington for Fredrika Ekblad and Geraldine Cuddy, University students who were killed Nov. 23 in an automobile accident near McPherson, Kan.
Miss Ekblad was killed instantly when the car in which she was riding sideswiped another between Canton and McPherson. Miss Cuddy was rushed to a McPherson hospital where she died an hour and a half later.
Elizabeth Stenzel, College freshman, driver of the car, suffered a fractured wrist. Albert B. Brewer, Fine Arts freshman, another passenger, escaped injury. Both live in Hoisington.
Miss Ekblad, 19, was a sophomore in the College. She was a member of the Glee club, Gamma Phi Beta, Kappa Phi, and was the cochairman of the program committee of the Wesley Foundation.
Miss Cuddy, 18, who lived at Corbin hall, was a freshman in education. She was a member of the Independent Students' Association and the Associated Women Students.
Basketball Seats Sale Starts Today
Students may apply for basketball tickets today through Saturday at the athletic business office, 103 Robinson. The tickets cost $2.15 for five games. Students may choose which set they apply for. Odd tickets will be good for games with Trinity university, Colorado, Creighton, Nebraska, and Oklahoma.
Even tickets will be used for the Missouri, Drake, K. State, Washington university, and Iowa State games. The Centenary game Dec. 23 will be open to the public.
Learn To Read Before Graduation; Take An Educational Reading Course
If you have trouble studying, you may not know how to read. You should let the University help you.
The educational clinic in 18 Fraser hall is open from 3 to 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays for students who wish to enroll for the work in reading or study methods.
The student interested in getting help will be interviewed by a counselor. A program designed to improve the student's reading speed, comprehension, vocabulary, or general study methods will be arranged for him.
The student should not expect an easy, magic road to improvement, according to the counselors. His development in reading speed and comprehension and his facility in using the best study methods will depend upon his own efforts in using the techniques offered him.
The instructional programs offered by the educational clinic are planned so that they require not more than two or three 50-minute meetings a week for four to six weeks. These programs are offered at various times during the day so that a student may choose a section which meets at an hour convenient for him.
KU To Debate Thursday Friday At Iowa City
In the wigwam of the Sachem many braves sit silently. The rival M.U. tribe has gained possession of the symbolic tom-tom.
Kim Giffin, director of debate, today named a team of four for the Iowa City trip. They are Frederick K. Cross, Robert F. Bennett, A Kent Shearer and J. S. Mills.
Two championships in two tournaments is the record University of Kansas debaters will carry into a 20-school invitational speech tournament at the University of Iowa Thursday and Friday.
Early last month a four-man team won a 16-school invitational tournament at Purdue university. In that competition William Conboy, was the top ranking affirmative speaker and Ed Stolenweck, was the third ranking negative speaker.
Federal aid for education will be the debate subject. The speakers will also participate in a series of roundtable discussions on economic controls for the United States.
KU. debaters won 19 of 20 debates to take a triangular meet with Wichita university and Kansas State college on the latter's campus three weeks ago.
Universities competing at the Iowa tourney include Chicago, Florida, Marquette, Illinois, Indiana, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Northwestern, Notre Dame, Oklahoma, Ohio State, Purdue, South Dakota, Wichita, Wisconsin, and the U.S. Military academy at West Point.
Sachem Holds War Council
Editor's Note—Each year at the KU-MU football game SACHEM, senior men's honor society, holds the traditional tom-tom ceremony where members from both schools beat the tom-tom and pass a peace pipe. The tom-tom then goes for a year to the school that wins the game.
The reporter has recounted the council of war held by the defiant Jayhawk tribe on the shore of Potter lake after fleeing the battle by overland bus.
The mighty Sachem chief speaks, "My braves, for many a moon the voice of the tom-tom will be silent. The snow-warrior will send his lances against our teepees before that voice again joins the cry of our noble Jayhawk."
A brash papose interrupts, "You said it chiefly. They may beat our skin for awhile, but we'll pound them next fall."
"Silence! Now hear my counsel, mighty Sachems," cries the chief, as two braves take the papoose and throw him into Potter lake.
"Many young warriors may need our guidance. They must be allowed to take to the field and carry the skin of the pig through enemy hunting grounds next autumn. Those warriors who need aid in mastering the knowledge of the tribal elders shall receive our counsel."
The chief resumes his place in the council ring amid a chorus of "How, how," the early American equivalent of bravo.
A dripping papoose shouts from outside the council ring, "Tutor 'em; that's how."
Two braves leave the council ring and in a few moments a solash is heard in the direction of Potter lake. From the limb of an ash tree comes the cry of the Jayhawk, a cry strangely resembling laughter.
O
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1943
'Whitey', Lawrence Booze Hound, Still Carries On Single-Hounded Campaign
Rv JIM CLAYTON
"Whitesey," who looks like a cross between a collie and an old pillow case, was thus occupied when approached for an interview. As he was redirect about giving his correct name, several were tried before "Whitesey" roused him from his deep thought. When questioned as to whether or not he knew that the elections had already taken place, "Whitey" raised his head slightly, but the weight of his problems overcame him and he again became wrapped in deep thought.
"Whitey," the courthouse dog, should be told that the election is over and that repeal has won. Since two weeks before the election, "Whitey" has been advocating the repeal of the bone-dry law. He has "vote" written on one side of his body and "yes" on the other. Apparently the person who aided "Whitey" in his campaign has neglected to tell him that the cause is won.
No one seems to know just why "Whitey" started his campaign. One old-timer observed, that "it was probably one of those dern college kids that put him up to it."
"Whitley's" campaign headquarters are directly in front of the city hall on Massachusetts street. He has a private plot of grass where he does his heavy thinking. Some people believe that he is merely sleeping his time away. If the truth be known, he is probably thinking up some scheme to bring the bone-dry people to their knees.
"Whitey" has earned one dubious distinction anyway—he has become Lawrence's first booze-hound.
Law Journal Staff Chosen
Joseph D. Lysaught, law senior,
has been appointed editor-in-chief
of the student, editorial board of
the K.U. section of the Kansas Bus
Journal. He succeeds Bernard E.
Nordling.
Ernest J. Rice and George A Robb, second year law students, have been appointed associate editors.
The editorial staff members were appointed by faculty members of the Law school. They will serve for the next two issues of the journal, which is published four times a year. Law students prepare recent case notes and comments upon current legal problems raised by decisions which are of particular interest to the bar.
Members of the student board are Ronald D. Albright, William C. Cuvert, Joseph E. Hensley, Donald E. Johnson, William A. Kelly, Eldon L. Lackey, Richard P. Royer, and Maxine W. Wood, senior law students.
Kenneth Harmon, Earl E. O'Connor, Payne H. Ratner Jr., Henry H. Sinning, Donald E. Underwood, Milo M. Unruh, and Paul B. Watson, second year law students, and Robert H. Meyer, first year law student.
Carl Slough and William J. Kraker, associate professors of law, are faculty advisors.
Students of Prof. Elmer F. Beth's Elements of Advertising class will take two field trips to Kansas City soon. They will visit a newspaper, radio station, and possibly a printing concern. The trips will be made Wednesday and Saturday.
University Daily Kansan
Advertising Classes See City Firms.
The purpose is to study the organization and mechanisms of these enterprises. Having already studied the principles from the textbooks, students will receive a permanent impression after seeing the application, Professor Beth believes.
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, on Lawrence and $1.00 a semester. Please submit at University Kens, every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examinations are due on Saturday as second class matter Sept. 17, 19th until Oct. 3 at Lawrence, Kens, under act of March 19.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
Name Convention Delegates
Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, is sending David Wilkie, business junior, and Harold Shigley, fine arts junior, as the two voting delegates from the University chapter to the fraternities' national convention which will be held in Chicago Tuesday, Dec. 28, Wednesday, Dec. 29, and Thursday, Dec. 30.
The aim of every state is to become industrialized, Dr. Paul Malone, professor of economics, told the members of the Delta Sigma Pi fraternity recently.
Aim Is More Industry For Kansas-Malone
Open The Drawer, Richard
Dr. Malone, who is also director of the University Bureau of Business Research, told the business majors that nothing would make Kansans happier than to be told that industrial income in Kansas exceeds income from agriculture products.
The early Roman calendar had no January. The year began with March and had only ten months.
Manila, P. I., -(UP)—Marine Staff Sgt. Gerald D. Tilman of Memphis, Tenn., found out that death can lurk even in an office filing cabinet. He opened a drawer and discovered an eight-foot coffee-colored deadly snake called the makipe. He killed it with a rifle.
"Among other things the Bureau assists in finding the industrial potentials of Kansas, and ascertains the advisibility of beginning new industries in areas throughout the state," Dr. Malone said.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Socially Speaking
Phi Kappa Tau, national social fraternity, installation ceremony was held Nov. 18 in the Castle Tea room. Phi Kappa Tau is the newest of the 22 social fraternities now at K.U.
Phi Kappa Tau Installation
Representatives from all fraternities and sororites on the campus were invited to hear speeches by Roland Maxwell, national president of Phi Kappa Tau; L. C. Woodruff, dean of men; Paul J. De Cora, instructor of music theory; and Alan Pickering, president of the local chapter. Ray W. Wilson, administrative assistant to the city manager of Kansas City, Mo., and alumnus of the fraternity, was master of ceremonies.
Delta Upsilon Formal
Delta Upsilon gave a Trophy Girl formal dance Nov. 12. The guests were Joan Cooper, Irma Rick, Ann Learned, Shirley Stewart, Joan Schindling, Florence Robinson, Barbara Hagan, Joan Sanders, Jo Mullins, Katherine Kubik, Carol Buhler, Georgette Speaks, Gwenwnd Guion
Rosemary Jackson, Phyllis Debus. Ruth Henry, Barbara Fletcher. Louise Lambert, Barbara Howard. Patricia Brown, Marilyn Brown. Barbra Maldoal, Joan Vickers. Elinor Parrott, Nancy Watson. Kay Collins, Alyce Fawkes, Gloria Evans, Charlotte Dixon, Nancy Cole, Mary Margaret Moore.
Claudia Anderson, Virginia Gargis, Barbara Creel, Barbar Zimmerman, Abigail Bixby, Barbara Pack, Joanna Schrag, Jeanne Aldridge, Carolyn Isern, Roberta Larson, Wilma Elkblad, Alice Schooenover, Norma Guthrie, Mary Wilkins, Louise Warner, Norma Mendenhall.
Kathleen Graff, Ruby Sobel, Betty
Snook, Suzanne Kleine, Jane Kirch-
Kappa Phi Pledges Honored At Party
The pledges of Kappa Phi. Methodist sorority were honored at a School Days party given by members in the Methodist church Nov. 19.
Manish Swoyer, acting as teacher, opened the meeting during which the honor roll was read and classes in art and music were held. Pictures of the council meeting last summer were shown.
hoff, Carlene Sturges, Elaine Clirchrist, Barbara Hays, Mary Williams, Suzanne Jones, Margaret Olson, Carolyn Salome, Jane Cunningham, Elizabeth McKie, Barbara Boling, Sallie Brannan, Lois Klinghammer, Mary Power, Ann Galloway, Darlene Schindler, Sammy Johnson.
Acacia Pledges
Lois Timken, fine arts junior, and Ida Mae Woodburn, special student in the College, were named as outstanding in attendance and activities.
Dorothy Dudley, Barbara Bell,
Betty Bloss, Marilyn Kuno, Connie
Caraway, Dorothy Durfee, Don
Fincke, John Stoops, Winter-
mote, Bill Mills, Paul Duckworth,
Edwin Hirman, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Wolcott, Mr. and Mrs. Jack C.
Veatch, George Davidson, Mr.
and Mrs. John E. Meyer, and Mr.
and Mrs. Madrude Weltmer.
***
The Acacia fraternity announces the pledging of Neil Peterson, Clay Center; Dan Taylor, Norton; William Thorne, Rose Hill; and Charles Forrer, Wichita.
Alpha Chi Omega Visitor
Mrs. Thomas Leslie, national councilor of Alpha Chi Omega sorority, stayed at the University chapter house on an inspection visit from Nov. 20 to Nov. 22. Mrs. Leslie is from Detroit.
Square Dancing and community singing were the features of the "Corn Gigue," music education department party held Nov. 19. Freshman students in education were honored guests.
Music Group Gives Party
Miss Elin K. Jorgensen, associate professor of music education, and Ray Janeway, assistant director of the library, and Mrs. Janeway led the square dancing. Robert Hallman, education senior, led community singing.
Four skits were presented by students representing the classes. They were directed by Olin Parker and Raymond Zepp, graduate students; James Sellards, senior; Danny Orton, sophomore; and Jacqueline Kräger, freshman.
Members of the committee in charge of the party were Harry Spencer, master of ceremonies, Phillip H. Humeld, Marybeth Rea, William Spence, and Doris Gilman. Guests were Dr. E. Thayer Gaston, professor of music education; D. M. Swarthout, dean of school of fine arts; and George B. Smith,
Medical School Gets Portrait Of Doctor
A portrait of Dr. E. J. Curran, painted by Thomas Hart Benton, was presented to the School of Medicine in a ceremony at the Medical center in Kansas City recently.
Dr. Curran, a Kansas City eye specialist, headed the department of anatomy in 1911-1912 and has been associated with the school. He was chairman of the department of optology for 35 years, having retired from that post recently.
Chancellor Deane W. Malott accepted the painting for the University. It was a gift of Dr. Curran's son, Dr. Kevin Curran.
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WeaverS
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Sigma Gamma Epsilon, national honorary fraternity of earth sciences, held its annual fall initiation following a dinner in the English room, Nov. 16. Guest speaker was Mr. Ogden S. Jones, geologist, from the state board of health.
New members are James Bowman, Herbert Ebuchthel, Wayne Capron, Robert Coshow, James Ekstrom, Gerald Freeze, David Gagliarlo, Raymond Careia, William Greer, Edward Harry, James Henderson, Wallace Howe, Dean Kerr, Max Kliewer, John Koenig.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1948
Beta's Defeat Aces Hi To Win Intramural Title
The Beta's swept to the intramural touch football championship in impressive fashion with a smashing 37 to 0 victory over a battling Aces HI team.
The opening quarter of the game was more than a little reminiscent of the same frame of the recent K.U. vs. O.U. debacle. In quick succession the Beta's scored three touchdowns; the first one coming when Jack Winters took a punt and passed to Al Lowry who raced 20 yards behind good blocking to score. Bill Halverhout blocked a punt, picked up the ball, and scampered 22 yards to register the second score a few minutes after. And soon after that, Bob Schwanzel hit pay dirt for the third touchdown when he took a lateral pass and skirted his own left end from 4 yards out.
A complicated 22-yard, double-pass play netted the Beta's fourth touchdown in the second quarter, the ball going from Lowry to Winter to Bill Jones who took the ball all alone in the end zone.
In the fourth period Winters received an Ace Hi punt, and immediately heaved a 30 yard pass to Andy Struble in the end zone for the Beta's last touchdown.
Al Lowry, the Beta's place kick artist, successfully converted all five placements.
The Beta's wound up the scoring 9 seconds before the game ended with a safety when they trapped an Ace Hi back behind his goal line.
Two Jayhawkers On UP Big Seven Team
Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 29—(UP)—Here is the 1948 United Press All-Big Seven team as chosen in the Midlands through a poll of coaches, sports writers and radio sports-casters:
Second Team
Ends: Bryan Sperry, Kansas
Ed Pudlik, Colorado
E. Mel Sheehan, Missouri
E. Jim Owens, Oklahoma
T. Chet Fritz, Missouri
T. Homer Paine, Oklahoma
G. Paul Burris, Oklahoma
G. Dick Tomlinson, Kansas
C. Bob Fuchs, Missouri
B. Jack Mitchell, Oklahoma
B. Bus Entsinger, Missouri
B. George Thomas, Oklahoma
B. Forrest Griffith, Kansas
Second Team
Ends with
Hurk, Colorado
Tackles: Hugh Johnson, Kansas
Wade Walker, Oklahoma
Guards: Gene Pepper, Missouri
Howard Brubaker, Iowa State
Center: Tom Novak, Nebraska
Backs: Dick Gilman, Kansas
Harry Narcissin, Colorado
Dick Braznell, Missouri
Webb Halbert, Iowa State
Ex-University Grid Star Dies in Kansas City, Kan.
Dr. Howard C. Reed, formerly one of the football greats of the University, died Nov. 22 in Kansas City, Kan.
Dr. A. R. Kennedy, coach of the football team during the period when Dr. Reed played, said he was one of the last of the five-year men. He played left guard from 1905 through 1909 when he graduated from the Law school. Death occurred at a packing plant where he was a meat inspector. He had suffered from a heart ailment.
Plenty of BASKETBALL SHOES at Kickpatrick's PORT SHOP
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Big Seven Standings
Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 29 - (UP)— The final standings of the Big Seven football conference for the 1948 season:
Conference Games
W L T Pts Opp Pct
Oklahoma 5 0 0 217 .34 1.000
Missouri 4 1 0 165 74 .800
Kansas 4 2 0 121 116 .600
Colorado 2 3 0 97 98 .400
Nebraska 2 4 0 84 135 .300
Iowa State 2 4 0 73 128 .333
Kansas State 0 6 0 28 214 .300
All Games
W L T Pts Opp Pct
Oklahoma 9 1 0 336 115 .99
Missouri 8 2 0 368 137 .800
Kansas 7 3 0 193 137 .700
Iowa State 4 6 0 116 197 .400
Colorado 3 6 0 168 164 .333
Nebraska 2 8 0 137 273 .200
Kansas State 1 9 0 78 323 .100
Orange Bowl Looks To Texas
New York, Nov. 29-(UP) Orange Bowl committeemen today awaited the "ayes" of Texas, for the Longhorn will complete the lineup of the major New Year's day football games.
The Orange Bowl grabbed off Georgia late Saturday night for one of its teams after the Bulldogs whipped Georgia Tech, 21 to 13, to win the Southeastern conference championship. But they didn't land anyone else even though the rest of the Bowl committees were making their announcements as fast as the wires could handle them.
Yesterday Texas Athletic director Dana X. Bible announced that the twice-beaten, once-tied Longhorns were being "considered" for the Orange Bowl.
The Rose Bowl lined up California and Northwestern last week, and then Saturday the Dallas, Texas, Cotton Bowl signed up Oregon to face Southern Methodist.
The Sugar Bowl at New Orleans secured Oklahoma, the Big Seven champion beaten only by Santa Clara, to play once-tied, undefeated North Carolina. Oklahoma downed Oklahoma A and M, 19 to 15. Saturday and Carolina walloped Virginia, 34 to 12.
Title Play Soon For Pro-Teams
The Philadelphia Eagles today were assured of meeting Chicago in the annual national football league playoffs, but which Windy City team—the Bears or the Cardinals—probably won't be decided until the final day of the season.
Philadelphia won its second Eastern division championship yesterday as Tommy Thompson paced the Eagles to a 17 to 0 triumph over the Pittsburgh Steelers. The Bears helped the Eagles clinch the division title by clipping the Washington Redskins, 48 to 13, for their ninth victory in 10 starts.
The Cardinals, who were idle yesterday, now share the Western division lead with their cross-town rivals with a similar 9-1 record. Philadelphia, with eight victories in a row after a defeat and tie early in the season, holds a two and a half game lead on Washington in the Eastern division with only two games left.
Playing on a painfully injured leg, getting the daylights bopped out of him by a viciously-charging San Francisco defense, automatic Otto Graham flipped four touchdown passes—three of them in the third period — to give the Cleveland Browns a 31 to 28 victory over the Forty-Niners yesterday.
That made Cleveland the All America conference Western division champion for the third straight year and, because the East's teams are so weak,partially assured the Brownss of their third league championship.
Buffalo strengthened its lead in the Eastern division with a 35 to 14 victory over the New York Yankees, and Baltimore kept in the fight by downing Brooklyn, 38 to 20, in the other AAC games. Buffalo meets Baltimore Saturday in the show-down game.
Quigley To Talk At Liberal
E. C. Quigley, athletic director, will speak at the high school football banquet at Liberal Tuesday, Dec. 14. His talk will be sponsored by the Liberal Downtown Quarterback club and 50 football players.
Each snowflake is built in units of six. These take on an almost endless variation of design.
One Phone Call Could Stop A Murder----Her Own
Desperately she phoned—but every time the line was busy!
See it! You'll remember it every time your phone rings!
A TEN FINGERNAIL PICTURE
You'll chew every one of them off says movie columnist Erskine Johnson.
SHOCK 71
BARRON STANWYKEN
BARRON LUNCASTER
Sorry - WRONG
NUMBER
SCREAMS
SOULS
THAT DO UMN-
SWEER
JAYHAWKER
NOW
ENDS WED.
Thrill - Romance, and Beauty It will leave you breathless!
IT CAST A MAGIC SPELL!
The Enchanted Valley
ALAN CURTIS ANNE GWYNNE
ANTIQUE LIFE MUSEUM
102
VARSITY
IT CAST A MAGIC SPELL!
The Enchanted Valley
ALAN CURTIS • ANNE GWYNNE
AN EAGLE LION RELEASE
NOW ENDS TUESDAY
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Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed - 79c
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You'll want one for yourself and several for Christmas gifts.
There are dozens of new cartoons . . a calendar of Bibler cuties . . plenty of info. on K.U. social dates for fraternities, sororities, and students.
Send orders to: Alpha Delta Sigma Don Tennant University Daily Kansan Lawrence, Kansas
P. S. Add 10c for mailing charges.
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Hugh Schmidt, Minnesota Miss. receiver George The late Linda in during games of the Don as the first quarter team Hawk with gunning sharp, pass, brench nay catchd Midwid Drum keep in Kansas a back skaked Sertuzu 10 as he Bud yard tigers On the He Mr Griffith next trunk Dont miss It to the beautifl the lon layer played season, French the nex Wilson have Fown fourth Griffith end T A few cell will covered two min Elever over french call as plays in The p by back umble Cansner zurück whil all S. Ente the 24 guard but best in Carrars ntsimming who mcrrd be look th
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29,1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
MU Mauls Jayhawkers 21-7 To Land 2 Spot In Big 7
Missouri Tigers scored 21 points in the first half and then faced a fired up Kansas team in the last two quarters to win the 57th annual Thanksgiving battle 21 to 7. The game was played in perfect 50 degree weather before 32,000 fans. It was the largest crowd ever to watch a football game in Columbia. The previous record was 30,892 which watched Southern Methodist and Missouri play earlier $ \textcircled{4} $ this year
Seats were set up in every imaginable place in the stadium. Cars were tied around the stadium as the
isands poured into the stadium.
on were offering to sell their
kickets before game time for less than
what they had paid for them.
It was the first Missouri victory over Kansas since 1945. The Jaynawkers won 20 to 19 in Columbia in 1946. Last year the Kansans won a thrilling game in Lawrence 20 to 14. One of the Missouri fans below the press box kept yelling near the end of the first half "Pour it on boys! 'we waited a long time for this.' The Tigers finished in second place in the Big Seven as a result of the win. Kansas wound up in third place with 7 won, 3 lost record.
It was the last game for such Kansas regulars as Charles Moffett, Dick Bertuzzi, Ken Sperry, Jim Stephens, Hugh Johnson, Bryan Sperry, Dave Semidt, Frank Pattete, and Dick Mudge. All saw action against Missouri except Frank Pattete who received a "fractured jaw in the George Washington game, Oct. 15. The Missourians completely dominated play in the first half. Kansas was in Tiger territory only once during that time. Jayhawkier fumibles gave Missouri chances to control the ball and score.
Don Wilson replaced Dick Gilman is the K.U. quarterback before the first quarter ended and lead his emmates in a battling finish. The layhawkers came out after the half with greatly renewed spirit. Theirunning, blocking, and tackling was sharp. They didn't complete a single pass, but led by Dick Bertuzzi, Bud French, and Forrest Griffith, they searched downfield for their lone quickdown.
Midway in the third period Bob Drum intercepted a Missouri pass keep in his own territory to start a Kansas drive that almost paid off. He hit back to his 13 where he was kicked by Fuchs. On the first play, Bertuzzi carried the ball to the K.U. 40 as he swept around his left end. Bud French went to the 49 after a yard offside penalty against the Tigers had moved the ball to the 45. On the next play Bertuzzi went to the Missouri 45 for a first down, Griffith made another yard on the next try.
Don Wilson was thrown for a loss
Dan Carter as he faded back to
assess. On the next play Griffith made
it to the Missouri 14 behind some
beautiful downfield blocking. It was
the longest gain by any individual
player during the afternoon. Griffith
played one of his best games of the
season. Bertuzzi got to the 14 and
trench picked up another yard on
the next set of plays.
Wilson threw a pass intended for Jave Fischer but it was knocked down by Martin Sauer. On the fourth down Bob Ebinger caught Griffith behind the line of scrimmage and end this Jayhawker scoring threat. A few moments later Dick Brazzell fumbled and Bud French recovered the ball on the M.U. 36 with two minutes left in the third quarter. Eleven plays later Bertuzzi bullied over from about the one-half yard line for the Kansas score. Griffith, French and Bertuzzi had carried the ball as Don Wilson had called the plays in the scoring drive.
The first Missouri score was set up by 'Bus' Entsminger's able quarterbacking of the Tiger team. Aumble by Bertuzzi had forced the Kansas to punt early in the quarter. Entsminger passed to Brazzell who took the ball on the Kansas 3. Entsminger carried the ball to be 24 where it was fourth down, gabby was Entsminger who took him, this time to the 20 for the last ten.
in car. Carras carried the ball to the 18, mtsminger handed off to Braznell tho made no gain as he was tackled rd by Johnson and Ellis. Carras took the ball to the 5 where the
Tigers had another first down. Entsinger got to the 2. The hard charging Bill Houston, 220 pound sophomore fullback who gave the Kansas trouble all afternoon, went to the 1 yard line. Then Entsinger went over for the touchdown. Bob Dawson kicked the first of three perfect conversions.
The first touchdown came with 11 minutes, 55 seconds of the first period gone.
About three minutes later Carras intercepted a pass thrown by Gilman and carried it to the Kansas 14. Ents-minger made no gain on the first play as he was tackled by Ellis. Stephens took the ball to the 10. Dick Braznell went over to put the Tigers ahead 13 to 0. Again Dawson's conversion try was good.
A fumble by Bud French recovered by Win Carter gave Missouri a chance to score in the second quarter. The ball was put in play on the KU, 23. Ensminger threw a pass to Mel Sheehan who made a brilliant one-hand catch on the 14. Braznell carried the ball to the 5. Carras picked up 4 yards on the next try. Carras again took the ball but was tackled by McCormick for no gain. Enmsinger went across the goal line over the right end of the Kansas line for the score. Dawson's conversion made the score read 21 to 0 with 10 minutes and 10 seconds of the second quarter played.
Just before the end of the first half Kansas had the ball and Dick Gilman came in as quarterback and threw two long passes in an attempt to score. The last pass was picked up by Wilbur Volz and he ran down the sideline to cross the Kansas goal line. The officials ruled that the pass was incomplete, though.
After French recovered Braznell's fumble on M.U.'s 36 in the third quarter. Wilson handed off to Bertuzzi who went to the 26. Griffith got to the 20 on the next play. French fumbled but it was recovered by Bertuzzi on the 18. Bertuzzi went
to the 15. It was fourth down then with 1 and one-half yards needed for a first down. French charged through to the 12 to get the important first in ten as the third quarter ended.
As the fourth quarter opened French went to the 6, Bertuzzi to the 5, French to the 2, again to the 1 for a first down, Bertuzzi to the one-half yard line in a series of hard fought plays. Bertuzzi scored on the next play and Ken Sperry converted to add the extra point.
Chester Fritz, left tackle, Bob Fuchs, a great defensive player who had been in the game all the time, and Bronko Marusie, all Missouri players, were hurt on a successive series of plays as the line charging became fierce and the blocking and tackling rough.
Dave Fischer recovered a Missouri muffle on the KU. 48 later in the game. Charlie Moffett roared to the Tiger 39 for a first down. Griffith went to the 38 and Bertuzzi to the 35 on the next two plays. Wilson threw a pass for Delvin Norris but it was incomplete.
Dolph Simons kicked a beautiful punt that went out of bounds on the Tiger 1 yard line. Entsminger played it safe and tried center of the line sneak. Robinson came in to point on the fourth down.
Moffett started a drive that carried the Jayhawkers to the Tiger 29. Wilson tried a couple of passes, one for McDonald in the end zone which was knocked down by Volz. The next one Volz intercepted on the goal line and ran it back to the 40 to end the last of Kansas' scoring threats which had kept the Missouri rooters worried through the last half.
**Game Summary** **K.U.** **M.U.**
First downs 0 16
Net yards gained rushing 199 237
Forward passes attempted 8 12
Forward passes completed 0 4
Yards forward passing 0 47
Forwards intercepted by 1 2
Yds, run-back inter. 6 58
Punting averages 35.6 63
Total yds, all kicks return 98 63
Op. fumbles recovered 2 3
Yds lost, penalties 35 20
Score by periods:
Kansas 0 0 0 7—7
Missouri 14 7 0 21
The Best In Pictures At Your Commonwealth Theatres
GRANADA
NOW
Ends
Wednesday
A RIOTOUS REBEL!
RED SKELTON
A Southern
Yankee
BRIAN DONLEVY
ARELENE DAHL
RED SKELTON
a Southern
Yankee
BRIAN DONLEVY ARLENE DAHL
GRANADA
NOW Ends Wednesday
A RIOTOUS REBEL!
RED SKELTON
A Southern Yankee
BRIAN DONLEVY ARLENE DAHL
ADDED
PLUS:
Science Short "The Big Eye"
Color Cartoon "Readin',
Ritin' and Rythmatic" & News
PATEE
NOW Ends Tuesday
Roaring Action & Gay Comedy
The PRAIRIE
LENORE AUBERT • ALAN-BAXTER
also
The GAY INTRUDERS
with JOHN EMERY • TAMARA GEVA
WEDNESDAY 3 Days
2 Top Hits!
Grand Canyon TRAIL
ACTION MUSIC TUNES!!
ROY-ROGERS TRIGGER
and
Oscar Homolka
Derek Farr
Mariel Pastov
Code of SCOTLAND YARD
PATEE
NOW
Ends
Tuesday
Roaring Action & Gay
Comedy
The
PRAIRIE
LENORE AUBERT · ALAN-BAXTER
also —
The GAY INTRUDERS
with JOHN EMERY · TAMARA GEVA
WEDNESDAY
3 Days
2 Top Hits!
Grand
Canyon
TRAIL
IN TRUCKOLOR
ACTION
MUSIC
TONES!!
ROY ROGERS
TRIGGER
and —
Oscar
Homolka
Derek
Farr
Muriel
Paulov
Code of
SCOTLAND
YARD
The PRAIRIE
LENORE AUBERT · ALAN-BAXTER
THE GAY INTRUDERS with JOHN EMERY · TAMARA GEVA
WEDNESDAY 3 Days
2 Top Hits!
Grand Canyon TRAIL
TRUCKHOUSE
ACTION
OF TUNES!!
ROY ROGERS
TRIGGER
54 34
Oscar Homolka
Derek Farr
Muriel Pavlov
Code of SCOTLAND YARD
Dick Bertuzzi (44) goes roaring through for the Kansas touchdown just after the fourth quarter had opened against Missouri. Don Wilson, K.U. quarterback, had sent Bertuzzi into the line twice in succession to climax the Jayhawkers' downfield drive. Number 34 is Missouri's fullback Wilbur Volz. The man with the doubled fist is another Tiger fullback, Win Carter (33). Coming into the action is a Missouri guard (61) Hardin Cox.
Call
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 194
The Editorial Page-
We Will Now Sing-
As the band gives forth with the first few strains of the Star Spangled Banner, hundreds of persons at public gatherings reluctantly rise to their feet. Each person, according to his musical limitations and patriotic spirit, plunges into the unknown with a determination to be in on the last note. Some are lost completely in the course of the song, others mutter along making a noise that by no stretch of the imagination we could call singing.
At the close of an assembly or convocation, the Chancellor asks that everyone stand and sing the Alma Mater. Granted that the tune is pitched comfortably, the first lines resound with vigor. After this bold beginning, discords enter with each succeeding line.
The trick of catching hopefully at a neighbor's phrase usually results in disaster as it betrays the ignorance of both you and your neighbor. Everyone rides along until they hear the words Alma Mater and this they know. So, they give forth as if they had been singing all along. The song ends as it began but the impression of half learned lines remains. This is not very flattering to the student body or the faculty.
Why is it that we make such a sorry exhibition in attempting to sing these two songs? How about taking a little time to learn them?
—Laurence Silks.
- Letters To The Editor -
Council Votes
Dear Editor
I was greatly amused at a recent letter to the Daily Kansan which claimed organizational representatives were out of place on the All Student Council. This position was obviously based on the contention that delegates of organizations do not "represent the student body as a whole." It would be degrading to the intelligence of the student body to assume they actually believe this generalization.
In the first place, it would be difficult to ascertain whether or not the A.S.C. actually represents the student body as a whole when a majority is held by a politica party representing less than one-third of the students of the University.
In the second place, it would be difficult to say that the students are being adequately represented merely because several students who are responsible to their own classmates are taken from the various schools and colleges to voice their personal opinions in the student council.
In the third place, it seems to assume that the students are best represented when their interests are focused and this consolidated desire is upheld. No better portrayal of the student's wishes exist than shown in their organizational interests. Not only are their representatives pledged to uphold the particular organization's attitude, but they can be held responsible for their actions directly.
I, therefore, wish to point out that not only do the organizations deserve representatives on the A.S.C., but that they deserve equal footing with those representatives who are honored in the spring general election. Disenfranchisement is a denial of the
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students' right to true representation.
Roger L. Davis
Men's Inter-Dorm
A.S.C. representative
Sold Out, Twice
Dear Editor
The Kansas City Star called us a demoralized band of Jayhawkers. But it wasn't nearly so much a result of the final score as it was a result of the resale of some 2,000 seats originally purchased by students for their own use and use of their wives at the Oklahoma-Kansas football game.
Never before in my 27 years have I ever heard of a more dastardly trick being inflicted upon a group of helpless college students. Never before have I seen such regal example of unfair play, of unscrupulous action, of mercenary conning as was displayed by an exemplary institution in this action.
Never before this game have my wife and I, and many others, been forced to sit illegally and uncomfortably in twice-sold seats that we had previously occupied "un-demoralized!"
Lionel H. Hayes Business senior
Names Committee Chairman
Bob Brooks, Pharmacy junior, will be chairman of the speakers' committee for Religious Emphasis Week. The committee will arrange the time and place for talks by guest speakers during the week, which begins Sunday, Feb. 20 and ends Saturday, Feb. 26. Other committee chairmen will be named before Wednesday.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
HOLIDAY
An Adventure in
Good Smoking
Aromatic in
the pack...
Aromatic in the
pipe!
HOLIDAY
Pipe Mixture
AROMATIC IN THE PACK
AROMATIC IN THE PIPE
OT's Hear Hospital Affiliation Talks
Aromatic in the pack...
Aromatic in the pipe!
HOLIDAY
Pipe Mixture
AROMATIC IN THE DOCK
AROMATIC IN THE PIPE
Four students told of their experiences last summer as psychiatric affiliation students at an Occupational therapy club meeting recently
Psychiatric affiliation is one of four required summer courses for occupational therapy majors. The others are tuberculosis, physical injury, and pediatric-orthopedic affiliations.
The speakers and the hospitals at which they interneed were Retta Jo Landis, fine arts junior, State hospital, Kalamazoo, Mich.; Margaret John, sophomore, State hospital, Norwich, Conn.; Betty Joe Brewer, junior, State hospital, Cherokee, Iowa; Barbara Ann Richard, junior, Shepherd Pratt hospital, Towson, Md.
Daily Hansan
University
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Ind. Journal Assn., College Press, Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., Ks.
Editvie-Clinch ... Maurice C. Cooney
Managing Editor ... Hal D. Nelson
Asst. Man. Editor ... Anne Murphy
Asst. Man. Editor ... Bill F. Mayer
Asst. Man. Editor ... Ronald W. Rosemary
Asst. City Editor ... Nora Tempe
Asst. City Editor ... Patricia James
el. Editor ... Richard D. Barton
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Sam
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Robert D. Smith
Sports Editor ... Osmero L. Bartelli
Asst. Sports Editor ... Marvin L. Rowlands
Society Editor ... Rosemary Rosapw
Business Mgr. ... Bill Nelligan
Advertising Mgr. ... Don Tennant
Advertising Mgr. ... Don Clayton
Advertising Mgr. ... Don Knuth
Classified Mgr. ... Don Waldon
Asst. Class. Mgr. .. Yvonne Josserand
Asst. Adv. Mgr. .. William E. Beck
Ndv. Adv. Mgr. .. Dan Wen
Promotion Mgr. .. Charles O'Connor
DE SOTOM
APPROVED
SERVICE
PLYMOUTH
DE SOTON
SERVICE
PAYMENT
Ruddyer GALLAGHER
MOTORS
FINE
SERVICE
GREAT
CARS
SQUARE
Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St.
he Bus-(Adv.)
-By Bidie
K.U.
THE RAPID TRANSIT CO.
"Finally found you, Reginald. — Unnerstan you're havin' a little trouble with yer heater."
THANKS - THANKS - THANKS To The Following BOOSTERS Of The PUMPKIN PROM
Skyline
2 steak dinners, and free cover charge on Saturday night
2 courtesey passes for skating The University Shoe
The University Shop A white shirt with French cuffs The Campus Shop
A red sweater with short sleeves Rachelle Studio
Rachelle Studio
2 courtesy cards for 8 by 10 portraits
Leshers Shoe Shop 2 one dollar shoe repair cards Royal Shoe Shop
Royal Shoe Shop For the girl, a pair of loafers
Lawrence Dry Cleaning
6 dollars worth of cleaning
6 dollars worth of cleaning Wade
Worms
Corsage and a carnation
Outlook Boy: box of engraved matches
Waavers Girl: ten dollars worth of merchandise
Lawrence Sanitary 4 qts. Varsity Velvet ice cream
Kirkpatrick Sport Shop
Phog Allen Sport Stories
Lawrence Typewriter Exchange
Pen and pencil
Marinello Beauty Shop
$1.50 gift card
Carters stationery store 2 boxes of stationery
Dixies Corn Shop Girl: fuzzy kitten
Lauter Jewelry Co.
Boy: silver key chain
Music Co.
Bell Music Co.
2.75 dollars in records
Dine-a-Mite Two chicken dinners
Dine-a-Mite
Two chicken dinners
Armoire Bedrock Chicken
Acme Bachelor Cleaners 5.00 dollars in dry cleaning
Mosser-Wolf Camera SH Book on Photography
Palace An appropriate gift
An appropriate gift Roberts
Roberts Rhine Stone ear rings
Sol Marks
Tie clip and collar clip
Round Corner Drug Perfume
Parsons Gift for the girl
Carters Super Service Four gallons of gas
Allison Thomas Flower Shop Flowers
Woolworths Billfold
L. L. Smith 2 popular records
Jayhawker 4 theater passes
IONDA
Granada 8 theater passes
Dai
words
tiona
Drakes 2 cakes
terms: C with the paired piring th at Satu D daily illumbly befer
Ch
E SL
ound st
Swopes Sweater
Harzfelds Hosiery Case
Gibbs Tie pin
Hixons Picture
Carls Shave Lotion
Rankins Drug Store
Box of Candy
Rapid Transit Bus 2 Bus Books
The Book Nook The Prophet
Kresses One lamp
044 CHE
ood tire
006 Miss
0 STUI
excellent
Keelers Girl: Stationery
-E SILU SLIM
ee she
Sh E SHIM
CITY on H
04R, 28R
ILL THE
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SWI W.
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to noon
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OR SAI
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Litwins
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Miller-Jones Hose
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Walkover Shop
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Student Union Activities
81
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Phone KU 376
forms. Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will promptly. Ads must be called in writing by 3 to 5 o'clock on Saturday) or brought to the University of Kansas Business office. Journalism blanks 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
Ocean Three Five
day days five
words or less... 35c 65c 90c
national words...1c 2c 3c
FOR SALE
64 CHEVROLET Deluxe Sedan, heater,
doodles, motor just overlaired. See at
606 Miss. St.
20 STUDEBAKER Champion. 2 door,
excellent condition. Call Bob Elbel, 236.
OR SALE wire recorders. Brand new,
complete, ready to go $90.00 and up.
Hank Black, phone 2354L. 29
A2 camer, good condition, new.
see. See Eugene Searl, 1037 Terrain, n.
3346.
JUN LAMP Special: Get a Florida sun-
while you study. GET Sunsults to
hand cards now. Only $8.50. B.
Goodrich, 9229 Mass.
MUNITION, Fishing Tackle, Guns and
resaled. Keys made, padlocks.
ofer's Shop, 1016 Mass. rtfm
LOST
E SLIDE RULE without case, at oround stadium, Saturday, Nov. 20. Any other information please call 28949.
GMA CHI Sweetheart pin and Kuppy on Friday morning, Reward Card 0482, 286R, 343S, or 718.
ILL THE person who took the wrong handbrake with red and black lining on ballroom cafeteria Nov. 17, call have I have our jacket.
ILL PEEKER immediately taken from Strong-Elllyn Human Neurology book from Union lower cafeteria Tuesday noon, please return it to Kansan Urge? Nurgly needed! Grace Horst.
LEASE BRING back our book—we read it, reading it; and if you and the Daily Mail need it! (we refer to the new Webster dictionary which disappeared from the roof-reder's desk in the journalism department) stamped all over the fly leaf.
AN'S WRIST left in Room 310 nasal Hall at 11:00 a.m. Thursday morning. Please leave at Kansan office for ward. Edna Cobb 2734-M.
BUSINESS SERVICE
USED CARS bought and sold. 6 blocks north of underpass. Phone 3005. Midwest Motors, 709 North Second. 30
BILL'S ROAD service and delivery service. We will come and fix your flats, stall your car, anywhere at any time by phone or online. We deliver anything from a post card up to any size. Phone Lawrence 2268J. 30
USED CARS bought and sold. 6 blocks north of underpass. Phone 3005. Midwest Motors, 709 North Second. 29
TYPING HEASONABLE RATE. Prompt service. Work on all vehicles. BUILT YOUR ONE ONE is best.-Bullet's for watch repair, 419 West 141th. rtfn
TYPING DONE. Prompt service, reasonable rate, accurate work. 1209 Ohio, or phone 1601. rtfn
WHEN ALL PETS including dogs, birds, rabbits, chickens, ducks, squirrels, rats, mice, etc., go shopping for an outfit they go to Grant's Pet Shop, 1218 Comm. St. Phone 418. Everything in the pet field—their needs are our肮脏-12-21
TYPING DONE. Prompt attention, curate work and reasonable rates. Tel. 418 or bring to 1218 Comm. St. Ask for Miss Helen. 12-21
EBERHART and Son, tailors. Finest samples made to measure, suits, topcoats and overcoats. Alterations, repairing and leather work. 831½ Mass. IX
FOR RENT
SLEEPING ROOM 2 singles. Ideal
room. 3 blocks from campus. CAMP.
798R.
TRANSPORTATION
URGENTLY NEEDDED ride. To share expenses and driving to Philadelphia or eastern city and return. Will leave to the car after December 17. Call Bob Teel 284.
COMMERCIAL PILOT flying 4 place
airplanes and return Thanksgiving.
Take off from Kansas City. Route
oral route or 150 mile radius. Jackson
Airport Hotel or Yellowson
3305 Kansas City.
MISCELLANEOUS
MATHEMATICS. If you find yourself in need of help, call Lacy T. Daugherty, or call Mickey Balfour. ONLY ONE is best - Balfour's for watch repair. 411 Ward 14th. If
Did You Know That—
Boston — (UP)— America's first stagecoach was known as Stavers Flying Stage, which began operating between here and Portsmouth, N. H., in 1761.
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Official Bulletin
Nov. 29,1948
Kansen Board, 4 p.m. tomorrow.
107 Journalism.
S. A.M., 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Lindley auditorium, Speaker, Warren E. Blazier, personnel director, Beach Aircraft Corp., Wichita. "Job opportunities in the Aircraft Industry."
Coffees and Forums, 4 p.m. Wednesday, Pine room, Union. Prof. J. M. Osma, "Should Franco Spain Enter the U.N. or Any Federation of European States?"
Archery club initiation, Miss Stapleion's house, Wednesday. Pay fee 102 Robinson by Wednesday morning.
A. S.C. regular meeting, 7:15 pm tomorrow, Pine room, Union.
A.W.S. Senate, 5 p.m., tomorrow,
at office of dean of women.
Episcopal College club Holy Communion, 7 a.m. tomorrow, Trinity Episcopal church followed by breakfast at Parish house.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Atom Smasher Being Built At Blake To Be 'Best Controlled In The World'
If you can imagine yourself sitting at a control panel shooting proton "bullets" at a metal target and "watching," with the eyes of a Geiger counter, the atom particles fly off, there may be a place for you with the group building the three million volt generator in Blake annex.
The atom smasher under construction here will be the only instrument of its kind between Illinois and the west coast.
The generator is technically known as the Van de Graaff electrostatic generator. There are 26 machines already in operation and about the same number being built.
It will be possible to control the voltage within 1-20 of 1 per cent of the total voltage. At the maximum potential of about three million volts, it will vary only a plus or minus 1,500 volts.
In pointing out that the machine is not a cyclotron, L. W. Seagondollar, assistant professor of physics, said, "great care and expense are going into this generator to make it the best controlled atom smasher in the world."
With this force acting as a repellent, protons of the hydrogen atom will be fired at the target through a vacuum tube. By observing what breaks off, and the speed and direction of the particles, it is hoped to relate this information to tell how fast the bullets go into the target.
Mr. Seagondollar received his degree from the University of Wisconsin and worked at the Manhattan project at Los Alamos, N. M. during the war. R. W. Krone, instructor in physics and the other staff member working on the generator, is a graduate of Johns Hopkins university.
The project was started in September, 1947, and should be operating the summer of 1949.
Substitution of compressed air for the lung power of the glass blower was one of the first industrial modifications of the ancient art of glass making.
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1948
UN Proposes New Berlin Plan
By UNITED PRESS
Argentina's Juan A. Bramugli discussed today with Western and Russian delegates to the United Nations what was described as a "new and final plan" for a compromise settlement of the Berlin crisis.
Berlin residents in the Americans, British and French sectors will vote Sunday in municipal elections, but the Russians have forbade such balloting in their area of the city.
While the president of the U.N. security council made his new mediation attempt in Paris, German Communists apparently were preparing to proclaim a new Berlin regime, and the last vestiges of unified four-power control of the German capital seemed about to disappear.
Bramuglia's new plan, which was approved yesterday by the six small so-called "neutral" nations of the security council, calls for a joint committee of Berlin experts to work out, under the auspices of the security council, a scheme for introducing the Soviet eastern mark as the sole currency in all Berlin. The Russian blockade which has cut off all supplies by rail, highway, or barge from the Western zones to the western sectors of the city would be lifted at the same time that the currency plan was made effective.
The Israeli government was expected to file a formal application for U.N. membership today, the anniversary of the U.N. partition decision a year ago which created the Jewish state. The partition decision later was revoked by the U.N. but the State of Israel was proclaimed anyhow when the British mandate expired last April. American delegate John Foster Dulles said he hoped for a Palestinian settlement soon along the lines of the original partition decision.
In Tokyo, indications were that the executions of former Japanese Premier Hideko Tojo, who ordered the Pearl Harbor attack, and six other Japanese warlords, may be only a few hours away. Gen. Douglas MacArthur's headquarters set up a 24-hour watch to be prepared to inform the press, which will not be permitted to witness the hangings, when the executions have been carried out. It appeared that Tojo and the others might die at dawn tomorrow Tokyo time (late today in the United States).
A strong Chinese Communist force estimated at 100,000 men was trying to force a river crossing 125 miles north of Nanking in a push toward the Nationalist capital. At the same time an American navy plane was flying Madame Chiang Kai-Shek, wilde of the Chinese Generalissimo, to the United States to make an urgent appeal for U.S. aid.
An article written by Leonard Snyder, journalism senior, will appear in a future issue of The Western Horseman, a magazine published in Colorado Springs. Colo.
Life Of Comanche Told In Article
Entitled "Comanche Still Lives," the article relates the life story of Comanche, a U.S. cavalry horse now preserved in Dyche museum.
Comanche and a Pawnee Indian scout were the only survivors of the Battle of the Little Big Horn, commonly called "Custer's last stand," in 1876.
Grads Change Jobs
Alan Stewart and Patricia Penney, class of '48 in journalism, report their new addresses.
Stewart, formerly of the Lawrence Outlook, is now employed by the Daily Mercury-Chronicle, of Manhattan, Kan.
Miss Penney is employed as secretary to the publicity director of a theatrical, commercial and television motion picture company in Hollywood, Cal.
Carr, Smith To Be 'Brainbuster' Guests
T. DeWitt Carr, dean of the School of Engineering, and George B. Smith, dean of the School of Education, will be the guests on the KFKU Brainbusters program at 9:30 tonight.
The quiz show features three faculty members as "brains." Questions are sent in by the listeners, Emil L. Telelfel, assistant professor of journalism, is the regular member of the "brain trust," "Larry Edwards," L. E. Stellenwerck in real life, is the moderator for the program.
Gondoliers Cast Chosen
The Light Opera guild's production, "The Gondolliers," will be double-cast this year. The alternatives will play the leads and the lends will take the place of the alternates for the matinee.
The cast chosen is Jeanne Aldrider, fine arts senior; Mildred Garisson, fine arts senior; Clarence Hooper, education senior; Harry Spencer, education senior; Charles O'Connor, journalism junior; Robert Paris, graduate student; Eric Ericson, College special student; Richard Bennett, education junior; Nancy Messenger, fine arts junior; Ruth Russell, graduate student; Joan Rodgers, fine arts senior; Mary L. Lucas, fine arts junior; William Wilcox, education junior; John Wesley, College sophomore; Nancy Rutrahauff, fine arts special student; Kathryn Walters, fine arts junior; Bernadine Read, education junior; Boyd Bainter, business junior; Harriett Harlow, fine arts senior, and Betty Rae Thomas, fine arts senior.
The final decision of who will have the leads and who will be the alternates will be made after two weeks of rehearsal.
The committee which made the selections consisted of Don Dixon, assistant professor of speech; G. C. Simpson, assistant professor of organ and theory; and Gerald M. Carney, assistant professor of music education.
Prof. Robert Toft To Speak
On Lawrence History, Friday
Robert Taft, professor of chemistry, will speak on "Lawrence in the 60's and 70's" at the annual meeting of the Lawrence Historical society at 7:30 p.m. Friday.
The meeting will be held at the chamber of commerce office in the Wren building.
Oilman Violates Law Daily Just To Park His Cadillac
Houston. Tex.—(UP)—W. W.'s Cadillac was there again today, parked in its usual bus zone with the usual pinkish $5 traffic ticket under the windshield wiper.
To Houston police, already sagging under this booming city's traffic burdens, it meant that millionaire oilman Wesley W. West would once again shell out $5 a day for the privilege of parking his shiny automobile
It started eight months ago, police inspector W. P. Haley remembered when buses snarled downtown traffic because they had to halt in the street at the Sterling building stop. A big Cadillac blocked their regular zone.
"So," said inspector Haley, scratching his head, "I had a talk with Mr. West. He was nice — reminded me that police were doing their duty by tagging his car. And he said he was doing his part by paying the fines."
Inspector Haley looked at the ground. "And he's perfectly right—perfectly within the existing law—and doesn't have to move that Cad-
Every day for a week traffic officer Barney Friery smacked the owner with a $5 ticket. Every day it was promptly paid, but the traffic situation got no better.
Other Houston police, in their trim two-toned blue and gray uniforms, prefer not to talk about Mr. West. Inspector Haley confided, however, that the force had been caused a little "embarrassment and inconvenience" by his action, although he has enriched departmental tills by approximately $1,000 in parking fines.
Luckily, the inspector observed,
the traffic situation is saved on certain days. Mr. West is out of the city on business frequently, and when he's gone, traffic machinery moves slick as a whistle.
Although the $5 tickets get paid without a whimper, the oilman has made one complaint to the police. With so many people lined up waiting for buses, the entrance to the building is so clogged he can hardly get to his office.
Husbands Scream Protests Over Poll By Labor Bureau On Clothing Bills
Baby Sit, Play Detective, Drive A Car-That's The Taxi Driver's Job
illace of his one inch once a ticket has been issued."
"We do everything from minding babies to putting out laundry," says one Lawrence cab driver. Often housewives take a taxi to the grocery store and give Junior his outing at the same time. It falls to the versatile cab driver to baby sit while mother shops.
One driver was asked by a housewife to dump the garbage, while she
By UNITED PRESS
Indignant husbands from coast to coast gave the U.S. Labor department the razzberry today for saying married men spend more for clothes than their wives.
Nelson Named To New Group
Dean J. H. Nelson of the Graduate school has been appointed to the advisory committee on graduate studies of the Institute of International Education, New York City. The first meeting will be held Thursday and Friday, Dec. 16, 17 in New York.
This advisory committee will act as a selection agency for graduate students in carrying out the provisions of the Fullbright bill. This bill enables American students to study abroad on the proceeds from the sale of surplus war materials.
Comedian Bob Hope summed up the general male attitude when he cracked: "That sounds like a poll taken in the Fiji islands. It certainly isn't so around Hollywood where most men are wearing dungarces to pay their wives' clothes bills."
Most wives polled by the United Press agreed with the labor department's findings. Its survey of the nation's 34 largest cities showed that the average husband spends up to $159 a year on clothes, while his wife can get along on about $139.
"It's impossible," snorted Albert Watkins, a construction worker in San Francisco. "Besides, I don't believe surveys anymore since the election."
The husbands found a sympathetic champion in Mrs. Carola Mandel of Chicago who was named one of the nation's 10 best-dressed women last year and whose husband is president of a large department store.
"When they say $136," inquired commentator Gabriel Heatter, "Do they mean for a year, or for a week?" He thought the survey must have been made by a woman.
"Of course the wives spend more," commented F. A. Montgomery, a fuel oil salesman in Philadelphia. "I'm sorry this phone call isn't televised. If you could see my pants, you wouldn't have to ask that question."
"I'm afraid I must disagree with the labor department," she said. "Have you ever seen a man trying to keep his wife in silk stockings seven days a week?"
Mrs. Mary Schwaller of Cleveland, a secretary, admitted that she spends about 60 per cent of the family clothing budget on herself.
"But then," she added, "I have a very good husband. He never throws any of his clothes away."
However there was another passenger, a mortician, who performed the ritual.
Sometimes strange requests are made by passengers. A 95-year-old woman wanted to be taken to "the stone house with two doors and driven to the north door." Calling upon his detective powers the driver finally ascertained she wanted the Social Service house.
New innovations such as the two way radio also bring about strange situations. One illustrates the fast service the two way radio gives the taxi business. Thinking that he would be able to dress while waiting for a taxi one LawRENCESON called a cab and was caught without his trousers.
Besides enabling fast service the two way radio allows drivers to report accidents quickly, will give train schedules to be bewildered passengers, and report the current movies to the undecided ones.
In connection with the last service, Cab 25 tuned in to find what shows were playing. In replying the dispatcher said, "25 has a 'Date with Judy'."
The range for these radios is ten miles. Any more is prohibited by law since it might conflict with the surrounding stations in Kansas City and Topeka.
Sunflower Women's Gym Class Tonight
The regular meeting of the women's gym class at Sunflower will be tonight from 7:45 to 9:30 in the Village gymnasium. Mrs. Betty Hallberg will conduct the class.
Mrs. Betty Lou Collins, Sunflower representative of the University said that wives.of all students from Sunflower are invited to the meetings. The women do calisthenities, play volley ball, run races and get general physical education instruction, Mrs. Collins said.
There are no fees for the gym classes.
Archery Club To Initiate With Skits, Buffet Supper
Initiation of new members of the Archery club will be held at 6 p.m. Wednesday, at the home of Miss Joie L. Stapleton, associate professor of physical education, 1046 Vermont street.
Skits will be performed by those been initiated as the initiation ceremony. After the ceremonies a buffet supper will be served.
$5.000 Gift To KU For Lectureship
A gift of $5,000 from Mrs. Logan Clendening of San Marino, Calif., the Kansas University Endowment association to establish the Logan Clendening memorial lectureship in medicine was announced during vacation by Chancellor Deane W Malott.
The annual lectureship at School of Medicine will honor late Dr. Logan Clendening of Kank City, Mo. He was a member of the class of 1907 and served on the medical faculty for many years prior to his death in 1945.
Dr. Franklin D. Murphy, dean of the School of Medicine, who will choose the lecturer each year, said that although Mrs. Clendening left the subject open, the lectureship would probably be limited to the history and philosophy of medicine, of which Dr. Clendening was a great scholar.
Mrs. Clendening is the former Dorothy Hixon, daughter of the late Frank P. Hixon, Wisconsin lumberman, whose endowment made possible the Hixon laboratory for medical research at the K.U. medical center in Kansas City.
Dr. Murphy described the gift as a contribution to better medicine. "It and other lectureships enable the school to offer students contacts with great medical personalities from the entire nation."
Dr. Clendening was a nationally known physician. His daily routine appeared in metropolitan newspapers that he wrote. He was presented to K.H. after his death.
In discussing the expected repeal of the Taft-Hartley law, Mr. White said, "Labor again can have the closed shop and will be permitted to contribute funds in political matters. One of the biggest mistakes in the law is that it is punitive and not corrective. Out of the 45,000 workers in New York who voted the point, 44,000 voted to ream their union leaders. This proves the law could not have been to protect the worker from his union leaders."
When asked about the prevention of jurisdictional disputes, he said that they never would be abolished. "The jurisdictional dispute is on
"The jurisdictional dispute intricate and essential phase to the system of free enterprise," he said.
"We'll get rid of the Taft-Hartley law and this will appease labor to some extent," he said. "But labor is abused in the future, wouldn't be surprised to see a labor party formed."
Commenting on John L. Lewis he said that Mr. Lewis was probably more of a "free enterprise" be liever than a lot of the capitalists.
Malott Gets Post As AAU Executive
Henry M. Wriston, president of Brown university was elected president, and Dr. Frank P. Graham head of the University of North Carolina, was elected vice-president
Chancellor Deane W. Malott has been elected secretary-treasurer of the Association of American Universities.
The AAU is a group representing 34 of the leading state and private universities of the country. It composed largely of graduate deans and deals with graduate study problems. Its major function is to serve officially for higher education in the country.
Labor may form a separate labor political party, Samuel S. White manager of Kansas City Joint Boyle International Ladies Garment Workers union, A. F. of L. Kansas City, Mo., said recently in an interview.
Melott To Speak In KC
Chancellor Deane W. Malet will speak to the members of the Medical School Auxiliary at Memorial hospital in Kansas City today at 3 p.m His speech will be a general discussion of the University.
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48
University Daily Kansan STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
World Church Leader Will Be At Westminster
The Rev. Leonardo Dia, moderator of the United Evangelical church in the Philippines, and active world Christian leader, will be a guest at Westminster house tomorrow. The Rev. Mr. Dia will speak on "The Philippines and the World Council of Churches" which he attended in August at Amsterdam.
He has been in the forefront of the movement in the Philippines to unite the Evangelical church
NORTH EASTERN RAILWAY CORPORATION
BISHOP LEONARDO DIA
groups. The Rev. Mr. Dia was elected one of four bishops of this united church with responsibilities for churches in the Visayas.
The Rev. Mr. Dia was a delegate to the Assembly of the World Council of Churches in August. He was also elected to the central committee of the World Council and to the Ad Interim committee of the International Missionary council.
He is a native of Southern Luzon, having first met the Evangelical gospel while living in a mission seminary at Legaspi. He was graduated from Union Theological seminary in Manila and was called in 1947 to the pastorate of the Legaspj church. His 11 years in the pastorate brought him outstanding influence in the Philippine church. In his capacity as world leader, he has attended as delegate conferences in the United States; Madras, India; and now Amsterdam.
He is now chairman of the Board of Trustees of Silliman university, where he is well acquainted with the problems of the university, one which has been badly bombed and is now accommodating more than double its pre-war enrollment.
the men are Capt. Clifford A. Fines, University of Colorado, Capt. John J. Laffan, University of Missouri, and Capt. William L. Messmer, University of Nebraska.
NROTC Leaders Meet With Terrell
The Westminster Fellowship invites all students to meet the Rev. Mr. Dia at Westminster house tomorrow at 8 p.m.
Captain Terrell will report on the national convention of the Association of N.R.O.T.C. colleges and universities which was held at Northwestern university, Nov. 19 and 20.
The commandants of the Naval Reserve Officers Training corps of the Universities of Missouri, Nebraska, and Colorado, will confer today and tomorrow with Capt. W. R. Terrell, commandant of the Kansas University unit.
Checks Of Vets To Come Soon
Veterans' checks should be out today and tomorrow, E. R. Elbel, director of veterans affairs, said today.
"Several veterans received back pay on a supplementary pay roll Nov. 20 but there are still many veterans with compensation due them. We hope this time will clear up all back compensation." he said.
Carlson Writes To CORE Head
Gov. Frank Carlson, referring to racial segregation in campus cafes, said in a recent letter to Ray Williams, C.O.R.E. president, that "if the present situation works a hardship on the Negro students, I am certain that college authorities would be more than pleased to cooperate with their group in working out the situation."
The Governor received a report Nov. 8 protesting racial discrimination in the cafes. It was presented to him by Y.M.C.A., Y.W.C.A., Negro Students' Association, American Veterans' committee, and the Committee on Racial Equality.
Governor Carlson also wrote, "It is true that not all eating places near the University are open to Negro students; however, there are a number of places within a reasonable distance of the college that are open after school hours to Negro students."
He named the main cafeteria, the ballroom cafeteria, the Palm room and the Union fountain.
William Johnson, president of the committee representing the protesting organizations, said that the closest non-university eating place which Negro students may patronize is more than half a mile down the hill.
Williams said he appreciated the governor's interest, but that he believes the situation still warrants action by the University.
Trio Rescues Rail Worker
Kenneth Dougan, engineering freshman, Raymond Stevenson, engineering sophomore, and Richard Zink, Lawrence, heard Freeman's cries as they were driving home from a dance. Freeman had fallen from a Rock Island work train shortly after midnight and landed in a creek near Calhoun bluffs east of Topeka. His back was broken, but he had crawled to the road, and was suffering from exposure when the three men found him.
Two University students were instrumental in saving the life of Gerald Freeman, 32-year-old railroad worker, late Saturday night.
The second annual Hi-Y model legislature will convene in Topeka at the State house on Friday and Saturday. One-hundred eight-five boys and club sponsors representing 0 Hi-Y clubs from the state of Kansas will participate.
Hi-Y Clubs Meet This Week
They took him to Christ's hospital in Topeka.
The major speakers at the pre-operative conference the past week were Rhoten A. Smith, assistant instructor of political science, and Ethan P. Allen, professor of political science.
Gives Sunflower Bus Times After Students Criticize
In the Nov. 15 issue of the University Daily Kansan, an article on students hitchhiking from Sunflower to Kansas University said, "Only one early bus leaves each morning (from Sunflower)." The article added that "the greatest factor which started many students thumbling rides is the lack of good bus transportation."
C. S. Woodlan, Jr., district passenger agent of the Continental Bus system, formerly the Santa Fe trailways, said Monday that two busses instead of one leave Sunflower in time to bring students to the University for 8 a.m. classes. He said also that two more busses arrived at Lawrence in time for 9 and 10 a.m. classes. Altogether, 10 busses make the trip from Sunflower each day.
Sunflower to Lawrence
Mr. Woodland pointed out that though a few busses had been removed from the run due to higher costs, the fare remains the same as it was during the war. He added that the Continental system tried to make the Sunflower-K.U. run a paying proposition, or to at least break even, and yet furnish the best possible service to the students.
The complete schedule is as follows:
Sunflower to Lawrence
Busses Leaving Arriving
2 7:20 a.m. 7:50 a.m.
1 8:30 a.m. 8:55 a.m.
1 9:10 a.m. 9:40 a.m.
1 12:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m.
1 4:05 p.m. 4:35 p.m.
1 4:20 p.m. 4:50 p.m.
1 5:45 p.m. 6:15 p.m.
1 6:45 p.m. 7:10 p.m.
1 11:30 p.m. 11:59 p.m.
Lawrence to Sunflower
1 6:15 a.m. 6:35 a.m.
2 6:45 a.m. 7:15 a.m.
1 7:50 a.m. 8:15 a.m.
1 10:00 a.m. 10:30 a.m.
2 12:00 12:30 p.m.
1 3:45 p.m. 4:15 p.m.
2 5:15 p.m. 5:45 p.m.
Board Hits History Text
Wichita, Nov. 30 — (UP) — The Wichita Board of Education asked the state today to remove from Kansas schools the controversial history textbook, "The American Way of Life."
Dr. Wade C. Fowler, Wichita superintendent of schools, termed the book "unsuitable for use as a text."
Last week when the book first came under fire in Wichita, Dr. L W. Brooks, state superintendent, revealed that it has been a controversial piece of school literature in Kansas for some time, and that schools have petitioned to be permitted to use other history books in its stead. On the other hand, many history teachers have informed Dr. Brooks that the book is excellent in its new approach.
Adopted as the only history text for high school seniors, the book is used on a compulsory basis throughout the state. The contract for its use has one more school year to run.
He said it was "the history of the development of certain notions rather than a history of America.
That approach, said Dr. Brooks, was sociological rather than an emphasis on political and military event telling.
Dr. Fowler cited two basic reasons for viewing the text as unsuitable: He characterized it has having "a decided point of view," and not being "rich enough in historical material."
Said the Wichita superintendent: "A suitable text should be so unbiased you could not tell whether the persons writing it were Republicans or Democrats."
Paul Kitch, Wichita Board of Education president, said the liberal attitude of the history was not to be condemned for itself but "the fact that it sets out deliberately to indoctrinate makes it undesirable."
Duo-Pianists Play Tomorrow
Arthur Gold and Robert Fizdale, two-piano team, will appear at 8:20 p.m. tomorrow in Hoch auditorium, as a program in the major University concert series.
The program will include both modern and classical numbers; "Siellienne" by Bach, "Sonata in D Major" by Mozart, "Variations on a theme by Joseph Haydn" by Brahms, "Danzon Cubano" by Copland, "Danse Creole" by Milhaud, "Brasiliera" by Milhaud, "Hoe-Down" by Copland, and "Suite Champetre" which was written for and dedicated to Gold and Fizdale by Rieti.
The duo-pianists are both still in their twenties, but have played more than 160 recitals and orchestral concerts since their Town Hall debut two years ago. Their first appearance as a two-piano team was in 1944 at the Arts club in Chicago.
Both were child prodigies in the field of music, and began studying piano at an early age. Mr. Gold was born in Toronto, Canada of Russian parentage and has studied under Rosina and Josef Lhevinena.
Mr. Fitzdale was born in Chicago, and has studied under Louise Robyn and Ernest Hutcheson for sixteen years.
Student activity tickets admit to the concert.
Prof Enters Neff Trial
Dr. Ray Q. Brewster, head of the department of chemistry at the University, was called to the witness stand in the trial of George Neff, Perth., Kan. farmer, Nov. 24. Neff is standing trial a second time on the charges of having poisoned his wife and fatally shot his brother-in-law, Kenneth Wynn.
The evidence introduced by Dr. Brewster enabled the state to reopen its prosecution of the case after the attorney for the state had rested his case.
Dr. Brewster testified that he had been called into the case by Ed Rooney, special prosecutor for the state, in April. In letters written May 11 and 12, Dr. Brewster told the defense attorney that he had found positive evidence of strychnine in the vital organs of Mrs. Neff.
An anonymous telephone call from Lawrence had directed the state's attorney's attention to the evidence. Dr. Brewster said that he had not revealed the information because he felt bound by his employers, the defense.
The case is being tried before Judge Wendell Ready. The first trial of Neff ended in a jury deadlock of 6 to 6 for conviction of the wife's death, and 8 to 4 on the shooting of the brother-in-law.
WEATHER
Kansas Fair with little change in temperature today and tonight. Wednesday increasing cloudiness and slightly warmer. High today 45 to 50. Low tonight mid 20's.
See Little Hope For Settlement Of Berlin Crisis
Berlin, Nov. 30—(UP)—The last hopes for any quick settlement of the Berlin crisis between Russia and the Western Powers disappeared today.
The Communist action in Berlin had the apparent approval of Soviet authorities. It was seen as the first move in a Communist attempt to gain control of the entire city—a move which Col. Frank Howley, American commandant in Berlin, had said would not be permitted to succeed.
While mediation attempts continued in the United Nations at Paris, the Communist bloc of the Berlin city assembly met in rump session and split the German capital in two, ending the last traces of unified control.
The Communists did not invite city assembly members from the Western sectors to their meeting. They named their own mayor. They called for city elections for a new assembly, but meanwhile took steps to appoint an assembly until such elections should be held.
It already had been made clear that they would not recognize officials who will be chosen in municipal elections Sunday in the American, British and French sectors. No elections will be held Sunday in the Russian sector.
A disturbing threat of violence hung over the crisis-ridden German capital, focal point for more than five months of the cold war between Russia and the Western Big Three.
Communists summoned a great mass meeting later today. And Marshall Vassily D. Sokolovsky, Russian military governor for Germany, had been quoted as telling Red leaders they should not fear the possibility that violence would be necessary.
In Paris, Argentina's Juan A. Bramuglia, president of the U.N. security council until his term expires at midnight today, continued an attempt to reach a compromise settlement of the Berlin dispute.
But his latest move seemed no more than a face-saving action, undertaken so that he would leave the chairmanship of the council during a time when mediation moves still were being made. The Western Powers had made plain that they were not interested in any involved settlement schemes which simply would consume more time while the Russian-backed German Communists proceed to split Berlin.
Five students were elected to the Phi Beta Kappa in the fall election Monday. The lowest grade average was 2.83.
One of the worst fogs in many years was aiding Soviet tactics. It grounded the Anglo-American airlift on which the 2,500,000 Germans in the Western sectors depend for food and supplies.
Five Elected To Phi Beta Kappa
The students elected were Jesse H. Foster, Jr., 1st year law, Virginia Joseph, Kenneth E. Miller, Dorothy J. Scroggy, and Charles R. Young, College seniors.
Names of candidates for election to the honorary academic fraternity are submitted to the chapter by a committee which has checked the scholastic records of the candidates. Election is by popular vote of the members of the chapter.
There will be two more elections of new members to the organization during the spring semester.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 194
Official Bulletin
A.W.S. House meeting, 4 today.
Carruth hall.
Nov. 30,1948
Y-Kroot of Y.W.C.A., 5 today, Henle
house.
Quill club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow,
East room, Union.
Jay James, 5 p.m. tomorrow, Pine room, Union.
Alpha Phi Omega, 7:30-8:30 p.m.
tomorrow. East room_Union.
A.L.E. smoker, 7:30 p.m. Thursday,
Men's lounge, Union. Prof Dresden.
"The Significance of Physics to Engineers."
A.S.T.E. chili supper, 7 tonight.
Fowler shops. All members bring prospect. Prof. Bradshaw will speak on registration of engineers.
University Women's club, 3 to 5 Thursday, Museum of Art. Dr. Maxon, speaker.
La reunion de Nool du Cenere française aura lieu leju le 2 decembre se heurt en demie dans la saille 131 Frank Strong.
Sociology club, 4 p.m. Thursday,
East room, Union. Discussion of
sociology and social work majors.
Dues of 50c payable.
Students for Norman Thomas
7:30 p.m. Thursday, 107 Frank
Strong. Russell Barrett, "Does
Socialism Mean Dictatorship?"
Bacteriology club, 7:15 tonight
501 Snow.
A.S.C. regular meeting, 7:35 to-
night. Pine room.
S. A.M. 7:30 tonight, Lindley auditorium. Speaker, Warren E. Blazier, personnel director, Beach Aircraft Corp., Wichita. Job opportunities in the aircraft industry.
Phi Delta Kappa. 7:30 tonight
110 Fraser.
Y. W.C.A. freshmen nominations committee, 5 p.m. tomorrow, Henley.
K. U. Dames, S.p.m. tomorrow, 101 Snow.
Coffees and Forums, 4 p.m. tomorrow,
Pine room, Union. Prof. Osma,
"Should Franco Spain Enter
the U.N. or Any Federation of
European States?" Everyone welcome.
Archery club initiation tomorrow. Miss Stapleton's house. Pay fee in 102 Robinson by tomorrow morning.
Mortar Board, 9 p.m. Thursday WREN building.
Square Dance club, 7:30 p.m.
tomorrow, Recreation room, Union.
Beginners welcome. Plans for trip
All members.
I. S.A. Council, 5 p.m. Thursday East room, Union. Dinner. Bring 87c
Y.W.C.A. freshman commission
7:15 p.m. Thursday, Henley house
Women's Rifle club will fire tonight from 7 to 8 and 8 to 9.
K.U.D.F. discussion group, 4 p.m.
tomorrow. Myers hall. Topic: Back-
ground for racial segregation in the
churches.
SHADOW: MEET-MR. GLUESING
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.
William A. Gluesing shakes hands with his own shadow in the General Electric "House of Magic" science show. A phosphorescent screen enables him to walk off the stage and leave his shadow behind, fold his shadow up in a box, or to do any of the many things you may have wished you could do with your shadow.
Blind New York Student Returns To Classroom After Two Years
Niagara Falls, N.Y.—(UP)—Two years ago last June, Anthony Heaney left Niagara university to spend the summer vacation at his home in Geneva, N.Y.
He planned to return to the campus the following September to begin his sophomore year. Instead, he embarked on one of the hardest and most heartbreaking fights of a young person's life. He began a losing battle to save his eyesight.
This fall, 21-year-old Tony finally was back at Niagara as a sophomore. With him is his constant companion, a seeing-eye dog named Boots.
Things are quite different from Tony's freshman year. Instead of pen and notebook, he carries a braille stylus to class. His books are put on records for him by the American Foundation for the Blind in New York.
His ambitions are unchanged. He is still working toward a bachelor of science degree in social science. He still plays his trombone and writes for the college paper, and
Although Tony lost the use of his left eye after an operation in 1944, he did not become completely blind until December, 1846, when four operations in Rochester proved unsuccessful. At first, he says, it was hard to take.
Slowly his confidence began to return. He began taking long walks along Geneva's tree-shaded streets
The next four months were the worst of his life. All hope for his sight was gone and he refused to leave his home or mix with friends,
he still wants to become a news paperman.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
Magic House Here Dec 10
General Electric's "House of Magic," a science show, will be presented by Mr. William A. Gluesing, from the General Electric research laboratory, at 4 and 8 p.m. Friday, Dec. 10 in Hoch auditorium.
M. G. B. ROGERS
WILLIAM A. GLUESING
Among the most impressive features of the show is sending sound across the stage on a light beam. A record is played; and the music is sent across the stage to a loud speaker on a narrow beam of light. The music may be stopped by breaking the beam of light.
A man shaking hands with his shadow, visible sound and audible light, an electric train which obeys voice commands, paper which explodes, and producing lighting with a match are some of the other demonstrations that will be presented.
The "House of Magic" show has been presented before more than 13 million persons in the past 15 years. It has been presented at every major exposition since Chicago's Century of Progress.
Refresher In Obstetrics
A three-day course in obstetrics and gynecology Dec. 6 to 8 will be the third refresher offering of the year at the University of Kansas Medical center in Kansas City, H. G. Ingham, K.U. medical extension director, announced today.
Guest lecturers will be Dr. John H. Moore, Grand Forks, N. Dak; Dr. Lucien R. Pyle, Topeka; Dr. Lawrence M. Randall, Rochester, Minn.; and Dr. Ray A. West, Wichita.
Mr. Ingham said one California physician already had enrolled. Regi- itations have also been received from Oklahoma and Arkansas as well as Kansas and Missouri. Fifty physicians attended a similar course last year.
Instructors from the K.U. medical faculty will be Drs. L. A. Calkins, Kenneth E. Cox, H. M. Floersch, H. L. Gainey, Buford G. Hamilton, and Robert L. Newman, all of Kansas City; and Dr. Raymond A. Schwegler, Jr., Lawrence.
Odanah. Wis—(UP)—Wilfred L.
Sharlow took the long way home and
got delayed when he borrowed his
employer's automobile to go after his
laundry.
The Man Was Carried Away
The 40-year-old farmhand was found more than a month later in Klamath Falls, Ore., with the car. His employer, farmer Chris Olsen, said Sharlow told him he was going only to Odanah to pick up his laundry.
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $2 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.90 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence Kane, Kentucky University year except Saturdays and days. University holidays and examinations. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 16, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kens., under act of March 3, 1879.
"HOUSE OF MAGIC" SUN MOTOR
FOR MAGIC SUN MOTOR
THE world's first "sun motor" of its size and kind is demonstrated in the General Electric "House of Magic" science show by W. A. Gluesing. This is one of many demonstrations in the science show which consists of interesting and unusual new developments of the General Electric Research Laboratory in Schenectady, N. Y. The painted gear at the left is driven by a motor which runs on electric energy converted from light. The power plant which makes electricity from light is the bank of photo voltaic cells at the right.
A. S. H.
How a rapidly spinning gear can be "stopped" while in full motion is one of the many fascinating demonstrations in the General Electric "House of Magic" science show. Revolving 900 times a minute it becomes only an indistinct blur, making it impossible for engineers to study its action while operating at full speed.
Under the stroboscopic light, however, the rapidly spinning "gear" appears to stand still, allowing engineers to study its action so they can design safer and better-running machines.
The image shows a person sitting on a flat surface, holding an object that appears to be a large gear. The gear is yellow with black teeth and a central hub. The person's posture suggests they are in the middle of an activity, possibly related to machinery or engineering.
Her 'Begf' Is Well-Founded
Salem, N. H.—(UP) The town's one-man police force should be expanded, Mrs. Anne M. Noyes argued at a board of trade meeting. The next day, Mrs. Noyes, who operates a meat market, had evidence to support her argument. Her butcher shop had been broken into and looted of cash and food.
The Murphys Go To Harvard
Cambridge, Mass.—(UP) New William S. Murphy, Harvard class of '55, died 33 years ago he left funds to pay for the education at Harvard "of any young man or men named Murphy." Since then, five Murphys a year have been graduated with their tuition paid by Murphy scholarships.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30.1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Socially Speaking
ATO 'Apache' Party
Alpha Tau Omega held an "Apache" Party Nov. 19 at the Model, Kan., school house. The guests included Bill Hintze and Sally Whitney from the University of Oklahoma, Barbara Hume, Joan Duvall, Maxine Lindley, Mary Covey, Ruth Mitchell, Jean Tallant, Margaret Miller, Kathryn Kubik.
Virginia Ray, Joan Bushey, Rose Evelyn Tuohey,Joan Bryan, Carla Haber, Jeanie Biscanin, Martyl Steinert, Shirley Hobbs, Valerie Stagg, Doris Miller, Amy Guinotte, Portia Baldwin, Barbara Brown, Mary Jo Breidenbach; Sue Boyd, Agnes Husband, LEE Pringle, Mary Douglass, Joyce Friesen, Mary Lou Martin, Priscilla Richmond, Charlene Lashbrook, Joe Ann Bousman, Margaret Doll, Gloria Evans, Judith Hall, Joy Brown, Sue Scott Wilson, Georgann Reed.
Sydney Ashton, Patty Edson, Janice Horn, Jeanne Dettean, Chirley Hybarger, Barbara Nesch, Sue Ininger, Melba Mather, Patricia Cheatam, Patricia Davis, Suzanne Van Slyke, Sally Todd, Nancy Matteson, Shirley Siekfan, Betty Sharlet, Marion Moynahan, Milyn Claxton, Bea Senator, Nancy Meyer, Jeanette Leuth.
Dorothy Poindexter, Carolyn Brown, Darlene Stuart, Sue Sperry,
Nancy Lindsey, Susan Woodward,
Margaret Quigley, Barbara Drohan,
Gloria Maxwell, Margaret Leisy,
Pat Brubaker, Alice Appleton,
Patricia Barron, Patricia McManus,
Ethel Pearson, Althea Voss, and Jo
Ann Jacobs.
☆ ☆ ☆
Dinner for N.R.O.T.C. Members
Captain William R. Trell, professor of naval science, gave a dinner Nov. 22. The guests were H. H. Weidensoul, J. E. Dausman, W. G. La Combe, T. C. Fuller, H. R. Bailey, C. H. Hayes, Barbara Burkholder, Dorothy Baldwin, Margaret Miller, Diane Danley, Billie Nave, and Jean Terrell. The men are all first class petty officers of the NRO TC and the women are members of Sigma Kappa sorority.
--division showed that Germans believe a man should have preference in any position he can fill satisfactorily.
Alpha Omicron Pi Hour Dance
The pledges of Alpha Omicron Pi entertained the pledges of Phi Delta Theta with an hour dance Nov. 19.
Iota Sigma Pi Initiates
At a recent meeting held at the home of Mrs. Ralph K. Collins, Iota Sigma Pi, honorary chemistry sorority initiated three new members; Charlotte Sagmoen, college senior; Karthyn Ward, college junior; and Billie J. Moore, freshman in Medicine.
Kathryn E. Faust, graduate, was welcomed as an associate member from the Iowa Chapter. Two women pledged were Magdalena Berger, graduate and medical student and Martha Wilhoit.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
German Women Strive For Equal Career Opportunities
Berlin—(UF)—German women are rebelling against the traditional kirche, kuche, kinder—church, kitchen, home.
The majority of male Germans still believe women belong in the home. But the women themselves are beginning to show different ideas. For one thing, women know that many of them will never be able to marry here and have homes of their own. $ ^{ \textcircled{1}} $
The process is not without opposition, for military government research shows the traditional German attitude toward women, particularly the emphasis upon having children, still holds.
In all Germany, there are 7,500- 000 more women than men. In the American zone, according to the 1946 census, there are 124 women to every 100 men. The difference is even greater in the marriageable ages. For every 100 men between 20 and 25 years of age there are 171 women.
As they turn from Hitler's slogan of "Out of business, and back to husband, kitchen and fireside," they also are becoming clerks, shopkeepers, secretaries, teachers, journalists.
This result of two wars has made women increasingly insistent that there be more opportunity for them in business and the professions, more adequate training for girls so that they may be prepared to earn a decent livelihood.
An opinion survey by military government's information services
Psychologically, according to a military government report, women are better oriented to reconstruction on a democratic basis than men.
Handyman Out On A Limb
"They have no face to save," the report concluded. "Since 1933 they have had no status. They have everything to gain, nothing to lose in a democratic reorganization which sweeps away old stifling traditions."
American officials assert this attitude runs counter to reality. They say it ignores the excess number of women, the pressing need for reconstruction and export production.
Memphis, Teen.—(UP) — The fire department's hook and ladder truck parked in front of a home. Firemen raised the extension ladder against a tall scyamore tree and rescued a trapped handman who had cut off all the tree's lower limbs.
Weddings And Engagements
Bloomer-Case Pinning
Alpha Omicron Pi sorority announces the pinning of Betty Joe Bloomer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bloomer of Claflin, to William R. Case, son of Mr. and Mrs. Delbert B. Case of Atchison. The announcement was made by Mrs. P. H. Klinkenberg, housemother, at a coffee for the Phi Kappa fraternity Nov. 21.
Miss Bloomer wore an orchid corsage. The Misses Janece Bryan, Melba Mather, and Virginia Johnston, who passed chocolates, wore corsages of baby orchids. Mrs. Klinkenburg, Mrs. Case, and Mrs. Bloomer wore corsages of yellow asters.
Edith Rae Williamson, accompanied by Eleanor A. Brown sang "You Are Love." The Phi Kappa and Alpha-O sweetheart songs were also sung.
Fry-Leslie Marriage
Mr. Leslie is a junior in journalism. The couple will be at home at 2112 Vermont.
Helen Fry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.Harold D. Fry of St. Louis was married to Keith Leigh, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ora L. Leslie of Bloeit, at 4 p.m. Friday at the Memorial Presbyterian church in St. Louis.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
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University Daily Kansan
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
'Tigers Milk' Makes Debut Because Of Happy Prince
Washington—(UP)—The year was 1919. It was well past curfew in jolly old London town, and the famed Kit-Kat club was operating outside the law.
Hayden Talbot, the baggy-eyed proprietor (the used to be a newspaper-
man himself), had ushered out the potential spies and dropped the lateh
inside.
Hayden was happily surrounded by a group of close, thirsty friends all from the smart set.
One of the paying customers was Edward, then Prince of Wales, who had dropped in for a nightcap after attending the theater.
"Hayden, old man," he said "I believe I'll have a spot of father's favorite—a glass of that fine tiger's milk. Challied just right, you know."
Hayden brushed a tangle of red fuzz over his bald spot. He was about to reach under the mahogany for the crock of royal spirits when the phone rang.
It was bad news. A tipster was on the wire to inform the inn-keeper that the long arm of the law was reaching at that very moment in that direction of the Kit-Kat. The suggestion over the line was the equivalent of "scram."
Hawden saw himself worming toward the middle of a fine旧 tizy. He quickly flicked the lights and led his guests, Edward included through a hallway and out a back door. And just as the head bobby hit the front gate a good one with his night-stick.
The loudest sign from the small group huddled in the back alley came from the prince. Edward was extremely grateful at having avoided an unpleasant situation and later told his friend, Hayden Talbot, he would grant him any favor he wished within reason.
Our man didn't have to think long. What he would like, said he, was the secret formula for that fine drink called "tiger's milk."
Edward scratched his royal crown and frowned a little. It would take a bit of doing, he explained, but he would try. The recipe had come down in the royal family from the 17th century. It was whispered from one chief royal steward to another. The king himself didn't know what was in the drink except that it had a lof of fresh fruit juices.
Well, it took the prince six months but he kept his promise.
Today the drink is featured by H. Talbott, now manager of the Parrot restaurant in Washington. (Formula still secret.)
"Tiger's milk" comes in two sizes — "Mr. Tiger, 60 cents" and "Miss Tiger" (somewhat more tame)—40 cents.
Tonight the mix—a tough one, folks. I tried it—will begin a sort of international tour. T he restaurant is staging the first of 65 embassy parties, featuring the native dishes of each. The kick off is the Union of South Africa. Main dish: "sowatties," which takes three days to cook. And, of course, an appetizer of "tiger's milk" choice of Mr. or Miss.
Moral To Housewives;
Knives Cut Bread, Too
St. Louis — (UF) — Engaging her husband in a discussion of army strategy and methods of attack, Mrs. Louis Garaviglia displayed a 12-inch knife and declared she was an expert with it.
He skeptical spouse pointed to a spot two feet above his head and shouted "Heigh ho, Silver," while his wife took "him, and let fly."
She missed the target by exactly two feet, sending her mate to the hospital with a crease in his scalp.
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Job Talks For Engineers
Mr. A. C. Johnson, and Mr. C. W. Miller, representatives of the Linde Air Products company, Tonawanda, N.Y., will interview engineers Thursday in 111 Marvin.
They are interested in chemical, mechanical, a few electrical, and any civil engineers interested in research design and development of equipment; chemical, industrial, or mechanical engineers interested in industrial gas production, or equipment production; or chemical, industrial, mechanical or metallurgical engineers interested in selling industrial gases, chemicals, and appliances.
They would like to interview men with doctor of philosophy degrees in the following categories: physical chemists or inorganic chemists to study reactions of metals and silicon chemicals, a crystal physicist for single crystal studies; chemists, chemical engineers, or physics for low-temperature studies, physicists who are electronic experts, chemists or physicists for research on flames, and physicists for diversified problems in physics laboratories. Persons with master of science degrees will be considered in the last category.
A qualification record and an interview schedule may be filled out in 111 Marvin.
Spurned Missouri Woman
Deflates sweetie's Plans
St. Louis—(UP)—Miss Eula Rose Percival was determined to have it out with her boy friend even though he was deliberately avoiding her. To police who caught her tampering with her friend's automobile, Miss Percival explained that she was letting the air out of the tires so he couldn't get away without tipping to her.
NY Times Mentions Bracke In Feature
William Bracke, instructor of English, has been quoted recently by the New York Times feature "In And Out of Books." The quotation was taken from Mr. Bracke's review of "Remembrance Rock" a novel by Carl Sandburg. The review had formerly appeared in the Kansas City Star. Out of nearly fifty reviews of the book made over the entire country, six remarks were chosen for the article.
A copy of the same review has been requested for use at the Waldorf-Astoria book shop
Mr. Bracke has written book reviews for the Kansas City Star the past nine years. His next review, "Roosevelt and Hopkins," will appear there soon.
Nickerson Meets Ph D Tests
James Nickerson, assistant professor of music education, has completed all requirements for a Ph.D. degree from the University of Minnesota. His major is educational psychology.
The music education department has three teachers with Ph.D. degrees, which is matched by few schools in the nation. Other holders of the highest academic degree are E. Thayer Gaston, department chairman, and Miss Elin Jorgensen, associate professor.
Emphasis on the scientific training in music education stems from the new graduate curriculum in musical therapy. K.U. is the first school in the nation to offer graduate training in the field of functional music. The first students entered that course this year.
TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 30. 1948
He Wasn't A Robot Anwav
Houston, Tex. — (UP) — What they think of next department:
Patrolman Fred Woods trailed a pedestrian that made a clanking noise when he walked.
At a police station it was found the noisy pedestrian wore two pairs of pants, neatly sawd together at the cuffs. In between the pants police discovered six tablespoons, a can of chili, a can of tuna fish, 50 feet of clothes line and an electric extension cord.
The man said he had "shopped" at a chain grocery store.
J. Paul Sheedy* Switched to Wildroot Cream-Oil Because He Flunked The Finger-Nail Test
IF YOU were a rhinoc with problem hair, we'd say: Rhinot scratch your hide and seek Wildroot Cream-Oil hair tonic? Translated it means: Try the Wildroot Finger-Nail Test! If you find signs of dryness or loose ugly dandruff, get Wildroot Cream-Oil. It's non-alcoholic-contains lanolin. Groomes hair neatly and naturally without that greasy look. Relieves annoying dryness. Removes loose dandruff. And helps you pass the Fingr-Nail Test. You can get Wildroot Cream-Oil at any drug or toilet goods counter. So get a bottle or tube today. Have your barber give you professional applications. This fellow liked Wildroot Cream-Oil so well he wrote us a leather about it—said it kept his wife from going to Rhino (Nevada that is).
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Spanish Students Give South American Program
Intermediate Spanish students under the direction of George Schauer, their instructor, recently gave a program about mate, a native drink of Uruguay.
Students who gave the program were Billie A. Carter, College junior, James Chamberlain, College sophomore, Billie Dumm, College junior, Ardrye L. Wilson, College junior, and Robert Wood, Collegue junior.
Mr. Schauzer showed pictures of Uruguay and Argentina. Mate, which is the traditional drink of those countries, was served to members.
Graduate To Chicago Job
Kenneth E. White, 48, has been transferred to the Chicago office of the Kansas City Star. He has been employed in the national advertising department of the Star since his graduation.
Blasts From Blake Result
Students in the vicinity of Blake hall have been sent into near panic recently by a deafening noise coming from Blake annex. The blast is caused by opening a three-inch gate valve on the housing of the generator under construction there.
By pulling a lever, 600 cubic feet of air under a pressure of 150 pounds per square inch escape in twenty-five seconds giving off the blast.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
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JESDAY, NOVEMBER 30,1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Double T' May Replace The 'T' ays Andy Kerr
New York, Nov. 30—(UP)—Irres-
sible Andy Kerr was getting
ly today to startle the football
with a new formation—the
table T'—just two years after
being heaved out at Colgate
going too old.
It was a dark day for the snappy the Scotsman when he reached olgate's retirement age of 68 and as forced to leave the Chenango. hile there he had made the Rediders a gridiron power and produced an undefeated, untidy and unforced upon team in 1932.
but he refused, just as had Amos佐斯 Zoag, to sit on the sidelines. o Andy went to Lebanon Valley in pennsylvania and just has completed is second winning year. He still is
way, Jan. 1 East-West Shrine game
San Francisco and, proving that
it hasn't lost any of his zip, is busy
joking up his "Double T."
apply, like a lot of other coaches, er, her straight "T" mania fading. e won't go as far as Penn State's job Higgins, who declares that the T' will be out completely within years.
"Anybody will stick to a formation long as they can win with it," err explained. "But eventually the defenses become so widely-known at the formation must drop off. Most high school coaches are teaching the 'T these days,' he add. "Well, when those boys get to oblige they don't know what to do against the single wing or some other system."
That's why Andy, who used the T" and some single wing this season, is experimenting with his Double T." Under this system, the backpacks are stationed as in the double wing, with the quarterback up under the center and the fullback in his usual "T" spot.
Kerr explains that he "still isn't so old to learn" and the man who elpd bring razzle-dazzle to foot-I gets a hearty smile of agreement om Dartmouth's Tuss McLaughry. "I can remember seeing you when was only 14," McLaughry laughed, and I'll be darned if you look any elder now."
Andy agrees and asserts that he till can teach winning football. The ecords would seem to bear him out. Since he went to Lebanon Valley with his clubs were winners. In 1947
Flying Dutchmen scored four ties against two losses and one tie. Colgate, meanwhile, got one victory and that over a pitifully weak Kings Point team. This season Kerr's club lost only three games out of nine. Colgate won only three out of nine.
Murray Will Play Sul Ross In Bowl
Murray, Ky.. Nov. 30-(UP) Murray State college today accepted a bid to play Sul Ross Teachers of Texas in the Tangerine bowl at Orlando. Fla., the night of Jan. 1.
It will be the Kentuckyians first bowl game.
Athletic director Roy Stewart received the invitation by telephone yesterday, and immediately accepted.
The Texas team has won 10 games and lost none this year, it was reported, while the thoroughbreds of Murray have won nine and lost one to Eastern Kentucky.
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Dodgers In Deal With Hollywood
New York, Nov. 30—(UP)—The Brooklyn Dodgers today became the only major league club with an affiliate in each of the triple-A circuits when they announced the signing of a working agreement with the Hollywood Stars of the Pacific Coast league.
Brooklyn, which controls Montreal in the International league and St. Paul in the American association, signed the pact with Hollywood on a year-to-year basis.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
Basin Bowl Bid To Miami 'Skins
Oxford, O., Nov. 30—(UP)—The Miami university football squad was slated to vote today on a bid to play a New Year's day game in the Basin bowl at Odessa, Tex.
The Redskins were to have voted on the invitation yesterday but decided to postpone their answer 24 hours because of the absence of Coach George Blackburn on a speaking engagement.
Miami was eliminated from the Cigar bowl at Tampa, Fla., yesterday by a wire from J. Rex. Farrior, team selection chairman.
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Irish-Wolverines Top Undefeated
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New York, Nov. 39—(UP)—Headed by two burly customers—Notre Dame and Michigan—the Midwest today boasted seven of the remaining 15 unified, untied football teams going into the final week of the 1948 campaign.
Clemson and California were the only other major units on the perfect list.
The East lost its last major team when the Army ran into difficulties against the Navy at Philadelphia last Saturday. The result was a 21 to 21 tie.
The leading minor team still was the Missouri Valley Vikings, who have stretched their streak to 42 in a row.
Pitt To Get Hamilton
Pittsburgh, Nov. 30-(UP)—The University of Pittsburgh, once a power and later a patsy in intercollegiate football, was expected to start a rebuilding program today with the appointment of Navy's Tom Hamilton as Athletic director.
The University has been considering a revamping of its athletic policy for nearly a year, and has been without an athletic director since James Hagan was ousted before the start of the 1948 season.
The school's athletic committee met last night, and then announced that it probably would name the athletic director today. Chancellor Rufus H. Fitzgerald admitted that Hamilton was one of those being given prominent consideration for the job. Hamilton indicated last week he would be interested.
Hockey Team Wins Two
The women's varsity hockey team stacked up two wins and one loss in the fall schedule of play.
The team was captained by Marilyn Smith, W.A.A. hockey manager.
October 6 on the University field the first team defeated Washburn University, 6 to 0 and Ottawa University, 2 to 0. The B team lost to Ottawa University's B team, 1 to 2.
The team has been coached by Miss Ruth Hoover, associate professor in physical education department.
The high coor for the games was Mary Helen Shepard, center forward with 5 points. Other team members and positions were: Frances Pence, right wing, Pat Luger and Mary Wright, right inners, Donna Mueller, left inner, Betty van der Smissen, left wing, Anne Hendershot, right halfback, Marilyn Smith, center halfback, Beverly Pepper, left halfback Nancy Moore, right fullback Arlene Hill, left fullback and Joan Lippmann, goalie.
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PAGE SIX
.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1948
SPOTLIGHT SPORTS
By Daily Kansan Sports Staff
The Oklahoma Sooners booming powerhouse, Big Seven conference champs, placed only three men on the 1948 Daily Kansan Big Seven All-Star team, but walked off with five spots on the all-conference second team.
Kansas and Missouri pushed Oklahoma for top honors. Both schools placed three men on the first team and an identical number of two on the second team.
The Sooner team was led by All-America candidates Jack Mitchell and Paul (Buddy) Burris, with Wade Wallace barely edging Homer Paine for first team honors.
Kansas, which placed third in the Big Seven standings, landed Dick Tomlinson, Dick Monroe, and Forrest Griffith. Tomlinson was an easy choice for a first team berth while Monroe had to squeak past Bob Fuchs of Missouri and Griffith narrowly topped George Thomas of Oklahoma for the backfield spot.
Unanimous choices for top honors went to two Oklahomaans, Mitchell and Burris. All other positions were closely contested with only one or two ballots separating the first and second team choices.
All-Star selections were determined by ballots cast in the Memorial stadium press box by sports writers covering the Kansas home games. The closest contest among the voters, which could have been settled either way, was the one-half edge Colorado's Ed Pudlik received over Oklahoma's James Owens.
Repeating stars of most 1947 All- Conference teams include Mitchell, Griffith, Burris, Sheehan, Entsminger and Fritz.
The four Kansas coaches who walked off with all berths on the local Big Seven All-coach squad. They are left to right: Norman Cooper, line coach; J. V. Sikes, head coach; Cliff Kimsey, backfield coach. Below right is Mike Getto, assistant coach.
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Rollin Frather, Kansas State; Bob Ebinger, Missouri; John Zisch, Colorado; Ralph Damkroger, Nebraska.
Tackles; Clair Mayes, Oklahoma;
MIKE McCORMACK, KANSAS;
Dick Stevens, Colorado; Dick
Schofield, Missouri; Charles Toogood,
Nebraska; Tom Southard,
Iowa State.
Guards: Stanley West, Oklahoma; Robert Spicer, Colorado; Bronko Marusie, Missouri; KEN SPERRY, Kansas.
Centers; Tom Novak, Nebraska; Pete Tillman, Oklahoma; John Conley, Kansas State; Bill Simons, Colorado; Bob Rust, Iowa State.
Backs; BUD FRENCH, CHARLES MOFFET, DON WILSON, JOHN AMBERG, DICK GILMAN, KANSAS; Dana Atkins, Gerald Hackney, Kansas State; Tony Delmonico, Don Hagin, Malcom Miller, Colorado; Leon Heath, Lindell Pearson, Oklahoma; Dick Braznell, Winford Carter, Missouri; Dong Fergusin, Webb Halber, Iowa State; Frank Callopy Del Weigand, Nebraska.
M. D. R.
Lotteries- and games of chance were outlawed in Wyoming in 1879.
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Ray Evans, in a recent letter to Fred Ellsworth, alumni association secretary, said, "It will be good to be in good old Kansas after spending four and a half grinding months here in the East."
Evans has been keeping his eyes on Kansas and looking forward to the basketball season. "I see where KU has quite a basketball schedule this year—more than usual. It will be nice to see a few of the games again from the sideline."
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
Sports Program Begins At Sunflower
John Fencyk, education senior, has been appointed director of the Sunflower men's sports program.
An organizational meeting is being planned for the early part of December, Mrs. Collins said.
Mrs. Betty Lou Collins, Sunflower representative of the University, said that seasonal sports would be conducted on an intramural type program.
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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
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of
Auburn-'Bama 41 Year Feud Ends Saturday
Atlanta, Nov. 30—(UP)—Alabama and Auburn will play a football game Saturday in Eirmingham for the first time in 41 years. It has taken all that time to disprove the popular legend that the schools dropped athletic relations in 1907 because of "danger to the spectators."
The rumors that excessive bitterness in games from 1892 to 1907 caused free-for-alls and riots with snowballed down through the years. But there is no verification of the reports and, finally, after nearly half a century, they have been dispelled as mythological.
Both schools explain that the series was discontinued because of failure to get together on officials, dates and places.
In the early 'twenties, when Auburn was a major collegiate power Alabama clamored for a return Auburn would not agree.
A decade later Alabama emerged as the elite of Dixie football. Auburn hollered for a game—and didn't get it.
Numerous bills were introduced in the Alabama legislature to require that the teams meet or their appropriations be cut off. All were defeated. This spring authorities of the two institutions scheduled Saturday's fracas.
Administrators have little fear of violence this year. One plausible reason—which has gone unvoiced—is that both teams have had such poor seasons that supporters will find it hard to work up any enthusiasm for either.
The coming clash, in which the unlimited substitution rule is bound to play a prominent role, will be a distant cry from the battering endurance contests of old. In the '07 game, Auburn used 11 players — Alabama won't match such stamina, using a previously unheard-of 15-player total.
That one ended in a 6 to 6 tie, only one of the 11-game series that had even been close. In all, Alabama has won four, Auburn five and there was the tie.
In 1907, coach J. W. H. Pollard of Alabama stunned the football world with the introduction of a "varsity two-step" formation, which "threw the Auburn defense into confusion."
It worked like this;
The team divided into three parts, the left side of the line joining hands behind the line and the right side following suit. The center faced the
backfield. The line skipped into position and the backs followed to either the right or to the left at the signal of the quarterback. One sports writer called the formation "as fancy and as dainty as the minutel."
Despite the comparatively inferior quality of the two teams this year, the long-awaited game doesn't stand to resemble a "minuet." It's the last chance of the season for each to salvage some self-respect and they'll be keeded for a battle royal.
Riotlessly, of course.
The Street and Traffic Safety Lighting Bureau says half of the night fatal traffic accidents are attributable to inadequate thoroughfare lighting.
Breakfast's READY at Skillets Tavern
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CARLOS SANTO DOMINGO
Forrest Griffith, battering "Grif" shoulders fullback duties on Daily Kansan Big Seven All-Star first team.
Big 7 Opens Court Season
Four basketball teams in the Big Seven, where Oklahoma is favored to sack up the championship, will go into action this week, three of them tomorrow night.
By UNITED PRESS
Wednesday's openers will find Nebraska playing Marville (Mo.) State college at Lincoln; Kansas State meeting Emporia State college at Emporia, Kan., and Iowa State playing Cornell (la.) college at Ames.
Bruce Drake's high-geared Oklahoma squad was not scheduled for its first action until Wednesday, Dec. 8 when it meets at Norman Okla.
Coach Forest C. (Phog) Allen's University of Kansas entry will make its first appearance of the 1948-49 season Thursday night in Kansas City, Mo., against Rockhurst college.
Kansas State's second game of the week will be against Phillips U., Bartlesville, Okla., at Manhattan, Kan., while Iowa State's second rival is Coe (la.) college at Ames next Saturday night.
Missouri, generally rated No. 2 in the Big Seven, will open its new season against Wisconsin at Madison, Wis. Thursday, Dec. 9, while Colorado, whose Buffaloes are called "dangerous" in pre-season guessing, will wait until Friday, Dec. 17 to make its debut.
Texas To Play In Orange Bowl
Austin, Tex., Nov. 30—(UP)—The University of Texas, Southwest conference runner-up, accepted an invitation to face Georgia in the Orange bowl at Miami. Fla., on Jan. 1 and announced the squad would take a week's rest before opening drills.
The announcement of Texas' acceptance was made by Dana X. Bible, Athletic director, after conferences with Coach Blair Cherry and members of the Longhorn squad.
Cherry said preliminary workouts will begin Dec. 6, when the squad will open a week of light conditioning drills. Full-scale practice for the bowl clash, Texas' fifth, will begin Dec. 13.
Southwest conference approval usually a routine action, was requested through James H. Stewart, conference executive secretary.
The Longhorn squad, beaten three times and tied once this season, voted unanimously to accept the bid to meet the Southeastern conference champions.
In four previous bowl showings, Texas has played three times in the Cotton bowl at Dallas and once. last Jan. 1, in the Sugar bowl at New Orleans.
Texas in the Cotton bowl whipped Georgia Tech, 14 to 7 in 1943; tied Randolph Field, 7 to 7, in 1944; and defeated Missouri, 40 to 27, in 1946.
The Longhorns defeated Alabama, 27 to 7, in the Sugar bowl last Jan.1.
The first Orange bowl feeler came late Saturday night, but the official invitation was received shortly after noon today.
The Steers won six games, lost three and tied one this season. They suffered defeats at the hands of North Carolina, Oklahoma and Southern Methodist, being tied by Texas A and M.
Texas will be the fourth Southwest conference squad to play in Miami's Orange bowl. Texas Christian lost to Georgia in 1942, 40 to 26, Texas A and M lost to LSU, 19 to 14 in 1944, and Rice defeated Tennessee in 1947, 8 to 0.
Ed Olle, University of Texas Athletic business manager, said that he would begin to accept orders immediately for sale of Texas' share of 5,000 seats for the game.
Chuck Bednarik Drafted By Eagles
Philadelphia, Nov. 30—(UP)—Chuck Bednarik, Pennsylvania's all-purpose center, won a unique double distinction today when he was named player of the year by the Philadelphia Maxwell club and was drafted by the Philadelphia Eagles
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Football Causes Fire
Warren, N. Y.—(UP)—A youngsters' game of street football brought out the fire department in this town. Officials explained that a bootted football struck an electric wire, causing a short circuit.
The Pants Wouldn't Fit
Ardmore, Okla.—(UP) Jess Clayborn is a sound sleeper. Jess was sleeping on a bus going east from Commanche. When he awakened, his boots, hat, belt and a billfold containing $15 were missing.
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1948
Orange Bowl Frowns Offset By Sugar Bowl Smiles
New York, Nov. 30—(UP) Georgia's coach Wally Butts was blasted by an avalanche of criticism today for being too choosy about whom his Buildings play in the bowl. But Butts stitches it.
But Butts, sticking to his guns, insisted, "I'm not going to sell my boys down the river."
Officials of the Miapi, Fla., postseason football game finally selected thrice-beaten, once-tied Texas almost in desolation after Butts ruled out all fellow-members of the Southeastern conference as opponents for Georgia.
Butts reasoned that his team already had won the conference championship and therefore could gain no prestige—but could lose plenty—in meeting another member of the league New Year's day.
This sent the Orange Bowl selection committee reeling.
Just about all of the Bowl eligibles out of the league already had been snatched up by other post-season classics, so the committee was counting on some team like Tulane, Mississippi or Vanderbilt—none of which Georgia played this season—to round out its game.
Butts' ultimatum eliminated that trio, leaving the Miami people little choice but to take the defeat-splattered Longhorns. In the Deep South, the snubbed Southeastern conference members and their sports editor supporters were enraged, but Butts was unyielding, even offering to withdraw Georgia from the game rather than play a league member.
In New Orleans, the Orange Bowl frowns were contrasted by the beaming smile of Oklahoma's coach Bud Wilkinson, whose Sooners were picked to meet North Carolina in the Sugar Bowl. He arrived to talk about tickets with the bowl sponsors, but took time out to reveal he had accepted an invitation to the game by telephone only 13 minutes after Oklahoma closed its season by defeating Oklahoma A. and M. Saturday. "We're all happy as kids about it," he said.
A California report said Navy, which didn't win a game all season but won national acclaim for a 21 to 21 tie with Army, had been invited to the Harbor bowl at San Diego. But Navy athletic director, Tom Hamilton would neither confirm nor deny the report.
The tastiest item in the bowl roundups comes from Taylor, Tex. There one Elmore R. Torn suggested organization of a "Blackeye Pea bowl." It, he explained, would match not undefeated teams—but teams which had picked up "black eyes" during the season.
An average-size hen that produces 200 standard-size eggs yearly lays almost five times her body weight in eggs.
Cleaning by
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Phillips' Trim Arkansas
night, Arkansas' center, Bob Ambler, tied Kurland for scoring honors.
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A capacity crowd of 1,600 fans saw the Phillips team flooring five veterans and five newcomers, completely outclass a good Razorback squad.
In the second half Ambler kept Arkansas within hailing distance of the host team but Kurland and Gerald Tucker, former University of Oklahoma All-American, guarded him out of many scoring chances.
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matches.
Absent from the Phillips lineup were such veterans as Gob Renick, now coach, Shorty Carpenter and R. C. Pitts. In their places were Alvin Williams from Arkansas, A. L. Bennett from Oklahoma A. and M, Kenny Jastrow from Denver, Johnny Stanich from U.C.L.A. and Roy Lipscomb from St. Mary's and the Denver Nuggets.
The 66ers, often off form, put in
23 of 54 shots, while Arkansas made
55 tries and sank 13.
KU Stars of Daily Kansan Big 7 All-Stars
BUD FRENCH
H. JOHNSON
DICK MONROE
R. BERTUZZI
PAGE 14
TOMLINSON
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The largest Balsam fir on record in America is in Pocomoe City, Md. It stands 75 feet, has a spread of 41 feet and a circumference of 7 feet, 7 inches at breast height.
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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE NINE
Indiana Farmer Has Bulges In Land, Corn Crib, Bankroll
V
Cedar Lake, Ind.—(UP)—Henry Huppenthal's farmland is bullying up feet in what soil experts describe as an "agricultural phenomenon."
About 25,000 square yards of earth has bulged 15 feet higher than the surrounding land.
Mr. Huppenthal, himself, described it as "an eruption of the earth's core." He said he was nuzzled, but4
core. He said he was puzzled, but not annoyed, because the erupting soil is richer and produces bumpe
errors.
He said the land began to swell 10 years ago. Rich, black earth has been thrown atop the clay by the phenomenon, and Mr. Huppenthal has been able to produce more than 110 bushels of corn to the acre.
The soil texture was described by experts as "excellent" to a depth of six feet. Chemical analysis showed that the raised earth is silt loam with excellent content of organic matter, nitrogen, phosphorous and hydrogen.
Mr. Huppenthal said the richness of the loam was shown when he tried to grow oats. The experiment was a failure, because the stem of the plant could not support the heavy yield.
A "baby eruption" occurred about 100 yards northwest of the large, bulged section, with the same type of soil coming to the top.
Mr. Huppenthal said geologist told him that the ground is being pushed upward, by an underground stream, or spring. The area con-
comes to swell actively, and large
rises in the ocean frequently along the
earth's surface.
The underground stream theory is supported by the fact that snails, usually found near bodies of water, populate the Huppenthal farm, although the nearest lake is four miles away.
"What a farm," Mr. Huppenthal says.
Name Of "Duke" Causes Confusion
The name of Duke D'Ambra, Lawrence photographer for a quarter century, has caused much confusion. Many have wondered if the native of the island of Capri really was representative of unemployed Italian royalty.
The given name "Duke" also has cost the University some publicity. The October issue of the Intercollegian, a magazine of Christian student life, used a picture of K.U.'s Memorial stadium for its cover photo. However, the caption labeled it the stadium of Duke university in North Carolina.
The editor has apologetically explained that D'Ambra's credit line on the back of the picture threw him for a loss clear to North Carolina.
Selling Of Store's Name
Not Issue In Salt Lake
Salt Lake City - (UP)—The spelling, Sugar House or Sugarhouse (take your choice), is a hot issue in Utah's largest suburban shopping center near Salt Lake City.
The post office sub-station stamps its mail with one-worded Sugarhouse. Ten per cent of the merchants spell it that way. But the chamber of commerce and 90 per cent of the merchants use the two-worded Sugar House.
Turkey And Radios Aid Hospital Stay
Students confined to Watkins hospital over the Thanksgiving vacation made the best of it with turkey and football.
Eight students, half of them surgery cases, listened to the K.U.-M.U. football game over radios donated to the hospital by the Union bookstore.
Because students postponed operations until vacation time, in order to miss a minimum of classwork, the number of surgery cases was unusually large.
Parlavs Remain—To Amuse
Law enforcement may stop betting, but it does not stop parliaments. Not to be stymied by petty regulation, at least one company has made a decisive change of policy. Across the top of the card now appears "For Amusement Only."
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
Small Classes In Majority
For every large class a student attends at the University, he has three small ones, Dean Paul B. Lawson of the College said recently.
Dean Lawson said that many students think classes at the University are too large, but the large class is the exception, rather than the rule.
The largest class is the biology lecture, attended by 330 students. To enable the student to get individual attention, laboratories have been arranged. These are limited to 26 students, with two instructors at each meeting of the class.
Foreign languages are handled in the same manner. The average class consists of 24 students, but the labs average 11.
Perhaps the smallest class is one in English for foreign students. Four students attend to learn to read and speak English.
Dean Lawson said that as a student advances in his field, the classes become smaller. Many of the classes for upperclassmen average only six or eight members. There are about 6,000 juniors, seniors, and graduate students at the University.
Postoffice "Handed Down"
Malone, Texas—(UP) The postoffice here was still "in the family" even with the resignation of Mrs. Ida Worley, 72, who ended 41 years' service as postmaster. Guy Mann, Jr., 27, husband of Mrs. Worley's grand-daughter, succeeded her.
Chemistry Takes Over In The Laundry As Ersatz Soap Proves Efficient
Washington—(UP)—The housewife's old ally, soap, may have to surrender a large share of its popularity to other chemical compounds, agriculture department experiments show.
The department's textile chemists have been trying to find out what kind of laundering job various kinds of soap will do compared with synthetic detergents. Comparatively $ ^{\textcircled{2}} $
new on the market; synthetic deter-
compounds that remove dirt in the
same way soap does. About half
have a petroleum base.
Miss Margaret Furry of the bureau of human nutrition and home economics, directed the experiments. Fifty-one different granulated and bar soaps and synthetic detergents were used on white cotton fabric soiled with an oil-grease-dirt combination.
Miss Furry reported that soap was more efficient than all but one type of synthetic detergent when soft water was used. But when the laundry was done in hard water, some of the synthetic detergents were twice as good at routing the dirt as most of the soaps.
The testing will be continued on colored cottons and on woolen and rayon materials.
Officials said soap manufacturers are now producing synthetic detergents at the rate of about 400,000,000 pounds a year. Other manufacturers, particularly chemical companies, also produce substantial quantities, figures for which were not available.
About 2,284,000,000 pounds of soap was used in the United States last year, the largest amount since 1941. Reports for the first third of this
year indicated an annual consumption of 2,448,000 pounds.
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Hollywood—(UP)—It must have been a sleepy burglar who broke into the small Franklin canyon cabin-studio of actor Edward G. Robinson and his wife.
All the intruder took was blankets, sheets, bedspreads and pillows.
Thieves Forgot Something
Bedford, Ind.—(UP)—Doug Kidwell put this ad in a newspaper recently;
"The party or parties who took my gun, shells, shell vest and game bag from my car Thursday, Nov. 11, may come back and get my bird dog."
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PAGE TEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1948
Those Bars Mean Something
SOVIET POLICE POWER
DANIEK BISHOP
By Daniel Bishop, St. Louis Star-Times
The Editorial Page-
Food Costs
Students beset with expenses for food, rent, and clothing, far out of proportion to their income, are still looking for a solution.
The largest number of married students ever to participate in campus life are now a part of the record enrollment at the University. They find the price of food a critical problem. Particularly concerned are men with families; men who can find only limited amounts of work at 50 cents an hour; who get no outside help, have no scholarship, and yet want to graduate.
Success of the Student Union bookstore in cutting expenses on school supplies is suggestive that a cooperative food store might well afford proportionate savings on items that cost more than books and must be bought oftener.
Better food and more food would be on the tables of many married students if they obtained cooperative savings on purchases for the family larder.
Such a market could be housed in quisset huts. Labor could be furnished by students. If such a market could give the G.I. and the non G.I. a break on food bills during these years of high prices and low, part-time wages, the effort would be worth the time and trouble.
Operation of cooperative food stores at other universities is an indication that the food problem has been recognized and given attention.
—Richard Jones.
"Morons make the best drivers" reports an eminent psychologist. At least there's some consolation for persons failing to pass tests for drivers' licenses.
Dear Editor-
Thank You
Dear Editor:
The dinner invitations extended by members of the faculty and residents of Lawrence, to make Thanksgiving a memorable occasion for the foreign students who stayed on the campus, was deeply appreciated.
It was all the more appreciated because there were many of us who learned for the first time why Thanksgiving is celebrated in the United States. We certainly hope that through these informal meetings with the "American family" we may get to know the American way of life.
Baa-quer Shirazi
Bombay, India
Faruk Mutman
Istanbul, Turkey
University
Member of the Kansas Press Assn. Na-
tional Adm. Press Assn., the Associated Collegi-
al Press. Represented by the National Ad-
ministration. 420 Madison Ave.
New York City.
Daily Hansan
New Camera Spots Cancer Inside Body
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
St. Louis—(UP)—A camera that takes color pictures of the body's internal organs will be important in detecting cancer, its inventor, Dr. Lowrain E. McCrea of Temple university, said here today.
Editor-in-Chief ... Maurice C. Lungen
Managing Editor ... Hal D. Nelson
Asst. Man. Editor ... Anne Murphy
Asst. Man. Editor ... Bill F. Mayer
City Editor ... Rowan E. Rose
Asst. City Editor ... Nora Temple
Asst. City Editor ... Patricia James
Asst. City Editor ... Richard D. Barton
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Andy Kroner
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Robert D. Snair
Sports Editor ... Osmero L. Bartell
Asst. Sports Editor ... Marvin L. Rowlands
Society Editor ... Rosemary Rospaw
Business Mgr. ... Bill Nelligan
Advertising Mgr. ... Don Tennant
Circulation Mgr. ... William A. Beck
Circ. Mgr. ... Desa Knuth
Classified Mgr. ... Don Waldenr
Asst. Class. Mgr. .. Yvonne Josserand
Asst. Class. Mgr. .. William W. Beck
Nati. Adv. Mgr. .. Charles O'Connor
Promotion Mgr. ... Charles O'Connor
The natural color pictures are especially important in detecting diseases such as cancer in the bladder, Dr. McCrea said.
The camera has a 13-inch telescopic lens with a light bulb on the end. It performs seven automatic operations and can be used in various parts of the body.
Flash Gordon Should Be Told About This
The first hotel under construction to include a system for television is the Terrace Plaza Hotel in Cincinnati. It will have video outlets in 350 rooms.
Books
Berkeley, Calif.—(UP) —Shooting stars smaller than a garden pea may prevent passenger rocket flights higher than 50 miles above the earth, two scientists hinted today.
The tiny meteors that constantly bombard the upper atmosphere pack the wallop of a Big Bertha shell and could turn a rocket or space ship into an airless coffin by puncturing its shell.
are gifts to treasure
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With each re-reading
they bring a happy
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Come in and see our
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The Book Nook
1021 Mass. Ph. 666
Professors Laurence A. Manning and Oswald G. Villard, Jr., of Stanford university said they have clocked meteors at speeds of more than 150,000 miles an hour. Even a tiny pellet generates as much energy as a big locomotive as it whizzes into the earth's air blanket.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Heavens, Men, Let's Learn
To Cuss Like A Real Soldier
Washington—(UP)—If GI's mus swear, says Maj. Gen. Hobart M Gay, they ought to use "one virile profanity."
The military commander of the Washington, D.C. area suggested it a memorandum to his aides that they start a drive "to tone down the GI vocabulary."
But General Gay emphasized the he was referring "not to the strong virile profanity of which every man is entitled to free usages, but the vulgar obscenity which has so generally replaced profanity."
He Was Swep Off His Feet
Peabody, Mass.—(UP) A boy with a broom hospitalized Jose, Wodanode, 64. Wodanode stepped fro a bus just as a street cleaner ga his broom a push and actually wa swept off his feet.
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Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St.
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You can always figure on looking your best—when you're wearing clothes cleaned and pressed by
INDEPENDENT
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Phone 432
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
PAGE ELEVEN
四
Phone KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be received at 10 a.m., during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univer- tity business office. Journalism bldg, not later than 45 p.m. the day before publication date.
FOR SALE
LOOK! Cheap transportation. 1930 Model A. Business coupe. Perfect run-down office. Metal top, heater and fog lights. See it to appreciate it. Call 2996J. 721 Illinois
Classified Advertising Rates
1834. CHEVROLET Deluxe Sedan, heater good tires, motor just overhauled. See a n
1947 REMINGTON RAND portable type-
machine. Received by Peco. Preceded to
Call Jack Thomas, 2988.
One Three Five
day days five
25 words or less...35c 65c 90c
additional words...1c 2c 3c
SUN LAMP Special! Get a Florida sun-tan while you study. G SunLamps to fit standard sockets now, Only $8.50. B. F. Goodrich. 292 Mass.
BUSINESS SERVICE
FIFTEEN nice new beefs for your lockers. First come, first choice. Two miles south of West Baldwin. S. C. Hennhill. 2630 Baldwin phone.
MAGNETIC recording machines, typewriters, adding and calculating machines, posture and swivel chairs, filing cabinets, audio equipment at Peterson's, 710's Mass, Cal 13
WATCHES, expertly repaired at Balfours,
Snappy service; very reasonable rates; 6.
CONTACT us for all airline information.
City ticket office, First National Bank of
Lawrence. Miss Rose Gieseman, Mgr.
sth and Mass. Phone 30. 2
E. TERM papers, etc.
Prompt attendee or work Cars,
1847J or bring to 645 Michigan.
2 USED CARS bought and sold. 6 blocks
Midway Motors, 709 North Sevier. 3005. Midwear
Motors, 709 North Sevier.
BILL'S ROAD service and delivery ser-
vice start your car, anywhere at any time
after fifteen miles of Lawrence. Will
deliver up to an up size. Phone Lawrence 228830
TYPING: REASONABLE rate. Prompt service. Phone 1168R. 1193 Vermont. ONE ONE is best-Balfour for watch repair. 411 West 14th. rtfn
TYBPING DONE: Prompt service, reason:
accurate work rate 1209 Ohio, irs#
Phone 1601
SIGMA CHI Sweetheart pin and Koppa
Call 1-800-735-2491 or visit www.sigma.chi
or on the Web.
TYPING DONE; Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel. 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. Ask for Miss Helen. 12-21
WHEN ALL PETS including dogs, birds,
fish, cats, pigeons, skunks, parrots,
squirrels, rats, mice, etc., go shopping
for an outfit they go to Gracie's Pet Shop,
John St. Phone 48. Everywhere
the pet field—their needs are our business.
12-21
FOR RENT
WILL THE person who took the wrong windbreaker with red and black lining from ballroom cafeteria Nov. 17, call 3251W. I have your jacket. 20
SINGLE ROOM for boy. Close to campus. 1012 Alabama. Phone 21434J. 2
ROOM AND BOARD. Available for one man student. Phone 2533J.
EBERHART and Son, tailors. Finest samples made to measure, suits, topcoats, and overcoats. Alterations, repairing and leather work. 831\frac{1}{2} Mass. 19
LOST
JASM 1207 Annaphora. Phone 21353. 2
HAVE 3-ROOM furnished apartment to buy, to trade for one like it in Kansas City. Married couple only. Phone 306J1.
Hampden, wrist watch, leather strap. Lost on, or about November 18. Vichity of Robinson gym. Leave at Kangan to collect. 6 BLACK AND HOLD Shaffer evershard 5 BLACK AND HOLD Shaffer evershard Margaret Hoopes, Phone 781. Reward. 2 RED AND BLUE blaid glasses, night of Fred Waring's concert. Finder please call Harris, Corbin Hall. Ph. 389. Reward.
LADY ELGIN wrist watch and oop ring
Battery, $25 reward. Call Betty Boo,
P. 665.
HALF OF ROOM with double bed. $114
ROOM. No drinking. 1113 Kentuck
phone 1422
TRANSPORTATION
WOULD LIKE 'ride to California over Christmas. Will drive and share expenses. Going to LA, or within a radius 721 miles. Call Ben Kumprath. Phone 721.
MISCELLANEOUS
OUR SOUTHERN Fried Chicken is the talk of the town. Come on out and try some. Our steaks and sandwiches are delicious. We can teach you MATHEMATICS. If you find yourself in need of help, call Lucy T. Daughtery, 909 Maine, Ph. 3084M. 1
ONLY ONE is best -Balfour's for watch
remain. 411 West 14th. tf
Seven classes for the wives of University students in Sunflower will be offered beginning Monday, January 17, Mrs. Betty Lou Collins, Sunflower representative of the University, announced Sunday.
Sunflower Wives To Attend Classes
Registration for the classes will be during the first week of January.
No scholastic credit will be given for the classes. They are offered for the information and instruction of the students' wives as a special service of the University, Mrs. Collins said.
be big the first week of January.
The classes are: interior decoration, sewing, tailoring, child care, marriage and family relationships, music appreciation, and gracious living.
Women who have children will be allowed to leave them in the Village nursery without charge while they attend classes, she said.
Names of the instructors for the classes and the amount of the fees will be announced later.
Bing Crosby Is Favorite Star
Hollywood — (UP) — Crooner Bing Crosby is the nation's favorite movie star this year, a poll conducted by boxoffice magazine, movie trade publications, revealed.
Crosby edged out Ingrid Bergman who had headed the poll for the past two years.
Other leaders, in order, were Gary Cooper, Claudette Colbert, Clark Gable, Loretta Young, Cary Grant, Gregory Peck, Betty Grable, Spencer Tracy, Humphrey Bogart and Rita Waworth.
Roy Rogers and Gene Autry finished one-two in a special western-star poll.
Kenosha, Wis.—(UP)—Alex Schmunck's domestic troubles got him up a tree.
Press and radio critics, movie exhibitors and representatives of selected civic organizations cast the ballots.
Husband Lands In Tree After Family Quarrel
Schmunck quarreled with his wife and she called sheriff's deputies in to aid her. By the time they arrived the raging husband had driven off in the family car.
He was trailed from tavern to tavern. Finally, the law cornered him in an orchard. The car was wrecked, and schmunck was perched in an apple tree.
Son Of Mail Carrier Dies
Funeral services for Paul L. McGhee, 27, son of Mrs. Josie Lee McGhee, campus mail carrier, were held Nov. 26.
?
McGhee died Nov. 22, as a result of gunshot wounds accidentally received during a hunting trip near Denver the day before.
Surviving are Mrs. McGhee and a brother, Linn McGhee, of Milwaukee, Wis.
WHY delay and wait for a new car when you can buy one of our pre-Christmas specials:
NASH BROUGHAM, nearly new, $2150
1946 NASH AMBASSADOR
1940 NASH 4-door, overdrive and
weathereye
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
See them now!
Livengood-Nash Motors
Phone 407
617 Mass.
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Doctors smoke for pleasure, too! And when three leading independent research organizations asked 113,597 doctors what cigarette they smoked, the brand named most was Camel!
PAGE TWELVE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1948
Tojo Hanging Delayed Slightly By Court Appeal
Tokyo, Nov. 30—(UP)—Gen. Douglas MacArthur today granted a stay of execution to former Premier Hideki Tojo and six other condemned Japanese war lords as result of a two-man appeal to the U.S.
The seven men, scheduled to hang at any moment, were assured by General MacArthur's action that they would live at least until after the supreme court meets next Monday, Dec. 6.
All seven were condemned by the Far East military tribunal and their sentences were upheld by General MacArthur. It was believed they might have hanged today had not their appeal stayed the executions. The general has refused to reveal the date of executions.
The stay was granted by Genera MacArthur in two crisp words after two of the condemned men, former Premier Koki Hirota and Geni Kenji Doihara, went over General MacArthur's head with an appeal to the supreme court for a review of their trials.
The general replied "certainly not" when asked if the men would be executed before their appeals were heard. His public relations office explained that the stay of execution applied to all seven condemned men.
Should the court turn down their appeal, it is likely they would hang immediately—perhaps on Pearl Harbor day, Dec. 8, Orient time, or Dec. 7, United States time.
Franklin Warren, Tulsa, Okla,
American defense attorney for Doihara, said the appeal was primarily a challenge to the authority of General MacArthur as the American appointed executive of the allied powers of Japan.
Under this authority, he set up the court that tried Japan's leaders. Mr Warren claimed that the crime of aggression for which they were tried never had been defined by an American legislative body nor by international law.
The supreme court also was asked to rule on the sentences of five others sentenced to prison terms in addition to the two condemned to death, Mr. Warren said. Instructions to appeal were telegraphed to attorney William Logan, joint defense representative in Washington, he said.
The Lawrence Community Chest committee reported today that the fund is just $71.69 short of the goal of $19,246.86. The total which has been collected in cash and pledges is $19,175.17. The committee hoped to reach the goal this week.
Red Feather Drive $72 Shy Of Goal
Of the $18,563.92 in cash contributions, students of the University gave $759.79 and the faculty members and employees of the University gave $1,901.
The nine organizations which the Community Chest aids are the Boy Scouts, the Girl Scouts, the Hi-Y, the Y-Teens, the 4-H clubs, the Y.M.C.A., and the Y.W.C.A., the Salvation Army, and the Social Service League. Three community activities are also dependent on the Community Chest. They are the Christmas parade, street decorations, and the wrapping station in the Community Chest office of the Chamber of Commerce, the Fourth of July celebration, and housing assistance.
YMCA Players To See Movie
All Y.M.C.A. basketball players are invited to attend a movie, "Phillips Oilers 63" 7:30 tonight. It will be shown in 205, Bailey Chemistry& laboratory. Don Clark, Y.M.C.A. basketball manager, will be in charge.
By Bibler
Little Man On Campus
By D. TAXIDERMY
STUFFING
WIRE
TOOLS
STUFFING MOUNTINGS
MORE FADDING STUFFING
FiByer
"You should do well in this course. Miss Paddon."
When Grizzly Bears Are Sunflowers State Transition Will Be Complete
"Kansans have not quite taken over in Montana, but it won't be long . . . " George W. McVey, '23, recently wrote Fred Ellsworth, alumni association secretary.
The retiring governor, Sam C. Ford, received his law degree in 1906 Two members of the state supreme court are graduates of the University Hugh Adair, '13, is chief justice and Raymond V. Bottomly, '15 was elect-
Mr. Adair, but for the ruling of the court he now heads, might have been governor of Montana. Gov. J. E. Erickson resigned and Lt. Gov. Frank H. Cooney became the chief executive.
daymond V. Bottomly, 15, was elected recently to a six-year term.
There was a dispute in the 1934 elections whether a vacancy existed for governor, lieutenant governor or both. Mr. Adair, thinking the No.2 spot was open, filed, but the supreme court ruled there was no vacancy for either office.
He tried again in 1936 and was elected. "If I had been permitted to run in 1934 and had done as well," Mr. Adair said, "I would have been governor when Mr. Cooney died."
Membership is limited to the students in the highest 10 percent of the senior class and the highest 2 percent of the junior class of the School of Business.
Mr. Adair is probably the nation's only chief justice who can keep a weather eye on what he calls his "ranch" while writing opinions in his state house chamber. His corral, in sight of his office windows is just across the street from the state highway department building in Helena.
Mr. Bottomly has been attorney general of Montana since 1942. He recently represented Montana before the International Joint commission in a controversy over the allocation of the water of Sage creek near the Canadian border.
The Alpha chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma, scholarship honor fraternity of collegiate schools of business, will elect new members at a meeting at 4 p.m. Thursday in the Seminar room, Frank Strong annex F.
Once in a hurry to reach court for a hearing, Mr. Adair simply tied his horse behind the capitol and rushed to his seat on the bench—his flowing black robe falling to hide the incongruous clump-clump of high heeled cowboy boots.
Initiation for the new members will be held sometime this semester. The date will be announced later.
Business Fraternity Will Elect Members
Seventy-seven members of four co-operative houses at the University obtained board and room during October for an average cost of $37.15.
The K.U. Co-op council estimated the average saving at $23 compared to what other independent students paid for comparable accommodations and meals. In co-op houses the members share the cooking and household duties as well as costs. Other economies are effected through quantity purchasing.
Three of the five campus co-ops rent their houses from the Student Housing association. The Henley group rents the Y.W.C.A. clubhouse and the Rock Chalk co-op occupies the second floor of a business property.
The 10 women at Henley lived the most economically, spending only $27.85 per member. The Rock Chalk men averaged $40.40 for the month. Food cost was the principal difference between men and women.
HCL Is Cut By Co-ops
Co-op housebills are running slightly higher than those of the University - operated scholarship residence halls. Smaller rental charges account for most of the latters' advantage.
The monthly report covered the Rock Chalk, Jayhawk and Don Henry co-ops for men and Henley co-op for women. Data for the 34 women living at Harmon Co-op were not submitted to the auditing committee.
Inter-dorm council will sing Christmas carols to organized houses Tuesday, Dec. 14. Each caroler will carry a candle.
The committees and their chairmen are music, Susan Stayton, College senior; publicity, Virginia Doan, engineering sonhomore; chaperons, Phyllis Mcfarland, fine arts freshman; and route of houses, Jerry Horney, education senior.
Organized Houses To Hear
Inter-Dorm Carolers Sing
Missing Link Not Missing; It Just Never Was There
Berkley, Calif.—(UP)—The famous "missing link" of man's prehistoric climb toward civilization may be missing simply because it never existed.
Dr. Richard Goldschmidt of the University of California, unveiling new evidence to support his racial theory of evolution, says the classic Darwin theory may be all wrong.
Crochet Champion Is A Railroad Engineer
New York, Nov. 30—(UP)—An Iowa railroad engineer shared top honors today with Mrs. Pauline Ploudre of Silver Creek, N. Y., for the national crochet championship sponsored by the National Needlecraft bureau.
Louis I. Walter of Mason City, Iowa, a 61-year-old grandfather of 11, won a three day trip to New York for his delicately embroidered bedspread, which headed the men's division. He admitted he took a lot of kidding from his fellow railroaders, but added, "they know just how far they can go."
Chinese Reds Still Moving
Shanghai; the Chinese city best known to foreigners and one of the world's great ports, appeared doomed also. Loss of Nanking would mean capture of the great port some 200 miles to the southeast within a matter of days or a few weeks at most, observers believed.
Nanking, Nov. 30—(UP)—Chinese Communists began a pincer movement on Nanking today which appeared to doom Chiang Kai-Shk's capital to early capture, perhaps within a few days.
The so-called "great victory" in which Nationalist forces beat off the Communist threat to Suchow, 200 miles northwest of Nanking, appeared to have boomeranged. Communist forces flowed around Suchow, encircling it and cutting off nearly 150,000 Nationalist troops there.
Rushing southward along the Suchow-Nanking rail line, the Communists were at the gates of Pengpu, 105 miles north of Nanking and the last bastion before the Yangtze and the capital. Reports from Pengpu said gunfire could be heard in the city, which was only thinly defended despite the arrival there of some Nationalist troops who escaped from Manchuria when that rich area fell to the Red forces.
Should they succeed in doing so in force, the Nanking escape route by river and railroad to Shanghai would be cut.
He thinks modern man may have descended from a "monster" instead of slowly evolving by a succession of minor changes.
Dr. Goldschmidt, one of the world's eminent authorities on heredity and genetics, is studying laboratory experiments which indicate that most new species of life come into existence by sudden "cataclysmic" changes rather than by developing over thousands of years.
The suddenly-born mutations are "monsters" compared to their ancestors, which eventually they may supplant.
"Now it appears that hetero-chromatin may be responsible for these cataclysmic changes in life spec. Dr. Goldschmidt said." And there is some hint that it also may be concerned with the determination of sex. But it is very inconclusive so far."
Until recently, Dr. Goldschmidt had little laboratory evidence to explain how this sudden-evolution process might work. Then he began experimenting with a mysterious particle in living cells, called heterochromatin.
Pointing out that "monsters" are created by almost every species, including mankind, Dr. Goldschmidt said he thinks they may be "hopeful experiments" by nature rather than her mistakes.
If such monsters survive and thrive, he theorized, they may become the fathers of new species.
That explains why there are so many "missing links" in evolution which never have been found.
While believers in the Darwin theory of gradual evolution scoff at Dr. Goldschmidt's ideas, he challenges them to explain how hairless animals developed hair, how spineless creatures came to have back-bones and how some organisms appeared with the skeletons of their bodies on the outside rather than inside their bodies.
Dr. Goldschmidt's laboratory experiments with netero-chromatin and fruit flies, produced similar monsters in one generation, "indicating this cellular substance is in charge of early development and growth processes."
Wins Legislative Seat
Jerome Beatty, '08, was elected the Connecticut house of representatives on the Republican ticket. He will remain on the staff of the American magazine.
US Cities Banning Comic Books; State Statutory Power May Be Used
Chicago—(UP)—The American Municipal association reports that nearly 50 cities have banned the sale of certain comic books. The books were declared盗版.
The books were declared objectionable by various civic grouns.
Los Angeles and Terre Haute, Ind., are the first localities to pass ordinances placing the bans in effect. In Los Angeles county, the ordinance prohibits the sale of comic books dealing with murder, burglary, kidnapping, arson or assault with deadly and civile grievance.
murder, burglary, kidnapping, arson or assault with deadly weapons.
County Supervisor Leonard J. Roach of Los Angeles seeks to have the ban adopted by the California legislature to cover the entire state.
Terre Haute's ordinance bans the sale, display, printing and distribution of undesirable comic books. A 10-member civic board will decide which are undesirable.
Many other cities are setting up censorship committees. Among the most recent to do so are Oneida City, N.Y., and East Hartford, Conn. In both cities dealers promised cooperation.
Indianapolis has removed 52 "objectiveball" comic books from the market through co-operation with distributors.
In Racine, Wis., comic book dealers are doing their own censoring,
in co-operation with city officials
Twenty states have laws forbidding the sale of obscene, indecent, harmful or immoral literature. These statutes could be applied to comic books. In Detroit, the county prosecutor held that certain comics violated Michigan statutes, and Detroit distributors banned the books from circulation.
However, the validity of such state laws is being questioned. A recent decision by the U.S. Supreme Court held a New York law constitutional. The law prohibited distribution of magazines composed principally of crime news or stories of bloodshed and lust.
In Illinois, lower courts have a case pending in which the city of Chicago had been challenged, for interfering with distributors' of comic books under a state law.
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