University Daily Kansan Monday, April 3, 1950 Lawrence, Kansas OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS STUDENT NEWSAPER Revue Awards Go To Pi Phi's, Phi Delta Theta Student talent in student-produced skits was presented before 2.000 persons April 1, in Hoch auditorium. Rock Chalk Revue, similar to the annual Kansas State Y-Orphen production, was comprised of eight skits "Flapper Fling" by Pi Beta Phi won first place in the sorority division. The skit was directed by Barbara Coats, business junior, and Connie Kendall, College junior. The second place sorority trophy was won by Sigma Kappa with "Under the Bed."—directed by Margaret Miller, College senior. In the fraternity division Phi Delta Theta took the first place trophy with a skit entitled "Drums." Student directors were Roger Allen, education senior, and Fred Six, College junior. Second place was won by Phi Gamma Delta. Edward "Bud" Rodgers, journalism junior, directed the runner-up skit "Yes, We Have No Talent." Following the presentations by K.U.'s organized houses, a skit which took third place at K-State was put on by the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity. Enitled "History of Entertainment," the skit was not entered in the competition. Student directors were Tony Ceranich and Lewis Marklev. Roy Wonder, business senior was producer of the Revue, sponsored by the Y.M.C.A. He was assisted by Milf Champion, publicity manager; Byron Werges, business manager; Milton Commons, technical director; and Virginia Walsh, make up director. Mrs. Phyllis Keating and Gene Courtney, speech instructor, were advisory directors to all student directors. Organ music between skits and during intermission was played by Donald Parker, education junior. Members of the Ku Kun men's new organization were ushers. James Hawes, fine arts senior was master of ceremonies and introduced each act. The skits were judged on the basis of originality, organization, and staging. This is the first year the Rock Chalk Revue has been given at the University and the production staff hopes it will be presented annually One Vote Decided Site Of University The location of the University a Lawrence was largely due to the efforts of Judge J.S. Emery, a member of the state legislature from 32 to 1863. Judge Emery built the 70-year-old house at 627 Louisiana street which was destroyed by fire March 30. His daughter, Miss Agnes Emery, 83, who lived in the house, is the only living member of her family. When the vote on the location of the state university came before the legislature, Judge Emery boosted Lawrence. The vote in its favor was one over the majority. The Judge was a member of the fisheries hall from 1873 to 1888, and again from 1873 to 1877. Judge Emery came to Lawrence with the Second Emergent Aid party on Sept. 9, 1854. Charles Robinson, who later was governor, was leader of this group. Soon after arriving in Lawrence, Judge Emery was appointed a justice of the peace. A few years after settling in Lawrence, Judge Emery went East where he was married. At the time of the Quantrill raid in August, 1853, Judge and Mrs. Emery were living in the East and so suffered no losses. Jayhawker Looks For Beauty Queen Pictures for the Jayhawker beauty queen contest should be submitted at the Jayhawker office in the Union building by 5 p.m. Thursday. All University women are eligible to submit photographs. Finalists will be selected by a panel of judges on the basis of the contestants photogenic beauty. The final candidates will have their pictures retaken for use in the fourth edition of the Jayhawker annual. Spellman To Be In Lawrence Francis Cardinal Spellman will be in Lawrence Saturday, April 29 as principal speaker for "I Am An American Day." He will speak at a dinner in the Community building Saturday night. According to present plans there will be a parade on Massachusetts street at 2 p.m. in which University R.O.T.C. units will participate; a program in South park, and a dinner in the Community building. Because seating capacity at the dinner is limited to 700, arrangements are being made for the Cardinal to speak earlier in the day at a place where more persons can be accommodated, said Nicholas Lopes, general chairman of the event. During the past month Cardinal Spellman led a group of 525 Americans to Rome where they were met by Pope Plus XII and received the Pontiff's blessing. Cardinal Spellman is one of the four Cardinals of the Roman Catholic church in the United States. His appearance in Lawrence is expected to focus national attention here and plans for a coast-to-coast radio broadcast are being made. Conference Periods Arranged At Marvin Mid-semester advisory periods for engineering students receiving below average grades for this semester will be offered today through Thursday. The names of all engineering students receiving "D's" or "F's" at mid-semester have been posted on the bulletin board on the first floor of Marvin hall. The list also gives the names of advisors, the time and place that they will be available for counseling. Students are not required to meet with an advisor. SHEPHERD'S DANCE Players Give 'She Stoops' Novel Opening, Realism "Let schoolmasters puzzle their brain. BERNICE BRADY as Kate, who stoops to conquer, listens modestly to the romantic proposal by Tom Rea, playing young Marlow, who is conquered in the play. The 18th century romantic comedy opens Tuesday for four days at K.U. With grammar, and nonsense and learning; Good liquor. I stoutly maintain, Gives genus a better discerning, Let them brag of their heathenish Their Lethes, their Styxes, and Stygians. Fred Ellsworth, Alumni association secretary, liked the "lost song" and refused to let it stay forgotten. After years of digging around Mr. Ellsworth found that a member of the 1926 glee club had located the score of the song last spring and had given it to Joseph Wilkins, professor of voice, who left for Italy shortly afterward on a sabbatical leave. Their qui's, and their quae's, and their quod's. They're all but a parcel of pigeons. "Toradla ili idolo, toroll." Toroddie, torodlie, With the singing of the Alehouse song, of which the above is the first verse, Tony Lumpkin, played by Harold Harvey, signals for the opening curtain of Oliver Goldsmith's comedy of manners, "She Stoops to Conquer." The play, which will be presented at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday through Friday in Fraser theater, has a novel introduction in the University Players' production that was not in the original. WEATHER KANSAS — Considerable cloudiness today and tonight. Occasional showers and thunderstorms, mostly in the east, and somewhat cooler. Highs today 45-50 northwest, 60-65 southeast. KU 'Lost Song' Returns After 22 Years Absence A song missing from the K.U. campus for 22-years will return this month as part of an album to be released by the Alumni association. The song, "Fight for Kansas," was written in 1919 by Frank E. Kendrie, glee club director at the University from 117 to 1921. An immediate hit, it was instrumental in winning a first rating for K.U. at the National Glee club meet in New York in 1926. At that time the club was led by Tom Larrimore, a professor in the School of Law. Mr. Larrimore left shortly afterward and in a quick succession of glee club directors the song was lost. As the time for the recordings approached and the score was still not available. Mr. Ellsworth was ready to cable the voice professor when the score was found among some papers Mr. Wilkins had left. Copies were printed and glee club members rehearsed the song. It now stands out among those included in the album. Other selections in the album are "The Crimson and the Blue," "I'm a Jayhawk," "Onward Kansas," "Fight for Kansas," "We're from Kansas," "Stand Up and Cheer," "The Jayhawk Song," and "Home on the Range." The group of songs, recorded jointly by the University Band, Glee club, and A Cappella choir, will be booked to the library book store about the middle of April. This production of the comedy written in 1771, uses many authentic 18th century props. The musical instrument that is heard at the opening of the play is called a recorder, a forerunner of the modern flute. It was borrowed from S.F. Anderson, instructor in German, who has a collection of these instruments. The cup and ball device which Tony Lumpkin uses to while away his time, was made by Tom Shay, instructor in speech, who also plays Hastings. This toy was very popular in the 18th century. The costumes, with their ruffles, lace, silk knee pants, and hoop skirts, supplemented by the powdered wigs, give the production a realistic effect. Monday, April 10, the show goes on the road for two weeks. It will be presented in 11 towns in southwestern and northwestern Kansas. Hayward Shows Ability In Recital Bv PATRICIA JANSEN A mastery of the techniques of good singing was demonstrated by Betty Hayward, fine arts senior, in her recital Sunday. The mezzo - soprano combined good pitch, tone quality, and rhythm in her pleasing program. Miss Hayward's selections in Italian, German, French, and English, included everything from saucy numbers to melancholy songs. She showed a clear understanding of the emotional worth of each song. For her major aria, Miss Hayward sang the "Recitative and Air of Lia" from "L'Enfant Prodigue." (Debusy.) One of the loveliest numbers on the program was the difficult "Crepuscule" (Massenet) which demonstrated her ability at sustained singing. Included in the program were the familiar "Gretchen Am Spinrade" (Schubert) and "Ouvre Tes Yeux Bleus." "Roses in Your Hair" (Arden and Wille) was popular with the audience. Miss Hayward also sang "Apotheosis," an original number by Willard Straight, fine arts junior. Hospital Releases Griffith Forest Griffith. Varsity football player, was released from Watkins hospital March 31, where he had undergone an appendectomy March 26. 300 Students Rally In Hoch For F. C. Allen With chants of "we want Phog!" 300 students gathered in Hoch auditorium at 9:50 a.m. today to honor F.C. "Phog" Allen, recently named basketball's outstanding man of the year by the National College Basketball Coaches association. Introduced by Chancellor Deane W. Malott, who described Coach Warren in a warm petrel of basketball. "Phoebe" greeted with enthusiastic applause. Coach Allen assured the audience that being voted the honor came as an utter surprise to him. He called this season's championship basketball team "not the team of the year, but of many years," and cited the spirit and backing the team received as the main factors for its success. "I also want to thank the cheerleaders who have done a marvelous job." Coach Allen said, "who have shown a great deal of spirit, and who have worked under criticism which was perhaps unjustified." E. C. Quigley, director of athletics, congratulated Coach Allen for the athletic department. Dr. Allen will be honored at the annual varsity basketball Chamber of Commerce banquet today at the Eldridge hotel. Arthur "Dutch" Lonborg, head basketball coach at Northwestern university, will speak. Claude Houchin, captain of the 1950 basketball team, will present Rick Harman, Kansas State basketball player, with a citation-award for sportsmanship. When K.U. played Bradley university in Kansas City, Mo., Harman sent a telegram on behalf of the Kansas State students wishing K.U. good luck. The Downtown Quarterback club will present gifts to all University basketball squad members at the banquet. Air Force Wants College Graduates The air force is now accepting applications from College graduates for officer training in aviation-executive positions and in technical fields. A recent letter to T. DeWitt Carr, dean of the engineering school, from Major General R. E. Nuget, Acting Deputy Chief of Staff, U. S. Air Force, stated that the air force is especially interested in June graduates from the engineering school. The training offered will lead to reserve and regular air force commissions. A copy of the letter is posted in Marvin hall. Any college graduates or June graduates interested may contact Col. Lynn R. Moore, 108 Military Science building. Students To Hear Trust Researcher Gilbert T. Stephenson of Wilmington, Del., will speak on the drafting of wills and trust instruments before University law students Tuesday. Mr. Stephenson is director of the trust research department in the graduate school of banking of the American Bankers association. Campus Writers' Fiction On Sale In Magazine Form The 1950 New Writers is now on sale in Fraser hall, Strong hall, and the Union. The work is a collection of fiction produced on the campus during the past year. Copies are being sold for 35 cents each. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, APRIL 3, 1950 PAGE TWO New Students To Be Informed Members of the President's council discussed and suggested methods to use during orientation week to help freshmen become acquainted with the University at a recent meeting. Suggestions were as follows: write letters to the to-be freshmen during the summer telling them about enrollment classes, securing rooms, organizations at the University, and other information of that type, have the Independent Students association print books about independent student housing, have Jay Jane act as guides during registration and enrollment, post maps of the campus on the bulletin boards around the campus and in the organized houses, and send Associated Women students representatives out to the high schools to tell the student what to expect. One of the members believed that freshmen were required to attend so many meetings during orientation week that they had no time of their own. The majority felt that the joining of activities was stressed too much at the first, causing the newcomers to have difficulty retaining information about the different organizations, enrollment, and classes. The mountain bluebird, official state bird of Idaho since 1831, was believed sacred by the Navajo Indians. University Daily Kansan Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $1.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans. every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Unregistered and examination period Entered as second semester. 17, 1910. at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. Weaver 901 Mass. here's the LOVE of LOAF you'll never want to be without And it's styled by Penobscot Trampeze — so you know IT's the best little live-in, lounge-in, loaf-in shoe that's made. Tops for campus duty — an "ace" for the year-round, all-round grind. Wear? Like a beard! Cause Trampeze are styled for action right down to their sturdy soles. Brown or Brown of Antique Red 695 Penobscott TRAMPEZE Weaver's shoes-second floor Honor Graduate Of'43 Will Teach At KU Warren Snyder, '43, assistant to the head of the mechanical engineering department at the University of Minnesota since 1948, will become associate professor of mechanical engineering September 1. Chancellor Deane W. Malott announced today. Mr. Snyder is a former Summer- field scholar and honor man of his class. He did his undergraduate work at the University and received his master of arts degree from Minnesota last summer. He will receive his doctor of philosophy degree this summer. Snyder's undergraduate activities included an assistant instructorship in physics; membership in Sigma Tau and Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternities; Sachem and Owl societies; the University band; and the Engineering council. After being graduated from the University, Snyder spent one year in a naval research laboratory in Washington, D. C., and in 1944 he was transferred to Minneapolis, Minn. There, he was associate engineer in an aircraft precipitation static research group. During the war years he taught mathematics for night extension classes of the University of Minnesota. "My cigarette? Camels, of course!" WITH SMOKERS WHO KNOW...IT'S CAMEL TURKISH O.D. BLUE CIGAR Camels for Mildness Yes, Camels are SO MILDthat in a coast-to-coast test of hundreds of men and women who smoked Camels—and only Camels—for 30 consecutive days, noted threat specialists, making weekly examinations, reported NOT ONE SINGLE CASE OF THROAT IRRITATION due to smoking CAMELS! SALE! GE DISHWASHER FITS ANY KITCHEN For a Limited Period $12950 E! HER WHEN Period 60 ortable and the Washes , pots, lick of y port- n cost. IAL electric your s. No day NCE NY You Save $40. Amazing new G-E Portable Dishwasher does all the hard work for you! Washes dishes, glasses, silver, pots, and pans—with the flick of a switch! Completely portable—no installation cost. Woman cleaning a trash bin. Free! HOME TRIAL OFFER Use the new General Electric Portable Dishwasher in your own home for 10 days. No expense-no obligation. CallusToday GENERAL APPLIANCE COMPANY 1103 Mass. MONDAY, APRIL 3. 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Jay Janes Add 39 Members Choose Four Honor Initiates Thirty-nine women were initiated into the Jay Jane pep organization at a banquet the past week. Marjorie Crane, College junior; Mildred Hill, education junior; Virginia Coppedge, journalism junior, and Mary Swanson, fine arts sophomore, were honor initiates. Others initiated are Marian Bishop, graduate student; Marian Graham, Eleanor Kerford, Jo Ann Myers and Shirley Sonder, College seniors; Patricia Grinnell, education senior; Charity Fischer, Barbara Glover, Harriet Graves, and Dorothy Johnson, fine arts seniors. Doris Greenbank and Norma Hunsinger, journalism seniors; Margaret Dickinson, Evelyn Harris, Ruth Hurwitz, Esther McKinney, Yvonne Morrow, Elizabeth Shannon, and Diana Sherwood, College juniors; Peggy Circle, Georgia Ginther, Joan Holozapfel, Shirley McKnight, Virginia Penny, and Betty Louomas, education juniors. Myrna Lynch, Margery Myers, Barbara O'Neal, fine arts juniors; Caroline Crosier, Virginia Ferguson, Patricia Glover, Sammy Johnson, and Fairy June Seymour, College sophomores; Chloe Warner, education sophomore, and Judith Buckley, fine arts sophomore. Job-Seekers Meet To Plan Summer Women who want jobs in Y.W.C.A. camps, Girl Scout camps, and vacation resorts met the past week to see material sent from vacation spots in the United States. They looked at pamphlets, advertisements, letters, and application blanks from the various places. Some of the jobs open were teaching handicrafts, working in offices, life guarding, camp counseling, and working as waitresses. The program is sponsored by the Associated Women Students, who obtained the material and addresses for the job hunters. The information is still available in the office of the Dean of Women, 220 Strong hall. Pre-Nursing Club Told Of KC Trip Eight members of the Pre-Nursing club who recently visited the University of Kansas Medical center and nurses' home in Kansas City, told about their visit at the club's meeting the past week. Students who made the trip are Bernice Altenbernd, Jean Feuerborn, and Marion Rose, College juniors; Margaret Gartner and Mary Hook, College sophomores; Marian Hoecker, Alice Milligan, and Patricia Woelhloff, College freshmen. Miss Electa Kindlesperger, nurse for the Lawrence public schools, told about her activities with the schools at the meeting. Miss Jean Hill, director of nurses at the University Medical center, will speak to the club at the next meeting on Wednesday, April 26. Nelligan Pledges Tri Delt The average adult hippopotamus weighs about 5,000 pounds and eats about 400 pounds of fodder daily. Delta Delta Delta sorority announces the pledging March 31 of Katharine Jane Nelligan, fine arts freshman, from Halstead. AOPi's, Theta's Announce Spring Pinnings Forbes-Olander Kappa Alpha Theta sorority announces the pinning of Miss Carol Forbes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Forbes, Eureka, to Mr. Jim Olander, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Olander, Wichita. The announcement was made after dinner March 25 by Miss Louise Swigart and Miss Celia Kilgore. Mrs. Christine Alford, housemother, received a dozen talisman roses. Miss Forbes wore an orchid and was assisted by Miss Barbara Comstock and Miss Betsy Bowers who received white rose corsages. AO Pi Pinning Miss Forbes is a College freshman. Mr. Olander is a business senior and a member of Phi Gamma Delta vaternity. Alpha Omicron Pi announces the pinning of Miss Betty Jo Bloomer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bloomer of Clafin, Kansas, to Mr. Richard Bradley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Bradley, of Wichita. Mr. Bradley formerly attended the University where he was a member of the Delta Tau Delta fraternity. Miss Bloomer is a junior in the business school. If all the tile put into the new Brooklyn-Battery tunnel in New York were laid end-to-end it would make a four-inch strip reaching 418 miles, or from Brooklyn to Pittsburgh. Whose is This? Is There A Name On It? If No! someone is very careless with their property Yes! Owner will be notified Open Monday Thru Friday 11 a.m.—2 p.m. LOST & FOUND A FREE SERVICE BY ALPHA PHI OMEGA OFFICIAL K. U. RINGS SENIORS ONLY 1987 BIRTH OF 1960-2007 Your University seal, sunflowers and degree on one side; Jayhawk, sunflowers and graduation year on opposite side. Top set with beautiful ruby stone. MAN'S RING $27.50 LADY'S RING $21.50 Plus 20% Federal, 2% State tox Business Office has limited supply on hand now. AUTO PARTS and ACCESSORIES New Used Parts for All Cars We Buy Old and Wrecked Cars TEMPERATURE CONTROL - Auto Glass • Mirrors • Glass Table Tops AUTO WRECKING AND JUNK CO. Phone 954 712 E. 9th Two things every college man should know! 7 1. This is a Geology Major. Takes life or granite. An earthy type with rocks in head. Thinks nitrates are cheaper than day rates. Wouldn't be caught ossified without a "Manhattan" shirt 2 2. This is a "Manhattan" Range widespread collar with French cuffs. Does something for your natural contours. That narrow "Manhattan" tie is a pretty smart specimen, too. Manhattan CAMPUS FAVORITE THE MANHATTAN SHIRT COMPANY Copr. 1950, The Manhattan Shirt Co. The More You Tell—The Quicker' You'll Sell—Use Kansan Classifieds. Housemothers . . . Did You Know That Lawrence Has DURACLEAN SERVICE for your RUGS and FURNISHINGS? Safe for all Fabrics . . . vivifies colorings . . . raises Rug Pile . . . Retards Deterioration Service Available in The Home Your furnishings may be DURACLEANED right where they are so you may see the care they are given. They may be used a few hours later. LawrenceDurcleanCo. 727 Mass. Phone 2401 A nation-wide certified service PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, APRIL 3, 1950 Trackmen From Kansas Show Well In Texas Relays Austin, Texas, knew trackmen from the state of Kansas were in town March 31 and April 1 for the Texas Relays. The Kansas Jayhawkers—led by All-American Pat Bowers—ran off with three relay titles, a second place in the high hurdles, fourth place in the meet, and one new record. Country - cousin Kansas State—relying on individual performers in field events—surprised by taking one title, two first-place ties, a second place, two ties for seconds, a share of a new record, and a tie for second in the meet. To make the meet a success for the Sunflower state, Bowers was named "outstanding performer of the relays." Bowers was little less than amazing as he clipped off a 1:52 half-mile. 3:02.4 three-quarters and a 4:16 mile. KU. got its victories in the distance medley, two-mile, and four-mile relays. Jack Greenwood was the runner-up in the hurdles after posting the best qualifying time of 14.5. The Jayhawkers' new record came in the four-mile event, Coord Bill Easton's team finishing in 17:20.9. The national intercollegiate record is 17:16.1. In establishing the new mark, the Kansans thoroughly crumbled the former meet mark of 17:40.1 set by Illinois in 1929. It had been the oldest record in the meet's book. The K.U. record-smashing four-some was Cliff Abel, Captain Bob Karnes, Herb Semper, and Bowers. Although Karnes, anchor man of the quartet, was just recovering from a bout with the flu and a slight leg injury, he had little to worry about in the final leg as his teammates handed him a 50-yard lead. The same four were good for the 2-mile title with a time of 7:46, three seconds off the record held by a Drake team which set the mark when Easton was coach at the Iowa school. Semper was expected from the above four and Bob Devinney added to make up the winning K.U. distance medley team. The Jayhawkers' time was 10.21.9. Other Kansas entries were in the mile relay, sprint medley relay, high jump, and discus. Although Jayhawkers Emil Schutzel, Dave Fisher, Greenwood, and Devinney produced the fastest time—31.9.8—an Easton-coached K.U. mile relay squad has ever run, they finished out of the money. That foursome also made up the K.U. sprint medley entry which won its heat but did not place. Kansas high jumps Del Norris and Bill Richardson found plenty Blues Win Intra-Squad Game In a serimimage which was described by Coach J.V. Sikes as "not very good" the Blues pounded out a 24 to 18 win over the Reds Saturday in the second intra-squad football game of the spring. It was the second win in as many Saturdays for the Blue team. The Blues trounced the Reds 42 to 6 on March 25. Henry Lamping, junior halfback, scored three times to lead the Blue attack. His 5-yard smash over left tackle late in the game broke an 18 to 18 tie and provided the clincher for the Blues. Galen Fiss, freshman fullback, accounted for the other Blue touchdown on a 19-yard sprint up the middle. The Reds never led but fought from behind three times to tie the game. Early in the game three Red drives were halted inside the Blue 25-yard line. Lackus Lachen, freshman guard, and Fiss were defensive standouts for the Blues in stopping these surges of the Reds. Lamping put the Blues out in front in the first five minutes of the game when he circled right end for 5 yards after taking a pitchout. The Reds evened the count on a 10-yard sweep by freshman halfback Charlie Hoag with a Jerry Bogue pitchout. The tie was short-lived for on the first play from scrimmage after Hoag's touchdown Lamping raced 70 yards down the middle to give the Blue team the lead again. Lamping's run was the longest of the two hour scrimmage. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. G 80th Year, Modern-to-the-minute. Courses keyed to today's training needs. Secretarial Training Civil Service. Higher Accounting and Auditing. Write for catalog. Box 424. Lawrence Business College. Radio Repairs... ... of every kind executed with care and skill. is your reception muffled or "staticky?" Save further wear and tear on your set now. Let us service your radio . . . repair it expertly and economically. University Radio at Bell Music Co. F. E. Sutton Ph. 575 Bogue made the score 12 to 12 on a slice off tackle from the 15-yard line. Fiss then came through with his touchdown run and the Blues again were in the lead. The Reds tied the count for the first time on a lateral from Jack Rodgers, freshman quarterback, to Bob Brandeberry. The play covered 12 yards. Halfbacks Dean Wells and Hal Cleavenger and tackle Bob Talkington did not see action in the game. The first two are sidelined with severe ankle sprains and Talkington is out with the flu. Breakfast at Gemmell's Cafe 717 Mass. Always Ready To Serve Ham, Bacon or Sausage with 2 eggs, toast and jelly and fried potatoes—50c Waffles, wheatcakes, or buckwheat cakes—syrup, butter and coffee—25c Department of Speech and Drama Presents in The University Players SHE STOOPS TO CONQUER Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday April 4,5,6,7 FRASER THEATER Curtain 8:15 p.m. I-D CARDS ADMIT Present I-D Cards for Reserved Seats Ticket Office, Basement Green Hall Open Daily 9-12,1-4 Phone KU 412 of competition. Virgil Severens, Kansas State, and Jack Razetto, San Diego State, tied for the championship at the record height of 6 feet $8 \frac{1}{4}$ inches. Eleven jumpers—including Norris—cleared 6-4, while five of them got over 6-6. Richardson dropped out at the 6-4 mark. Remaining K.U. entry was Bob Braddy who tossed the discus 137 feet but did not place. Other K-Staters in the championship bracket with Severens were huge Rollin Prather who was 10 inches away from a record in tossing the shot put 52 feet $ \frac{1}{4} $ inch and Herb Hoskins, broad jumper. Hoskins tied with John Voight of Oklahoma A. and M. with a leap of 24 feet $ 10\% $ inches. Wildcat Don Frazier came up with a throw of 196 feet $7 \frac{1}{4}$ inches, good for second place in the javelin. Hurdler Earl Elliott was in third place behind Greenwood in the 120-yard highs. Jim Danielson was third in the broad jump. Easter is Next Sunday Send Flowers By Wire Anywhere or Flower Shop Call Us For Delivery In Lawrence WARD'S Phone 820 Cymbidium Going Home For Easter? THEN READ ABOUT OUR THEN READ ABOUT OUR 3 DAY SERVICE PICKUP and DELIVERY MENDING and REPAIRING "QUALITY OUTSTANDING" LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS Call 383 1001 New Hampshire 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, APRIL 3, 1950 S. PAGE FIV KU Cagers Name All-Opponents up nes, lin. bird 20- bird Bv BOB NELSON Two players from the Big Seven and three from non-conference teams have been named to an all-around team in the nation of the 1960 Kansas basketball squad. Bob Cousy, All-American forward for Holy Cross, is the unanimous choice of the Jayhawkers for the best player they'd played against this season, and they have selected Bradley university as the best team met during the year. Another All-American, Paul Unruh of Bradley, is teamed with Cousy at forward on the all-opponent team. Milt Whitehead of Nebraska is center, while guards are Charley Cooper, Duquesne, and Kendall Hills, Colorado. Unruh lacks one vote of being a unanimous choice for the squad, and he is also named next in line to Cousy as best individual player. The Jayhawkers' Big Seven all-opponent team is made up of players from five of the conference schools. On the first quintet are Wayne Glasgow, Oklahoma, and Hills, forwards; Whitehead, center; and Ernie Barrett, Kansas State, and Bud Heineman, Missouri, guards. Hills is the only unanimous choice with Whitehead one vote off. However, Whitehead has been named the best of their Big Seven opponents by the Jayhawkers in voting for the individual honor. Hills is edged by the Nebraska giant with just one-half point. The two tie behind Cousy and Unruh for best all-season opponent. Because of a tie in the balloting, six players are included on the second all-opponent team. They are Ed Dahler, Duquesne, and Glasgow, forwards; Elmer Behnke, Bradley, center; and Ernie Barrett of Kansas State, Don "Pinky" Knowles of Creighton, and Charles Grover of Bradley, guards. Duquesne is second to Bradley in voting for the best team faced during the season. Third is Kansas State, and Oklahoma and Holy Cross follow the Wildcats in order. Baseball Squad Tunes Up For First Game April 12 Second Big Seven all-opponent team is made up of Rick Harmon and Ed Head, Kansas State, forwards; Dont Stroet, Missouri, cenvs; Wayne Tucker, Colorado, and Paul Merchant, Oklahoma, guards. Coach Bill "Red" Hogan's baseball forces, rounding into shape for their season opener against Rockhurst on Wednesday, April 12, played their third intra-squad game of the spring April 1. The Regulars downed the Reserves 5 to 3. In previous games the Regulars beat the Reserves, 8 to 3, and the Right-handers beat the Left-handers, 8 to 3. Glasgow, Heineman, and Barrett trail Hills and Whitehead in best conference player voting. In Saturday's game third baseman Floyd Temple paced the winners 7-hit attack with a double and a single. The blows ran his intra-squad hitting total to seven hits in 13 times at bat. His hits have included three doubles and two home runs. Arnold Stricker cracked out a double and two singles for the reserves. Herb Liverett, the Reserves, starting pitcher, shut the Regulars out on one hit while striking out two and walking four. Curt Harris was found for three hits and four runs in three innings and Al Row gave up two hits and one run in his two inning stint on the mound for the Reserves. Carl Sandefur turned in the best pitching performance of the afternoon limiting the Reserves to one hit in four innings. He struck out seven and didn't issue a walk. Herman Phillip pitched three innings for the Regulars and gave up three hits and three runs. The last two innings were worked by Wayne Louderback, a left-hander, who gave up two hits but no runs. People suffering from aleurophobia have an unreasoning fear of cats. Phi Delts Dominate Intramural Finals Waltz-Time King Joins Big 15 Phi Delta Theta fraternity dominated finals in intramural volleyball play over the week end. The Phi Deltats defeatedDelta Tau Delta 15 to 10 and 15 to 12 for the fraternity A championship. However, Sigma Alpha Epsilon prevented a complete Phi Delt sweep of the championships by winning the fraternity B title from them, 15 to 10 and 15 to7. "WAYNE KING (above) plays Johann Strauss." . The Blue Danube, Emperor Waltz, 4 others . . . an album "DESIGNED FOR DANGING", just like all 15 of RCA VICTOR's astonishing brand-new albums! By 15 great bands, 15 great composers. 90 all-time favorites to end the dance-record shortage! Real dance-beat again! King's album has it! Come and get one or all 15 at IRELAND Two Phi Delt teams, Phi Delt C and Phi Delt Frosh met in the fraternity C championship with the Frosh losing 10 to 15, 15 to 12, and 10 to 15. The independent A championship went to the Fijis who defeated Don Henry co-op in 15 to 13, 12 to 15, 17 to 15 games. In the independent B championships, Scarab downed Oread hall No. 2 by 15 to 8 and 15 to 7. Bell Music Co., 925 Mass. You'll enjoy the informal atmosphere and home-cooked food "Maw and Paw are always glad to see you." - A Crested Gift Cube Steaks 70c Pork Chops 75c L. G. Balfour Co. 411 W. 14th Call 907 Pork Tenderloin ___75c A Mother's Pin or CLOSED Pork Tenderloin -----75c Hamburger Steak -----65c FRIDAY SHAVER'S and 2----4:30 Sunday Call 785-K-2 1 $ \frac{1}{2} $ miles south U.S. 59 AL LAUTER Reminds You That Mothers DAY MAY 14 REMEMBER HER with IT'S NOT TOO LATE !! You Can Still Make That Summer Trip To Europe WITH INTERNATIONAL YOUTH Flights to LONDON and ROME Write or phone PARIS BY AIR $360 ROUND TRIP International Youth Inc. 150 Broadway, New York 7, N.Y. COrtland 7-0362 IM Volleyball Teams Go For Hill Titles To assure passage write immediately University intramural volleyball championships in A and B divisions will be decided today when fraternity and independent league champions are paired together at 5 p.m. in Robinson annex. Phi Delta Theta, fraternity champions, will meet the Fijis, independent winners, for the University A championship. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, fraternity king, meets Scarab, independent champ, in the B division. A persec is an astronomical unit of measure nineteen billion miles long. Store Furs Now Don't put off sending furs to us. Each warm day weakens your furs . . . makes them prey to destructive moths. Call us now! Low cost! WANTED! This murderer, William Historic Evac. Costs $50 BEWARE ! A man is sitting on a chair. He is leaning forward with his hands on the armrests of the chair. His eyes are closed, and he appears to be in a relaxed or contemplative state. The background is plain white. We have cleaning, glazing storing and repair service for your precious furs. Call 75 today or bring your furs down. New York Cleaners 926 Mass. Ph.75 BLUE CROSS Hospital Service BLUE SHIELD Physician's Service Non-Profit 2019 13487 MASSAIC CHURCH OF THE SACRED HEART MASSAIC, CALIFORNIA SHIELD Community Health Service ENROLLMENT ENDS APRIL 4 This is the only opportunity to join these Services this year for regular monthly payroll staff and faculty member. Turn in your application to "Pete" Swartz Business Office or Your Department Office ARE YOU PROTECTED? Service for New Members Starts May 1. > PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, APRIL 3, 1950 ONE AND ONLY Jayhawk by Arlo Bailey Is the Jayhawk, the emblem of the University of Kansas, loosing its distinctiveness? At present four different Jayhawk designs are available in Lawrence. The latest came equipped with sweater and cane. This design, in itself, is not too different from the others, but it gives an idea as to the wide variations that could follow. The Jayhawk is probably the most distinctive college emblem in the United States. When persons see it on a car window they know the owner probably is, or was a K.U. student. Many colleges have ten or more variations of their emblem, and it is difficult to tell what they represent. A number of colleges have the same emblem. For example Kentucky, Northwestern, New Hampshire and Kansas State, as well as many others, are known as the Wildcats. We have an advantage by being the only Jayhawks. Why not amplify our distinctiveness by adopting one Jayhawk design as the official emblem of the University of Kansas? It goes something like this: all Greeks will receive voting instructions. They will vote for the hand-picked slate or else Independents will be freely exhorted to get out and vote. As usual, when the ballots are counted, Greeks will win a majority of the seats on the All Student council. As usual, screams of "dirty politics" will echo from the Hill. Only a few weeks away is the spring election for A.S.C. seats. We predict an apparent increase in campus political activity. We say apparent because campus politics here on the Hill follow a time-honored formula. A Butterfly Whirl At present there is only one here—Pachacamac. It represents a strong minority of students. Yet even more in the minority—although it claims to speak for the majority—is the so-called Independent party. As any grade school civics student could tell you, this is an unhealthy situation. Unhealthy because it takes more than a single party to fairly represent the student body. by Pete North If you listen closely this election, you will find that there are no real debates concerning real issues. The only contest is Pachacamac versus Independents. The Pachacamac candidates solidly represent the organized houses. The Independent candidates solidly represent only themselves. Yet there could be a solution. In the first place, few students living in unorganized houses know what the A.S.C. does. To interest them, so-called Independent leaders should begin—and keep up—an educational program, outlining council powers and activities. So that these students will be stimulated to vote, the so-called Independent leaders should draft a constructive platform. DOWN THE CENTER IN Judging from the comment and letters we have received, there is ample room for improvement in the A.S.C. Intelligent, ambitious leaders could find many improvements that should be made, if they only were willing to look. Just offhand, we can think of several improvements we think should be given serious thought. The powers of the student court should be re-examined to determine whether they are sufficient, or over-sufficient, to carry out the court's function. Antiquated smoking regulations, where and why student funds are handed out, student representation are other problems the A.S.C. should be trying to straighten out. Rule by a minority is seldom satisfactory. Yet that is what we have here. As things stand now, we foresee no change. Even, if by some quirk of fate, the so-called Independent party came into power, there would be little change. For actually, the Independents represent an even smaller minority than Pachacamae. By Bibler CHEERS TO YOU by Robert Leonard Mr. Basketball A rally was held this morning in honor of Mr. Basketball. Tonight a dinner will be given in honor of his co-champion team of Jayhawkers at the Eldridge hotel. Sports figures from all over the United States will be there to see the man who tied for the Big Seven crown with a team of sophomores. A team who at the start of the season weren't given a chance to make the first division. Recently he was named basketball's outstanding man of the year by the National Basketball Coaches association. But he has been an outstanding coach for 40 years. During his 33 years at K.U., his teams have won or shared in 21 championships. He is a tireless sort of man. He will take time out—anyplace or anytime—to speak to anyone on his favorite sport. He is the first to shake the hand of a coach whose team has just beaten his Jayhawkers. Although 64 years of age, he has the pep of his youngsters when sitting on the K.U. bench during a contest. Yes—a rally was held this morning in Hoch auditorium honoring Mr. Basketball. If you missed the rally, why not take just a minute when you pass the gym and go in and tell this man how you feel about our great season this year. His office is on the first floor. Stop and say, "The entire nation knows you, Mr. Basketball. Thanks for everything you've done for us at K.U." TODAY'S MAIL Not to deprecate Phog Allen's name but to enhance it, may we suggest that we consider calling the new fieldhouse Naismith-Allen field-house? We Are Proud Many of our students will not remember that the inventor of basketball, Dr. James Naismith, was for many years a member of our Physical Education faculty. Why not give the name of him as well as of basketball's most important coach to the fieldhouse? Kansas ought to be proud of both these men. John R. Malone Journalism instructor (Ed. Note: We'd like to hear from more readers on this question.) Charred Sir: Since smoking has been allowed at the University, there have been students who objected to the ban on smoking while studying in the library. The objection to "off limits" rulings became so strenuous that when the library addition was finished, provisions were made to have one room set aside where students could contemplate in a cloud of smoke, if they so desired. Although the Green room has been open only a few months,the hesitant attitude on the part of University officials has proven well founded. The Green room is one of the best furnished in the library. Yet certain students have displayed uter disregard for the polished walnut studying tables. Even though plenty of ash trays are supplied, the pock-marked finish of the tables bears evidence to the carelessness and irresponsibility of some student smokers. At the present rate, it won't be long before the tables will look like they've been through a forest fire. Your money paid for those tables; why not take care of them? Keith Leslie Journalism senior Ed. Note: Letters send us for publication should contain writer's name, telephone number, address, and University classification. The writer should sign his name at the bottom of his letter. No letter will be published if writer requests his name be withheld, if it is libelous, clearly false, or violates good taste. No length limits are imposed, although we reserve the right to edit down any letter needing cutting down. Daily Hansan University Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS News Room K.U. 251 Member of the Kansas Press Assm. National Editorial Assm., Inland Daily Press Assm., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service,420 Madison Ave., New York City. Adv. Room K.U.376 Editor-in-Chief ... James Morris Managing Editor ... Doris Greenbank Asst. Man. Editors ... Norma Hunsinger Kay O'Connor John Hill Ralph Hemeweny City Editor ... Edward Chapin Foster Editor ... Francis Leiley Photograph Editor ... Wanda Pratt Editorial Assists ... Pete North Sports Editor ... Richard Dilsaver Society Editor .. Faye Wilkinson Business Mgr. ... Jim Shriver Advertising Mgr. ... Charles Reiner Marketing Mgr. .. Yvonne Jousserand Nat. Adv. Mgr. .. Forest Browne Classified Adv. Mgr. .. Lee Dyer Promotion Mgr. .. John Wiedeman Little Man On Campus Z. B. "Dear Professor Snarf, we knew you'd be up half the night makein' that ole final, so we thought——" 'Small Things' by Keith Leslie Thanx for yore pie which I et. Doin' right good this smester. Maid a A in English lit. Coud you start sendin' three or four piez a week? Elections is coming and I want to be ready. Dear Ma: Yoor luvabul sun. P. S. Have found girl of my dreams, as she can run faster than Duke. A fellow who says he's seen one, says the model flying saucer is shaped like a coolie hat, with one large light at its pointed top. Underneath there was a circle of lights. We're inclined to doubt this report since Mother used to have a hat that fits this description. She lost it last week when the wind blew so hard. Speech students seem to be as resourceful as ever. We were particularly interested in hearing about the business junior who told how to get rid of a hangover. He suggests a can of beer on rising. We would like to know what you should do if you can't get up off your face? The contest to pick the Kansas Relay's queen has begun, and it is being said that one of the requirements of a candidate is that she be able to run 100 yards in 10 seconds. CANT BLAME HIM Rodney Nipnap warns that this is probably for the future queen's own good. Schwenningen, Germany—A man who refused his wife 25 cents to bet on football matches has ended his life, it was disclosed today. His wife would have won $17,000 with her correct forecast had he given her the money. Well, that ought to teach him. Lawrence Was Named For Boston Philanthropist Who Helped Settlers When the first two parties of settlers met to establish a city government in September, 1854, they decided to name their new town for Lawrence, who was a generous contributor to the New England Emigrant Aid Society, which had sponsored the colonization. Lawrence himself didn't visit the town until a few years before his death in 1886. The town of Lawrence was named by its early settlers for a man who never visited the site until it had become a thriving community. Amos A. Lawrence, a Boston philanthropist for whom the town was named, encouraged the settlement but did not take part in it himself. The passage of the Kansas-Nebraska bill in May, 1854, provided that when Kansas became a state its citizens would vote to decide whether it would be a free or slave state. The answer from the anti- slavery North was, "Settle Kansas and vote to make it free." The New England Emigrant Aid Society was organized to sponsor a community in Kansas territory. Men were sent out to exploit and find a suitable site. They chose present location because of its accessibility to water and the "beautiful view in all directions." When the first group of 29 emigrants arrived at the selected location, they camped on a hill which they named Mount Oread. The next day they moved down by what is now known as the Kaw river. They still had not selected a name for their town when the second group of settlers arrived a month later. So the 143 early citizens held a meeting and named the community "Lawrence" for a man who had never seen it. * 0 r MONDAY, APRIL 3, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Students Have Borrowed $26,011 From Loan Fund More than 650 loans, totaling $26,011.75, have been made to students since May, 1949, from the Flower fund, the most active of the student loan funds. Handled by the University of Kansas Endowment association and the University business office, the student loan funds are an important student aid service. An increase in the demand for loans is attributed to the decrease in the number of G. I. students and the changing economic scene. Loans made from the Flower fund, which is supported by contributions alone, are all short term loans of 30-60 days. For the study of medicine there are loan funds from which the medical student can borrow as much as $1,000 to be repaid after graduation and internship. These funds are the W. T. Graham fund, the Ethel Ann Jones Scholarship loan fund, the Medical Alumni Association student loan fund, and the A. Morris Ginsberg fund. Several memorial loan funds have been established with the Endowment association. The donors of these funds provided that the unused portions of these funds were to be invested in income-producing securities. The income received then is to be used for scholarship awards and to make up losses which may occur from the student loans. Among these memorial funds are the J. Frank Jones Memorial loan fund and the Dean L. E. Sayre Loan fund. The E. Catherine Lowe, the Ida H. Hyde, and the Co-operative House loan funds have been established for women students. Other loan funds handled by the Endowment association are the Charles Dean Bunker for zoology students, the Francis G. Peabody for biological science majors, the W. H. Lowe for men students, the Talented Student Loan fund for students taking advanced studies in foreign universities, and the Pharmacy Loar fund for pharmacy students. The loans sponsored by the business office are the Regular Student Loan fund and the Schorlship Loan fund. Applications for these loans may be made at the Endowment association office in Strong hall. The applications are passed on to the committees handling the loans and are checked by them. Hall Gets Mammals On Trip To Mexico A two-week trip to study animals on islands off the Gulf coast of Mexico was recently taken by Dr. E. R. Hall, director of the Museum of Natural History. Dr. Hall flew 90 miles south of Brownsville, Texas, and landed on the beaches of offshore Gulf coast islands to determine whether the animals there differed from those or the mainland. Dr. Hall obtained specimens representing four of the five type mammals found on the island. On the adjacent mainland, between 25 and 30 kinds of mammals are found. Although it appears that two of the island mammals differ from those on the mainland, Dr. Hall said that the specimens had not been studied sufficiently to state definite findings. The trip was provided by Dr. Curt von Wedel, prominent Oklahoma City physician, who accompanied him to the museum with valuable zoological specimens from his two expeditions to Africa. JAYHAWKER Phone 10 for Sho Time NOW thru WEDNESDAY John Payne Gail Russell "CAPTAIN CHINA" Late News Events Color Cartoon Official Bulletin Monday. April 3 Cheerleaders Training School, 5 pm. Wednesday, April 19, East Side, Robinson gym. Candidates' petitions for A.S.C. general spring election must be submitted to Wilma Shore by 6 p.m. Wednesday, phone 3450. Installation of new I.S.A. officers and short meeting with old council members, 7:15 p.m. today, 1423 New York. Mathematical colloquium, 5 p.m. Monday, 203 Strong hall. Prof. Max Dresden, "Some Mathematical Problems of Statistical Mechanics." W. Y.C.W. Executive Board, 4 p.m. today, Pine room, Union. Phi Sigma, noon Tuesday, 301 Snow hall. Dr. C. Leone, zoology department, speaker. All Student Council, 7:15 p.m. Tuesday, Pine room, Union. Young Republicans, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, 106 Green hall. Laackle, state chairman, Young G.O.P. speaker. Convention report; refresh- I.S.A. Executive council, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Miller hall. Society of American Military Engineers, 5 p.m. Wednesday, 105 Military Science building. Engineers in advanced course of three R.O.T.C.'s or with commissions eligible. Stateswomen club, 7:15 p.rh. today. Watkins hall. Ward P and Z meeting, 7 p.m. today, 262 Fraser hall. Faculty, Alumni Engineers' Guests Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity, entertained a group of their alumni and faculty members at a dinner March 29. Faculty members who attended were: J. O. Jones, T. F. McMahon, R. L Smith, Harold Kipp, Frank Bowdish, Edward Hansen, and Loring Hansan. Kansas City alumni members attending were: C. G. Davis, W. L. Patterson, R. S. Patterson, R. W. Nusser, John Grest, D. L. Flanders, John Hunt, D. J. Brown, D. Dwyer, B. R. Pennington, E. A. Elliott, John Wahstedt, Bill Weldon, Alex Kennedy, M. E. Borne, Robert Elliott. KU Couldn't Compete—Hah! Tucson, Ariz.—(U.P.)A new kind of contest was conducted at the University of Arizona. Ten candidates competed for the title of the ugliest man on the campus. "Movies Are Better Now Than Ever Before" TUE and WED Hurry . . last times tonite Hurry . . . last times tonight Glenn FORD Evelyn KEYES "Mr. Soft Touch" Follow the cars to see the stars THE FIRST MOTION PICTURE OF ITS KIND "HOME OF THE BRAVE" DOUGLIE DLICK · FRANK LOVEJY · JAMES EDWARDS STEVIE EVERY · JEFF CORKEY · LLOYD BRIDges Lawrence DRIVE - IN Theatre For Show Times Phone 260 Kansan Classified Advertising Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be mailed to you at 3 p.m. during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Dally Mann Business office. Journals must be submitted by 45 p.m. the day before publication date. Phone K.U. 376 Classified Advertising Rates One day Three days Five days 25 words or less ... 35c 65c 90c Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c FOR SALE PERFECT for Any Bounce! We have cudly bunnies and bouncy rubberized bunnies for Easter. Come in and pick out these bunnies. Blast Carmel Corn Shop. 842 Mass. 7 BOOK-EASE, a collapsible book holder. Can be used on a desk, in bed, anywhere. Now only 89c at your Student Union Book Store. 21 FORD '36, four door sedan. New upholstering and new paint. Motor in excellent condition. Inquire 714 Illinois. 5 UNDERWOOD, Standard. No. 5 typewriter. Good condition; Bargain for home. See at University of Kansai Press. PICNIC TIME is portable time. For expert repairs and batteries, bring your portables to the Radio Hospital, 14 East 9th. Full line of Everbready batteries. 6 THESES MATERIALS! All weights of thesis quality typing paper, carbon paper, and typewriter ribbons. Student Union Book Store. M4 SIX FOOT Cooler for sale. Like New cooler, has excellent ice capacity. Call 3243W or see at 2021.Wt. NOW IS THE TIME to place your order for an album of K.U. songs. Delivery by May 1. Only $4.90 at your Student Union Book Store. 6 FINEST TELEVISION - Best in sets and series with rentals. $75.00 up, and see the newest Emerson table table set at $159.50, Vernon, Phoenix and Electric 856 Vermont, Phone 138. 1948. 26 ft. M-system trailer house with electric refrigerator and water heater, forced air heating stove and butane cooking stove. 1316 Kentucky. 17 TRANSPORTATION GOING "TO New York City Easter; round trip wider wanted. Call 2557L. RIDERS: Round trip. Trip to Riders Parkway, all Sunday after 6:30 weekdays except Friday. Richard Longinari, 1022 Ala. Ala. over Easter. Willing to drive and share expenses. Contact Glenn Varenne. phone 965. Battetland Hall after 8:00 p.m. WANTED NOW!! M-G-M's BIGGEST WESTERN IN 10 YEARS!! DRIVING to New York non-stop for spring vacation. Round trip—recent convertible. Rider-drivers wanted. Call 3856M after 7 p.m. 3 STENOGRAPHER wanted. Wanted age, married or single, training, experience, references, address and telephone number. Daily Kansan. Box No. 3. 4 HIT TO TERROR BLOODTHIRSTY APACHED HOLD! BLOODTHIRSTY APACHES HOLD WHITE GIRL IN AMBUSH" starring ROBERT TAYLOR JOHN HODIAK-ARLENE DAHL DON TAYLOR • JEAN HAGEN • JOHN McINTIRE Cartoon — News "AMBUSH" with - SOON - 'CHEAPER BY THE DOZEN BUSINESS SERVICE Granada PHONE 946 TYPING: Neat, accurate, rapid. Regular rates. Prompt service. Mrs. Schear. Apt. R-36. 1810 Ln. Phone 3273R. 7 TENNIS铃 RESTRups and repaired. $9.00. Launch racket at Student Union Bookstore. 24 hour service. 3 TYPING, Theses, Term Papers, Reports, Notes, etc. Prompt Service. Mrs. Sheaher, 1028 Vermont. Ph. 1168R. tf* TYPING, Term papers, notebooks, let me do your work. Regular rates. Prompt attention. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601 THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. Complete overhaul, engine tune-up, body and feather repair, auto painting, used cars, used tools. JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our one-stop service includes pets and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Conn. St. Ph. 418. tf TYPING: Call Hazel Stanley .286M for prompt experienced service. 820% Mass LOST FOR RENT SINGLE ROOM to young man. No drink- ing. In south, 500 acres of south campus. See at 1616 Indiana. PAIR OF glasses in brown plastic case. Name and address in case. If found, name, address on night. Reward. Harold Heinrich. SHEAFFER Lead Pencil, Silicon Top at from Building on Monday, March 1980. Finder please return to Kansu son. NICE SINGLE room for rent Saturday. Inner-spring mattress. Student moving to fraternity. 1416 Tennessee. Phone 1555. 4 FOUR-ROOM房; modern; built-in-su- b, bath, nicely furnished, garage, Ph. 2365W after 6 p.m. Available within 10 days. 7 STUDENTS look! Room and board (optional). Space for few extra boards. 50c per meal. 5 days. Under new man- agement. 1213 Ohio. Phone 2917-R. 8 pleasant with comfortable beds, adjoining other rooms young man. Kitchen privileges if desired. Convenient to town and bus lines. 707 Tenn. Ph. 2536 R. 3 There were more than 100 apothecaries in London in 1617, the year they organized the guild called the Apothecaries' Company. VARSITY NOW thru TUESDAY Phone 132 for Sho Time Johnny Weissmuller "MARK OF THE GORILLA" 'BONGA OF - and - Johnny Sheffield PANTHER ISLAND" THEY CALLED HER A DISGRAGE TO FRENCH WOMANHOOD!!! NOW Showing! She's the talk of the town! Jennifer JONES • James MASON VAN HEFLIN • LOUIS JOURDAN Madame Bovary Shown 1:00-3:10-5:20-7:30 & 9:40 1 - Also Latest World News Soon "Key to the City" "Holiday Affair" Open 12:45 Continuous Shows. Patee PHONE 321 A Woman's Mind Is Like "SALOME" ... hidden from the world by seven veils . . . of reserve, shyness, fear . . . with friends a woman will drop two, perhaps four . . . with the man she loves five or six . . . but never the seventh, NEVER! This Is A Story Of A Woman Who Did! G. C.F. presents --- James MASON Ann TODD The Seventh Veil Music by London Symphony Orch. Pathetique Sonata (Beethoven) Seventh Veil Waltz; Overture, "Merry Wives of Windson"; Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto in C Major SPECIAL LIMITED ENGAGEMENT No Reserved Seats • All Seats 75c tax incl. SPECIAL STUDENT PRICE 50c tax incl. VARSITY 2—Days Only—2 WED-THUR Features at 2:00-3:50- 5:40-7:30-9:20 Box-Office Opens Each Day 1:30 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE KANSAS PAGE EIGHT MONDAY, APRIL 3. 1950 Meanwhile, Senator McCarthy says he intends to refuse to hand over two key documents, subpoena or not, to the senate investigators. He claims the documents show that Mr. Lattimore tampered with secret government files. He said their release might expose his informants to reprisals. Senate Delays Loyalty Defense Until Thursday Washington, April 3—(U.P.)-Sen- ate investigators today put off until Thursday the defense testimony of Owen Lattimore, the Far Eastern expert Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy charges is a Soviet spy. At Key West, Fla., President Truman formally announced that he had told the Attorney General, Secretary of State and the chairman of the Civil Service commission not to compete with subpoenas for government officials who have been served on the three officials by the senate investigators. Sen, Theodore F. Green, (D—R.I.) said that Mr. Lattimore had asked for additional time to prepare his reply to the Wisconsin Republican's charges. Senator Green also announced the investigators had postponed until tomorrow a decision on whether to subpoena Senator McCarthy's documents. He said the delay was necessary because Chairman Millard F. Tydings, (D-Md.) of the senate foreign relations investigating subcommittee would not be able to attend today. Senator Tydings arrived here only this morning from the Hague where he attended an Atlantic pact defense strategy meeting. Fred Kurata, associate professor of chemical engineering, will leave Monday, April 17, to attend meetings of the American Chemical Society in Detroit. The "documentary evidence" sought by the committee was referred to by Senator McCarthy in a senate suee March 30. Kurata To Attend ACS Meetings Mr. Kurata is co-author of a technical paper, "Operating Characteristics of a Vibrating-type Atomizing Nozzle," which will be presented at the meeting Thursday. April 20. The paper resulted from research done for the National Defense Research Committee during the war The atomizing nozzle is used to spray sea water in such fine particles to produce a screening fog in naval warfare. Mr. Kurata has applied for patents on more than six nozzles that apply the vibrating principle. Kansan Calendar of Coming Events Monday, April 3 Jeanne Aldridge will present her seance capital at 8 p.m. in Strong auditorium. Tuesday, April 4 "She Stoops to Conquer," a comedy by Oliver Goldsmith, at 8:15 p.m. in Fraser theater. Albenieri Trio, Chamber Music sales, at 8 p.m. in strong auditorium Wednesday, April 5 "She Stoops to Conquer," a comedy by Oliver Goldsmith, at 8:15 p.m. in Fraser theater. Albeneri Trio, Chamber Music series, at 8 p.m. in Strong auditorium. Thursday, April 6 "She Stoops to Conquer," a comedy by Oliver Goldsmith, at 8:15 p.m. in Fraser theater. Thursday, April 6 Atomic Energy and Man series Lecture by Dr. R. M.Dreyer, "Geoconscience Occurrence of Fissionable Materials at 7:30 p.m. in Strong auditorium Friday. April 7 "She Stoops to Conquer," a comedy by Oliver Goldsmith, at 8:15 p.m. in Fraser theater. IM Softball Games Postponed By Rain Start of the intramural softball season today was rescheduled because of rain. Don Powell, intramurals director, said games will be played tomorrow if possible. Powell also said he is trying to find umpires for softball games. He invites interested persons to see him in his office at Robinson gym. Umpires are paid $1 per game. Greek Houses To Aid Students Eight fraternities and three sororities will take part in a program sponsored by the state department to help German students see how democracy works and how American college students live. Starting next September, 11 students will attend the University with the help of the groups. Some of the students will live at the organized houses and others will eat their meals there. J. A. Burzle, associate professor of German in charge of the program, said that a list of applicants will be sent to K.U. so that the organizations may choose the students they want. The applications tell of the student's activities, interests, and majors. The groups taking part in the program are: Alpha Delta Pi, Kappa Alpha Theta, and Sigma Kappa sororities, and Acacia, Delta Tau Delta, Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa Phi Kappa Psi, and Sigma Nu fraternities. German students apply at universities in Germany and are carefully selected. From 35,000 applications only 500 will come to the United States this fall. The program was started the past year by the army and since then has been given to the state department. During the first year of the plan 156 students were selected to come to the United States. Jacobs Opposes State Meddling With Business The purpose is to break down the intellectual, cultural, and spiritual isolation of Germany. United States officials feel that more could be done by bringing over students and letting them see and judge for themselves. Professor Burzle gave credit to Dale Helmers, president of Inter-Fraternity council, and Marie Schumacher, president of Pan-Hellenic council, for the success of the plan at the University. The past year K.U. accepted two German students, Robert Schnorr and Dr. Werner Winter, both of whom will return to Germany at the conclusion of the present term. State intervention is justified only where it is impossible for private enterprise to function. That was the opinion of Albert C. Jacobs, chancellor of the University of Denver, who spoke to approximately 125 lawyers and judges at a Law Institute banquet. The banquet was held March 31 in the Union. Chancellor Jacobspurned the arguments of those who say that state ownership is necessary because labor unions, without the restraint of law, have the power to disrupt the nation's economy. He also expressed the fear that statism and planned economy are immediate and real threats to the American way of life. "No other group is in such a strong position to defend free society in the war against a planned economy as is the legal profession," Chancellor Jacobs said. "A large proportion of the legislators who make the law, the judges who interpret it, and the public administrators who apply the laws are members of the bar." "The universities can supply the truth of which we are not afraid," he said, "and they can do their part in developing critical minds, minds that can see the fallacies in the truth of everything." Vidual is no longer fit to manage his own affairs and must let the state do it. He urged that universities demand higher qualifications in admitting students to law school and that they provide better and more individual instruction. These are necessary to equip the legal profession for its social responsibilities, he said. "The practicing members of the bar must show more zeal in protecting the rights of the little fellow so the government won't have to step in to protect him." Dergance To Talk 'Off The Record' Philip Dergance, former United States district attorney for Kansas will speak before members of Sigma Delta Chi and Theta Sigma Phi professional journalistic fraternities, and journalism faculty members at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the English room the Union. The William Herbert Carruth contest has been extended to April 17, .10 that contributors will have a chance to work on their manuscripts during Easter vacation. This The speech is the second in a series of "off-the-record" being sponsored by Sigma Delta Chi. Writers' Contests Offer Large, Small Cash Prizes Do you pride yourself on literary skill? Can you write poetry song lyrics, essays? Then sit down at your typewriter and bang out a manuscript. It may be worth cash. The annual Hattie Elizabeth Lew- is essay contest will pay $100 for the best essay on the application of the teachings of Jesus Christ to some modern day problem. The contest offers $75 for second money, and $50 for third place. Deadline for this contest is Friday. May 5. For instance, if you write song 'lyrics, the Chicago Singing Teachers' guild will pay you $50 for a poem which can be set to music; if you write it test-submitted, that is. Just write to Greenwich Central college, Naperville, Ill., for the entrance data. Deadline for this contest is October 15, 1950. Here on the campus, awards are not lacking either. Prizes ranging from $5 to $2500 are given for good library efforts. The Quill club offers a $5 prize for the best poetry, and $10 for the best prose entry in its contest which ends Saturday, April 8. This contest will pay the whopping sum of $2500 for a novel, volume of short stories, full length play, or volume of short plays, book of essays, biography, collection of poems, or a cultural or interpretative study of contemporary society. This prize is offered each year, and the manuscripts must be in by July 1 The largest prize at the University is offered by the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, in cooperation with G.P. Putnam's Sons, publishers. If none of the manuscripts are considered worthy of the big prize, cash prizes of $150, $100, and $50 be awarded the three best entries. contest will pay $50, $25, and $15 for the three best poems. Engineers Council Approves Course Through these prizes, a few ideas, a little skill, some research, and some spare time can be parlayed into enough cash to pay the bills for awhile. The undergraduate program in petroleum engineering at the University has been officially accredited by the Engineers Council for Professional Development. K. U. is now one of the 15 schools in the nation accredited in this field by the E.C.P.D. and one of the two schools in the Big Seven so accredited. The University of Oklahoma is the other. WORLD NEWS at Press Time French Receive Airplanes Bizerte, Tunisia, North Africa, April 3—(U.P.)—French troops were called out today to begin unloading 48 American navy warplanes representing the first shipment of American arms to France under the Atlantic pact. Fliving Bixbys Delaved Tokyo—(U.P.)-The Flying Bibxys were forced to return to Calcutta today about three and a half hours after taking off there for Tokyo on a round the world flight. Speeding well into the second half of their quest of a globe girdling flight record, they were forced back to Calcutta by engine trouble. Whether they intended to continue the flight was not indicated in the reports received at the Haneda airport here, where they had been scheduled to arrive about midnight. Smallpox Infects Glasgow Glasgow, Scotland — (U.P.)—Glasgow was declared infected by deadly "Eastern Smallpox" today and travelers by land, sea and air were not to be treated without international vaccination certificates. 100 doses of vaccine from London 000 doses of vaccine from London. The health ministry flew in $80-. The authorities said they hoped to avert a crisis caused by men in mass vaccinations. Thousands of Scots jammed public offices. The scourge was brought to the Scottish lowlands by an Indian seaman from Bombay. Rain To Snow Is Forecast Topeka, April 3—(U.R)—Southeast Kansas was soaked by a thunderstorm that dumped up to 3.56 inches of rain and for a time closed an arterial highway. A beneficial rain this morning in the Kaw valley of northeast Kansas, averaged about half an inch up to 8 am. with a gentle fall continuing. But the dry Southwest missed nearly all the moisture and isn't scheduled to get any appreciable precipitation in the 24 hours just ahead. Chill north winds of strong velocity will bring Kansas colder temperatures tomorrow likely will be cloudy, windy and colder with scattered snow flurries. The official forecast is for snow in northwest and extreme northern Kansas and scattered light rains changing to occasional light snow in the rest of the state this afternoon and tonight. No Preliminaries In Orators' Contest No preliminary round will be held for the Lorraine Buehler oratorical contest, William Conboy, instructor in speech, said today. The contest will be at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the little theater in Green hall. Mr. Conboy urged that those planning to enter the contest submit their names and the titles of their speeches to him at 1 Green hall. The preparation of leather is the oldest craft known to man, even older than textile weaving. Cervantes Day Speaker To Be Dr. Christensen Dr. Asher Christensen, professor of political science at the University of Minnesota, will be the principal speaker at the annual Cervantes Day celebration Saturday, April 29. He will speak on "The need for Spanish—the Layman's Point of View." Cervantes Day was established by the department of Spanish over 25 years ago, and the program for this year has been planned by the department of Romance languages and the American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese. The celebration is held the first Saturday after the anniversary of the death of Spain's great man of letters, Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra. He died 334 years ago. He is regarded as the symbol of the unity and the variety of Hispanic thought and civilization. The celebration will begin at 9 p.m. and coffee will be served in 117 Strong hall. Registration will be in the same room from 10 to 10:30 a.m. The program will begin in Strong auditorium at 10:30 a.m. Miss Agnes Brady, assistant professor of Romance Languages, will demonstrate the teaching of Spanish in grade schools. Eugene Savaiano, professor of Romance Languages at the Municipal University of Wichita, will discuss "Pevera's Portrayal of the Clergyman." This meeting is open to the public. Competition of high school and junior college students for the A.A.T.S.P. medal will be conducted from 11 a.m. until noon in 113 Strong hall. At 3:30 p.m., the Cervantes Day Party will be held in Strong auditorium. Jose M. Osma, professor of Romance languages, will act as master of ceremonies. The program will be widely varied, and is designed to attract students. Between luncheon and the afternoon program, guests will be invited to visit two exhibitions, including the display of Hispanic art in the Museum of Art, and the collection of rare books and Spanish regalia in 119 Strong hall. Election of officers of the A.A.T. S.P. will be held at a business meeting from noon to 12:30 p.m. The Cervantes Day luncheon will be held at 1 p.m. in the Ballroom of the Student Union. Miss Aldridge is a member of Mu Pike Epsilon and was president in 1950. She is also a member of the choir of the school. Presbyterian church of Lawrence. Miss Aldridge has been a member of the A Cappella choir and was president of the group in 1949. She also has been assistant director of the choir. As a member of the Light Opera guild, she had a leading role in "The Mikado." "The Gondoliers," and "Sweethearts." Miss Aldridge is the student of Mrs. Alice Moncrieff, professor of voice. Jeanne Aldridge, fine arts senior, will present her senior recital at 8 p.m. today in Strong auditorium Senior To Give Recital Tonight Money from the sale will be used to increase a loan fund available to married students. The loan is made in installments, after which interest is charged A White-Elephant sale will be given by the K.U. Dames at 8 p.m. Wednesday in 417 Hall. KU Dames To Hold White Elephant Sale Auctioneer for the sale will be Mrs. Charles Sims, 1208 Delaware street. The average person walks the equivalent of twice-around-the-globe in the course of a lifetime. University Dailu Kansan Tuesday, April 4, 1950 OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas STUDENT NEWS PAPER Two Students Candidates For Council Seats Two University students, Thomas J. Alexander, second year law, and Lester L. Henry, third year law, are candidates for seats in the city council in the city election today. Henry is running for re-election from the sixth ward. Issues in the election are: election of six members of the city council, a proposal to adopt the city manager-commission form of government and a decision on a $75,000 Sixth street cutoff. The city manager-commission proposal has been one of the most hotly argued throughout pre-election campaigns. At present the city is being governed by a partisan council system. Handbills have been distributed, both for and against the proposal, and party workers will furnish transportation to the polls and baby-sitting service for mothers. According to local political observers, the outcome of the election hinges on the size of the vote. A large vote should increase the chances of a favorable vote on the city manager-commission issue. The polls in each ward opened at 6 a.m. today and will remain open until 7 p.m. Zeigler Will SubmitPaper John E. Zeigler, Jr., engineering junior, will present "Clapp Oscillators" at the second annual Costelow student paper competition to be held in Kansas City, Mo, Tuesday, April 11. Zeigler, who will represent the University chapter of the Institute of Radio Engineers, was recently one of the winners of a student paper competition here at the University. Winning this contest entitled him to compete in the Kansas City contest. Several colleges and universities from this area will be represented. Twenty students and three staff members of the School of Engineering plan to attend the contest and make a tour of Southwestern Bell Telephone company, Midwest Research institute, and Trans-World airline flying field. ISA Officers Installed Monday Richard Krimminger, College junior, took the oath for the presidency of the Independent Students association at a candlelight installation service in his home Monday night Union Activities Election To Be Held After Easter Selection of officers for the Student Union activities scheduled for Wednesday has been postponed until after Easter vacation. Other executive officers installed were Robert Dunwell. All Student Council representative, and Louise Horton, secretary, education juniors; Carol Jeannine Pritchard, College sophomore, social welfare chairman; and Robert Longstaff, College freshman, public relations chairman. Allyn Browne, College junior, vice-president, and Donna Hobein, College freshman, social chairman, were unable to attend the installation, but will take oaths later. A meeting of the operating board Student Union activities will be and April 20. Western Civ Gives Preliminary Exams The preliminary Western Civilization examination will be held at 7:30 p. m. today. Students whose last names begin with letters A through M will take the test in 305 Bailey Chemical laboratory. Those whose last names begin with letters N through Z will take the test in 101 Snow hall. The test will cover units 6 through 10. Anyone who misses the test tonight may take it Thursday, April 20, during the test over units one through five. Court To Hear Phone Rate Case Topека, Kan., April 4—(U.P.) Two vital telephone rate cases, due for argument Thursday, highlighted the agenda today as the Kansas supreme court moved into its second session of the April term. The state's highest tribunal will decide whether Southwestern Bell Telephone company will be granted permanent higher rates. The court faces other important matters, including appeals from three phases of the Kansas Liquor Control act. One of the latter cases involves alleged violation of state regulations through secret rebates by a wholesaler to retailers. A second concerns possible loss of license by a dealer who failed to affix state liquor stamps within a prescribed period. The third involves prohibition of a distributor paying all or part of transportation costs of liquor sold to a retailer. Decision day on cases heard the past month will be Saturday, April 8. It is possible that the justices will hand down a ruling in the George Neff murder case. Neff is appealing a life sentence for murder in the shooting of his brother-in-law, Kenpeth Wynn. WEATHER KANSAS—Clear and cold tonight. Wednesday sunny and warmer. Low tonight 20-25; high Wednesday in middle 50's. KU Graduate May Have Begun 'Saucers' Story A University of Kansas graduate may have started the current wave of hysteria about flying saucers and the little pilots only 23 inches high. One of the outstanding designs in the history of aviation, the "flying wing" which Zimmerman invented has not been flown since 1947, the navy said. At that time, the wing was regarded as potentially the tastest propeller-driven aircraft in the world. The navy classified it as an experimental fighter, and it was the only such aircraft to offer both extreme high and low speeds in one machine. Charles H. Zimmerman, who graduated from the School of Engineering in 1929, designed the only machine in the United States that resembles "eye-witness" discriptions of the saucers, navy officials said today. The part Zimmerman's aircraft plays in the current hysteria about flying saucers was brought out in an article which appeared in U.S. News and World Report, claiming they are being built by the navy. The plane looks like a pancake, and is powered by three engines. It has a horizontal stabilizer on each side of the plane, as well as two vertical fins. The cockpit is on the leading edge of the plane, between the two engines. The original model weighed 3,000 pounds. The navy has denied that it is working with any planes which may be considered saucer shaped, and says that Zimmerman's plane is the only one it ever built that resembles a flying saucer. Two Statues, Four Paintings Added To Art Collection The Albeneri trio, an internationally famous group, will present the final concerts in the University Chamber Music series at 8 p.m. today and Wednesday in Strong auditorium. Albeneri Trio Will Play Today The trio consists of Erich Kahn, pianist; Giorgio Ciompi, violinist; and Benar Heifetz, cellist. A life-size clay statue of Diana, the Greek huntress, with her dog at her feet, is one of the new displays at the University Museum of Art. A gilded bronze statue, "Virgin and Child" is another of the statues on exhibit. It was made in 1650 by the Roman sculptor Ercole Ferrata, who used three kinds of tool markings on it. The smooth surface of the Virgin's face and the Child's body were made by one kind of tool marking and the coarsely woven linen blouse and mantle by another. The statue, made in 1740, was recently purchased by the museum. Diana has a bow in her hand and a quiver on her back. Her youthful face is surrounded by curls. An oil painting, "Crucifixion", which was hidden in a German salt mine by Hitler during World War II, is another of the new possessions now being displayed. The picture was painted by the Austrian baroque painter, M.F. Kremser-Schmidt. It was seized from a private Viennese collection by Hitler A third marking was used to stimulate the satin and the fur on her robe. Four European paintings have also been purchased by the museum and are being displayed on the main floor. Another recently acquired European oil painting is the "Arrest of Jesus," which was done in 1615 by the Roman baroque painter, Guercino. It formerly belonged to the 19th century American architect, William Morris Hunt. Two more paintings on display are the "Healing of Malchus's Ear" by the 16th century Venetian, Leandro Bassaro, and "Virgin and Saints," a painting by the Florentine painter, Cristofano Allori. Senior Orders Due April 15 for his museum in Linz, but was recovered by the American army. The canvas still had traces of salt water drippings on the varnish when it was bought. Sixi American paintings of the 1870-1920 period being displayed are: a scene of the Scottish border by J. M. Cropsey, the "Lady in Green" by Dewing, "Dominican Monk" by Elhu Vedder, two paintings by Dr. William Rimmer, and a view of the French harbor of Honfleur by Dennis M. Bunker. The deadline for placing orders for Senior announcements is noon, Saturday, April 15, Harold Swartz, student activities accountant at the business office, said today. "Crucifixion" is a painting of Jesus on the cross between the two thieves. Roman soldiers are sitting nearby casting dice for Jesus' garment. Mary Magdalene and the Virgin Mary are mourning and praying beneath the cross. However, because that includes the spring vacation, the effective deadline for most students is noon, Saturday, April 8, he warned. Summer Classes Begin June 12 The schedule of summer session classes was announced today by Dean George B. Smith, summer session director. The 10 schools of the University and 20 institutes and short courses sponsored by University Extension were included in the schedule. The eight weeks of class work during the session will be from Monday, June 12, through Saturday, August 5, with registration and enrollment on Thursday and Friday, June 9 and 10. The maximum number of hours a student will be allowed to take during the session will be eight. The School of Law will offer two 5-week terms, from Monday, June 6, through Monday, August 14, with a maximum of 10 hours credit. Four hundred forty-three courses, and 45 teaching departments will be offered in about 500 classes. The institutes and short courses include both credit and non-credit offerings for teachers and other types of professional workers. The summer session lecture series, outdoor movies, street dances, and the popular evening playground recreation program will be continued, Dean Smith said. Weekly band and orchestra concerts will be given by the Midwestern Music camp units and the School of Fine Arts will provide a concert and recital series. An appreciable drop in enrollment is expected. Summer enrollment during the past two summers has been 3,550. Large enrollments are expected in the Graduate school, and the Schools of Education and Medicine, the decline in veterans attendance, lessening the duplication of "college generations" and the desire for accelerated programs, will probably be noticed in the other schools. Aldridge Recital Pleasantly Sung By Dale S. Romig It took Jeanne Aldridge quite a while to get warmed up to her music Monday night in Strong auditorium, but when she did, the audience heard a pleasant senior recital. Miss Aldridge opened her program with the familiar "Nel, corpus well enough done, but betrayed a little uncertainty in her voice. Four German songs made up the second set; of them, the last two by Wilhelm Schreiber. The music was outstanding in every language Miss Aldridge sang. "Ave Maria" from "Othello" is a sensitive aria, and Miss Rldridge's interpretation of it indicated her regard for the prayer scene from which it is taken. Several French numbers and five last digits up the remainder of the program. Chicago, April 4 —(U.P.)— Wheat futures, which declined sharply yesterday, showed a steady to firm undertone at the opening of the board of trade today. Other grain futures were steady. Miss Aldridge's accompanist was Jacqueline Stoops, fine arts junior. Wheat Futures Steady Yale Physicist To Give Talk On Humanities Dr. Henry Marginau, professor of physics and natural philosophy at Yale university, will give the seventh Humanities lecture of the third annual series at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Fraser theater. He will speak on "Physics, Determinism, and Freedom." Dr. Margenau received his bachelor of arts degree from Midland college, Fremont, Neb., in 1924, and his master of science degree from Nebraska university in 1926. He served as an instructor in physics at Nebraska in 1926-27. In 1929, he received his doctor of philosophy degree from Yale university. Dr. Margenau, who is now on a speaking tour, is recognized as an authority in the field of physics. He has studied intermolecular and nuclear forces, high frequency discharges, and the philosophical foundations of physics. He has also worked with the atomic energy commission and the bureau of naval research. The past year he served as a moderator at a nationwide colloquium for physicists at Columbia university. The colloquium concerned the ethical challenge of modern physics. The lecture is sponsored jointly by the Humanities committee and the department of physics. Award Open For Architects A $25 scholarship will be awarded in June to the beginning architectural student showing the most progress in his work for the year. The scholarship will be given for the next three years. The award is made possible through a $100 cash gift to the architecture department from Lorentz and Goldman Sachs, added to WVCH and Peddie architectural firm, Wichita. George M. Beal, head of the architectural department, said beginning architectural students, especially those in Architectural Design I and II, are eligible for the scholarship. Mr. Schmidt is regional director of the American Institute of Architects. In the past, he has awarded savings bonds to beginning students. Thirty-one senior boys from 20 Kansas high schools are taking the final examinations in the Summer field scholarship competition today. The candidates took examinations on Monday and were guests that attended for University Summerfield scholars in the Kansas room of the Union. 31 Senior Boys Take Finals Today The finalists, chosen from the 245 students who took the preliminary examinations in February, are today being interviewed by members of the Summerfield committee. Committee members are: James K. Hitt, chairman; Leonard H. Axe; Dr. Domenico Gagliardo; Dr. Paul W. Gilles; Irving Hill, treasurer of the endowment association; Dr. Cecil G. Lalicker; Dr. C. F. Weinaug; and Dr. L. C. Woodruff. Donald K. Alderson is executive secretary of the committee. Approximately 10 of the 31 students will be named Summerfield scholars. They will receive financial assistance at the University, and in return must maintain a high grade average. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, APRIL 4,1950 do Bacteriologists Do Research On Rare Disease Fungus Bv STEVE FERRO Research on histoplasmosis, a rare disease which is the most common in this area, is being conducted by the bacteriology department. An occurrence of positive histoplasmin skin reactions of 45.2 per cent of the students is reported by Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the health service at Watkins hospital. The disease is mildly serious in its active state, however, few cases discovered here are active. There have been approximately 100 cases of active histoplasmosis and 80 recorded deaths in the United States from the disease. The importance of the disease lies in its similarity to tuberculosis. Both diseases are lung aliments and when active they are associated with chronic coughing weight loss, and fever. The first objective of the research is to recover the organism, histoplasma capulatum fungus, from nature. This organism has not been isolated from nature because other fungi and organisms overgrow it. It can be isolated from pure cultures in clinical cases. The department has in its possession 10 strains which have been isolated from clinical cases by Dr. Michael F. Furcolow, senior surgeon of the U.S.Public Health service at Hixon laboratories at the University Medical center in Kansas City, Kan. A second objective is to produce a better antigen for testing the sensitivity to histoplasma. Felix A. Pileggi and William F. Myers, assistant instructors in bacteriology, are carrying on this research in their laboratory in Snow hall. They are using chick embryos as culture media. It is hoped that successful methods of isolation can be made to show the source and distribution in nature of the fungus causing histioplasmosis. The research being done in the bacteriology department is headed by Dr. Noble P. Sherwood, past chairman of the department. Dr Furcolow, who suggested the problem, is working on tuberculosis and its association with histoplasmosis. Dr.W. H Horr, associate professor of botany, is consulting botanist on the project and is helping to find where the fungus exists in nature. The research being conducted is part of a study by Dr. Furcolow and others in the U.S.P.H.S. Application for a grant from the U.S.P.H.S. has recently been approved for work at K. U. on histoplasmosis. The relation of tuberculosis and histoplasmosis is not known, however, histoplasmosis produces calissified "spots" in the lungs in a similar manner. In this area 25 per cent of the positive chest plates of tuberculosis show signs of histoplasmosis. Want $600 In Cancer Drive It is hoped that at least $600 can be raised in Douglas county in the annual cancer fund campaign which began April 1, John T. Andrews, state campaign chairman, said today. Anyone may contribute to the fund. Mr. Andrews said, "I urge everyone to give and give quickly. There are a lot of people fighting this cancer battle, and when 200,000 people are killed in a year by the disease, as there were in the United States in 1949, it is quite a battle." Reginald R. Strait, chairman of the University drive, pointed out that 38 people died of cancer in Douglas county in 1949. To guard against the disease, a cancer-tumo diagnostic clinic has been held twice monthly during the past 20 months. In these clinics, 163 cancer case have been studied by the staff of the Lawrence Memorial hospital. Dr N. P. Sherwood, professor of bacteriology, is the director of the clinic Contributions to the drive should be sent to Reginald R. Strait, 107 Robinson gymnasium, University of Kansas, or to the Kansas division of the American Cancer society, 506 New England building, Topeka. "We know that over 50 percent of the cases can be saved if the person will go to his doctor soon enough, Mr. Andrews said. "Until research develops a cure for the disease, early diarrhois is vital." In many cases where chest X-rays show calcification and yet there is negative skin test for tuberculosis, histoplasmosis is thought to be the cause of the clalcification. University Daily Kansan Mail subscription: $3 a semester. $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence bid $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and holidays. Entered as second class administration periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. Nancy Lichty Nancy Lichty Joyce Emick Marilyn Ringler Barbara Zimmerman Donnis Stiles Jean Taylor Diane Wade Lorraine Mather Kathleen Larson Jerre Mueller Have you cast your ballot for Revlon's "Miss Fashion Plate of 1950"? Ravlans' exciting "Miss Fashion Plate of 1950" contest closes midnight. Saturday, April 151 Cast your ballot, today! The girl who wins the title "Miss Fashion Plate of 1950" on your campus will receive a full year's supply of Revon products FREE! If she wins the national "Miss Fashion Plate of 1950" title she will get a free trip to Bermuda by Pan American Clipper, including an expense-free week at the famous "Castle Harbour", plus seven other thrilling prizes: an RCA-Victor "Globetrotter" portable radio; a Lane Hope Chest; an Amelia Earhart Party Case in "Revin Red" leather; a necklace, bracelet and earring set by Trifari; a silver-plated lighter, cigarette urn and tray set by Ronson; a year's supply of Barkshire's nylon stockings; a Wittnauer wrist watch. **GRAND PRIZE A glamorous trip to Bermuda by Pan American Clipper, including an expense-free week at the famous "Castle Harbour".** Choose your candidate on four counts only: beauty and charm... fashion knowledge and dress... personal grooming... personality and poise. Clip your ballot today and drop it in the ballot box in this newspaper office or other locations on campus. There's a panel of beauty authorities waiting to judge your candidate for the national Grand Prize. I nominate___, ___ for "MISS FASHION" PLATE of 1950", a contest sponsored by Revlon Products Corp. Your Name --in a new SPRING ENSEMBLE by Fabergé . . . perfume (in the famous Fabergette applicator) with matching cologne, nestled in an honest-to-goodness little straw sailor, 3.00 the set Your choice of Aphrodisia in a chartreuse hat, Australia Won't Accept Bridges Sydney, Australia, April 4. (U.P.) A high ranking government official said today that Australia would refuse to accept Australia-born Harry Bridges, San Francisco labor leader, if the United States tried to deport him. Bridges, now on trial for perjury in San Francisco, faces possible deportation on charges of having lied when he denied in an application for citizenship that he was a Communist. "I know of no international agreement whereby we would be legally obligated to receive a denaturalized American deportee who was born in Australia," the official said. "I don't think we want him. He is America's baby, not ours." The official said the United States had not contacted Australia on the subject. "The United States government appears to be proceeding on the assumption that Bridges could be deported without knowing the position of the Australian government," the official said. "The only way Bridges could be admitted would be as an immigrant." He added that if a San Francisco jury finds Bridges guilty," Australian laws prohibit the entry of convicted felons." He said Bridges' entry .would cause widespread protests from the public. T ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ The Australian government, at present involved in a fight with the Communist - dominated Waterside Workers federation because of a series of recent strikes, has threatened to deport "Communist trouble makers." Beauty Queen Pictures Due Thursday Pictures for the Jayhawker beauty queen contest must be submitted to the Jayhawker office in the Union by 5 p.m. Thursday. In a preliminary judging, 50 girls will be chosen. Of this number, 15 will be sent to the judges for selection of the 1950 queen. Judges for the 1950 Jayhawker queen will include such Hollywood beauty experts as Perc Westmore, noted make-up man, John Roberts Powers, model executive, and Burt Lancaster, screen and radio star. The Jayhawker staff urges all organized houses, women's halls, and campus organizations to submit pictures of candidates as soon as possible. Finalists will be judged entirely on their photogenic beauty. Clock Silenced By Voters Colebrook, N. H.—(U.P.)After 50 years of listening to the town clock strike the hours in the Congregational Church tower, townfolk voted to silence the bonging between 10 p. m. and 7 a. m. AGAIN This Year! State Farm Mutual slashes auto insurance costs! New Savings up to 25% for Kansas Drivers! Call or come in now! M. R. Carison 5 E. 9th Ph. 214 Licensed agent for State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company Read the Want Ads Daily. We shall be open during Easter vacation 6 a.m.-8 p.m. daily 6 a.m.-10:30 p.m. Sun. Our Easter special: Try our fountain service, also. FRIED CHICKEN -- $.75 ALAMO CAFE 1109 Mass. APRIL '50 Weaver's 901 Mass. SUN. MON. TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. 2 3 4 5 7 8 9 15 16 22 23 29 30 A hatful of fragrance Woodhue in a white hat, Tigress in a blonde hat, Straw Hat in a red hat plus tax Weaver's Cosmetics—Main Floor TUESDAY, APRIL 4, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE di da Fl to M E l di W a Fl or M G m io D a D p o c e M A B R s A e t a h a i. Fletcher-Wintermote A. W. F. Delta Delta Delta announces the joining of Miss Barbara Fletcher, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William T. Fletcher, Jr., of Kansas City, Mo. to Mr. Richard Wintermote, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Wintermote of El Dorado. The announcement was made at dinner March 18, by Mrs. Charles Wentworth, housemother, who wore a corsage of white carnations. Miss Fletcher wore a corsage of yellow orchids. Chocolates were passed by Miss Charlene Farrell and Miss Georgia Haum', who wore pink carnation corsages. Canterbury Club Elects Miss Fletcher is a fine arts junior and a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority. Mr. Winternote is a College senior and a member of Delta Upsilon fraternity. Barbara Glover has been named president of Canterbury club, Episcopal student organization. Other officers for the coming year will be Mary Louise Colyer, secretary; Jo Anne Elder, treasurer; and Andrew Berry, representative to the Student Religious council. The new sponsors of the group are Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Partridge. The club plans to attend a conference of Kansas Canterbury clubs at Kansas State College after Easter vacation. Among new words which the atomic age has given the dictionary is "weaponeer." It means "one who activates an atomic bomb into readiness for release upon a target." From Sandwiches to Steaks . . . Miller's Bar-B-Q has it! 1/2 Fried Chicken Dinner $1.25 12 oz. T-Bone Steak $1.25 Large Cube Steak 85c Hamburger Steak 60c Pork Chops 75c Bar-B-Q Beef and Pork Sandwiches 25c Thirty-three seniors, 24 juniors, and three professors will be initiated into Sigma Tau, national honorary engineering fraternity, Thursday. Home made Pie Miller's Bar-B-Q 4 miles NE U.S. 40 and 24 Engineering Group To Initiate Thursday Burton W. Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, will speak on what journalism and engineering mean to each other and the value of good public relations in any field. The initiation will be held at 5:30 p.m. in the Pine room of the Union. The initiation banquet will be at 6:30 p.m. in the Kansas room. The three professors to be initiated are Frank Bowdish, assistant professor of mining engineering; Harold L. Kipp, professor of mechanical engineering; and Stanley M. Walas, associate professor of chemical engineering. Frances Pence became president of Corbin hall at installation ceremonies Sunday. Other officers will be Donna Hillier, vice-president; Nancy Pinckney, secretary; Shirley Michelson, treasurer; Wilma Hartman and Lura Mae Stouder, social chairman; Shirley Hillier, fire chief; Hanna Mary McDowell, keeper of the archives. Corbin Elects Pence Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers Seymour - Miller THE BIRTHDAY OF SIMON AND MARGARET Theta Phi Alpha sorority announces the pinning of Miss Fairy June Seymour to Mr. Robert J. Miller. Miss Seymour is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Seymour of Tonganoxie and Mr. Miller is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Miller of Claflin. Miss Seymour wore a corsage of talisman roses. Her attendants, Miss Patten and Miss Louise Koppers, wore double gladioli. At the annual scholarship dinner March 16, Miss Seymour was presented with an oversized apple as a token of special achievement and the pinning was announced by Miss Patricia Patten. Mrs. Mary Carby, housemother of Theta Phi Alpha, and Mrs. E. R. Hooper, housemother of Phi Kappa fraternity, were presented with corsages of double gliadiio. Our Suggestion for Tonight CHICKEN - Filet of Sole with Tartar Sauce - A Crisp Vegetable Salad - Pie and Coffee 821 Vermont Duck's Tavern -By Bibler The Bus-(Adv.) BUS STOP The Bus—(Adv.) BUS STOP $\textcircled{1}$ RAPID TRANSIT CO. $\textcircled{2}$ KAPID TRANSIT CO. $ \textcircled{2} $ $ \textcircled{3} $ BUS STOP WATCH YOUR LANGUAGE $\textcircled{3}$ 'Umbrella Size' Hats May Be Summer Fashion To Make Up For Sheer Dresses, Short Skirts BUS STOP WATCH YOUR LANGUAGE New York, April 4—(U.P.)-Women are going to have to wear their hats this summer-to keep from "feeling naked all over." That's the prediction of Fred Fredericks, who dreams up the hats that carry the well known John- Fredericks, Inc., label The way this summer's clothes are built, he pointed out, "Psychologically, a woman is going to feel undressed." "The dresses are sheer," he said. "They haven't any sleeves. The skirts are short. The necklines are plunging, or low. "But a woman doesn't like to look naked all over. So, unconsciously, she will reach for a hat." For the really shy girls, Fredericks is making some of those hats so broad they'll take the place of an umbrella, too. Stiff or floppy natural leghorns trimmed with orange ribbons, sheer and mysterious black horsehair and lush velvet are built to hang three inches over the shoulders in some cases. cases. There aren't so many flowers on the hats as sometimes, Fredericks said, because there are going to be so many flowers covering up the bare spaces somewhere else. Typewriter Tables ...$5.95 All steel construction, on casters, easy to roll. Sterling Furn. Co. 928 Mass. SUNSHINE Want a real taste treat? Try our Ice Cream made fresh daily from Top Quality Ingredients to produce that rich, "Home Made" Goodness. Open 11 a.m. CHATEAU DRIVE-IN MAIL AT 12345 Curb Service After 4 p.m. Pre-Easter Reductions! Take advantage of these EARLY Reductions Were Now Suits, 2 Skirts $49.95 $29.00 Suits and Toppers 35.00 19.00 Dresses 19.95 11.00 and 17.95 Dresses 15.00 8.85 and 12.95 (Both prints and plain colors) Raincoats 16.95 11.00 Included, also, a few skirts at favorable reductions. Campus WEST Across from Lindley UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FOUR TUESDAY. APRIL 4,1950 KU Trackmen Rest After Texas Relays Meet Huskers Next Now that they've had a taste of warm Texas sunlight, Kansas trackmen are taking it easy for the remainder of the week. Coach Bill Easton is giving his charges only light workouts until Thursday when he'll discharge the squad for the week end. Fresh from the Texas Relays, the Jayhawkers can look back on a successful week end. At that event, Kansans won three relay titles and set a new meet record in gaining one of their victories. In addition they picked up an individual second place and fourth place in the meet. On Monday the Jayhawker trackmen will return to the campus to go work in earnest, preparing for their dual meet with the Nebraska Cornhuskers Saturday, April 15. The meet is the only dual of the season scheduled for Memorial Stadium. Coach Easton is currently concerned with getting some of his charges back into top form. Chief concern is distance runner Dave Breidenthal. His trouble has been with an injured leg. Also on the ailing list are Captain Bob Karnes and Cliff Abel, distance men. Karnes has been hampered by a slight leg injury and a mild touch of influenza. Abel, too, has been bothered by flu. In looking forward to the Cornhusker dual, the Kansans will be planning revenge for a 76 to 55 defeat handed them by N.U. a year ago. The outlook isn't too pleasant for Easton's men for the Huskers are a fairly well-rounded team, whereas the Jayhawkers pit most of their strength in distance events. In anchoring the two-mile relay squad, one of the three K.U. winners, Bowers also gained further satisfaction. He decisively whipped swift Harold Tarrant, Oklahoma A. and M., in the final lap. At the Kansas relays a year ago, Bowers was forced to dodge dancers kicked up by the Aggie star in the last leg of the same race. The N.U. meet will be the first outdoor competition for many of the squad members, as only 11 made the trip to Texas, first outdoor meet of the year. The KU. camp is still talking about the whirlwind accomplishments of All-American Pat Bowers in Texas. Voted outstanding performer of the relays, Bowers reeled off dynamic times of 1:52 in the half-mile, 3:04.2 in the three-quarters, and 4:16 in the mille. Radium is 3,000 times as valuable as gold. YOU'LL FIND YOUR CHOICE of ARROW WHITES at Glad to show you CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Glad to show you CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES YOU'LL FIND YOUR CHOICE of ARROW WHITES at Glad to show you CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES ON CAMPUS OR AT HOME — You'll Want Arrow Whites for Easter No matter which suit you wear—an ARROW white shirt will set it off right! They're crisp ON CAMPUS OR AT HOME You'll Want Arrow Whites for Easter No matter which suit you wear—an ARROW white shirt will set it off right! They're crisp white, impeccably tailored of fine fabrics and come in a variety of good looking, perfect fitting Arrow collars. $3.65 up ARROW SHIRTS & TIES UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS Seven Men Named To Varsity Golf Team Seven of the eight men who will carry K.U. colors into golf competition this spring have been selected by Coach Bill Winey. Selection was based on past performance and on the showing made in a 72-hole medal play tournament completed at the Lawrence Country club April 1. Dick Ashley, conference individual champion in 1949, and Dave Dennis, national junior college champion in 1948 and a regular on the K.U. team the past season, were unable to compete in the qualifying tournament. However, Winey named them to the Varsity squad on the basis of their past records. In addition to Ashley and Dennis, the five low scorers in the 72-hole qualifying tournament were named to the team. The men and their qualifying scores are Gene Rourke, 298; Calvin Markwell, 301; Bob Dare, 312; Gene Riling, 313, and Howard Logan, 318. honors for the tournament, although Rourke posted a lower score. Rourke was not considered because he did not tee off with the rest of the field and, consequently, missed the high winds that hindered play the first day. Winey, who is beginning his third year as Varsity golf coach, will be trying to give Kansas its first golf championship since 1939. Winey was a mainstay on the K.U. golf team in 1946 and 1947. The 1946 team made the best showing since K.U.'s 1939 The eighth position on the team is still open. Candidates for the spot are Jim Houghton, Charles "Chuck" O'Neal, and Jim Thompson. champions in taking second in the conference. Markwell was awarded medalist Coach Winey believes Kansas will make a strong bid for conference honors this year. The Jayhawkers finished fourth behind Missouri, Oklahoma, and Iowa State in 1949. K.U. was just eight strokes out of second place and a single stroke behind the third place Cyclones. . . According to surveyor's measure, 36 square miles comprise a township. "A Complete Line of Arrow Products" at the Palace Clothing Company EVERY DAY THOUSANDS ARE PROVING CHESTERFIELDS SMOKE MILDER BE YOUR OWN CIGARETTE EXPERT says JAMES H. DARDEN, JR. Prominent Tobacco Farmer, Farmville, N.C. A YOU BUY A PACK OF CHESTERFIELDS AND OPEN IT UP LIKE THIS. B YOU SMELL THAT MILD, PURE ARGMA. NO OTHER CIGARETTE HAS IT. C YOU LIGHT A CHESTERFIELD AND ENJOY THIS FACT... YOBUACCOS THAT SMELL MILDER SMOKE MILDER. Always buy ABC MILDER CHESTERFIELD BE YOUR OWN CIGARETTE EXPERT says JAMES H. DARDEN, JR., Prominent Tobacco Farmer, Farmville, N.C. A YOU BUY A PACK OF CHESTERFIELDS AND OPEN IT UP LIKE THIS. B YOU SMELL THAT MILD, PURE AROMA. NO OTHER CIGARETTE HAS IT. C YOU LIGHT A CHESTERFIELD AND ENJOY THIS FACT... TOBACCOS THAT SMELL MILDER SMOKE MILDER. The Aroma Tells You... We tobacco farmers know that when tobaccos smell milder they smoke milder. That's how smokers can know that the mild, ripe tobaccos Chesterfield buys from me and hundreds of other farmers will taste better, smoke cooler and much milder. That's why I've smoked Chesterfield for 15 years. (SIGNED) James H. Darden Jr. FARMVILLE, N. C. BUY THIS PACK TODAY and enjoy more smoking pleasure than any other cigarette can give you. Always buy ABC MILDER CHESTERFIELD THE BEST CIGARETTE FOR YOU TO SMOKE Copyright 1950, LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO Co. TUESDAY. APRIL 4, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Big Clyde Lovellette Lured To Colorado Says Student Paper The following is taken from the Silver and Gold, student paper at the University of Colorado: "Colorado's basketball future definitely grew brighter today with the announcement by Dean Harry Carlson that Clyde Lovellette, Kansas university's outstanding center, has decided to transfer to the University of Colorado. "Lovellette, who stands 6 feet $ \frac{8}{2} $ inches, could not be reached in Lawrence for comment concerning his surprise move, but Dean Carlson revealed that Mr. Magnificent would arrive in Boulder early next week after he winds up his business deals at Lawrence. "In an unprecedented move, Colorado university's admissions committee will meet this afternoon to do away with scholastic requirements in connection with Lovelette's being admitted as a bona fide student here. It is rumored that the basketball star compiled some rather low grades last quarter at K.U., this being due to the many hours he had to devote to Dr. Phog Allen's team. "Doc Allen, 64-year-old hoop dean at the Kansas school, wired his congratulations to Dean Carlson. You are to be congratulated on acquiring the greatest player I have ever coached," Allen wired to Carlson. "But I really don't know what Clyde will do about his asthma. You know, he came to Kansas in the first place mainly because the weather was good for asthmatic condition.' "Associated Press reports that Dutch Lonborg, Kansas athletic director-elect, is fuming at the gills. Lonborg, basketball coach at Northwestern before coming to Kansas last winter, is accusing Colorado of piracy. The Boulder people's acquisition of "Our Clyde" amounts to nothing less than outright pirating of an athlete." "But Boulder officials report that they are surprised at Lovellette's transfer as are Lonborg and Allen. Aroused at Lonborg's 'unfair accusations', the usually soft-spoken Harry Carlson erupted, 'Darn it, all we know is that Lovellette said he thought Boulder would prove more beneficial for his athlete's feet and that he'd like to enroll here—if we'd accept him.' "Although he was only a sophomore this past season, Clyde Lovellette turned his Kansas center duties into a Big Seven record-breaking scoring performance. He hit better than 23 points in a game in his initial campaign in conference games, a previously unheard-of scoring feat. *scores 10 points in Boulder against the Golden Buffaloes in a game which Colorado won by two points. Then, with Kansas getting sweet revenge against the Buffins in a game at Lawrence, the carrot-topped Kansan hit 29 points. "Colorado's combined men and Women's Softball Set To Start Today Women's intramural softball games begin today and will continue through May 10. The Jayettes are defending their title won last year, but the 20 other teams in the round-robin tournament cannot be counted out. Entries by divisions are as follows: Division I: Delta Gamma, Gamma Phi Beta, Harmon Co-op, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Miller, and Sigma Kappa. Kappa Division II: Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Omicron Pi, Delta Delta Delta, Kanza, and Temruth. Kraba, and Tinkham. Division III: Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Phi, Chi Omega, Corbin, and Kappa Alpha Theta. Division IV; Jayettes, Jolliffe Locksley, Pi Beta Phi, and Watkins 1 Women's intramural golf returns to the campus this spring with 28 contestants. All women entered in tournament play must turn in a qualifying-round score by Monday, April 17, by Friday, April 7, if possible. If the round can't be played before then, each contestant must turn in by April 17 her average score for 18 holes. score to one team is entered in tennis doubles this year. There are 20 couples in division I and 21 in division II. women bands will be down at the Boulder depot to welcome Lovellette on his arrival in Boulder. Hugh McMillen says that a number of appropriate numbers will be played. "Mayor J. Perry Bartleite, acting for the Boulder Sports club, will be in charge of the welcoming program." In case you hadn't already guessed it, the story appeared in the Silver and Gold dated April 1. EASTER VACATION Is Almost Here SUPER SERVICE AND SERVICE IS HERE AT MORGAN - MACK - The Student Center for Auto Service - Enjoy your Easter Vacation with worry-free motoring. Let us give your car a thorough servicing - - Genuine Ford Parts - Ford-Trained Mechanics Rain Stops IM Softball; Volleyball Contests Today Phone 3500 Continued precipitation h a s forced postponement of the opening of the intramural softball season for at least another day, Don Powell, intramural director has announced. Also postponed Monday were the University championships in LM. volleyball. 714 Vermont --winners of the fraternity league, and Scarab, independent kings. The volleyball contests will be played at 5 p.m. today in Robinson annex. Phi Delta Theta, fraternity champion, will meet the independent winners, the Fijis, for the A division championship. B division contenders are Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Powell is hoping that fields will have dried enough by Wednesday for softball play to begin. Softball had previously been scheduled to begin following Easter vacation with the swimming meet planned for this week. Because the Robinson gym pool was being used by the Red Cross this week, the swim meet had to be postponed and softball was moved up. The swim meet, along with other I.M. spring sports, will be held immediately following vacation. Lonborg Recommends Tourney Sites To NCAA Executives Committee Chicago, April 4- (U.P.)—The N.C. A.A. executive committee holds a one-day session on routine business today prior to two days of meetings with executives of at least 19 member conferences regarding modification of the widely-criticized "sanity code." Routine approval was expected or Eight of the nine executive committee members were expected to Routine approval was expected of guides for various sports and scoredowns while there will be discussion of recodification of the N.C.A.A. constitution. Arthur C. "Dutch" Lonborg, chairman of the basketball committee, was expected to recommend dates and sites for the 1951 tournament with action by the committee probable. UNIVERSITY SHOP Spring Suits are Here! EASTER Gabardines Coverts Sharkskins To take you in style through Spring and Summer . . . a new group of superbly tailored suits. In a fresh array of colors and smart patterns. Come see this outstanding collection today! $37.50 to $69.50 "Alterations on all suits purchased this week, guaranteed to be ready for Easter vacation." the university shop Phone 715 ACROSS FROM LINDLEY 1420 Crescent Rd. PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS The Editors Report - MAC HAS A KNACK For Spook-Hunting by Harrison Madden When Mac and I were boys we said we wanted to grow up to become G-men. We saved box tops to get ourselves Junior G-man badges, fingerprint sets, and other detecting equipment so that we could "track the criminal to his lair." We dreamed of saving our fathers' businesses, protecting women and "children." We track down, and captured the bandits who robbed the big brick bank on the corner. After seeing spy pictures at the movies, Mac and I would play at catching slippery foreign agents who were trying to destroy our democracy. We searched everywhere for spies, and wherever we looked we'd come up with at least one. Mac was better at this sort of thing than I was. He seemed to have a knack for the "international" stuff, for saving our American Way of Life from sinister plots. Now we are both grown up. I've lost interest in becoming anything like a G-man, but not Mac. He still yearns to "protect defenseless Americans from those who would oppress." However, Mac has learned a few things. For instance, he has discovered that being a federal agent isn't all glory. It involves much detail work, getting facts and more facts before acting. It means having rather conclusive proof of a person's misdeeds before accusing him. More often than not it means working in obscurity and letting someone else in the organization—get the credit. This doesn't appeal to Mac; he likes the spotlight. He wants to have his picture in the paper so all can see that HE, at least, is on guard. What is more, Mac doesn't like the monotonous task of gathering facts. If there is a rumor that a certain person, and especially a government official, has bumped into another person, who is suspected by some "to tend to have an affinity toward criminal tendencies," that is enough for Mac. He is ready to expose that official and compel him to prove his innocence beyond any reasonable doubt. Of course, with our libel laws, such "exposures" are a bit dangerous, so Mac needs some "legal apron" behind which he can hide—his mother was always around in the old days. Yes, hunting down the criminal still has its appeal for Mac. But working through the F.B.I. just hasn't got it. That's kid stuff. Mac now wants to be a congressman. BROADER HORIZONS FOR Western Civilization by Kay O'Connor The University's Western Civilization is a five-year-old nowadays. He's growing up to be strong and healthy. He's taking an important place in campus affairs. What can we say to the proud parents of this sturdy progeny? Can we pat him on the head and pronounce him a perfect offspring? Or should we tell them frankly that we think he is basically a fine addition to our world but that he isn't perfect and badly needs some training? We think perhaps it should be the last choice. We think the underlying idea of Western Civilization is sound: to trace and understand the factors of Western culture which have contributed most to our American culture, and to obtain an integrated conception of social progress in the world. We think the material used to achieve these objectives is well selected so far as it goes. But we also believe that there are two glaring faults in the present course, and that it could be improved greatly by removing them. First, much of the usefulness of the course is lost because of the way it is presented. The student is handed a notebook and bibliography, meets his proctor once every two weeks, and is told to go ahead on his own. Those who support the program say this teaches independence and responsibility. Yet the contents of the course could be much more valuable if the outside reading was augmented by lectures. Most students get a great deal out of the course as it is now taught. But think how much more they could get if lectures were added to the readings. Western Civilization is rightfully a freshman-sophomore course. It provides much material that can be used in future courses. Rightfully, it should come early in the college curriculum. But why force another—and big—adjustment on the new student as he struggles to fit into University life? If the course is to continue being taught on paper, why not reserve the sophomore year for it? Students will be ready for something new then. This seems to us to be the great fault of Western Civilization. The other is its concentration on political philosophy. Why not broaden the course to include slide lectures of the art, architecture, music, and literature of fields other than political philosophy? Other schools, such as Stanford and Lindenwood college, have done this and come up with excellent courses. Students in these colleges gain a real and complete background for understanding daily events. Why can't we? The Kansan soberly reported that a crab's teeth are in its stomach, and Uncle Swaybak says as far as he knows the ones he swallowed in '08 are still in his stomach, too. Little Man On Campus TUESDAY, APRIL 4, 1950 A By Bibler "Just don't let an engineer stand you in front of a WIND TUNNEL!!!" Prisoner Of Nazis, Russians Escaped, Now Enrolled At KU At an age when most young Americans are worrying about the big football game or the next high school prom, Ted Tiber Szabo, engineering junior, was imprisoned in a German concentration camp in Poland. Ted was taken out of his senior year of high school in Gyro, Hungary, and placed in the camp with his parents and 18-year-old sister. He was freed by the Russians after a year of what he termed "miserable living," but his parents and sister were killed by the Germans shortly before the Russians arrived. After leaving the prison, Ted learned that the Russians planned to transport him to Russia. He escaped and wandered through Poland before finding his way back to Gyro, where he finished high school. He attended the University of Budapest one semester, then entered a displaced persons camp in the American zone of Germany in February, 1946. He studied at the University of Paris for one semester and sailed for America in March 1947. After attending Bergen junior college, Taneck, N.J., and New York university for one semester each, Ted transferred to K.U. "I guess I was just lucky," Ted commented. "You never can figure those things out." Ted commented that American colleges are more systematically conducted than are European schools and that their curriculums are practical instead of theoretical. Of the most notable differences between Americans and Europeans is that Americans are more outspoken. Chicago—U.P.)—Joseph Yanul, a motorcycle policeman, didn't have his usual means of transportation with him when children in the neighborhood shouted that a boy was escaping with a stolen bicycle. Yanul hopped on his son's bicycle, chased the culprit four blocks and caught him. Patrolman Cycles For Thief "In America if someone doesn't like something, he has the privilege of coming right out and saying so—and he usually does," he said. "For me," he said, "Europe contains nothing but bad memories. It all seems like a terrible nightmare that is better forgotten. Besides, I am plenty satisfied with America." Ted has no definite plans for the future other than working on his master's degree after graduation. He will know that he will never return to Europe. R. M. Churchwell, petroleum engineer for the Ohio Oil company, will interview June graduates in petroleum engineering Wednesday. Further information may be obtained in the engineering office, 111 Marvin hall. Engineering Seniors To Be Interviewed Wednesday Cycles Into His 75th Year Milford, Mass.—(U.P.)—Charles S. Brown celebrated his 84th birthday by taking a bicycle ride, a daily practice he has not missed for 75 years. the perfect Easter gift for a good egg Prince Gardner Registrar As seen in LIFE He'll cherish this superb billfold for a long, long time. Card case slips out for trim evening wear. REGISTRARS... From $5.00 plus tax Matching KEYGARDS From $1.50 plus tax the perfect Easter gift the perfect Easter gift for a good egg Prince Gardner a ye CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Department of Speech and Drama Presents The University Players SHE STOOPS TO CONQUER in Tonite, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday April 4,5,6,7 FRASER THEATER Curtain 8:15 p.m. I-D CARDS ADMIT Present I-D Cards for Reserved Seats s S. hday pra- years. Ticket Office, Basement Green Hall Open Daily 9-12, 1-4 Phone KU 412 TUESDAY, APRIL 4, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN 50 g. 125 s. Finding Jobs Tougher Now Atlantic City, N.J., March 30—(U.P.) College graduates this year are going to have a harder time finding a job than in any year since the end of World War II, commissioner Ewan Clague, commissioner of the bureau of labor statistics, said today. In a speech prepared for the American College Personnel association, Clague said many of the 500-000 students who will graduate from college this spring will not find the type of jobs for which they were trained. 图 In general, most 1950 graduates look for professional, semi-professional, or administrative jobs. But not many would be successful. The war and postwar shortages in many occupations have been filled. There probably will be fewer openings this year than last or in the first post-war years. The size of the graduating class, largest in the nation's history, will make competition even stiffer, Mr. Clague said. University Daily Hansan News Room K.U. 251 Adv. Room K.U.376 Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assm. National Editorial Assm., Inland Daily Press Assm., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Ad- vertising Service,420 Madison Ave., New York City. Editor-in-Chief ... Managing Editor ... Asst. Man. Editors .. City Editor ... Asst. City Editors --- James Morris Doris Greenbank Norma Hunsinger Kay Hunsinger John Hohn Ralph Henneyway Edward Chapin Nelson Rose Sigman Marlyn Marks Elaine Elvig Francis Kelley Franke Kelley Pete North John Bannigan Richard Dillasver Bol Holt Yolden Soldan Arthur McHurtte Mona Millikin Billie Bailleau Emily Stewart Feature Editor ... Photograph Editor Editorial Assts. ... Business Mgr. ... Jim Shriver Advertising Mgr. ... Charles Reiner Circulation Mgr. .. Yvonne Josserand Nat. Adv. Mgr. ... Forrest Bellus Classified Adv. Mgr. ... Lee Dey Promotion Mgr. ... John Wiedeman Sports Editor ... Asst. Sports Editors Society Editor ... Asst. Society Editors Girl's Request Becomes A Bust Milwaukee — (U.P.) — A burburian matron ended up with a red face when she tried to do some shopping for her college daughter. The co-ed left a note with the name of the item on it. The mother, knowing her daughter's mania for record collecting, gave the note to a clerk in a record store. The clerk searched for 10 minutes before reporting the store had no such record listed. The mother looked at what she thought was the title and hurried away in confusion when the words sank in. The note said simply: "Two Bali-Bra, 32." Official Bulletin Tuesday, April 4 Parking regulations for Jayhawk drive remain in effect during spring vacation. Restrictions in zones lifted 12 noon April 8 to 8 a.m. April 17. Young Republicans, 7:30 tonight. 106 Green. Lackie, state chairman Young Republicans, speaker Convention report; refreshments. All Student Council, 7:15 tonight, Pine room, Union. I.S.A. Executive council, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Miller hall. Candidates' petitions for A.S.C. general spring election must be submitted to Wilma Shore by 6 p.m. Wednesday, phone 3450. International club. 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Recreation room, Union. All committees Student Union activities, 7 p.m. Wednesday, Fraser. Society of American Military Engineers, 5 p.m. Wednesday, 105 Military Science building. Engineers in advanced course of three R.O.T.C.'s or with commissions eligible. Law Wives, 8 p.m. Thursday, Law lounge. Election; white elephant sale. Cheerleaders Training school, 5 p.m. April 19, East Side, Robinson gym. Jay Janes, 5 p.m. Wednesday, English room, Union. S.A.M., 7:30 tonight, Recreation room, Union. ___ Mathematics club, 4 p.m. Thursday, 203 Strong, Calvin Foreman, "Combinatorial Topology." All invited; refreshments. Meeting of Wichita students at 7:15 p.m. today in 222 Strong hall. Plans will be made for an alumni dinner. Girls' State Meet To Attract 800 A reunion for approximately 800 girls who attended Sunflower Girl's State from 1947 to 1950 was planned at a meeting of the K.U. Stateswomen's club Monday. The group, recently organized, is made up of girls who attended Sunflower Girl's State during their junior years in high school. Chosen by Kansas high school principals in conjunction with the American Legion Auxiliary, sponsors of Girl's State, the candidates spend one week on the campus practicing fundamental state, county, and city government. The reunion is scheduled for the last two days of the 1950 session of Sunflower Girl's State, June 17 and 18. MINDSTORMS YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription Duplicated. Phone 425 1025 Mass. Lawrence Optical Co. Lawrence Optical Co. FLYING? See FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY TONITE And WEDNESDAY DENVER Steve Brodie · Jeff Corey · Lloyd Bridges ADDED . . . "Rhythm of the Big City" and Color Cartoon Douglas Dick • Frank Lovejoy • James Edwards with "HOME OF THE BRAVE" DED . . . "Rhythm" Feature at 7:47 - 9:43 Open Nightly at 6:30 Follow The Cars Follow The Cars To See The Stars Phone 260 Lawrence DRIVE-IN Theatre Kansan Classified Advertising Phone K.U.376 Terms. Cash, Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be promised. Ads must be sent during the hourly time to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Dalkan Kisan Business office. Journals may not be published 45 p.m. the day before publication date. Classified Advertising Rates FOR SALE One day Three days Five 25 words or less ... 35c 65c 90c Additional words ... 1c 2c 1833 Chevrolet diesel, good tires, mechanically good, sealed beam lights, lighter reasonable. Ask for Paul Gibbs. 565 evenings. 6 PERFECT for Any Babe! We have cuddly bunnies and bouncy rubberized bunnies for Easter. Come in and pick one of our babs. Babe. Dixie Cornel Corp. Shop. 842 Mass. 7 BOOK-EASE, a collapsible book holder, be used on a desk, in bed, anywhere. Now only 98c at your Student Union Book Store. 21 FORD "36, four door sedan. New upholstering and new paint. Motor in excellent condition. Inquire 714 Illinois. 7 THESES MATERIALS! All weights of thesis quality typing paper, carbon paper, and typewriter ribbons. Student Union Book Store. **M4** PICNIC TIME is portable time. For expert repairs and batteries, bring your materials to the Radio Hospital, 14 East Bay. Full stock of Everlasty batteries, 6 NOW IS THE TIME to place your order on album of KU. songs. Delivery by May 1. Only $4.90 at your Student Union Book Store. 6 SIX FOOT Cooler for sale. Like New and selling cheap. Lime ice capacity, 180 cu. ft., #261 WI. 1948. 26 ft. M-system trailer house with electric refrigerator and water heater, forced air heating stone and butane cooking stove. 1316 Kentucky. 17 FINEST TELEVISION-Best in sets and nerials at lowest prices. New features. See the newest Emerson table model set at $15.90. Easy toys. Bowman Radio and Electra LOST BLUE rimmed glass in lizard zipper case between glasses & 12" & Tenn. cases; 3914-W-94. MAROON PARK 51, Silver Cap. 8 a.m. Fraser or Danforth Rewards 9:30 am. PM 1 baseball glove near 13rd Oread $1 reward, to fund. 3662RJ. 17 85 reward to mender. Cult count 17 PAIR OF glasses in brown plastic case. Name and date of death. If found. 46 days, or Yvânia 8-1 night. Reward. Harold Heinrich 19 STENOGRAPHER wanted. Give age, married or single, training, experience, references, address and telephone number Daily Kansan. Box No 3. 4 WANTED NOW!! M.G.M.'s Biggest Western in 10 Years! APACHES vs U.S.ARMY BLOODTHIRSTY ARCHES hold white girl crawl! "AMBUSH" ROBERT TAYLOR JOHN HODAK ANlene DAHL BOB TAYLOR - FANN JAREN - JOHN McBRYTE AMBUSH - Also - Pete Smith Special Cartoon - News STARTS SAT. OWL 11:15 SUNDAY RECHNICOLOR CLIFTON WEBB MYRNA LOY CHEAPER BY THE DOZEN Granada PHONE 946 HEY MEN! Can you beat this? Nice private rooms on second floor, cooking facilities including dishes, etc. in basement for $5.00 week each. 1400 Rhode Island. FOR RENT WALK a little farther and have a nice quiet room in which to study. Single room for man. No other roomers. 1240 R. L. Ph. 1350R. 6 SINGLE ROOM to young man. No drinking or smoking. First house south of campus. See at 1616 Indiana. 5 NICE SINGLE room for rent Saturday. Inner-sleep mattress. Student moving to fraternity. 1416 Tenn. Phone 1555. 4 FOUR-ROOM house; modern; bed-bath, nicely furnished, garaged. 2365W student room. 10 days. 10 days. STUDENTS look! Room and board (optional). Space for few extra boarders 50c per meal, 5 days. Under new management. 1213 Ohio. Phone 2917-R. 5 TRANSPORTATION DRIVING to Chicago for Easter holidays. Can take 3 riders. Leave Friday or Saturday, April 7 or 8. Phone 892 at 5 p.m. 6 RIDE WANTED to St. Louis, Giressardeau, or southeast Missouri. Leave Friday afternoon or night. Call Stevens. 3336-W. 6 RIDE WANTED to New York and back for spring vacation. Will share expenses end help drive. Phone Per Sjogren 3944- w or KU-409. 6 MARRIED Couple would like ride to western New York for spring vacation. H. Mattison, 1905 Mass. St., Phone 2925-6 FLY AND TAKE advantage of reduced faves, dovetail connections, good accommodations. Call Miss Glesman at First Aid Department and Information. Telephone No. 30. 6 GOING TO New York City Easter; round trip rider wanted. Call 25571. 6 N-O-W Ends Wed. Ravishing French Beauty Jennifer JONES James MASON in Madame Bovary Produced in Hollywood by Mi COLUMBIA COUNTY JUDGE Also - Latest World News Continuous shows-operated 12:15 Patee PHONE 321 RIDERS: Round trip to Boston via Pennsylvania turnpike, Merrit Parkway. Home all Sunday after 6:30 weekdays except Friday. Richard Longarini, 1021 Ala. A4 BUSINESS SERVICE TYPING: Neat, accurate, rapid. Regular prompts. Prompt service. Mrs. Shea- t, Apt. R-36, 1810 Lau., Phone 32738. TYPING: Neat, accurate, regular, reports. Prompt service. Mrs. Shea- han, 1038 Vermont. Ph. 1168R. tf* TYPING: Term papers, notebooks, let- ters, theses, legal papers, paper attention. Prompt attention. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601 Call K.U. 251 With Your News. NOW thru WEDNESDAY John Payne Gail Russell "CAPTAIN CHINA" Late News Events Color Cartoon TYPING: Call Hail Stanley. 286M for prompt experienced service. $20% Max ft THEOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. Complete overhaul, engine tune-up, body and fender repair, auto seating, with JAYHAWKERS. Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our everything for fur, fun and feathers. Grant's Pet and Fift Shop. 1218 Conn. St. Ph. 418. JAYHAWKER Phone 10 for Sho Time VARSITY - and - NOW thru TUESDAY Johnny Weissmuller "MARK OF THE GORILLA" Johnnv Sheffield Phone 132 for Sho Time BONGA OF PANTHER ISLAND" A Woman's Mind Is Like "SALOME" This Is A Story Of A Woman Who Did! ... hidden from the world by seven veils . . . of reserve, shyness, fear . . . with friends a woman will drop two, perhaps four . . . with the man she loves five or six . . . but never the seventh, NEVER! G. C.F.presents --- James MASON Ann TODD The Seventh Veil Music by London Symphony Orch. Pathetique Sonata (Beethoven) Seventh Velt Wail; Overture, "Merry Wives of Windsor"; Bachmaninoff Piano Concerto in C Major SPECIAL LIMITED ENGAGEMENT No Reserved Seats • All Seats 75c tax incl. SPECIAL STUDENT PRICE 50c tax incl. VARSITY 2—Days Only—2 WED-THUR Features at 2:00-3:50- 5:40-7:30-9:20 Box-Office Opens Each Day 1:30 PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, APRIL 4, 1950 'Phog' Presented With Car; 17 On Team Given Watches By BOB LEONARD A Chrysler automobile was presented to Dr. F. C. Allen, basketball's man of the year, and engraved wrist watches were awarded to 17 members of his co-champion squad at the annual banquet in honor of the Jayhawker basketball team Monday night. Frank McDonald, president of the $ \textcircled{e} $ Downtown Quarterback club of Lawrence, presented the car to Dr. Allen as a token of appreciation for his service throughout the years to the University of Kansas. Dr. Allen stood speechless when he was given the keys to the car. However, he had this to say about his being chosen as basketball's man of the year. "When an honor comes to an individual, his first thought reverts home. It makes you wonder if you are worthy." Mr. Basketball, wearing his usual scarlet necklece, said that after the Oklahoma defeat, he did not wish to get in the play-off. He felt that the Jayhawkers had had enough failures and successes for one year. However, after his team was chosen to represent the fifth district in the Kansas City tournament, he was glad to get the chance to play Bradley and he hoped that the showing made by his Kansas team justified the committee's selection. It was announced that Jerry Waugh, junior guard, had been elected captain of next year's team. Waugh presented the basketball used in the Bradley game to Claude Houchin, Captain this year, who will be graduated in June. Chancellor Deane W. Malotl praised the co-operative athletic program at the University as a "great example of teamwork." He said that "all of us are proud to be a part of the organization in which Dr. Allen participates." E. C. Quigley, retiring director of athletics, said that "the outstanding honor to come to K.U. in its entire athletic history was the choice of Dr. Allen as basketball's man of the year." Mr. Quigley added that Dr. Allen's name is not only known locally, but also nationally and internationally. Arthur Lonborg, K.U. athletic director-elect, said that if Kansas had gotten by Bradley, they would now be the national champions. Mr. Lonborg continued by saying that he had always wanted to be connected with a team that could win the national title and he thought that K.U. would be that team next year. He was extremely happy that Dr. Allen was accorded the honor in New York and felt that the doctor was "the one and only person who could have even been considered for it." History Group To Hear Colonel Col. William Sexton of Fort Leavenworth will speak on Iran before members of Phi Alpha Theta, honorary history fraternity, at 7:30 p.m. today in the English room of the Union building. All members may bring guests, Louise Lambert, president of the group, announced today. IRELAND FRANK McDONALD, president of the Lawrence Downtown Quarterback club, congratulates Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen, basketball's "man of the year" at the annual banquet honoring the Jayhawker basketball team. Varsity Dance, Common Interest Groups Planned For Reunion Of Class Of '25 A silver anniversary reunion of the class of 1925 is planned for Saturday, June 3 and Sunday, June 4. Plans for a varsity dance, 1925$^4$ style, for a class dinner, and for a charity event. Three small groups were announced by Tom Poor, Olathe, class president, today. Fred S. Montgomery, director of the bureau of visual instruction, will assist Mr. Poor in promoting attendance. Mrs. Montgomery will head the reception and general service committee. Richard B. Stevens, Lawrence, heads the registration committee, and Dr. Carroll P. Hunge, Kansas City, Mo., is the general finance and class gift chairman. Alex S. Kennedy, Kansas City, Mo., vice-president of the class, will* be program chairman. Television was first viewed at the University on March 5, 1927. The week in St. Louis sponsored by the Advertising club was as valuable as an intensive semester of college, Yvonne Josserand and Journalism Majors Visit Newspapers Louis Sciortino, journalism seniors, agree. The two winners of the trip returned to Lawrence the past week, end. They were among 12 students from six universities attending the event. Their activities included a five-day tour of newspapers, radio stations, advertising agencies and department stores. FLY HOME EASTER VACATION Reservations to all points, all lines. Down's Travel Service Ph. 3661 1015 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. TICKETS AND RESERVATIONS FIRST NATIONAL BANK BIBLER Fly Home Before The Easter Bunny Arrives Save with - Sky Coach (there is no sky coach between K.C. & Chicago) - Round Trip Discount - Family Plan If you are in Lawrence during Easter vacation come in let us plan your summer vacation or tour. Exclusive Agents for Pan American Airways System CITY TICKET OFFICE THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE TRAVEL AGENCY Miss Rose Gieseman, Manager 8th & Mass Sts. Telephone 30 It's Magic-How You Save at the Jay Hawk You save up to 10% on your food dollar. Ask Cliff or Paul for money saving meal tickets. You'll like the large servings and quick service too. "At the Bottom of the 14th Street Hill" $ The Jay Hawk Cafe ANNOUNCING --- We have moved to a new location 9271/2 Mass.(Professional Bldg.) 1st door south of Bell's Music. We want to say "Thanks a Million" to the Students and Faculty Members whom we have served on insurance needs. To YOU who might need the advice of professional insurance counseling we extend a welcome to try our service. M. G. HENRY "It Wasn't Raining . . . When Noah Built the Ark." Delbert C. Richardson Insurance Agency Phone 509 9271/2 Mass. University Daily Kansan Lawrence, Kansas STUDENT NEWSAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Co-Discoverer Of Plutonium Will Speak Here Dr. Joseph W. Kennedy, a co-discoverer of the fissionable element plutonium, will talk on "The Significance of Radio Isotopes in Chemistry" at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Strong auditorium. Strong author. Dr. Kennedy, chairman of the department of chemistry at Washington university, St. Louis, Mo., was previously chief of the chemistry and metallurgical division of the Los Alamos laboratory in the Manhattan project. He was one of a group working with Dr. Glenn C. Seaborg making trans-uranium elements by means of the cyclotron at the University of California. They made the first minute bits of plutonium, which does not occur naturally, on which the gigantic Hanford, Wash., works were predicated. Dr. Kennedy once taught at the University, serving as an assistant instructor for two years while earning a master's degree. He received the degree in 1937, then went to the University of California to receive a doctorate degree and to become an instructor. For his work on the Manhattan project, Dr. Kennedy received the medal of merit. Dr. Kennedy's talk is one in the Sigma Xi "Atomic Energy and Man" series. The public is invited. Beu Receives Fellowship Robert D. Beu, engineering senior has been awarded the California company fellowship in geology for the academic year 1950-51. Beu, a Lawrence resident will receive $1,250 and will have fees paid. This is the second year the University has been given a California company fellowship and is the second time the company has renewed its fellowship at any university. It is awarded to an outstanding geology student who is in his first year of graduate work, and enables him to pursue advance work in petroleum geology. Students Discuss Pharmacy Board Requirements for taking the Kansas State Board Pharmacy examination were discussed at a meeting of the student branch of the American Pharmaceutical association Monday in Bailey chemical laboratories. Speaking to club members on the function and duties of the board and its history were three members of the Kansas State Board of Pharmacy. Blaine Miller, secretary from Salina, R. M. Raney, treasurer from Osborne, and Marion King of Topeka, answered questions asked by the pharmacy students. Judges To Name Escorts For Relays Queen Thursday The male escorts for the 1950 K.U. relays queen and her court will be selected at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas room of the Union by three judges. The candidate from each men's organized house may be entered. Any student not living in an organized house wishing to participate in the contest should call Marcia Horn, chairman, at 731. WEATHER KANSAS—Sunny and warmer today. Considerable cloudiness and warmer Thursday. Highs today in middle 50's. Election Entries Due Wednesday The deadline for filing petitions and nominations for All Student Council and class elections is 6 p. m. Wednesday. Petitions and nominations should be sent to Wilma Shore, council secretary. The election will be Wednesday, April 19. Four Debaters To Wichita U The University's four top debaters will compete in the Missouri Valley Forensic league tournament Thursday through Saturday at the Municipal University of Wichita, E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, said today. Alan Kent Shearer and Steve J Mills, College juniors, will debate the affirmative side. Together they have won a state high school class AA championship and in three years of collegiate competition have lost only one debate. Edward Stolenwerck, College senior, and Keith Wilson, College sophomore, will take the negative side. Stolenwerck tied for the best individual speaker at the past year's West Point national invitational meet. The debate subject is "Resolved that the United States should nationalize the basic non-agricultural industries." Stolenwerck and Shearer will also represent K.U. in the extempore contests. The winner of the annual Lorraine Buehler memorial oratorical contest tonight in the Little theater of Green hall will be the University's entrant in the oratoriortical contest. Catholic Church Announces Several Special Services A sermon on the Passion and Death of Christ will be given by the Rev. George Towle at the Holy Thursday night services at 7:30 p.m. in the Catholic church, 1229 Vermont street. Good Friday night services will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the church. Morning Holy week services will be at 7 a.m. Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. M. B. SMITH REPORTS OF "FLYING SAUCERS" began about the time this wierdly shaped plane was built a few years ago. It was designed by Charles H. Zimmerman, '29, (left) a graduate of the University of Kansas School of Engineering. The "flying wing," (right) has not been flown since 1947. The U.S. News and World Report said that the planes were being built by the navy. They were falsely tied in with the current hysteria concerning flying saucers, but the navy denied any work with any plane resembling a saucer shape. Queen Pictures Due Thursday Pictures to be submitted for the Jayhawk beauty queen contest must be in the Jayhawk office in the Union building by 5 p.m. Thursday. All University women are eligible to submit pictures. Finalists will be selected on the basis of the contestant's photogenic beauty. YW To Install Officers Today The outgoing Y.W.C.A. executive and new executive officers met Monday and discussed the procedure of the Y.W.C.A. installation service which will be held at 4 p.m. today in Danforth chapel. The candlelight service will consist of background music, a call to worship, a recitation of the purpose of the organization, and the benediction. All old and new officers and cabinet members should come. Y.W.C.A members are invited. It was also announced that a worship service sponsored by the Y.W.C.A. and Y.M.C.A. will be held at 4 p.m. Thursday in Danfort chapel IFC Changes Rushing Dates The proposal to move rush week ahead in order not to interfere with convocations and examinations of new students was passed by the Inter-Fraternity council at a meeting Monday night. The proposal was put before the council at a meeting March 27 and the council members were to find how fraternity members felt about the plan to change the rush week dates. The other plan before the council to keep all "train dates" in Douglas county was defeated. The plan called for all fraternities to hold their "train dates" in Douglas county, and a fine of $100 for violators. As a result of this action by the council Monday night, the fraternity rush date cards will probably be distributed before vacation starts. Rush week will start for the fraternities Friday, Sept. 8, and lists of dates will be turned into the office by 1 p.m. Monday, Sep. 11. Sociy plans were discussed at Monday's meeting and May 19 was the tentative date set for the Inter- Fraternity council spring formal. Final plans will be made later Slapstick, Pointed Satire Enliven Goldsmith Comedy By JOHN A. BANNIGAN The University Players' presentation of Oliver Goldsmith's " Stoops to Conquer" has many delightful moments. A novel introduction opened the play, but was happily cut short by the clowning buffoon, Tony Lumpkin, portrayed by Herk Harvey. Harvey did a splendid job, taking a Puckish delight in scrambling the plot, tweaking the nose of propriety, and finally, resolving the dilemmas with idiotic simplicity. While much of the pointed satire of the 18th century was lost on a 20th century audience, the rollicking humor and slapstick comedy were as effective as in 1773. This is especially true in the second act which is the most humorous of the plauv. The recorded 18th century music had a pleasant authenticity which filled the theater. Act one, scene one was slow, but the action quickly got under way. The scenery as a whole was good, but the most effective scenery and lighting were in act three, scene one. On the romantic level, Bernice Brady as Kate Hardcastle, and Tom Rea, as young Marlow, did excellent characterizations. Miss Brady, with her beautiful costumes, purposefully overdone make-up and striking coiffure resembled a Dresden figurine come to life. All in all, the presentation was thoroughly relaxing and enjoyable. Dan Palmquist made a solid character of Squire Hardcastle and Milton Commons was a convincing Sir Charles Marlow. Among the minor characters Danny Orton, as Diggery, was outstanding and Frank La Ban, as Roger, squeezed some good laughs out of a minor part. The other members of the cast weren't on stage long enough to be judged, but they retained the spirit of the play in their portraits. Jeanne Mardy did a good job of bringing a middle-aged, affected English country woman to life. Her voice and mannerisms were excellent. Mary Lou Lane, in As constance Neville, and Tom Shay, as her lover, Hastings, were an engaging romantic couple. As Mrs. Hardcastle, Dale Helmers and Chuck Hall president and vice-president of the council will leave Thursday for Boulder, Colo. where they will attend an I.F.C. district meeting, April 6 and 7. Fifty Students To Field In April Fifty geology students will take field trips during the month of April, Dr. R.M. Dreyer, chairman of the geology department, announced Tuesday. Ten graduate students will spend the Easter vacation camping out and engaging in geological work. They will study the age and fossil content of rock layers under the direction of R.C. Moore, professor of geology. For three days beginning Thursday, April 27, H.T.U. Smith, associate professor of geology, will take a structural geology class of 40 men on a trip to the Arbuck mountains of southern Oklahoma. The class will study the folding and faulting of rocks exposed in that area. Wet grounds have forced cancellation of all intramural softball games until after Easter vacation, Don Powell, intramurals director, announced today. wet Grounds Stops Softball ASC Names Polling Spots, Restricts Dances Other action taken was; The All Student Council named the polling places for the Wednesday, April 19 general election at the Tuesday meeting. 1. It passed a bill restricting the junior and senior classes to one dance a year. 2. It approved a reapportionment in election district three. 4. It considered an appropriation of $200 to the Ku Ku's. 3. It made appointments to the disciplinary committee and set up a committee to investigate sending deserving juniors to study abroad. 5. It ordered that the salaries of the editor and business manager of the Jayhawker magazine be paid. Voting in the general election will be held in the following buildings: Lindley, Marvin. Strong, Fraser, and Green halls. There will be a total of 16 booths. The election will be held from 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday, April 19. Ballots will be counted at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 19, in 210 strong hall. Melvin Clingan, elections committee chairman, submitted his resignation at the meeting. Harold Edmondson was appointed to succeed him. If the chancellor signs the bill dealing with class dances it will mean that the junior and senior classes will hold but one dance a year. The dance would be in the spring and would be held jointly with the Council paying all expenses not exceeding $500. Marvin Martin, A.S.C. representative, pointed out that the classes have been holding from four to five dances a year and losing money on each one. The addition of one new member to the Council will result from the reappropriation made from enrollment figures supplied by the registrar's office. District three includes the Schools of Business, Fine Arts, Education, and the Graduate school. This means there will now be 17 elected members on the Council, 12 men and five women. The disciplinary committee, described by Robert Bennett, vicepresident of the Council, as an experiment to handle appeals from the Student Court, and such organizations as the A.W.S. and the Interdorm council, will consist of five members. They are Jack Howard, business junior; John Rader, first year law student; Shirley Rice, education junior; Donna Hull, College junior and Harold Edmondson, education junior. The Council formed a committee to consider giving deserving K.U. students money to study abroad during their junior years. Members of the committee are: J. A. Burzle, associate professor of German; J.H. Nelson, dean of the Graduate school; Raymond Nichols, executive secretary and assistant to the chancellor; and five students to be appointed. Dixon Vance, elected representative, asked the Council for $200 for the Ku Ku's men's pep organization. He said that most of the money would be used to buy new cards to be used in forming new letters and patterns at football games. The Council tabled the motion until further investigation is made. The salaries of the two Jayhawker magazine staff members that were two months late were ordered paid, Son Born To Gillispies A son was born at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, at Lawrence Memorial hospital to Mr. and Mrs. James Gillispie. Mr. Gillispie is head pharmacist at Watkins Memorial hospital. The baby weighed 7 pounds, 10 ounces. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 1950 Big Bead National Park in Texas is the only national park in the United States to enclose an entire mountain range, the Chisos, or Ghost, Mountains. Speech Debunks Rain Myth The belief that increasing the earth's water surface by artificial methods would increase rainfall is false Dr. Walter Kollmorgen, professor of geography, told Botany club members Tuesday. ZBC Dr. Kollmorgen said in the 1800's on the plains people used all sorts of devices to increase the rate of evaporation to produce rain. Trees were planted, soil was plowed and ditches were dug. Not only did the farmers believe that man's efforts had a bearing upon rainfall, explained Dr. Kollmorgen, but scientists also thought that man could increase rainfall. increase rainfall. This presumption, asserted Dr. Kollmorgen, is false, as it is not so much local evaporation which affects rainfall but rather the water carried in from the oceans. 20's Dance Tempos Flame In Big 15 "SPRICE JONES (recognize him!) plays THE CHARLESTON", The Charleston, Black Bottom, 4 others...a new album "DESIGNED FOR DANCING!" Just like all 15 of RCA VICTOR's exciting brand-new dance albums...by 15 great bands, 15 great composers! 90 all-time hits played for dancing' Hurry for all 15 albums to Bell Music Co., 925 Mass. Official Bulletin April 5,1950 Parking regulations for Jayhawk Drive remain in effect during spring vacation. Restrictions in zones lifted 12 noon April 8 to 8 a.m. April 17. All committees Student Union Activities, 7 tonight, Fraser hall. Candidates' petition for A.S.C. general spring election must be submitted to Wilma Shore by 6 p.m. today, phone 3450. ___ I.S.A. Executive Council, 7:30 to- night, Miller hall. Society of American Military Engineers, 5 today, 105 Military Science. For Engineers in advanced course of three R.O.T.C.'s or with commissions. Jay Janes, 5 today. English Room Union. K.U. Dames white elephant sale 8 tonight, 417 Snow. Law wives, 8 p.m. Thursday, Law lounge. Election; white elephant sale. Der deutsche verein versammlt sich Donnerstag um 5:00, 402 Fraser. Alle die sich für deutsche Kultur interesseren sind freunlich einge-laden. Mathematics club, 4 p.m. Thursday, 203 Strong, Calvin Foreman, "Combinatorial Topology." All invited; refreshments. A. W.S. Senate, 5 p.m. Thursday, Delta Delta Delta house. For all old and new Senate members; W.I.A.-W. S. convention report. Joint Y.M.-Y.W.C.A. Worship Service, 4:30 p.m. Thursday, Danforth chapel. All invited. Cheerleaders training school, 5 p.m. April 19, East Side, Robinson gym. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday, 131 Strong. All invited. ___ Archery club, 4 to 6 today. Robinson Annex. Weather permitting. New members invited. Delta Sigma Pi professional function, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 200 Strong. ___ Joint meeting of Square Dance and International clubs. 7:30 tonight, Recreation room Union. A Photographer Paints Cambridge, Mass., (U.P.) A professional photographer, Ernst, Halberstadt, paints pictures for a hobby. Department of Speech and Drama Presents The University Players in SHE STOOPS TO CONQUER TONIGHT, THURSDAY, FRIDAY April 5,6,7 FRASER THEATER Curtain 8:15 p.m. I-D CARDS ADMIT Present I-D Cards for Reserved Seats Ticket Office, Basement Green Hall Open Daily 9-12,1-4 Phone KU 412 Bednasek Found Not Guilty Iowa City, Iowa, April 5—(U.P.) Robert Bednasek, 24, was found innocent today of strangling his coed sweetheart at a forbidden rendezvous by candlelight Dec. 11, 1949. The jury filed into the courtroom at 9:24 p.m. and the foreman handed the verdict to the county clerk, who in turn gave it to Judge James P. Gaffney. oys of many towns. The small-town jury of eight men and four women reached its verdict after almost 12 hours of deliberations, which began Tuesday at 10:02 am. Bendnesk was accused by the state of deliberately strangling pretty Margaret "Gee Gee" Jackson, 20, a daughter of socially prominent parents, because her love for him had cooled. The white-haired jurist read the verdict, returned it to the clerk, and jury foreman Robert Bothell then intoned the verdict. Bednasek, husky University of Iowa psychology senior and former merchant mariner, slumped in his chair and sobbed. Defense Attorney Clair Hamilton wept, too. The judge finally quieted the commotion. Bednasek leaned across the counsel table as the judge announced he would sign an order at once freeing him. Then, Bednasek walked to the jury box and began thanking the jurors, many of whom were weeping. Zoology Club Hears Sociology Professor The Zoology club heard Dr. R. G. Foster, professor of sociology and home economics, speak on March 31 on "From Dinoflagellates to Divorce." More than 20 members attended the meeting. E. Lendell Cockrum, president of the club, announced election of officers will be held at the next meeting on Thursday, April 27. Picture the fun 192E. ... You'll have this spring with a camera drop in today and let us help you select the camera that meets your needs at the price you want to pay. Ask about our convenient payment plan MOSSEN WOLF MOSSEN-WOLF 1107 Mass. Ph. 50 KC Architect Lectures Here Tonight Architectural practices in the profession will be discussed by Ralph E. Myers, practicing architect, at a meeting of the student chapter of the American Institute of Architects at 7:30 p.m. today, 101 Snow hall. Mr. Myers is associated with Kivett and Myers, architectural firm of Kansas City, Mo. This firm recently received an award for the best commercial building design in Kansas City for 1949. We shall be open during Easter vacation 6 a.m.-8 p.m. daily 6 a.m.-10:30 p.m. Sun. Our Easter special: FRIED CHICKEN .. $.75 Try our fountain service, also. ALAMO CAFE 1109 Mass. Here's what you need for that quick spring paint job. It's quick because it's easy-to-use. PAINT WALLS EASY WAY No Messy Mixing-Goes On Quick ONE COAT COVERS WALLPAPER MARY ELLEN RUSSELL ONE COAT COVERS WALLPAPER DA-TEX OIL BASE WALL FINISH DA-TEX is washable. It is not a water paint. $365 GALLON Paint with Da-Tex. Your walls dry quickly to a soft, satin sheen. Apply it right from the can—no messy mixing. Paint right over wallpaper, wallboard, bare plaster, painted walls. One coat does the job. Many beautiful decorator colors available. DA-TEX Decorator's DEEP COLORS Now you can get colors you have always wanted. Deep colors may be used full strength or easily inter-mixed to create delicate hues, pleasing pastels, or rich, deep tones. Easy to mix colors to match your rugs and draperies Deep colors slightly higher than regular Da-Tex. DAVIS PAINT Phone 1078 --- 931 Mass. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE University Daily Kansan Presents— --- Women Not Merely Decorative Lui Lambert, Class Of'50, Proves Louise Lambert, president of the class of '50, is a direct contradiction to the old theory that a woman's place on the campus is solely decorative. A vivacious, green-eyed brunet, "Lui" has not only fulfilled the traditional feminine requirements, but with capable leadership and enthusiasm has been president of Phi Alpha Theta, honorary history fraternity, and Jay Janes. In spite of maintaining a high grade average, Lui has found plenty of time for other interests to supplement her history major. Dramatics has made a strong claim on her A. E. H. Miss Louise Lambert time. She was cast in "Trojan Women" and "False Gods" presented by University Players. She also appeared in the first two productions of College Daze and is cast in the current play, "West of Abilene", as Sycamore, proprietor of a western saloon. Lui maintains that the proudest moment of her career as a University Player was finding an English shooting stick and a bear skin rug for the setting of "Ten Little Indians." Miller Holds Spring Dance Lui has also been active in Student Union Activities and Y.W.C.A. She is a member of the Union Operating board and chairman of the Miller Hall held its spring formal dance March 31. The theme was "Bow-knots." The Sellards and Orton combo played for the dance. Chaperones were Mrs. H. P. Ramage, Miss Julia Willard, Mrs. J. R. Scott, and Mrs. R. G. Roche, housemother, Guests were: Don Hull, Bryan Sperry, Max Pachl, Henry Reed, Cliff De Lude, Tom Cartwright, Jim Thomas, Edward Lynn, Paul Arrowwood, Duane Compton, Loren Hepler, Louis Eisele, Charles Molina, Douglas Kent, Don Coyne. Jimmie Pierce, Charles Sloan, Marvin Liggett, Ross Purcell, John Mann, Al Moore, Leon Lee, Gene Untruh, Hollis Hands, Darrell Rhudy, Nehemiah Kronnenberg, Bob Dun- well, Wayne Nielsen, George Mc- Neish, Don Dirks. Parke Woodard, Joanne Stanton, Kansas City; Jim Fullinwider, EI Dorado; Harold Hula, Topeka; Kenneth Walden, Lamoni, Iowa; Floyd Clark, Topeka, and Tom Barrett, Manhattan. Coe's Drug 1347 Mass. Drugs - Drug Sundries Drinks - Sandwiches Y. W. C. A. art appreciation committee. She has been Vice-president of Pi Beta Phi and a member of A.W.S. President's Council for the past two years. If you have read this far, you will not be surprised to know that she was tapped for Mortar Board last spring. We Deliver 10 To 10 When quizzed about plans for work after graduation, Lui replied. "Work! I haven't had time to think about that. I have to get out of here first!" Then, becoming serious, she added, "I do hate to leave the University, though. It hardly seems possible that my four-year share of K.U. is nearly over." Lui admitted that she is interested in training in some field of merchandising, but she has not decided whether or not she will make her start in Kansas City or the West Coast. Phone 234 Perhaps Lui's success in campus activities and scholarship are at least partially due to her passion for neatness and order. She loves to plan her day in every detail and then see how well she can stick to the pattern. She confessed, however, to leaving plenty of time for coffeeing, and sleeping, her favorite way of "overlooking time." Oliver hall entertained with a dinner dance April 1. Intermission music was by Robert Kite, Will Adams, Ronald Sunby, Al Long, James Lovett, and William Behrmann. Tom Schoech was master of ceremonies. Oliver Hall Dinner Dance "Activities, I believe, are an important part of education because they give us an opportunity to accept responsibility, to test our ability both as leader and follower, and to apply what we have learned in the classroom. Yvonne Morrow, Shirley Rothberger, Barbara Findley, Mary Anna Ward, Joy Hutcherson, Darlene Clark, Joan Shuler, Jean Johnson, Jessie Westgate, Mary Buckner. Guests were Arlene White, Donna Hobein, Jane Romig, Elizabeth Scott, Florene Shelley, Freddie Fuller, Sue Naylor, Ann Koch, Faye Wilkinson, Carolyn Barndt, Marese Ball, Yvonne Luce, Betty Jane Orlowski, Patricia Corder. Dr. and Mrs. L. C. Woodruff were after-dinner guests. Chaperones were Mrs. Lorraine Gosney, housemother; Mrs. Althea Galloway, Mrs. Elizabeth Kite, and Mrs. Fredult Z. Jobs Available To Women Students A number of full and part time jobs at the University are now available for women students, Miss Marjorie Austin, social director of dormitories, said. Full time work is being offered for clerk stenographers. Any applicant for this type of work must meet the civil service requirements, which include that the person be a resident of the state of Kansas for two years. Jobs for typists, stenographers, waitresses, and houseworkers are being offered on a part time basis. Miss Austin said that there are more job openings now than there have been all semester. Employers are particularly looking for women who can begin work immediately and can continue in the job next year. Anyone interested should inquire at the employment office in the dean of women's office, 220 Strong hall. AKL Laurel Fete Held Alpha KappaLambda fraternity held its spring formal, the Laurel Fete, in the Kansas room of the Union March 31. Guests were Jeanette Leuty, Elizabeth Stanford, Betty Lewis, Marie Antinette, Marilyn Thomas, Sarah Margaret Rayburn, Nancy Truby, Jeanne Mueller, Mona Coffman, Joan Collins, Eloise Dlabal, Gwen Peterson, Carol Beery, Pat Gray, Myrth Maddox, Barbara Holmes. Mary Lou Ketchum, Joanne Manners, Cara Lou Sheets, Verla Steffy, Betty Thompson, Doraine Wiegel, Joanne Varnum, Mrs. Dale Spiegel, Mrs. Burt Canfield, Marian Kysar, Juie Klocher, Frances Allen, Kansas City.Me; Joan Reed, Garden City: Rita Shipp, Paola. Bonnie Bowman and Katherine Bowman, Mission; Virginia Graham, Pittsburg; Beverly Burr and Mary Pierce, Stevens College, Columbia Mo.; Jo Anne Kincaid, Wichita; Julia Maupin, Joyce Cockell, Norma Fredrics. Chaperons were Mrs. Lela Wilson, house mother; Mrs. Althea Galloway, Mrs. Lorraine Gosney, and Mrs. C. L. Veatch. Sierra Nevada, in English, means snowy range. NOW Is The TIME to secure your Senior Class Ring Seniors Only The Palace at Frank Strong Hall Business Office Upper front Jacket with slash pockets. Water-repellent tackle twill. All sizes. Great Jacket for Campus Wear $1295 A 843 Mass. Alumna, Graduate Student Engaged Mr. and Mrs. Russell G. Davis of Blue Mound announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary Lou, to Mr. John L. Margrave, son of Mr. and Mrs. Orville F. Margrave of Kansas City, Kansas. Miss Davis was graduated from the School of Business in 1948 and is employed in Kansas City, Mo. Mr. Margravea 1948 graduate of the School of Engineering is now a graduate student n chemistry at the University. Let RISK'S Be Your Home when it comes to washing clothes. Use a Maytag washing machine for only 60c an hour. Facilities for drying and ironing, too. FOR FAMILY WASHING THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE HOME RISK'S Self-Service Laundry 613 Vermont Order Your Flowers for Easter Sunday Today! 40 Call 998 Victoria's Gift Store The Blossom Shop Give Your White Elephants 'Green Backs' With KANSAN Classifieds. Leave your Clothes with Us During Easter Vacation Now is the time to - Get your formal ready for that spring dance. - Or to get your spring woolens ready for after-Easter wear. "QUALITY OUTSTANDING" LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS Call 383 1001 N.H. PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 1950 Semper Is OK For A Sophomore BY RICHARD DILSAVER A boyhood accident in which he lost the sight of his right eye started Herb Semper on a track career. Now a sophomore at the University, Semper has been doing all right at running. Not every Big Seven trackman sets a conference record in his first league meet. Herb did just that. At a Big Seven indoor carnival in March he came up with probably the most surprising and compelling-stirring performance when he twotile run with a dynamic sprint in the final two laps. In doing so, he left pre-meet favorite George Fitzmorris of Colorado fully 40 yards behind, and his time of 9:26.4 bettered the record teammate Bob Karnes had set in 1949. "I didn't want to give up athletics," Herb says. He had been hit in the eye by a BB while playing. His freshman coach at Proviso Township High school at his home in Forest Park, Ill., refused to let him play football because of the handicap. Herb turned to track. He did well enough at Proviso, winning third in the mile and fourth in cross country at state meets. Before graduating in 1947, he decided to continue his track career at Drake under Bill Easton, then track coach at Des Moines school. But Easton moved to Kansas that summer. MANSION HERB SEMPER is shown winning the Big Seven two-mile run in record-breaking time. followed Easton to K.U. in the winter of 1948. And he says, "I've been happy at Kansas ever since." Along with him to run under Easton was Hammond and tried Durke. He went ahead and tried Drake for a semester, but dissatisfied, he another man to become important in Kansas track annals—All-American Pat Bowers. As a K.U. freshman, Herb lost no time in starting to work over Jayhawker record books. During the indoor season, he set new University freshman marks of 4:30 in the mile and 9:42 in the two-mile. Outdoors he posted the fresh two-mile record of 9:33.4. His recent mark at the Big Seven is now the Varsity indoor two-mile standard. At KU. he is in the College, majoring in entomology and minoring in zoology. He's a member of Phi Gamma Delta social fraternity and the Entomology club. Plans for Herb after graduation aren't certain yet. At present his biggest concerns are when he'll be married—probably next winter—to his fiancee who is at home in Forest Park and when he'll break a few more records—probably this spring. Herb was a member of Easton's crack teams which won the two-mile and four-mile relays at the Texas relays. That same quartet will be after new records in those events at the 25th annual Kansas Relays April 22. In Bob Karnes and Pat Bowers, Coach Easton has developed two of the Midwest's finest distance runners. With the flying start he's got. Herb Semper may have exceeded both of them two years hence. And, brother, that will be stepping. Tackles Look Good In Spring Practice For the first time in almost 20 years Kansas is cementing its strongest line link at tackle as the Jayhawkers grind through spring football practice. The Jayhawkers have produced some good ones in recent years, notably Red Ettinger and Hugh Johnson of the '46 and '47 co-championship clubs, but no overall set which packed such a definite bulge in strength over other positions as the '50 corps promises to do. Returning are three solid lettermen, Co-Capt, Mike McCormack, a second team all-conference choice last year; S.P. Garnett, 215-pound senior, and Bob Talkington, 226-pound senior. Battling them are four sophomores, Art Spratt, converted back; George Muskion, Virgil Wenger, former all-stater, Bill Schaben, 200-pounder and Jasper Mirabilie, 225-pounder. There was no finer blocking tackle in the conference last year than McCormack, and he is playing equally well on defense this spring. He probably will handle tackle all the way next season. Garnett is a blasting defender and improving blocker, Talkingkton a satisfactory close-line blocker. How far the sophs can develop this spring remains to be seen. Mrkonic holds high promise as a punter. Here's a Pre-Easter Treat Hot Fudge Sundae A Chocolate 'Shake' or TRY THEM BOTH AT THE Dairy Queen 1835 Mass. End is also taking shape as a fortified post. Every one of last year's offensive and defensive regulars is returning plus Sandefur, 6 foot 3 inch laid sealing 208. The experienced roster includes Orbon Tice and Chuck O'Neal, who manned the defense most of the way in '49, and pass-grabbers Lyn Smith, Bill Schaake, and Aubrey Linville. The concern surrounds guard and center where the Jayhawks lost all starters plus two lettered understudies at the latter position. It's an all-sophomore scrap at the pivot with Clay Roberts, Merlin Gish, converted halfback, Harold Stroud, 218-pounds, and Wint Winter, locked in a four-way battle. Three lettered guards, John Idoux, Dolph Simons, and George Kennard, are being pushed by a host of sophomores including George Abel; Jack Luschen, ex-all-state tackle; Oliver Spencer, converted backfelt; Ron Hammel, former all-state tackle; Frank Renroft, and Ron Mercer. ing halfbacks will be filled by sophomores at least part time, Chuck Hoag, the rangy freshman sensation of 1949, is in the front row of the picture as expected, he will have to beat out Dean Wells, one of last year's most valuable sophs, before he can stake out clear claim to the post. Dave Wilson also is in the picture. It is an even bet that both start- The traffic is thick at right half where the veteran Wade Stinson must hold back a four-man sophomore flood to sew up the starting job held so capably by the graduated Bud French the past three seasons. Three more first year hands are stacked up behind Co-Capt. Johnny Amberg at full. The trio includes two budding powerhouses, Galen Fiss, 212-pounder, and Bud Laughlin, a big, swift bucker. Bob Brandeberry, 190-pound battler, cannot be overlooked. Unless the picture changes considerably. Fiss already is ticketed for much defensive duty next year. Bring Your Car in for a SPRING CHECKUP! A Spring auto check up is like that wise regular visit to your doctor. A check up now can avoid a major repair job in a month or two. Don't take chances. We Service All Makes of Cars See Us Today for Better Spring Driving Boyer Motors 617 Mass. Mary McLean Look! Who's that good - looking gal? With your Jayhawker it's easy to find out her name and phone number! It's not too late to subscribe to the Jayhawker, but get yours today. Only a limited supply. Subscription 5.25 at the Jayhawker Office VAN HEUSEN PRODUCTS Sold Exclusively in Lawrence 811 Mass. Gibbs Clothing Co. Ph. 459 new and different pullover that g- l - v - e - s winner either way VAN G-I-V-E Tailored garbardine in front . . . knitted comfort in back . . . smart all around Short sleeves, $4.95; long sleeves, $5.95 Van Heusen shirts Reg.T.M. "the world's smartest" O PHILLIPS-JONES CORP., NEW YORK 1, N. Y. www WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5. 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE ANGAS 8 Jerry Waugh, junior guard, will be captain of the 1950-51 Kansas basketball team. Waugh, a regular for Dr. F. C. Allen the past three Michigan First Entry In Relays; Fonville Coming Michigan's Wolverines, including Charles Fonville, shotputter, and Don McEwen, one of the nation's tep sophomore two-milers, are the first official entry in the 25th annual Kansas Relays April 22. seasons, was unanimously elected to the post by his teammates. He succeeds Claude Houchin. The Big Ten school will send an eight-man squad, its largest in post-war relays history. Entries from Marquette and Chicago have been received since Michigan's. Fonville will be after the title he earned here two years ago when he hung up a relays and world record of 58 feet $ \frac{1}{4} $ inch, later bettered three inches by Jim Fuchs of Yale. The rangy 195-pound Negro is returning after a back injury kept him out of competition last year. He reached 55 feet 1 inch in his first start at the Michigan A.A.I.L. relays. McEwen is expected to anchor stout Michigan bids for the distance Pedley and four-mile relay titles, events also being eyed by Bill Easton's host Kansas crew. He recently set a new Big Ten indoor two-mile record in 9:07.2 and has run as low as 9:06.9. He also set a new standard at the Michigan State Relays at 9:12, erasing a 9:21 figure by an old K.U. Relays favorite, Jerry Thompson of Texas. Bossi Suffers Eye Injury Bernice Bossi, College junior, was admitted to Watkins Memorial hospital Sunday after being hit in the eye with a softball. She was practicing with other members of the Locksley hall intramural team when she was injured. Her condition is good. Call K.U. 251 With Your News. Clyde Lovellette, Kansas, and Rick Harman, Kansas State, have been named to the Helms foundation All-America basketball team. They were the only Big Seven players named. Lovellette was placed on the third team and Harman on the second. Lovellette, Harman Named By Helms NCAA Official Dislikes 'Code' Chicago, April 5—(U.P.) N.C.A.A. President Hugh Willett of Southern California said today he believes the embattled "sanity code" should and will be revised. He emphasized that he was speaking "personally" and not as president of the association as representatives of 19 conference members opened a two-day meeting with the N.C.A.A. executive committee to discuss suggested changes in the code. "I personally have never believed that the code was in its final form." Willett said. "I personally believe it should be revised and I believe it will be. "It is a code that can be improved and made more adaptable to the needs of colleges all over the country. Our code can be made more flexible." Willett said the session with the conference representatives was designed to let them know the channels for recommending changes in the code, as provided by a resolution approved at the January convention. "The commissioners are here to help us decide the scope of our survey," he said. "We can't get into it without discussion of the sanity code, but we want to get the ideas in the proper channel for presentation to the convention." 5 Drink MILK for Health Drink Lawrence Sanitary Milk 202 W. 6th Call 696 University Championships To Phi Delt's, Sig Alph's Boulder, Colo., April 5—(U.P.)H. B. "Bebe" Lee, 33-year-old basketball coach who had a brilliant playing career with Stanford 10 years ago. Tuesday was named head basketball coach at Colorado university. Lee, who coached the past year at Colorado A. and M., succeeds Coach Forrest "Frosty" Cox who has coached Buffalo cage teams to national prominence for 15 years including the 1940 season when Colorado won the National Invitational tournament at New York City. Phi Delta Theta in division A and Sigma Alpha Epsilon in division B are University champions in intramural volleyball. The finals were played Tuesday night in Robinson annex. The Phi Delts, champions of the fraternity A league, had an easy time in defeating the Fijis, the independent league winners. Scores were 15 to 5 and 15 to 3. The winners were led by the hard spiking of Bill Lienhard. Lee Is Named To Replace Cox As CU Coach Sig Alph downed Scarab, 15 to 1 and 15 to 13, in winning the B crown. Sig Alph was the fraternity B league King's, and Scarab was champion of the independent B league. Members of the A league champion Phi Delt squad were Myron The announcement of Lee's appointment was made by Robert Stearns, president of Colorado, and William E. Morgan, president of Colorado A. and M. Lee's appointment came after a two-month search of the nation for an outstanding coach to direct the Big Seven basketball fortunes of Colorado in the coming years. Lee's contract is for three years. He will assume his new duties immediately. The new Colorado mentor was appointed as an assistant professor of physical education in charge of the entire basketball program. He scheduled spring basketball practice for the first week in May. "I am very flattered at being picked to succeed Coach Cox who has made such a fine record at Colorado," Lee said. REMEMBER HER with MAY 14 ALLAUTER Reminds You That Mothers L. G. Balfour Co. 411 W. 14th Call 907 "Sonny" Enns, Bob Fountain, John Hedrick, Lienhard, Harold Lowe, Morel Dellhrath, and Walt Quiring. Players on Sig Alph B league champions were Fred Apt, Claude Houchin, Pete Jensen, Tom Nelson, Frank Ross, Doug Wall, Hal White, and Marvin White. The A runnerup team, the Fijis, was composed of Heywood Davis, Van Gillespie, Jack Gove, Jim Gurleff, Cliff Hargis, and Tom Jones. Typewriter Tables Members of the Scarab team were Bob Arbuekle, Howard Nearing, Jim Porter, Don Schaake, Dick Sime, Stan Staats, and Carl Stanstrom. - A Mother's Pin or - A Crested Gift ...$5.95 All steel construction, on casters, easy to roll. Sterling 928 Furn. Co. Mass. ACME Laundry & Dry Cleaners Wishes You A Happy Easter May your vacation with your family and loved ones be an enjoyable and memorable one. Easter Greetings FRIEDRICH HALL Have your clothes in spick and span condition when you return from your Easter holiday. Just leave them with us to be scientifically dry cleaned before you leave. . . they'll be ready when you come back. ACME Laundry & Dry Cleaners The More You Tell—The Quicker' You'll Sell—Use Kansan Classifieds It's "Home For Easter" TAKE YOUR TIME - Use your head - Drive safely - we want you back here with us April 17th. Let us service your car before you go - be sure it's SAFE TO DRIVE. CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. PHONE 4 8th and New Hampshire CITIES SERVICE - PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5. 1950 TODAY'S MAIL Sorehead, So-Called Sir: I am sorry that the Kansan, the one medium of student information which is not subject to A.S.C. control, has taken up the game of partisan politics. I was however, amused at the ignorance exhibited in the editorial by Pete North by his assumption of the existence of a so-called "so-called Independents party." The so-called so-called Independents party was dissolved shortly after the election last spring, at which the so-called Independents suffered a sound defeat. THERE IS NO INDEPENDENTS PARTY—so-called so-called, so-called, or otherwise called. Mr. North's editorial was subtly worded and apparently rational, but, as a broken spirited and disappointed so-called Independent leader (as long as Independent leadership is no more than so-called I can call myself a leader and qualify as well as anyone) I see between the lines of it an attempt to further degrade the name of "Independent." I must contradict Mr. North's generalization that the Independents party represented "an even smaller minority than Pachacamac." Perhaps this conclusion came to Mr. North as a result of plenary inspiration (Ed. Note: plenary inspiration by dictionary definition would mean due process of thought.), for it is obvious that no factual basis exists for such a statement. I will admit, however, that some of the Independents political leaders have been motivated by purely selfish aims. Indeed, the reason for the dissolution of the Independents party was the sell-out committed by one such leader who managed to pull the wool over the eyes of the other Independents. This person was able to reach a position of some prominence in campus politics by standing on the caress of the party he stabbed in the back. May I congratulate you then, Mr. North, for your excellent use of journalistic subtlety in making stupid generalizations appear rational. You should be proud, for you have done your task well, but nothing will likely come of your efforts to induce Independent opposition. The Independents realize full well that under the present election procedure, it will take more than a mere "quirk of fate" to defeat Pachacamac. (Such a feat would call for a miracle.) Nor do the Independents any longer cling to their old ideal of a university that does not discriminate against a student on such flimsy grounds as social affiliations. We passively pay our activity fees, not even rebelling when Pachacamac throws our money away on Delta Sigma Rho trips for the A.S.C. president and his stooges, or on imaginary tepees for the Sachem society. I will admit to thinking a few harsh words when the Independent Students' association, a non-political organization, was denied any funds at all, but then I'm just a sorehead whose party lost a fair election. The Independent opposition you are seeking. Mr. North, is not going to materialize. We Independents are convinced at last that a person who wears a pin is a better person than one who does not. Robert C. Casad College senior The Editors Report — AN OPEN LETTER TO A Sorehead, So Called ye Ed 食二 Dear Mr. Casad: In view of the charges you wrongfully make at the University Daily Kansan, I will attempt to answer your letter to us. You say our information is incorrect. Yet you yourself have not the least idea what you are talking about. For instance, you say the University Daily Kansan is the one medium of student information which is not subject to A.S.C. control. Where may you have obtained such incorrect information? As editor-in-chief, as a member of the Kansan board, I have many times seen a copy of our constitution. In the Kansan board constitution is a section on general policies. In that section is A.S.C. bill no. 6, A Bill on Publications. We suggest you read that bill, paying particular attention to chapter four, before you go around handing out misinformation. Yet even if the Kansan is under the control of the A.S.C. as the "official student paper of the University of Kansas," we are nevertheless non-partisan. We do not, will not, shall not take the part of any group or individual on the campus. Yet this does not mean we may not, will not, shall not comment on the activities of groups and individuals on the campus. Mr. Casad, let me ask you a few questions. We can only hope for answers. As a man who feels others are ignorant, let us find out if you can enlighten them. Here is your chance to be something other than a so-called ex-Independent leader. Here is your chance to stop calling other people names and do something constructive. You say our facts are incorrect, will you do us the favor of straightening us out? As we see the truth, are able to find it, to get facts to back up what we say, so shall we call our shots. And evidently this time, one of our shots has struck home. We'd like to know, for instance, just what was the reason for the Independents nominally disbanding? Was it an attempt to discredit the A.S.C. as the students' governing body for once and for good? Did the Independents, by "saying" they were dissolving, think they could coerce the administration into scrapping the All Student council? We wonder about these questions. We also wonder about your readiness to take offense about something that isn't. Could it be that the Independent party actually is still around? You, Mr. Casad, seem pretty anxious and eager to refresh everyone's memory that you were (or are you still?) one of the so-called leaders of the so-called Independent party. And would you be so kind to tell us just who it was that sold out to Pachacamac and rose to prominence "by standing on the carcass of the party that he stabbed in the back," as you so poetically put it? Can you prove it? Would it be too much trouble to ask you to substantiate your claims that Pachacamac throws away our money on trips and canapes for A.S.C. members? Would you be willing to give us the benefit of your apparently unlimited knowledge? We have many more questions we'd like answered. We wonder, Mr. Casad, after reading your letter over, if it just wasn't because of leadership like yours that the Independents never got any farther than they did. We wonder if, with leadership, or even so-called leadership, as the Independents have had in the past that they will ever win any election. You charge Mr. North with generalizing. Yet he might charge you with the same thing. He would, however, have the advantage. He did not become vituperative. He was, although a Greek, a gentleman. We have many more questions we'd like you to answer, Mr. Casad. But we tire of bickering with someone who does not have the least idea about what or with whom he is arguing. Which brings us down to the reason Mr. North was not allowed to reply to your foolish outbursts. It was to evade any further charges that the University Daily Kansan is politically partisan. We want to let you know that there are others on the "official student paper of the University of Kansas," non-Greeks, who also would like to see a return of the two-party system to the campus. Yet none of us, can, by any stretching of the imagination, see how this can be called political partisanship. Editor-in-Chief. by Keith Leslie James S. Morris, Quebec—(U.P)A worried husband told the judge that he didn't think much about it when his pretty 21-year-old bride twice threatened to poison him after they were married four month ago. "When she hit me on the head with an axe last night and tried to clip off my leg after I had fallen to the floor, I decided it was serious," he said. Graduation days will soon be here, and Huey P. Muckpump, political science senior, is beginning to worry about the finals in Baby Kissing II, Hay Pitching 170, and Plain Dirt Farming 220. Dallas, Texas—(U.P.)—The Dallas police radio dispatcher last night solemnly asked a squad car to report to the headquarters of Alcoholics Anonymous—to pick up a drunk. We were pretty worried about the international situation there for a while, but now that "Daddy" Warbucks is back, we expect everything to turn out all right. THE WORKOUTS ARE EASY. WARNER CERTAINLY CARRIES A LOT OF WEIGHT SINCE HE STARTED USING VITALIS! You'll be strong with the gals, too—if you use your head—and "Live-Action" Vitalis care. Just be sure to use that famous "60-Second Workout" topside. 50 seconds' scalp massage (feel the difference!)—10 seconds to comb (and will the gals see the difference!). You'll look neat and natural. Bye-bye loose, flaky dandruff and dryness, too. So be smart and look smart—get Vitalis soon at drug store or barber shop. "LIVE ACTION" VITALIS and the "60-Second Workout" March Winds Can't Roar Bigger Values Than Those In Kansan Classifieds smart radio buy AC/DC TABLE RADIO by Motorola Here's Economy Plus Tops In Listening Pleasure ● "Sweep Station" Tuning ● Built-in Antenna ● New Improved Dynamic Speaker Stop by our shop and see for yourself. . . before you buy. . . you'll marvel at its performance. A Smart Buy At $19.95 BEAMAN'S RADIO & TV 1200 N.Y. Phone 1497 WARNER CERTAINLY CARRIES A LOT OF WEIGHT SINCE HE STARTED USING VITALIS! You'll be strong with the gals, too—if you use your head—and "Live-Action" Vitalis care. Just be sure to use that famous "60-Second Workout" topside. 50 seconds' scalp massage (feel the difference!)—10 seconds to comb (and will the gals see the difference!). You'll look neat and natural. Bye-bye loose, flaky dandruff and dryness, too. So be smart and look smart—get Vitalis soon at drug store or barber shop. "LIVE-ACTION" VITALIS and the "60-Second Workout" VITALIS "LIVE- ACTION" A PRODUCT OF BRISTOL-MVERS Vitalis soon at drug st VITALIS "LIVE ACTION" VITALIS and the "60-Second Workout" smart radio buy 5 6 7. 8. 12 14 16. AC/DC TABLE RADIO by Motorola smart radio buy AC/DC TABLE RADIO by Motorola Here's Economy Plus Tops In Listening Pleasure 1950 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 1950 on we UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN us feel the sky get Kansan Classified Advertising Phone K.U. 376 Classified Advertising Rates Terms: Cash. Phone orders are acceptes, with the understanding that the bill will be promptly. Adms can arrive in during the hours to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University office. Journalism bide, not later than 4 p.m., the day before publication date. | | One day | Three days | Five days | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 25 words or less | 35c | 65c | 90c | | Additional words | 1c | 2c | 3c | FOR SALE PONTIAC 1939. Fordor sedan; radio heater, sound, power Mpulse. Mass Pho- ce. Auxiliary Motors. CHEVROLLP 1940; Tudor; good tires, leather and upholstery; clean inside and out. See at Vern Schneider Motors 1010 Mass. Phone 4241. DODGE 1941; club coupe; radio; heater; two tone green car; condition. See 1940s Mopars 1941 Motors 1918 Motors CVROLET 1936 Standard; good paint and tires; heat器; seat covers; over-all appearance good. See at Sy Barncord Motors, 19th, and Mass. ___ 7 K 1980; (discount) 2 door, radio; white sidewalls; new. Also others. See at Sy Barncord Motors 19th and Moe. ARCHITECTS! We now have the Graphic Solarmeter. The quick way to determine the angle of sun rays in the Northern Hemisphere. Only $3.00 at Studios Incline. DRESS UP your watch with a tinted glass of non-breakable crystal. Save here on repairs. Masden's Watch Shop; 12 Eat Street. Phone 47. 18 "SELECTED Letters of William Allen White" edited by Walter Johnson: regularly $3.75—on sale at 49c. Student Union, Book Store. 7 MACHINE DITCHING. House foundations, water and sewer ditches. Ditches are 16 in. wide to 34 in. deep. Reason: the sewer is too low. John Table 2129 or Bob McKinney. 25373. 1933 Chevrolet sedan, good tires, mechanical good, sealed beam lights, heater reasonable. Ask for Paul Gibbs. 565 rewarnings. 6 PERFECT for Any Babe! We have cuddly bunnies and bouncy rubberized bunnies for Easter. Come in and pick out your favorite buns! Biscorn Cornel Corp. Shop 842 Mass. BOOK-EASE, a collapsible book holder. Can be used on a desk, in bed, anywhere. Now only 88c at your Student Union Book Store. 21 FORD 36, four door sedan. New upholstering and new paint. Motor in excellent condition. FDW 29, four door sedan. DFW 20, Good Standard. No. 5 typeface. Good condition; Bargain for writer. Good condition; Bargain for ( older ) See at University of Kansas PreNCIC TIME is portable time. For expert repairs and batteries, bring your portables to the Radio Hospital, 14 East 9th. Full line of Everyready batteries. 6 THESES MATERIALS! All weights of thesis quality typing paper, carbon paper, and typewriter ribbons. Student Union Book Store. M4 NOW IS THE TIME to place your order for an album of K.U. songs. Delivery by May 1. Only $4.90 on your Student Union Book Store. ___ 6 SIX FOOT Coolerator for sale. Like new and in excellent condition. Ice capacity, 80W or at 2021 W. 1948, 23 ft. M-system trailer house with electric refrigerator and water heater, forced air heating stove and butane cooking stove. 1316 Kentucky. 17 University Daily Hansan News Room Adv. Room K.U. 251 K.U.376 Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assn, National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn, and the Associated Collegiate Represented by the National Ad- dressing Service,420 Madison Ave., New York City. James Morris Doris Greenbank Managing Editor Astast City Editors Norma Hunsinger John Hill I Cured Astast City Editors Nelson Ober Marilyn Marks Featuring Photograph Editor Sports Editor Astast Sports Editors George Graves Arthur McIntiire Society Editor Astast Society Editors Telegraph Editor Astast Tel. Editors William Grace James Shriver Business Mgr. Kay O'Connor Ralph Hemenway Edward Chapin Elaine Elvig Steve Ferre Wayne Filey Frankie Walters Richard Dilsaver Ray Soldan Mona Millikin Fave Wilkinson Emily Stewart Robert Sigman William Graves Michael Tatum Lloyd Holbeck Adv. Mgr Cr. Mgr Nas. Mgr Classified Ad. Mgr. Collation Mgr. Richard Tatum olbeck Laboral Assassins Pete North John Bannigan Kaita Leslie FINEST TELEVISION-Best in sets and accessories. Hires arrived. $87.50 and up. See the est Emerson table model set at $19.50. Mowers. Broma Radio and Electric. $89.99 Versailles. CHAIN with 4 keys and a silver plate with Kansas printed on it. Reward: if found please call Penny at 2304 after 5 o'clock. 18 Charles Reiner Yvonne Josserand Forrest Brus Bruce Hines John Wiedemann BLUE rimmed glasses in lizard zipper 196 Fraser, Phone 3914-W 198 Fraser, Phone 3914-W LOST MAROON POO 51. Silver Cap. $ a.m. CAROL 370-3 PM 1 baseball game near 13th Ord $ reward to finder. Call 3662R. 17 HEY MEN! Can you beat this? Nice private rooms on second floor, cooking facilities including dishes, etc. in basement. All for $0.00 week each. 1400 Rhoeat 316-729-5800. FOR RENT WALK a little farther and have a nice quiet room in which to study. Single room for man. No other rooms. 1240 R L Ph. 1350R. 6 SINGLE ROOM to young man. No drinking or smoking. First house south of City Hall. FOUR-ROOM house; modern; built-ins, bath; neatly furnished; garments and tools; 10 days, 7 weeks. STUDENTS look! Room and board (optional). Space for few extra boards. dc per meal, 5 days. Under new management. 1213 Ohio Phone 2917- R.5 VANTED: Ride, Kansas City to Law- ence and return. Monday thru Satur- lay. Will join car pool. Call J. De- ganne. 3478W TRANSPORTATION WANTED: Ride to St. Louis Saturday morning April 8; Will share driving and nurses. Call 444; Wayne Helgesen; 540 DRIVING Chicago over Easter Holiday Riders wanted - phone Bette or George. WANTED: Riders to Chicago. Leaving Saturday. Returning Sunday. April 18 to New York. DRIVING to Chicago for Easter holidays. Can take 3 riders. Leave Friday or Saturday, April 7 or 8. Phone 892 after 6 p.m. 6 RIDE WANTED to St. Louis, Cape Girardeau, or southeast Missouri. Leave Friday afternoon or night. Call Stevens, 3236-W. 6 RIDE WANTED to New York and back for spring vacation. Will share expenses and help drive. Phone Per Sjogren 3944-W or KU-409. 6 MARRIED Couple would like ride to western New York for spring vacation. H. Mattison, 1905 Mass. St., Phone 2925-6 HELD OVER!! Ends SATURDAY The BIGGEST western in 10 years! "AMBUSH" ROBERT TAYLOR JOHN HODDAK-ARLENE DAHL US ARMY CRAFTSMAN AMBUSH BY ALPHONSE ● Also ● Pete Smith Special Color cartoon News FLY AND TAKE advantage of reduced faves, dovetail connections, good accommodations. Call Miss Gieseman at First Aid Training and Information. Telephone No. 30. 69 STARTS Saturday Owl 11:15 SUNDAY CLIFTON JEANNE MYRNA WEBB CRAIN·LOY CLIFTON JEANNE MYRNA WEBB CRAIN·LOY CHEAPER by the DOZEN 20TH CENTURY COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR with Edgar Buchanan Granada PHONE 946 GOING TO New York City Easter; round trip rider wanted. Call 25571. 6 BUSINESS SERVICE - TIPING: Neat, accurate, rapid. Regula rules. Prompt service. Mrs. Schear. Apt R-36. 1810 Lu. Phone 32738. Notes, etc. Prompt service. Reports, Notes, etc. Prompt service. Sheehan. 1028 Vermont. Ph. 11688. * tF* TYPING. Term papers, notesbooks, letters, remarks. Prompt service. Report rates. Prompt attention Mrs. Shields. 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601 CHEAPER by the DOZEN 20 EXPRESSION COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR with Edgar Buchanan Granada PHONE 946 THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. Complete overhaul, engine time-up, body and fender repair, auto shut-off service. LET'S GO! 1821R FAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our one-stop-shopping service includes pet and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Conn. St. Ph. 418. tf TYPING: Call Hailer Stamley. 2865M for prompt experienced service. $209/Mass WANTED ACCOUNTANT appointed by University of Kansas Press; half-time April 15 to June 1; Full-time thereafter. Applicant to take Civil Service exam when given; must be permanent. See Mr. Ryther, Journalism building. 25 The name "Derby" originated in England when the Earl of Derby offered a prize for an annual horse race at Epsom. Continuous Shows Open 12:45 Patee PHONE 321 ADM. 12c & 39c Patee ends tonite "MADAME BOVARY" STARTS THURS. The Valor Stories of Our Fighting Heroes! THE NORMAL GUY RICHARD TREGASKIS' GUADALCANAL DIARY with Preston FOSTER - Lloyd NOLAN William BENDIX - Richard CONTE Anthony QUINN Directed by LEWIS SEILER Produced by BRYAN FOY 20th Century-Fox F-ore 20th Century-Fox Encore Triumphs 'RICHARD TREGASKIS' GUADALCANAL DIARY with Preston FOSTER · Lloyd NOLAN William BENDIX · Richard CONTE Anthony QUINN Directed by IEWIS SEILER Produced by BRYAN FOY 20 Century-Fox Encore GUADALCANAL DIARY Triumphs! PURPLE HEART with Dana Andrews $* Richard Conte Farley Granger * Kevin O'Shea Donald Brardy * Truvd Marshall Added Fun Color Cartoon Soon • "Holiday Affair" Delta Chi House Repairs To End Soon Repair of damages to the Delta Chi fraternity house caused by a recent fire should be completed within two weeks, according to workmen on the job. Smoke damage has necessitated the painting of the entire first floor and hallways on the second and third floors. The chapter room is being enlarged about 125 square feet by using the space formerly taken up by a storeroom, which was completely destroyed. "Iinsurance has lessened the burden on us individually and the fraternity as a whole," explained Fletcher Abbey, chapter president, "and we feel that once the work is completed, the house should be in as good condition and possibly better than before the fire." Oh, Those Good Old Days Ramsay, Mich.—(U.P.)—When the town thermometer registered 55 degrees below zero, residents threw it away because they thought there was something wrong with it. A few days later, the new thermometer registered 62 below. JAYHAWKER Phone 10 for Sho Time GUTS! Hurry . . . Last Times Tonite THURSDAY Blue Grass or Kentucky BILL WILLIAMS JANE NIGH RALPH MORGAN in CINECOLOR! on our stage Orva Dodson presents "EASTER PARADE REVUE" Ends tonite "CAPTAIN CHINA" THURSDAY and FRIDAY on our screen For Show Times Phone 260 FOLLOW THE CARS FEATURE AT 8:05—9:58 We've got an Easter IT'S ALL IN FUN...AND YOU'LL LAFF YOUR HEAD OFF! Laurel & Hardy in "WAY OUT WEST" The Macy's Music Store We've got an Easter Surprise Sunday for Kiddies FOLLOW TO SEE THE STARS 1 Mile West on Hi-way 59 "HOME OF THE BRAVE" - ALSO - GIANT CARTOON Feature 7:47 and 9:43 5 Color Cartoons CIRCUS For Kids 6 to 60 Featuring All of Your Favorite cartoon characters in one giant fun-fest! It's a swell Laff-tonic for Everyone! Lawrence DRIVE-IN Theatre No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money. A Woman's Mind Is Like "SALOME" This Is A Story Of A Woman Who Did! Ann TODD ... hidden from the world by seven veils . . . of reserve, shyness, fear . . . with friends a woman will drop two, perhaps four . . . with the man she loves five or six . . . but never the seventh, NEVER! G.C.F. presents James. MASON The Seventh Veil Music by London Symphony Orch. Pathetique Sonata (Beethoven) Seventh Veil Waltz; Overture, "Merry Wives of Windsof"; Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto in C Major SPECIAL LIMITED ENGAGEMENT SPECIAL LIMITED ENGAGEMENT No Reserved Seats • All Seats 75c tax incl. SPECIAL STUDENT PRICE 50c tax incl. VARSITY 2—Days Only—2 Today-Thur. Features at 2:00-3:50- 5:40-7:30-9:20 Box-Office Opens Each Day 1:30 PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 1950 Model Road To Be Shown At Exposition One of the many exhibits to be shown at the Engineering Exposition to be held Friday, April 21 through Sunday, April 23, will be a model highway built by the students of civil engineering department. This highway will be a scale model which will be shown in several stages of construction. The display will consist of four sections. Scale model equipment and vehicles will be used throughout the project to offer a touch of realism. The second section will be a view of the same terrain but will show the initial steps and the cut being made through the hill. Typical earthworking equipment that would be seen on an actual construction project will be shown in place. The third section will show further construction with a section of the concrete slab being poured by model equipment. The final section will show the finished highway complete with traffic. The initial section will show the rough terrain, a hill adjoining a food plain, with the necessary stakes for the beginning of construction. In conjunction with this project will be a display of the latest prefabricated military bridges. These bridges will be exact scale models of the bridges now being used by the U.S. army. The civil engineers will show surveying instruments, measuring apparatus, and bridge models in 208 Marxin hall. In room 11 Marvin hall the soil exhibit will consist of models showing soil settlement under buildings, the model of an earthdam with electric flow net analyzer, and the model of equipment used to obtain borings and full size undisturbed samples of soil in tubings. A model spillway and drainage basin with moving river system showing runoff- and flood flow will be part of the hydraulics exhibit in the hydraulics laboratory. The sanitary exhibit to be found in room 7 Marvin hall will consist of a model water treatment plant in operation, model sedimentation basin in operation, and displays of pathogenic bacteria and bacteriological analysis of water. Colonel Will Talk Thursday Night Col. William Sexton, Ft. Leavenworth, will speak on Iraq to members of Phi Alpha Theta, honorary history fraternity, at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the English room of the Union. Buehler Contest Today In Green A previous notice that the meeting was Tuesday was incorrect. The third annual Lorraine Buehler oratorical contest will be held at 8 p.m. tonight in the Little Theater in Green hall. The contest offers three prizes; first, a complete set of the Encyclopedia Americana; second, $20 in cash; and third, $20 in cash. This year's contest is the largest in the history of the contest. Eleven speakers have registered subjects for the event. The contestans and their topics are: Thomas Oliver, education sophomore, on "The American Way"; Wain Koerper, College sophomore, on "Fact and Fancy"; Kent Shearer, College junior, on "My Uclele"; Thomas Payne, College sophomore, on "The Golden Leaf"; Donald Dirks, College freshman, on "Across the Rio Grande." Edvin Glasscock, College senior, "First and Foremost," William Van Almen, "Luxury Versus Necessity; Orval Swander, College sophomore, "On Boston Redwood; Craig Hampton, fine arts senior, on 'Angels Can Do More;' Beverly Stapules, College sophomore, on "Man's In-humanity to Man;" and Steve Mills, College junior, on "Heads or Tails" Chairman of the contest will be Ernest Friesen. College senior who was winner of the contest last year. Judges will be F.J. Moreau, dean of the School of Law, R. M. Davis, professor of law, and R.L. Schlefebusch assistant professor of speech. The winning oration will be published in permanent binding and possibly reprinted in one of the campus magazines. Governor Re-Apoints Raney D. M. Raney of Osborne, student at the University in 1915 and 1916, has been re-appointed to a three year term on the Kansas State Board of Pharmacy. The appointment was made by Governor Frank Carlson. US Policy Too Negative Lackie Tells Young GOP Dean Acheson, secretary of state, is a "bungler." Paul Lackie, '40 McPherson attorney, told Young Republican club members Tuesday night. Referring to more local matters, Mr. Lackie said that it was the duty of the Young Republicans and similar groups to get out the more than 46 million votes wasted in every election by non-voters less than 40-years-old. The present administration formulates a policy and then "hopes everything turns out all right", rather than adopting a positive policy toward world developments, he charged. He cited a need for greater cooperation among older and younger political groups in order that the wishes of both may be better served. It calls for "a nickels worth of diplomacy," Mr. Lackie said as he advocated that more young peo- Mr. Lackie declared that President Truman's "welfare state" is a "narcotic of security," and that it will result in the loss of the people's freedom. When the government "tries to do it all" it makes the people too dependent; it will destroy their incentive, he remarked. He attributed this negative stand to the tendency of the administration to listen to the ideas of Owen Lattimore and "fellow travelers." M. Lattimore is the government envoy charged by U.S. Senator Joseph McCarthy as being a top Communist svy. pr stools for once. We should select candidates who have a common appeal to the mass of voters, Mr. Lackie concluded. ple should run for office. Student Wins Election For City Council Lester Lew Henry, 3rd year law, was among those Republicans who swept the Lawrence election elections Tuesday. Henry received 300 votes more than the 69 votes cast for his Democratic opponent, John Taylor. Another University student was unsuccessful in his race for the council position from the 2nd ward, Thomas Alexander, 2nd year law, was defeated 513 votes to 187 by Richard Martin, Republican candidate. All six ward elections for city council members resulted in Republican victories. The city voted to adopt a city manager-compartment type of civic government. The proposal passed by a majority of 1,510 votes. Lawrence voters also approve the $75,000 bond issue necessary for the extension of 6th street from Massachusetts to New Hampshire streets. The issue passed by 2,659 to 1,488, according to reports from the city clerk's office. Clubs Will Meet Jointly At Union Members of the International and Square Dance clubs will meet jointly at 7:30 p.m. today in the Recreation room of the Union. The purpose of the meeting, said Nehemiah Kronenberg, Inter-national club president, is to better acquaint members with American social customs. "We've seen how the American people work and now we would like to get a better picture of them at play," Kronenberg said. In addition to receiving instructions in square dance, International club members will be appointed to entertain foreign officers stationed at Ft. Leavenworth, who will be guests of the club later this month. Journalism Instructor To Speak To Reserve Group "Electronic Computers: Digital and Analog" will be discussed by John Malone, instructor in journalism, before the 5006th research and development unit of the organized reserve corps at 7 p.m. today. He will speak in the Lawrence reserve armory at 609 Massachusetts street. Mr. Malone was an electronic computer specialist and teacher during World War II. The unit, consisting mainly of University faculty and graduate students, is commanded by Dr. George B. Smith, dean of the School of Education. Geologists To Meet In Chicago The annual K. U. geology alumni luncheon will be held on Wednesday, April 26 in the Stevens hotel in Chicago. All geology students are invited to attend. Reservation may be made with Dr. Cecil G. Lalicker, professor of geology, before Monday. April 10. LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices 12 East Eighth Deadline Moves Up On Senior Photos Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed . . 75c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed . . 79c CASH AND CARRY ONLY The Jayhawker office will accept senior pictures until Friday, it was announced today. This is an extension of the previous deadline which was April 1. A chamber music concert can be the most boring form of musical entertainment, but the Albenieri trio which played Tuesday night in Strong auditorium proved that it can also be one of the most exciting forms of expression when well done. REGULAR DINNERS Trio Displays Musical Skill The cost of $3 for the pictures covers the expense of photography, engraving, and printing. O'Bryon studio, 1024 Massachusetts street, is handling the photography. - Fried Chicken - Short Orders REGULAR PRICES - Steaks By DALE S. ROMIG - RAY'S CAFE - One reason for the success of the performance was that it appealed to those who aren't interested in the technicalities of the Bach sonatas so often performed, but who appreciate the fine melodic compositions of Brahms and Schubert. 709 Mass. The trio consisting of Erich Kahn, piano; Giorgio Ciompi, violin; and Benar Heifetz, cello; gave the audience a performance with flawless timing and of rare excellence. The program included the "Trio in E Flat Mayor" by Haydn, "Trio in C Major" by Brahms, and "Trio in E Flat Major" by Schubert. The program opened with Haydn's trio, written in three movements. The moderately fast beginning continued through the slower, carefully shaded second movement and ended with the third movement marked "Presto Assai." Open Sundays The second number was Brahm's trio. Melodic and powerful, with its theme recurring again and again in the different instruments, it gained momentum through four movements of almost faultless playing and ended with a merry finale. Schubert's trio finished the concert on a stately plane. The skillful blending of the piano, violin and cello brought out all the innuendos of melody, especially in the "Andante Con Moto." second movement. World News At Press Time Honolulu, T.H., April 5. (U.P.) Delegates to Hawaii's constitutional convention began writing the basic laws of a new state today to influence the U.S. congress to grant statehood to the islands. Hawaiians Plan State Laws In writing a constitution to be submitted to Congress, Hawaii is following a precedent set by 15 previous U.S. territories in obtaining statehood. Labor Party Majority Cut Gestapo Officer Sentenced London, April 5—(U.P.)-The Labor party's overall majority in the house of commons dwindled to two today. Laborite James Glanville was hospitalized with a skull fracture after falling from a street car. Cardinal May Be Dead German court. —A German court sentenced today the former Gestapo boss of Frankfurt to life imprisonment for murdering 55 persons. Henrich Babb, 41, also was found guilty by a jury on charges of attempted murder, mistreatment of Jewish prisoners, and illegal detention. Vatican City, April 5—(U.P.)-Vatican sources said today that they were unable to confirm or deny a rumor published in the United States that Joseph Cardinal Mindszenty of Hungary had died. AGAIN This Year! New Savings up to 25% for Kansas Drivers! State Farm Mutual slashes auto insurance costs! Call or come in now! M. R. Carlson 5 E. 9th Ph. 214 Licensed agent for State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company Reservations to all points,all lines. Downs Travel Service FLY HOME EASTER VACATION Ph. 3661 1015 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. for Smooth Sailing this Spring See us for reliable products at lowest cost. Complete Lubrication Dye's Standard Service 23rd and La. - Also Offering - - Tune Up Washing Minor Repair Work University Daily Kansan OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Thursday, April 6, 1950 ! STUDENT NEWSPAPER. Lawrence. Kansas Binaggio Murdered In Kansas City Kansas City, Mo., April 6—(U.P.)—Charles Binaggio, 43-year-old north end Democratic political boss who unseated the remnants of the old Pendergast machine in this city's river wards in a dramatic power bid four years ago, was shot to death early today in his clubrooms on Truman road. Killed with Binaggio was his right-hand man, Charles Gargotta, described recently by a special U.S. assistant attorney general as one of "the top mobsters in Kansas City." Binaggio was shot four times, as he sat shirt sleeved at his reception desk. Officers at first believed he was hit only once but examination at the morgue showed one shot hit him in the forehead, two in the temple at the left side and one in his neck. All four wounds were powder burned. Gargotta ran for the front door. The killer apparently raced after him and shot him down as he clawed at the door's venetian blinds. The wound in Gargotta's head also was powder burned. The Pendergast organization was knocked out of control at the city hall here in the cleanup election in 1940. The divided party has never been able to recoup that loss, although Binaggio two years ago named his followers to key offices in the county courthouse and appeared to be gaining strength until recently in his bid to take over full party control here. Police later issued a pickup order for a Council Bluffs, Iowa, gambler after a motorcar registered in his name was found outside the Democratic clubrooms where Binaggio and Gargotta were slain. The gambler was identified by police as Homer Cooper, widely known in Kansas City as a dice dealer. Police said Cooper was known to have been in Kansas City in recent weeks, but when they went to his reported residence, they were told: "He's not here. He's gone to the state line tavern." In Jefferson City, Mo. Gov. Forrest Smith ordered all state law enforcement agencies to enter the investigation of the slaying. "Gang killings must be stopped in Kansas City," Gov. Smith said. The governor wired L. V. Boardman, special agent in charge of the F.B.I. office in Kansas City, urging "your all out assistance in bringing about an early solution of the gangland murders in Kansas City." Atom Expert Talks Today Dr. Joseph W. Kennedy, co-discoverer of the fissionable element, plutonium, will give the eighth atomic energy lecture at 7:30 p.m. today in Strong auditorium. Dr. Kennedy will speak on "The Significance of Radio Isotopes in Chemistry." He is chairman of the department of chemistry at Washington university, St. Louis, Mo. He received the medal of merit for work on the Manhattan atomic energy project. 'Ya Wanna Buy A Bunny?' Dr. Kennedy's talk is sponsored by Sigma Xi, national honorary scientific society. The public is invited. Just the thing to keep you happy over Easter vacation. A California plastics company announces the invention of a Humpty-Dumpty talking toy, "designed to delight the children and baffle the Easter bunny." Engineered like a miniature "talking machine" this large egg-shaped device recites the full rhyme of "Humpty-Dumpty" twice at each playing. Which should quicken those long hours spent waiting for school to start again. Muchnic Gives Scholarship The Muchnic Foundation of Atchison has contributed $15,000 to the University of Kansas Endowment association for a scholarship in engineering, Chancellor Deane W. Malott, announced today. Income from the principal will provide scholarships for engineering students who plan to enter industry after graduation. Scholastic standing and the student's need will be considered in making awards with scholarship receiving first emphasis. William H. Muchnic, Chester L. Mize Jr., and Guy I. Bromley, Atchison, are trustees of the foundation. The Muchnic Foundation may be awarded for students during their junior or senior years and one individual may hold it twice. Acceptance of Muchenic scholarships will carry no obligation of repayment but the trustees expressed the hope that young men so helped will in turn help others when they are able to do so. Between $350 and $400 a year will be available for award. By terms of the gift, the chancellor will appoint the scholarship selection committee. Journalism Instructor To Study Case Method Charles G. Pearson, instructor in journalism, left today to spend a week at Harvard university, Cambridge, Mass., studying casebook preparation. he will collect case material next year for a book on reporting problems for use in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information. WEATHER KANSAS—Increasing cloudiness and warmer with strong southerly winds tonight and Friday; winds 35 m.p.h. and occasionally higher Friday. Low tonight middle 40's; high Friday 70-75 degrees. Six Trophies To Be Given For Best Floats Six bronze trophy cups will be awarded the winners of the third annual Kansas Relays parade to be held Saturday, April 22, Bill Easton, Kansas trackcoach and relays director, announced today. These trophies are now on display at the Balfour jewelry company, 411 West 14th street. All organized houses at the university are urged to enter a float in the parade and should have received instructions concerning the parade, Coach Easton said. If any organization has not received plans for the parade, please contact the student relays committee by calling K.U. 464, he added. Three prizes will be given in the women's division and three in the men's division. The first, second, and third prize trophies are 12, nine, and six inches tall and have been engraved with the following: K.U. Relays Parade, Silver Anniversary, and the prize winning position of first, second, or third. Balfour's display window shows the pictures of the 1949 winners in both the women's and men's division. The women's division winning floats were, Sigma Kappa, first; Chi Omega, second; and Alpha Omicron Pi, third. The men's winners were, Delta Tau Delta, first; Kappa Sigma, second; and Sigma Phi Epsilon, third. The parade will start at 10 a.m. and is expected to attract several thousand visitors with its floats. The raleys parade has taken the place of the homecoming parade the past two years and has acted as second annual homecoming for relays visitors. "This year's parade is expected to be the biggest and best ever held," Coach Easton said, "and we expect to use the silver anniversary theme to bring the greatest honor ever given the relays." Graduating architectural engineering students are being interviewed today by a K.U. graduate, Andrew Glaze, Glaze Construction company, St. Joseph, Mo. He is looking for June graduates for his firm. June Graduates Sought For Jobs Mr. Glaze received his bachelor of science in architectural engineering in 1937. 35 File Petitions For KU Election Names of 35 students filing for All Student Council positions and class offices were submitted to Wilma Shore, A.S.C. secretary, by the 6 p.m. Wednesday deadline. The names must be certified by the council's election committee. ASC To Hold Special Meeting The All Student Council will discuss nominating petitions for the spring elections at a special meeting at 7:15 p.m. today in 106 Strong hall. Wilma Shore, secretary of the organization, urges all members to attend. Physiologists To New Jersey Six members of the department of physiology will attend the annual meeting of the American Physiological society in Atlantic City, NJ. from Monday, April 15, through Friday. April 21. They are Dr. Kenneth E. Jochim and Dr. O. O. Stoland, professors of physiology; Dr. Parke H. Woodward, associate professor of physiology; Dr. G. N. Loofbourrow, assistant professor of physiology; Dr. Boyden L. Crouch and Richard P. White, instructors in physiology. Three papers will be presented by attending members. Dr.Jochim will present a paper on "Comparison of Pressure and Flow Pulses in the Unopened Carotid Artery of the Dog". Dr. Stoland will present "The Effect of a New Synthetic Drug on the Blood Supply of the Heart." Mr. White will present "Studies on Heparin Release in Anaphylactic Shock." The society meets each year as part of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, an organization composed of six national constituent groups. Dr. Jochim attended the first meeting of the circulation section of the society when it was organized in 1931. The circulation section is an organization composed of physiologists working on problems related to the heart and circulatory system. At the 1931 meeting of the section, membership was only 12. Now it is more than 200. Hampton Wins Oratorical Contest Craig Hampton, fine arts senior, urged the development of understanding your fellow man in an oration which won first place in the third annual Lorraine Buehler Oratorical contest held Wednesday night. Hampton's forceful talk, "Angels Can Do No More," depicted life as an unending drama with the populace as spectators, participants and authors of this drama. He advocated a fuller understanding of human beings when the understanding will contribute to the everyday needs of fellow men. Steve Mills, College junior, won second place with a speech entitled "Heads or Tails" Alan Kent Shearer, College junior, and Donald Dirks, College freshman, tied for third place. Shearer's oration was "Across the Rio Grande" and Dirk's was "My Uncle." As winner of the Lorraine Buehler C. J. BOLLINGTON contest, Hampton was awarded a complete set of the "Encyclopedia Americana" by E. C. Buehler, professor of speech. He will also take part in the Missouri Valley Forensic league tournament at the University of Wichita today through Saturday. Mills received a $30 cash award for second place. Shearer and Dirks received $10 apiece for third place. Judging the contests were F. J. Moreau, dean of the School of Law; F. M. Davis, professor of law; and Richard Schiefelbusch, professor of speech. Ernest Friesen, College senior and first place winner of the 1949 contest was chairman. Other participants in the contest were Thomas Oliver, education sophomore; Win Koerper, Thomas Payne, Orval Swander, and Beverly Stapaule, College sophomore; Edwin Glasscock, College senior; and William Van Almen. - The spring election will be held Wednesday, April 19. Melvin Clingan, Pachacamac-N.O. W., and Miss Shore, non-partisan, have filed for presidency of A.S.C. Pettitions for A.S.C. seats are divided into two classes - men and women. Miss Shore has turned the petitions over to Harold Edmondson, ejections committee chairman, for certification. Men who filed for council seats are as follows: District one—Warren Andreas, Dale Helmers, Dean Wells, and Joe Wimsett, Pachacamac-N.O.W. Walter Brown, non-partisan. District two—Bob Kleist, Damon Simpson, Sam Wilcoxen, and Bill J. Wilson, Pachacamat-N.O.W. District three—Jack Howard and Ralph McClung. Pachacamac-N.O. W. Roger L. Davis, non-partisan. District four—Tom Fritzlen, Pachacamac-N.O.W. Bob Bennett, nonpartisan. Dr. John Ise, professor of economics, will speak on "Problems of Investment" at a dinner meeting of the Kansas section of the American Society of Civil Engineers at 6:30 p.m. Friday, April 14. Women who filed for the seats 'are as follows: Names filed for class officers—all of them Pachacamac-N.O.W. candidates—are as follows: District three—Georgia Ginther and Barbara Hagan, Pachacamac-N.O.W. Maxine Holsinger, non-partisan. Senior class—John Amberg, president; Lorraine Ross, vice-president; Hal Edmondson, secretary; Betty Jo Bloomer, treasurer. Ise To Talk To Engineers District one—Pat Gardenhirefri Patricia Glover, and Marcia Horn, Pacachacam-N.O.W. Helen Maduros, non-partisan. The meeting will be held in the Kansas room of the Union. All engineering students and staff members are invited to attend. Dinner reservations may be made with Maxwell Ravdal, president of the University chapter of A.S.C.E., or Dwight Metzler, assistant professor of civil engineering, 2 Marvin hall. Tickets are $1.25 a person. Junior class—William Schaake, president; Emalene Gooch, vice-president; Vernon Sutton, secretary; Sammy Johnson, treasurer. Sophomore class—Karen Hall, president; Philip Heowen, vice-president; Marilyn Hanson, secretary; Billy Todd, treasurer. A. S.C.E. members from Topeka, Manhattan, Kansas City, Wichita, Salina, and other points over Kansas will attend the meeting. Those interested in attending only the speech at 7:30 p.m. will not need a ticket. George Lamb, national director of A.S.C.E., is expected to attend. Mr. Lamb is a graduate of the University in civil engineering. Youth Week Observed Eight University students are participating in a youth week at St. Luke's Methodist church this week. They are Louis Welton, College senior; Eugene Combs, engineering senior; Margie Harrison, and Richard McClain, College juniors; Claude Ellison, College sophomore; Curtis Herron, Belva Elrod, and Jannith Lewis, College freshmen. Miss Lewis is program chairman. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1950 Official Bulletin April 6, 1950 Parking regulations for the Jayhawk drive remain in effect during spring vacation. Restrictions in zones lifted noon Saturday, April 8 to 8 a.m. Monday, April 17. Cheerleaders Training School, 5 p.m. Wednesday, April 19, east side Robinson gym. Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship, 7:30 to 8:30 tonight, 131 Strong hall. All invited. L. V.C.F. Missionary meeting, noon Friday, Damforth chapel. Der Deutsche Verein versammelt sich Donnerstag um 5:00, 402 Fraser. Alle, die such für deutsche Kultur interessieren, sind freundlich einreden. Joint YM.-Y.WC..A. Worship service, 4 to 3. 10 p.m. today, Danforth chapel. All invited. A. W.S. senate, 5 p.m. today, Delta Delta Delta house. All old and new senate members attend. W.I.A.W.S. convention report. Mathematics club, 4 p.m. today 203强 hall, Calvin Foreman "Combinatorial Topology." All invited; refreshments. Law Wines, 8 tonight, Law lounge Election: white elephant sale. Delta Sigma Pi professional function 7:30 tonight, 200 Strong hall. Fhi Chi Theta, 7:30 tonight, East room, Union Installation of officers Mortar Board, 8:30 tonight, 220 Strong had. Chemistry club, 4 p.m. today, 305 Bailey Chemical laboratories: Dr Miller. "The Industrial Chemist What is He?" All invited; refreshments. KUTTA, 7.15 tonight, Recreation room. Union. Beginners' clinic. 6:30 p.m. Round-robin for first six players after meeting. Special All Student Council meeting, 7:15 tonight, 106 Strong hall Important that all members attend. Three From Faculty To Attend Meeting Three members of the University faculty will speak at the second annual Kansas Conference on Family Life, Tuesday, April 11 and Wednesday, April 12. in Toopeka. The three are Dr. Carroll D. Clark, chairman of the department of sociology; Dr. Edward H. H. Hashinger, clinical professor of medicine at the University medical center in Kansas City, Kan., and Mrs. Luella M. Foster, instructor in child development. Dr. Robert G. Foster, former professor of sociology, is chairman of the conference. Dr. Foster is now a member of the Menninger foundation in Topeka. Dr. Clark will preside at the luncheon meeting on Tuesday, April 11, and Dr. Hashinger will speak on "The Aging Processes" Tuesday morning. Mrs. Foster will speak at a discussion session on "Stresses in families with Pre-School children." City Manager Plan Discussed At Forum Sixty-six persons attended the city manager forum sponsored by the K.U. Young Democrats club April 1. Professor Ethan Allen, chairman of the political science department, spoke for the city manager form of administration, and Clarence Strunk, chief of the local central labor union, spoke against the change. Bulletins Go To Public Relations Announcements to be placed in the Official bulletin should be taken to the University public relations office, 222 A Strong hall, and not to the University Daily Kansan. Deadline for items to be printed is 9:30 a. m. the day of publication. All must be taken to the public relations office. No telephone calls will be accepted. Announcements must pertain to organizations recognized by the University. Maundy Thursday Service In Chapel The Maudy Thursday Easter service sponsored jointly by the Y.M.-C.A. and Y.W.C.A. will be held at 4 p.m. today in Danforth chapel. There will be organ music, scripture reading, and silent prayer in preparation for Good Friday and Easter Sunday. Student leaders are Marilyn Ross, College freshman, and Wayne Neal, College sophomore. Pianists, Vocalist Cellist In Recital Five students in the School of Fine Arts will present the following program at 3 p.m. today in Strong auditorium: "Aria" (Purcell and "Village Song" (Popper), by Carl Bilger, cellist; "Nocturne in D Flat" (Chopin) and "Alleluia in Form of Toccata" (Talma), by Lois Bradfield, pianist. "At the Cry of the First Bird" (Guion) and a Welsh folk song, "David of White Rock," by Althea Owen, contralto; "Prelude," "Valse Triste," and "Chanson" (Cliera) and "Jamaican Rumba" (Benjamin), all piano duets by Marilyn Barr and Carolee Eberhart. E. R. Elbel Elected Officer In Meeting Edwin R. Elbel, professor of physical education, was elected secretary-treasurer of the Central District Association for Health and Physical education at its closing meeting April 1. In addition to teaching, Professor Elbel has been directing the veterans service at K.U. since the war. His previous positions with the 10-state association have included chairmanship of the research section. Henry Shenk and Reginald Strait, both associate professors of physical education also attended the meeting. Post Charter Is Approved Notice has been received by the University post of the Society of American Military Engineers that its charter has been approved by the national organization and will be formally presented later in April. The notice was made public at a regular meeting of the post Wednesday. It is planned by the University post that Brig. Gen. S.D. Sturgis, Jr., division engineer of the southwestern division of the corps of engineers, will make the formal presentation of the charter at a dinner meeting to be held late in April. The date will be announced later. The post discussed plans for completion of the society sponsored display at the Engineering Exposition on April 21, through Sunday, April 23. Chancellor To K.C. For Budget Meeting Chancellor Deane W. Malott is meeting with the budget committee of the University today in Kansas City, Kan. The committee went to Kansas City to discuss next year's budget for the School of Medicine with Franklin Murphy, dean of the Medical center, and other officials at the University of Kansas Medical center. They will return to the University late today. Postmen are limited by law to 50 pounds of mail per trip. University Daily Kansan Mail subscription: $2 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence pay $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and holidays. Accepted for examination periods Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. DE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH Buddy GALLAGHER MOTORS Ph. 1000 632-34 Mass. St. GREAT SERVICE FINE CARS SQUARE DEAL MODEL WANTED for Community* Silverplate Advertisements Apply Today Enter your picture in this unusual search by Jon Whitcomb and Community for fresh, new talent! Free trip to New York! $100 a day model fees! $100 extra for incidental expenses! Your own pretty face may be one of the four that Jon Whitcomb and his jury pick for big color page advertisements to appear in important magazines! Your own favorite picture, an entry blank and our signature are all you need to take part in this nationwide search for unprofessional, undiscovered talent. We'll be looking for you! - TRADE MARK OF ONEIDA LTD. Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER 809 Mass. Ph.911 Easter Values At Your A & P Super Market All White - Country Fresh Eggs . . . . . . . . Doz. 31c A & P 2 No. 2 cans Apple Sauce ___ 29c Sultana No. 2 can Pineapple ___ 29c Ann Page pt. Salad Dressing 25c Ann Page pt. Mayonnaise ___ 29c A & P 2 No. $2\frac{1}{2}$ cans Peaches ___ 45c Ann Page 1 lb. jar Peach Preserves 23c Budlong pt. Sweet Pickles ___ 39c Qt. Dill Pickles ___ 19c STRAWBERRIES ...pt. 29c NEW POTATOES ... 5 lbs. 29c ASPARAGUS ... 1 lb. 29c A & P Super Market Give Your White Elephants 'Green Backs' With KANSAN Classifieds. BE STYLE SURE A man in a double-breasted suit with a fedora and tie. THERE'S "STYLE RIGHTNESS" IN THE BROAD SHOULDERS . . HIP TRIMMING TAPER . . IN THE GREATER EXPRESSION OF THE GREAT DRAPE. IN BOTH SINGLE AND DOUBLE-BREASTED MODELS. FROM 4500 FLANNELS - GABS - SHARKSKINS Ober's THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE University Daily Kansan Presents— People Are Her Interest Business Is Her Major "Business school isn't a snap, especially when you're the only girl in the class, but it does afford a liberal education." That's the optimistic attitude Mary Hercules, 22-year-old business senior from Carbondale, takes toward her predicament of being one of the few women in the predominantly male School of Business. Miss Mary Hercules S. W. , "Here's" mother wanted her to major in English, but a "snap" course to fill out her program turned out to be accounting and made her decide on business as a career. Herc's immediate ambition, almost too immediate, she laughed, is to be a personnel manager. "I've always been interested in people and I've wanted to do something in the field of human relations," she explained. "Management is finally learning that workers aren't machines. So, a brand new field is opening up for us." Although she will be graduated in June, Here doesn't know where she will start work. She would like a job in City, Mo., Oklahoma or New Mexico. "When I'm graduated" she said with a sparkle in her eyes. "I'm going to do everything I've missed out on in college." Perhaps this would include these secret desires to visit Hawaii and to live in a penthouse, who knows? Dreams aren't her only accomplishments, however. An honor student, Herc has held a Miller hall residence scholarship since her freshman year. Short, blonde Here has found herself in many other campus positions during her stay at the University. Since she was a cheerleader in high school, she has been interested in Jay Jane and is now secretary of that organization. She belongs to Phi Chi Theta, business women's professional sorority, the Business School association, and the senior announcements committee. Since her first year at Miller, she has been a member of the hall's social committee. Collecting postcard-size reproductions of great works of art is her "time-consuming" hobby, and she now has three scrapbooks filled with them. She said once she began collecting dolls from foreign countries, but that hobby "went the way of all good hobbies." Although Herc hasn't any plans for marriage yet, she thanks K.U. for contributing to preparing her for a housewife's career. She learned how to cook by planning and preparing food at Miller. "I came equipped with a cook book and a strong stomach," she confided. Then, as an afterthough, she added, "I hope the other girls did, too!" Socially Speaking Sally Cross was recently elected president of Monchonsia hall. Other new officers are Marian Mussatto, vice-president; Arlene Ulrich, secretary; Shirley Lyon, treasurer. Monchonsig Elects Cross Marsec Ball, social chairman; Charlene List, scholarship chairman; Barbara Mangus, activities chairman; Patsy Gay, Intramural chairman; manJ Fink, song leader; Zella Nightengale, freshman counsel; Clara Karl, social secretary, and Donna White, fire captain. Tri Delt Informal Party Delta Delta Delta sorority gave an informal party April 1 at Lakeview schoolhouse. Guests were Wallace Buck, Bill Root, Gaines Hill. Ralph Lamb, George Lewey, Dick Wintermote, Marvin Wilhite, Bill Todd, Bob Rosenfeld, Hank Knudsen, Dean M. Jonson, Sam Clemons, Bill Black, Dick Sims, Ed Todd. Gene Dagel, Wallace Rouse, Jim Roberts, Gene Hall, John Wellington, Archie Unruh, Reed Bailey, Richard Penfold, Phil Basson, David Thurston, Ben Kamprath, Charles Keilhack, Charles Dougherty, Bill Salome, Jim Owens. SMART ... and easy going White buckskin for that style-wise appearance ... thick rubber soles for easier going ... plus the advantage of all Bates Originals — invisible extra width across the ball of the foot. Try them on for looks and comfort. "SHIPPER-FREE WHERE YOUR FOOT BENDS" $10.50 2013 "SLIPPER-FREE WHERE YOUR FOOT BENDS" $10.50 Leon's Shoe Store 815 Mass. 815 Mass. BATES Originals Wolf-McClure W PICTURED are Miss Mary Ann Wolf and Dr. R. W. McClure, Whose engagement was recently announced, Miss Wolf is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ferris T. Wolf of Lawrence and Dr. McClure's parents are Mr. and Mrs. R. W. McClure, also of Lawrence. Miss Wolf is a College sophomore and a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority, Dr. McClure, a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, is serving on the staff of University Health service. Jack Stonestreet, Bob Frecoto, Alvin Havery, Ray Sauder, Ernest Friesen, Jack Kennedy, Bill Roy, Don Patton, Leonard Vaughn, Karl Estes, Paul Alyward, Richard Childs, and Charles Childers. Chaperones were Mrs. Dean S. Nite, Mrs. Thomas A. Clark, Mrs. H. J. Overholser, and Mrs. Charles Wentworth. Alpha Chi Installs Six Founders To Be Guests At Dinner-Dance Alpha Chi Omega sorority announces the installation Monday of the following officers: Dolores Brown, president; Mary Helen Keller, vice-president; Jean Trantum, corresponding secretary; Barbara O'Neal, recording secretary; Sharon Oakes, treasurer. Jane Dunmire, scholarship chairman; Jane Stanley, social chairman; Nancy Dennen, Lyre editor and publicity chairman; Patsy Landis, intramurals chairman. Beverly Rhodes, warden; Mary Marr Evert, house manager; Georgia Ginther, song leader; Judy Buckley, scrap book chairman; Donnis Stiles, historian; Shirley Rosenau, chaplain; Carolyn Lientz, assistant social chairman. Six founders of Mu chapter of Kappa Alpha Pi fraternity will attend the 30th anniversary celebration of the founding of the chapter Friday. The fraternity will entertain with a formal dinner at 6:30 p.m. in the English room of the Union, and a formal dance at 9 p.m. in the Ballroom. The founders who plan to attend are H. N. Stone and M. O. Black, Lawrence; O. B. White and Brown, Brown, Little Rock, Ark; B. J. Moore, Kansas City, Mo., and Bernard Watson, Kansas City, Kan. Mrs. Lethna Hughes, Mrs. H. N. Stone, and Mrs. Carl White will chaperone. Baptist Sorority Officers Mildred Simpson was elected president of Theta Epsilon, Baptist sorority, Tuesday. Other new officers are Arlene Ulrich, vice-president; Virginia Johnson, secretary-treasurer; Betty Slangle, social chairman; Annetta Smith, chaplain; Dorothy Wetson, contact chairman; Mary Lee Haury, guard; and Veda Russell, historian. LINDLEY'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 "Designed for Dancing" Album by 15 Great Bands Beneke, Dorsey, Flanagan, etc. On RCA Victor 45 R.P.M. Records BELL'S Weavers 901 Mass. Fashion Find BEAUTIFUL MILAN PICTURE HATS TRENCHED HAT 7 $ ^{95} $ and $ 10^{95} $ Here is the wonderful, wide-brimmed Milan you've always wanted—at a really rock-bottom price. Some trimmed, some tailored Wheat, yellow, kelly, coffee, navy, black, white Weaver's Millinery - Second Floor @ PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1950 Medieval Students Celebrated Easter With Egg Rolling, Shoe Buckle Stealing By LEW SCIORTINO A few more class periods from now, Easter will be here. And with it will come vacation. Students will travel home to celebrate Easter by eating good food, coloring eggs, and attending parties and family gatherings. Going home for the Easter holiday is a tradition students have cherished since medieval times, and only the ways of celebrating it have changed. Medieval students in England took their Easter celebration in earnest. They started the celebration a week before the actual holiday and closed it a week later. Easter feasting was done on a grand scale with all the trimmings of a Mardi Gras. Monday to Thursday before Easter were days of hubbub activity. Eggs were roasted, pastries were made, and the traditional hot cross buns were baked. Then came Thursday and with it the customary drinking bout. Often these beuts ended in brails over who could drink the most wine. However, by the next day, all was forgotten and friendships were restored. On Friday, the buns were passed out among the students. They were hard but the sugared cross on top was a delicacy after 40 days of rigid fasting. Saturday was quiet. Usually it was spent preparing for the next day. Clothes were put in order. Last minute items were purchased. Friends and relations were met at the crossroads. On Easter Eve everyone marched down the streets in a colorful pageant carrying candles, banners, and early spring flowers. Students sporting their best clothes held hands with their girls and danced in the streets. Wine flowed freely and the spirit of carnival was everywhere. Easter day started early at Eton. It was the custom for students to arise before daybreak and go out in the country to see the "sun dance" which ancient superstition said always occurred that day. Those who doubted that the sun did dance were taken to a creek or a pond. Then the water was stirred and the doubting one told to watch the rays of the sun play on the trembling water. If the doubting one still persisted that the sun didn't dance, he was shoved into the water for deeper study. Maduros Installed As YW President Helen Maduros, College sophomore, was installed as president of the Y.W.C.A. in ceremonies Tuesday in Danforth chapel. Seven other officers began their one-year terms at that time. They are Diana Sherwood, College junior, vice president; Susan Manoville, College sophomore, secretary; Helene Steinbuchel, College sophomore, treasurer; Jane Baker, College sophomore, district representative; Natalie Logan, education junior; All Student council representative; Patsy Cameron, College junior, and Sue Ihinger, College sophomore, delegates to the Student Religious council. Students at Oxford took their Easter morning a little more strenuous than their Eton brothers. Locking their hands behind their heads and doubling up into a ball, they would roll down a hill. However, as time went on and bruises got worse, one bright Oxford student thought of rolling eggs down the hill instead. The idea was that everyone line up and roll an egg down. At a signal, all would scramble down the hill and hunt for the eggs. The one who gathered the most won a prize. At Cambridge, the egg was put to another use. There the roasted eggs were clashed together in football fashion. The egg which did not break in the competition was the champion egg and its owner was duly honored. Following the egg-football game, the Cambridge swains would go to the town and permit their ladies to throw eggs at them. The lucky one who received a black eye was convinced that he was greatly honored by his sweetheart. The bigger the shiner, the deeper the love. On the Monday after Easter, the young men went about the town preceded by a fiddle player to take off the young girls' shoe buckles. On Tuesday, the young men's buckles were taken off by the young women. All travelers who passed were also relieved of their shoe ornaments. In order to redeem the buckles, a small Gilbert W. Fuller, engineering senior, will present "A.C. Network Analyzers" at the student paper competition to be held at the American Institute of Electrical Engineers' convention, at Norman, Okla. The architectural staff and 15 graduating architectural students will be the guests of the Kansas City, Mo., chapter of the American Institute of Architects at a dinner meeting Tuesday, April 11. Fuller's paper was one of the winning papers of the student competition recently held at the University. Architecture Staff, 15 Students To KC Eight students and three staff members of the electrical engineering department plan to attend the convention. ___ Alfred Roth, visiting professor from Zurich University, Switzerland, will deliver a speech on "Basic Theory of Art and Composition." A tour of the institute will be made by the K.U. group following the meeting. For Complete Satisfaction Don't take chances on being half satisfied with your spring reupholstering— Easter Bunny Breaks Date meeting Tuesday. The meeting will be held at the Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Mo. Senior Will Give Paper At Norman AIEE Meeting Los Angeles, —(U.P.)—Amusement park operator Mike Collins went "rabbit" hunting Wednesday. He told police a woman in a red dress, accompanied by a girl in a rabbit costume, recently offered to impersonate a pair of rabbits in front of his park during Easter week. He thought it was a good idea and gave the two a $10 advance. Mr. Collins is still waiting for his rabbits to appear. fine had to be paid. Near the end of the week when all of the buckles were returned, a great street dance was held and with it the Easter season was brought to a close. Dingman Furniture 1803 Mass. Attention: - Organized Houses - Social, Frat. & Sorority Houses See IT'S NO MIRACLE - JUST GOOD COOKIN' "Maw and Paw are glad to see you anytime." Cube Steaks 70c Pork Chops 75c CLOSED [Illustration of a modern living room with three couches, two armchairs, and a flat-screen TV. The walls are decorated with framed artwork depicting abstract human figures.] and 2----4:30 Sunday Pork Tenderloin ___75c Hamburger Steak ___65c FRIDAY SHAVER'S 1 $ \frac{1}{2} $ miles south U.S. 59 Call 785-K-2 Spring OIL CHANGE Have You Had Your- Let Us Give Your Car a Complete Spring Check-up Youll find that this is just one of our friendly services to protect and keep your car in "top notch" running order. CHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH 827 Vermont MOTOR IN Bridge Tourney Into Semi-Finals The elimination round for the Big Seven Bridge tournament will be held at 7 p.m. today in the Union ballroom. Any undergraduate student may enter the contest. The two top ranking teams will represent the University at the Big Seven tournament at the University of Missouri, Columbia, Friday, April 21, and Saturday, April 22. and Saturday, April 14. Ada Watson, education sophomore is chairman of the local contest. Speak To Pharmacy Class Riley Burcham, vice president of the Lawrence National bank, will speak to students in the drugstore pharmacy class at 1 p.m. Friday on the financial aspects of the drug business. Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers AGAIN This Year! State Farm Mutual slashes auto insurance costs! New Savings up to 25% for Kansas Drivers! Call or come in now! M. R. Carlson 5 E. 9th Ph.214 Licensed agent for State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company Summer Courses University of Madrid Study and Travel A RARE opportunity to enjoy memorable experiences in learning and living! For students, teachers, others yet to discover fascinating, historical Sp a i n. Courses include Spanish language, art and culture. Interesting recreational program included. For details, write how to SPANISH STUDENT TOURS 500 Fifth Ave., New York 18, N.Y. Martin Rhythms In "Danceable 15" BARRY JOHNSON "FREDDY MARTIN (above) plays Jerome Kern". . Make Believe, Smoke Gives In Your Eyes, Who. 3 others in a brand-new album "DESIGNED FOR DANCING!" 15 such albums just released by RCA Victor. 15 big-name bands, 15 great composers! 90 great hits, with the solid danceable beat you've yearned for! Hear Martin's album and you'll want to roll back the rug and dance! Own all 15 albums! At L. LOKE SMITH 846 Mass. Call K.U. 251 With Your News A CARL'S STYLE FLASH Varity Town Clothes PACEMAKERS FOR SMART AMERICA Ravie Variety Town Clothes PALESMAKERS FOR SMART AMERICA are habituously silky and despite ... in. haw delicious flavors 905 Mass. St. $60 CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES TH Phone 905 THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS SPOTLIGHT on SPORTS Our readers might be interested in this letter we are putting in the mailbox today. It is self-explanatory. Mr. Stan Emerson, 121-123 West 8 Topeka Kansas un of h o o k o o k o p A o b o u t T i o o u w y i h t r Topeka Daily Capital, 121-123 West 8th Street Dear Mr. Emerson: Your apologies, please, Mr. Emerson. In "The Sporting Thing" of Tuesday, April 4, you indicated that you have little esteem for students in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information at the University of Kansas. you cite the following reason: that the University Daily Kansan said, "We understand that everyone at Manhattan and Kansas State are staunch supporters of Jack Gardner. In fact, even the pigs are rooting for him." You will remember your comment was, "The column…wonders how many K.U. English profs caught the error: it's everyone IS—bub. Such a simple grammatical mistake, tho, speaks well of K.U. journalism majors." Mr. Emerson, you have told your readers a lie. Please find enclosed an issue of the University Daily Kansan of Tuesday, March 28. On page 7 you will find the article to which you refer. It reads: "A faculty member informs us that the K-State students and the Manhattan people are all solidly behind Jack Gardner, the Wildcat coach. He adds that even the pigs' are rooting for him." Not quite the same thing, is it? You quoted the Kansan as saying, "...everyone...are staunch supporters..." We did say, "...K-State students and the Manhattan people are all solidly behind Jack Gardner..." There is nothing grammatically wrong with that. In our School of Journalism we are constantly drilled with one of the cardinal rules of news writing, Mr. Emerson. That rule is accuracy. Perhaps instead of making underhand remarks about us, you should be here studying with us. Sure, we can take a ribbong. However, we don't like people taking cracks at us when they base their cracks on lies. you owe it to students, graduates, and faculty of our School of Journalism to tell your readers that you told them a lie and that your sly remark was based on that lie. your apologies, please, Mr. Emerson. (signed) Sincerely, Richard Dilsaver, Sports Editor, University Daily Kansan Universi- P.S. be emotional redress, I would be willing—anytime, anywhere—to take a grammar exam- ination with you. Man Loses 'Lead Foot' Preston, Ga.—(U.P.)—Charlie Christian wasn't sorry he had to part with an old possession. A surgeon removed a bullet that had been in his foot for 49 years. 'Diz' No Longer Pitches, But He Hasn't Quit Talking By MILTON RICHMAN By MILTON RICHMAN United Press Sports Writer - United Press Spot New York, April — (U.P.)—Dizzy Dunn, a little more a heavier, and a lot more talkative, "snuck" quietly into town today and immediately proclaimed young Mickey McDermott as the fastest pitcher in baseball and "Good Ol' Diz" as the slickest slugger on the links. "This McDermott of the Red Sox is the fastest around," allowed the great Dean. "Course, he ain't faster than I was but he's the fastest there is now." Dean, here to sign a television commentator's contract with the Yankees, wanted to talk golf as much as baseball. "Ya know," he declared. "I've been shooting a lot of 70's and I even had a 69. Now don't go printin' that because the guys I play with will want me to spot 'em more strokes. "I won $11,000 in a golf match not so long ago. That was more than the Cardinals paid me in three seasons." "I won $1,500 in a gunman's so long ago. That was more than the Cardinals paid me in three seasons." Dizzy, who handles the king's English like a semi-pro, she has made no elaborate preparation for his new commentating job with the Yankees. "Ain't looked at a grammar book in years," he said, shrugging his shoulders. "You know how my education was. I went to the second grade and never finished the first too good. "Those Brooklyn fans don't worry me none. If they don't understand me too good we're even-stephen because I never understood them too good." Champs Galore At KU Relays Sixteen newly- crowned individual and relay champions from one of the top Texas Relays fields in history are expected here April 22 for the Silver Anniversary running of the Kansas Relays. Two co-champions, Virgil Sevens, Kansas State high jumper, and Oklahoma pole-vaulter Bill Carroll, will complete this roster, thus leaving only two co-winners and one victorious baton team, Loyola of Chicago, which bagged the college class sprint medley, scheduled to be missing from top-flight competitors who went to the post at Austin. Furthermore, no less than 35 second and third place winners in both the university and college classes at Austin are slated to move up to Lawrence en masse. Here they will run into some of the Big Ten's best, such as Wisconsin, Michigan and Minnesota, plus a full complement of Big Seven teams. Add to this that only one individual winner—Jack Todd of Colorado who won the javelin—from last year's carnival will be missing, and it points toward the best balanced field in the post-war running of the Mt. Oread Olympics. Off the basis of their performances With All-American Pat Bowers blazing 4:16 on the No. 3 leg, Kansas produced a sterling 17:20.9 in the four-mile relay, bettering the old Texas figure by almost 20 seconds and running almost 17 under the present Kansas record of 17:37.8 which Illinois notched here 19 years ago. in the 85-degree Texas weather, at least four relay quartets and one individual performer, Severns, will seriously imperil Kansas records. The Jayhawkers' performance in this race was only 4.8 seconds off the American intercollegiate record of 17:16.1 set by Indiana's great team of 1937 which included Tommy Deckard, present Drake track coach, and Don Lash. The Kansas Stater shared the Texas crown at 6 feet 8¼ inches with Jack Razzetto of San Diego State, a shade above the Kansas Relays standard of 6 feet 8 3-16 inches which Texas' Bobby Walters established here last year. Walters, Vern McGrew of Rice, and Jack Heintzman of Bradley, all expected to enter at Kansas, cleared 6 feet 6 inches behind Severns. With Missouri's Bob Gordon, Big Seven Indoor co-champion with Severns, joining the field, the Mt. Oread high jumps will assume an all-time sheen. With stiff competition assured from Texas A. and M, and possibly Wisconsin, who could present N.C. A.A. champion Don Gehrmann in the anchor mile if it elected to run that race, Kansas or its conqueror, probably will come even closer to the American mark here. B LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence Kansas. 80th Year. Modern-to-the-minute. Courses keyed to today's training needs. Secretarial Training Civil Service. Higher Accounting and Auditing. Write for catalog. Box 424, Lawrence Business College. 8 E. 8th Heine's Blend at The PIPE SHOP 727 Mass. S' Phone 498 ROGERS Fashion CLEANERS CAREFUL is the word, when cleaning your delicate evening gowns . . . you will be pleased with the care we give them. He made a big hit The first time he lit . . . HEINER'S WIND William Shakespeare Chronicle Books HEINE'S BLEND Tragrant PIPE TOBACCO AUTLIFF TOBACCO CO., 45 Fremont, S.F., Calif. The Hollywood Stars of the Pacific Coast league drew a barb from Diz because of their recent adoption of short pants. "Anything can happen out there," he said indifferently. "Besides, a lotta those guys look like bloomer girls anyway." Dean, who said he was 39 years old—"They had a war and they checked on me"-insisted he likes his baseball straight, free of short pants, hulking elephants, and gift refrigerators. Museum of Fine Arts YOUR EYES --- should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription Duplicated. Phone 425 1025 Mass. Lawrence Optical Co. University Radio at Bell Music Co. - Prompt and efficient radio service - All work guaranteed 90 days - Pickup and delivery service. - Sound and recording equipment TAILOR MADE CLOTHING at Hand Me Down Prices SUITS Tailored To Your Measure By SCOTCH TAILORS Inc. Special Limited SALE EXTRA TROUSERS Matching or Contrasting 1/2 PRICE First Door South of PATEE THEATRE Brown's TOGGERY 830 Mass. No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money. will you find THE WORLD'S MOST FAMOUS NAME IN JACKETS ONLY AT GIBBS WINDBREAKER ON LINK NOW IN What WINE ONE OF LINE OF NOW IN 995 to 1495 Whatever you do, you'll do in a WINNERKER . . . look better, too! For work play, night or day, it's desi- for long wear, easy action, appearance! The fabric is man Gabardine — showe. wind-proof, Rayon-lined. Tho- ors are sure to make a hit- cer's Pink, Gray, Sea Green, Maroon. One look will conv you it's a WINNERKER you! Why wait? Plan to to look today! $ 9^{9 5} $ to $ 1 4^{9 5} $ - look for the WINDBREAKER name! - insist on the WINDBREAKER label! - then you'll really have a WINDBREAKER! TRADE MARK WINDBREAKER RED D. S. PATOFF JOHN RISSMAN EGON Whatchness LABORDINE Sold Exclusively by Gibbs Clothing Company 811 Mass. Ph. 459 PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1950 TODAY'S MAIL Et Tu . . . Sir: In regards to Mr. North's editorial of April 3. Thank you Mr. North. Your daring expose is typical of most feeble attempts to rationalize the political situation here on the hill. We can now assume that the justification for Pachacamac and its policies is that it is the lesser of two evils. In other words, the only two opposing factions on the campus are both minorities and for this reason we should accept the one which is in power. Not so hot Mr. North, you'll have to try again. It is not accident that only a bare fourth of the student population is polled during election. You admit that there is a thing called dirty politics, Mr. North, but you don't clarify. Maybe you didn't know that there were only 3500 ballots printed last spring with which to record the entire actual student opinion. Maybe you thought it was accident when polls started running out of ballots at 10 a.m. Maybe you think it is funny to see polls located in out-of-the-way, easily congestible areas. Maybe you didn't wonder why no polls were set up at the Union building to give a large number of students a more convenient location in which to vote. Maybe you think that democracy can exist even if the polls do get blocked just when the largest number of students can be expected to vote. All is fair, eh Mr. North? Who can say that everything is fine when every election shows us that Pachacamac doesn't really want to register student opinion at all. Now who shall we call self-interested, Mr. North? Or maybe it would be too much like allowing themselves to be voted out of office if good student government were sponsored. Let us quit hiding the election behind the name of student democracy and recognize from the first that it is nothing more than just simple "Pach" procedure. Roger L. Davis Business senior Editor's Note: The editorial to which Mr. Davis refers was not an attempt to rationalize the political situation which is known throughout the campus. Rather, its purpose was to stimulate some activity on the part of the Independents so as to make the political situation more healthy. Nothing was mentioned about "dirty politics," except that the words were screamed by the Independents after each election. Mr. Davis' letter merely affirms this statement. It must be recognized that Pachacamac is a political machine. With little or no opposition, machine politics, whether here or in any city in the country, will become something less than spiritually uplifting. Pachacamac is not going to disorganize simply because a few students write that it is undemocratic. Could it possibly be that the majority of the students don't want their opinion registered? Buechel, Ratner Elected To Office In Collegiate YR William Buechel, College junior; and Cliff Ratner, College sophomore and law; were elected second vice-president and secretary of the state-wide Collegiate Young Republicans recently. Seventeen members of the K.U. Young Republicans club attended the meeting April 1, in Manhattan. OUR HARD-WORKING The Editors Report - University Players ye ED Once again, the University players have put on a play worth seeing. Once again, the players have spared no effort in making the production top-notch. They seem to be indefatigable persons, these thespians. Not only are they superb actors but they can turn you out an eighteenth century toy, draft you up a novel introduction for an ever-entertaining play. Versatile are they. And when the vacation is over and Oliver Goldsmith's "She Stoops To Conquer" has been put back on the shelf for another rest, we're willing to bet the University Players will be hard at work on another play. They call themselves players but they look like the hardest-working people we've come across in many a week. Perhaps indefatigable is too lukewarm a word to describe the energy of the University Playeys. After putting in a full week of shows, they plan to "go on the road" over Easter vacation. While the rest of us are at home catnapping and cracking hard-boiled eggs, they will be putting on shows in eleven towns in Kansas. K.U. Album SERVICE TO ALUMNI: ye ED Sometime this month—we don't know the exact day—the Alumni association will release the long-awaited K.U. album. The songs in the album represent the cream of traditional Hill songs. There has long been a need for an album such as the association is putting up for sale this month. After four years or more of hearing the songs of K.U., students know the songs by heart. But memory is a transient thing. As years pass, it plays tricks on you. As students become alumni, then turn into "old Alums," they forget the songs they sang in college. When they return for Homecoming, more often than not, they feel left out of things when they get into a crowd singing K.U. songs and can't remember a single word of the songs they knew by heart only "a few years ago." Now and nevermore, these "old Alums" need not feel out of things. The K.U. album will take care of that. With the album in his record library, the fuzziest-memoried Alum can refresh his memory of the songs he sang as a student on the Hill. Every now and again, when he's feeling nostalgic for the days of his youth, the "old Alum" can haul out the album and play the recordings. And if he should want to brag about his Alma Mater, the album will take over and do the job for him—if he should get stuck for something to brag about. The selections in the album are particularly good. The selections are the efforts of the University band, the Glee club, and A Cappella choir. We don't have space here to tell you about each of the songs. But you can take our word for it. We've heard all of them. They are all top-notch. University Daily Kansan News Room K.U.251 Adv. Room K.U.376 Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assn. National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service,420 Madison Ave., New York City. James Morris Editor-in-Chief Doris Greenbank James Shriver Managing Editor Business Mgr. Asst. Man. Editors Norma Hunsinger Kay O'Connor John Hill Ralph Homeway City Editor Edward Chapin Asst. City Editors Nelson Ober Marilyn Marks Elaine Elvig Steve Fergus Feature Editor Francis Kelley Photograph Editor Frankie Waltz. Sports Editor Richard Dlasaver Asst. Sports Editors Bob Leonard Hayley Arthur Mcntire Mona Milliken Society Editor Faye Wilkinson Asst. Society Editors Bilee Simmons Emily Stewart Telegraph Editor Robert Sigman William Graves Richard Tatum Lloyd Hobeke Editorial Assts. Pete North John Bannigan Keith Leslie Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner Cr. Mgr. Yvonpe Jossner Nat. Adv. Mgr. Forrest Bellus Classified Ad. Mgr. Lee Dyer Promotion Mgr. John Wiedeman Varsity is derived from the word university. Riverside, Ga.—(U.P.)—Fishing in the Chattahoochee River, B.E. Freeman hooked a floating box with 20 live chickens in it. Try This One In The Kaw NOW IS THE TIME! for - Ball Gloves - Ball Shoes - Softballs Masks Ball Bats TEAM MANAGERS! See us for special wholesale prices on all athletic goods. KIRKPATRICK'S Sport Shop 715 Mass. Phone 1018 Little Man On Campus by Bibler Man On Campus by Bibler "Your hair smells so lovely tonite, Flossy. I'll bet you just washed it, huh?" Watkins Hospital Open During Easter Vacation Watkins Memorial hospital will be open for admittance of cases from 10 a.m. to noon each day during the Easter vacation. Doctors will, however, be available for emergency cases at all times. Regular visiting hours from 7 a.m. to 8 a.m., and from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., will be observed. REGULAR PRICES REGULAR DINNERS - Fried Chicken - Steaks - RAY'S CAFE - or - Short Orders Open Sundays 709 Mass. "The best part of every date is dinner or a late snack at the Chateau." CHATEAU DRIVE-IN TASTY LUNCHES DELICIOUS DINNERS FOUNTAIN SPECIALS Open Daily 11 a.m. Curb Service after 4 p.m. Easter Center Design Varsity Velvet ICE CREAM At Your Dealer Lawrence Sanitary Ice Cream 202 W. 6th Phone 696 1950 THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Kansan Classified Advertising Phone K.U. 376 Classified Advertising Rates Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Journal, Journey 3, on Friday at 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. One day Three days Five days 25 words or less 35c 65c 90c Additional words 1c 2c 3c FOR SALE LATE model electric range, good condition, reasonable. 1006 W. 6th St. Pho ton CAMERAS: Argus 35mm, Kodak 620, 630, Kodak 100, 300 mm Gamax Del Robo, Php. 2102; CHEVROLET 1940; Tudor; good tires; heater, good upholstery; clean inside and out. See at Vern Schnider Motors 1010 Mass. Phone 424. 7 ARCHITECTS! We now have the Graphic Solarimeter. The quick way to determine the angle of sun rays in the Northern hemisphere. Only $3.00 at Student Resource Center. DBRESS UP your watch with a tinted glass of non-breakable crystal. Save here on repairs. Masond's Watch Shop; 12 E 9th Street. Phone 47. 18 Stirling BUTCH 1950; discount) 2 door, radio; radio; white sidewalls; new. Also others. See at Sy Barncord Motors 197 and Mass. 17 *SELECTED Letters of William Allen White.* edited by Walter Johnson; regularly $3.75—now on sale at 49c. Student Book. Book Store. 7 Union Book Store CHEVROLET 1936 Standard; good paint and tires; heavier; seat covers; over-all appearance good. See at Sy Barncord lbs., Mass. 7 MACHINE DITCHING. House foundations, water and sewer ditches. Ditches are 16 in. wide to 54 in. deep. Reason for use: To prevent leakage into John Tubber 18190 or Bob McKinney, 253J7. 1933 Chevrolet sedan, good tires, meancap good, sealed beam lights, heater reasonable. Ask for Paul Gibbs. 565 excellences. 6 PERFECT for Any Babe! We have cuddy bunnies and bouncy rubberized bunnies for Easter. Come in and pick one today! Cameron Show. 842 Mass. 712 BOOK-EASE, an unplastic book holder. Can be placed on a desk, in bed, anyw- where. Now only 88c at your Student Book, Store. 21 FORD 36. four door sedan. New up- perior. Glove compartment. excellent condition. Battery 714 Illinois, 7 charged. UNDERWOOD, Standard. No. 5 type- writer. Good condition; Bargain for foneone. See at University of Kansas Press 7 PICNIC TIME is portable time. For export repairs and batteries. For export parts. Four batteries. 14 East Full line of Everyday batteries. 6 THESES MATERIALS! All weights of thesis type typing paper, carbon paper, and typewriter rubbons. Student Uniforms M4 NOW IS THE TIME to place your order album of K.U. songs. Delivery by May 1. Only $4.90 at your Student Union Book Store. PONTIAC 1939. Fordor sedan; radio, heater; seatbelts. Mass. Phot. Vern Schneider Motors. Call 32458 for ice car hire 1948, 26 ft. M-4x4 trailer house with electric refrigerator and water heater, forced heating stove and butane cooker, 1316 Kentucky. 17 SIX FOOT Coolerator for sale. Like new and selling cheap. 75 pound ice capacity. FINEST TELEVISION -Best in sets and zerals at towers on lower floors and up. See the newest Emerson table model set at $199.50 Easy terms. Eowman Radio and Electronics. DODGE 1941; club coupe; radio; heater; Sawyer 1937; manual transmission; Sea Bacurin Motors 1918 and Mass. 7 1920. TRANSPORTATION RIDERS wanted: Leaving for Wichita every Friday 4 p.m. Returning Sunday evening. Please call between 7-9 Ph. 310-2651. JT DRIVING to viensity of Salina. Leaving Sunday, April 8. Will take 3 riders. Renting about Tuesday. Call Chuck Ph. 1062, 1155 Louisiana. 6 602. 1105 Kansas City to Lawrence WANTED: Ride, Kansas City to Lawrence Monday through Thursday. Will join car pool. Call J. Dewey; 3478W. JAYHAWKER Phone 10 for Sho Time TONIGHT —On Our Stage— ORVA DODSON presents "EASTER PARADE REVUE" —On Our Screen— "Blue Grass of Kentucky" WANTED: Ride to St. Louis Saturday morning April 8; Will share driving and expenses. Call 444; Wayne Helgesen; 1540 La. DRIVING Chicago over Easter Holiday, Riders wanted. Phone Bettle or George, 2645W after 6 p.m. 7 WANTED: Riders to Chicago. Leaving Washington. Sunday, April 14. R. L. K. Lite, 355 FIDE WANTED to St. Louis, Cape Glordeau, or southeast Missouri. Leave Friday afternoon or night. Call Stevens. 3336-W. 6 RIDE WANTED to New York and back bring vacation. Will share expenses and help drive. Phone Per Sjogren 3944- W or KU-409. 6 MARRIED Couple would like ride to western New York for spring vacation. H. Mattison, 1905 Mass. St., Phone 2925- 6 FLY AND TAKE advantage of reduced faves, dovetail connections, good accommodations. Call the Reservist at First Aid Clinic for assistance in book request and in formation. Telephone No. 30. GOING TO New York City Easter; round rider wanted. Call 25571. 6 LOST ONE brown herringbone tweed overcoat. Either 426 Lindley or Lindley Library. March 28th. Reward. Call Ted 1911 Room 730. 17 Beaver, 1611 b 65 c 193 CHAIN with 4 kernels and a silver plate with Kunze printed on it. Reward; if Kunze please call Penny at 2204 after 5 18 BLUE rimmed glasses in lizard zipper case between Fraser and 12th & Tenn. MAROON Parker 51, Silver Cap. a 8, amph. Fraser or Danforth. Rewait 6 2670-3. FOR RENT PM 1 baseball game near 13th Orem. $5 reward to finder. Call 3662R. 17 HEY MEN! Can you beat this? Nice private rooms on second floor, cooking facilities including dishes, etc. in hammam. All for $5.00 week each. 1408 Room 12B WALK a little farther and have a nice quiet room in which to study. Single room for man. No other roomers. 1240 R L Ph. 1350R. 6 WANTED ACCOUNTANT wanted by University of Kansas Press; half-time April 15 to June 1; Full-time thereafter. Applicant to take Civil Service exam when given; must be permanent. See Mr. Ryther, Journalism building. 25 VARSITY Phone 132 for Sho Time VARSITY Phone 132 for Shoite Ends Tonite "The Seventh Veil" FRIDAY - SATURDAY Whip Wilson "Fence Riders" —AND— MUTINY ON THE HIGH SEAS! 'Tyrant of the Sea' Ch. 3 "Bruce Gentry" BUSINESS SERVICE Continuous Shows. Open 12:45 Patee PHONE 321 Adm. 12c and 39c NOW SHOWING 2 Thundering Epics of Grit, Glory and War!! Patee PHONE 321 GUADALCANAI DIARY with LLOYD NOLAN PRESTON FOSTER Plus The PURPLE HEART Denicated to the Dauntless Courage of the American Soldier! Dana ANDREWS Richard PHILLIP Arley GRANGER Added COLOR CARTOON **TYPING:** Neat, accurate, rapid. Regular. Prompt service. Mrs. Schelar. Apl R-36. 1810 Lau. Phone 327. 548. Notes, etc. Prompt service. Papers. Reports, Notes, etc. Prompt service. Papers. Sheer, 1028 Vermont. Ph. 1168R. **TYPING:** Term papers, notebooks, lab work. Regular work. Regular time. Prompt attention. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601 THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. Complete overhaul, engine tune-up, body and fender repair, auto glass replacement, TAB 788 or 1821R tFAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our priority, wanting for fur, fun and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop 1218 Conn. St. Ph. 418 TYPING: Call Hazel Stanley, 2865M for prompt experienced service. 820% Matr TONITE AND FRIDAY IT'S ALL IN FUN . AND YOU'LL LAFF YOUR HEAD OFF! Laurel & Hardy IN "WAYOUT WEST" Ha Ramson, Woody Roberts ALSO - GIANT For Kids 6 to 60 CARTOON 5 Color CIRCUS Cartoons Featuring all your favorite cartoon characters in one giant fun fest on our giant screen! A swell Laff-Tonic for every member of the family! Feature at 8:05 — 9:58 OPEN NIGHTLY-6:30 p.m. Lawrence DRIVE-IN Theatre 1/2 Mile west on Hi-Way 59 PHONE 260 Read the Want Ads Daily. F. R. E. HELD OVER Ends Saturday The Biggest Western in 10 Years!! AMBUSH ROBERT TAYLOR JOHN HUDJAK ARLENE DAVLE Extra In the News BASKETBALL C.C.N.Y. vs. BRADLEY Title won the second time by C.C.N.Y. ALSO CARTOON STARTS SUNDAY Prevue Sat. 11:15 Clifton Jeanne WEBB CRAIN Myrna LOY "CHEAPER BY 11 Business Students To Honorary Group THE DOZEN" Eight seniors and three juniors were selected for membership in Beta Gamma Sigma, national honorary fraternity for business students, the University of Kansas chapter announced today. Granada PHONE 946 Seniors selected are: Mabel Conderman, Mrs. Jeanne A. Dodson, Thomas T. Hawkins, Keet O. Johnson, James L. Masterson, George A. Monson, Richard J. Reed, and Jack Ward Robison. Michigan Student Solves Job Problem With Sign Juniors selected are: J. Eugene Balloun, Lloyd Wayne Davis, and Loren E. White. East Lansing, Mich., —(U.P.)—Art Miller, Michigan State college engineering student, believes in advertising. The job-hunting senior, who will be graduated in June, erected a 14 by 7 foot sign, extolling his merits as a mechanical engineer. In huge red letters on a white background, Miller advised prospective employers he was an "industrial mechanical engineer trained in better methods." He also included his telephone number. "I had two phone calls four hours after I put up the sign," Miller said. "It looks like this advertising stunt may pay off." SMOKED HAM kroger WILSON'S CERTIFIED Full Shank Portion 45c lb. Tender Young Full 7 Rib Cut PORK LOIN ROAST ___lb. 37c Armour's White Label Sliced Bacon Ib 39c Tenderay RIB ROAST ...lb. 59c Full 7 Rib Cut CHEESE Windsor Club Spread 2 lb. box 65c LARD Armour's Star 6 Ibs. 69c Van Camp PORK & BEANS ...5 tall cans 49c Whole Grain OTOE HOMINY ...6 No. 2 cans 49c Otoe Brand TOMATO SOUP ...6 tall cans 49c Evaporated - Enriched KROGER MILK ...5 tall cans 49c Finest Pack SAUERKRAUT ...5 No. 2 cans 49c 15c Value KROGER SPINACH ...4 No. 2 cans 49c Blackberry, Pineapple & Cherry PRESERVES ...2 12 oz. jars 49c Choice of Flavors JELLO DESSERT ...7 pkgs. 49c TIDE or OXYDOL ...2 lg. pkgs. 49c CUT GREEN BEANS ...5 No. 2 cans 49c STRONGHEART ...6 tall cans 49c Fresh Fluffy 2pkgs. Marshmallows-15c CALAVOS each 15c Fresh Calif. ASPARAGUS Lge Bch 19c Fresh Tender HEAD LETTUCE lb 19c Large Crisp POTATOES 50 lb bag $1.19 Red PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1958 Yale Physicist Explains Laws Of The Universe Modern physics now describes things in terms other than those of position and time, Henry Margenau, professor of physics and philosophy of science at Yale university, said Wednesday afternoon. Professor Margenau discussed causality, a term meaning the relationship between cause and effect. He described Newtonian mechanics, and quantum mechanics. He explained why scientists maintain that the latter is in keeping with the causal laws. "Cause and effect govern the universe," he said. "One state of the universe invariably precedes another in time." "To develop a causal science, a scientist must develop his law and his definition of state simultaneously. Observations alone," the Yale professor said, "would not bring forth a law." He explained that in a universe of complete causality, if one can imagine an intelligence capable of seeing and analyzing the position and velocity of all the particles in the universe, this intelligence would be able to predict the future position and velocity of any particle in the universe. "We are not capable of doing this. However, we can see part of it at any particular instant. From these observations we determine the causal relations in a particular system in the physical world. "In order to have a causal system, we must have two things; a well defined state, and a law governing the state. Professor Margenau explained the attitude of the scientist toward the theories of LaPlace, on which the present causal philosophy of physics is based. "You have heard it said that physics is no longer causal, since Students Attend Leaders' Meeting Seventeen members of the K. U Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A. recently attended a three-day leadership training conference at Kansas State College, Manhattan. Claude "Bud" Moore, president of the K. U. Y.M.C.A., was elected to serve as co-chairman of the Kansas district for 1931. By virtue of his office he will also be a member of the district council. Donovan Hull College sophomore, was also selected as a member of the district council! Both Hull and Moore were chosen as members of the Rocky Mountain Regional council which includes seven states. As such they will aid in the administration of Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A. affairs. Denni Wade Photo To Be In Varsity The picture of Denni Diane Wade, College freshman, which appeared on the cover of the March issue of the Sour Owl will be printed in a future issue of Varsity magazine, editor Doug Jennings announced. "An exchange issue of the last Sour Owl was sent to Varsity by staff member Bob Sigman," Jennings said. "Varsity editor Jerry Tax wrote back and said in part, "We would like to include Dennis Wade in our gallery of beautiful coeds in a future issue." Miss Wade is majoring in languages, is a member of Alpha Delta Pl, and lives in Mission, Kansas. The photograph was taken by Bill Chapman, journalism senior. Alumnus To Hold Canyon Rim Service A graduate of the University School of Fine Arts will conduct the annual Easter sunrise services on the rim of the Grand Canyon. Eldon Ardrey, '28, director of the rusic department at Arizona State college, will continue the program he instituted 15 years ago. He will direct the "Shrine of the Ages" concert choir in a program which will be broadcast starting at 7 a.m. C.S.T. the conception of quantum mechanics, but this is not the case," he declared. Modern physics is capable of describing things not describable in terms of exact position and time. Instead of locating a particle of the universe by the classical method, scientists now use quantum mechanics, which are probability statements. "In other words, science uses a probably location to predict a future probable location in space and time." Professor Margenau's lecture was not one of the regularly scheduled humanities lectures, but was a special talk sponsored jointly by the humanities committee and the physics department. World News At Press Time Dulles Accepts Adviser Job New York, April 6—(U.P.)-John Foster Dulles accepted the post of foreign policy advisor to the secretary of state today with the statement that Soviet Russia has posed a threat to the United States "as grave as any we have ever faced in a shooting war." Mr. Dulles said he accepted after talks during the last 48 hours with President Truman and Secretary of State Dean Acheson. Calls McCarthy 'Tool' Washington, April 6- (U.P.)—Owen Lattimore swore firmly under oath that he is not and never has been a Russian spy or a Communist, and that Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy is a "willing tool" of a Chinese Nationalist "lobby." He called Senator McCarthy's charges "base and contemptible lies." Mr. Lattimore said he is thinking of bringing libel or slander action against the Wisconsin senator whose charges thus far have been made on the senate floor. Surgery Course To Begin In KC Twelve faculty members will participate in a two-day post-graduate course in orthopedic surgery at the University Medical center in Kansas City, Kan., Tuesday April 11, and Wednesday, April 12. Joseph Nickell, Topeka, chairman of the Kansas Workman's Compensation commission, will discuss compensation laws and procedures of the state. The program will combine fractures and industrial surgery, according to H. G. Ingham, director of the University Extension program in medicine. Guest faculty members will be Dr. A. E. Bence, Wesley hospital, Wichita; Dr. Michael L. Mason, Northwestern university; and Dr. Earl D. McBride, University of Oklahoma. University Women Postpone Meeting The meeting of the University Womens club, which was scheduled for today, has been postponed until Thursday, April 13, when a mourning brunch will be held at 10:30 a.m. in the English room of the Union. Mrs. George B. Smith, wife of the dean of the School of Education, is general chairman for the brunch. Four Students To Give Papers Four graduate students will present papers at the annual meeting of the Missouri Valley branch of the Society of American Bacteriologists at Lincoln, Neb., Friday and Saturday. Dr. Robert Guthrie, chairman of the bacteriology department, announced today. The graduate students and the topics of their papers follow; Earl M. Fowler, "Electron Microscopy Studies on the Genus Bartonella"; Eugene van der Smissen, "Studies on the Relative Incidence of Organisms in the Norman Human Tonsil and Nasopharyngeal Areas"; John L. Ott, "Blood Pressure Determination in Small Laboratory Animals and the Adaptation of the Hamilton Optical Manometer"; and Lyle V. Von Riesen, "Effects of Anionic Surface Active Agents Upon the Metabolism of Certain Bacteria." Nearly 16 University graduate students in bacteriology plan to attend the meeting. Bacteriology staff members who will attend are Dr Guthrie, Dr. Noble P. Sherwood, Dr. Corg M. Dong, and Dr. E L. Treece, professors, and Dr. Francis Jarvis assistant professor. Photo Fraternity To Have Contest The fifth annual International Collegiate Photography contest has been announced by Kappa Alpha Mu, honorary photo-journalism fraternity. Twenty prizes, including a two-year scholarship to the Fred Archer School of Photography, will be awarded the winners. Open to any student regularly enrolled in any accredited college or university is eligible. Each student photographer may submit as many as 10 prints. The classes are news, pictorial, feature, sports, and industrial. Prints must be 8x10 or larger and must be entered by Sunday, April 30. All entries should be sent to George K. Morgan, secretary. Kappa Alpha Mu, 12 Walter Williams hall, University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. George R. McNeish, engineering junior, was recently elected regent of Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity. Other engineers who will take office are Thomas E. Brune, senior, vice-regent; Keith C. Smith, junior, scribe; Marion W. Scholes, sophomore, treasurer; Ellis J. Allison, sophomore, assistant treasurer; Thomas W. Oliver, sophomore, corresponding secretary. Theta Tau Chooses McNeish As Regent We shall be open during 6 a.m.-10:30 p.m. Sun. Easter vacation Our Easter special: 6 a.m.-8 p.m. daily FRIED CHICKEN -- $.75 Try our fountain service, also. ALAMO CAFE 1109 Mass. 21 Compete To Be Relays Queen's Escorts Four male escorts for the 1950 K.U. Relays queen and her court will be selected tonight from among 21 candidates. Judging will begin in the Pinel room of the Union at 7:30 p.m. The following candidates have been entered by organized houses: Glenn Anschutz, Theta Tau; Robert Attenberry, Phi Kappa Sigma; Allen Dagel, Sigma Phi Epsilon; William Flynn, Phi Kappa; Thomas Foster, Oliver; C. W. Hanna, Sigma Nu; Thomas Hanna, Phi Delta Theta; Robert A. Hanson, Kappa Sigma; Charles Hawkinson, Triangle. Entertainment for the candidates will include songs by the Alpha Chi Omega trio, Joyce Friesen, Barbara Ackerman, and Donna Stiles. Solos will be sung by Martha Weed, education senior; Margaret Cowger, education junior; and Barbara Nesch, education sophomore. Charles Hoffhaus, Phi Gamma Delta; Jack Jevons, Sterling; Carroll Jones, Sigma Pi; Robert Kenney, Delta Upsilon; Neil Lilley, Tau Kappa Epsilon; Philip Owen, Lambda Chi Alpha; William Owens, sigma Chi; Lillard Parks, Alpha KappaLambda; Clay Roberts, Phil Kappa Psi; Richard Sime, Alpha Tau Omega; Paul Uhlg, Battenfeld; and Burley Vandergirl, Acacia. A melodrama will be presented by Judy Carothers, Ruth Dryden, Massagic Air Cushion ★ Yields with every step ★ Absorbs shocks, jars ★ Keeps you foot-tresh 13.00 WEYENBERG Massagic SHOES Massagic SHOES HAYNES & KEENE 819 Mass. Ph.524 Interest Shown In Salesmanship All professional people are becoming interested in salesmanship, Fred Sharpe. Extension division lecturer, told the Society for the Advancement of Management Tuesday. "The requisites of a salesman." Mr. Sharpe explained, "are to know your product, have a pleasant personality and patience, see the viewpoint of others, be able to withstand rebuffs and criticisms, and know how to criticize." Ruth Sharp, and Shirley Strain. are College freshmen. Betty Catell, College senior, and Patricia A. Young. College junior, will give a song a dance routine. Read the Want Ads Daily. AUTO PARTS and ACCESSORIES --- We Buy Old and Wrecked Cars - Auto Glass • Mirrors • Glass Table Tops AUTO WRECKING AND JUNK CO. New & Used Parts for All Cars Reservations to all points, all lines. Phone 954 712 E. 9th Downs Travel Service Ph.3661 FLY HOME EASTER VACATION 1015 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. MILLER'S MENU ½ fried chicken $1.25 Large cube steak .85 Makes Your Mouth Water . . . 12 oz. T-bone steak $1.25 Pork chops .75 6 Hamburger steak .60 Home made pie Barbecue beef and pork sandwiches .25 4 miles northeast U.S. 40 and 24 Closed on Sunday X University Daily Kansan Friday, April 7, 1950 STUDENT NEWSAPER Lawrence, Kansas Speech Festival Begins Today For 300 Students Three hundred students from approximately 75 Kansas high schools are expected to participate in the state Speech and Drama Festival at the University today and Saturday. The students won the right to participate in the festival by place in division contests held throughout the state recently. At K.U. no awards will be made, but students will be given speaker ratings. One-act plays will be presented by 120 high schools in Fraser theater and Liberty Memorial High school. The festival will open with a general assembly in Fraser theater at 1 p.m. today. Dramatic readings will be presented by 20 students Friday and by 17 students Saturday in the Pine room of the Union and at University High school. Thirty participants will give humorous readings today and Saturday in the Kansas room of the Union and at University High school. Eleven students will give extemporaneous speeches Saturday in Lindley auditorium. Subjects from "The Constitution" to "Euthanasia Is Murder" will be discussed by 17 students in the original oration division in Strong auditorium Saturday morning. Sixteen standard orations will be given in Green theater and 15 informative speeches in the English room of the Union on Saturday. Judges at the festival will be: ex-emporaneous speeches — Richard Christfelbusch, assistant professor of speech; original orations — William Conboy, instructor in speech; standard orations—Don Jalmquist, instructor in speech; informative speeches—Don Dixon, assistant professor of speech; dramatic readings—Miss Margaret Anderson, associate professor of speech and Mrs. Leola Horowitz, instructor in speech; humorous readings—Tom Rea, instructor in speech; and Mrs. Frances Feist, instructor in speech; one-act plays—Thomas Trenkle, professor of speech at Kansas State college, and Mrs. Thomas Trenkle. The speech and drama festival is being co-sponsored by the Kansas State High School Activities association and the University Extension. El Ateneo Election To Be Held Soon Election of officers of the El Ateneo club will be held Thursday, April 20, at 4:30 p.m. in 113 Strong hall. Rita Swearingen, College junior for the candidate for the presidency Other nominations include Bautista Murillo, business junior, for executive assistant; Verna Edwards, and James Benefiel, College juniors, for secretary; James Irby, College sophomore, and William Patterson, College freshman for treasurer; Veda Russell, and Dorothy Pearson, College sophomores, and Carl Tongier, College junior, for the refreshments committee. Additional nominations will be accepted from the floor at the time of the election. Student Religious Council Elects Bradshow President The newly-elected Student Religious council officers will take up their duties at the next regular meeting. Thursday, April 20. They are Henry H. Bradshaw, president; Walter J. Brown, vice-president; Kathryn Conrad, secretary; and Andrew Berry, treasurer. Mary Louise Fischer, education junior, was chosen chairman of Religious Emphasis week activities for incoming year. Spring Jayhawker Issued Today The 1950 spring issue of the Jayhawker magazine is now available at the student union book store. Featured in this issue is an unusual sketch written by John E. Hankins, professor of English and noted author on Chaucer. Satirizing the administration by using characters from the Canterbury Tales, the sketch pokes polite fun at such personalities as Chancellor Malott, John Ise, Raymond Nichols, Miss Veta Lear, Dean E. B. Stouffer, Dean Paul B. Lawson, and Dr. Herbert Hungerford. Claim 246 Lives Easter Mishaps At least 246 persons were counted dead or missing today in Holy week train, ferryboot, bus, and flood disasters in Europe and South America, the United Press reported today. The biggest disaster was in Brazil where a passenger train crowded with Easter holiday vacationers plunged from a broken bridge into the Indica river. Thirty-eight bodies were recovered and 70 more persons were feared dead. At least 60 persons were believed drowned in Portugal when a ferry-boat capsized. Another 50 persons were reported missing in Southern Ecuador. In Spain, 19 persons died when a train broke in two while rounding a curve and three cars plunged into a 20-foot gorge. The Brazilian wreck occurred yesterday when a 22-car train started to cross the rain-weakened bridge over the river 55 miles north of Rio de Janeiro. The train, carrying an estimated 200 sleeping passengers, plunged into the stream. Rescue workers recovered 38 bodies but it was feared the bodies of at least 70 more were trapped in the submerged cars or had washed downstream. Thirty-three other passengers were seriously injured. In Ecuador, the Tomebamba river spread death and destruction over a wide area, causing damage that was at more than two million dollars. Isotopes Enable Science To Tell Age Of Earth By DALE S. ROMIG Radio-isotopes have helped scientists to formulate a plausible theory establishing the approximate time of the origin of the earth. The theory was explained Thursday night by Dr. Joseph W. Kennedy, chairman of the department of chemistry at Washington university, St. Louis, Mo. This is the way Dr. Kennedy described it. Certain elements, such as uranium, will in time decay and change their chemical qualities. Uranium will change to lead. By determining how fast the element decays and then measuring the amount changed, the time that 'a specimen of the element has been in existence can be calculated. Elements from all over the earth and meteorites that have fallen on earth have been tested and found to be approximately the same age, Dr. Kennedy said. These results agree with a theory proposed earlier which was based on another method of investigation. Declining to comment on any political issues concerning atom control, and pointedly remarking that he had been instructed not to talk about the hydrogen bomb, the former chief or the chemistry and metallurgy division of the Los Alamos laboratory confined his talk to a purely scientific discourse. Dr. Kennedy also explained the use of radio-isotope tracers in other fields of analytical and theoretical chemistry, and gave a resume of the most recent developments in the synthesis of new elements. Alumnus To Direct Grand Canyon Choir An annual Easter Sunrise service at the Grand Canyon will be conducted by Eldon A. Ardrey, head of the department of music at Arizona State college at Flagstaff and graduate of the University School of Fine Arts. The program was instituted 15 years ago by Mr. Ardrey. He will direct the "Shrine of the Ages" concert choir in a program to be broadcast at 7 a.m. Drive With Care Malott Warns TO THE STUDENTS: Many hundreds of you will be on the highways during the next few hours returning to your homes for the Spring vacation. May I caution each one of you who has the responsibility for driving a car to exercise every care that protects your life, helps the lives of other students who may be with you; and of other travelers on the highways—in order that the holidays may not be marred by accidents. And as you go, we give you the best wishes of all of us on the campus for a pleasant break in the academic year. DEANE W. MALOTT Chancellor. Design Changed For Campanile A change in the design of the memorial campanile will make it possible for students to see the carillon in the tower and will improve the range of the bells. Original plans called for a cut stone mullion or bar on each side to extend from the base of the structure to the top of the campanile tower. It was decided, however, that this would cut down the effective range of the bells. Architects have devised new plans that cut the mullions off at the 92-foot level, leaving a 23-foot opening extending upward to the top of the carillon section of the structure. Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the alumni association, said. The present long vertical openings will be retained and there will be no change in the basic structure of the campanile. The change will allow spectators to see the carillon. Construction of the campanile has progressed rapidly since the ground breaking ceremony reached one-half of its ultimate 120-foot height. Progress has been reported on the casting of the 50-bell carillon. John Taylor and company, of Loughborough, England, informed the committee recently that 19 bells in the middle register have been cast. They expect to cast the rest within a year. ASC Accepts Two Late Petitions Bv JOHN CORPORON A compromise was reached at a special All Student Council meeting Thursday that resulted in two late nominating petitions being accepted by the elections committee of the A.S.C. The onlookers, out in greater The onlookers, out in greater numbers than Council members, contributed frequent outbursts of laughter and one enthusiastic round of clapping to the sometimes heated proceedings. Walter Brown, College junior, ended 40 minutes of sharp debate by asking the council if he could file a petition, even though late, in behalf of Edward Grandle, engineering sophomore, to run as a candidate for an A.S.C. post from district two. The Council accepted. The meeting was called by Ernest Friesen, Council president, for the Council to decide whether a petition for Thomas White, College senior, to run for an A.S.C. position from district three was valid. The chain of events started when the secretary of Pachacamac, Thomas Alexander, drew up a petition for White to be filled with Wilma Shore, A.S.C. secretary. Alexander believed that the petition was to be filled with Melvin Clingan, chairman of the elections committee. Friesen said he was bringing the issue before the Council to be considered on three points: (1) whether or not there was a violation of A.S.C. laws, (2) whether the petition was invalid; and (3) that a person is being deprived of a place on the ballot because of an individual's mistake. He placed the petition on Clingan's desk in the Sigma Nu fraternity house. Someone discovered it after 6 p.m., Wednesday the deadline set for the filing of petitions. It was called to Friesen's attention and he called Miss Shore at 11:30 p.m. asking if she would accept the petition. She refused, saying that she felt that she could not accept the responsibility of accepting it after 6 p.m. Council members quizzed Brown as to the legality of his petition. Upon completion of the questioning period the Council carried a motion that would allow the elections committee to accept both petitions. It carried by a 15 to 2 vote. Friesen said, "We took an unknown preoperative when we set the deadline at 6 p.m. when the constitution says that the petitions must be filed six days before the election; I would interpret that to mean that the deadline would be Wednesday midnight." Robert Bennett, first year law, said, "No doubt which ever side wins the issue tonight the other will take it to the student court." Brown said he had a petition which had been refused on the same grounds as the Pachacamac one. He explained, "Well, we heard the situation was coming up and knew about it fairly early so we went in and had up another petition. I presume all the proper things are here." Harold Edmondson, elections committee chairman, said, "I agree that ignorance of the law is no excuse. However, one of the signers on one of the petitions did not properly counterseign the petition. If we have to go by the constitution that petition is no good. I think, however, that it is an oversight and I don't think we should strive to keep to the letter of the law." Friesen asked, "Was it prepared before the deadline?" Brown replied, "Yes. Questions continued in an attempt to establish when Brown's petition was drawn up and why it had not been filed properly. Mabel Conderman, business senior, said, "Maybe he (Brown) laid it on his own desk." Bishop Werner Will Deliver Baccalaureate The escorts for the 1950 Relays queen and her court will be Allen Dagel and Paul Uhlig, College seniors; and Clay Roberts, Jr., and Joseph Wolfe. College freshmen. The evening services will be in Memorial stadium. Bishop Hazen G. Werner, resident bishop of the Ohio area of the Methodist church, will deliver the baccalaureate address to the graduating class Sunday June 4, Cabellor Dean W. Malott announced today. Bishop Werner was elected to his present position in 1948 after three years as a professor at Drew Theological seminary. Previously he served 11 years as pastor at the Grace Methodist church in Dayton, Ohio. After earning an A.B. degree at Albion college in 1920, Bishop Werner took graduate work at Columbia university and in 1923 received the bachelor of divinity degree from Drew university. The following year he was ordained and successively served churches in Detroit and Flint, Mich. While at a downtown church in Detroit he pioneered in developing a personal trouble clinic in collaboration with a psychiatrist and family visitor. The clinic had the close cooperation of the police, public health departments and other public agencies. He has written articles on family and personal problems, and three books, "The pastor and the Pre-Marriage Conference," "And We Are Whole Again," and "Real Living Takes Time." He has been awarded doctor of divinity degrees by Albion and Ohio Wesleyan universities. Last year he was awarded doctor of laws degrees by both Mount Union college and Ohio Northern university. The past summer Bishop Werner filled a preaching itinerary in England under the direction of the British Council of Churches. He was also a long time WWII organ, and has also made a long study trip through Europe. They were selected from 22 contestants by personal interviews before three judges Thursday. Marcia Horn, chairman of the contest, said they were chosen on "all the qualities that make a dateable male." Four To Escort Queen And Court He is a member of the Methodist board of education and the board of missions and church extension. He is on the commission on ministerial training of the Methodist church, and the commission on marriage and the home of the Federal Council of Churches. The queen's escort, who will be chosen from the four, will be announced Tuesday, April 18. Judges for the contest were: Mrs. Betty Broat, buyer for Weaver's; J. Getto, Lawrence civic leader; and Charles Radliffe, owner of Ober's. Inter-Varsity Fellowship Holds A 'Brain Buster' A "Brain Buster" question and answer program was conducted by the Inter-varsity Christian fellowship at its Thursday meeting. Previously submitted questions were answered by three members and panel discussion followed. Acting as "question answerers" were Beril Peterson, graduate student; Alice Kitchen, medicine freshman; and Stanley Davis, graduate student. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1950 PAGE TWO Navy Believes Coastal Subs Are Russians San Francisco. — (U.P.) High United States navy officers believe submarines reported sighted off the West coast belonged to Russia, but the fantastic possibility that they might be of Nazi origin also is being investigated. Rear Adm. Frederick J. Entwitste, deputy-commander of the western sea frontier, bolstered the reports of other officers by declaring the unidentified subs are "very probably" soviet vessels on "normal neapctetime operations." Intelligence officers, Entwisle said, are interested in the strange disappearance of Theodore Donay, convicted of helping the Nazis during the war. Donay, a 51-year-old Detroit importer, rented a motorboat and disappeared at sea near Catalina island at about the same time the coast guard sighted an unidentified submarine Sunday in southern California waters. At the same time, he said many intelligence officers were investigating the possibility that the reported undersiders craft are of German origin. This new possibility was described by Entwistle as "highly imaginative," although he said that it could be true. Authentities ordered a handwriting expert to determine if a suicide note found in Donay's hotel room actually was written by him. His brother, Felix Donay, in Detroit said Donay "wasn't the type to take his life." But he said it was "just plain silk" to connect his brother's disappearance with the sighting of the submarine. While civilian authorities searched for Donay's body, naval intelligence—investigated the possibility that the submarine could have landed someone on the mainland or picked up a person from the water. Entwistle pointed out that at the end of World War II there were numerous reports that high Nazis had fled Germany in submarines with plans to establish a secret base in some isolated part of the world. in some soiled part of the world. Allied intelligence checked these reports thoroughly and found some submarines loaded with equipment for an escape run to Japan. Several were sunk or captured, and at least one was bagged in Asiatic waters. Entwishe said. "We believe all were accounted for," the admiral said, "but there is always the possibility that one or more got away." Holiday Parking Rules To Stand Campus police will continue to enforce the 30-minute limit parking regulation on Jayhawk drive during the spring vacation, Donald K. Alderson, chairman of the parking committee, announced today. Restrictions on parking in the zones will be lifted, and students and faculty may park in any of them from noon April 8 to 8 a.m. April 17, he said. ISA Meeting Date Is Set The national Independent Studen Association convention will be held at Bloomington, Ind., from Thursday, April 20 to Sunday, April 23. Walter Brown College junior, announced at a meeting Wednesday. Those attending will leave in buses at 10:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 19. Anyone interested in attending should telephone Brown or Richard Krimpinger, president of I.S.A. The convention will consist of committee meetings, motion pictures, discussions, a general business meeting, and banquets. Alex Campbell, former attorney general of the United States will speak on "Which Way Democracy?" 19.1 L.S.A. Pink Elephant semi- formal will be held Friday, April 21, Donna Hobein, social chairman, announced. The University's I.S.A. members hope to secure the next year's national convention site here. A meeting at Lone Star lake or a similar place to discuss plans for next year has been decided upon by the ISA. executive council and wards T and P-Z officers. It will be held Saturday, May 6. There will be a combined meeting of wards T and P-Z at 6:30 p.m Monday, April 17, in 206 Fraser Ward re-organization will be undertaken. International Club Elects Officers Norman Wenger, College sophomore, was elected president of the International Relations club Tuesday. Other officers are William Buechel, College junior, vicepresident; James Hops, business junior, treasurer; and Ruth Hurwitt, College junior, secretary. These officers will serve at the regional convention in the spring of 1951 at the University. Albeneri Trio Ends Chamber Concerts By Playing Good Music With Finesse The School of Engineering was organized in 1891. By DALE S. ROMIG It isn't very often that a good story has two climaxes of equal importance, but that is the story of the success of the Albene which played its second concert Wednesday evening. Strong auditorium was filled to hear Erich Kahn, piano, Giorgi Gloepi, drum, and Benar Heifetz, percussion and la band concert in the chuppier music series. The second number, "Ten Variations in G Major on Tch bin der Schneider Kakadu" opened with a broad stately movement that could hardly have been written by anyone other than Bemoven. The music almost violent contrasts of sound and color to a triumphant finale. The program opened with the Schumann "Trio in D Minor." It began with the typical Albenieri finesse but seemed to lack a little of the spark which was so evident in Tuesday's concert. The Doorak "Dumky Trio" brought the concert to a brilliant close. Beginning with a slow majestic movement, the trio slowed to the 'yrical second movement marked by sensitive passages for all three instruments. in that movement, the Alberneri rio brought out the spirit of Dvorak, playing the muted phrases sentimentally and the vigorous ending without restraint. The piece ended with a regal inale, reiterating earlier themes. Eight engineering students and faculty members represented the University at the seventh American Institute of Electrical Engineers convention at Norman, Okla., April 3-4. Gilbert W. Fuller, engineering senior, represented the K.U. branch of the A.I.E.E, in the student paper competition held at the convention. Winners will be notified by mail. K.U. had the largest representation of my school attending the convention. Thirteen of the 14 schools in the seventh district attended. Kansas State was not represented. Eight AIEE Men Attend Convention Read the Want Ads Daily. University Daily Kansan Semi-Invalid Correspondence Student Has Successful Free-Lance Writing Career Mail subscription; $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence贺加 $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Outsiders. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. A semi-invalid student of the Bureau of Correspondence Study has made a career in free-lance writing into a three-year success story. By JESSIMAI SHIDLER STRANGE Following an unsuccessful operation in 1946, Mrs. Derr was unable to walk. Three amputations were necessary before she could be fitted for an artificial limb. She is Mrs. Eileen Derr of Forest City, Mo., a housewife and the mother of four children. Mrs. Derr has completed the bureau's courses in Feature Writing and Magazine Writing and is at present enrolled in the Creative Writing course. She writes regularly for two newspapers and a magazine and does other free-lance writing. The young mother fought to overcome her handcap and to live a normal life. She had always been interested in writing, and in 1944 had taken a writing course from a national institute. "Yet somewhat," she said, "I never gained courage to send anything out." Her opportunity came in July, 1947, while she was still on crutches. The Missouri river flooded territory around Forest City. A few months later Mrs. Derr decided to take up writing in earnest. She enrolled in the two correspondence courses. Her instructor, Lottie "for lack of something to do," Mrs. Derr said. "I wrote it up and sent the story to the St. Joseph, Mo., Gazette. It was printed under a byline, and I was asked to serve as Forest City correspondent for the newspaper." Lesh, and the director of the correspondence study bureau, Ruth Kenney, spoke of her excellent work in the courses. "However." Miss Lesh said, "the real test of her work is its saleability, and Mrs. Derr sells practically everything she writes." Mrs. Derr believes that readers, and consequently editors, are coming to favor pictorial articles more and more. She has illustrated some of her feature stories with pictures from her own camera. An article by Mrs. Derr in the February, 1949, issue of Household magazine entitled "What'll I Do Now, Mom" and written under the pseudonym "Alice Sprague," was illustrated by Mrs. Derr with her children as models. Mr. Derr is also interested in photography as a hobby. This is a great help to her in obtaining difficult shots that she is unable to take for herself. Mrs. Derr spoke of the helpfulness of her husband and children in caring for the house. "We as a family are doing our own work. If everyone does a little bit, it is soon all done, and everyone has time to follow his or her own pursuits." The Derrs have three sons aged 11, 9, and 6, and a daughter, three. Some of Mrs. Derr's most recently published material appeared in the December, 1949, issue of Better Weapon Collections To Be Displayed Plans were recently completed for moving two weapon collections to the Military Science building. One collection is now on display in Dyche museum and the other collection is in storage at the Alumni office. Four showcases are being constructed for display of the weapons. They will be 8 feet high, and will be constructed of oak with glass fronts. The weapons are from the Civil's war, Spanish American war, World War I. and World War II. The collections contain an 1840 model of a French musket a leg iron and chain from Turkey which was used on Allied prisoners of war during World War I, a Japanese automatic rifle presented to the University by Gen. Ennis C. Whitehead, '20, and a German anti-tank gun from World War I. There are 125 pieces in the two collections. Capt. Alfred Gallup, assistant professor of air science, said that the two collections should be moved and on display by the latter part of May. Homes and Gardens. Her instructions and pictures for woven dolls were incorporated in an article on easy things to make for Christmas. She does correspondence for the two St. Joseph newspapers, and sells pictures to them occasionally. She has written several features and poems for Kitchen Klatter, published at Shenandoah, Iowa. "I seem to have a failing for writing articles from a man's viewpoint," Mrs. Derr laughed. She sold an article to Business of Farming magazine, which she was forced to sign "Ben Garner" because of her masculine line of thought. Her first published article, "What It's Like to a Father," was signed "Expectant Grandfather" and sold to Baby Talk magazine. Mrs. Derr has several correspondence courses in mind for the future—"courses in cartoon, versification, and photography, all of which are closely related to furthering writing salesmanship," she said. Dell Music Co. 925 Mass. "RAY McKINLEY (above) plays Rodgers and Hart". . My Heart Stood Still, Blue Moon, Thou Swell, 3 others. ALL "DESIGNED FOR DANCING!" In fact, RCA Victor brings the dance-record shortage to an end with 15 brand-new albums by 15 great bands, 15 great co-posers! 90 danceable hits! . . with the rhythm that'll roll back your rugs in a hurry! McKinley's album has it! We've got all 15—everybody's rushing for them. Call K.U. 251 With Your News. McK's Dance Beat In "Colossal 15" on your way home and back DRIVE CAREFULLY Forget school during Easter vacation but don't forget Safety... University Daily Kansan 1950 FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 4 --- PAGE THREB tions were easy She no St. tures written for Shen- writ- point," n ar aaga- sign mas-pub to Bectant Talk e fusifi wbzn ering id. cat plays Heart Swell, For Victor actor to ms. col. with your album body's University Daily Kansan Presents— Outstanding Student And Pianist Bill Composes In Spare Time A piano major who learned to play by means of a player piano might seem to be slightly ridiculous. One look at the record of Willard Straight, fine arts junior, however, would impress anyone. Voted outstanding student in the School of Fine Arts by Pi Kappa Lambda, honorary music society, both his freshman and sophomore years. Bill boasts a 2.7 all over point average. Add to this the seven songs he has composed for this year's College Daze musical production plus two art songs which have been performed this spring at senior recitals, his —Kansan Photo by Bob Blank Willard Straight activities as secretary and song leader of Delta Chi social fraternity and many recitals—and you have a lot of accomplishments which anyone could be proud to own. Bill started his musical career at the age of one year, by being featured by Believe it-or-Not-Ripley for being able to sing 150 songs. He first banged the keys of a piano at the age of six. From then until 1937 when his uncle purchased a player piano he kept his musical ambitions concealed. After experimenting with this instrument for two years he began taking formal lessons from Gene Thompson in Kansas City. Bill was active in Southwest high school in Kansas City both musically and scholastically. He won honors from National Scholastic magazine for two of his compositions and was a member of the National Honor society. At present, composing is competing with his work on the piano for his interest. "I would rather play the piano than do anything," he said. Mrs. Ed Abels Talks Mrs. Ed Abel of the Lawrence Outlook addressed members of Meta Sigma Phi, honorary and professional fraternity for journalism women, at their annual Ladies-of-the-Press breakfast April 1. Mrs. Abels, who was graduated from the University in 1919, spoke informally on personalities she had met in 25 years in the newspaper business. Most of the persons she described are acquaintances made on annual trips taken by members of the National Editorial association. She gave short sketches on Dorothy Dix, Amelia Earhart, Will Rogers, Walter Damrosch, Sidney Lawrence, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Harry Truman. Mrs. Abels told the fraternity that although she had been associated with a newspaper for 25 years she had never had two days that were alike. She pointed out that although newspaper work has its dark, monotonous side, it also has its compensations in the people you meet. Emil L. Telfel, assistant professor of journalism, and Mrs. Telfel also attended the breakfast. Professor Telfel is faculty advisor to Epsilon user. Asked for his opinion of be-bop, Bill said that he thinks that it is more a passing phase in American life than a lasting form of music. His favorite composers are Rachmaninoff, Chopin and Liszt and Robert Casadesus is his favorite contem- nary pianist. "but composition is taking more of my time." After being graduated Bill plans to study either at Yale or the Berlitz School of Music in Paris. "I hope to become a concert pianist," Bill said, adding that this is the wish of every student pianist he has ever met. "If I don't succeed at that though, I can still fall back on composing or teaching." Socially Speaking Phi Gam Mothers Meet Phi Deuteron chapter of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity entertained the mother's clubs from Wichita, Kansas City, Topeka, and Lawrence at a luncheon Tuesday. Nearly 35 mothers attended. Following the luncheon a short business meeting was held. D.U. Pledges Entertain The pledge class of Delta Upsilon fraternity held a formal dinner dance April 1. The principal decoration was a large blue and gold pledge pin placed against a white background at one end of the dance floor. Hors d'oeuvres were served to the guests in the lounge preceding a three-course dinner. Guests were Anne Lambert, Mary Gayle Loveless, Courtney Carroll, Mary Ann Deschner, Celia Kilgore, Wanda Denny, Margaret Quinley, Beverly Lander, Beverly Wilson, Shirley Selig, Pat Flinn, Joan Brock, Ann Boncutter. Margaret Martin, Elmyra Crane, Joan Pace, Betty Jo Lipscomb, Mary Virginia Douglas, Barbara Fletcher, Mary Joe Busch, ack Luff, James Crates, John Scrivner, Richard Wood, and Richard Wintermote. Eight seniors and three juniors have been selected for membership in Beta Gamma Sigma, national honorary fraternity for School of Business students, the University chapter has announced. Chaperons for the dance were Mrs. Richard Blume, Mrs. P. W. Henry, Mrs. W. S. Shaw, and Mrs. James A. Hooke. Juniors elected have especially high scholarship. They are J. Eur- Honorary Elects Eleven Kappa Announces P. C. B. MISS MARY McNALLEY Mr and Mrs. L. A. McNalley of Minneapolis announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary Elizabeth, to Mr. Charles Medwolock of Kansas City. The announcement was made April 2. Miss McNailley is a business junior and a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Mr. Medowlock was graduated from the University in June, 1940. He received a degree in mechanical engineering. tene Balloun, Lloyd Wayne Davis, ind Loren E. White. The wedding will take place in June. New senior members are Mabel Conderman, Mrs. Jeanne A. Dodson, Thomas T. Hawkins, Keet O. Johnson, James L. Masterson, George A. Monson, Richard J. Reed, and Jack Ward Robinson. Clubs Hold Joint Meeting Students from Italy, Spain, Latin America, China, and India were introduced to the old time dance that is sweeping the country once more. There was some hesitancy on the part of the foreign students at first but soon all were joining in and responding to calls such as "all join hands and circle to the left, grab your partner and take her home." Rita Swearingen, vice president of the International club, said that cooperation was wonderful; everyone seemed to have a fine time. Three University students were initiated March 1 into Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity. They were Albert Grayson, engineering sophomore; Roosevelt Strickland, College sophomore; and John Warder, College sophomore. Alpha Phi Alpha Initiates Mu Phi Epsilon Pledges Xi chapter of Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary music sorority, announces the pledging of Martha Heck, Doris McConnell, Beverly Wilson, Mary Lynn Sommerville, Katie Nelligan, Jacque Cook, and Rita Yakle. CASH AND CARRY ONLY LINDLEY'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 LITTLE OWL SANDWICH SHOP 902 Mass. Sandwiches, Meals, Steaks short orders YWCA Board Names New Area Chairmen Try our 49c Special Open24 hours Mrs.Jack Lee,Prop. Executive board of Y.W.C.A. announces the following area chairmen who were installed Wednesday. Administration area officers are: Zara Zoeller, business junior, chairman; Virginia Walsh, College junior, social; Virginia Thomson, College sophomore, office staff; Marcia Horn, membership, and Gloria Anne Lehman. College freshman. publicity. Christian Faith and Heritage area officers who took oath are: Sammy Johnson, College sophomore, chairman; Joyce Rohrer, fine arts senior; comparative religion; Donna Hull, college interior; Annie Berg, Embryrine Gooch, College sophomores; and Marilyn Ross, College worship,孕命 Personal and Campus Affairs area officers who were installed are: Nancy Haffner, fine arts junior; chairman; Betty Lou Thomas, education junior; campus affairs; Jean Almon, fine arts sophomore, art appreciation; and Ella Lois Meridith, College freshman, recreation. Social responsibility area officers installed were: Janice Horn, fine arts sophomore, chairman; Ritt Swearingen, College junior, Aniit Phillip, political effectiveness, an Anne Snyder, community, College sophomores. World relatedness are officers installed were: Betty L Brown, College junior, chairman and Ada Watson, education sophomore, world organization. Law Wives Elect Mrs. Jack Maxwell Law wives held election of officer and a White Elephant sale at their regular meeting Thursday. Marvin Small, assistant secretary of the Alumni association auctioneered. New officers include: Mrs. Jack Maxwell, president; Mrs. William Mahoney, vice-president; Mrs. Richard Ashley, recording secretary; Mrs. Kenneth Beck, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Roger Lovett, treasurer; and Mrs. Robert F. Bennett, social chairman. The program was under the direction of Mrs. Forrest Wilson. Hostesses for the evening were Mrs. Joseph Stryker and Mrs. Arthur Rudd. Eye EYE YOUR EYES Bodwell Engaged should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription Duplicated. Phone 425 1025 Mass. Lawrence Optical Co. A. MISS JOAN BODWELL The engagement was announced by Mrs. Mary Youmkam. Sigma Kappa housemother, at a birthday party for Miss Bodwell Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Bodwell of Kansas City, Mo. announce the engagement of their daughter, Joan, to Mr. Ralph W. Dicker, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Dicker of Smith Center. Miss Bodwell wore a lavender orchid corsage. Miss Elda Lou Phillips assisted her in serving an elaborately decorated birthday cake. mss Bodwell is a College senior and a member of Sigma Kappa sorority. Mr. Dicker is an engineering junior. Boston is near Europe than any other American city. AGAIN This Year! New Savings up to 25% for Kansas Drivers! State Farm Mutual slashes auto insurance costs! Call or come in now! M. R. Carlson 5 E. 9th Ph.214 Licensed agent for State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company FELLERS, GIVE THE GALS A BREAK- Tooth WHEN YOU'RE OUT FOR YOUR CHEESECAKE. YOU'LL FIND THAT THEY GO HEART AND SOUL FOR GUYS WHO BUY THEM TOOTSIE ROLL! Chocolate Botsie Roll 5¢ 7 DELICIOUS PIECES at all leading candy counters THE SWEETS CO. OF AMERICA, INC., HOBOKEN, N. J. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1950 PAGE FOUR KU Nine Plays Three Games Over Holidays Coach Bill "Red" Hogan's Jay- hawkers, defending Big Seven baseball champions, play Rockhurst college here on Wednesday, April 12, in the opener of a 20-game schedule. the opener of Kansas follows this non-conference game with a two-game series against Colorado at Boulder on Friday and Saturday, April 14 and 15. Kansas, who last year won its first conference title since 1923, will play only two non-conference games, both with Rockhurst. The second game with the Hawks will be played on Wednesday, April 19, in Kansas City. To date, Colorado has played five games, winning two and dropping three against top-flight competition. The Buffaloes, top-heavy with lettermen at every position, used their fieldhouse and a nine-day, four-game spring training trip to Arizona to reach their near mid-season condition. The 22-man squad will work out today, Saturday and twice daily next Monday and Tuesday in preparing for their opener. Kansas split a pair with the Hawks last year winning the opener here, 4 to 2. Jim Quinnlan, veteran hurler, is expected to get the starting assignment for Rockhurst. Rockhill Colorado, fourth in the Big Seven last year with a 5-6 record, is far advanced in spring training over the Jayhawkers and will be favored to mark up a pair of conference wins. Coach Frank Prentupt's Buffs won a 15 to 13 slugfest from a strong University of Arizona nine while dropping 15 to 8 and 9 to 2 decisions. Colorado defeated Arizona State college 6 to 4 to split even on the trip In their only game at home, the Buffs lost 6 to 5 to Colorado A. and M. after leading 3 to 1 going into the ninth inning. Kansas 1950 baseball schedule: April 12 Rockhurst, LAWRENCE April 14-15 Colorado, Boulder April 19 Rockhurst, Kansas City April 24-25 M.U. LAWRENCE April 28-29 Iowa State, Ames May 1-2 M.U. Columbia May 5-6 Nebraska, Lincoln May 8-9 Iowa State, LAWRENCE May 12-13 K. State, Manhattan May 17-18 K. State, LAWRENCE May 22-24 Oklahoma, LAWRENCI Manager Interviews Seniors W. J. Horan, manager of sales training for the Sinclair Oil company was on the campus Thursday interviewing June graduates from the School of Business for possible employment. 1945 BILL "RED" HOGAN. Jayhawker baseball coach, watches his men run through a practice session as they point for their opening game and their second straight Big Seven championship. K.U.'s first start is against Rockhurst college Wednesday, April 12, here. 'Hardluck Coach Of Year' Although his Kansas baseball team hasn't played a game, Coach Hogan already is the Big Seven's top candidate for "Hardluck Coach of the Year." He has lost the services of what might have been the top battery in the Big Seven, Dick Gilman and Jay Drake. Bake. Frank McColough, a pitching prospect lost his life in an auto accident, March 14. Forrest Griffith was sidelined from a possible outfield berth by an appendectomy. Two other lettermen, catcher Bob Talkington and infielder Jim Briley, are missing due to scholastic difficulties. Kansas should field another respectable club if satisfactory pitching improvement is shown by two lettermen and a promising sophomore hurler. Guy Mabry, last year's regular right fielder, has been moved back to the mound where he performed two years ago. Loren Hep- ler, southpaw, is last year's only returning letterman hurler. Carl Sandefur, 6-foot 3-inch 210-pound sophomore righthander, is expected to become the ace of the Kobe mast mouft staff. Sandefur wives doubles as an end in football, has a blazing fast ball and should give Coach Hogan a top-flight hurler after gaining a bit more experience. The infield will include two newcomers with only third baseman, Floyd Temple, returning to the same oition. George Voss, a sophomore left-hander and two-year regular with the Lawrence Colts, will open at first base. Lou DeLuna, a three-year letterman at first base, has been moved to second. DeLuna's keystone partner will be newcomer Frank Koenig, junior, who replaces Carl Ellis. Ellis has been moved to left field. Trackmen Meet Huskers In First Outdoor Contest Jayhawker trackmen get their first trial of the season in an outdoor dual track meet when they face the Nebraska Cornhuskers at Memorial stadium, Saturday, April 15. Kansas, indoor king of the Big Seven, was defeated by Coach Ed Weir's Huskers during the indoor season 43 to 61 at Lincoln. The Jayhawkers were also humbled by the Nebraskans outdoors a year ago 56 to 75. Greenwood scored victories in both the highs and the low last season, setting a new'mark of 14.7 in the highs and equalling the 23.8 record in the lows. It could be that the 1950 winner in each event will be forced to better each of those times to triumph. Given good weather, the competing thinlads could turn up with a bevy of new meet records. Five meet marks tumbled and another was equaled when they met in 1949. But should it be a bad day, only one standard would be seriously endangered. Nebraska's best chance for setting a new standard will come in the pole vault. Weir will send Don Cooper and Leonard Kehl after the existing record of 13 feet 4 inches set by D Bird of K.U. in 1939. Jim Floyd and Jim Potts, sophomores, are Easton's hopefuls. Kansas' twn terrors—Bob Karnes and all-American Pat Bowers—are faced by stiff records and stiff competition in their specialties, the half- Semper, the nifty sophomore sensation, collapsed the conference indoor record of 9:28.4 this winter. Abel set a new KU.-N.U. indoor dual record of 9:53.4 a few weeks previous. The mark due to be rewritten, rain or shine, is the 9:55.3 two-mile set by Ed Fortune of Kansas in 1930. Almost certain to go under that time are Jayhawkers Herb Semper and Cliff Abel. Stiffest competition will probably be in the hurdles where Kansas Coach Bill Easton will start ace Jack Greenwood and sophomore Bob Devinney against the crack Nebraska duo of Ray Magsamen and Bob Berkshire. Besides Ellis, the outfield strength will come from Herb Weidensau, outfield letterman reserve last year, sophomore Walter Hicks, and Bill Mace, junior utility outfield-catcher. Catching is improved this year with the addition of Don Wilson, junior grid quarterback. Returning lettermen are Ken Morrow and John Goodson. Off the basis of early season performances, Wilson should be the Jayhawkers' best backstop since pre-war days. mile and mile. Bowers posted the 880 record of 1:53.3 a year ago. Husker Loyal L肋尔bert is to be reckoned with by Bowers. Karnes will have to do better than Glenn Cunningham's 4:17.4 of 1933 to set a new mark. He'll be faced by Nebraska's surprise of the indoor season, Lee Moore. Jayhawkers Del Norris and Bill Richardson and Husker Dick Meissner will aim for the 6 foot $ \frac{3}{2} $ inch high jump mark set in 1937 by Dale Shannon of K.U. Hunbert set the 440-yard dash mark of 49.3 a year ago and could possibly better it. Teammate Harold Kopf also could do it. K.U. will have Emil Schutzel and Jim Dinsmore, as its top candidates. The discus record of 144 feet Willis Ward of Kansas in 1937 isn't too safe. Jayhawker Bob Broady or Husker Jim McConnell might exceed it. In the dashes, the Nebraskans could easily have their own way. Coach Easton isn't sure yet if he has an entry ready to go into the 100. Schutzel is his top candidate in the 220. Other likely Kansas entries, although the list is yet incomplete, will be Dave Fisher in the half-mile and 440, Ed Lee in the shot put, Ken Stites in the 440, Bob Kline in the discus, Bob Drumm in the javelin, Clarence Nauman in the broad jump, and Al Bouchard in the low hurdles and broad jump. This week end the Jayhawkers are vacationing, but they will return to the campus Monday for training. Coe's Drug 1347 Mass. Drugs - Drug Sundries Drinks - Sandwiches We Deliver 10 To 10 Phone 234 Tennis Team Opens Season April 20 The Varsity tennis team will rely on two lettermen and a group of inexperienced players to try to better 1949's fifth place tie in the conference. K.U.'s first dual match is with Oklahoma, the defending champion, on Thursday, April 20. Charles Crawford, the only left- hander in the top five, is slated for the number four position on the 1950 team. Lou Smith and Bill Thompson appear to hold the upper hand in the battle for the number five spot. Hervey Macferran, the number one man in 1949, and Jack Ranson, number two a year ago, are returning lettermen. Bob Swartzell, a transfer from Santa Monica, Calif., Junior college, has beaten Ranson out of his number two spot on this year's team and he may push Macferran out of his number one position. Oklahoma, Missouri, and Colorado appear to be the strongest teams again this season. They finished one-two-three in the 1949 conference meet at Lincoln. The Sooners have dominated the conference in tennis the past two decades, winning 12 titles in the past 18 years. Macferran is the only double letter winner on the squad. He lettered the past season while playing in the number one spot and won a letter in 1948 on Kansas' conference champions. Macferran three times intramural badminton champion, won three of seven dual matches in 1949. Other players trying for a place on the team are Dale Ferguson, John Freiburger, Howard Graff, Bob Matheir, Dick Menuet, and Hal Titus. - Swartzell won the Varsity tennis tournament held in October. Al-though a newcomer to the K.U. Richards was the Jayhawkers' number one man for two seasons after transferring from Drury college of Springfield, Mo. At Drury, he won the Missouri State college conference singles championship in 1946. Coach Richards is beginning his second year at the head of the Varsity team. As a K.U. player he won the conference singles crown in 1948 in leading Kansas to its sixth tennis championship in K.U.'s history. squad, he is a veteran player. He is a member of the Santa Monica, Calif. tennis club. Easter vacation Our Easter special: 6 a.m.-8 p.m. daily 6 a.m.-10:30 p.m. Sun. Our Easter special: We shall be open during FRIED CHICKEN -- $.75 ALAMO CAFE Try our fountain service, also. 1109 Mass. IT'S NOT TOO LATE !! You Can Still Make That Summer Trip To Europe WITH INTERNATIONAL YOUTH PARIS BY AIR $360 ROUND TRIP Flights to LONDON and ROME Flights to LONDON and ROME Write or phone International Youth Inc. New York 7, N.Y. COrtland 7-0362 150 Broadway, To assure passage write immediately 1950 FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE the ago, he hernes lemm set Nesea- Bill leis- inch Dale kans way. if he the te in al-plete, mile put, one in save-broad low s are urn to g. SPOTLIGHT SPORTS By ARTHUR McINTIRE BY ARTHUR MEINHRE Colorado's Silver and Gold wasn't the only student paper in the Big Seven to come up with a bit of wish- ful thinking April 1 concerning Clyde Lovelette. Not to be outdone by the Buffs, the Aggies also claimed in big bold headlines, plus a picture, that the big boy would enroll at K-State as soon as possible. C. E. McBride, Kansas City Star sports editor, had a bit of April foolery poked his way also. Goes to prove that these Aggies have a long memory. The Minneapolis Lakers walloped Anderson, Ind. Packers Thursday night 90 to 71 to earn the right to meet Syracuse in the National Basketball association championship. Charlie Black, former All-American for the Jayhawkers, is a forward for the Packers. Coach Forrest C. "Phog" Allen was one of the originators of the KU. Relays, April 21 and 22 will mark the silver anniversary of the event. The Jayhawkers dominated their own first Relays by winning the 440 and 880-yd relay, the broad jump and high jump. Track Coach Bill Easton will be shooting for at least one K.U. Relays record. The four-mile relay team of Cliff Abel, Captain Bob Karnes, Herb Semper, and Pat Bowers stepped the distance in 17:20.9 at the Texas Relays. This is 16.9 seconds better than the present record. Illinois set the standard in '31. Coach J. V. Sikes will send his charges through another practice game Saturday starting at 1:30 p.m. All Big Seven football games are supposed to start at that time this season. Coach Sikes has juggled the squad in order to pit the best defensive team against the best offensive. Sandelius Will Address Group In Texas Saturday Professor Walter E. Sandelius, professor of political science will speak to the Southwestern Political Science association in Houston, Texas Saturday. His speech will deal with problems that face the modern political scientist. Professor Sandelius left for Houston Thursday evening. This Golf Game Is Getting Rough What started out to be a friendly game of golf ended up with one of the participants on crutches. Jack Robison, senior in the School of Business, decided to play a quick nine holes Wednesday with his brother-in-law Cal Markwell on the local country club course. On the first hole Robison drew back for what he hoped would be a record breaking drive. He took a mighty swing but missed the ball completely. The force of his swing dislocated his knee and flung him to the ground. When he hit the earth his knee popped back into place but the damage was done. A doctor said however that he would be off the crutches in a week or so. Allen To Call Spring Drills Next year's Jayhawker basketball team, the one that K.U.'s next athletic director, Arthur "Dutch" Lonborg has tagged "a team that could win the national title," begins practice sessions immediately after spring vacation. The workouts will continue to the end of the present semester. Coach Phog Allen plans on a powerful team for 1950-51 with only four lettermen lost from this year's co-championship squad. Captain Claude Houchin, Gene Petersen, Harold England, and Guy Mabry are the graduating seniors who have completed their careers on the University of Kansas hardwoods. Spearheaded by Clyde Lovellelette Kansas' All-Big Seven center, and Captain Jerry Waugh, playing his fourth year on the varsity, the Jayhawks will gradually swing into full-scale operations under the watchful eye of Coach Allen. Several players are at present engaged in spring football practice and will not be available until early May. They are Dean Wells, Aubrey Linville, Lyn Smith, Jerry Bogue, and Bill Schaake. Charley Hoag, a freshman standout, is also playing football but will report to Doctor Allen as soon as possible. Five of the first six players will be available, namely, Lovellette, Waugh, Bill Houghland, Bill Lienhard, and Bob Kenney. Only Houchin is missing from the past season's starting five. Working alongside these men will be varsity reserves and the freshman squad. K. U.'s most outstanding woman athlete returned to Lawrence Thursday before leaving for Topeka to play an exhibition golf match. Auburn-haired, blue-eyed Marilyn Smith, who attended K.U. in 1948 and 1949, is the youngest professional woman golfer in the United States. 'Smitty' Returns For Golf Match She gave up her amateur standing in July of 1949 and took a job as promotional representative for the A.G. Spaulding company. Traveling more than 35,000 miles since July, the personality-packed athlete has toured more than 20 states playing exhibition matches, and holding golf clinics. By BUD RODGERS "My primary interest," said Martyn. "is to promote women's golf at colleges all over the country." She has instructed girls on the fundamentals of the sport at the University of California, University of Washington, Kansas State college, University of Florida, and many others. Ever smiling as she told of her golf career, the vivacious 20-year-old retarked that she was invited to play golf with Bing Crosby while on the West Coast, but due to a picture commitment the crooner was unable to keep the appointment. In addition to her promotional efforts, Marilyn has played in numerous exhibition matches and national golf tournaments. The most exciting tournament match, she recounted, was the title holders at Augusta, Ga., the past summer. Marilyn was entered with some of the toughest competition in the country, including Babe Zaharias, Patty Berg, Louise Suggs, and Marlene Bauer, who was voted the outstanding amateur athlete of the year. Marilyn was two shots behind Miss Berg and was fourth among the six professionals entered in the match. This has not bothered Marilyn too much, however, as she is one of the five women golfers in the country who has been invited to play in the Celebrity tournament at Washington D.C., June 3 and 4. Not only will she be playing against Bing, but also Bob Hope, Dwight Eisenhower, and other high government personnel. "This tournament," said Marilyn, "is one of the outstanding in the country, and I am terribly excited about having been invited." Marilyn said she had always wanted to play at the celebrity match, but never believed her wish would be fulfilled. Since turning professional the peppy young lass from Wichita has won over $750 in tournament play, and drives around the country in a new Dodge which A.G. Spaulding company gave her. During her two years at KU. Marilyn became one of the best-liked and most active girls on the campus. She was a physical education major and participated in field hockey, intramural basketball and badminton. She also swims a powerful backstroke and swings a mean tennis racket. Marilyn is a member of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority and was elected president of her sophomore class and president of the 1948 Junior Pan-Hellenic. While in Lawrence, this remarkable athlete has visited a lot of friends and faculty members. "It's always a great thrill," she exclaimed, "to get back to such an outstanding school as KU." Marilyn has a packed schedule for the remainder of the year. After playing an exhibition match in Topeka today she will leave for Sedalia, Mo., then will go to Stephens college, Columbia, Mo., and on to Philadelphia for two weeks. When asked how she liked traveling from state to state, and playing golf for a living, the enthusiastic athlete said, "Golf is a wonderful Stalcup Leaves MU For Michigan State Wilbur "Sparky" Stalcup today was named to take over the basketball coaching reins at Michigan State college. Stalcup, a veteran of (5 years) college coaching, left Missouri for the Lansing, Mich. campus. Of the Big Ten teams that leaves only Purdue university without a coach. Mel Taube resigned as basketball coach at Purdue last week, but remained on the campus to direct the baseball team and also teach physical education. Northwestern replaced Arthur "Dutch" Lonborg, recently appointed K.U. athletic director, with Harold G. Olsen, 24 year veteran of the Bie Ten from Ohio State. High Jump Field Is Best In Relays' History Bob Gordon, Missouri—one of the best high jumpers in Tiger history. Shared Big Seven Indoor title with Severn's with a leap of 6 feet 3 inches. Virgin Severs, Kansas State latest Wildcat field sensation who shared first place and a new record of 6 feet $ \frac{8}{4} $ inches with Jack Razzetto of San Diego State April 1 at the Texas Relays. Jack Heintzman, Bradley—a veteran campaigner who has consistently placed high in the nation's major meets. Dick Jones, Oklahoma - Sooner sophomore sensation whose first place-tying leap of 6 feet $5 \frac{1}{2}$ inches at the Oklahoma A. and M. Relays is the third best in O.U. history. In marked contrast much is expected from this year's high jump corps when it hits the takeoff in the Silver Anniversary of the Relays, here Saturday April 22. Eight leapers who have cleared 6 feet $4\frac{1}{2}$ inches or better are slated to compete. Given a break by the weather man, they will seriously imperil Walters' one-year-old mark. The 1949 Kansas Relays high jump field wasn't supposed to produce any fireworks. But Bobby Walters, an unheralded performer from Texas, not only notched a new record of 6 feet 8-3-16 inches but walked off with the day's "most outstanding athlete award." Here is the information Bob Walters, Texas-defending champion who broke an 11-year-old Relais record the past year. Vern McGrew, Rice — another veteran who was a member of the 1948 United States Olympic team. Here is the lineup: W. F. Davis, Texas A. and M.- tied for first place at the Border Olympics at 6 feet $ 4 \frac{1}{2} $ inches. Of this contingent Sevens, the elongated Aggie, is perhaps the most outstanding. This Norton High school product is one of those rare performers who changed from one event to another, unrelated to the first, with marked improvement. Two years ago he was a two-miller for coach Ward Haylett. Olympic Berry, Arkansas—tied Jones for first place at the Oklahoma A. and M. Relays. Severns was only fair as a distance runner and Haylett needed a high-jumper to round out the club's field strength. Severns had jumped 5 feet 11 inches in high school so the job was his. He climbed 6 feet as a freshman and improved an inch and a half the past year. Now as a junior he shares the nation's highest jump of 1950 with his effort at Austin. at Adkins. McGrew and Heintman are two of the nation's better hands. The former's best to date this year is 6 feet 6 inches, which was good for no better than a third place tie at Texas. He got a first place tie at the Border Olympics at 6 feet $4\frac{1}{2}$ inches. He was second behind Walters at the West Texas Relays. Two years ago he won the final Olympic trials at 6 feet $8\frac{1}{4}$ inches although he failed to place in the world games at London. His best the past year Heintzman also tied for second at Texas and tied for first at the Chicago Indoor Relays in March. Touring Europe with an American track troupe the past year he cleared 6 feet 6 3-4 inches for his top effort of the summer. He was second in the National A.A.U. and fourth in the N.C.A.A. was 6 feet 6 inches which earned second place in the N.C.A.A. This shapes up as the best jump field in the 25 year old history of the Jayhawker games. Champions 1923 Tom Poor, Kansas 6-1¹⁴ 1924 Tom Poor, Kansas 6-4 1925 Tom Poor, Kansas 6-5 1-8 1926 G. Shepherd, Tex. 6-4 1927 C. McGinnis, Wis. 6-2 Floyd Short, Shurt. 6-2 1928 Park, Shelby, Okla. 6-1 1929 Milton Perkins, Ill. 6-0 Park, Shelby, Okla. 6-0 Robert Carr, Ill. 6-0 1930 Ted Shaw, Wis. 6-3 1-6 1931 Ed Gordon, Iowa 6-3¹² M. Strong, Swest. 6-3¹² 1932 B. Newblock, Okla. 6-2 3-4 Bert Nelson, Butler 6-2 3-4 1933 B. Newblock, Okla. 6-3 3-8 1934 F. Stambach, Pitt. T. 6-5¹⁴ 1935 Lyn Phinole, Drake 6-5 1936 Gil Cruter, Col. 6-5¹² 1937 Jack Vickery, Tex. 6-1 8-1 T. Stevens, Pitt. T. 6-6 1-8 1938 Gil Cruter, Col. 6-7 9-16 1939 D. Snakech, Ia. S. 6-5¹² 1940 Boydston, Ok. A.M. 6-6 1941 B. Stoland, Kansas 6-7/8 N. Sanmannel, Kan. 6-7/8 1942 Boydson, Ok. A.M. 6-2 1946 T. Scofield, Kansas 6-5/8 1947 T. Scofield, Kansas 6-1 3-4 M. Kinder, Neb. 6-1 3-4 1948 D. Eddleman, Ill. 6-5/8 1949 R. Walters, Texas 6-8 3-16 sport and I intend to continue my efforts to interest college women in the game." Conference Plans Better Government Eleven faculty members from the University attended the Kansas Conference on Government in Topeka April I. The purpose of the conference was to encourage the extension and improvement of the governmental information services to public officials, and to encourage the instruction of teachers and students in state and local government. Only 13 muscles are required to smile—fifty to frown. The faculty members were Dr. Ethan P. Allen, professor of political science; Jack McKay and Norman Blacher, research assistants of the Bureau of Government Research; John H. Holmgren, instructor of political science; Ray Carmon and Vernon Koch, administrative assistants; Dr. E. O. Stene, professor of political science; J. W. Drury, assistant professor of political science; Esther E. Twente, professor of social work; E. Jackson Baur, associate professor of sociology; and Dr. Paul Malone, director of the Bureau of Business Research. Spring is Here! and we're LOADED (With Sporting Goods That Is!) - Tennis Balls - Tennis Rackets - Badminton Rackets - Shuttlecocks - Ball Gloves & Hats - Softballs See us for Special Wholesale prices on All Athletic Goods Team Managers! KIRKPATRICK'S Sport Shop 715 Mass. Phone 1018 Fishing for a New Place To Eat? - Deep Sea Scallops - Pan Fried Smelts - Salmon Steak FISHERMAN - Pan Fried Catfish Steak - Filet of Sole - Tartar Sauce OUR MEALS WILL MAKE A STRIKE WITH YOU EVERY TIME Duck's Tavern 821 Vermont PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1950 The Editors Report LOOK. FRIEND Do Us A Favor by Bibler Tomorrow, another vacation begins. Tonight and tomorrow, you will be leaving the campus. Like ourselves, you've been impatient to get going for at least the past two days. But like oursels, you had classes right up to the last minute. by Charles F. Reiner You're eager to get home. So eager, you're going to spare no horses getting there. So eager, you're going to ramrod your hotrod down the highway. Minutes will be precious. Minutes can be saved by passing a slower-moving car on a hill. Tonight and tomorrow, there's going to be a couple thousand extra "other guys" on the road. And it may be something of a job to miss hitting them all. We mean, for them to miss hitting you. So as a friend who wants to see you around after Easter vacation is over, we'd like to ask you to take it easy going home tonight and tomorrow. It's true, you can save seconds by fast driving, by taking chances. Simple arithmetic will prove that a car traveling 100 miles an hour will save you an hour over a car traveling 50. The only trouble, so far as we can see, if that simple arithmetic can't take into account human factors. It's just that "dad-blamed" other guy we're worried about. He's the one who causes all the accidents. More minutes can be saved by never slowing up for curves or bad roads. At least a few seconds can be saved by wriggling in and out of traffic. Hours can be saved by floorboarding the accelerator on seemingly clear stretches of roads. We want to be able to ask you, "How was the vacation?" We can't if you don't make it home and back. Sure, we know you are a safe driver even if you do drive a bit faster than most persons. We'd be willing to trust you with our lives. An amendment to the A.S.C. constitution will be presented to the student body Wednesday, April 19 on the ballot with All Student Council officers. The amendment would take away the "non-political" vote of the nine organizational representatives. Sleeping Beauties by Billie Stover SIXTY-TWO HUNDRED If the amendment is passed by "a majority of those voting," the nine representatives will be removed from the council. the nine representatives will be removed. Even if the amendment fails to get enough votes, the representatives will remain to vote only on issues the "elected representatives" consider non-political. As we understand the set-up, one representative is selected from the Y.W.C.A., Y.M.C.A., Independent Students association, Interfraternity council, Negro Students association, Associated Women students—one independent and one Greek, Men's Interdormitory council, and the Cooperative Student Housing association. As we understand the reason for selecting a representative from each of these groups, the representatives sit with the student council, take part in discussions, offer constructive criticism, and report back to their respective groups. As we understand it, the purpose of allowing organizational representatives to take part in the council's business was to give every kind of student representation on the A.S.C. As every student other than the day-old newcomer knows, the A.S.C. has long been run by a minority group of students. The organizational representatives plan was an attempt to give all students a voice in the A.S.C. The plan was one of those "checks and balances" so necessary in any democratically run organization. Now we have a proposed amendment to remove this "check and balance." The amendment will be up for vote April 19. The amendment will be passed if it gets only a majority vote of those voting. Judging by the number of students who have voted in past elections, this would only need to be fifteen or eighteen per cent of the entire student body. . . some 1300 students. We predict that—unless the Hill caves in, or something equally as drastic occurs, on or before April 19—the amendment will pass. And with it will pass anything like a coherent plan for representing all the students enrolled in the University. Re-Survey Of Old Mason-Dixon Line Reveals Wrong Belief In Demarcation The Mason-Dixon Line, whose reported deterioration through lost or defaced markers has resulted in Maryland state legislation providing for tentative re-survey, is one of the most famous and least understood of world boundaries. Popularly known as the division between the North and the South, the Mason-Dixon Line is erroneously believed to have originated around the Civil War period, notes the National Geographic Society. Its significance is presumed to have carried over from the time when it separated slave and free states, or marked the limits of secession. Actually, this line was first surveyed during colonial days. Stretching along what is now the southward Pennsylvania-northern Maryland border (with an offshore southward between Maryland and Delaware), it was established to settle disputes over the extent of the adjacent Penn and Calvert land grants. TODAY'S MAIL Into The Act Sir: De With regard to Pete North's editorial which appeared in the U.D.K. on Monday, April 3, I would like to make some corrections. He writes of the "so-called Independent party." At the present time there is no Independent party, so-called or otherwise. Any person who is not affiliated with a political party and petitions the A.S.C. to appear on a ballot, is classified as "independent-non-partisan" whether this person be Greek or Independent. The only organization which solely represents the Independent student at this time is the I.S.A. However, this organization has not and does not intend to present a slate for spring election, nor does the organization endorse any candidate or candidates. We are not a political organization and do not wish to be construed as such. Richard Krimminger President, I.S.A. I Agree Ed. Note: We commend Mr. Krimminger on his letter. It is so refreshing after the ones we have received the past few days. However, we would like to suggest he read over Mr. North's editorial. Nowhere does Mr. North mention the I.S.A. Yet perhaps it is useful to remind students that the Independents Students association is strictly non-political. We would also like to remind students that the U.D.K. is strictly non-political. Dear Kansans: I should like to join Professor Malone in the hope that consideration will be given to calling the new fieldhouse Naismith-Allen. Some fifty-odd years ago, I was often taken, for the lack of a baby sitter, to watch some of the faculty members play the new game under Professor Naismith's tutelage. The games were played in an old skating rink far north on Vermont street. The baskets were literally peach baskets from which the ball was retrieved after a score, by means of a ladder. One of the ardent players was professor Clarence McClung of the zoology department, who later became chairman at Pennsylvania university. And so, you see from my generation's viewpoint, Naismith belongs on that fieldhouse, too. Yours, Oreta Moore Shaw, '12 511 Denver Road Bartlesville, Okla. University Daily Hansan News Room Adv. Room K.U. 251 K.U.376 Member of the Kansas Press Assn. National Press Association. Press Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave. New York City. Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS James Morris Editor in Chief Doris Greenbank James Shriver Managing Editor Business Mgr. Asst. Man. Editors Norma Hunsinger Kay O'Connor John Hill Ralph Hemmway City Editor Edward Chapin Feature Editor Francis Kelley Photograph Editor Frankie Wats Rhonda Welker Society Editor Faye Wilkinson Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner Cr. Mgr. Yvonne Josserand Nat. Adv. Mgr. Forrest Bellus Little Man On Campus B. K. This will make a good test question: "Compare social psychology to the Psychology of Music." But when you make up the quiz make the question read: "Collate the formation of social stereotypes and the effect of the social environment of the individual with the psychological principles underlying the musical arts." RULES FOR ALL MEAN Books For Everybody by Charles F. Reiner Periodically, students bring charges against the library because of the difficulty in checking out books, many of which have been held by faculty members for years. Here are some facts: Non-reference books may be checked out by students at the circulation desk for two weeks. They may be rechecked for another two-week period. If overdue, the student is fined at the rate of two cents per day. Any full-time instructor may check out any number of these non-reference books for an indefinite length of time. He pays no fine. The library staff only requests that the book be returned when he leaves the University or dies. At present, one professor has 132 library books in his possession. Eighty-one of these were withdrawn in 1933. Some professors have had books checked out for a longer period. The majority, however, are more considerate and return books promptly. If any student asks for one of these books, the librarian is authorized to tell him the name of the professor holding the book. Students have the privilege of going to the instructor and asking that the book be returned. Seldom does the library staff recall a book from a professor for a timid student. Names of students who have a book checked out are not revealed. Reference books, bound periodicals and rare books may not be checked out of the building by a student except when the student brings a letter from a faculty saying why the student must check out the books. Violation of this rule brings a 25 cent per day fine for the student culprit. However, the same books are available to faculty members for two weeks with no fine assessable on overdue books. Admittedly, faculty members need to check out books. But students also need some of these same books for research. A slight change of policy which would make more books more easily available would be desirable. Faculty members should be allowed to check out non-reference books for only two weeks at a time—as required of students. Keeping of library records would be facilitated and fewer books would be lost. Reference books should be available to full-time instructors for two weeks with permission to recheck them for another period as is the present case. Recall of books needed immediately should be as emphatic to faculty members as to students. The University library, containing more volumes than any other library in the state, exists for the use of faculty and students. An outdated set of rules should not be allowed to cause undue inconvenience to any student or faculty member. Son Follows Father Burlington, Vt.—(U.P.)-It was a pleasant day for policeman Charles P. Collins when he was given the task of breaking in a new special officer. The recruit was his son Leo. Broom Frightens Cat Glenwood, Ga. — (U,P) — Mrs. Azuba Page hopes some time to find out just what horror a broom holds for her cat. Every time Mrs. Page starts to sweep, the cat scoots up the chimney and out by the way of the roof. FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Church Schedule CHURCH OF CHRIST 1501 New Hampshire W. T. Carter, minister Bible study, 10 a. m. Morning worship, 11 a. m. Sermon: "Doing Things Decently and in Order." Training class, 7 p. m. Lord's Supper, 11:45 a. m. Training class, 7 p.m. Evening service, 8 p. m. Sermon: "Making Friends." Ladies Bible class, 2 p. m. Wednesday. Wednesday Bible classes, 8 p.m. FIRST BAPTIST 8th and Kentucky George C. Fetter, minister Sunday school, 9:45 a.m Morning worship, 11 a. m. Sermon: "The Risen Lord of Life." Anthem: "By Early Morning Light!" by Dick- inson. Solo: "I Know That My Redeemer Liveth" by Handle. Mrs. M. R. Price is soloist. Quartet: "The Weary Soldiers Sleeping Lay" by Demarest. Singing will be Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thomas, Mrs. Paul Turner, and Mr. Fascal Davis. New members will be received into the church. FIRST CHRISTIAN 1000 Kentucky H. M. Sippel, minister Worship service, 10:45 a.m. Sermon: "The Power of an Indestructible Life" Anthom by choir: "Christ is Risen," by Ely. Offeryotolo卖 by Stanley Norman: "The Resurrection" by Curran. 12th and Connecticut Lester Hamilton, pastor FREE METHODIST Easter program, 10 a.m. Greetings by superintendent, Dr. Clarence Grothaus, Recitations by Norma Tate and Marilyn Sellers. Easter songs by the Junior department. King of Men" by Prof. Joseph Bemer. Painter by Deanne Workman. Sermonette by pastor. Dismissal at 11:30 a.m. Young Peoples' Missionary society, 7 p. m. Evening service, 7:45 p. m. Sr. and Verma- Theodore H. Aszman, minister FIRST PRESBYTERIAN 3th and Vermont Theodore H. Ashman, m. m. Easter service, 11 a. m. M. Sermon: "The Change That Easter Means." Special Easter music. TRINITY LUTHERAN IRINITY LUTHERAN 1245 New Hampshire R. W. Albert, pastor Sunday school, 9:45 a. m. R. W. Albert, pastor Sunday school, 9:45 a.m. Two identical Worship services, 8:30 a. m. and 11 a. m. Sermon: "The Easter Challenge." Easter music. ST. JOHN'S CATHOLIC 1229 Vermont Rev. George Towle, pastor Masses, 8 a.m., 9 a.m., 10 a.m. Official Bulletin Daily Kansan Classified Ads Phone K.U.376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the customer must be called in during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University of Georgia's journalism bldg., not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. Civil Rights Coordinating Committee, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 18, 111 Strong hall. Friday, April 7 Classified Advertising Rates FOR SALE One day Three days Five days 25 words or less ... 35c 65c 90c Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c 1948 PONTIAC convertible, hydromatic, beater, rear windows extras. See Boyd phone 639. PURE-BREED black cocker puppies. Six puppies registered. Photographed. 2184W, 915 Ailsa. CAMERAS: Argus 35mm. Kodak 620. German 620 or 120. One pair x 8 x 30 binoculars. Call Del Robot, Pn. 2102. 17 CHEVROLET 1940; Tudor; good tires; good upoilability; clean inside and out. See at Vern Schneider Motors 1010 Phone, 4242 7 ARCHTECTS! We now have the Graphi Solarmeter. The quick way to determine the angle of sun rays in the Northern Hemisphere. Only $3.00 at Studen 18 SHOP BOSS SHOP DRESS UP your watch with a tinted glass of non-reflectable crystal. Save here on repairs. Madsen's Watch Shop; 12 E. Phone 47, BUICK 1980; (discount) 2 door, radio; neater; white sidewalls; new. Also others. See at Sy Barncord Motors 197 and Mass. "SELECTED Letters of William Allen White" edited by Walter Johnson; regularly $3.75—on sale at 49c. Student Union Book Store. 7 CHEVROLET 1936 Standard; good paint and chews; heat seat; covers; over-all appearance good. See at Sy Barncardo Motors, 19th, and Mass. 7 MACHINE DITCHING. House foundations, water and sewer ditches. Ditches are 16 in. wide in 34 deep. Reasonableness depends on John Tabler 2192 or Bob McKeinny, 253J7. BOOK-EASE, a collapsible book holder. Can be used on a desk, in bed, anywhere. Now only 98c at your Student Union Book Store. 21 PERFECT for Any Babe! We have cuddly bunnies and bouncy rubberized bunnies for Easter. Come in and pick on one of our items. Dixie Carmel, Corp. Shop, 842 Mass. FORD 36, four door sedan. New up- bolstered doors. Sportier condition. Inquire 714 Illinois. 7 UNDERWOOD. Standard, No. 5 type- writer. Good condition; Bargain for someone. See at University of Kansas Press. 7 THESES MATERIALS! All weights of thesis quality typing paper, carbon paper, and typewriter ribbons. Student Union Book Store. M4 1948. 26 ft. M-system trailer house with electric refrigerator and water heater, forced air heating stove and butane cooking stove. 1316 Kentucky. 17 PONTIAC 1939 Fordor sedan; radio, heater, sound. See THE MASS. Phone (718) 250-6744. Co-feature DODGE 1941, club coupe; radio; heater; and tail lights. By Sax Barincic Motors 19th and 7, 1950. FINEST TELEVISION -Best in sets and nerials at lowest prices. New shipments are available by email. Enterson table model set at $159.50. Easy (easy). Bowman Radio, Electronic. Late News Events Color Cartoon "Greeting Bait" Edly ARNOLD "FEUDIN' RHYTHM" PENNY SINGLETON - ARTHUR LAKE Today-Saturday "Fence Riders" "Tyrant of the Sea" BLONDIE'S HERO VARSITY SUN-MON-TUES Phone 132 For Sho Time est Emmerson table model set at KISHA 836 Vermont. Phone 128. 836 Vermont. Phone 128. RIDERS wanted: Leaving for Wichita every Friday at 4 p.m. Returning Sunday evening. Please call between 7-9 p.m. Harry Shultz. Ph. 3101-J. 17 WANTED: Ride to St. Louis Saturday morning April 8; Will share driving and expenses. Call 444; Wayne Helgesen; luxury L.A. 7 WANTED Ride, Kansas City to Lawrence and return. Monday thru Saturday. Will join car pool. Call J. Deviney. 3478W. 7 TRANSPORTATION DRIVING Chicago over Easter Holiday Riders wanted. Phone Bettie or George, Marcus. WANTED Riders to Chicago. Leaving Cleveland. Sunday, April 16. Call R. L. Kite, 3551 GLASSES, skin rim with gold trim. Probably lost in vicinity of Frank Strong hall. hall 581, Charity Fischer, 1225 Oread. 18 CHAIN with 4 keys and a silver plate with Kansas printed on it. Reward: if found please call Penny at 2204 after 5 o'clock. 18 LOST ONE brown herringbone tweed overcoat. Either 426 Lindley or Lindley Library, March 28th. Reward. Call Ted Beaver. 1671-B or 730. 17 ONE KEY ring with some particularly valuable keys on it. Call 3865W. 18 PM 1 baseball球 near 13th Oread. $5 reward to finder. Call 3662RJ. 12 YM Sportsmen Must Contact Riggs Men interested in playing baseball, tennis, horseshoes, or golf for Y.M.C.A. contact Frank Tinken, College sophomore, or M. David Riggs, general secretary of the Y.M.C.A., in the Union building. FOR RENT HEY MEN! on you beat this? Nice private rooms on second floor, cooking facilities including dishes, etc in base-ware for $5.00 weeek each, 1490 Rhoe Island. ACCOUNTANT wanted by University of Kansas Press; half-time april 15. Req.: Master's degree. Applicant to take Civil Service exam when giving journalism building. See Mr. Rhythe journalism building. BUSINESS SERVICE TYPING: Call Hazel Stanley, 2865M for prompt experienced service. $80% Mass. WANTED THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. Complete overhaul, engine tune-up, body and fender repair, paint correction. Phone 785 or 1821R t JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are ours. Our inventory includes anything for fur, flin and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Conn. St. Ph. 418. tf TYPING: Neat, accurate, rapid. Regular notes. Prompt service. Service Apr. 128. TYPING: Trees, Term Papers, Reports, Notes, etc. Prompt Service. Mrs. Sheehan, 1028 Vermont. Ph. 1168R. t* TYPING: Term papers, notebooks, letters, work. Prompt attention. Work. Regular notes. Promt attention Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601 PRESTON FOSTER NOW SHOWING! ENDS SATURDAY STARTS DAK ANDREWS Darryl P. Zammitkis THE PURPLE HEART SATURDAY OWL SHOW 11:15 LLOYD NOLAN WILLIAM BENDIX THEY Click LIKE A KEY IN A LOCK! CLARK GABLE LORETTA YOUNG Moon Colburn Movie KEY TO THE CITY MARILYN MAYHURT SUNDAY - ADDED FUN - ADDED FUN Color Cartoon "EACH DAWN I CROW" Latest News Continuous Shows. Open 12:45 Patee Library To Remain Open For Vacation Watson library will be open from 9 n.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, April 10 through Friday, April 14, C. M. Baker, director of libraries, announced today. Sunday, April 16, the library will be open from 6 p.m. until 10 p.m. The Western Civilization library will be open from 9 a.m. until noon each day except Sundays throughout Easter vacation. The Law library will be open from 9 a.m. to noon, and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. every day except Saturday. Lindley library will observe the same hours as the law library except that it will be open Sunday, April 16 from 6 p.m. until 10 p.m. These same hours apply to the engineering library. JAYHAWKER Phone 10 for Sho Time Tonite - Saturday "Blue Grass Of Kentucky" Prevue Saturday 11:15 SUNDAY for 4 days CROSBY RIDING HIGH Late News Events Bugs Bunny "Big House Bunny" HURRY Giant Cartoon Circus 5 color cartoons Last times LAUREL & HARDY in "WAY OUT WEST" T-O-N-I-T-E Wild Fury . . . Wide open thrills James Ellison Mary Beth Hughes SATURDAY SATURDAY MIDNITE SHOW LAST of the WILD HORSES In Glenny SEPIATONE! SUNDAY and MONDAY THE MOST WHIMSICAL TALE OF THE TIMES! GARY COOPER · ANN SHERIDAN in Good Sam with RAY COLLINS · EDMUND LOWE JOAN LORRING GoodSam AUTHORITY SUNDAY EVENING AT 6 p.m. EASTER EGG HUNT FREE PRIZES GALORE! Drive Out Early And Join In The Fun! Follow the cars 2—Shows Nightly—2 for the kiddies 1/2 Mile west on Hi-way 59 750 340 250 Lawrence DRIVE - IN Theatre For show times—Phone 260 Give Your White Elephants 'Green Backs' With KANSAN Classifieds. NOW SHOWING! ENDS SATURDAY "AMBUSH" ROBERT TAYLOR JOHN HODIAK-ARLENE DAHL Also Pete Smith Special — Cartoon — News STARTS SAT.OWL 11:15 SUNDAY "In This . . . My Greatest Performance ... I Wasn't Alone!" - Belvedere Clifton WEBB Myrna Jeanne LOY·CRAIN CHEAPER BY THE DOZEN COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR Clifton WEBB Myrna Jeanne LOY·CRAIN ALSO Color Cartoon Latest News Granada PHONE 946 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE EIGHT FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1950 17 Candidates For Jayhawker Queen Chosen Seventeen University women have been chosen as candidates for the 1950 Jayhawker yearbook queen and attendants. Judges making the selections were George Docking, president of the First National Bank of Lawrence; Miss Nancy Corrigan, instructor of the Jayhawk Flying club and former model, and Jules V. Sikes, football coach. The queen and attendants will be chosen from photographs of the 17 candidates by John Robert Powers, New York model agency executive; Harold Ross, editor of the New Yorker magazine, and Bob Hope, movie and radio star. Jonell Asherta, Nancy Anderson, Priscilla Barron, Patricia Edson, Alice Ann Sellars, Margaret Herschberger, Nancy Seewell and Margery Waddell, College sophomores; Joyce Emick, Jerre Mueller and Jean Taylor, College freshmen, Dagmar Hasalova, fine arts senior. The candidates are Jeanne Parrott and Corrine Temple, College sen- sor to college counselor, education seni- ner; Betty Martin and Jeanne Shafer; College juniors. Science Group Elects 24 Men Twenty-four new members were chosen at the annual spring meeting of Phi Lambda Upsilon, honorary chemistry and related fields fraternity, president Luther Hall announced. The newly elected members are Russel Claude Waters, Mark Martin Jones, Grannis Samuel Johnson, Harold Mead Hubbard, Joseph Kyle Thompson, Earl Arthur, Abrahamson, John R. Lund, Robert Henry Glazier, Robert Desmond Gibson, Jack Lewis Beal, William Lewis Nobles, Fred S. Hirskorn, Carl E. vonWaaden, graduate students; Wallace D. Holderman, Arthur Gene Peterson, Thomas James Fritzlen, College seniors; Edwin Dale Hornbaker, Dan Horace Buite, Jr., Robert Albert West, College juniors; and Frank I. Reynolds, engineering senior. Four faculty members were also elected to membership. They are Duane Wenzel, assistant professor of pharmacy, Vincent Valleroy, instructor in chemical engineering, R. C. Mills associate professor of biochemistry and Dwight Mulford, assistant professor of biochemistry. The industrial chemist is the backbone of the entire chemical industry, Dr. Shelby Miller, associate professor of chemical engineering, told Chemistry club members Thursday. Industrial Chemist Backs Industry Dr. Miller, speaking on "The Industrial Chemist—What Is He?" maintained that the industrial chemist's greatest asset is not his technical ability but his capacity to get along with co-workers. He must have a high sense of responsibility and do all things expected of him by his employer and company. Chemistry club will meet again on Thursday, April 27. Student Quartet To Sing On Television Show Tonight A quartet of University students will sing on a television broadcast over WDAF-TV at 9 tonight. The 15-minute program will be unsponsored. Singing in the quartet will be Bernadine Read, fine arts senior; Todd Seymour, and Robert Cooper College of the Island Kamprath College sophomore. WEATHER Kansas—Cloudy, windy and turning colder tonight, with scattered light rain in the extreme north portion late tonight. JONATHAN HARRIS ENJOYING A COKE at their frequent get-together on the sun porch of Watkins hall are Kenneth, Constance, Alfred, and Keith Moore. Even though they see each other on the campus every day, they try to plan a get-together once or twice each week. A minor migration from Kansas City, Mo., to Lawrence ended in September, 1949, when the last member of the Moore family Kenneth, College freshman, enrolled at the University. Four Members Of Family Are University Students Alfred, Constance, Keith, and Kenneth Moore attended the same grade school, were graduated from Northeast Junior and Senior High schools in Kansas City, Mo. and are now attending the University. Constance, College junior who is majoring in sociology, was graduated from Southwest Baptist college at Bolivar, Mo., and worked three years in Kansas City before coming to the University. Although Connie, 24, is working her way through school by doing stenographic work in the chancellor's office and managing house duties at Watkins hall, she still has had time to make the dean's honor roll. Connie frequently invites one of her brothers over on Sunday to eat a home-cooked meal. Kenneth claims, "She's the best cook in the family." But Keith says, "It's not like Mom's." Each week "Mom" sends food for their Sunday evening meal, and the four gather at the boy's rooming house to eat meatloaf, roast, or chicken, and apples, oranges, and cookies. Alfred, education senior, served in the navy, then entered the University in 1946 to study medicine. Preferring sports to medicine, he later changed his course to physical education. He is a member of Sasnak and the Archery club. Blondhaired, 22-year-old Al is doing practice teaching at Olathe and plans to graduate in June. Keith and Kenneth, College sop- homores, are 20-year-old fraternal twins, but they don't bother with identical dress. Although both have blue eyes, Keith's hair is dark while Kenneth's is blond. Whenever Watkins hall has a party, Connie invites all three brothers. Occasionally the four spend two or three hours talking over a bowl of chili on Friday nights. Usually they visit home together on holidays, but never on weekends. Keith, who is 6 feet, 4 inches tall, entered the University in September, 1948. Kenneth, two inches shorter than his twin, entered the University in September, 1949. Both served in the army. Connie is particularly anxious for summer to arrive. "I'm going to get married in August or September to a pre-med student," she explained. "Next year we will attend the University of Missouri." Nancy Lund, business junior, was installed as president of Phi Chi Theta, professional business sorority, Thursday evening. Kenneth and Keith own cars which are in common use among the four. However, Kenneth says, "Keith is a little tight with his." Keith wants to work in Alaska or South America during the summer, and Kenneth is trying to coax Al into going to California to work with him. Other officers installed were; vicepresident, Betty J Bloomer; business junior; secretary, Betty Osenberger; business junior; treasurer, Joann Webster, business senior; reporter, Zara Ann Zoellner, business junior. Officers Installed By Phi Chi Theta Four men from the University have been admitted to the graduate course in city manager training Dr. Ethan Allen, director of government research, announced today. They are Bobby Collison, graduate student; Thomas Herring, College senior; Leland Nelson, business senior; and John Young, engineering senior. City Training Jobs Named Samuel Ostertag, Wichita university; and David Koester, Oregon State college were also accepted to enter the advanced training. In addition, three city manager training scholarships, each worth $1,000., were awarded to Stanley Fisher, Baker university; Bruce Love, Wooster college, and Lawrence Larson, University of South Dakota The scholarships cover the last nine months of the 18 month course. Trainees will spend the first nine months at the University taking graduate courses. They spend the last nine months as apprentices in cities that use the city manager form of government. This is the third year that the scholarships have been awarded. They are provided by a grant given the University in 1948 by the Andrew Carnegie foundation. Alpha Kappa Psi professional commerce fraternity will have its annual spring formal dance at 8:30 p.m. today at the Lawrence Country Club. Music for the dance will be 'turned by' Jim Sellands band. The educational clinic will open new classes in reading and study methods on Monday, April 17. The non-credit course is offered free to students wishing to improve their reading ability. Reading Classes To Begin April 17 Further information may be obtained from 3 to 5 p.m. daily in 18 Fraser hall. World News At Press Time Hollywood, April 7—(U.P.)-Walter Huston, veteran actor, died today. He was 66 yesterday. Walter Huston Dies Huston, who won an academy award last year for his part in "The Treasure of Sierra Madre," died of a blood clot. He died at the Beverly Hills hotel. His son, John, who directed him in his oscar-winning role, was at his side when he died. Earthauakes Shake Italy Leghorn, Italy, April 7—(U.P.) Five earthquakes of unusual violence rocked this city of 125,000 today and terrified residents fleed into the streets in panic. No damages or injuries were reported. Mercy-Killer Convicted Allentown, Pa., April 7 — (U.P.) Harold A. Mohr, 36-year-old tannery worker, was convicted of voluntary manslaughter today in the mercy-killing of his blind, cancer-ridden brother. The verdict carries a possible six to 12 year term. Binagaio Killer Sought Kansas City, Mo., April 7—(U.P.) Police questioned scores of hoodlums and bigwig politicians today, racing against time to find the expert assassins who killed Democratic loss Charles Binaggio and his hechman. Charles Gargotta. The investigators feared that unless the gunmen were found quickly Kansas City might be in for a political and gang war in which many others would be killed. American Seeks Red Asylum Prague, Czechoslovakia, April 7 —(U.P)—George S. Wheeler, 42, of Rolling Bay, Wash., asked the Communist government today to allow him and his family to remain in Czechoslovakia as political refugees. Wheeler did not make clear whether he intended to renounce his American citizenship. He told a press conference that he and his wife decided to ask for refuge here because the United States is fostering the revival of "Gestapo and Nazi methods in Germany." Austrian Group To Give Program Of Folk Music The colorful culture of Austria will be portrayed by 32 Austrian students in the musical production, "A Night In Old Vienna," at 8 p.m. Wednesday, April 19, in Hoch auditorium. The group will present a pro- $ \textcircled{+} $ gram of songs and dances culled from the folkways of all Austria—from the Swiss Alps to the Hungarian border. The students will be dressed in authentic costumes which have been loaned to them by the provincial museums of Austria. The Austrian students have been chosen because of their high scholarship, musical ability, personality, and character. They represent every field of study in Austrian universities. The group was organized by Dr. Oskar Bock, lecturer at the University of Vienna with the hope of introducing Americans to Austria and permitting Austrian students to learn about life in America. It is a non-profit organization, and the students are interested only in making their expenses. SCHWEIZER The students will arrive on Tuesday, April 18, and will visit classes of children in the district to a member of Associated Women students will make plans ahead of time Left to right; Dr. Suzanne Polsterer, Karl Martitsch, and Brigitta Reichel. Tickets may be purchased at the dean of women's office, from A.W.S. house representatives, at Strong hall, from Ku Ku representatives, or at the door before the performance Wednesday. with instructors of classes the students will visit. A. W. S. is sponsoring the group to earn money for its memorial scholarship fund. Two Fellowships Granted By AEC For KU Study The atomic energy commission has awarded predoctoral research fellowships to two graduate students in chemistry for study at the University. They are Richard M. Wallace, formerly of Lawrence, and Harry J. Christoffers, formerly of Seattle, Wash. Both have been teaching physical chemistry at other colleges the past two years. They will return to continue research projects already begun in the chemistry department. The A.E.C. fellowships pay between $1,600 and $2,000 plus University fees for the calendar year, depending upon the fellow's family responsibilities. Mr. Wallace has been teaching at East Tennessee State college. He has a master's degree from the University. Mr. Christoffers, who has a master's degree from the University of Washington, has taught at the University of North Dakota. Mr. Christoffers will study under Dr. Paul W. Gilles, assistant professor of chemistry. He will study the stability of the various tungsten halides. Mr. Wallace will study under Dr. William J. Argersinger, associate professor of chemistry, on paraffin chain salt solutions. Both rates of surface equilibration in men will start their studies in June. They will be the first graduate students to study at the University under the A.E.C.'s predoctoral program. The purpose of the grants is to enable students with unusual scientific ability to gain further graduate training and do research for the doctorate degree in one of the physical sciences. Research problems need only be sufficiently related to atomic energy to prepare the fellow for possible employment in some scientific capacity by the atomic energy commission. Wearing her 900 years lightly but proudly, Oslo will turn back the pages of history this spring when she celebrates her birthday with festivities starting Sunday, May 14th notes the National Geographic Society. Oslo, capital city of Norway, is like a modern grandmother—young, pioneering, and beautiful in spite of her age. Mayors from the world's principal cities have been invited to attend. The new Oslo City hall, under construction for nearly 15 years, will be opened to the public for the first time. The latest group of Gustav Vigeland's remarkable statues, more than 50 years in the making, will be in place at Oslo's Frogner park. Two couples were chosen by elimination play to represent K.U. in the Big Seven Bridge tournament Thursday night. The four students who will compete in the tournament at the University of Missouri Friday, April 21 and Saturday April 22 are: James Feitz, business senior; Hubert Berger, education sophomore; Herman Lohrengel, education junior; and Earl Watson, first year law. Although the birthday commemoration will be climaxed on Wednesday, May 17, Norway's Constitution Day, special exhibits depicting the history and activities of the city, and a series of cultural events will continue throughout the summer. Oslo To Celebrate Its 900th Birthday Four KU Students In Bridge Tourney Vacation Closing Hours Set Closing hours for women remaining at the University over Easter vacation will be 12 midnight from Saturday, April 8 through Sunday, April 16. The regular closing time of 12:30 a.m. will be observed today. Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks. University Daily Kansan Monday. April 17, 1950 STUDENT NEWSPAPER .Lawrence, Kansas Wichita Student To Be Queen Of KU Relays Joyce Lawrence, a Municipal University of Wichita sophomore, will reign as queen of the 25th annual Kansas Relays at the University Friday and Saturday. The queen's attendants will be Marilyn Davis, a student from the Municipal University of Washburn, Topela, and Jean Jennings, a student from Kansas State college, Manhattan. The queen and her attendants were chosen from 32 candidates submitted by colleges and universities in Kansas. They were selected from photographs by Ken Neuman of the Neuman Photo laboratory, Kansas City, Mo., and Jack Stevens of Stevens Modeling school, Kansas City, Mo. University hostesses in the queen's court will be Jonell Ashcraft, College sophomore; Marilyn Ringler. College freshman; Jamie Estlack pharmacy senior; and Elaine Modrell, journalism junior. Miss Lawrence, an 18-year-old green-eyed brunette, is a member of the Sorosis sorority at Wichita university. She has also been selected as queen of the school yearbook, "Parnassus," this year. Conrad Gets $1,250Award The fellowship will also provide for payment of all fees. Walter Conrad, graduate student, has been awarded a $1,250 fellowship in mechanical engineering for the 1950-51 year at the University by the Stanolind Oil and Gas company, Tulsa, Okla., Chancellor Malott announced today. For the past two years Stanolind has maintained fellowships at KU for graduate students in chemistry. The company will provide fellowships at the following institutions for next year: California Institute of Technology, Pasadena; Louisiana State university, Baton Rouge; University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; University of Oklahoma, Norman; University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia; University of Texas, Austin; Texas A. and M., College Station; and Yale University, New Haven, Conn. Selections will be made by the schools with the co-operation of Stanolind. The fellowships will be awarded to those students considered most worthy of scholastic aid and best able to carry on advanced study in their respective fields. Engineers Plan Various Displays Among the exhibits to be shown at the 1950 annual Engineering Exposition, which opens Friday, will be the displays of the mechanical engineering department. In Marvin hall this department will show various machine designs, time and motion studies, methods of motion transmissions, industrial plant designs and layouts, and mechanical engineering problems that confront the present-day engineer. In the mechanical engineering laboratory, directly behind Marvin hall, automotive, diesel, and steam engines, and steam turbines will be demonstrated in operation. THE HISTORY OF THE MUSIC BY RAYMOND LEE AND SAMMIE CUNNINGHAM 1948 Joyce Lawrence Rain Soaks Dry Midwest Chicago, April 17—(U.P.)The former dust bowl soaked up a crop-nourishing rain and damaging floods fanned out over the northern plains today. Farmers from western Texas to Nebraska and from the Rockies east across the wheat belt cheered a general rain which eased fears that dust bowl days would return. In North Dakota, melting snow and ice gorged streams and rivers and sent them rampaging over their banks across the lowlands. Spring weather spread across most of the nation, but winter lingered on in the northeastern states where below-freezing temperatures were recorded. recorded. In the southwest, the hardest hit wheat area in Kansas, the moisture equalled or exceeded the total amount that had fallen there since the first of the year. The Oklahoma panhandle wheat country was benefited too, as was the Texas areas around Amarillo. The U.S. Weather bureau reported that rainfall during a 48-hour period averaged one inch or more from Lubbock, Tex., north to Goodland, Kan. Lesser amounts were reported farther south in Texas and north into Nebraska and eastern Wyoming. Agriculture officials said the downpours were worth "many millions of dollars," and would alleviate at least partially the drought that has plagued wide areas of the central and southern plains. However, they were hesitant to speculate whether the rain would end recurring dust storms, India Won't Go Communistic Malott Declares Communism is not a major threat in the sub-continent of India, Chancellor Deane W. Malott told members of the Council on World Affairs of Greater Kansas City at a luncheon meeting April 15. "Out of a population of nearly 400 million, there is an estimated Communist minority of only some 80,000 people," he said. "Nor does India appear to be taking leadership in the formation of a southern Asiatic bloc at the present time." The most serious immediate problem in India, Chancellor Malott pointed out, is the critical disintegration of relations between Pakistan and India, now temporarily stabilized as a result of the New Delhi conference between Jawaharlal Nehru, India's prime minister, and Liaquet Ali Khan, the prime minister of Pakistan. "Restless Asia has become a critical center of the world's history in the making." Chancellor Malott called attention to the urgent desire for help which India's men of affairs think essential to bulwark Asia against communism. He stressed the almost hopeless problem presented by India's newly-won independence and subsequent partition. "It is 12,000 miles to India, but there on the other side of the world is a land of strange contrasts—of fabulous wealth and incredible poverty, of ignorance of the masses and great wisdom and learning on the part of the leaders." Chancellor Malott, said. "There is contrast of modern technology and science and a way of life which has changed little since the first century of Christianity. "It is a land of mystery, of hidden restlessness awaiting a new catalyst, of determination to stand on an equal footing in the congress of nations, a great force for good or for evil in the future of the world." The Kansas department of the American Legion auxiliary will offer a $300 scholarship to a Kansas girl for her freshman year at the University, it was announced today by Chancellor Deane W. Malott. Legion To Award $300 Scholarship Mrs. Harold Goble of Riley, president of the Kansas department, expressed the Auxiliary's desire that the winner be selected for scholarship, character, personality and financial need. Preference will be given daughters of veterans. Announcements Deadline Extended The April 15 deadline for ordering senior announcements has been extended till Thursday, Harold Swartz, student activities accountant, announced April 15. He said that seniors have been very slow in ordering their announcements and this is their "last chance." The announces are priced from 15 to 60 cents apiece. Seniors who wish to order announcements should do so as soon as possible at the business office, 123 Strong hall. Engineers Open Show Friday Friday will be a big day for engineering students as the 1950 Engineering Exposition opens for an expected record breaking attendance. This annual student display opens at 10 a.m. Friday and continues through 6 p.m. Sunday. Among the many exhibits to be seen at the exposition will be a German jet plane, target plane, ram jet model, and engine cutaway displays. Other projects to be presented by the aeronautical department are horizontal and vertical wind tunnels with airplane models, stress concentration demonstration, propellor vibration demonstration, torsional membrane analysis, radio controlled airplane model, and flight instruments. An interesting model exhibited by the mining and metallurgical engineering department will be a three inch experimental cupola, which is a small furnace used for melting metals to be cast. This cupola was built by Kermit Oswalt, engineering junior, as a replica of one built by the McWane Pipe company of Birmingham, Ala. This three inch cupola is believed to be the world's smallest. It is constructed to scale of the larger ones and performs the same as the larger units. On hand at the exposition will be students from the engineering drawing department to exhibit finished plates from Engineering Drawing I and II classes, evolution of an article from drawing to the finished product, work with various drafting and lettering instruments and slide rule demonstrations. WEATHER KANSAS—Partly cloudy west mostly cloudy with showers today and tonight. Tomorrow partly cloudy. Showers extreme southeast; continued mild. Highs today 55 to 65. Sculpturing Displays Shown In Strong Twenty metal panels demonstrating the basic steps in making a statue from a sketch to the finished product are being displayed on the third floor of Strong hall. The panels, showing William Zorach, sculptor, as he makes the statue, were taken from illustrations in Life magazine and are one of a series of exhibitions prepared by the editors of that magazine. Ater choosing a pose from his sketches, he is shown building a basic support of aluminum tubing and copper wire for his figure. He then prepares his clay by pounding it with a wooden block and by handling it to feel its bulk, weight, and its pliability. editors or that magician. The first panel shows Mr. Zorach in his shirt sleeves and coveralls, sketching a pose of a nude. Finishing this, the sculptor builds his figure by coiling six inch strips of clay around the wire skeleton. With his shirt sleeves rolled up and his glasses on, Mr. Zorch is seen refining the contours of his clay model with a wooden block. He then sprays his clay figure to keep it moist. Ready to cast a plaster from the original clay mould, Mr Zorch inserts metal blades, called shims, into the clay in such a fashion that the plaster, which will later be put on, can be easily cracked open. The shims mark the dividing lines between the sections of the plaster mould. After the plaster mould is hardened. Mr. Zorach is seen tapping the plaster mould along the lines marked by the metal shims to loosen the sections. He then scoops out the soft clay figure with its wire skeleton from the inside of the plaster mould. Mr. Zorach discards the original clay figure but its impression remains in the plaster mould. When the inside surface of the mould is dry, the sculptor paints it with lemon oil so that when it is finally chipped off it will not adhere to the fixture. Mr. Zorach is then shown building the plaster mould by applying several coats of plaster on the outside of the clay figure. As the plaster dries he adds metal supports to keep it from cracking when it is later removed. Mr. Zorach seals the sections together and entirely fills the mould with wet plaster by pouring it through an opening in the base of the mould. When the plaster inside is hardened, he delicately chips off the mould and scrapes off the ridges left by the seams of the mould. The last panel is a picture of the finished plaster statue. Debaters Asked To West Point For Third Year The University has been selected to compete in the West Point Invitational Debate tournament for the third consecutive time, E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, said today. K. U. was the first school from this district to be chosen to take part in the contest which will be held at West Point, N.Y., Thursday through Saturday, April 27 to 29. Other schools in the district selected for the tournament are: Central State Teachers college, Stevens Point, Wis.; Luther college, Decorah, Iowa; and the College of St. Thomas, St. Paul, Minn. L. Edward Stollenwerck, College senior, and Kent Shearer, College junior, will represent K.U. in the tournament. At West Point the past year Stollenwerck tied for top individual speaker ranking. At this year's tournament the deaners will discuss both the affirmative and the negative on the following questions: 1. "the federal government should nationalize the agricultural industries"; "the federal government should nationalize or national defense"; 2. "the federal government should nationalize the steel industry"; and 4. "the federal government should nationalize to control business cycles." Thirty-four teams from all parts of the country will compete in the tournament. McNown In Piano Recital Bernard McNown, a candidate for a master of music degree in piano, will give a piano recital at 8 p.m. today in Strong auditorium. Mr. McNown, an instructor in piano, has for the past year studied under D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts. In 1944 he received his bachelor of music degree from the University. From 1945 to 1948 he was a member of the university of Baker university. Baldwin The recital will include advanced piano literature from Bach, Chopin, Brahms, and Debussy. KU To Vote Wednesday The annual spring election of class officers and president and district representatives of the All Student Council will be held Wednesday. Two students are candidates for president. They are Melvin Clingan, Pachacamac, and Wilma Shore, nonpartisan. Polls will be open from 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. All students who are regularly enrolled for the spring semester may vote. Students must show their identification cards at the polls to receive ballots. Polls will be in the basement of Strong, Fraser, Haworth, Green and Marvin. KU Man To Teach At Harvard Dr. Martin Scheerer, professor of psychology at the University, has been engaged to teach at the Harvard University summer school this year. Dr. Scheerer, who is completing his second year at K.U., will teach a course on the abnormal personality and conduct a seminar on theories of personality. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, APRIL 17. 1950 PAGE TWO 9,371 Veterans In Farm Course More than 9,300 veterans residing in northeastern Kansas and western Missouri are taking a course of on-the-farm training either under the G.I. bill or Public Law 16. This is the largest number of enrollees in this category since the inception of the farm training program in this area in July, 1946, the Kansas City Veterans administration said. Of the 9,371 farm trainees enrolled in this 52-county area, 1,169 are disabled veterans under Public Law 16, the V.A. office said. While many schools still have a waiting list of veterans desiring to take on-the-farm training as a full-time vocational pursuit, many other schools are now able to organize a new class when enough applications are received. Veterans interested in receiving this type of training should contact the local school or other institution where the course is offered. In addition to paying the schools tuition and other authorized expenditures, the VA may also pay to eligible veterans $67.50 to $77.50 a month while they are in training. Veterans interested may get assistance from the Veterans bureau Strong annex C. Art Museum Gets Italian Painting A large oil painting by one of the old Italian masters has been presented the University Endowment association by W. E. Tyler, cement company executive, 2350 Guilford Lane, Johnson county. The 4 by 5-foot oil is "The Falls at Terni" attributed to Salvator Rosa, who lived 1615-1673. Rosa was the greatest Italian landscape painter of the 17th century and a great source of 18th and 15th century romantic art. Dr. John Maxon, director of the Museum of Art, said the painting has historical significance in American art. It was brought to the United States in the 1850's by Henry Shaw, founder of the famous Shaw Botanical gardens in St. Louis. "The Falls at Terni" was thus a foundation for the first great private collection of art in the Midwest. In the picture are shown a herd of cattle, herdsmen, a bridge over the falls, a city on a hill, and on a distant hill the three crosses of the crucifixion. Temporarily the painting will hang in the library of the museum. Dr. Mason said it would be difficult to value the painting but that it ranks among the Museum's more valuable art works. The gift was made without restrictions. State Art Teachers To Honor Sandzen The Kansas State Art Teachers association will hold its annual meeting Saturday at Bethany college, Lindsburg, Arvid D. Jacobson, associate professor of design, and president of the association announced today. The 1950 meeting will honor Dr. Birger Sanden, internationally known Kansas artist and emeritus member of the Bethany faculty. After their morning business meeting and luncheon, the Lindsborg artists will hold open house in their studios. Lindsborg is noted for its art colony, and facilities for many art forms may be found in the studios there. They Were Not Practicing What They Were Preaching Fort Worth, Tex—(U.P.) —Safety-conscious police—in the midst of a crusade against traffic violators—wore red faces after one incident here. Officers C. R. Williams and J. H. Murphy were taking a prisoner to sir when they attempted to pass a car on a curve. The police vehicle hit loose gravel and careened into a curb, breaking a rear wheel. Official Bulletin Y. W.C.A. Executive board, 4 p.m today, Pine room, Union. Monday, April 17 Mathematical colloquium, 5 p.m. today, 203 Strong hall. Keith Moore "On A Class of Transformations." Inter-Dorm council, 5 p.m. today Monochoria hall. College Daze rehearsal, 7 tonight, Fraser theater. A.S.C. dinner meeting, 6 p.m. Tuesday, Dine-A-Mite Inn. Call Ed Perkins at 2102 by 9 tonight for reservations. Civil Rights Coordinating Committee, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, 111 Strong hall. Cheerleaders training school. 5 p.m. Wednesday, East side, Robinson gym. Engineers Wives, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday Kansas room, Union. Dessertbridge. Reorganization meeting of Wards T, P, and Z tonight, 206 Fraser hall. All unorganized men and ward members, past and present, urged to attend. Four students in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information will write editorials for the Salina Journal during the next two weeks, Charles G. Pearson, instructor in journalism announced today. Students To Write For Salina Journal ambilanced today. Whitley Austin, editor of the Salina newspaper, will be in the East attending meetings of the American Society of Newspaper Editors and the Associated Press. "My column will be written and directed for a fortnight by students at K.U." Mr. Austin told his readers before leaving. "The boys have been given free rein, short of libel and Communism." The four students are Bob Spangler, College senior; Harrison Madden and Louis Sciortino, journalism seniors, and John Bannigan, journalism junior. Ashes In Beer----15 Days Minneapolis — (J.P) — William C. Johnson told the judge that somebody put cigarette ashes in three beers and that's what made him drunk. He got 15 days in the workhouse. RISK'S Self-Service Laundry will Make Wash Day a Shopping Day! Leave your clothes with us. Our GE automatic washers will wash them for Only 25c a load Drying ... 15c . 613 Vermont Free Parking KU Models Of Homes On Exhibit Model homes, slides, and drawings are being used by the department of architecture to show how architects inject the spirit of their predecessors into their designs and planning at the Kansas City Home show this week. The exhibit is directed by three architecture students, Claude Van Doren, William M. Conrad, and James E. Northern, engineering seniors. The Greater Kansas City Centennial Home show opened April 15 in the Exhibition hall of the Municipal auditorium and will continue through Saturday. - The student forum along with the slides, drawings, and scale models explains home building from Kansas City's beginning in 1850 to the present day in a chronological history. The project is entitled "A Century of Progress in Kansas City Architecture." Special shows of the forum are being held each afternoon and evening. A town must have a population of 12,000 before it can be a city. "My cigarette? Camels, of course!" WITH SMOKERS WHO KNOW...IT'S CAMEL TURKISH O DON BLUE CIGARET Camels for Mildness Yes, Camels are SO MILD that in a coast-to-coast test of hundreds of men and women who smoked Camels—and only Camels—for 30 consecutive days, noted throat specialists, making weekly examinations, reported S NOT ONE SINGLE CASE OF THROAT IRRITATION due to smoking CAMELS! MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE the hills- "A City the moon of Spring Vacation Highlighted By Weddings, Engagements Higginbottom-Hickox Miss Zelina Higginbottom and Cpl. Max D. Hickox were married April 8 in Danforth chapel. Miss Higginbottom is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Higginbottom of Lawrence and Corporal Hickox is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Hickox of West Plains, Mo. Mrs. Hickox, a member of Sigma Kappa seority, is a senior in the School of Education. Corporal Hickox is stationed at Ft. Leavenworth. They will live at 621 Alabama street. Leigh-Fields Engaged Mrs. C. V. Leigh of Lawrence announces the engagement of her daughter, Julia Pearl, to Mr. Dale W. Fields, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Fields of McPherson. Miss Leigh, who was graduated from the University in 1949, is a physical education instructor, Great Bend Junior high school. Mr. Fields is a journalism senior. The wedding will be in August. Vickers-Bayles Miss Joan Vickers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. C, Vickers of Lawrence, became the bride of Mr. Hugh G. Bayles April 8 in Danforth chapel. Mr. Bayles is a son of Professor and Mrs. E. B. Bayles. The bride and bridegroom are graduates of the University. Mrs. Bayles was a member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority and Mr. Bayles belonged to Phi Kappa Psi fraternity and Nu Sigma Nu medical fraternity. He is now a student in the School of Medicine in Kansas City, Kan., where the couple will live. AO Pi Engaged Mrs. Roy G. Wilson of Lawrence announces the engagement and approaching marriage of her daughter, Winfried, to Mr. Leon R. DeYoung, son of Mr. D. A. DeYoung of Prairie View. The wedding will be June 5 at St. John's Catholic church! A member of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority, Miss Wilson will be graduated from the University in June. Mr. DeLong was graduated in February from the School of Business. Women Boss Men's Styles - Haberdashers Cater To Feminine Taste New York—(U.P.)—If a woman trails into a clothing store, next time "he" plans to buy a suit, she, more than he, can expect the red carpet to be rolled out. The Wool Bureau has surveyed more than 5,000 retail clothing salesmen and discovered women have a hand in 75 per cent of all apparel purchases. 1. His coat must be long enough to cover the seat of his trousers. So when the little woman sits down with a critical eye to see how that gabardine drapes, her eye is likely to fall on a little booklet the salesman will shove before her. Miss Patricia Brubaker What's more, they've discovered that men today are more clothes-conscious than ever before. It's called "Male Plumage-How Women Can Improve It." In it, she'll find these main points to watch for to insure good fitting: 1947 3. The coat should not break at the middle button and bulge in the rear. 2. The coat collar should be set low enough on his neck to show half an inch of shirt collar, the tapered sleeves should permit half an inch of shirt cuff. 4. His vest must cover the trouser waist band. 5. His trousers should hang straight from the thighs and must have plenty of seat room. Tri Delt Pinned Back of this educational campaign are some of the country's leading manufacturers. Botany 500 Daroff; Hart, Schaffner and Marx; Fashion Park; Kuppenheimer; GGG; Lebow; Value First and Varsity Town are the brand names behind it. Delta Delta Delta sorority announces the pinning of Miss Patricia Brubaker, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Dewitte Brubaker of Kansas City, Mo., to Mr. William Edward Roy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Roy of Kansas City, Kan. F. Eugene Ackerman, spokesman for the Wool Bureau, said they've discovered that the "five-day week, paid vacations, the automobile and airplane have contributed to turning men's attention to clothes." Three points for the basis of Mr. Everyman's wardrobe. A business suit runs the gamut of fabrics and styles. There is the "dress up" suit, the blue or dark gray worsted which waits for special occasions. A country ensemble has the sporty flair. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. B 80th Year. Modern-to-the-minute. Courses keyed to today's training needs. Secretarial Training Civil Service. Higher Accounting and Auditing. Write for catalog. Box 424, Lawrence Business College. Jumping WORRY The announcement was made at dinner recently by Mrs. Charles Wentworth, housemother, who wore a corsage of peach glamellas. Miss Helen Zimmerman assisted in the announcement by reading a series of verses revealing the identity of If ... But you won't have any worries about moths you have your winter garments moth-proofed at New York Cleaners. One treatment does the job—and your clothes are protected against moths for 5 years . . . have them cleaned as often as necessary after the one treatment . . . cleaning does not affect the moth resistance. New York Cleaners 926 Mass. Dean Habein Speaks Before 235 Teachers New Savings up to 25% for Kansas Drivers! AGAIN This Year! State Farm Mutual slashes auto insurance costs! Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, was a guest speaker at the tenth annual state convention of Delta Kappa Gamma in Lawrence April 15. The honorary organization is for women in education. Call or come in now! Miss Habein spoke at a luncheon of the group. The Founders' Day banquet speaker was Miss Berneta Minkwitz of Austin, Tex., national treasurer. Two hundred and 35 teachers registered for the convention. M. R. Carlson 5 E. 9th Ph.214 Licensed agent for State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company University faculty members who helped plan the meeting include Miss Esther Twente, professor of social work; and Dr. Elin Jorgensen, associate professor of music education. Miss Brubaker is an education junior. Mr. Roy, a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity, was graduated from the College in February. the couple. Chocolates were passed by Miss Georgia Haun, Miss Kay Collins, and Miss Marilyn Swenson, who wore gardenia corsages. Miss Brushbaker wore a white orchid. Spring Weekends mean .. .. PICNICS . . WIENER ROASTS SWIMMING PARTIES .. and outdoor get-togethers mean you'll want to get your portable radio fixed up for perfect operation. Bring your portable down today for expert repair service. University Radio at Bell Music Co. Call K.U. 251 With Your News. OFFICIAL K. U. RINGS SENIORS ONLY 1827 MILITARY AWARD IN ASSOCIATION WITH THE NAVY 1956 1927 THE CITY OF BROOKLYN 1852-1937 RA Your University seal, sunflowers and degree on one side; Jayhawk, sunflowers and graduation year on opposite side. Top set with beautiful ruby stone. MAN'S RING $27.50 LADY'S RING $21.50 Plus 20% Federal, 2% State tax Business Office has limited supply on hand now. Hang That . . . For Sale Sign in Daily Kansan CLASSIFIEDS Phone KU 376 PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1950 Kansas Baseball Team Splits First Two Games By BOB NELSON Coach Bill Hogan's Kansas Jayhawkers, defending Big Seven baseball champions, opened their 1950 baseball season during Easter vacation by splitting even in games with Rockhurst and Colorado. Kansas lost its conference opener, 4 to 3, to Colorado at Boulder, April 14, after winning the season opener 10 to 2 with Rockhurst here April 12. A second game scheduled at Colorado was rained out. Colorado 4, Kansas 3 Guy Mabry, Kansas righthander, and Colorado's veteran Bob Manire, hooked up in a pitchers' duel through the first seven innings. With Kansas leading 3 to 2 going into the last of the eighth, pinch hitter Harry Narciseian walked. After stealing second base, he advanced to third and left fielder Hugh Graham reached first on an error. Graham took second on an attempted pick-off play to place both runners in scoring position. Second baseman Dick Cowden followed with a single driving home Narciseian and Graham with the game's tieing and winning runs. Herman Philipp, K.U. sophomore righthander, replaced Mabry to retire the side without further scoring. He entered the game with one away and two men on base. The Jayhawkers scored in the 4th as shortstop Frank Koenig walked and advanced to second on Floyd Temple's sacrifice hit. After reaching third on a passed ball, Koenig tagged-up to score on Carl Ellis' long fly to leftfield. In the last of the fourth, Colorado knotted the score. A walk, a sacrifice hit, and a line single to left-field by Ley gave Colorado a 2 to 1 margin in the fifth. Manire, with the aid of good fielding, had a no-hitter going into the eighth inning. Walter Hicks, Kansas leftfielder, singled for the first hit off Manire to start the inning. George Voss moved Hicks to second with a sacrifice. Magry's double scored Hicks to knot the score at 2-all. Jim Cavonaugh promptly singled home Magry to give the Jawhackers a one run margin. Mabry, in making his first start of the season, allowed the Buffs only five scattered hits, all singles, but issued four costly walks. Three of these wheels turned into runs. Mabry struck out three while Manire whiffed four in his winning role. All 3 Kansas hits came in the eighth in It was following this two-run rally that the Buffs scored their two runs to win the Big Seven opener for both clubs. AUTO PARTS and ACCESSORIES New & Used Parts for All Cars We Buy Old and Wrecked Cars - Auto Glass - Mirrors - Glass Table Tops AUTO WRECKING AND JUNK CO. 12 Phone 954 712 E. 9th ning. Colorado, fourth place Big Seven club in 1949, looked in near mid-season form as they played errolless ball to win their fifth game of the year against three defeats. The Buffaloes took a nine-day spring training trip to Arizona where they played three games with a strong University of Arizona club and a game with Arizona State. Upon arrival home Sunday, Coach Hogan said, "We hit the ball hard, but Colorado gathered it in no matter where it went. They played great defensive ball. Ellis hit two long balls that traveled about 350 feet, but were just long fly balls. I was well pleased with the team's play." Kansas scored eight runs in the first three innings off Rockhurst's starting pitcher, Jim Quinlan, to win the 1950 K.U. home opener, 10 to 2, April 12. The game was played before a small crowd in 40 degree weather. Kansas 10, Rockhurst 2 The Jayhawkers' big sophomore righthander, Carl Sandefur, started his first college game and pitched the first five innings. He was nicked for both runs and nine scattered hits, but he left eight Rockhurst runners stranded on the base paths. Herman Philipp co-pitched effective three-hit shut-out ball the final four innings. Quinlan's wildness put the Hawks in trouble from the start. Four hits, three walks, four errors, four wild pitches, a passed ball, and a hit batter provided Kansas with the eight runs. Of the 16 players Coach Hogan sent into the game, only Jim Sunye, third baseman, could gather more than one hit. He got two singles, while Darrell Houk, right fielder, doubled for Kansas' only extra base hit. Kansas played good defensive ball making but one error. Rockhurst made seven costly errors to help keep its pitchers in trouble throughout the contest. Kansas will play Rockhurst a return game at Kansas City Wednesday in the only non-conference game left on the Jayhawker schedule. Sandefur is scheduled to start for Kansas and will probably be opposed by Quinlan, Rockhurst's best hurler, | KANSAS (3) | AB | R | H | PO | A | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Cavonaugh, 2b | 3 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 1 | | Koenig, ss | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 | | Temple, 3b | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 1 | | Ellis, cf | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | | Mace, c | 3 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 1 | | Houk, rf | 3 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | | Hicks, lf | 3 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 0 | | Voss, 1b | 2 | 0 | 0 | 8 | 0 | | Mabry, p | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | | Philipp, p | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Weidensaul | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | DeLuna | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Baseball Box Scores Totals 28 3 24 9 COLORADO (A) AB R H PO A Graham, lf 4 1 0 2 0 Cowden, 2b 2 1 1 2 5 Rogers, ss 3 0 0 2 1 Ley, 3b 3 0 2 0 3 Knoblock, cf 3 0 1 6 0 Johnson, rf 3 0 0 0 0 Maldonado, 1b 3 0 0 10 0 Cox, c 3 1 1 4 0 Manire, p 1 0 0 1 3 Nix, p 0 0 0 0 0 Narcisjan 0 1 0 0 0 Totals 26 4 5 27 12 Weidensau grounded out for Mace in 9th. DeLuna fled for Houk in 9th. Narcissian walked for Manire in 10th. Kansas 000 100 020—3 Colorado 000 110 02x—4 E — Voss] Temple, RBI-Ellis, Mabry, Cavonaugh, Knoblock, Ley, Cowden 2. 2B—Mabry, SB—Cowden, Ley, Narcissian, Graham, SH-Temple, Voss, Manire, Rogers, Dp-Mabry to Koenig to Voss, LOB—Kansas 3. Colorado 5. Pitching analysis; BB —Mabry 4, Manire 3, SO—Mabry 3 Manire 4, Runs and Hits off—Mabry 4 and 5 in 7½ innings; Philipp 0 and 0 in ¾ innings; Manire 3 and 3 in 8 innings; Nix 0 and 0 in 1 innning. Earned runs off—Mabry 3, Manire 3. HBP—Mabry (Johnson). Passed ball Loser Mabry, Umpires—Goolby and Cox. Winning pitcher — Manire Ray. Time—2:10. Att.—2000 (est.) Kansas-Rockhurst Box Score: Kansas-Rockhurst Box Score: Rockhurst (2) AB R H PO A Schmittker, 2b 3 0 1 0 2 Hill, 2b 2 0 0 2 2 Messina, 3b 5 0 2 0 1 Williams, ss 2 1 0 3 0 Roark, ss 2 0 0 0 0 Rheem, cf 4 0 3 3 0 Flaherty, lf 4 1 2 1 0 Biser, rf 2 0 2 0 0 Pace, rf 1 0 0 0 0 Billiard, 1b 2 0 1 5 0 Delaney, 1b 2 0 1 3 0 Reichmeier, c 4 0 0 6 0 Quinlan, p 1 0 0 0 2 Meara, p 3 0 0 0 2 McCready, p 0 0 0 1 0 Totals 37 2 12 24 9 Kansas (10) AB R H PO A Cavonaugh, 2b 1 2 1 3 1 DeLuna, 2b 2 0 1 0 1 Koenig, ss 3 1 0 1 4 Mace, c 3 0 0 4 0 Morrow, c 2 0 1 1 0 Ellis, f 5 0 1 1 0 Weidensaul, cf 2 0 0 0 0 Lamping, c 2 0 1 0 0 Houk, rf 2 2 1 1 0 Hicks, rf 1 1 0 2 0 Sunve, 3b 4 2 2 2 2 DRY CLEANING or LAUNDRY SHOPPING? - - - - - TRY OUR SOLUTION - We guarantee against lost articles. - We promptly pick up. We have prompt delivery. "Quality Outstanding" - We do mending and repairing. 1001 N. H. LAWRENCELAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS Call 383 Voss, 1b 2 2 1 5 0 Peete, 1b 1 0 6 0 Sandefur, p 2 0 4 4 Phillip, p 1 0 0 1 McConnell 1 0 0 0 1 Totals 34 10 9 27 15 Rockhurst 010 010 000—2 Kansas 152 000 20x-10 E—Quinlan, Messina, 2. Williams, Schittiker, Houk, Hill 2. HI—Biser, Koenig, Ellis, Sandefur, Flaherty, 2B—Flaberty, Hole, Kiser, SB—Cavonaugh, Flaherty, SH—Koenig, DP—Deluna to Koenig to Peete, Hill to McCready. LOB—Rockhurst 10. Kansas 8. Pitching summary: BB—Quinlin 3. Meara 1, Sandefur 1. SO—Quinlin 3. Meara 2. Sandefur 4. Philipp 1. Hits and Hits off—Quinlin 8 and 4 in 3 innings; Meara 2 and 2 in 4 innings; McCreedy 0 and 2 in 1 inning; Sandefur 2 and 9 in 5 innings; Philipp 0 and 3 in 4 innings Earned runs off—Quinlin 6, Sandefur S—andSandefur (Williams). Quinlan (Cavonaugh). WP—Quinlin 4, Sandefur. Passed balls—Mace, Reichmeier, Winning pitcher—Sandefur. Loser—Quinlan. Umpires—Michael and Edwards. Time—2:05. The next Kansas home games will be against Missouri Monday and Tuesday, April 24 and 25. Follow The Wild Goose San Diego, Calif.—(U.P.)The cry of the wild goose sounded over San Diego when two youths climbed over the zoo fence and ran off with a Canadian honkener. Frank Bonnet, special zoo officer, said the boys escaped in a car. He said the goose was very much alive and putting up a racket that could be heard for nearly a mile. He's DANCE-Happy In "Famous 15" "CLAUDE THORNHILL (above) playe Gershwish". . . bidin' My Time, Embraceable You, Fascinatin' Rhythm, 3 others.. all played the really danceable way! This and all of RCA Victor's terrific brand-new dance albums are "DESIGNED FOR DANCING!!"Featuring 15 great bands, 15 great composers, 90 hits! A national craze! You'll know why when you hear Thornhill's album! No party should be without 'em! At L. LOKE SMITH. 846 Mass. Van Heusen Bansage work of art by Van Heusen BonSaga Van Heusen goes Van Gogh one better with BonSaga rayon broadcloth sport shirts. Such feeling . . . such softness . . . such deft handling of the needle . . . BonSaga is truly a masterpiece of luxury. Completely washable . . . in many color-fast shades. Short-sleeve pullover model, $3.95. Famous California Lo-No, with two-way collar, short sleeve, $3.95 . . . long, $4.95. Van Heusen shirts REG. T.M. "d's smartest" Q shirts PHILLIPS-JONES CORP., NEW YORK 1, N. Y. MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE nines- game dule. for closed urler, will and cry San nhbed with nnet, boys goose g up for Track Fans Leave Too Soon To See KU Win 一 Just about everyone at the K.U.-Nebraska dual track meet in Memorial stadium April 15 left after the mile relay was run. And they thought Nebraska had won the meet 68 to 63. A few stayed around 15 minutes longer and watched Kansas actually win the meet 66 to 65. Jayhawkner sophomore Al Bouchard came up with a second place in the broad jump—only event not completed before the relay was run—to account for the surprise K.U. victory. The delay in completing the broad jump was due to Bouchard's running the 220-yard low hurdles a few minutes before the relay. Officials allowed him a breathing spell before taking his final jumps. Three meet records fell and two more were equalled with good weather helping out. Sensational Herb Semper, Kansas sophomore, breezed through the two-mile run in 9:23.4—not only a new meet mark, but also a new K. U. record. Semper clipped the meet meet mark. 9:55.3 set by Jay-Hawker Ed Fortune in 1930, by almost 32 second. The former school record was 9:28 by Bob Karnes in 1948. Two Nebraskans accounted for meet records. Loyal Huribert lowered his 1949 mark of 49.3 in the 440-yard dash to an even 49. Don Cooper raised the pole vault record to 13 feet $4 \%$ inches. Cooper barely to make 14 feet. Kansas' Jack Greenwood equalled both of the hurdle marks he set a year ago. Few of the races were close enough to stir the crowd very much. Each team gave here and took there. Coach Bill Easton's twin terrors, Captain Bob Karnes and All-American Pat Bowers, were in their usual good form. They trotted in for a 4:19.3 dead-heat victory in the mile run. Bowers won the 880-yard run in 1:54.6 with Karnes in third behind teammate Cliff Abel for one of K.U.'s two sweeps of the day. Jayhawkers also finished 1-2-3 in the two-mile. Sophomore Bob Devinney was the real Kansas workhorse. Devinney ran second in the 100-yard dash, third in the 120-yard high hurdles only minutes later, first in the 220-yard dash, but finished out of the money in the 220-yard low hurdles just after his furlong victory. Husker Huriburt gave one of Nebraska's better performances of the meet with a good 48.8 anchor leg in the mile relay. The meet was the first dual for both teams in the 1950 outdoor season. The summary: and Bob Karnes (tie), Kansas; 3. Lee Moore, N. Time-4:19.3. Kansas 66, Nebraska 65. Mile run—Won by Pat Bowers 100-yard dash—Won by Harry Meginnis, N; 2, Bob Devinney, K; 3, Emil Schutzel, K. Time--9.9 440-yard dash—Won by Loyal Huribert, N; 2, Harold Kopf, N; 3, Jim Dinsmore, K. Time—49. New meet record. Old record of 49.3 set by Huribert in 1949. 120-yard high hurdles—Won by Jack Greenwood, K; 2, Bob Berkshire, N; 3, Devinney, K. Time—14.7. Equals meet record set by Greenwood in 1949. 880-yard run — Won by Bowers. K; 2, Cliff Abel, K; 3, Karnes, K. Time—1.54.6. 220-yard dash—Won by Devinney, K; 2, Meginnis, N; 3, Schutzel, K. Time-21.6. 2-mile run—Won by Herb Semper, K; 2, Dave Breidental, K; 3, Paul Aylward, K. Time—9:23.4 New meet and Kansas records. Old meet record of 9:55.3 set by Fortune, K. Baseball Plans Gala Opening Day New York, April 17—(U.P.) Clearing skies punctured the gloom over the big league baseball map today, lending hope that there can be a gala beginning to the combined diamond-golden jubilee season of the majors Tuesday afternoon. Most of the clubs went through their final paces in exhibition games yesterday in bright but crisp weather and even though temperatures still are expected to be below normal in the East and Midwest, there is likely to be little of the rain, snow, fog, cloudiness, and generally miserable conditions that have plagued the athletes for the past two weeks. ine openings this yegr have more At the same time the Dodgers go back to Philadelphia to play the than the usual significance because the venerable National league—cornerstone of organized baseball—is observing its 75th continuous year of operation. The American league which came into existence a quarter of a century later, then promptly made up few lost time, will be opening up its 50th year. The white-haired leader of the Philadelphia Athletics will be observing his own golden jubilee year that this year's team will bring him that "one more pennant" he has dreamed about ever since his 1931 club brought him the last one. pesky Phillies who bothered them no end all last year and who extended them into hectic 10-inning final before Brooklyn was able to up its pennant campaign successfully in the last day of last season. In both leagues the champion teams will take up tomorrow exactly where they wound up in the 1949 seasons. The Yankees go to Boston to play the Red Sox in a renewal of hostilities that found them winning two in a row from the Bean Town Belters at the finish of the 1949 race to win the American league flag. in 1930. Old Kansas record of 9:28 set by Karnes in 1948. At Washington, where President Truman will make the opening of the season "official" by throwing out the first ball an hour after most of the other big league games have begun, there will be poignant memories of a glorious past and sentimental support for one of baseball's grandest gentlemen. 86-year-old Connie Mack. The Cardinals are doing something different. They're opening up at night, the first club in the majors ever to do so. They play the Pirates who have little else to boast about but Ralph Kiner. but Ralph Rimer. The clubs that have fought it out for last place the past two years in the National, the Cincinnati Reds and Chicago Cubs, play in the other opener at Cincinnati. There is more than the usual interest attached to the New York opener between the Braves and the Giants because these teams engaged in baseball's biggest off-season trade and both managers feel they got the better of it. In the other American league openers, the Tigers and Indians who have long been mutual rivals and who are both legitimate flag contenders this year, open up at Cleveland while two second division weaklings, the Browns and White Sox are hoping to launch better days at Chicago. 229-yard low hurdles — Won by Greenwood, K; 2, Berkshire, N; 3, Wendell Cole, N. Time—23.8. Equals meet record set by Greenwood in 1949. Mile relay—Won by Nebraska (Kehl, Meginnis, Kopf, Hurlbert). Time—3:22.5. Pole vault—Won by Don Cooper, N, 13-4 $ \frac{1}{4} $ ; tied for 2, Jim Flood, K, and Leonard Kehl, N, 12-6. New meet record. Old record of 13-4 set by Bird, K. in 1939. Javelin—Won by Ray Magnasen, N, 189-41²; 2, Bob Drumm, K, 184- 71²; 3, Jim McConnell, N, 179-4. Shot put—Won by McConnell, N, 47-3; 2, Charles Toogood, N, 46- 41/4; 3. Wayne Sees, N, 42-8. Broad jump—Won by Meginni, N, 21-8; 2, Al Bouchard, K, 20-11; 3, Owen Brainard, N, 20-9 1-8. Discus—Won by Sees, N, 137-8; 2, Bob Broady, K, 132; 3, Toogood, N, 127-9/4. High jump—Won by Bill Richardson, K, 6-1 3-8; tied for 2, DeL Norris, K, and Dick Meissner, N, 6-0. Coe's Drug 1347 Mass. Drugs - Drug Sundries Drinks - Sandwiches I-M Spring Sports Play Opens Today Weather permitting, play will begin today in all sports on the intramural spring sports schedule except swimming. The first contests of the season will be played today in softball, tennis, golf, handball, badminton, and horseshoes. The swimming meet will be held from Monday, April 24 through Wednesday, April 26. We Deliver 10 To 10 Phone 234 Handball teams will consist of a three-man squad and the games will all be singles. Handball play will Intramural softball play will be divided into several leagues with each team meeting its league mates once each. The top two teams in each league will qualify for a single - elimination tournament which will decide the hill champions. meet the winner of the consolation bracket for the championship. be in a single-elimination tourney. Badminton teams will be composed of six men who will play in a single - elimination tournament with a consolation bracket. The winner in the winners bracket will The golf teams will have three men to a team and will play in a round-robin tournament. The two top teams in each league matched in a playoff. The team with the lowest score will be the winner. Horseshoe teams will have three men to the team. Play will be in the same type of tournament as described for badminton. Tennis teams will be composed of four men—two singles players and one doubles combination. Teams will play a round-robin tournament. WANTED Owners of the many items in the Lost & Found Files. NO CHARGE 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. Open Daily - Monday thru Friday 2nd floor - Student Union Building Hey Guys! Alpha Phi Omega Lost & Found Hope you had a good Easter vacation. REMEMBER! From now until June, you can save enough for an extra spring date a week-10 cents on a $1.00 at the "At the Bottom of the 14th Street Hill" JAYHAWK-Cliff and Paul SPALDING SPORTS SHOW IN THE EARLY DAYS OF GOLF THE GUTTA-PERKA BALLS SOMETIMES WERE CARRIED IN BucketS OF ICE TO KEEP THEM FROM GOING SOFT YOUR VERY GOOD HEALTH SIR AH, JUST SO... IT SEEMED SUCH A WASTE, AS LONG AS WE HAD THE ICE BUCKET, IT TO BRING CHAMPAGN IN BUCKETS OF ICE TO KEEP THEM FROM GOING SOFT THERE'S A LONG LONG THREAD A-WINDING... 1 SPALDING DOT Golfers are nuts about the new Spalding Dot®...with Spalding's improved winding ("TRUTENSION"). Gives maximum distance combined with sweet feel-Plus famous Dot click. True uniformity assured. the high-powered Spalding AIR- FLITE® is "Tru-Tension" wound, too. And for toughness plus distance, it's the KRO-FLITE® and TOP-FLITE®. DOT and TOP-FLITE at Pro Shops Only. SPALDING sets the pace in sports PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1950 The Editors Report - IT'S JOLLY GOOD FUN But Too Expensive by Billie Stover The KuKu's, members of the men's pep organization, are asking the All Student council for $200 for next year's expenses. The 1949-50 appropriation for the KuKu's was $110, but they want $30 more next year to buy some cards to hold up at football games. Of course, the KuKu's spent about $60 for the cards alone the past year, according to the new president. But those were inferior cards. Many of them were ruined by rain or were lost. The next cards will be superior cards. The club will take care of them, the KuKu president told the A.S.C. The KuKu's are planning a magnificent card section that will include cards for students outside the club as well as members. All that holds them up now is for the A.S.C. to hand over the money. This detail will probably be taken care of at the next council meeting. We hope K.U. football fans appreciate the expensive spelling bees put on next year by the KuKu's. FOR ARM-CHAIR STRATEGISTS Cold-War Chessmen by Lew Sciortino At last the propaganda-minded Russians can lay undisputed claim to a new invention—a modified set of chessmen. These chessmen symbolize the conflict between Communism and capitalism. What an ideal May Day gift this set of chessmen would make from one thoughtful Fellow-traveler to another. How much more inspiring this would be to a budding Communist than dull Canasta or deadly bridge. And if a Fellow-traveler had an especially close friend he might even give the friend a set that had each chessman personally autographed by Stalin himself. The capitalistic king is depicted as a skeleton wrapped inermine and medieval armor. His anemic-looking queen stands with one breast lewdly exposed, holding a cornucopia from which pours money. The capitalistic pawns are weary-facedcowering workers bound by triple strands of chains. On the Communist side, the king is an excellent example of the red-blooded Russian "super-worker." His muscles bulge and in his powerful hand he grasps a hoe. The robust queen wears a colorful peasant dress and a satisfied smile. The pawns happily swing their sickles. The only hitch to the whole thing is that in the rules of chess it is still possible for either player to come out winner. With the new chessmen, it is obvious that only one side can win. So, it is now up to the inventive mind of the Russians to revise the rules so that the capitalist always lose. SENATOR'S SOLILOQUY: What Can I Tell 'Em? by Bill Stratton Haven't been doing much to please the voters lately. I guess I'd better get to work on something. I've got to make them remember my name so they'll know me when I run for re-election. Say, here's something on the front page. Secretary of the Exterior Pleggins admits that he used to go to school with Forum Tomato. Well, I'll be! Pleggins must be a Communist! I'd better write that down and call a press conference. I've got to get something big, something sensational. Where's the evening paper? Maybe I can get some ideas from it. Oh, here it is... hmm. Let's see. . . I'll tell the newspapers that one of our top cabinet men is a "card carrying Communist." But I won't tell them who it is. While they beat their brains out trying to figure out who it is, I'll be digging for some evidence. Must be something I can get on Pleggins. . . Ha... here's something else I might be able to use. The wife of Al Stewed, movie actor, gave birth to a boy last night. By George, I happen to know they've only been married eight months and twenty-nine days. All those movie actors are the same! They all lead immoral lives. Something's got to be done about them. I know what! I'll introduce a bill that will require all movie actors to be morally pure. That'll fix them! Now, let's see what's on the next page. . well, of all things! The U.S.S. Mudscow broke loose from its moorings in San Francisco and tore up three piers. Those blundering idiots—they don't even know how to tie up a boat! I'll have a Senate investigating committee on their necks or my name isn't. . Somebody will go to trial if it's the last thing I do. Well, let's see. . . I think I have enough to tell the newspapers. I'll call Pleggins a communist-by-george, tell how I'll raise the movie actors' morals, and accuse the Navy "brass" of criminal negligence. Brother, if that don't get me some publicity, I don't know what will!! !! Should Have Stayed In Bed An Investment That Paid Off Shubert, Neb.—(U.P.)—Fireman T. A. Hillary raided for the fire truck when the alarm sounded, but he fell, dislocating his shoulder and cutting a bad burg in his knee. Then he discovered it was a false alarm. Owosso, Mich.—(U.P.)—Scott Rundell still uses the rifle he bought in 1899 for $11.50. Notches on the stock of the gun represent 60 deer, three bears, and a wildcat bagged during the gun's 50 years' service. TODAY'S MAIL Joyless Sir: The parting with $3.40 recently prodded this Scotch mind to think the following thoughts. The division of students into classes—freshman, sophomore, junior, senior—for any purpose other than keeping records is an arbitrary one. That the senior class should exist as a unit is predicated on the belief that the common interests of a group of students are in some way connected with the date of their graduation. Also, a great many seniors have not spent all four years at this University. Thomas Bruce Daniel Engineering senior. Paying for parties held while I was attending college in another state, and buying a gift in the name of an arbitrarily selected group fails to overwhelm me with joy. I Agree I agree with John R. Malone's suggestion in the Kansan of April 3 that Dr. Naismith should not be forgotten in naming the new fieldhouse. Either Naismith Allen or Allen Naismith would do. But above all, let us not leave out Dr. Naismith. Sir: If it were not for Dr. Naismith there would be no basketball. The careers of both men speak for themselves; Dr. Naismith as the inventor and who introduced the game at K.U. and Dr. Allen as his worthy successor. Both names would bring prestige to K.U. Mr. Malone said "Many of our students will not remember Dr. Naismith's connection with the physical education faculty." This is certainly true. Therefore, Dr. Naismith's name should be before their eyes and so in their consciousness and on their tongues to enhance the prestige of the University as well as to insure that neither of those great men will be forgotten. From my personal contact with Dr. Naismith when I played basketball on the first K.U. basketball team in the late '90's, I consider him one of the greatest men I ever met. William F. Yahn, '00 Lawrence University Daily Kansan Bill DeLay News Room Adv. Room K.U. 251 K.U.376 Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assm. Press Assm., and the Associated College Press Assm., and the Associated College Press. Represented by the National Ad- dress Service, 420 Madison Ave. New New York City. James Morris Editor-in-Chief Editor-in-Chief Doris Greenbank James Shriver Managing Editor Business Mgr. Asst. Man. Editors Norma Hunsinger Kay O'Connor John Hill Ralph Hemenway City Editor Edward Chapin George Editor Mark Kielsch Photograph Editor Frankie Waits Sports Editor Richard Dilsaver Asst. Sports Editors Bob Leonard Ray Soland Arthur McIntyre Mona Millikin Society Editor Faye Wilkinson Asst. Society Editors Billie Stover Emily Stewart Editorial Assists. Pete Nacom John Bannigan Keith Leslie Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner Cir. Mgr. Yvonne Josserand Nat. Adv. Mgr. Forrest Bellus Classified Ad. Mgr. Lee Dyer Promotion Mgr. John Wiedeman Chris Cross Delah "Dust storms and hill politics have a lot in common—they both blow up a lotta dirt!" The navy has offered as explanation of the flying saucer the fact that they developed a flying pancake a few years back. We presume it uses log cabin syrup in lieu of high octane. 'Small Things' The latest week we've heard of is National Sleep week. We would like to be patriotic and observe it, but we know of three or four professors who might take a dim view of the whole thing. by Keith Leslie Dr. Lawson, a nephew of Dean Paul B. Lawson, was born in Pasumaliayi, South India in 1915, where his parents were American Congregational missionaries. Young Jim came to America at the age of 4, but returned to India to begin his school. Lawson was graduated from high school in 1931 and was awarded a Summerfield scholarship to the University. After his graduation from KU, in 1935 with an AB degree, he continued at the University for a year's graduate work and earned his master's degree in 1936. A needlework rug made by Queen Mary which recently arrived in Kansas City was reported to have "rested well" in the upper berth of a pullman. We'll bet those sheets felt a glow of pride at having such distinguished company to cover. He returned to the U.S. in 1928 and entered high school in Lawrence. His uncle was then an entomologist at the University. He was appointed assistant in physics at the University of Michigan, where his principal work was on the cyclotron, then being built for the physics department there. He received his doctor of philosophy degree in 1939 and was appointed research physicist at Michigan University the same year. Here Dr. Lawson worked on many different problems, one of which was the "T-R box," a widely used device in transmitting and receiving. In 1941 he was sent to England to study the work of the British on the flying radar system for the B-18 airplane. Much of his technical findings in radar are being published in his book, "Threshold Signals In Noise." In 1940 he was called to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. There he became a member of the radiation laboratory, which was destined to become the main center of radar development in the United States. From a boyhood in one of the world's most ancient civilizations to a prominent place on the roster of those working on science's most important recent discovery, the powerful atom-smasher, is a quick summary of the career of Dr. James S. Lawson, '35, head of the nuclear investigations section of the General Electric research laboratory. Ed. Note: This is the first in a series of articles on prominent University alumni. PROMINENT ALUMNI: Former Summerfield Scholar Heads Radiation Research In 1945 Dr. Lawson accepted his present position. One of his first projects for General Electric was to plan and supervise the construction of a gamma ray spectroscope for analyzing the distribution of energy in the high-voltage X-rays. Dr. Lawson is now working with other scientists on a machine expected to be capable eventually of yielding radiations of a billion volts of energy. Dr. Lawson lives in Schenectady, N.Y., with his wife, a University of Michigan graduate, and their three small children. Radio Club Plans Exposition Display Plans for a display at the Engineering exposition to be held at the University Friday through Sunday were furthered recently by members of the Amateur radio club. is best as he of it, that of its in a, are, na the al's, of e is is The display will consist mainly of sending messages for visitors at the exposition to friends over the United States by ham radio sets. Members will also demonstrate how their sets may be used in emergency cases if other communications are not available. A new 10-meter directive antenna was exhibited at the meeting. The antenna should enable the local radio sets to reach longer distances, James S. Heaton, vice-president of the club, said. After Girls—Welcome Minneapolis—(U.P.)-Welcome Sunding of the Minneapolis Veterans Administration office says he got his name because all children born before him in his family were girls. ,1950 MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN eslie the We tions most quick of the lab- Henry Wants To Improve Lawrence Street Condition lk his first was truc-ure n. ofrays m. of rays ex- c-ly of vols s. in s. in s. in dauate, En- hold at Sun- by club, mainly ars at r the sets. how engency are denna The local balances, nt of The terrible condition of the streets of Lawrence was one of the principal reasons for Lew Henry, 3rd year law student and city council member, being interested in local politics. "Lawrence probably has some o the oldest streets in Kansas," Henry commented. "They're being improved, but it's a slow process." The 33-year-old-councilman is chairman of the streets committee and a backer of the Sixth street trafficway issue. Henry was first appointed to the city council in 1947 by Mayor Parsons to fill in when one of the council members died. He was elected to the council in 1948 from the sixth ward. Henry was re-elected to the same position at the Tuesday city election. During his term, Henry has constantly backed measures for improving the streets and traffic situation in Lawrence. His committee was instrumental in getting the Kaw river bridge paved, having modern street lights installed, and in getting sewer systems installed in the new sub-divisions of the city. Commenting on the $75,000 bond issue for the construction of a Sixth street trafficway which was approved by the voters Tuesday, Henry said that "with concerted effort and good luck, the new trafficway could be open by late July or August." He also said that the city plans to repave 24 additional streets and to put a rock coat on the dirt roads that were graded last year. The latter will be paid for by a gasoline rebate and not by direct assessment. Henry plans to remain in Law- rence after graduation, but is doubt- ful about remaining in politics. "My main purpose has been to get Lawrence's streets fixed, and that's what I'm trying to do," he remarked. Niagara Falls Has Split Personality As They Put Water To Industrial Use One of the scenic wonders of the modern world is developing a split personality. Niagara Falls, twin cataracts separating the United States and Canada, can be expected to put on their usual spectacular show during daylight hours for some three million visitors this season. But after dark much of their tumbling waters will be diverted to produce electric power. The double-shift schedule for Niagara is posted in the new U.S.-Canadian treaty which is designed to please both tourist and industrialist alike. It makes possible a heavy increase of power output and at the same time provides adequate safeguards for preserving the beauty of the famous falls, notes the National Geographic Society. Phone 10 For Sho Time Jayhawker NOW thru Wednesday GINGER ROGERS DENNIS MORGAN "PERFECT STRANGERS" — PLUS — Late News Events Color Cartoon "Bye Bye Blue Beard" Prevue Saturday 11:15 SUNDAY For 4 Days Joseph Cotten - Valli Orson Welles THE THIRD MAN Hear the Magic Fingers of Anton Karas Play The Gay "THIRD MAN THEM"! Of the estimated 200,000 cubic feet of water that normally would pass over the falls each second, 100,000 cubic feet will be reserved for the cataracts' daytime flow during spring and summer months. At nights and in the off-season for tourists, all but 50,000 cubic feet per second is expected to be diverted above the falls for hydro-electric use. Sailors To Show Naval Equipment Sport and beach clothes, as well as afternoon and evening dresses, will be modeled by members of the home economics classes. The costumes, which are being furnished by the Simplicity Pattern company, will be described by Miss Olive Berry, the college fashion director for the company. The present cold war may not develop into a "shooting war" in the near future, but, nevertheless, the University Naval R.O.T.C. unit has decided to show their military might at the 1950 Engineering Exposition Friday through Sunday. Home Economists To See Fashions Some of the equipment to be on display will be: sectionalized 8 inch rocket, MK 65 rangefinder, projectile demonstrator, 50 caliber sectionalized gun, MK 51 rocket launcher, rockets, torpedoes, MK 9 depth charge, rangekeeper, 40 mm. sectionalized gun, and mines. A fashion show, "A Cruise to Florida," will be given at the meeting of the Home Economics club at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 110 Fraser hall. WELCOME BACK! We'll be glad to see you. CLOSED and 2----4:3Q Sunday We'll be glad to see you Cube Steaks 70c Pork Tenderloin 75c Pork Chops 75c Hamburger Steak 65c CLOSED FRIDAY SHAVER'S 1 1/2 miles south U.S.59 Call 785-K-2 Daily Kansan Classified Ads Phone K.U.376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid by cash upon receipt during the burs $10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Office of Student Affairs. Journalism bigl, not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. Classified Advertising Rates Classified Words One day Three days Five days 25 words or less ... 35c 65c 90c Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c FOR SALE CAMERAS: Arguus 35mm, Kodak 620. Germany: Arguus 35mm, Kodak 620. Japan: Del Coulbo, Phh. 2102. ARCHITECTS! We now have the Graphite Solarmeter. The quick way to determine the angle of sun rays in the Northern Hemisphere. Only $3.00 at Student 18 MACHINE DITCHING. House foundations, water and sewer ditches. Ditches are 16 in. wide in 34 deep. Reasonable depths vary by John Tablentz 3102 or Bob McKinney . 2537J. UNION BOK STORE DRESSER watch with a tinted display of non-breakable crystal. Save here on repairs. Masden's Watch Shop; 12 E. 12th Street. Phone 47. 18 BOOK-EASE, a collapsible book holder. Can be used on a desk. in bed, any- where. Now only 89c at your Student Union Book Store. 21 1948, 26 ft. M-system trailer house with electric refrigerator and water heater, forced air heating stove and butane cooking stove, 1316 Kentucky. 17 THESES MATERIALS! All weights of thesis quality typing paper, carbon paper, and typewriter ribbons. Student Union Book Store. M4 FINEST TELEVISION - Best in sets and acclaim at lowest prices. New shipments just arrived. $75.70 and up. See the new- est Emerson table model set at $195.90. Easy terms. Bowman Radio and Electric, 826 Vermont. Phone 138. tt FOR SALE HAVE YOU SEEN THESE? 47 Nash Ambassador sedan $1,295 47 Chev. Aero sedan 1,245 47 Chevy Tahoe sedan with platform 1,095 '39 Ford de luxe 8 sedan 350 '38 Dodge 2-door sedan 345 '37 Chrysler convertible 295 Many others to choose from BELL BODIN, Lincoln 9th & Miss. Open Tonight LOST GLASSES, shell rim with gold trim. Probably lost in vicinity of Frank Strong hall. Phone 581, Charity Fischer, 1225 Oredge. 18 ONE KEY ring with some particularly valuable knives on it. CALL 3685W. 18 ONE brown herringbone tweed overcoat. Either 428 Lindley or Lindley Library, March 28th. Reward. Call Ted Reaver. 1671-R or 730. 17 CHAIN with 4 keys and a silver plate with Kansas printed on it. Reward; if found please call Penny at 2204 after 5 o'clock. 18 VARSITY Today-Tuesday Alan Baxter "PRISONER OF JAPAN" AND ANNA MAY WONG "Bombs Over Burma" Late News - Cartoon PM 1 baseball球 near 13th Oread. $5 reward to finder, Call 5662R. **17** Harry . . . Ends Tonite BUD LOU ABBOTT COSTELLO "Africa Screams" "Movies Are Better Now Than Ever Before" BUSINESS SERVICE TYPING, Theses, Term Papers, Reports, Notes, etc. Prompt Service. Mrs. Sheehan, 1029 Vermont. Ph. 1168R. tf* TYPING, Term papers, notebooks, notes, etc. Prompt attention. work. Regular rates. Prompt attention. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601 TUE-WED "SANDS OF IWO JIMO" Starring FOR RENT THEOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. for delivery of automotive parts and fender repair, auto painting, used cars 317 E.17th. Phone 785 or 1821R. JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant experience. We shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our one-stop pet shop has everything for you. Pet Shop and Gift Shop. 118 Conn. St. Ph. 418. TYPING: Call Hazlen Stanley 265M for TYFING: Call Hail Stanley, 296M for prompt experienced service. 820% Man- age time. HEY MEN! Can you beat this? Nice private rooms on second floor, cooking facilities including dishes, etc. in base- ware for $3.00 week each. 148 Rhode Island WANTED John Wayne John Agar ACCOUNTANT wanted by University of Kansas Fairfield, Fla. to take Full-time thereafter. Applicant to take Civil Service exam when given; enrollment. See Mr. Rhydes Journalism department. Lawrence DRIVE - IN Theatre TRANSPORTATION For Sho-Times Phone 260 RIDERS wanted: Leaving for Wichita every Friday at 4 p.m. Returning Sunday evening, Please call between 7-9 p.m. Harry Shultz. Ph. 3101-J. 17 Africa's Gold Coast is sixth among the world's gold-producing regions. French Boy Scouts On Marquette Trail Four French Rover Scouts, who recently have been welcomed to America by the Boy Scouts' organizations, plan an American canoe odyssey. Switching to the modern counterparts of the birch-bark craft that Jacques Marguette used in his mission travels, they hope to follow the general course of travel of their celebrated countryman nearly three centuries ago. "Yankee" comes from the Dutch word "yanku" meaning to snarl. Limited Engagement 2-Days Only-2 Wednesday-Thursday "One of the year's 10 best" Bernard Shaw's PYGMALION WENDY HILLER LESLIE HOWARD Continuous Performances Box-Office Opens 12:45 Special price this engagement only: All seats 75c tax. incl. Special student price 50c tax. incl. VARSITY HELDOVER 2nd GRAND WEEK THEY CLICK LIKE A KEY IN A LOCK!! I ROMANTIC RIOT! CLARK LORETTA GABLE·YOUNG KEY TO THE CITY MARILYN MAXWELL · FRANK MORGAN Morgan - SOON • "Holiday Affair" Added Enjoyment Color Cartoon Latest World News Continuous Shows - Open 12:45 Patee PHONE 321 NOW! Movies Are Ends Wednesday Better than ever! M-G-M's Big Adventure Romance. TOMMY JAMES STEWART VALENTINA CORTESA They Gambled Their Lives in the Perilous Jungles of MALAYA Men's Collection Mayer Theatre co-starring John HODIAK Sydney GREENSTREET Lionel BARRYMORE - SOON - Red Skelton ALSO COLOR CARTOON - NEWS "Yellow Cab Man" Granada PRONE 946 PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1950 WORLD NEWS at Press Time Japan. May Not Need Aid Tokyo, April 17—(U.P.)The United States may find it unnecessary to give further aid to Japan in another two or three years, an official from Gen. Douglas MacArthur's head-quarters told American economic experts today. The official, Maj. Gen. M. Almone who reported on Japan's economic progress to experts from Washington and 12 American diplomatic posts in Asia said that U. S. aid to Japan has dropped from nearly $600,000,000 two years ago to an estimated $250,-000,000 for the fiscal year beginning next July. Lobby Trial Begins Today Slaughter was indicted in 1948—two years after he was defeated for re-election when President Truman, a native of his home district, conducted a "purge" campaign against him. The three-count indictment charges that Slaughter attempted to influence votes of his former colleagues in congress on behalf of grain interests without registering as a lobbyist as required by law. It says that, among other things, he lobbed for defeat of the international wheat agreement. Washington, April 17—(U.P.) The trial of Roger C. Slaughter, former Democratic congressman of Missouri, is scheduled to start in U.S. district court today. He is accused of illegal lobbying. Kansan To Berlin Post Berlin, April 17—(U.P.)-Theo. E Hall, of Wichita, Kan., was appointed acting director of the Berlin branch of the U. S. high commission's public safety office today. He is a former consultant in the Chicago police department and was chief of police in Wilmette, Ill., from 1943 to 1945. He joined the public safety department of the military government in Germany in 1945. Vatican Denies Accord Vatican City, April 17—(U.P.) The Vatican officially denied any knowledge today of a purported agreement between the Catholic church and the Communist government of Poland. The official Polish news agency PAP reported Saturday that three high Polish Catholic clergymen and government officials had signed an agreement. The agency said that under the agreement the church recognized the authority of the Polish state in all but purely religious matters. Nationalists Stop Invasion Iong Kong, April 17—(U.P.) The Nationalists said today they had broken up a 15,000 man Communist Invasion force off the northern coast of Hainan island. The force was said to have been composed of more than 200 junks. Reports from Hoiow, on the strategic island, said planes spotted the junks last night and naval gunfire scattered the fleet, inflicting heavy casualties. "Mopping-up" was said to be continuing today. Catholic Students To Meet Catholic students and members of the Newman club, Catholic student group, will meet at 7:30 today in the basement of St. John's Catholic church, 1229 Vermont street. Business concerning "I Am an American Day," which will be Saturday, April 29, will be discussed. Today's Schedule For IM Softball Independent "A" Field | **Hello** | | :--- | | Jim Beam v. Deuces Wild | | Theta Tau v. Don Henry | | Sterling-Oliver v. A.S.C.E. | | A.I.E.E. v. Y.M.C.A. | | Air Screws v. A.R.O.T.C. | | Wesley v. Alpha Phi Alpha | | Oread v. Dix | Invalid Wichita Youth Is Straight 'A' Student Dallas Darrell Reiserer, 14 year-old Wichita youth, is probably the most unusual student ever to enroll with the Correspondence Study burgau of the University. Blast Victims Are Recovering Two men who were injured in a gas explosion in a small animals laboratory April 7 are reported improved by Watkins Memorial hospital authorities. The men injured were Theodore Metcalf, instructor in bacteriology, and Herbert Kasoff, graduate student. Both men suffered first and second degree burns and shock. Mr. Metcalf was burned on his face, arms, neck, and both hands. Kasoff's burns were restricted to his right hand and face. The gas explosion occurred when an ultraviolet light used for sterilization was switched off. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the University health service, said that the men believed a spark of static electricity from the switch ignited gas which had accumulated from a leak. The blast, which originated in a small sectioned-off laboratory at the far end of a larger laboratory, charred all woodwork in the small room. There was little apparent damage to equipment in the large laboratory. Damage to the laboratory was estimated at about $200. The north and south sides of the narrow wooden structure were bulged outward for about 40 feet from the west end, where the explosion occurred. The explosion broke a gas main but there was no fire, the injured men said. The laboratory is used for the study of communicable diseases. Memorial Contest Poems Due Today Today is the last day to submit manuscripts in the William Herbert Carruth memorial poetry prize contest. They are to be submitted to the chancellor's office. Although he has never entered a school room, Dallas is taking high school courses on the sophomore level. He has hemophilia, a disease that prevents the clotting of blood and doctors have advised him not to attend school. Since Oct. 1, 1949, he has completed a full scholastic year of English and algebra, and will soon finish mechanical drawing and radio. During the winter he was unable to write because of internal hemorrhaging which made his arm too sore, so all his study was confined to the latter two courses. His mother, Mrs. Jack E. Reiserer, was his only teacher until he enrolled in his correspondence courses. Dallas is technically a student at Wichita North High school. His course of study is approved by the principal of that school, and his diploma will come from North high. Fees for his correspondence courses are paid by the office of the Sedgwick county superintendent of public schools, under a state law which provides educational opportunities for exceptional children. Dallas qualifies. His transcript shows nothing but straight A's. He uses a wagon to move around. Nevertheless, he has managed to make the Reiserer home an electrical wonderland. He has built a burglar alarm and installed it. Manufactured control panels for his electric trains wouldn't do all the things Dallas wanted, so he has built his own. He also built a garden tractor. A degree in electrical engineering from K. U. is Dallas' academic ambition. He is confident that he will be able to use his electrical and mechanical talents in spite of his limited physical activity. Two Students Have Emergency Surgery Two students underwent emergency appendectomies S u n d a y morning in Watkins Memorial hospital. They were Walter Philip Billau, pharmacy sophomore; and Myrna JoAnn Lynch, fine arts junior. The condition of both students is described as good. Opening Today g 4:30 p.m. - Lawrence's newest recreation - New 30 yd. pitching green - You may use your own clubs. - Open Weekdays----4:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. - Sat. & Sun.—2:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. Sport Jayhawk Golf Driving Range 1 Mile East of Haskell on 10 You drive 'em—We'll shag 'em Play Tryouts Today, Tuesday Tryouts for the University Players laboratory production of Thornton Wilder's "Our Town" will be held at 7:30 p.m. today and Tuesday in the Little theater in Green hall. All students are eligible to try out for any of the 17 parts in the play. This play, which is being directed by Don Harling, College senior, is the first three-act play to be given by the University Players in their laboratory theater, KU Debaters Place Fourth L. Edward Stollenwerck, College senior, won first place in extempore speaking, and Craig Hampton, fine arts senior, placed fourth in original oratory at the Missouri Valley Forensic league tournament. The K.U. debate team tied for fourth place with the University of Texas at the tournament which was held at the Municipal University of Wichita April 6 through 8. The K.U. debaters were L. Edward Stollenwerck, College senior; J. Steve Mills, Alan K. Shearer, College juniors; and Evan K. Wilson, second year law. The Municipal University of Wichita placed first in the debate rounds of the tournament. The University of Colorado and Washington University placed second and third respectively. E. C. Buehler, professor of public speaking, was re-elected secretary of the league. Professor Buehler has held that office for 17 years. Ronald Amundsen discovered the South Pole. McGrath Urges Gambling Curb Washington. April 17.(U.P.)-Attorney General J. Howard McGrath urged congress today to throw a "knockout blow" at gambling syndicates by refusing them use of interstate communications facilities. He asked a senate interstate commerce subcommittee to approve a bill which would ban the transmission of certain gambling information by such methods as telephone, radio, and television. Interferie with the "freedom of the press" to circulate sports information or introduce "a new 'prohibition' era" by anti-gambling provisions which would require the federal government to police and prosecute gamblers throughout the nation. "It is quite evident that modern bookmaking operation is completely intertwined with the communications systems of this country," the attorney general said, "and that to deny the use of facilities of interstate communication to the organized gambling fraternity would be a knockout blow to their operations" McGrath made it clear that the proposal, drafted by the justice department and local law officers participating in the attorney general's recent conference on crime, is not designed to: Mr. McGraath said horse race information poses the major problem. But he said "the gamblers have apparently moved into large scale betting operations on such amateur and professional sports events as baseball, basketball and football" "Modern bookmaking, or off the track betting on horse racing," he said, "requires rapid transmission of facts on each race on the card" at about 20 major race tracks. Interstate communications facilities-telephone radio and some so-called wire services-provide that information. 47 WOL ti po tti Serving KANSAS Mom and daughter playing with floor tiles. The Kansas Power and Light Company has brought millions of dollars of new money into Kansas to build its producing, transmission and distribution facilities .money provided by thousands of stockholders and investors living all over the country. Money for Sister's shiny new shoes, for Johnny's new suit for school, for all the things you need and want . . . comes from JOBS. And those jobs, of course, are possible largely because the owners of business and industry invest their money in plants and equipment. This investment of new spending money is another example of the way the American Free Enterprise System works to bring better living to your community. ...by bringing in NEW SPENDING MONEY THE KANSAS POWER and LIGHT COMPANY 1950 Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks. University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 18, 1950 STUDENT NEWSPAPER Lawrence, Kansas f the ma- hibi ovi- der pro- the Wards Approve Clearing House In Council Form An inner ward council to function as a clearing house for independent student activities,policy forming group, and means for establishing communication between the Independent Student Wards and the Independent Student Association was amended and approved by wards P-Z and T Monday. The plan was submitted by the I.S.A. executive council and ward officers on April 5 for consideration. Under the approved plan ward officers will appoint members to the council. The council will elect the following officers; chairman, public relations director, vice-chairman, and secretary. Officers are to be approved by the I.S.A. executive council which will also appoint combination business manager and co-ordinator for the council. A social chairman will be appointed when needed. A leadership training school for independent students who are interested in becoming campus or ward leaders will be held at 7 p.m. on Monday, April 24, and Monday, May 1. Council officers will work closely with the I.S.A. executive council. Council members from each ward will be responsible for a report to the council co-ordinator, who will integrate this information into periodic reports to the I.S.A. executive council. Marie Schumacher, education junior, will speak about social activities between wards and other campus organizations at the first meeting. Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women, will talk about the mechanics of running an organization on the last Monday. Difficult Program Pleases Listeners By PATRICIA JANSEN An enjoyable recital by Bernard McNown, candidate for a master of music degree in piano, was well-received Monday night. served Monday night. His program consisted of difficult musical compositions from Bach, Chopin, Brahms, and Debussy. Chopin. Among McNown's better numbers were the familiar "Pour le Piano" (Debussy) and "Sonata in B Flat Minor" (Chopin). He also played the "English Suite No. 2 in A Minor" (Bach) and "Variations on a theme by Paganini op. 35" (Brahms). Bayles To Address Group At Washburn Polling Places Set For Election Dr. Ernest E. Bayles, professor of education, will give the honors address at the annual honors day convocation at Washburn university Friday. His subject will be "Progress Toward Democracy In Japan." Polling places for the general election Wednesday have been named Students in District I, including the College and the William Allen White School of Journalism will vote in the basement of Strong hall, and in Lindley and Fraser halls. District II, the School of Engineering, will vote in the basement of Marvin hall. District III, which includes students from the Schools of Business, Fine Arts, Pharmacy and Education will have its polls in the basement of Strong hall. Strong hall. Students from District IV, the Schools of Law and Medicine, will vote in Green hall. Except for the amendment ballot, all ballots should be marked by a number. First choice should be marked with the figure 1, second choice with a 2, and so on. Ballots which are marked with a cross will be disqualified by election officials when votes are counted. All regularly enrolled students at the University are qualified to vote in the election. Students-must present their identification cards to the judges at the polling places to get the ballots. Swarthout To Chicago D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, will leave Wednesday evening for Chicago to attend a meeting of Pi KappaLambda, national honorary musical society. Dean Swarthout, who is a member of the board of regents and a past president general of the society will act as delegate for the Kappa chapter at K. U. Before returning to Lawrence, he will visit relatives at Dixon, Ill. WEATHER KANSAS — Clearing and colder tonight, with diminishing winds. Wednesday fair, cooler southeast. Clingan is on the Union Operating board, the publications committee of the A.S.C., and was chairman of the elections committee. He is president of the Sunflower statesmen, a Summerfield scholar, a member of the men's honor organization, the Owl league, and of the Forensic league, Melvin Clingan, Pachacamac candidate for president of the All Student Council, has been serving on the A.S.C. or two years. MELVIN CLINGAN Clingan Wants Better Seating P. E. F. M. A. N. S. P. C. E. I. T. D. E. W. H. J. K. L. M Forecast Regime The platform that Clingan and the Pachacamac party endorse, contains seven major planks. KU Election Is Wednesday; Clingan And Shore In ASC Race A mechanical engineering fellowship for $1,250 for 1950-51 will be given the School of Engineering by the Stanolind Oil and GAs company, Tulaa, Okla. 2 The party, if elected, will try to investigate better seating possibilities in the stadium for football games. 1 The party hopes to achieve short order service in the fountain of the Union. Engineering School Gets Stanolind Fellowship 4 Clington advocates no payment for rooms engaged at the Union. He feels that the students should be able to use the Union's facilities more reely because of the payment of the $5.00 fee which is required of each student. The Stanolind company for three years has awarded a similar fellowship to a graduate student in chemistry at the University. Walter E. Conrad, graduate student in chemistry, currently holds the fellowship. He has been doing research on the reaction of hydrazic acid with olefines under the supervision of Dr. Calvin VanderWerf, professor of chemistry. The fellowship in addition to its value of $1,250 will also cover tuition and laboratory fees, explained T. DeWitt Carr, dean of the School of Engineering. It will be awarded to a student considered most worthy of scholastic aid and best able to carry on advanced study in mechanical engineering. The University Daily Kansan was incorrect in an article printed Monday that said the fellowship for $1,250 had already been awarded to a graduate student for the 1950-51 school year. The Kansan regrets making the error. This is the first time that the Stanolind Oil and Gas company is giving the University a fellowship in mechanical engineering, and the only fellowship in this field being awarded to a school for the next school year, Dean Carr said. 3 Instead of having dance bands on the campus for concerts, the Pac-hacamac party hopes to bring name bands in for dancing as well. John A. Poje, '37, Kansas City, Kan., who has completed the requirements for a Ph.D. degree, held Stanoloid graduate fellowship in chemistry the first two years it was awarded. Mr. Poje was a Summerfield scholar. 5 A day of grace should be allowed students between the end of classes and the beginning of finals. The class will visit the following firms: the Kansas City Central Electrotype company; Gill studios, which specializes in silk screen work; Greiner-FiFiled Lithographing; and the Kansas City Star plant. 6 Concerning hour parking on Jayhawk drive, Clingan said that the students with only one hour of class cannot conveniently park near that class because of the present half hour regulation. Twenty-nine students of the Elements of Advertising class will make a field trip Wednesday to Kansas City, Mo., to visit several firms which use various processes in making advertising layouts. The trip will begin at 8 a. m. and last until late afternoon. Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism, is taking the students to see some of the techniques they have been studying. Advertising Class To Visit KC Firms 7 Clingan said he hoped to attain a better feeling between the Council and the students. ASC Members Class Officers To Be Chosen A new All Student council president, Council members, and class officers will be selected in the student election Wednesday. Students will also decide whether or not to retain the organizational representatives on the A.S.C. Thirty-seven students have filed petitions for seats on the Council. Wilma Shore, non-partisan, and Melvin Clingan, Pachacamac-N.O.W., have filed for the presidency of the A.S.C. The vice-president, secretary, and treasurer are chosen by the newly-elected Council. newly-elected Council If the amendment to the constitution concerning organizational representatives is passed, only elected representatives will be seated on the council. If it fails, the organizational representatives will stay on the A.S.C. under the present arrangement. The amendment, passed by the council in March, will go into effect only if a majority of the students approve it. If the organizational representatives are removed the elective districts will be re-aportioned later to keep a 30-member council. Under the present set-up one-fourth of the elected representatives on the council may take away the vote of the organizational representatives if the issue being voted upon is termed political. political. Men and women candidates for A.S.C. seats are separated. The men are: District one—Warren Andreas, Dale Helmers, Dean Wells, and Joe Winsett, Pachacamac-N.O.W.; Walter Brown, non-partisan. Four men from this district are to be elected. District two—Bob Kleist, Damon Simpson, Sam Wilcoxen, and Bill J. Wilson, Pachacamac- N.O.W.; and Edward Grandle, non-partisan. Three men from this district are to be elected. District three — Jack Howard, Ralph McClung, and Thomas White, Pachacamac-N.O.W.; and Roger L. Davis, non-partisan. Three men are to be elected from this district. District four—Tom Fritzlen, Pachacamac-N.O.W.; and Bob Bennett, non-partisan. One man is to be elected. District three-George Ginther and Barbara Hagan, Pachacamac-Fay, and Maxime Gorger, non-partisan. Two women are to be elected from this district. Women who flied for seats are as follows: District one; Pat Gardenhire, Pat Glover, and Marcia Horn, Pachacamac-N.O.W.; and Helen Maduros, non-partisan. Three women are to be elected from this district. Names filed for class officers, all of them Pachacamac-N.O.W. candidates are as follows: Senior class: John Amberg, president; Lorraine Ross, vice-president; Hal Edmondson, secretary; and Betty J Boloomer, treasurer. Junior class: William Schake president; Emalene Gooch, vice- president; Vernon Sutton, secretary; and Sammy Johnson, treasurer. Sophomore class: Karen Hall, president; Phillip Owen, vice-president; Marilyn Hanson, secretary; and Billy Todd, treasurer. Morey J. Potter, student in 1929, died Monday, April 10, in Harris- burg, Pa., following an illness of several months. Former Student Dies I WILMA SHORE 3. Miss Shore said that she approves appropriation of Council funds to organizations on the basis of merit and contribution to the extra-curricular life on the campus. Shore Opposes Council Salaries Wilma Shore, non-partisan candidate for the presidency of the All Student Council, is the present secretary of the Council. She has served two years on the A.S.C. and is a member of several of the committees of the Council. She has served on the finance, social, elections, and smoking committees. She is on the Union Operating board and its board of directors, the University calendar committee, the convocations and lectures committee, the freshman week committee, and the University lecture course committee. In Miss Shore's program, she has included five points upon which she is asking to be elected. 1. Miss Shore said that she believed in direct contact with as many large active campus organizations as possible. Therefore, she is strongly opposed to the proposed amendment to do away with the organizational representatives. 2. Although she received a salary under the present A.S.C. salary plan, she said she was opposed to it, and if elected, would ask the Council to abolish salaries. 4. The powers of the Council are limited, she says, because the powers that have been delegated to it have not been properly utilized in the past. 5. Miss Shore said that she would attempt to bring student government nearer to the student by encouraging student attendance and participation in the Council meeting. Cheerleader School To Begin Wednesday A cheerleader training school will be held this week and next, Patricia Perkins, head cheerleader, said today. The training will be given from 5 to 6 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday east of Robinson gym and from 5 to 6 p.m. Monday, April 24, and Tuesday, April 25, west side of the gym. the present cheerleaders will teach the trainees the following yells: "Rock Chalk Chant," "Yea Team Fight," and "Let's Go Kansas." Tryouts for cheerleaders will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 26, in Robinson gym. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1950 Greek Opposes Greek In Tomorrow's Election It Is Therefore Important To Vote The QUALIFIED CANDIDATE Pachacamac - N. O. W. Endorses Melvin Clingan For A.S.C. President 2. 5 Grade Average, Chairman A.S.C. Elections Committee, Summerfield Scholar, Owl Society, Union Operating Committee, International Relations Club, Forensic League, Sigma Nu President. A. S. C. Representatives District I JOE WIMSATT DALE HELMERS WARREN ANDREAS DEAN WELLS PAT GARDENHIRE MARCIA HORN PAT GLOVER District II DAMON SIMPSON SAM WILLCOXON BILL WILSON BOB KLEIST District III RALPH McCLUNG JACK HOWARD TOM WHITE GEORGIA GINTHER BARBARA HAGEN District IV - Tom Fritzlen Class Officers Senior Class Junior Class Sophomore Class PRESIDENT JOHN AMBERG BILL SCHAAKE KAREN HALL VICE-PRESIDENT LARRY ROSS EMMALINE GOOCH PHIL OWEN SECRETARY HAL EDMONDSON SAMMY JOHNSON MARILYN HANSON TREASURER BETTY JO BLOOMER VERN SUTTON BILL TODD These Students Are Dedicated To: 1. Improving A.S.C.-Student Body Relations. 2. Improving Student Seating at Football Games. 3. Opening Union Ballroom to Student Organizations Without Charge. 4. Securing Name Bands for Dances—Not Concerts. 5. Securing Hour Parking on Jayhawk Drive. 6. Obtaining a "Day of Grace" Before the Start of Final Week. Vote The Qualified Candidates Vote Pachacamac - N.O.W. The University of Texas at Austin is set to announce a new academic program in the field of robotics. The program, titled "Robotics for Manufacturing," will focus on developing intelligent robotic systems that can be used in manufacturing processes. Students will gain hands-on experience with robotics and learn how to design, develop, and implement robotic systems using various programming languages. The program will also provide students with opportunities to work with industry professionals to build real-world robotic applications. 950 TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE University Daily Kansan Presents— Career Goals For Wally Smith Include Medicine, Church Work A career which combines medicine and work for the church is the goal of Wallace Smith, College senior. Wally, who says he is going to specialize in being a good doctor, is the great-grandson of Joseph Smith, the founder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. Wally's grandfather, Joseph Smith, Jr., re-organized the church along its original lines in Plano, Ill., after Brigham Young took his followers to Utah to establish the Mormon church, now known as the L.D.S. church. 1952 Kansan Photo by Bob Blank Wallace Smith Wally's father was recently elected to the First Presidency of the reorganized church. He now becomes one of two advisors to its president Wally is following right along the pattern of his progressive predecessors. The 6-foot, 1-inch student has already chalked up an admirable record at the colleges he has attended. At Graceland junior college, Lamoni, Iowa, 20 - year - old Wally was editor-in-chief of the yearbook and wrote a humor column for the college paper. Kappa Sigma Formal Kappa Sigma entailed April 1 with its annual spring formal, the "Stardust Ball." Mrs. Ralph Park, Mrs. Andrew McKay, Mrs. Charles Mandigo, and Mrs. M. Mercedes Krieger were chaperones. Guests were: Peggy Miller, Martha Harris, Bee Mausoul, Barbara Bruft, Pug Resell, Dalene McMahon, Nancy Wilson, Pat Williams, Lorraine Godding, Alice Milligan, Nancy Brubaker, Virginia Cox, Georgia Ginther, Billie Ann Carter, and Jo Ann Siemens. Jaceline Starrett, Patricia Roney, Joann Weber, Maria Corma, Donna McCosh, Joan Culver, Sarah Thacher, Mary Wilkins, Vi Godding, Doretta Anderson, Doris Whaley, Jane Hollingsworth, Nancy Lee Sewell, Pat Kennedy, Jeanne Parrott, and Jean Tolhert. Pat Hutchings, Lorraine Mather, Doris Lyons, Elaine Gilchrist, Helen Averman, Mary Genet Covey, Maggie Dickinson, Pat Glover, Anita Andreen, Rosanna Berryhill, Ellen Krug, Cookie Brown, and Mary Gelen Keller. Patricia Creech, Betsy McCune, Alix Neville, Lucinda Stevens, Carolyn McNabney, Mary Lou Peckenscheider, Melva Dene Hoover, Winifred Miller, Joan Bennett, Sue Scott, Annabel Hungate, Karin Stock, W. J. Gonan, Arden Angst, and Barbara Blair. Mary Agnes Leach, Kay O'Connor, Pat Landis, Marilyn Barnum, Yvonne Siefkin, Betsy Dillon, Marilyn Barr, Marilyn Lind, Ada Watson, Carolyn Lientz, Frances Hall, Nancy Smart, Mr. and Mrs. Hom H. Steinle, and Mr. and Mrs. James Spears. Brinkman Heads Phi Kappa Fred H. Brinkman, engineering senior has been elected president of Phi Kappa fraternity. Other officers chosen are Harry Halligan, vicepres.; Donald Shauf; treasurer; John Bergmann, recording secretary; John Kiley, corresponding secretary; Jerald Moore, editor; Eugene Kennedy, historian; Richard Reid, sr.gentle-at-arms. In his free hours, he was an enthusiastic participant in the school's dramatic productions. Among the parts he played were the roles of Abie in "Abie's Irish Rose." and Rosenkrantz in "Hamlet." After he was graduated from Graceland, he continued his theatrical interest at the University of Portland, where he played the title role in "The Drunkard." At K.U., Wally has pursued activities along similar lines. He was a member of the cast in the University Players' production of "False Gods." He has contributed his editorial ability to the Jayhawker magazine. Wally plans to attend medical school next year. He wants to take his internship at the R.L.D.S. sanitarium in Independence, Mo. West Pledges Sigma Kappa West Pledges Sigma Kappa Sigma Kappa sorority announces the recent pledging of Edith Allane West, fine arts sophomore from Kansas City, Kan. Tri Delt Pledges Wilkie Delta Delta Delta sorority announces the pledging, April 6, of Shirley Ann Wilkie Pi Beta Phi Announces Engagement, Pinnings Kendall-McIlrath Kenanian-McIlrath Dr. and Mrs. Donald A. Kendall of Great Bend announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Constance Kendall, to Mr. Donald C. McIlrath, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. McIlrath, also of Great Bend. Miss Kendall is a College junior and a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority. Mr. McIrrath, a College senior, will enter the School of Medicine this summer. He is a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity and Nu Sigma Nu medical fraternity. Foncannon-Wharton Pi Beta Phi sorority announces the pinning April 7, of Miss Patricia Foncannon, daughter of Mrs. Frank Foncannon of Emporia to Mr. Clyde L. Wharton, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Wharton of Kansas City, Kan. Miss Foncannon is a College junior. Mr. Wharton is an engineering junior and a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. Swanson-Engel Pi Beta Phi sorority announces the piming of Miss Mary Swanson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Swanson of Kansas City, Mo. to Mr. Dale Engel, son of Mr. Harry E. Engel of Salina. The announcement was made at the Phi Delt Mess by Mr. Edward Denning. Miss Swanson is a fine arts sophomore. Mr. Engel is a business junior and a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity. Local Safety Film Wins Honorable Mention A safety film produced by Centron Corporation, Inc., of Lawrence with technical supervision by Miss Edna A. Hill, chairman of the department of home economics, has been awarded honorable mention for 1949 by the National Safety council. iliams of Kansas City, Mo., and Kenneth Edmonds of Lawrence. University Daily Kansan Mall subscription: $3 à semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and on Monday mornings. Entrated as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. The picture, entitled "Cooking-Kitchen Safety," is being used extensively throughout the United States, Canada, and several foreign countries. It was directed by Art Wolf, president of Centron, and Charles Lacey and photographed by Norman Steuwe. The cast for "Cooking-Kitchen Safety" included Mrs. Barbara Rozin, College junior; Mrs. Helen Wil- the amazing new shirt without buttons! Full Length Talon Zipper Airman MODEL Z HALFLEED zip-front business shirt Sizes 14 to 17 Sleeves 32 to 35 $395 - As advertised in LIFE - Full-length Talon zipper *PATENT PENDING - Snaps on collar and cuffs - Guaranteed laundry-proof -By Bibler - Fine Sanforized broadcloth - White and pastel colors the university shop 1921 CRESCENT DRIVE. IN WEST WALK. The Bus-(Adv.) SOCIAL RAPID TRANSE B.BER "As you know, Reginald, all the mechanics are off today. See if you can't fix your own flat and get back on tha' route when ya can." No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money. Weaver 901 Mass. Now! the only make-up that gives your skin the "mat" finish* Touch-and-Glow LIQUID MAKE UP Rivlon Revlon introduces 'Touch-and-Glow' new liquid make-up made with Lanolite 1.00 At last, a good-for-your-skin liquid make-up that never looks masky, never looks greasy, never dries your skin...thanks to Lanolite. Revlon's exclusive new skin-softening ingredient that actually beauty-treats your complexion. Now, even in the sunlight, your skin seems lit by candleglow...velvet soft, tenderly tinted. In six new shades (and natural), each with harmonizing Revlon Face Powder. *Not shiny...not masky...so natural, just right! **TRADEMARK** WEAVER'S COSMETICS — MAIN FLOOR PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1950 A BRADLEY'S JACK HEINTZMAN is one of the nifty high jumpers who will appear at the Kansas Relays Saturday. Tied for second place a year ago, Heintzman will be opposed by at least eight other jumpers who have already jumped 6 feet $ _{5/4} $ inches or better in the 1950 season. Big Seven Baseball Results, Standings Conference Games Conference W L Pct. Oklahoma 2 0 1.000 Nebraska 2 0 1.000 Colorado 1 0 1.000 KANSAS 0 1 .000 Missouri 0 2 .000 Iowa State 0 2 .000 Kansas State - - --- All Games All GAME W L Oklahoma 6 2 Nebraska 4 2 Colorado 5 3 KANSAS 1 1 Iowa State 3 3 Kansas State 2 2 Missouri 0 6 Last Week's Results Conference Game 4 KANSAS 1-2 (Second game rained out) Iowa State 1-5, Oklahoma 5-9 Nebraska 7-3, Missouri 1-1 (Second game 10 innings) Non-Conference Games Nebraska 10, Southern Illinois U. 0 Nebraska 25, Parks College 3. BOOKINBET 2, KANSAS 10. ROCKHUNG 7, 2 RANKS 10 Nebraska 9-7, Washington U. (St. Susan) Oklahoma A. & M. 3-22, Kansas State 0-2. This Week's Schedule Conference Games April 18-19—Kansas State at Nebraska 21-22—Oklahoma at K-State 21-22—Iowa State at Missouri Non-Conference Games April 18—Missouri at Washington Va.-654, Louis Iril 18-Missouri at Washington U. (St. Louis) 19-KANSAS AT ROCK-HURST 21-22-Luther College at Nebraska. 23-C college at Colorado 22—Regis College at Colorado NOW OPEN V 4:30 p.m. - Lawrence's newest recreation - Open Weekdays—4:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. - Sat. & Sun.—2:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. - New 30 yd. pitching green Come out and play our new 18 hole miniature golf course this weekend—it's beautifully laid out on a 22,500 sq. ft. plot. GOLF Jayhawk Golf Driving Range Jayhawk Golf 1 Mile East of Haskell on 10 You drive 'em—We'll shag 'em WE DARE THEM ALL! PHILIP MORRIS challenges any other leading brand to suggest this test! ESTABLISHED APRIL 4, OVER THE YEAR PHILLIP MORRIS & CO. LTD. Imc Fine Art Distinction SPECIAL BUILD MADE IN U.S.A. by PHILLIP MORRIS & CO. LTD. NEW YORK Phillip Morris In Just ONE MINUTE to yourself PHILIP MORRIS is definitely less irritating-therefore more enjoyable- than the brand you're now smoking! PETER FOLKMAN 1 ... light up a PHILIP MORRIS THEN, just take a puff - DON'T INHALE - and s-l-o-w-l-y let the smoke come through your nose. Fasty, isn't it? A. P. MALCOLM 2 . . . light up your present brand Do exactly the same thing DON'T INHALE. Notice that bite, that sting? Quite a difference from PHILIP MORRIS! 2 Thousands and thousands of smokers—who tried this test—report in signed statements that PHILIP MORRIS is definitely less irritating, definitely milder than their own brand. See for yourself what a difference it makes, what a pleasure it is, to smoke America's FINEST Cigarette. Try PHILIP MORRIS today! NO CIGARETTE HANGOVER means MORE SMOKING PLEASURE! CALL FOR PHILIP MORRIS I PHILIP CALL FOR PHILIP MORRI S TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIV Claude Houchin Will Join Oilers S Claude Houchin, captain of the 1949-50 University basketball team, will join the National A. A.U. champion Phillips 66 Oilers next season, Coach Cab Renick of Phillips recently announced. Houchin, a four-year letterman, was second leading K.U. scorer during the 1949 and 1950 seasons and was selected on the All-Big Seven second teams the same seasons. The 6-foot 5-inch 185-pounder from Muncie will be the ninth Jayhawker to play with Phillips. Other Kansas players who joined Phillips following their college cage careers were K. S. Adams, Paul Endacott, Twink Starr, Jay Wallenstrom, Ray Ebling, Fred Pralle, and Howard Engleman. Harold Schmidt, another Jayhawker star, did not play with the Oilers, but coached the team from 1936 to 1939. Phillips, 1950 A.A.U. champs for the eighth time since 1937, recently retired four top players from their team. They are Gerald Tucker, Dick Reich, Roy Lipscomb, and Lew Beck. Houchin, who has given a fine all-around performance game after game for four years, will join two other Big Seven cagers who will play for Phillips next year. They are Milt Whitehead, 6-foot 9-inch Nebraska star, and Wayne Glassow, Oklahoma's all-conference forward. Another scoring wizard, George King, Morris Harvey college, will play for Renick's club in 1951. He LANDS CLAUDE HOUCHIN scored 967 points in 31 games to better the All-time record set by John Abramovich of Salem in the 1941-42 season. Phillips, which won the United States Olympic play-offs by defeating the University of Kentucky, 53 to 49, in 1948, just completed one of its most successful seasons. The 1950 club won 52 and lost one game, a 55 to 51 setback to the Caterpillar Diesels. Houchin, who played in the last 76 Kansas basketball games, scored 40, 174, 248, and 196 points respectively in the past four seasons for a total of 658 points. In 1950 Big Seven games, Houchin led the conference in free-throw percentage by scoring 37 of 44 attempts for 84 per cent. He scored 77 per cent of his free throws for the entire season. Claude's scoring 10 points, plus his fine all-around play, against Kansas State March 7 of this year was probably the greatest single game performance turned in by him. He consistently cleared both backboards against taller opponents by outstulting them. Houchin, a 24-year-old business senior, is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon social fraternity and also secretary of the senior class. Pittsburgh-(U.R.)-Mrs. Theresa Singer and her daughter, Mrs. Ida Helbing, believe in large families. Between them they have raised 31 children, of whom 22 are living. Big Things In A Big Way Jayhawker Del Norris Enters Decathlon K. U.'s own Delvin Norris, defending champ Jim McConnell of Nebraska, and California darkhorse Brayton Norton will head a field of ten entries in the decathlon at the silver anniversary Kansas Relays Friday and Saturday. Returning to defend his championship in the Glenn Cunningham mile will be America's best miler, Don Gehrmann of Wisconsin. Five hand-picked runners will oppose Gehrmann. Also entered in the decathlon are the fourth and fifth place winners of the 1949 Relays, Cornelius Anderson of Missouri Valley and Mickey Dunn of Wyoming. Rounding out the field will be freshman Ronnie Dobson of Tulsa, Willis Kleinsasser of Tabor college at Hillsboro, Kan., Herb Falkenburg of Trinity, Paul Berry of Tulsa, and Anthony Persha of Marquette. Opposing/ Gehrmann in the mile will be Javier Montez of West Texas State, Howard Johnston of Trinity, Al Holmberg of Tennessee, Frank Prince of Savannah, and Bill Conrady of Loyola at Chicago. Norris, senior football letterman and ordinarily a high jumper for Coach Bill Easton's Jayhawker squad, will be making his first start in a decathlon. McConnel was the surprise winner a year ago, beating out former national champion Bill Terwiliger by a mere 30 points. Little is known about Brayton, who represents Santa Ana Junior college, except that he recently compiled a 6,907-point total in California. That's Cold War Is Forgotten Momentarily As Major League Baseball Takes Over New York, April 18—U.R.)The 1950 major league baseball season opened today, giving millions of Americans a chance temporarily to forget the Cold war. President Truman led the parade of 250,000 fans to eight major league ball parks. Millions more fans huddled around radio and television sets. The season really gets underway with the day's principal attraction—a game between the American league champion New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox in Boston. Other opening American league games were St. Louis at Chicago and Detroit vs. Cleveland at Cleveland. The president was to throw out the "first ball" at 3 p.m. E.S.T. at Washington, where the Senators met the Philadelphia Athletics. But this "first ball" ceremony wasn't the real McCoy since several other games began earlier. As they banked the fires all over the hot stove league and prepared to go into action once again, there was a forecast of threatening weather which might cause postponement of games in some sections. LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth --produced by GABRIEL PASCAL 209 points better than McConnell did in winning the 1949 championship. Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Montez may be Gehrmann's toughest competition. He recently went 4:17 in the Arizona Relays. Holmberg is champion of the 1950 Sugar Bowl. Gehrmann, co-holder of the Relays record of 4:10.1, has gone as low as 4:09.4 during the indoor season. "Movies Are Better Now Than Ever Before" TONITE and WED. • John Wayne • John Agar "THE SANDS OF IWO JIMA" Walt Disney Cartoon Feature at 7:45 - 9:50 OPEN NIGHTLY 6:45 Lawrence DRIVE-IN Theatre Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed . . 75c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed.. 79c CASH AND CARRY ONLY Intramural Softball Schedule, Results Now! ENDS WED. Marked For Death! SPENCER TRACY JAMES STEWART VALENTINA CORTESA MALAYA JOHN SYDNEY LIONEL HODIAK · GREENSTREET · BARRYMORE Fraternity A Field Also Tom and Jerry Color Cartoon Latest World News Starts THURSDAY A picture that will touch every heart! 1 Sig Chi vs. Pi K.A. 2 Phi Psi vs. Delta Chi 3 A.T.O. vs. Alpha K. Psi 4 Phi Deltus vs. K.A. Psi 5 DU. vs. Phi Kap Tug 6 Phi Gam vs. Phi Kap Sig MARGARET O'BRIEN DEAN STOCKWELL HERBERT MARSHALL THE Secret Garden DAZEN MOUNTAINS AND CLOUDS IN TECHNICOLOR Continuous Shows. Open 12:45 Granada PHONE 946 3 A.I.E. vs. Y.M.C.A. Yesterday's Results Independent A Alpha Phi Alpha 22, Wesley 11 Dix 14, Oread 13 A.S.C.E. 17, Sterling-Oliver 10 Jim Beam 17, Deuces Wild 7 Don Henry 15, Theta Tau 8 Police Pay Fines, Too Tampa, Fla.—(U.P.)—Even the police can't park overtime here. Chief J. L. Eddings has ordered the tagging and usual $1 fine for policemen who don't practice what they preach. The chief's order followed complaints from merchants. VARSITY ENDS TONITE Alan Baxter "PRISONER OF JAPAN" — AND — ANNA MAY WONG "Bombs Over Burma" Late News - Cartoon Jayhawker Jayhawker Phone 10 For Sho Time NOW thru Wednesday GINGER ROGERS DENNIS MORGAN TRY TO MAKE THEIR LIPS BEHAVE IN... "Perfect Strangers" PLUS Late News Events Color Cartoon "Bye, Blue Beard" Prevue Saturday 11:15 SUNDAY For 4 Days THE THIRD MAN THE THIRD MAN Joseph Cotten Valiif Orson-Welles Hear the Magic Fingers of Anton Karas Play The Gay "THIRD MAN THEME!" VARSITY Limited Engagement WED.-THURS. "Deftly, joyously told-a grand show!" DAILY NEWS "Practically perfect!" -TIME MAGAZINE A "A delightfully amusing satire!" Bernard Shaw's PYGMALION WENDY HILLER·LESLIE HOWARD Continuous Performances Box Office Opens "ONE OF THE YEAR'S IO BEST" Special Price This Engagement Only Special Price This Engagement Only All Seats Special Student 75c tax incl. Price 50c tax incl. The More You Tell-The Quicker' You'll Sell-Use Kansan Classifieds. HELD NOW PLAYING OVER! 2nd WEEK Movies Are Better Than Ever! AND HERE IS ONE TO PROVE IT! ROMANTIC RIOT! CLARK LORETTA GABLE·YOUNG KEY TO THE CITY MARILYN MAXWELL · FRANK MORGAN Feature Times: 1:21 - 3:21 - 5:21 - 7:21 and 9:21 - Added Fun - Color Cartoon © News Soon: "BICYCLE THIEF" Patee PHONE 321 PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1950 TODAY'S MAIL Logical Sir: I have been following with interest that readers of the University Daily Kansan have had to say regarding the naming of the fieldhouse. Offhand, it certainly sounds like a splendid idea to name the new fieldhouse after the two men who have figured most prominently in basketball, not only in Kansas but perhaps in the nation. The name of Naismith is logical because Dr. Naismith invented the game. Allen is also logical because Dr. Allen has done a great service to the University for more than a quarter century. Most logical of all is Prof. John Malone's suggestion that the name be combined into Naismith-Allen fieldhouse. However, it is my understanding that it is University policy not to name any building after a person still living. For this reason, it seems likely that when the fieldhouse is finally completed, and a name for it is sought, that Dr. Allen will have to be left out in the naming. While it doesn't seem exactly right to leave him out, it looks like that is what will happen. Dr. Allen is a spry old gentleman. He will be around for quite some time. While it doesn't seem exactly right to penalize him for staying alive, it looks like that might very well happen. No doubt the board of regents has a good reason for not naming buildings after living persons. Yet it would seem that here, in view of Phog Allen's long and creditable service to the University, they might make an exception to that rule and name the fieldhouse Naismith-Allen. James S. Morris Journalism senior Ed. Note: As far as we are able to find out, Mr. Morris is correct in believing that it is University policy not to name any University building after persons still alive. However, whether an exception should be made in this case is open to debate. How do other readers feel about it? When a rifle is aimed, the barrel is above the line of the target. University Daily Hansan News Room Adv. Room K.U. 251 K.U.376 Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANASS Member of the Kansas Press Assn. Press Assn. and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Ad- servive Service,420 Madison Ave. New New York City. James Morris Editor-in-Chief Doris Greenbank James Shriver Managing Editor Business Mgr Asst. Man. Editors Norma Hunsinger Kay O'Connor John Hill Ralph Hemenway City Editor Edward Chapin Asst. City Editors Nelson Ober Marvin McMahon Elaine Elvig Steve Ferro Feature Editor Francis Kelley Photograph Editor Frankie Writes Telegraph editor Robert Sigman William Graves Richard Tatum Lloyd Holmes Mick Sports Editor Richard Dilsaver Asst. Sports Editors Bob Leonard Ray Soldan Arthur McHenry Mona Millikin Society Editor Faye Wilkinson Asst. Society Editors Billie Stever Early Steyer Editorial Assts. Pete North John Bannigan Keith Leslie Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner Cir. Mgr. Yvonne Josserand Nat. Adv. Mgr. Forrest Bellus Classified Ad. Mgr. Lee Dee John Wiedeman L The Editors Report - IF WE HAD OUR WAY: A Queen A Day ye Ed Our attention has once again been focused on the astounding number of pretty girls we have on the campus. The Sour Owl, the R.O.T.C. units, Homecoming, the Kansas Relays, the Hobnail Hop, and a staggering number of other organizations choose beauty queens every year. We've noticed that a different girl seems to be chosen each time. We think it's a grand idea to pick beauty queens. We've never had much practical experience at the thing yet it has always seemed an appealing way to pass time. If we had our way, we would see to it that every co-ed had a chance to become "Queen Something or Other" at least once while she was enrolled at the University. It's an honor every girl should get. Nothing boosts a girl's morale so much as being thought beautiful. Nothing, that is, except being told that she is . . . which may explain why so many of them make a point of passing the lawbarn at least once a day. A.S.C. ELECTIONS ARE A Serious Business ye ED Tomorrow, the annual spring election of class officers and president and district representatives will be held. Polls open at 7:30 a.m. and close at 6 p.m. We're reminding you of this event today because we think you ought to take part in the event tomorrow. It really is a simple procedure: you go to one of the polls in the basement of Strong, Fraser, Haworth, Green, or Marvin, present your identification card, obtain a ballot, fill it out, and drop it in a box. You only have to go through the ordeal once. Altogether, it should take you only a minute or two. In theory, anyway, that's how you vote in an All Student Council election. If you're living in an organized house, you probably know all about it. You'll be voting tomorrow. You don't want to receive a stiff fine for not voting. But if you don't live in an organized house, we have a few tips that might make this "theory" a bit more workable for you. First, get down to your poll early. We suggest you get there no later than 7:30 a.m. Don't worry about missing breakfast. It is far more important that you vote. If you can't make it at 7:30, get down to your poll as early as you can. We suggest you try to make it by 7:31. We have heard of polls running out of ballots. You want yours, don't you? Second, don't be impatient if there are a few other students ahead of you waiting to vote. Get in line anyway. Third, stay in line even if you have to cut class. Ask your poll-worker to give you an excuse. It really won't be valid, but you've got to do your patriotic duty and vote. If your professor seems unwilling to accept the poll-excuse, point out to him that it is a citizen's patriotic duty to vote. A little patter along the line of "It's like you're always saying, Professor Snarf, it's a person's patriotic duty to vote" may turn the trick if he's a particularly hard nut to crack. Fourth, be prepared to wait in line. Go prepared with a box lunch. Take along a Daily Kansan in case you want something to read. If you should get stuck in an extremely long line, take along an Irish "line-shortener." If you don't have one of these, last winter's hockey stick will work just as well. Five, when you finally get to the voting booth, he sure to make out two ballots. Put one in the ballot box and the duplicate in your pocket. Please follow this important step. If you don't, you may forget who you voted for. There really is no point in voting if you can't recall later for whom you voted. Six, make no wagers on the election's outcome. We have it straight from the horse's mouth that. . . ! Oops, we almost forgot that's a secret to which we're supposed to be clingin'! Memphis, Tenn.—(U.P.) The thief who robbed a grocery store of $100 cash wrigled through window fan blades to enter the building. He Was Nearly A Cut-up Pontotoc, Miss. — (U.P.) J. A. Monts has a sow that keeps his farm littered with pigs—55 pigs since last August. Pig Litters Mississippi Farm CHATEAU DRIVE-IN MAIL AT 18=T. Take A Break For A Tasty Snack - Tempting Sandwiches - Fountain Specials - Sizzling Steaks — 5 to 7:30 CURB SERVICE AFTER 4 P.M. Military Base At Guam Goes To Civilians July 1 Washington, D. C.-The plan to transfer the government of Guam from naval to civilian control by Saturday, July 1, 1950, promises the second major change in this tiny American outpost since the end of World War II. Conversion of Guam, southernmost of the Marianas group, from a sleepy tropical island into a key military and naval base was the first big postwar development undertaken. Although actually begun in the closing year of the drive on Japan, the program picked up momentum with the coming of peace. Today Guam has two permanent air fields, both built on the level land of its northern plateau. Port Apra, the large natural harbor on the southwest coast, boasts mooring space for more than 40 ships, submarine pens, dry docks, and a breakwater to protect the new installations against destructive typhoons. Road improvements include four-lane highways, some running the length of the island. This is a vast change from the pre-war Guam, whose defenses in 1941 were weaker than those in 1920 because the United States had honored the demilitarization terms of the Washington Naval Conference. Located about 3,750 miles closer to the Far East than Pearl Harbor, the island now plays a vital role as a supply base for American forces in Okinawa and Japan. The reconstruction of cities and the revival of the Guannian economy, however, are still incomplete. Agana, the capital city five miles north of Port Apra, was leveled during the recapture of the island from Japan in 1944. By mid-1948 a new Guam congress building had emerged from the rubble, but there is still considerable need for new construction, particularly housing. This holds true for other settlements on the island. In pre-war years Guam's chief cash crop was copra, but many of the island's coconut trees were either destroyed by the war or have been cut to make room for the new developments. Copra exports averaged about 3,000 tons annually before the war, but no shipments at all were made in 1948. were made in the field. To counteract this loss, U. S. officials have been encouraging the Chamorros, native Guamanians, to increase their crop agriculture. Before the Japanese attack, homegrown corn was the island's chief food staple. Other crops included rice, sweet potatoes, tapioca and taro, and such tropical fruits as bananas, avocados, mangoes and papayas. 'Small Things' by Keith Leslie If you are acquainted with chemistry, you may be interested in this scientific analysis of a familiar element, woman. Symbol—Wo. Discovered—First detected in pure form by Adam in Garden of Eden. Physical properties: 1. Boils at anything. 2. Freezes at nothing. 3. Melts when properly treated. 4. Very bitter if not used well. 5. Very unstable under pressure. Accepted weight 116. 2. Reacts violently if left alone. 3. Has ability to absorb great quantities of food. Occurrence—Surplus quantity is found in metropolitan areas. Chemical properties: 1. Possesses great affinity for gold, silver, platinum and precious stones. Test—Turns green if placed beside better looking specimen. Uses: 3. Useful as an equalizer in distribution of weattn. 2. Useful as a catalyst in acceleration of low spirits. 1. Highly ornamental. 4. Probably the most effective income reducing agent known to man. CAUTION !! Highly explosive in inexperienced hands. IT'S NOT TOO LATE!! You Can Still Make That Summer Trip To Europe WITH INTERNATIONAL YOUTH PARIS BY AIR $360 ROUND TRIP Flights to LONDON and ROME Write or phone International Youth Inc. 150 Broadway, New York 7, N.Y. COrtland 7-0362 To assure passage write immediately --- 50 TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Official Bulletin Tuesday, April 18 Civil Rights Coordinating Committee, 7:30 tonight. 111 Strong. A. S.C. dinner meeting, 6 tonight, Dine-A-Mite Inn. Engineers Wives, 7:30 tonight, Kansas room, Memorial Union. Dessert-bridge. Carlson-for-Senator club organizational meeting, 7:30 tonight, 106 Green. Stateswomen club, 7:15 tonight, Watkins hall. Wichtig: Der Deutsche Verein versammt sich Dienstag abund um 7:30. Museum of Art. Die Osterreichischen studenten werden die Gaste sein. Alle dieurf Osterreichischen Kultur interresieren, sind freundlich eingeladen. Cheerleaders Training School, 5 p.m. Wednesday, East Side, Robinson gym. Archery club Spring tournament, 4 to 6 p.m. Wednesday, Robinson annex. S.A.M., 7:30 tonight, Little Theater, Green hall. ___ Square Dance club, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Recreation Room, Memorial Union. ___ KuKu's, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 105 Green. ___ Alpha Phi Omega, 7 tonight, 210 Strong. Important relays meeting; attendance required. Kansan Calendar of Coming Events Jefferson County students, 5 p.m. Thursday, Miller hall. Completion of picnic plans; please attend. Today Museum of Art display, "Books of Switzerland and Latin American Art," 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday All Student Council election. Museum of Art display. Thursday Atomic energy lecture, "Geological Occurrence of Fissionable Materials," by R. M. Dreyer, chairman of the geology department, at 7:30 p.m. in Strong auditorium. Kansas Relays at Memorial stadium. Junior Interdorm, 5 today, Jolliffe hall. Quill club, 7:30 tonight, Hill Coop. Jay Jones, 5 p.m. Wednesday, Pine Room, Memorial Union. Kansan Classified Advertising Phone K.U.376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid within 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansas office. Journals may be later than 10 a.m. the day before publication date. Classified Advertising Rates Classified text One day Three days Five days 25 words or less 35c 65c 90c Additional words 1c 2c 3c FOR SALE FOR SALE MAN'S formal coat. Fleet Nighter, white. Size of coat 3651 after 5:30 or after 16:46 Kentucky. 24 FIGUREAN PAINTING is sweeping the campus. Get into the swing! The DIXIE CARMEL CORN SHOP has a complete line of figurines, paints and tools. It also results in sculptures. DIXIE CARMEL CORN SHOP, 842 Mass. 24 CVHVROLET. 1940 Convertible. Beautiful finish. All thief interior. Excellent mechanically. See to appreciate. Car after 6 p.m. Dan Cain, 3021. 20 1930 MODEL "A" Roadster. Mechanically good. Good body and paint. Phone. 24 CONERTIBLE. 1941. Nash Ambassador. Baby Blue. On the shoulder of a red leather jacket. Body, interior, motor top, tires, exce- lent condition. 414 W. 12th after 5. 20. DRESS UP your watch with a tinted glass of non-breakable crystal. Save here on repairs. Masden's Watch Shop; 12 E. O. Street. Phone 47. 18 ARCHITECTS! We now have the Graphic Solarimeter. The quick way to determine the angle of sun rays in the Northern Hemisphere. Only $3.00 at Student Union. 18 MACHINE DITCHING. House foundations, water and sewer ditches. Ditches are 16 in. wide. Make sure Job Resume is in minutes. Call John Reed. 2102, or Rob McKinney. 2537J. Tabor. 18 BOOK-EASE, a collapsible book holder. Can be used on a desk, in bed, anywhere. Now only 89c at your Student Union Book Store. 21 THESES MATERIALS! All weights of thesis quality typing paper, carbon paper, and typewriter ribbons. Student Union Book Store. M4 FINEST TELEVISION - Best in sets and aerials at lowest prices. New shipments just arrived. $7.50 and up. See the new Emerson table model set at $19.50. Easy terms. Bowman Radio and Electric. $26. Vermont. Phone 138. tf FOR SALE HAVE YOU SEEN THESE? HAVE YOU SEEN THESE? '47 New Ambassador sedan $1,295 '47 New Ambassador sedan $1,295 '47 Chevrolet 2-ton truck with platform '47 New Luxe 8 sedan 1,055 '38 Dodge 2-door sedan 345 '38 Chrysler convertible others to choose from BILL DINOIN, Lincoln-Mercury 9th & Miss. Open Tonight 21 BUSINESS SERVICE TYPING: Neat, accurate, regular. Regular rates. Prompt service, Mrs. Schelar. Apt. R-36, 1810 La., Phone 3273-R. 24 WANTED FEMALE help wanted. Full time education. Shorthorn and typing required, all KU. 298. 20 SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer training. City representation the oldest, largest, and best known firm in the educational field. Applicants accepted will work by appointment at $25.00 or $25.00 and more per week on an advanced percentage basis. Write Mr. W. F. Graddock, Jr., 1006 Grand Ave. Kenwood City, Mo. Giving qualifications, home and office addresses. Term Papers, Reports, Notes, etc. Prompt Service. Mrs. Shearon, 1028 Vermont. Ph. 1158R. t* TYPING. Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rules. Prompt attention. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601 THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. Complete overhaul, engine cleaning, paintting, used cars. 317 E.17th. Phone 785 or 1821R. tf JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant visit and your "Jayhawk" field. We can help you find their needs are our business. Our one-stop pet shop has everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Conn. St. Miami. Phone 785. TYPING: Call Hazel Stanley 2865M for prompt experienced service. **820%** Max Attendance. FOR RENT THREE room apartment. Excellent condition. Suitable for student and working wife. Apartment furnished or unfurnished. Garage if needed. 831 K. Phone 1085-J 20 ROOM mate married over vacation. Need bed with room, with graduate student. New home. New furniture. Twin beds. $45.00 rent including breakfast for rest of semester. Phone 2447-R. HEY MEN! Can you beat this? Nice floor, cooking facilities including dishes, etc. in basement. All for $5.00 week each. 1409 Rhode Island. 18 Inter woven Socks WANTED Inter woven Socks TRANSPORTATION get yourself some of these New Interwoven Socks . . . New Patterns . . . New Colorings . . . 75c the pair. ACCOUNTANT wanted by University of Kansas Press, half year exp. Applicant to take Civil Service exam when given; Journalism building. See Mr. Rykes Journalism building. LOST CARLS GOOD CLOTHES COMMUTERS—Toppeka to Lawrence $35.00 six days. Wives, Williams, 12 upstairs. GLASSES. she rim with gold trim. Probably lost in vicinity of Frank Strong ball. Phone 581, Charity Fischer, 128. ONE KEY ring with some particularly valuable keys on it. Call 3835W. 18 CHAIN with 4 keys and a silver plate with Kansas printed on it. Reward; if please, call Penny at 2204 after o'clock. SENIORS! SAVE NOW BY SUBSCRIBING TO TIME Special College Rate—1 year of TIME for only $4.75, saving you $1.25 under the 1-year U. S. subscription rate .. bringing you 20c-a-copy TIME for less than 10c an issue. READ TIME-FOR THE NEWS YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO MISS In class or out, you'll want to know the important and interesting news of the world—and TIME is the favorite news source of college graduates everywhere. Every week, TIME organizes the news under 21 logical department headings—tells it so briefly you can make it your own in a single evening, so vividly it is fun to read, easy to understand, hard to forget. SUBSCRIBE TODAY AT THIS SPECIAL COLLEGE RATE—$4.75 FOR A FULL 52 WEEKS OF TIME Even bigger savings! If you subscribe to TIME now, you can continue your subscription for the next five years and get the same savings $1.25 each year under the regular subscription price. Take advantage of these long-term savings by giving your order to your college subscription representative today. STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE Give Your White Elephants 'Green Backs' With KANSAN Classifieds. "Pink Elephants on Parade" I. S.A. Spring Formal Friday, April 21 Union Ballroom 9 p.m. Music by Jim Sellards and his orchestra Admission - ISA membership cards or $1.25 per couple .75 single admission .75 per couple for ward members PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1950 125 130 140 150 160 170 180 190 200 210 220 230 240 250 260 270 280 290 300 310 320 330 340 350 360 370 380 390 400 410 420 430 440 450 460 470 480 490 500 510 520 530 540 550 560 570 580 590 600 610 620 630 640 650 660 670 680 690 700 710 720 730 740 750 760 770 780 790 800 810 820 830 840 850 860 870 880 890 900 910 920 930 940 950 960 970 980 990 1000 THE AIR FORCE Drum and Bugle corps will make its debut at the Kansas Relays parade Saturday. First organized six weeks ago, the corps has been rehearsing six hours a week in preparation for Saturday's event. The Air Force Drum and Bugle corps, which has been organized at the University under the direction of Capt. John W. Barley, assistant professor of air science, will make its debut at the Kansas Relays parade Saturday. Drum And Bugle Corps To Make Debut Saturday The corps has been rehearsing for nearly six hours every week since its formation six weeks ago, in order to be ready for the relays celebration. Some of the men who are in the corps have had no previous experience with the instruments they play. Instruction was given the new men by Paul Dring and Robert Zurbruchen, College sophomore. Eight bugles and nine drums were sent to the air force unit here. There are not enough instruments to go around but Captain Barley said that they had received all they could for the present. Much of the music has been written by Dring and Zurbuchen. Some of the titles are reminiscent of service lore. One of them is "The Purple Shaft," and another is "The Captain and the Colonel." Because of supply difficulties, the corps will not wear the new air force blue uniforms. The uniforms shown in the picture are green twill, similar to the officers uniforms worn during the war. Journalist Turned Librarian Reported Trials And Strikes A journalist turned librarian is de Lafayette Reid, assistant director of libraries at the University since September 1, 1949. Mr. Reid received his bachelor of science degree in journalism from the University of Missouri in 1938 and was a reporter on the Caruthersville, Mo., Democrat-Argus. He recalls 11 murder trials he reported in 11 months and the "share croppers" strike" of 1939 that led to his affiliation with the St. Louis Post Dispatch. Farm workers loaded family and goods into dilapidated wagons and moved onto the highways surrounding Caruthersville, center of the second largest cotton producing county in the south. Pennsicott county. First news 10 DE LAFAYETTE REID Library work was part of the ex-reporter's college career. At Shurteff college in Alton, Ill., he worked in the library. He acquired more experience as a student assistant at the University of Missouri library between 1936 and 1938. of the unusual strike reached the Post Dispatch through Mr. Reid, who became a staff correspondent for the newspaper. He received a bachelor of science degree in library science in 1940 from the University of Illinois. While working for his degree, he assisted in the Order department of the University of Illinois library. In 1946 Mr. Reid went to Galesburg, Ill., where he was the librarian of the Galesburg division of the University of Illinois. He received his master of science degree in library science in 1948 while at Galesburg. This undergraduate extension of the University of Illinois was discontinued in June 1949. "My trip to Lawrence and the University of Kansas was the most convenient one I could make." Mr. Reid said grinning. Lawrence was the only location, out of the positions he considered following the close of the extension library, that was served by a through train from Galesburg. Contacts with student library workers Mr. Reid finds one of the most rewarding phases of his work. As well as supervising student library personnel, the assistant director manages University branch libraries. Answer Ready For Soviets Topeka Capital Promotes Grads James L. Robinson and John F. Wheeler, '49 graduates of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, have received promotions on the Topeka Daily Capital. Robinson has been appointed state editor and Wheeler will be assistant city editor. The appointments were announced by James Reed, executive editor of the Topeka paper. While at the University, both held executive positions on the Daily Kansan. Wheeler was feature editor and city editor and Robinson was an assistant city editor, telegraph editor, and editor-in-chief. Washington, April 18—(U.P.) The United States today charged that Soviet fighter aircraft shot down an unarmed American naval plane over the open waters of the Baltic sea. Youth Dies in Auto Crash Turner, Kan, April 18—(U.P.)A 17-year-old Linwood, Kan was killed last night and three other persons were injured in a head-on collision of two motor cars on highway 32 near Turner. Washington, April 18—(U.P.) The United States planned to reply—firmly but calmly—today to Russia's angry protest that an American plane violated Soviet territory 10 days ago and exchanged fire with Soviet fighters. State department officials completed a draft of the American reply, and arranged to dispatch it to the Russians immediately unless some new hitch developed. The U.S. note is based on the "true facts" in a highly secret report relayed to President Truman and the state and defense departments by military leaders in Europe who investigated the disappearance of an unarmed navy privateer the same day. Michael J. McDermott, state department press spokesman, has criticized Russia for its lack of "calmness and restraint" and has said the United States will not follow suit. Russia protested a week ago that an American bomber committed an "unheard of violation of the elementary rules of international law" by flying over Soviet-controlled Latvia on April 8. The Russian note said the American plane fired on Soviet fighters and that they opened fire in return. The one possible clue to the fate of the American plane—a yellow rubber life raft picked up in the Baltic sea—was on the way to Copenhagen for examination by American air force men who have been directing the search for the missing aircraft. It was on April 8 that the unarmed navy privateer, a four-engined aircraft, disappeared in the same general area. Most officials here have gone on the theory that the Russian fighters shot it down. World News At Press Time Cholera Epidemic In India Calcutta, India, April 18—(U.P.) Calcutta's cholera outbreak reached epidemic proportions today and hospitals were unable to remove victims as fast as they died. Valetta, Malta, April 18—(U.P.) Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh will celebrate at a cocktail party on the destroyer Chequers tonight the news that she expects her second child in late July or early August. Princess, Duke Celebrate ALEXANDRA CABOTT Latin Toe-Teasing In Dance-Tempo 15 "MIGUELITO VALDES (above) plays Ernesto Leucona". . Malaguaña, Say Si Si, Always In My Heart, and 3 others in this new danceable album! RCA Victor has just come out with 15 new albums ALL "DESIGNED FOR DANCING". Everyone's stepping again! 15 great bands, 15 great composers, 90 hits! And what an album Miguelito has! Get all 15 at Bell Music Co., 925 Mass. ASC Refuses To Enforce Strong Hall Smoking Rule The All Student Council has decided that since the Council did not order the north and south wings designated as no-smoking areas the student court could not enforce the smoking rule in this case. If a non-smoking rule is to be enforced in the basement of Strong hall, the chancellor will have to enforce it. A smoking committee report by Arthur Ford, chairman, resulted in this action. In the report Ford revealed that psychology teachers had been smoking in their offices and that Chancellor Deane W. Malott had sent word to stop it. Seemingly it was an outgrowth of this action that led to the posting of "no-smoking" signs in the two areas. Ford's report outlined generally the smoking situation on the campus. The Council voted not to accept the portion which dealt with the Strong hall basement smoking. Ernest Friesen, Council president, said "By striking out the section dealing with smoking in the basement of Frank Strong, it would be up to the chanceller to enforce it, the court wouldn't." Robert Bennett, vice-president, said "If we let this pass we would be acting like a rubber stamp." WAC's Start New Styles Newton. Mass.—(U.P.)—Unwilling to be outdone by the Army's WACS, city officials hope to outfit their new policewomen in Hattie Carnegie uniforms. 眼 YOUR EYES EYE should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription Duplicated. Phone 425 1025 Mass. Lawrence Optical Co. QUEEN OF THE ALLEY... ALLEY... QUEEN OF THE ALLEY... No wonder she's in such demand —This queen keeps TOOTSIE ROLLS on hand! She eats a TOOTSIE, asks for more, Then bowls 'em over with her score! CHOCOLATE Tootsie Roll 5¢ at all leading candy counters THE SWEETS CO. OF AMERICA, INC. HOBOKEN, N. J. CHOCOLATE Tootsie Roll 5¢ at all leading candy counters COLOATE tsie all 2 + 2 / 4 We're Not So Dumb- We know that the smart students eat where there is— - Friendly Service - Good Food That's why we take pride in our excellent chef, restful atmosphere, and friendly waitresses. - Pleasant Atmosphere DUCK'S TAVERN Stop In - You'll Be Pleased 824 Vermont VII Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks. University Daily Kansan STUDENT NEWS PAPER Lawrence, Kansas 'Abilene' Show Will Be May 2 In Fraser Hall "West of Abilene," the second all-student production of the year, will be held in Fraser theater Tuesday, May 2. through Friday, May 5. Tickets for the show go on sale today in the Student Union office and at Obers clothing store for 75 cents. All seats are reserved. The entire cast of 31 people has been rehearsing for six weeks. They began full cast rehearsals Monday in Fraser theater. "West of Abilene," which is built around an unscrupulous character called Snake McCoy, is a show combining many talents. A musical farewell in three acts, "West of Abilene" was written by Craig Hampton, fine arts senior. Hampton also wrote the lyrics to the 19 songs composed by Willard Straight, fine arts junior. Sponsored by the Student Union Activities, this third annual production of College Daze, entails cooperation from every student union committee. C. Curtis Coffey, business junior, is business manager and Marjorie Crane, College junior, is cast secretary. Leads in the take-off on a western farce will be played by Louise Lambert, College senior, and James Hawes, fine arts senior. Both are veterans of the 1948 production, "Ghost of a Chance." Others in the cast are Roy Hadley, Donald Hyten, business seniors; Jack Stewart, business junior; Jake Mundy, Donna Harrison, Georgette Spears, John Wesley, College juniors; Pedro Antonioli, Heywood Davis, Hugh Eberle, Wayne Helge- son, Dick Hunter, Win Koerper, Nancy Lindsey, Donald Little, Norman Wenger, College sophomores. Myron Don George, College freshman; Margaret Ann Cowboy, education junior; Dudley Wallace Benton John Neely, engineering seniors Charles William Stephens, engineering sophomore; Norma Jean Guthire, Bernadine Read, fine arts seniors; Judson Greer, fine arts junior Marilyn Barr, fine arts sophomore Erma Lutz, fine arts freshman, and Emily Stewart, journalism junior. Assisting with the production staff are Don Yelton, stage director, Robert Geis, program director, Mary Witcher, production secretary, Patricia Brown, script secretary, Janet Coulter, assistant stage and Barbara Bolling, costume director. Narcotics Law Lecture Given To Pharmacists It is not only important, but essential that pharmacy students fully understand every angle of the Harrison Narcotic Act, TJ. Walker, district supervisor of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics said Monday night Mr. Walker, from Kansas City, Mo., spoke at the student affiliate chapter of the American Pharmaceutical association. His lecture covered the laws concerning the use and sale of narcotics and many of the restrictive regulations by which pharmacists must abide. History Professors Attend Topeka Meet Two faculty members from the University history department will speak at the 24th annual meeting of the Kansas Association of Teachers of History and Related Fields to be held in Topeka Friday, April 28 and Saturday, April 29. James E. Seaver, assistant professor of history, will talk about "Publius Ventidius, Forgotten Roman Military Hero." Charles B. Realy, professor of history, will speak on "A British Program for African Development." Donald Giffin Not A Candidate Posters listing Donald Giffin, College junior, as a candidate for president of the All Student Council, were erroneously circulated on the campus today. Giffin reported that he knew nothing about his candidacy and although he feels deeply grateful to those who wanted him to run for the position, he feels that his efforts can be put to a better advantage by maintaining less conspicuous campus positions. Seven Will Go To Convention Seven University students will leave today for the National Independent Student association convention to be held Thursday through Saturday at Bloomington, Indiana. Those who will attend are: Betty van der Smissen, second year law, Shirley Matson, College senior; Walter Brown and Richard Krimminger, College juniors; Robert Dunwell, education junior; Robert Longstaff, College freshman; and Luther-Buchele, executive secretary of the North American Student Co-operative league. Miss Marjorie Austin, Social director of dormitories, will accompany the group. The convention will consist of I. S. A. chapters discussing and pooling their ideas on social functions, political action, money-making schemes, social welfare programs, and membership campaigns. Alex Campbell, former attorney general of the United States, will speak on "Which Way Democracy?" Ten students from Kansas State college and one from the Municipal University of Wichita also will attend the conference. The University's I. S. A. members hope to secure the next year's national convention site here. WEATHER KANSAS—Generally fair today, colder southeast. Tomorrow, fair and warmer. High today 50 to 55 degrees, low tonight 35 to 40 degrees. ASC Decides To Enforce Smoking Rules The All Student Council voted Tuesday to enforce smoking regulations in the east and west wings in the basement of Strong hall. At a previous meeting the Council had decided that the Student court would have no jurisdiction in this matter. "I am sorry that another engagement prevented me from attending the last Council meeting," Dean Woodruff said. "We have had difficulty with smoking, particularly in the east wing of the basement of Strong hall. Roger Barker, chairman of the psychology department, in response to a suggestion that smoking be prevented in classrooms, sent a letter to chancellor Malott explaining the situation and Mr. Malott sent the letter to me. Arthur Ford and Mary Louise Fischer, members of the smoking committee, attended the meeting, Dean Woodruff explained. They discussed the smoking problem and "felt that it was reasonable to make these areas no-smoking areas since there is nearly a quarter of a mile of smoking area nearby. "He (Mr. Barker) said that it was hard to enforce the no-smoking in class rooms' since people smoked right outside the door. It sounded reasonable to me and I called the smoking committee together." They realize that their war torn country can offer the world little commercially, but they feel that the heritage left them by composers such as Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, and Schubert still leaves them cultural gifts which they may share with other peoples. "Some feel that smoking restrictions impinge upon personal liberties. Cancellor Malott feels that we must make some restrictions of smoking in the buildings." "Arthur said he would put a notice in the University Daily Kansan, and I said I would see to it about getting appropriate signs put up. We thought we were operating on the authority of the smoking committee," he said. L. C. Woodruff, dean of men, spoke to the Council outlining the events leading up to the Council's refusal to enforce the new smoking regulation. Austrians Will Entertain In Musical Show Tonight The Council appropriated $200 to the Ku Ku's, men's pep organization, for a card section at football games and other expenses. The musical director of their show, "A Night in Old Vienna," is Felix The members of the cast represent practically every field of study in the Austrian universities and every sectional and economic group in their small country, which is about the size of the state of Maine. Many of the men and women are students of foreign languages and music and practically all of them are fond of sports—skiing in particular. The customary starched shirt atmosphere of a concert will be absent from the performance to be given tonight at Hoch auditorium Thirty-two young Austrian teachers and university students will be performing their native folk songs and folkdances in authentic peasant costumes lent them by the provincial museums of Austria. The performances of these young people are not for profit but to pay their expenses in a sight-seeing tour of the United States. While they are here, they hope to be able to teach Americans something about the people of Austria and their cultural background and to learn the same things about this country and its people. This Goodwill tour of Austrian students is being sponsored by the Amt fur Studentenwanderungen, Office of Student Wandering, of Vienna, which was founded in 1924 by Dr. Oskar F. Bock lecturer at Vienna University. The Amt sponsored a similar tour to Great Britain in 1935 and another to South Africa in 1937. North America was the goal of the Amt in 1939, but the annexation of Austria and the second world war destroyed their plans. Molser. Mr. Molzer is a Viennese who has been directing since he was 14. He visited the United States in 1949 as director of the Vienna Boys Choir. Since 1939, these students have learned the meaning of war and of political terrorism. Dr. Bock describes them as now being "disillusioned, distrustful, cynical, and self-fish." The purpose of this tour then, he says, is to re-educate these young people so that they will be needed for help with the rebuilding of Europe. 700 Vote By 11 a.m. In Quiet Election Approximately 700 students had cast their ballots by 11 a.m. today in the University general election which was marked by extreme quiet compared with other years. Voting was exceptionally heavy at the polling places in Green, west Strong, and in Lindley, according to members of the A.S.C. elections committee. No signs of blocking the lines or other disturbances were noted by Daily Kansan reporters. A former associate justice of the Student Court who was distributing leaflets in behalf of one of the A.S.C. presidential candidates said that he hoped his candidate would win because "political division harms the solidarity of the student body." He stated that his candidate stood for "breaking down the lines between Greek and Independent." Office equipment belonging to Mr. Harris and a few books heretofore designated as part of a family library are to be set aside and go to Mrs. Irene Ellis under provision of the statutory law, Judge Gray ruled. An itemized list of the articles exempt from the library left to KU will be drawn immediately. The University of Kansas may finally call the major portion of the Ellis Natural History library its own as a result of a decision given Tuesday by Judge Frank Gray of the Douglas county probate court. The collection of about 60,000 volumes valued from $200,000 to $400,-000 has been stored in the basement of Strong hall awaiting the end of the long legal dispute that was heard in three courts, including the Kansas supreme court. Beth Will Address Forum, Congress The state supreme court ruled the past fall that full ownership of the collection of books on ornithology rested with the University, but the court did not specify which part of the collection should be considered as personal property of Mrs. Ellis, who had disputed the University's claim to her husband's library. Ellis Library To Be Divided In Marvin, voting was light. Poll workers amused themselves by playing word games while waiting for voters. Since January, 1948, he has been secretary-treasurer of both the American Association of Teachers of Journalism and the Association of Accredited Schools and Departments of Journalism. Newcomers Club To Meet Thursday One of the main speakers at the Southwestern Journalism Congress in Baton Rouge, La., this weekend will be Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism. More than 250 students and faculty members from 13 universities and colleges will attend the conference Thursday, Friday, and Saturday at Louisiana State university Officers for next year will be elected at a business meeting of the Newcomers club, 3 to 5 p.m. Thursday at the Lawrence Woman's club, 1941 Massachusetts street. The group will also vote on a revised constitution. Professor Beth will speak on "Publicizing Social Agencies", and he will also lead a journalism faculty forum on better teaching methods. He will visit the journalism departments at Tulane and Loyola universities in New Orleans. Feelings varied as to the importance and outcome of the election. The apathy of some of the students was expressed by Lee Turner, first year law, who said, "I don't want to vote in a predetermined election. Pachacamac has it—their machine is invincible under present political alignment on this campus." Another who did not plan to vote was Wayne H. Smith, engineering senior, who said that he did not know who was running or whether it was worthwhile voting or not. Stating an opposite opinion was Mal Copeland, College senior, who described the election as a "wonderful example of power politics." Also varied, were the opinions of two students on the political aspects of the election. Jim Gurley, College sophomore, thought it was "a very fair election and that everyone has a good chance to vote." A touch of color was added to the more serious aspects of the election with a red hammer and sickle being painted on the side of a voting booth in the basement of Green. Hal Edmondson, chairman of the A. S. C. elections committee said, "No evidence so far of any obstructing or causing any difficulty at the polls has been noted. The efforts of this council to run an honest election have been quite successful." None of the poll workers or election officials would give any prediction as to the outcome of the election. Polls will close at 6 p.m. Several original paintings of art work used in the Saturday Evening Post have been presented to the Museum of Art by Ben Hibbs, '24, editor of the magazine. Polls will close at 6 p.m. Hibbs Gives Illustrations The paintings include cover illustrations by Norman Rockwell and Constantine Alajalov and work by Steve Dohanos and Gilbert Bundy, a former Kansan. The Rockwell picture is a double cover in oil of a cowboy and his girl getting ready for a party. The Alajalov cover shows a woman shaking her wrapped Christmas present while her husband sleeps. Dr. John Maxon, museum director, said the paintings will be used for instructing students in illustration, painting and commercial art. The paintings will be ready for public display in May. Dean To Speak On General Education General education will be the topic of a speech to be given by Dr. Sidney J. French, dean of the faculty at Colgate university, at a faculty assembly 4 p.m. Thursday in Strong auditorium. Dr. French, who was graduated from the University of Chicago in 1922, has been a professor of chemistry and is the author of several books on scientific subjects. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE TWO WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1950 VA Defines Loan Terms World War II veterans interested in securing a G.I. loan were reminded today by the Veterans Administration regional office in Kansas City, Mo., that the V.A. is not permitted to lend money under the G.I. bill. if the G. I. loan is for the purchase or construction of a home and if that property meets reasonable value requirements based on today's real estate market, then the V. A. may guarantee a loan up to 50 per cent, in an amount not to exceed $4,000, once the loan has been secured. The V.A.'s maximum guaranty for nonreal estate is 2,000 dollars. The purpose of this guaranty, the V. A. pointed out, is to assist a veteran in obtaining a G.I. loan when he otherwise would be unable to do so. The V. A. reiterated that its guaranty of a G. I. loan becomes almost automatic once the veteran has successfully negotiated a loan and the selling price of the property is in line with the appraisal figure. Veterans interested in obtaining a loan should contact a bank, building and loan association, mortgage broker, or any public or private lender. Veterans in this area may secure assistance through the V. A. regional office located at 1828 Walnut street, Kansas City, Mo. Stateswomen Club To Sponsor Booth The *Stateswomen club* made plans to have a booth in the registration line next fall, the club decided Tuesday night. The purpose of the booth will be to acquaint new students with the Stateswomen club and will be a place for members to pay their dues. The club's current project is sending information to 1950 Girls' State members and also to Girls' State alumnae. The next meeting of the club will be on Thursday, two-hour work night when the women will work on these letters. Mrs. Grace Bell, state director of Girls' State will attend the last meeting of the club on Tuesday, May 16 'Smash For Cash'—Okay Maryville, Tenn. — (U.P.) "Smasl for Cash," said an advertisement for a Maryville furniture store. A burglar took the advice, smashed a window, and stole $23 from a cash drawer. University Daily Kansan Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year. (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University mail is sent by e-mail. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. All-Time Hits In "Danceable 15" (2) "SPADE COOLEY (above) plays Billy Hill!" .The Last Round-Up, Wagon Wheels, The Old Spinning Wheel, 3 other famed tunes ...all in a brand new RCA Victor album "DESIGNED FOR DANCING!" 15 such albums just out—15 great bands, 15 great composers. Danceable hits at last—90 of 'em—with the danceable beat that delights your feet! Make your living room a ballroom again—with Spade Cooley's album! At L. Loke Smith 846 Mass. Official Bulletin Wednesday, April 19. Wednesday, April 15. Cheerleaders Training School, 5 p.m. today, east side, Robinson gym. Jay James. 5 p.m. today, Pine room, Union. K. U. Dames 8 tonight. Little theater, Green hall. Short dramatic skits; all Dames urged to attend. KuKu's, 7.30 p.m. Thursday, 105 Green hall. Square Dance club, 7:30 tonight, Recreation room, Union. Archey club Spring tournament, 4 to 6 p.m. today, Robinson annex. Home Economics club fashion show, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 110 Fraser hall. Jefferson County students, 5 p.m. Thursday, Miller hall. Completion of picnic plans. Phi Chi Theta, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Jolliffe hall Red Peppers, 7.15 p.m. Thursday, 103 Strong hall. Social Work club business meeting. 4 p.m. Thursday, East room, Union. International club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Recreation room, Union. Alpha Kappa Psi business meeting, 7:15 p.m. Thursday, English room, Union. Professional meeting at 8 p.m. Young Democrats, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 106 Green hall. Larry Ryan, secretary of state, speaker. Phi Delta Kappa and Pi Lambda Theta annual spring dinner, 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Kansas room, Union Dr. John Ise, speaker. El atenue se remuira el jueves, 20 de abril, 4:30, 113 Strong hall. Programa: El Testamento de Judas y elección de oficiales. Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship, 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday, 131 Strong hall. Election of officers and panel discussion. Delta Sigma Pi professional function and business meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, west end of Union ballroom. Student Union Activities Executive board, 4 p.m. today, Union Activities office. General Semantics club, 7:45 p.m. Thursday, 111 Strong hall. Important business meeting. Unitarian Liberal club, 4 p.m. Saturday, East room, Union. Munroe Husbands, American Unitarian association, Boston, speaker. "Old Faithful" the University steam whistle, can be heard at Lone Star lake, nearly 16 miles away. Call K.U. 251 With Your News Canceled IM Games To Be Played Today Intramural games that would have been played Tuesday will be played today on the same schedule announced in the Tuesday Kansan. Rain forced postponement of the games. About half of all the earth's known uranium ore lies on the Shinkolobwe mine, 70 miles north-west of Elizabethville, Belgian Congo, the National Geographic Society notes. Zepplin Attends Meeting Miss Marie Zepplin, assistant professor of home economics, is attending a national biological science meeting in Atlantic City, NJ. The convention will end Friday. 眼 YOUR EYES politie should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription Duplicated. Phone 425 1025 Mass. Lawrence Optical Co. 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SEE YOUR LOCAL CHEVROLET DEALER Conveniently listed under "Automobiles" in your local classified telephone directory A WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Austrian Student Tells American Tour Experiences pro- at- sei N.J. ❤ The University today is playing hostess to 30 Austrian students who are touring the United States with a program of their native songs and folk dances in colorful authentic costume. They will be presented at 8 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium. One of them, Miss Elfriede Werzer, was cornered by a Kansan reporter for a glimpse into the background of the tour. The group is sponsored by the Office for Foreign Students headed by Dr. Oskar F. Bock, the tour leader. He has taken groups to South Africa and Scotland, but because of the war, he was unable to make a tour of the United States until now, Miss Werzer said. Examinations in singing, folk dancing, and speech were held in Vienna in order to select 60 out of the 700 students who applied. Afterwards a five-week camp was held to perfect the program they present and to learn the English language. "We began with the first English words such as "T", Miss Werzer laughed. Her command of English is remarkable for the five month period she has been in this country. She produced a large German-English dictionary she always carries for assistance. The "th" and "r" gave her the most difficulty, she said, in the transition from German to English. The group arrived November 15 and have covered a large part of the United States, beginning in the East, down the East coast and through the South to New Orleans. Then they traveled through the southwest and up the West coast to Vancouver and Canada. A fleet of five cars and one truck were bought in this country at the beginning of the trip. While on the road, the group stays in cabins which, Miss Werzer said, they do not have in Europe. While in town, she said, they prefer homes where no German is spoken in order to increase their skill in English. She commented also upon the hospitality and friendliness of their American hosts. During the day the national costume is worn. Miss Werzer wore a deep gray wool suit with strips on the skirt, collar and tabs of forest green. Carved ornaments and buttons of moose horn decorated the jacket. The outfit is completed by a hat with gamsbart which she explained is a tall brush-like ornament made from une stiff hairs of a mountain goat. At various historic or unusual places, "We wrote and wrote in our notebooks and took pictures, pictures, pictures," she said and added that most of her pocket money goes for pictures and post cards. Miss Werzer studied and is teaching in the elementary school system in Klagenfurt in the state of Caarinaith near the Italian border. She explained that she has relatives in Milwaukee and would like to stay in this country, but she has only visitor's visa. The purpose of the tour is to become acquainted with the American and to bring over some Austrian culture in exchange. The group is non-profit and money received outside of their expenses will be given to the A.W.S. memorial scholarship. Dr. Susan Polsterer is the mistress of ceremonies and Mr. Felix Malzer, formerly director of the Vienna Choir Boys who were here last year, is the musical conductor. Spring Engagements, Pinnings Gamma Phi Engaged Dr. and Mrs. Don Carlos Peeet of Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Sammie Lou, to Mr. James W. Scott, son of Mrs. James M. Scott of Mankato. Miss Poete is a fine arts senior and a member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority. Mr. Scott was graduated from the University in February with a degree in journalism. He was editor-in-chief of the Daily Kansan the past semester. He is a member of Delta Upsilon fraternity. OpinionTravelers The marriage will take June 9 at St. Paul's Episcopal church in Kansas City, Mo. Nearing-Dunmire Pi Beta Phi sorority announces the pinning of Miss Marion Nearing, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H.F. Nearing of Kansas City, Mo., and Mr. Joe Dummeir, son of Mr. and Mrs. R.A. Dummeir of Spring Hill. The announcement was made April 7 in Kansas City, Mo. Miss Nearing is a sophomore in the College. Mr. Dunnire is a senior in the School of Business and a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. Schenk-Stallard Sigma Kappa sorority announces the pinning of Miss Helen Schenk, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Fred G. Schenk of Burlingame, to Mr. Carl Stallard, son of Mr. and Mrs. C.N. Stallard of Lawrence. Miss Schenk is a fine arts freshman. Mr. Stallard is a business junior and a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity. Student Engaged The engagement of Miss Anna Mae Bieber, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. August H. Bieber of Lawrence, to Mr. Charles Monroe Layman, Jr., was announced at an Easter breakfast at the home of Miss Bieber's parents, Mr. Layman is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Layman, Sr., of Independence, Kan. Miss Bieber, who wore an orchid, was assisted by Miss Lucy Bieber and Miss Margaret Gartner, who had gardenia corsages. The mothers of the couple wore corsages of red roses. Christianity could solve every problem in Japan today, Mrs. Katherine Willard Eddy told members of Theta Epsilon, Baptist sorority, Tuesday at a Founder's Day banquet at the Union. Mr. Layman is a junior in the School of Business. "The Christian church of the United States is absolutely responsible for the path Japan takes," she said. "We should not reconstruct Japan; we should build a new Japan." Theta Epsilon Group Hears Missionary pam: The trouble with Christianity in Japan is that the people do not know about it, she believes. Mrs. Eddy has made three trips to Japan. Her first trip was just for traveling. During her second trip, she served as hostess at the International House of Fellowship. Her last trip to Japan was made after the war to help friends there who were teachers. ___ The sands of the desert, used sometimes as a symbol of perpetual warmth, grow extremely cold at night, says the National Geographic Society. A daytime temperature of 100 degrees Fahrenheit in the Sahara may drop that same night below freezing. Mrs. Spalding, KU Freshman, Has Lectured In Eight States On Japanese Art, Customs Lectures in eight states on missionary work, superstitions, and handicrafts of the Japanese people have been the extracurricular activity of Mrs. LeVetta Spalding, College freshman. Mrs. Spalding, who is majoring in psychology at the University, was a member of the 9000th Women's Army corps detachment of the headquarters, eighth army, the first Wac group to go to Japan. She did clerical work in Yokohama for 32 months, which now causes her to have trouble punctuating themes in her freshman English class. "We didn't use commas in the Army," Mrs. Spalding explained. While she was in Japan, the routine of her job and lack of entertainment facilities heightened Mrs. Spalding's interest in the people. She joined a camera club, which toured the countryside regularly, and it was on these trips that she became interested in Japanese handicrafts. "Designs are very intricate, and are all done by hand under such primitive conditions that one is amazed that the artists are able to turn out material of such beauty," she related. The wood block prints, jewelry, brass and porcelain ware, and wood figures made by the Japanese represent many hours of detailed labor. Mrs. Spalding soon realized. Mrs. Spalding has many beautiful examples of Japanese art in her home. One of these is a deep red vase of cloisonne in which the design is set in the enamel between wire screens. It is finished in lacquer that takes anywhere from 100 to 180 various baking processes for its completion. Seniors Only NOW Is The TIME to secure your Senior Class Ring Mrs. Spalding illustrates the lectures on Japan with colored slides when giving them for friends, clubs, church groups and others. The Right Gift Any Time at Through the years flowers have proven their rightness for every occasion. Next time—give flowers . . . selected from our fresh Spring array. Frank Strong Hall Business Office Phone 998 326 W. 9th FLOWER GARDEN THE BLOSSOM SHOP TEL. +1 234-567890 Frank Carlson Club Organized Here Robert King, first year law, was elected chairman of the Carlson-for-Senator club at an organizational meeting Tuesday. Plans for a campaign to elect Gov. Frank Carlson to the United States Senate were discussed at the meeting. Other officers elected were Jean Purdy, first year law, publicity; Tom Welsh, College sophomore, membership; Walter Stueckemann, third year law, program; Cliff Ratner, College sophomore, secretary; and Charles Linberg, first year law, treasurer. Students enrolled in the School of Engineering in 1919 totaled 325. Present enrollment is 1455. K. U. COLMERY for U.S. SENATOR CLUB Organizational Meeting THURS., APRIL 20 7:30 p.m. ALL STUDENTS ARE INVITED Designed for a lovely lady Rolfs "DIRECTRESS" $5.00 plus tax A snap-fastened purse conveniently holds your coins. Eight other practical pockets protect cards, currency, photos, spare house and car keys, stamps, and what-not. That's the practical part. Its other self is eloquently expressed in the smart, fashion-first look that says "Rolls." ROBERTS JEWELRY-GIFTS 833 Mass. 901 Mass. Phone 827 Give Your White Elephants 'Green Backs' With KANSAN Classifieds. WeaverS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 EXYLIN fashion's pure plastic material GLAMOROUS EXYLIN MAKES A BUSINESS OF PROTECTION The best behaved, best looking closets wear EXYLIN. Fashion's pure plastic material is see-through, odorless, dust-proof, lustrous, cleans with a damp cloth. Won't mildew, never cracks, almost never wears out. Equip your closets with EXYLIN—and enjoy them! 1 and 2 Blanket Case ... $3.95 5. Evening gown bag ... $6.50 3. Shoe Pocket Case ... 4.50 6. Jumbo garment bag ... 7.50 4. Men's garment bag ... 5.50 7. Garment bag ... 5.95 (Look for the name Exylin on raincoats, too!) (Look for the name Exylin on raincoats, too!) WEAVER'S NOTIONS——MAIN FLOOR PAGE FOUR WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 1950 KU Baseball Roster Pos. Throws
NamePos. ThrowsWt.ClassHome
BatsAgeHt.
*Cavonaugh, Jim2BLR215-9160Sr.Coffeyville
*DeLuna, Lou2BRR256-0180Sr.Kans. City, Mo.
*Ellis, CarlOFRR246-0190Sr.Kilgore, Tex.
Harris, CurtisPRR275-8145So.Wash., D. C.
*Hepler, LorenPLL205-11155Sr.Garnett
Hicks, WalterOFLL205-10194So.Kansas City
Houk, DarrellOFLL205-8150Jr.Lawrence
Koenig, FrankSSRR265-10160Jr.Trenton, N. J.
Lamping, HenryOFRR216-0175Jr.Kans. City, Mo.
*Mabry, GuyP-OFLR236-2165Sr.Rock Island, Ill.
Mace, BillOF-CRR246-0215Jr.Lawrence
McConnell, JohnSSRR225-10171So.Wichita
*Morrow, KenCRR216-1165Sr.South Haven
Peete, Don1BLR195-11160So.Kans. City, Mo.
Philipp, HermanPRR205-11150So.Gt. Neck, N. Y.
Sandefur, CarlPLR206-3210So.Lawrence
Stricker, ArnoldUTILRR255-8175Sr.St. Louis, Mo.
Sunye, Jim3B-PRR205-11153Jr.Gt. Neck, N. Y.
*Temple, Floyd3BRR245-8170So.Coffeyville
Voss, George1BLL196-1180So.Lawrence
*Weid'nsaul, HerbOFRR215-9175Sr.Eudora
Wilson, DonCRR215-10173Jr.Kansas City
*Denotes lettermen 1949 season record—14 won, 11 lost. Won Big Seven championship with 11-7 record. Kansas plays Rockhurst college at 3 p.m. today at Kansas City in the Jayhawkers' second and final non-conference baseball game of the season. Coach Bill Hogan will start Carl Sandefur, big sophomore righthander, who defeated the Hawks 10 to 2 in the season opener here April 12. Jayhawker Baseball Team Meeting Rockhurst In KC The Jayhawkers lost their opening Big Seven game to Colorado, 4 to 3, and will attempt to climb above the 500 mark in their third game of the young season. Following today's game, Kansas will play 16 conference games, eight at home and eight on the road. Coach Hogan's club, Big Seven defending champions, has been hampered by adverse weather conditions all spring and is still a question mark in two departments—pitching and hitting. With only one letterman, southpaw Loren Hepler, returning to the mound staff, Kansas pitching remains untested due to lack of work this spring. Coach Hogan says, "Counting out games with Rockhurst, Colorado, and our intrasquared games, we have played only about 35 innings thus far. Sandefur and Herman Phillip, a pair of sophomores, have looked good in limited pitching roles as did Guy Mabry against Colorado, but our whole staff lacks experience and needs plenty of work to pitch topflight ball in conference play. Hepler is recovering from the flu and is not up to par as yet. Another sophomore, Curtis Harris, is untested in competition. I feel our pitching is the definite question mark on this year's team." The Kansas hitting has been below par largely because of a lack of batting practice and intra-squard games, Hogan says. The Jayhawkers are batting .194 and have collected only two extra base hits, a pair of doubles, in two games. "Our weak hitting to date is largely due to lack of adequate outside work, but it should improve and probably be as good as last year's, if not better," Coach Hogan said. The team lost the services of sophomore catcher Don Wilson over Easter vacation when he decided to pass up baseball in order to save a year's eligibility. He did not compete in football this year and would have lost a whole year by playing baseball this spring, Bill Mace, 6-foot 215-pound junior, holds the first-string catcher's berth. Letterman Ken Morrow provides adequate relief if needed. The Jayhawkers have played fine defensively in making only three errors on 78 chances for a fielding average of .362. This year's team is ahead of the 1949 club in all-around defensive play. Coach Hogan indicated he would probably use the following batting order against Rockhurst: Frank Koenig ss L DeLuna or J. Cavonaugh 2b Regulation Army-Officer Shirts in high count, fine quality poplin; 14-17 neckbands; sleeve lengths 32-35. An exceptional $398 value at 740 & 935 Massachusetts PH-588 & 669 Lawrence Surplus Ice Cubes Crushed Ice Picnic or Party Chests Rented Pop by Bottle, Carton or Case American ServlCE Company Coolerator Electric Refrigerators Ranges, Home Freezers All five men will compete in plans to use Macferran and Swartzell as his top doubles team and Crawford and Ranson as his second duo. Phone 48 Charles Crawford, a sophomore, will be No. 3 man. Crawford is the only left-hander on the team. The No. 4 position will be filled by Jack Ranson, a returning letterman. Jim Thompson completes the five man squad. Floyd Temple ... 3b Carl Ellis ... 1f Bill Mace ... c W. Hicks or D. Houk ... rf Herb Weidensaul ... cf George Voss ... 1b Carl Sandefur ... p 616 Vermont Tennis Team To Face Sooners Here Coach Dick Kichards will send two lettermen and three newcomers against a strong Oklahoma team in K.U.'s opening tennis matches here Thursday. The meeting is scheduled for 2 p.m. Hervey Macferran, the Jayhawkers' No. 1 man in 1949, will play his usual spot against Oklahoma. Bob Swartzelt, a transfer from Santa Monica, Calif., Junior college, will hold down the No. 2 position. The Sooners have a big jump on the Jayhawkers, having already played 10 dual matches this spring. Kansas will probably use two or three pitchers with Philipp, Mabry, and Harris all ready for mound duty. The following 20-man squad made the trip to Kansas City by auto today, leaving Lawrence at noon; Pitchers—Sandefur, Philipp, Mabry, and Harris, Infielders—Voss, Cavonaugh, DeLuna, Koenig, Temple, Jim Sunye, Don Peete, and John McConnell. Outfielders—Ellis, Weidensau, Hicks, Houk, Henry Lamping, and Arnold Stricker. Catchers—Mace and Morrow. v Oklahoma has won eight, lost one, and tied one. The tie in the meeting with the Texas longhorns broke an Oklahoma dual meet winning streak at 18. The sooner loss was to S.M.U. Oklahoma has three of the top four men returning from its 1949 conference champion squad. The Sooners' major loss is Jack Stewart, singles champion the past season. Charles Cunningham will be matched against Macferran in the top singles position, Guy Ewton is Oklahoma's No. 2 man and Abe Ross, the only three-letter winner on the Sooner team, is No. 3. Cunningham and Ewton are also lettermen. Glenn Land, a sophomore, will probably play in the No. 4 spot for Oklahoma and the fifth man will come from the rookie foursome of Dick Land, Don Walraven, Joe Osmun, and Milton McCollough. The Sooners have been conference champions in 12 of the past 18 seasons. The most recent team to break through Oklahoma's domination and capture the championship White Tennis Oxfords "BEACON FALLS" brand, lace-to-toe style with sponge heel and sole, built-in arch support. Sizes $298 6-13 Lawrence Surplus 740 & 935 Massachusetts PH-588 & 662 LINDLEY'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 NOW OPEN 4:30 p.m. GOLFING - Open Weekdays—4:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. - Sat. & Sun.—2:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. - Use our clubs or your own. Come out and play our new 18 hole miniature golf course this weekend—it's beautifully laid out on a 22,100 ft. plot. GOLF Jayhawk Golf Driving Range 1 Mile East of Haskell on 10 You drive 'em—We'll shag 'em was the 1948 Kansas squad. The K. U. team of that year was paced by Coach Richards, who won the conference singles crown. Kansas has won six tennis championships in its history. The Jayhawkers will see action again this week when the Nebraska Cornhuskers journey to Lawrence for a Saturday morning match. The match will begin at 9:30 a.m. so as not to conflict with the Kansas Relays. Spraying molten steel on worn metal parts is a spectacular new maintenance technique being employed by Westinghouse engineers. They use a new tool developed by an atomizer concern. Palm Beach WASH. ST. GOODAILT-Sanford, INC. You're Smart, Cool, Correct, in the... PALM BEACH* FORMAL You can wear this summer formal, assured of cool correct smartness. The famous Palm Beach fabric tailors into a handsome shawl-collar white jacket and lightweight dress trousers. Make your selection now, and really enjoy summer dress-up occasions. Formal Jackets $22.75 Formal Trousers $10.50 CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Reg, T.M., Goodall Sanford, Inc. See fiber content on all garments. 1950 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE relied by the con- tribution ofaska ence. The o as Re- worn new em- eers. y an JACK TWO-MILE RELAY SPECIALISTS—When the Abilene Christian college two-mile relay team takes the track in the college division two-mile relay at the Kansas Relays Saturday, it will be seeking its third straight victory at the annual K.U. carnival. Shown above, from left to right, are John Sikes, H. D. Terry, Sam Volpe, Don Chisam, and Leon Lepard. When Coach Oliver Jackson's quartet won the event in 1948, it was with Terry, John Mason, Leroy Middleton, and Wayne Forrest in 8:11.2. A year ago the team of Terry, Middleton, Sikes, and Leopard toured the Memorial stadium oval in 7:48.4. This year's quartet is considered a good bet to better the existing Relays record of 7:47.7 set by an A.C.C. team in 1940. Softball Games Slowed By Rain Women's intramural softball was inaugurated April 6 with two games sandwiched between rainy days that have postponed 13 games to date. It is hoped that these games still may be rescheduled and the entire program played. Jayettes rolled up a 32 to 3 score against Locksley in three innings, and the game was called there to prevent further slaughter. The winners belted in 22 tallies in the first inning, then slowed down to pick up four and six while their opponents made two and one. Harmon co-op outpointed Sigma Kappa 16 to 10 in a more even scoring tilt. Tied in the third inning, Harmon went ahead with an 8-run Batteries were Moore and Jones for the Jayettes, and Braum and Hoffman for Locksley. Books for Gifts and for your own reading Hersey, The Wall Waltari, The Egyptian Shulman, Sleep Till Noon Lasswell, One On the House Lederer, All the Ship's At Sea Bromfield, Out of the Earth Overstreet, The Mature Mind Velikovsky, Worlds In Collision You are cordially invited to come in and see them. Hersey, The Wall rally while allowing their opponents only two. THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Tel-666 Batteries were Hopkins and Kesterson for Harmon, and Burnham, Clark, and Watson for Sigma Kappa. CORK SCHOOL Scheduled for today are the following games to be played at 4 p.m. Diamond: 1. Corbin vs. Kappa Alpha Theta 2. Alpha Chi Omega vs. Alpha Phi 3. Delta Delta Delta vs. Kanza As a freshman in 1949, Lepard anchored the Cats to their victory with a 1:52.8, the best time for an 880 lap in A.C.C. track history. He also ran a 47.8 anchor lap on the record-breaking mile relay team in the annual Texas conference meet a year ago. Utah leads other states in the production of gold. Coach Jackson also plans to enter Paul Faulkner, outstanding pole vaulter, in the Relays vaulting event. In the Texas Relays earlier this season, he cleared 13 feet 6 inches for a third place. Besides sure entries in the two-mile and mile relays, Jackson may enter a team in the sprint medley. If so, Bailey Woods would replace Bob Beatty on the mile relay foursome of Beatty, Terry, Pete Ragus, and Lepard. REGULAR DINNERS - Fried Chicken - Steaks - Short Orders REGULAR PRICES 709 Mass. - RAY'S CAFE - Open Sundays "Danforth Chapel" notepaper DANFORTH CHAPEL UNIVERSITY OF HAMMOND Created - Packaged - Distributed by PAT READ on wedding vellum with envelopes to match. PAT READ INDIAN TRADER 'Across from the Courthouse' 225 Schools Here For Big Week End Athletes from 225 schools—from universities through high schools—will compete in the approaching big week end of track and field atop Mount Oread. The 46th annual Kansas interscholastic meet comes off Friday at Memorial stadium with 164 high schools to be represented. Saturday will be the silver anniversary running of the Kansas Relays with 23 universities, 31 colleges, and 8 junior colleges scheduled to compete. The high school entries will break down into three classes-25 in AA, 50 in A, and 89 in B. Tip For College Students Six major conferences—the Big Seven, Missouri Valley, Big Ten, Southwest, Southeast, and Skyline Six—will be represented in the University class. Outstanding among the independents in the university class will be Notre Dame. Memphis, Tenn.—(U.P.)—Mrs. Howt Cain thinks the boy probably failed to do his homework. She watched him tuck his books under his arm, close his eyes, fold his hands, say a silent prayer, then dash into the schoolhouse. VACATION TOURS Transportation, hotel accommodations,and special sightseeing all included for one low cost! California Yellowstone Pacific Northwest Colorado Rockies Historic East Pacific Coast Chicago Fair New York City Old Mexico Alaska Alaska ★ Other enjoyable Tours also available. FREE FOLDER! Get your copy of Greyhound's Amazing America Vacation Folder, giving day-by-day descriptions of scores of carefree tours. SUNDAY THE NATIONAL WEEKEND WESTERN EXPRESS BUS When you return home this summer—go Greyhound — frequent schedules, low fares! See your Greyhound Agent about your vacation plans, and full travel information. GREYHOUND BUS DEPOT 638 Mass. Lawrence, Kansas PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1950 Little Man On Campus by Bibler PAPER PENCILS PAPER PAPER PAPER PAPER TAPER PAPER PAPER INK PAPER INK B. B. ER "Boy are we gonna have a 'Shot Gun' today." The Editors Report — WE'VE BEEN READING ye ED The Census Reports The 1950 census is already turning up useful information. For instance, it has already found out a few things on what it costs to run a welfare state. In simple terms, here is what we found out the census bureau has found out. One out of each twelve persons, now gainfully employed in the United States, works for the federal or a state or local government. This labor force just about equals the population of five states—Arkansas, Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, and Maine. If you like mouth-filling figures, this labor force totals 6,204,000 persons. Percentage-wise, the public labor force doesn't sound so bad. If there are around 80,000,000 persons gainfully employed in the United States, the public labor force is only 7.5 percent of the total labor force. But if you put it in simple butter-and-egg language, it looks slightly alarming. Suppose you went into a grocery store and bought a dozen eggs and found one uneatable. Or you bought a pound of butter and found you had less than fifteen ounces. Would you be inclined to think the grocer was giving you fair measure for your money? If we dealt with that kind of a grocer, we would be inclined to think he was either dishonest or, at best, incompetent. We like to think everyone is honest so most likely be is only incompetent. Yet must we be expected to pay for his inefficiency? Should we shell out sixteen billion, eight hundred and seventy-two million dollars a year because our friend the grocer can't count? That just might be asking too much of us. We wouldn't mind it if our friend the grocer, the sly old dog, rang in an eleven-egg dozen every so often. We most likely would shrug off a fifteen-ounce pound—so long as it didn't happen too regularly. But when he got to pulling his tricks too often, we might become offended. We never could be sure when he might start ten-egg or nine egg dozens. We would always have the uneasy feeling his fifteen-ounce pounds were degenerating into twelve-ounce pounds. Like it is with our grocer friend, we think it ought to be with our Uncle Sam, Cousin Sam, or Friend Sam. We think the federal, state, and local governments ought to give us a fair measure for our money. While we're quite willing to pay for what we get, we still insist on a fair deal. Padded payrolls, excess parity price supports, excess duplication of effort, "scavenger hunts" by legislators, wartime tax rates, "free" health "insurance", and the other hundred and one needless government activities aren't our idea of a fair deal. We're not against necessary government activities—like the census, for instance. The census gathers a lot of useful information that industry, educators, and editorial writers can use to good benefit. It's the useless activities—like running a welfare state—we're not sure we like. They Know Their Rights Mount Clemens, Mich. — (J.P.) When Vincent M. Dunn lays down the law to his wife, Betty Jane, she throws it right back at him. The Dunns received their law degrees together, and both are in practice. TODAY'S MAIL Every so often there appears a person of courage of conviction. The cause of right remains utmost in the mind, thoughts, and actions of such a person. Battler Sir: We have such a person at K. U. You have probably seen him on the campus. The members of the A.S.C. are most certainly acquainted with him for his conviction has rung forth in those meetings many times. Equal representation has been the cry of Walter Brown. Walter Brown has fought for independent representation in the A.S.C. His has been the battle of righteousness and his cause must not fail. The hundreds of independents will see to that. Walter Brown will have his cause realized because his will is what we all want. Walter has stood up and spoken this truth. April 19 of this year gives every student the opportunity to prove that he or she still believes in democracy the good-old-fashioned democracy that gives you and I a say in our government. Walter Brown has never failed the spirit of democracy, he has never changed his unwavering course of truth, he has supported you and I and April 19 gives us the chance to support him. Don't pass up that chance for upon it rests the principle of America, the democracy of K. U. and the chance to have equal and fair representation. W. Halsey Wildman College freshman Ed. Note: This letter reached us too late for yesterday's edition. The statements in the letter can in no way be considered an endorsement by the University Daily Kansan of a political candidate. February Law Graduate Is Appointed Professor Marshall C. Hill, a February graduate of the School of Law, has been appointed assistant professor of law at Lincoln university in St. Louis, Mo., Dean F. J. Moreau announced today. Mr. Hill's home is in St. Joseph, Mo. W University Daily Hansan News Room Adv. Room K. U. 251 K. U. 376 Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assn, Press Assn., and the Associated College Press. Represented by the National Ad- dress Service, 420 Madison Ave, New New York City. Editor-in-Chief Doris Greenbank James Shriver Managing Editor Business Mgr. Asst. Man. Editors Norma Hunsinger Kay O'Connor John Hill Ralph Heemwayn City Editor Edward Chapin Asst. City Editors Nelson Ober Marylyn Marie Blaine Elgig Steve Ferro Feature Editor Francis Kelley Photograph Editor Frankie Waits Telegraph Editor Robert Heman William Grey William Grey Tatum Richard Tatum Lloyd Holback Sports Editor Richard Dilsaver Bobson Moore Roy Salden Arthur McIntire Society Editor Fannie Wilkinson Billie Stover Editorial Asks Emily Stewart Editorial Asks Pete North John Bannigan Keith Leslie Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner Cr. Mgr. Yvonne Joserwerd Asst. Society Editors Forrester Classified Ad. Mgr. Lee Dey Promotion Mgr. John Wiedman Music Students To Present Recital Piano, voice, and violin students of the Lawrence accredited Music Teachers will be presented in their annual spring formal recital at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Liberty Memorial High school auditorium. Studios represented will be those of Maxine Albutry, education senior; Mrs. G. W. Bradshaw, 1641 Mississippi; Miss Kate Caldwell, 824 Kentucky; Mrs. H. W. Craig, 1024 Vermont; Theodora Ericson, fine arts sophomore; Miss Ednah Hopkins, 732 Kentucky; Mrs. C. A. Freyer, 1125 Tennessee; Mrs. C. W. Staffer; Mrs. Reginald Strait, 1346 Louisiana; and Mrs. Thomas Sturgeon, 708 Mississippi. Who's the Bathing Beauty? FIND OUT ALL ABOUT HER IN THE JAYHAWKER! Get your JAYHAWKER today...only a limited supply left. J Subscription Now $5.25 at the Jayhawker Office simple yet capable KODAK and BROWNIE CAMERAS Let us show you the complete line-up KODAK ELECTRONIC PHOTOEQUIPMENT e line-up B. F. M. G. H. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. You can enjoy the fun of snapshotting any time anywhere . . . with one of these smart, modern cameras. They make good pictures easier to get. Ask to see the Brownie "Hawkeye" (above), a brand-new box camera for only $5.50, or one of the 5 models of the Kodak "Tourist," the newest line of folding cameras, $24.50 to $95. Other cameras as low as $2.75. Prices include Federal Tax MOSSER-WOLF 825 1024 fine Hop- Prey- W. Staff alt, 1346 nas Stur- ? WOLF 950 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 826 PAGE SEVEN Kansan Classified Advertising Phone K.U. 376 Classified Advertising Rates Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly and on time. Inquiries will be filled in their courses 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the exigency Daily Katman. Journals may be filled later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. Classified Sentence One day Three days Five 25 words or less 35c 65c 90c Additional words 1c 2c 3c FOR SALE COMPLETE DARKROOM equipment including federal enlarger Model 312—Must sell~very reasonable. Call 931W 25 '41 HARLEY 74 O.V.H.: smooth running, lotta电机, reasonable. See Bob. 812 31 596 42 'BEE LINE' golf clubs for sale 'Two irons' from New York. Complete with case. TK393 between 7 p.m. 9 p.m. 15 one of the few used cars that has not been owned by a wealthy old Jack. She drove it only a month ago. Jack can afford by a college stuccar so must get rid of one. 1948 Cross Convertible. New castle. New clutch on condition. See cup. in at $31 Tenn. $59.00. 1948 Manual form. First Nighter, size 42. 10m. Phone 3651 after 5:30 see at 1646 Kentucky. FIGURINE PAINTING on the sweeping the DIXIE CARMEL CORN SHOP has a complete line of figurines, paints and our paint results. DIXIE CORN SHOP. M24 Mass. GREYROLET. 1940 Convertible. Beautiful finish. All leather interior. Excellent mechanically. See to appreciate. Call after 6 p.m. Daylight. 302. 20 1939 MODEL. "A" Readster. Mechanically perfect. Good body and paint. Photo 24 Phone 314-798-2056 BOOK-EASE, a collapsible book holder. Can be used on a desk, in bed, anywhere, if only 8cct at your Student Book Store. 21 CONERTIBLE. 1941 Nash Ambassador. Baby Blue, Overdrive, radio, camera, owner. 1941 Nash upholstery, upholster, interior, motor top, tires, ex- cellent condition. 414 W. 12th after . 10 Feb. Union Book THESES MATERIALS! All weights of fessity type typing paper, carbon paper, and typher writing ribbons. Student Union M4 FINEST TELEVISION - Best in sets and acerials at lowest prices. See below to see the newest Enserors model table set at $195.00 Easy types. Bowman Radio and Electrify. FOR SALE NOW SEEN THESE? HAVE YOU SEEN THESE? '47 Nash Ambassador sedan $1,295 '47 Chev. Aero sedan 1,245 '47 Chev. 2-lion truck with 2-ton platform 1,095 '49 Ford de luxe 8 sedan 350 '38 Dodge 2-door sedan 345 '38 Chrysler convertible 295 *Please choose from.* BILL BODIN, Lincoln 9th & Miss. Open Tonight 21 FOR RENT LARGE EIGHT room house; two blocks from campus. Excellent rooming and boarding property; partly furnished sub lease fully furnished. Available im- james 25 THREE room apartment. Excellent condition. Suitable for student and owning wife. Apartment furnished and unwarmed. Garage if needed. 831 Ky. 20 ROO'S mate married over vacation. Need boy to share room with graduate. Need dent. New 200 boys rent including breakfast for rest of semester. Phone 3447-2619. WANTED SOFTBALL PITCHER to play in softball with Deuces Wild. Call Ray Bowers 27641 then 21 RIDERS To Torker to Haskell; Monday leave Torker 7 a.m.; Haskell 5 p.m. Call Fitzsimmons-Haskell 79643 Tropea 379643 RIDERS WANTED: leaving for Weeks every Friday at 4 p.m. Returning Sunday evening. Please meet between 7-9 p.m. Ph. Ph. 2101J AGCOUNTANT wanted by University of Kansas Press; half-time April 15 to June 1; full-time thereafter; to take Civil Service exam when given; national building. See Mr. Rythner Cheerleaders School Planned Training school for next year's cheerleaders will be held in Robinson, gymnasium at 5 p.m. today and Thursday, and at 7:30 p.m. Monday, April 24, and Tuesday, April 25. The cheerleaders of the past year will conduct the school. The cheering committee will make its selections at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 26. One cheerleader will be selected from the Ku Ku's and one from the Jay Janes. The others will be chosen by the committee. TRANSPORTATION BUSINESS SERVICE COMMUTERS—Topteka to Lawrence. 24 (upstairs) days. Williams, I. 10 (upstairs). I WILL DO all kinds of typing in my home. Call 3848W. ___ 25 home. Call 512-345-8700 TYING: Neat, accurate, rapid, Regular applied service. Mrs. Schear. Apt. R36, 1810 La, Phone 3273-R. 24 WANTED FEMALE help wanted Full time secretarial position needing hand and typing skills K1, 298. K3, 298. require an internship. SUMMER WORK INTERNATIONAL HONORIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a digisigned sales activity representing the oldest, largest, and most prestigious colleges in the field. Applicants accepted will work by appointment on leads we furnish. Earnings $75.00 to $125.00 and more per week on an AF- vanced percentage base. We also provide guard Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Giving qualifications, school and home address. JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are as diverse as everything for fur, finn and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop 1218 Conn. St. Ph. 418. 185 Comm. U.S. TYPING: Call Hazel Stanley. 2656M for prompt experienced service. $820\frac{1}{2}$ Mass St. tt JAYHAWKER Phone 10 for Sho Time Ends Tonite Ginger Dennis Rogers Morgan "Perfect Strangers" Starts THURSDAY For 3 Days SECOND-HAND FATHER! WILLIAM HOLDEN COLLEEN GRAY FATHER IS A BACHELOR MARY JANE CHARLES with SAUNDERS • WINNINGER Blue Late News Events Technicolor Special "Camera Angles" TYING, Thesee. Term Papers, Reports. TSEE, Thesee. Mrs. Shea. 1038, Vermont. Ph. 11488. 1098, Vermont. Ph. 11488. THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. Complete overhaul in both cars, auto painting, auto painting, used cars 317 E. 17th. Phone 785 or 1?21ft FYPING. Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rates. Prompt attention. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601 Hurry . Last times tonite: John Wayne "Sands of Iwo Jima" "Movies Are Better Now Than Ever Before" A Stirring Action Drama of the Early West A Stirring Action Drama the Early West! THE NETWORK EVENING POST Columbia Pictures present WESLEY RUGGLES' ARIZONA Starring JEAN ARTHUR with William Holden Warren William Added Fun . . 'The Balmy Swami' In Technicolor A Stirring Action Drama of the Early West! THE SATURDAY AVENUE POST ANDRA MUSICAL COLUMBIA PICTURES present HUGGLES' WESLEY RUGGE ARIZONA Starring JEAN ARTHUR with William Holden Warren William Added Fun ... 'The Balmy Swami' In Technicolor $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mile West on Hiway 59 — PHONE 260 — Lawrence DRIVE - IN Theatre Burglar Is Routed By Motherly Devotion Worcester, Mass.—(U.P.)—The burglar who broke into the grocery store of Thomas Kiaikis reckoned without the strength of a mother's devotion. The intruder fled empty-handed when the grocer's cat howled to protect her litter of kittens. Simpsonville, S. C.—(U.P.)-This town is advertising one of its two jails for sale, with the explanation that one lockup is enough. Simpsonville put its 53-year-old city jail a 20 by 20 one-room building with one window, on the for sale list after completing a new jail several blocks away. Two Jails One Too Many VARSITY Limited Engagement TODAY - THURS. "Practically perfect!" – TIME MAGAZINE "Deftly, joyously told-a grand show!" — N. Y. TIMES "A delightfully amusing satire!" — DAILY NEWS Bernard Shaw's PYGMALION WENDY HILLER • LESLIE HOWARD produced by GABRIEL PASCAL Continuous Performances Box Office Opens "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST" ] DANGEROUS Special Price This Engagement Only Special Student 75c tax incl. Price 50c tax incl. HELD NOW PLAYING OVER! 2nd WEEK HELD NOW PLAYING OVER! 2nd WEEK Movies Are Better Than Ever! AND HERE IS ONE TO PROVE IT! ROMANTIC RIOT! CLARK LORETTA GABLE·YOUNG KEY TO THE CITY MARILYN MAXWELL · FRANK MORGAN PENGUIN ROMANTIC RIOT! CLARK LORETTA GABLE • YOUNG KEY TO THE CITY MARILYN MAXWELL • FRANK MORGAN Feature Times: 1:21 - 3:21 - 5:21 - 7:21 and 9:21 - Added Fun - Color Cartoon • News Soon: "BICYCLE THIEF" NO MATTER WHERE HE GOES OR WHAT HE DOES...HE'S MY MAN! Patee PHONE 321 THE 3RD MAN • VALLI • Thru the twisting maze of the shadowy city they hunted him . . . the men who hated him . . . the woman who loved him! The gay and sexy music followed him wherever he went! Hear the magic fingers of Anton Karas play 'The Third Man Theme' SUN thru WED JOSEPH COTTEN "Quack A Doodle Doo" We urge you to attend the afternoon shows for better seats. Feature at 1:00, 3:00, 5:05, 7:10, 9:20. JOSEPH COTTEN • VALLI • ORSON WELLES Jayhawker Jayhawker MIDNITE SHOW SATURDAY Doors Open 11:15 COLOR CARTOON LATE NEWS EVENTS STARTS THURSDAY Clarence Brown, who gave you "The Yearling" now brings to the screen another great book . . . Year's most unusual picture! MARGARET O'BRIEN THE SECRET GARDEN HERBERT MARSHALL DEAN STOCKWELL ALSO Latest News Starts SUNDAY Prevue SAT. 11:15 RED SKELTON THE YELLOW CAB MAN with GLORIA DeHAVEN M-G-M Last Times Tonite Spencer James Tracy Stewart "MALAYA" Granada PHONE 946 On the Way----watch for "Francis" "3 Came Home" "Mother Didn'T Tell Me" Granada PHONE 946 PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19. 1950 YWCA Officer To Assist In University 'Y' Y. W.C.A. members will talk with Miss Fern Babcock, program coordinator of the national Y.W.C.A./about campus problems and the development of a program for the University Y.W.C.A. today. Miss Babcock had dinner with the Y.W.C.A. advisory board Tuesday, and she will have dinner with the cabinet at 6 p.m. today in the Union. She will also meet with Chancellor Deane W. Malot during her visit. All Y.W.C.A. members will hear Miss Babcock at 4 p.m. today in the Pine room. She will also speak to the junior cabinet at 5 p.m. at Henley house. MRS. ELIZABETH RUSSELL Miss Fern Babcock Miss Babcock is secretary of the program commission of the student Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A. The commission helps develop programs for student groups in 706 colleges of the United States. "A Program Book for Student Christian Associations" and "From Campus to Capital," a program paper telling how students can become effective politically, were written by Miss Babcock. She is also a contributing editor on the editorial board of the Intercollegian, publication of the National Student Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A. A graduate of Kansas State Teachers college. Miss Babcock received an M.A. at Teachers college, New York city, which is a part of Columbia university. The past summer she directed the European Work Study seminar of the National Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A., in which 90 American students visited student Christian movements in 10 European countries. Medicine Course At KC Cancelled A postgraduate short course in psychosomatic medicine scheduled for Monday through Wednesday, April 24 to 26, at the University Medical center in Kansas City has been cancelled. H.G. Ingham, director of the extension program in medicine, announced today. Because of the progress of the building program, at the Medical center, there is no satisfactory place temporarily in which to hold the school, Ingham said. It was to be the 12th and final short course of the school year. Psychosomatic medicine will definitely be given next year, possibly in the fall, Ingham said. Mrs. George Beal was elected president and Mrs. Donald Wilson, secretary-treasurer, of the Engineers Wives club Tuesday. Following the election members of the club played bridge. Mrs. James Wolf was chairman. Mrs. George Beat Elected To Head Engineers Wives A picnic for members and their families will be held at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 16, at Potter lake. Banquet Tickets Now Obtainable Tickets are now available for the "I Am An American" day banquet Saturday, April 29. Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York will be the featured speaker. Cardinal Spellman is archbishop of the New York diocese and the top-ranking Catholic clergyman in the United States. The banquet will be held in the Community building and attendance is limited to 800 persons. Tickets are $2.50 each and may be obtained by calling Nicolas Lopes, 906 Massachusetts street, at 137. The deadline for ticket purchases is Monday, April 24. Lecture Series To Be Resumed The geological occurrence of fissionable materials will be the subject as the Sigma Xi "Atomic Energy and Man" lecture series is resumed at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Strong auditorium. Dr. Robert M. Dreyer, chairman of the department of geology, will give the illustrated lecture. The public is welcome and there is no charge. Dr. Dreyer will discuss the natural deposits and probable reserves of uranium and thorium ores. Such deposits of ores are the starting point in the process of utilizing atomic energy. Thorium deposits occur in India, Brazil and the United States. Uranium ores are found in Czechoslovakia, the United States, Canada and the Belgian Congo. Dr. Dreyer will present for the layman an appraisal of these deposits and make such inferences as a scientist today may draw regarding reserves and mining of uranium in Russia. Dr. Dreyer will give the ninth and next to last lecture of the series. Dr. Carlyle S. Smith, assistant professor of sociology, will conclude the series April 27. Geologist To Speak Today A. R. Denison, chief geologist of the Amerada Petroleum company, will speak at the Geology club at 7:30 p.m. today in 426 Lindley Mr. Denison will speak on "Prospects of Employment in the Petroleum Industry." KU Engineers Will Appear On WDAF-TV Faculty members and students from the School of Engineering and Architecture will appear of WDAF-TV from 7 to 7:30 p.m. today to publicize the 1950 Engineering Exposition to be held Friday through Sunday. T. DeWitt Carr, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture; Dwane M. Crowl, general chairman; Keith Smith, publicity chairman, and Maurice M. Mandelkehr, graduate student, will make the trip to Kansas City, Mo., to appear on the show. The delegation will present information concerning the 30th annual students' project. Mandelkehr will give a demonstration of the Tit-Tat-Toe robot which he designed. A man plays the game commonly known as cat with the robot. If the contestant moves first, the robot will tie or defeat him. If the robot moves first, it will win. During the Exposition the robot will be exhibited in the electrical engineering laboratory behind Marvin hall. The Exposition, in the past held for two days, will be open an extra day this year. The hours are: Friday, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to noon; Sunday, 2 to 6 p.m. Members of Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity, will conduct visitors through the exhibit. Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, will present a trophy to the department with the most outstanding exhibit. Boy Scout Meeting To Be Held Here Approximately 500 senior Boy Scouts are expected to attend the Scout visitation day at the University Saturday. The scouts, from Kansas and western Missouri, will be the guests of Alpha Phi Omega national service fraternity. They will attend the Engineering exposition Saturday morning and will be guests of the athletic department at the relays in the afternoon. An election of officers of Alpha Phi Omega will be held Tuesday, May 16. THIS WAY... for SPRING DRIVING Drive In Today, We'll- - Change Your Oil A complete check from stem to stern. We service all makes of cars. - Drain Anti-freeze - Check & Adjust Brakes Boyer Motors NASH DEALER 617 Mass. Scholarships Will Enable Students To Study Abroad Two scholarships of $600 each will be awarded qualified graduates who wish to attend the American Graduate school in Denmark during 1950-51. The grants also stipulate that the successful candidates must attend the Oslo Summer school. The scholarships are awarded by the Nansen fund which was established recently in Houston, Texas, by Jesse Jones, former secretary of commerce, and a group of Texas business men. The purpose of the fund is to promote more understanding between peoples of different nations by exchange of students. Twenty-eight students,representing 17 states, are currently enrolled in the American Graduate school Classes are held in the University of Copenhagen until the middle of March when they are moved to the University of Aarhus for the remainder of the term. Lectures are given in English by Danish professors, officials of the public administration, and other experts in specialized fields. Former Professor Appointed Dean Gordon Sabine, assistant professor in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information in 1847, has been appointed dean of the journalism school of the University of Oregon. After leaving K.U., Mr. Sabine taught at the University of Minnesota. He has been teaching at the University of Oregon for two years. Expert Watch REPAIR Electronically Timed Guaranteed Satisfaction 1 week or less service. WOLFSON'S 743 Moss. The admissions office for the school is at 588 Fifth Avenue, New York 19, N.Y. No Kidding No Kidding They're Ripe'n'Ready for Smokin' Steady DR.GRABOW Pre-Smoked PIPES No Kidding They're Ripe'n' Ready for Smokin' Steady DR. GRABOW Pre-Smoked PIPES No Breaking In Sweet from the very first puff— SEE YOUR DEALER— IMPORTED BRIAR Choice of 52 Shapes— DE Luxe $1.50 SUPREME $2.00 TRU-GRAIN $3.50 SELECT GRAIN $5.00 Write Free Dr. Grabow Catelion - Dent 11 Write for Free Dr. Grrabow Catolog - Dept. 11. DR. GRABOW CO. IB, CHICAGO 14 IL J. Paul Sheedy* Switched to Wildroot Cream-Oil Because He Flunked The Finger Nail Test Panda ALL panda-monium just broke loose for this little guy with the hairy ears and two black eyes. Somebody switched his Wildroot Cream-Oil! You may not be a panda — but why not see what Wildroot Cream-Oil canda? Just a little bit groomes your hair neatly and naturally without that plastered-down look. Relieves annoying dryness and removes loose, ugly dandruff. And Wildroot Cream-Oil helps you pass the Fingernail Test! It's non-alcoholic . . . contains soothing Lanolin. Get a tube or bottle of Wildroot Cream-Oil hair tonic at any drug or toilet goods counter today. And always ask your barber for a professional application. In case there's a panda in your house — keep some Wildroot Cream-Oil handa for him! - of 327 Burroughs Drive, Snyder, N. Y. Wildroot Company, Inc., Buffalo 11, N.Y. MILDROOT CREAM-OIL PARFUM WILDROOT CREAM-OIL PARFUM UPCOMING FOR BAR BUTTER FINE BAR LAVENDER LAKIN GILT LEAAM-OIL LAKIN GILT WILDROOT CREAM-OIL Hair Tonic Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks. University Daily Kansan OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 47th Year No. 136 Thursday, April 20, 1950 Lawrence, Kansas STUDENT NEWS PAPER the New KU Student Killed When Train Hits Car Thomas F. Clinton, 29-year-old junior in the School of Medicine, was killed at 3:20 a.m. today when a train struck his automobile on a crossing near Lenexa, Kan., the United Press reported. The accident occurred three and one-half miles south of Lenexa, the Johnson county sheriff's office said. Clinton was alone in the automobile and parked on the crossing without headlights. The car was struck by a speeding M-K-T freight train. The engineer of the train said he didn't see the car in time to stop because the crossing is on a curve and the lights of the diesel engine did not pick up the vehicle "until we were right on it." Clinton held a commission in the naval reserve. He was attached to the Olathe Naval Air station and had reported to the base Wednesday to stand an admiral's inspection held in the evening. Lt. H, W. Sturdevant, public information officer at the Olathe base, said Clinton was a carrier torpedo pilot who participated in the Okiawa campaign and a bombing mission on Tokyo. Clinton attended Cathedral High school in Wichita, Kan. After his release from the armed services, he entered the University in the fall of 1945. Clinton is survived by his wife, Betty, and two sons, who live at 8200 West 80th street in Overland Park, Kan. The body was removed to the Julian Funeral Home in Olathe. Cheering School Will Meet Today KANSAS — Fair and slightly warmer. Highs today 55 to 60 degrees. Low tonight 35 to 40 degrees. High tomorrow in the mid-60s. The second session of the cheerleaders' training school will be held from 5 to 6 p.m. today on the east side of Robinson gymnasium. Training will be continued from 5 to 6 p.m. Monday, April 24, and Tuesday, April 25, on the west side of the gymnasium. Any regularly enrolled University student who has met the eligibility requirements for organizations may try out for cheerleader. Payment of fees and a C average on at least 12 hours of courses the preceding semester are among these requirements. Students on probation are not eligible. Acratic or tumbling skill will be an added advantage to students trying out. Ten cheerleaders will be chosen later by the Pep committee. Members of the committee are L. C. Woodruff and Donald K. Alderson, dean and assistant dean of men; Miss Margaret Habein and Miss Martha Peterson, dean and assistant dean of women; Fred Ellsworth and Marvin Small, secretary and assistant secretary of the Alumni association; F. C. Allen, basketball coach; Jules V. Sikes, football coach; E. C. Quigley, director of athletics; Donald Giffin, chairman of the traditions committee of the All Student Council; and two students appointed by the A.S.C. president. These appointments have not been announced. WEATHER The Student Union Operating committee will meet today at 7:15 p.m. in the East room of the Memorial Union building. Union Group Meets Today Western Civ Exams Today The Western Civilization preliminary examination over units one to five will be given at 7:30 p.m. today. Students whose last names begin with letters from A to M will meet in 305 Bailey hall, and from N to Z in 101 Snow hall. Students who failed to take the preliminary examination over units one to 10 before Easter vacation may take them today at the same hour and places as the other examination. Western Civ To Continue After a 5-year trial the Western Civilization reading course at the University has received a vote of confidence and will be continued indefinitely as a graduation requirement by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The College faculty has voted to retain Western Civilization as a sophomore year requirement except for students entering K. U, as second semester sophomores or higher. For the latter it is a graduation requirement. The faculty adopted 13 new courses, dropped six and approved re-organization and changing the class level of several others. The department of speech and drama added six new courses: Introduction to Radio (3 hour credit), Radio Speaking (3), Radio Acting (2), Radio Production (3), Radio Dramatic Script Writing (2), and Extempore Speaking (2). Added by the history department were Medieval Russia (2), Imperial Russia and the Soviet Union (3), Origins of Modern Germany (3), and South Eastern Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries (2). The department of mathematics will introduce two courses in modern algebra and combine two old advanced calculus courses into one and two new courses in the introduction to the theory of functions. Dropped by the psychology department are courses in psychological clinic and systematic psychology. The home economics department no longer will offer Problems in Home Living. Student Recitals To Be Given Today Three students in the School of Fine Arts will appear in a student recital at 3 p.m. today in Strong auditorium. Applications for production manager, business manager, and publicity director for the 1951 Rock Chalk revenue should be submitted at the Y.M.C.A. office by Friday, April 28 'Revue' Managers' Jobs Now Open Melvin Borell, education senior will sing "Qui sidegno non s'accende" from "The Magic Flute" by Mozart A piano student, Gerald Hilbs, fine arts freshman, will play Kabale- sky's "Sonatina in C Major." "Scene et Legende de la fille des Parias" by Delibes, will be sung by Martha Weed, education senior. Oklahoma and Kansas meet in K.U.'s opening tennis matches here today. The meet is scheduled for 2 p.m. Applicants should give any background or previous experience, which would qualify them for the job and ideas or suggestions for next year's show. KU Meets OU In Tennis Clingan Wins 1323 To 922 Amendment Is Defeated 1958 —Kansan Photo by Bob Roto MELVIN CLINGAN, president-elect of the All Student Council, peers anxiously over Pat Gardenhire's shoulder as she calls out the presidential vote to election co-worker James Logan. Standing next to Clingan is Margaret Olson. Behind him are, left to right, Roger Davis, Ben Foster, and Thomas Milligan. Ballot Counters Find Votes Cast For Nipnap, Kalikak Bv DALE S. ROMIG Approximately 40 people were on hand Wednesday night in 210 Strong to work, kibitz or weep as the votes were tallied for the spring election and hear Melvin Clingan announced president of the All Student council. Sorting of the ballots got underway at 7 p.m. and 10 minutes later the first returns were posted on the board. Robert Bennett first year law, was named representative of District IV on the A.S.C. Only 87 votes were cast in the district. But it took three more hours to get all the votes counted and the proportional representation worked out so the proper candidates could be declared elected. J. W. Drury, associate professor of political science, and William Cape, instructor of political science, who were the faculty judges, were kept busy all evening figuring the P.R. No tempers flared but the judges were forced to resort to the constitution several times to explain a point in the P.R. system to the harried election officials. The successful presidential candidate appeared to be nervous as the counting got off to a shaky start. His lead built up gradually all evening, however, and after half the ballots had been tallied, there was not too much doubt as to his being elected. Upon being called the winner of the top A.S.C. post, Clingan praised his opponent and said "the Council is fortunate in having Wilma (Shore) as representative - at - large next year." In his own behalf, he said, "Now that the usual election pressure is off, I can relax and realize this is one of the finest things that ever happened to me and I want to extend my sincerest thanks to the students who supported me. The platform the party ran on will be executed to the highest degree possible." Miss Shore, who was not present when the votes were counted, said this when she was told that Clingan was the successful candidate: "I want to thank those who carried on the campaign in my behalf and those who supported me in the election, "I offer my congratulations to Mr. Clingan for his successful campaign for the presidency, and since I will serve on the Council as representative-at-large, I hope that we will be The Pachacamac political machine was creaking Wednesday, but it managed to pull ahead of non-partisan opposition and give the presidency of the All Student council to Melvin Clingan, business junior. Clingan received 1,323 votes which was only 401 more than the count for Wilma Shore, education junior, the non-partisan candidate. Miss Shore now automatically becomes representative-at-large on the A.S.C. With Clingan, 10 Pachacamac representatives rode into office while the non-partisans grabbed the other six district seats on the Council. There were 2,308 votes cast in the election, slightly more than one-third of the student body. That is approximately the same number of votes cast in the 1949 election when there were 1,000 more students enrolled in the University. The Council will have 15 new elected members. Besides Clingan and Miss Shore, the only other returning Council member will be Robert Bennett, first year law, who was elected from District IV. This will be his third year on the Council. In the junior class, Bill Schaake was elected president; Emmeline Gooch, vice-president; Sammy Johnson, secretary; and Vern Sutton, treasurer. The District II (engineering) candidates chosen for Council seats were Edward Grandle, non-partisan, and Damon Simpson, Sam Willcoxen, and Bill Wilson, Pachacama. The proposal to amend the constitution to discontinue organizational representatives on the A.S.C. was defeated 910 to 1,300. The amendment, if passed, would have meant that all the 30 seats on the Council would be elective rather than only 20 as is now the case. The discrepancy between the 20 members required on the Council and the 18 posts filled at this election will be made up at the freshman election next fall. In District I (College and journalism), Dale Helmers, Joe Wimsatt, and Dean Wells, Pachacamac, and Walter Brown, non-partisan, were elected to the council. The women elected from District I were Pat Gardenhire and Marcia Horn, Pachacamac-N.O.W., and Helen Maduros, non-partisan. Men elected from District III (business, fine arts, pharmacy and education) were Roger Davis, nonpartisan, and Jack Howard and Tom White, Pachacamac. Georgia Ginther, Pachacamac-N.O.W., and Maxine Holsinger, non-partisan, will represent the women from District III. Pachacamac - N.O.W. candidates were unopposed in the election of class officers. Senior class officers elected were John Amberg, president; Larry Ross, vice-president; Hal Edmondson, secretary; and Betty Jo Bloomer, treasurer. The sophomore class elected Karen Hall, president: Phil Owen, vice-president; Marilyn Hanson, secretary; and Bill Todd, treasurer. able to work together for the good of the student body." The counting was not without its lighter moments. Between cokes furnished by the A.S.C., and cigarets furnished by a cigarette company representative, the students counting the presidential ballots found time to laugh at one vote cast for Rodney Nipnap, the one for F.D.R., and the 40 ballots with Martin Kalkak written in. Somebody explained that the latter was the father of several idiotic progeny. Another write-in candidate receiving one vote was R. C. Hegaty. At the bottom of the ballot was the notation, "I need the money." UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1950 PAGE TWO Summer Session Concert Series Begins June 21 Three concert attractions have been obtained for the 1950 summer session, D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, announced. Earle Spicer, American bartite, will open the series by presenting a recital of English and American ballads in Fraser theater, Wednesday, June 21. Mr. Spicer has appeared at many of the universities of the country including: Cornell university, New York; University of Minnesota, Minneapolis; and Yale university, New Haven, Conn. He gave a recital at the University two years ago. The Katherine Flowers dancers, a group of eight, will appear in Hoch auditorium, Thursday, July 6. Their program, "Bamboula to Bop," will show the evolution of Negro dancing in the United States and the contribution that the Negro has made to American dancing. The final attraction of the summer concert series will be the Tudor Madrigal singers, who will present their program Monday, July 24, in Fraser theater. Seated informally around a candle lighted table, the six members will sing 16th and 17th century music. Jayhawker Posts Open Until April 26 Positions as editor and business manager of the 1950-51 Jayhawker magazine are open, John Eulich, business manager, said today. Interested persons should fill out applications stating their qualifications and obtain three letters of recommendation to be turned in to Karl Klooz, chairman of the Jayhawker advisory board, by 5 p.m. Wednesday, April 26. The selections will be announced at 3 p.m. Thursday, April 27, at the Jayhawker office. All applicants should be present. Michigan claims the largest eastern white pine, a tree measuring 17 feet. 10 inches in circumference. The state also has the largest white spruce, eight feet, nine inches in circumference. SO THIS IS WHERE YOU CAN GET YOUR CLOTHES TAILORED TO MEASURE. I MUST SEE WHAT THEY HAVE IN GOOD WOOLENS! YES-SIR this is the place where you can -get what you want in either Style or Cloth AT A LOWER PRICE THAN YOU WOULD PAY FOR SIMILAR QUALITY ELSEWHERE SCOTCH TAILORS NATIONALLY FAMOUS FOR MADE in U.S.A. STYLE, QUALITY & VALUE TUXEDO RENTALS First Door South of Patee Theatre Brown's TOGGERY 830 Mass. St. Brown's TOGGERY 830 Mass. St. Official Bulletin Thursday. April 20 Law Wives, 8 tonight; Law lounge Dean Moreau, speaker. El ateneo se reunira el jueves, 4:30 en 113 Strong hall. Programa: El Testamento de Judas y elección de oficiales. Phi Delta Kappa and Pi Lambda Theta joint annual spring dinner, 6:30 tonight, Kansas room, Union. Dr. John Ise, speaker. Delta Sigma Pi professional function and business meeting, 7:30 tonight. West end of ballroom, Union Alpha Kappa Psi business meeting 7:15 tonight, English room, Union Professional meeting at 8 p.m. Young Democrats, 7:30 tonight, 106 Green hall. Larry Ryan, Secretary of State, speaker. Social Work club business meeting, 4 p.m. today, East room, Union. Home Ec club fashion show, 7:30 tonight, 110 Fraser hall. International club, 7:30 tonight. Recreation room. Union. Red Peppers, 7:15 tonight, 103 Strong hall. Important. Jefferson county students, 5 p.m. today, Miller hall, Completion of picnic plans. KuKu's, 7:30 tonight, 105 Green hall. Phi Chi Theta, 7:30 tonight, Jollife hall. Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship 7:30 to 8:30 tonight, 131 Strong hall. Flection of officers and panel discussion. Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship missionary meeting, 12 noon, Friday, Danforth chapel. General Semantics, 7:45 p.m. tonight, 111 Strong. Important business meeting. Christian Science Organization regular meeting, 7:30 tonight, Danforth chapel. New A.W.S. Senate, 5 p.m. today. Kappa Alpha Theta house. Kappa Beta, 7 tonight, Myers hall. Unitarian Liberal club, 4 p.m. Saturday, East room, Monroe Husbands, American Unitarian association, Boston, speaker. Der Deutsche Verein versammelt sich Heute um 5:00, 402 Fraser hall. Sigma Tau election of officers, 7:30 p.m. Monday, 426 Lindley hall, All members attend. Mortar Board tonight, Malott's house. Axe Relates Business Plan The need for an understanding between the business community and the business student was emphasized by Leonard H. Axe, dean of the School of Business, in a speech before the Lawrence Rotary club recently. Dean Axe told the group that it is now generally believed that curricula in the schools of business are over-specialized and too high departmentalized. Students in most schools are graduated with a great volume of theoretical knowledge but with little notion of how to apply it. As a result of this, school of business at the University has attempted to solve the problem by adopting the case history method of instruction. This method gives students a practical approach to the field by giving them problems to solve that have actually been encountered in business. Call K.U. 251 With Your News University Daily Kansan Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays in examination periods Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. RELAYS SPECIAL! MOTOROLA 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 wherever you go take fun with you Here's a Motorola portable that will give you clear reception at the relays. Operates on AC/DC or batteries. $24^{95}$ plus batteries. BEAMAN'S RADIO & TV 1200 New York KU. MUTo Be Extension Hosts The University Extension and the extension division of the University of Missouri will be the official hosts for the annual meeting of the National University Extension association. The convention will be at Excelsior Springs, Mo., from Sunday. April 30 through Wednesday, May 3. Guy V. Keeler, director of University Extension, is in charge of the arrangements for the convention. Miss Ruth Kenney, director of the correspondence study bureau, is chairman of the registration committee. More than 200 persons are expected to attend the conference. The implications of atomic energy and television on adult education will be discussed. There will also be sectional meetings for the various extension activities. Morse Salisbury, director of public and technical information for the Atomic Energy commission, and George Glasheen, also of the A.E.C. will be present as consultants. Fred S. Montgomery, director of the K. U. bureau of visual instruction, will be in charge of the sectional meetings on audio-visual aids. Other section meetings will include community organization, correspondence study, evening college and extension classes, industrial relations and workers education, institutes and conferences, lectures and concert artists, technical institutes, radio and television, and fleet supervisors schools. Genita Clipped By Tombstone Carrollton, Ga.—(U.P.)-Three-year' old Genita Miles, visiting the grave of her grandfather here, was knocked unconscious by a falling tombstone. Where can I get model material? ? Where There's Most Of It!! at KIRKPATRICK's 45 H.O. gauge model kit - 33 Powered model kit - 23 engines for model airplanes and boats - 18 different sizes of Balsa MORE THAN — 35 accessories for powered models. KIRKPATRICK'S SPORT SHOP Ph. 101 715 Mass. Ph. 1018 Vee-Bit California COBBLERS Just a wee bit of quality leather, but the whole outdoors full of freedom and comfort in the just-for-you fit of this clever thong sandal. Notice, both the instep strap and the sling have size-adjustor buckles. Only $4^{95} Royal College Shop 837-39 Mass. THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE ne ear" ve k- b- Up And Coming Sig Ep Relays Breakfast Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity will entertain with a breakfast dance from 7 to 9 a.m., Saturday at the chapter house. The dance, an annual event, will start the fraternity's festivities for the K.U. Relays. Chapereons for the dance will be Mrs. E. I. Brammer, Mrs. Thomas Clark, Mrs. W. S. Shaw, and Mrs. C. H. Wentworth. Sigma Pi Formal Dance Members of Sigma Pi fraternity will entertain from 9 p.m. to midnight at the Lawrence country club with a formal dance. Lambda Chi Alpha Party Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity has scheduled a party from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday at Holcoms grove. Chaperones will be Mrs. H. M. Miller, Mrs. Thomas H. Stuart, and Mr. and Mrs. Philip Dergance. Gamma Phi Beta Dance Gamma Phi Beta sorority members will hold a dance from 8 p.m. to midnight Friday in the chapter house. Mrs. F. L. MacCreary and Mrs. Eugene Alford will be chaperones. Alpha Phi Alpha Party Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity members will entertain with a party at the chapter house from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday. Mrs. Johnson Smothers, Mrs. Alberta Frye, and Mrs. Ora Lee will attend as chaperones. Stephenson-Lorimer Mr. and Mrs. B. Z. Stephenson of Lawrence announce the engagement of their daughter, Betty Lou, to Mr. Wayne Lorimer, of Colee Dam, Wash. He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Lorimer of Olathe. The wedding will be June 1 at Danforth chapel. ATO Pinning Miss Stephenson will be graduated this spring from the School of Education. Mr. Lorimer received a degree from the School of Engineering in 1949. Alpha Tau Omega fraternity announces the pinning April 5th of Miss Gloria McManus, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George McManus of Coffeyville to Mr. William T. Hall, son of Mr. and Mrs. Orley Hall of Coffeyville. Coffey M. Miss Manus is a freshman at Coffeville Junior college. Mr. Hall is a business junior. Wood Pledges A O Pi Alpha Omicron Pi sorority announces the pledging of Elizabeth Wood of Cherryvale. Does your furniture flatter your home? SINGLE HOME FURNITURE May we invite you to stop in and see our work— - New Furniture Custom Built - Re-upholstering Dingman Furniture 1803 Mass. Sigma Alpha Iota Musicale Will Be Presented Friday Two arrangements by Marilyn Barr, fine arts sophomore, and an original composition by Bernadine Read, fine arts senior, will be featured at the spring musicale of Sigma Alpha Iota, national honorary music sorority, at 7:30 p.m. Friday in Strong auditorium. Brady-Harvey Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Brady of Wichita announce the engagement of their daughter, Bernice Luella, to Mr. Harold Arnold Harvey, son of Mrs. Minnie Harvey and Mr. Everet Harvey of Fort Collins, Colo. C. R. B. Miss Brady and Mr. Harvey will be married at 2 p. m. Saturday, June 3, in Danforth chapel. They will reside in Lawrence for the summer. Miss Brady will continue her graduate work and Mr. Harvey will teach. Miss Bernice Brady Miss Brady was graduated from the School of Education the past semester. She is a member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority. Mr. Harvey, an instructor in speech, will complete his master's degree this spring. He was graduated from the School of Education in 1948. Club To Hold Fashion Show Home Economics club members are scheduled to attend a free fashion show at 7:30 tonight in room 110. Fraser hall. - "With A Song In My Heart" (Rodgers-Hart), the title song of the program, and "The Song Is Ended" (Berlin) were arranged by Miss Barr for the chorus. Miss Read's number for chorus is entitled "Things." things. The program, which is directed by Miss Read, contains semi-classical and popular selections from such American composers as Cole Porter, Geoffrey O'Hara, Harvey Gaul, and Charles Griffes. The accompanist is Lois Bradfield, fine arts freshman. Solists will be Lynn Lucas, fine arts senior, centralto; Kitty Walter, fine arts senior, soprano; Carolee Eberhart, fine arts freshman, and Miss Barr, duo-pianists; and Miss Bradford, piano soloist. Each year University chapter of the sorority persents a musicale of American music to emphasize the contribution of America to the musical world. Pink Elephant Dance The Independent Students association will sponsor a "Pink Elephants on Parade" semi-formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday in the Union ballroom. Ullman classrooms will include the songs, "It Isn't Fair" and "With a Song in My Heart," sung by Betty Lou Richards, education senior, and a song and dance routine, "Look for the Silver Lining" and "Sweet Georgia Brown," by a dance team from Maxine Lindley's dancing school. Donald Dirkss, College freshman, will be master of ceremonies. James Sellards and Danny Orton's orchestra will play. Chaperones are Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bates, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Morris, and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Whaley. Alumni have also been invited. Donna Hobein, College freshman, is in charge of the dance. is in charge or Tickets may be purchased from Tromsø Poster, College sophomore, or at the door on Friday night. Prices are: Non-members, $1.25 a couple, ward members, 75 cents; stags, 75 cents; and I.S.A. members with membership cards, free admission. I. S. A. Spring Formal "Pink Elephants On Parade" Friday, April 21 Union Ballroom 9 p.m. Music by Jim Sellards and His Orchestra ADMISSION ISA membership cards or $1.25 per couple .75 single admission .75 per couple for Ward members Ice Cubes Crushed Ice Picnic or Party Chests Rented Pop by Bottle, Carton or Case American ServlCE Company Coolerator Electric Refrigerators Ranges, Home Freezers Phone 48 616 Vermont 1 SPRING TIME IS ICE CREAM TIME You'll find our ICE CREAM deliciously satisfying because it's made fresh daily in a variety of flavors. CHATEAU DRIVE-IN MA 11 AT 18:41 No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money. W Weaver 901 Mass. It ain't gonna rain no more! Sunny Side Up! Rockin Nail enamel .60* Lipstick 1.00* Lip-Fashion 1.00* Everything is 'Sunny Side Up Revlon's new color A young red...a tempting red... for lips and matching fingertips You must have it today...Revlon's bright-hearted sun-sweetened crimson -teasing as a butterfly kiss! Your lips and fingertips are all alight with "Sunny Side Up"...and you're on the sunny side of the street! Nail Enamel...Lipsticks... Harmonizing Face Powder and Face Make-ups Weaver's Cosmetics Main Floor 1 1 PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, APRIL 20. 1950 0 DICK JONES, OKLAHOMA'S SOPHOMORE HIGH JUMPER who performs wearing only one shoe, will be one of the outstanding high jump entries at the silver anniversary Kansas Relays Saturday. In order to win, Jones, whose best effort to date is 6 feet $ \frac{5}{2} $ inches, will have to best such aces as Bob Walters, Texas' defending champion and record holder; Virgil Severns, Kansas State's surprise who has cleared 6 feet $ \frac{8}{2} $ inches; Bradley's perennial Jack Heintzman; Vern McGrew of Rice, and others. Kansas Coach Bill Easton, director of the Relays, believes this year's list of entries in the high jump is the best any Relay's program has ever offered. Kansas Four-Mile Relay Team Will Run For American Record Wholesale record-breaking may be the word of the day Saturday at the silver anniversary running of the Kansas Relays, and a Kansas Jayhawker foursome could be in the thick of it. Coach Bill Easton's squad of Cliff Abel, Pat Bowers, Captain Bob Karnes, and Herb Semper have set their sights on a new American record in the four-mile relay. That quartet of Jayhawkers ran 17:20.9 at the Texas Relays a few weeks ago. The American record is 17:16.1. The Kansas Relays record is 17:37.8. Just the incentive Easton's crack squad may need to get the new mark are Michigan and Texas A. and M. Either team is fast enough to upset the Kansans, but they should have to set a new mark themselves to accomplish it. Do Gernhmann of Wisconsin, the nation's No. 1 miler, will be after the mark of 4:10.1 in the Cunningham mile. The record belongs to At least eight other records may be overhailed. They include the Glenn Cunningham mile, high jump, broad jump, pole vault, mile relay in both college and university classes, university sprint medley, and college two-mile relay. FIRST ISSUE ON NEWSSTANDS NOW! CollegeFun The best humor and cartoons from college periodicals of long ago, yesterday and today! Contains the undergraduate work of: PETER ARNO J. P.MARQUAND ROBERT BENCHLEY ROBERT SHERWOOD Stephan Vincent Banet GLUYS WILLIAMS as well as best college humor today. Students are invited to submit stories, cartoons, light verse, parodies. Payment upon acceptance. GET A COPY TODAY - 25¢ Gehrmann himself and Blaine Rideout of North Texas State. College mile: Oklahoma Baptist and Abilene Christian went over the mark of 3:17.3 in finishing one-two at the Texas Relays. Saturday. Several men, led by Virgil Severn of Kansas State and defending champ Bob Walters of Texas, will go for the high jump mark of 6 feet 8-13-16 inches. Another Kansas Stater, Herb Hoskins, and Jerry Biffle of Denver will try to outdo the broad jump mark of 25 feet $4\frac{3}{4}$ inches. Defending co-champions Bill Carroll of Oklahoma and Harry Cooper of Minnesota got within two inches of the pole vault record of 14 feet 2 inches in 1949. They may go higher Teams which have bettered relay marks in their respective classes during early meets include: University sprint medley: Oklahoma A. and M. has run 3:24.9. The record is 3:25.2. University mile: Rice zoomed 3:14.5 at the Texas event and Oklahoma was right behind. The record is 3:15.6. LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth CASH AND CARRY ONLY Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed . . 75c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed . . 79c Come in and hear This week's hits BEWITCHED Doris Day Chinese Mule Train Spike Jones My Foolish Heart Mindy Carson BELL'S Decathlon Entry On Relays Scene First contestant to arrive in Lawrence for the silver anniversary running of the Kansas Relays Saturday is Brayton Norton, decathlon entry from Santa Ana, Calif., Junior college. Norton arrived Wednesday and worked out in Memorial stadium in the afternoo, with Kansas trackmen. PLAYS SHOW TUNES N "DANCE-HAPPY 15" The Californiaian is a darkhorse in the decathlon. Pre-meet favorite to win the special event is defending champion Jim McConnell of Nebraska. However, Norton recently compiled a 6,907-point total in a California meet, and that is 209 points better than McConnell did in winning the 1949 championship. John Bunyan was "Pilgrim's Progress" while he was in prison. The decathlon is a gruelling test which includes ten events—the 100-yard dash, the broad jump, shot put, high jump, 400-meter run. 110-meter high hurdles, discus throw, pole vault, and javelin throw, and 1500-meter run. Competition begins Friday and winds up Saturday morning. 1945 T "LARRY GREEN (above) plays Vincent Youmans". . . Tea For Two, Carica, 4 others, in a big new RCA Victor album "DESIGNED FOR DANGING!" 15 of these new dance albums just out! . . . featuring 15 big-name bands, 15 famed composers . . . 90 hits! Every record the danceable kind you've wanted! Get all 15. At Bell Music Co., 925 Mass. Try our .. BUTTER PECAN Ice cream. Fritzel Call CHI GALLOWAY PH.182 Youll thrill to the combination of rich ice cream and fresh buttered pecans. Try this for a delicious dessert over the relays weekend. Fritzel - Jayhawk 836 Vermont Give Your White Elephants 'Green Backs' With KANSAN Classifieds. in WOMEN'S and MISSES SPECIALS APPAREL RAYON SUITS Reg. 14.95 ___ $10.00 Reg. 17.95 ___ 12.00 DRESSES Up to $19.95 ... $8.00 Up to 14.95 ... $6.00 Up to $8.95 ... $6.00 Up to $6.95 ... $4.00 HOSE SKIRTS Up to $1.65 ... $ .99 Up to $1.95 ... $1.39 The Palace 843 Mass. THURSDAY, APRIL 20,1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE KU Beats Rockhurst In Ninth Coach Bill Hogan's Jayhawker baseball team pushed across three runs in the ninth inning to edge out Rockhurst college, 11 to 10, in a game played Wednesday on the Hawks' diamond. The win gives Kansas a 2-1 season record, with both victories over Rockhurst. The game, played under anything but ideal baseball conditions, left much to be desired on the defense by both clubs with Kansas committing nine errors and Rockhurst six. Wind, intermittent rain, and a rough infield kept both starting pitchers, Carl Sandefur of Kansas, and the Hawks' John Meara, in trouble as their teammates handled the ball loosely. Kansas, which won the season opener with Rockhurst 10 to 2, trailed 8 to 10 going into the ninth inning. Lou DeLuna led-off with a walk, and moved to second as John McConnell grounded out. Floyd Temple grounded out moving DeLuna to third. Carl Ellis followed with a base on balls and 'promptfly stole second. Walter Hicks bounced a grounder off the second baseman's glove into rightfield with DeLuna and Ellis scoring to tie the game at 10-all. After Hicks stole second base, Arnold Stricker replaced him as a pinch runner. Jim Cavonaugh reached second base on an overthrow at first on a close play with Stricker racing home with the winning run on the erger. After Henry Lamping walked, George Voss made the third out to end the rally. Kansas will play the University of Missouri Monday and Tuesday, April 24 and 25, in the first Big Seven games on the home diamond this year for Coach Hogan's defending champions. Both games will start at 3 p.m. Herman Philipp, slender sophomore righthander, replaced Sandefer in the seventh inning to receive credit for his first collegiate win. This was his third relief role in as many games. Philipp retired Rockhurst in one-two-three order in the ninth. The Jayhawkers took an early 2 to 1 lead in the first inning as Ellis hit a long fly to leftfielder Jim Flaherty that got away for a two-base error. Frank Koenig and Temple scored on the play. After picking up a single tally in the second, the Hawks took a 4 to 2 lead in the fourth inning as Larry Messina tripped with two on and later scored with the third marker. In the sixth inning Kansas scored four runs to regain the lead 6 to 4. Voss' long triple to right field with two on highlighted the rally. This was the only extra-base blow manufactured by Kansas. After each team scored a pair of runs in the seventh, then Rockhurst scored four times in the eighth to take a 10 to 8 margin over Coach Hogan's club. Two walks, three errors, and a pair of hits provided the scoring. Kansas fought back to win the game as they pushed across three runs in the ninth, all unearned, to climb above the 500 mark in three games played to date. Score by innings: H. R. E. Kansas 200 004 203—11 5 9 Rockhurst 010 300 240—10 9 6 Batteries; Sandefur, Philippe (7) (won), and Morrow, Mace (9); Meara, Quinlan (7)—(lost), and Reichmeier. Fairview, Ill., April 20—(U.P.)—A Midwestern All-American basketball player said today he wasn't surprised when a man offered him a $100 bribe to throw a game in New York City because "everybody knows this stuff goes on there." Unruh Reveals Offer Of Bribe Paul Unruh, the crew-cut ace of Bradley university, said of course he didn't take the bribe and ordered the "short, dark man" who offered it to him to "shove off." He said the bribe was made when he was in New York for the recent National Invitational tournament. "New York is a big city and I understand a lot of that goes on there," said Unruh. "I led him on because I had heard a lot about those things and wanted to know how they worked," Unruh said. Unruh said the man offered him $100 if Bradley would win by six points and $500 if they would win by two points. Unruh said he didn't report the bribe attempt to his team officials, tournament officials, the N.C.A.A. or anyone else because he "didn't think anything of it." "Well, this guy asked if I was interested in such a deal, not for any particular game but just a deal to win by so many points. I listened to him and then I said, 'shove off, buddy, because I'm leaving.' " He said he forgot all about it until he mentioned it in a banquet speech at Pekin, Ill. Tuesday night. speech at Pelham, Ill. Tuesday night, at Peoria, Ill. Bradley's athletic director Arthur Bergstrom, expressed "surprise" at Unruth's disclosure. He confirmed that the player had not mentioned the incident to him or to Coach Forrest Anderson. Bergstrom said he did not think that Unruh had done wrong in failing to report the offer. But Unruh was worried. Announcing STUDENT SHIPS It's still possible to see Europe this Summer S.S. Canberra (Greek Line) Montreal to Cherbourg & Southampton ... 9 days Dormitory (25) berths $135* Tourist cabins (4 berths) $140* May 31, June 26, July 22 Denport Southampton & Depart Montreal Cherbourg for Montreal 4, 8, 20, 21, 24 Aug. 8, 1950, to Sep. Departures on other dates available. Limited space. Act promptly. Depart Southampton & Chebourg for Montreal YOUTH ARGOSY, Inc. 366 Broadway Worth. 2-0162 New York 13, New York 10 CHARLEY PARKER Parker won the event in the rainy Relays of 1948 and was a favorite to win a year ago before he dropped out at the last minute because of a leg injury. He has shown fine form during the early season meets. His best marks this far are a 9.4-second 100-yard dash and a 20.0-second 220. He was aided by a tailwind in both events; however, Texan Charley Parker will be favored to dethrone defending champ Jerry Biffle of Denver when the two are paired in the 100-yard dash in the silver anniversary running of the Kansas Relays Saturday. Weather Fails To Stop Softball Tuesday's "intramural softball games were not postponed as stated in Wednesday's University Daily Kansan. The full seven-game schedule was played despite scattered showers and chilly weather. Don Powell, intramurals director, requests all teams to show up for games. No games will be rescheduled unless weather causes postponements, Powell said, for rain has already delayed the schedule. Today's Schedule Fraternity "B" Psi vs. A.T.O. Independent "P 2 Fiji U. vs. Silent Men 3 Men of Dist. vs. Bonded Fifths 4 Physics department vs. Orcad 5 Beta 69 vs. Sig Chi “C” 6 Phi Chi vs. Jay Crows 7 S.A.M. vs. Delta Sigma Pi Wednesday Results Lambda Chi 0, Sig Ep 11. Beta 21, A.K.L. 2. Delta Tau 10, Sigma Nu 29. Acacia 0, Sig Alph 15 Phi Kappa 9, Kappa Sig 4 Bronchos 7, Alpha Chi Sigma 23. FLYING? FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY See Picnic Time Is Cottage Cheese Time Your outings will be an even greater success with Rich Creamy Cottage Cheese to top off your meal. It's Got To Be Good if it's from LAWRENCE SANITARY MILK At Your Dealer or Call 696 202 W. 6th Cold Winds Don't Stop Women's IM's; Postponed Games Scheduled Today Despite cold and wind women's softball games for Wednesday were played as scheduled. Games originally scheduled for Monday will be played today. Corbin defeated Kappa Alpha Theta 9 to 1, allowing the lone run in the last inning. The winners scattered their hits throughout the gam* including one home run by Mary Lou Conrod. Batteries were Petterson and Mickelson for Corbin, and McCune and Gage for Kappa Alpha Theta. Alpha Phi easily piloted up 16 runs to 6 for Alpha Chi Omega. Both teams spread their scoring through the game, but for Alpha Chi that meant one apiece for the last four innings. Batteries were Fitzpatrick and Hovalich for Alpha Chi Omega and Holloway and Sahm for Delta Phi. Kanza forfeited to Delta Delta Delta Schedule for today's games is: Diamond Scheff Diamond: 1. Watkins vs. Locksey 4 p.m. 2. Jayettes vs. Jolliffe 5 p.m. 3. Miller vs. Sigma Kappa 5 p.m. Laissez Faire 5. Squirrels 16 Tuesday Results Sigma Chi 14, Pi KA. 7 Phi Psi 12, Delta Chi 11 Y.M.C.A. 5, A.IEE, No. "32 A.T.O. 13, Alpha Kapha Psi 11 K.A. Psi 22, Phi Delt 17 D.U. 22, Phil Kap Tau 23 Pi Kap Sig 3, Phi Gam 16. K. U. COLMERY for U.S. SENATOR CLUB Organizational Meeting ALL STUDENTS ARE INVITED THURS., APRIL 20 7:30 p.m. Room 106 Green Shopping Note NEW FASHIONS IN PAPERS BY EATON We sure to stop in! The very latest creative designs in Eaton's fashion letter papers are now on display. You'll find one so right for you that it will carry the essence of your charm when you "visit.hv-mail." B 1025 Mass. Carter's Stationery OPEN P11-1051 4:30 p.m. NOW A GOLFING COURT - Open Weekdays—4:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. - Sat. & Sun.—2:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. - Use our clubs or your own. Come out and play our new 18 hole miniature golf course when it opens soon—it will be laid out on a 22,500 sq. ft. plot. H Jayhawk Golf Driving Range 1 Mile East of Haskefl on 10 You drive 'em—We'll shag 'em PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1950 Latin American Antiques On Display In Art Museum A wax figure of the Empress Carlotta made in 1860, surrounded by an embroidered wool wreath, is a part of the Latin American collection being exhibited in the University Museum of Art during April. Carlotta, in an age-stained wool dress, has dark eyes and dark human hair. The Latin American pieces were assembled to accompany the course in Latin American art taught by Dr. Maxon, director of the Museum of Art. The exhibition will end on Cervantes Day, Saturday, April 29. Cervantes Day is the celebration in honor of the Spanish author of "Don Quixote." Huge silver candle holders made in Argentina in the 18th century, a silver tea cup from Peru, a silver sauce boat, lamp, and silver spice jars are also being displayed. A needlework rug made about 1700 in Guatemala or Ecuador hangs on the wall in the north gallery. The rug originally had a black background, but the iron oxide dye with which the background was made has destroyed the wool. It has been patched in several places. A carved and painted redwood beam from the church at Pecos, N.M., built in 1617, is being shown. Displayed are Mexican baroque paintings from the vice-regal pediod. One of the paintings, "Crucifixion," from Ecuador was painted on a drumhead which is so thick that it cannot be pressed flat. A gold and silver finished frame decorated with intricate designs in the metal surrounds the painting. A large baroque painting of St. Rose of Lima in an oval frame hangs in the gallery. It was painted in Cuzco, Peru in the early 18th century. It reveals St. Rose as she looks at a model of her Savior on the cross in her hand. A panel painting of the Virgin of Guadelupe on a thick piece of wood is displayed. In it, the Virgin, in a blue robe with her hands folded and her eyes closed, is praying. The painting is an example of primitive Santos art. A bearded, black-haired wooden figure of "Christ the King," which was made in New Mexico in the 18th century, is being shown. The King is dressed in a gay colored robe and has large pink toes. The figure is another example of primitive art. Jefferson Students Meet Jefferson county students will make final plans for a picnic at a meeting today, according to Marjorie Newell, education junior, who is county Statewide Activities chairman. The meeting will be at 5 p.m. at Miller Hall. Miss Newell has invited students who have not attended previous meetings. Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers Soldier's Mail Arrives Seven Years Later Wilmington, Del. — (U,P) — William Schoy, Norfolk, Va, was just "getting shipped across" when he wrote the Knights of Pythias here for magazines to read. The letter arrived recently, seven years late. Lodge Secretary Harry R. Wilson pigeonhole the letter. He said he didn't think Schoy needed the magazines any more. KU Chemists Speak At Detroit Four members of the chemistry department and a graduate student are attending a meeting of the inorganic and physical section of the American Chemical Society in Detroit. Representing the University are Dr. Arthur Davidson, professor of chemistry; Dr. Paul Gilles, assistant professor of chemistry; Dr. Ernest Griswold, associate professor of chemistry; Dr. Jacob Kleinberg, associate professor of chemistry; and Albert McEllroy, graduate student. Dr. Gilles, Dr. Griswold, Dr. Kleinberg and McEllroy will present research papers. The purpose of the inorganic and physical section is to circulate results of new research work in the field prior to publication in chemical journals. TIE ONE ON FOR SPRING! Arrow Arrow Repp Ties $2. The market's finest silk ream value! Arrow's pure silk repp ties are carefully made by the company that tailors famous Arrow shirts. These ties come in smart college stripes. .give you good, long wear. Drop in today and pick out a few! 905 Mass. St. CARLS GOOD CLOTTIES Phone 905 "Ma, ah'm getting awful tar'd since "WEST O' A BILENE" OR BUST! that feller Snake McCoy took our horse." "Don't worry, Pa, we'll be at the "Last Chance" saloon in 12 days, but we gotta hurry or we won't get good seats cause that's 'West O' Abilene'" Austrian Students Attend German Club The Austrian university students visiting the campus were entertained by the German club and German department. They spent Wednesday visiting classes and were entertained at noon with a luncheon in the Palm room of the Union given by the American Association of University Women. The students presented a matinee performance of their musical show to the students of Liberty Memorial High school. Summer Courses University of Madrid Study and Travel A RARE opportunity to enjoy memorable experiences in learning and living! For students, teachers, others yet to discover fascinating, historical Sp a i n. Courses include Spanish language, art and culture. Interesting recreational program included. For details, write now to SPANISH STUDENT TOURS 500 Fifth Ave., New York 18, N.Y. No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money. Who says there's nothing new in Trousers? Hyde Park TUBE LOOP Hyde Park "Tube Loop" Trousers always look better, fit better and feel better! That's because the belt rides smoothly through "tubes" on both sides . . . bringing you new comfort and a measure of smartness you'll appreciate. Handsome Gabardines, Flannels and rayons. New shades. All sizes. Come in... try on a pair... SEE and FEEL the difference. The inner button of the waistband. Gibbs Clothing Company $8.95 to $15.95 811 Mass. St. --- 950 THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Nationalists Half Red Invasion Hong Kong.—(L.P.)—Chinese Nationalist troops on Hainan island wiped out 4,000 Chinese Communist troops and blunted the edge of the latest Communist invasion of the island, the newspaper Hong Kong Standard reported. It said also that defense commander Gen. Hsueh Yuen had served an ultimatum on the remaining 1,100 Communists to surrender by tonight or face a bloody aerial attack. Wild rejoicing on the island followed the Nationalist victory, the report said. The newspaper said the invaders were hacked by Nationalist ground troops while Nationalist planes and warships cut off their communications with the mainland after the invasion was launched yesterday. The report made no mention of the number of troops involved but claimed that Nationalist defenses were quickly overwhelmed. The leftist newspaper Wen Wei- Pao said in a Hainan dispatch that the Communists stormed ashore at Limkao point and Linsze harbor, within 40 miles of Hoihow. Reports reaching here said that Communist units had occupied tiny Lintin island, four miles outside Hong Kong waters at the mouth of the Pearl river. These reports said the Communists bombed the island and then landed aboard river steamers and motor junks today while the Nationalist defenders withdrew aboard a destroyer transport and two junks. Students Receive Stolen Clothing 1 Clothing valued at several hundred dollars, stolen Easter Sunday, was returned to Thomas Hawkins, business senior, and Ray C. Evans, engineering freshman, April 18. The clothing, taken from the two students' cars, was returned following the arrests of three youths Monday by the Topeka police in connection with 11 auto thefts. Hawkins estimated his loss at $231 including two suits, two sport coats, a pair of slacks, and a set of golf clubs. gun clubs. Evans informed the police that his stolen clothing, valued at $217, included a blue flannel suit, brown garadarine suit, gray overcoat, and pair of garabardine slacks. Marvin hall,main building of the School of Engineering and Architecture, was completed in 1907. AUTO PARTS and ACCESSORIES New & Used Parts for All Cars We Buy Old and Wrecked Cars Auto Glass Mirrors Glass Table Tops AUTO WRECKING AND JUNK CO. Phone 954 712 E. 9th Basketball To Presidency Is Path Of Boots Adams It was on a cold morning in November of 1920 that a sturdy six-foot chap, fresh off the University of Kansas campus and just turned 21, walked into the main offices of the vast Phillips Petroleum corporation and announced that he was ready to go to work. Kenneth S. "Boots" Adams was Kenneth S. "Boots" Adams was a little nervous as he sat in the office and told the company general superintendent that he didn't want to take a job under false pretenses. He admitted he knew nothing about the oil business and his sole claim to the job was a result of his ability to play basketball. "I don't know an oil well from a water well," Mr. Adams confessed with the same honesty and sincerity that was to later carry him to the top of Phillips, one of America's largest petroleum companies. Thirty years have passed since that day. Today Mr. Adams is in his 12th year behind the president's desk. He not only knows oil wells inside and out, but he also knows and understans nearly every man's job under him throughout the corporation. This he accomplished by starting at the bottom and working up a step at a time until he became president in 1938 at the age of 38. Few men in industry have equalled his record of advancement. He was born on a Kansas farm near Horton. When he was a year old the family moved to Kansas City, Kan. There "Boots," his brother, and sister were graduated from the grade and high schools. Young Mr. Adams entered the University in 1517. He remained in school a short while before enlisting in the army the same year. He was sent to Officers Training school in Louisville, Ky. where he remained until after the Armistice was signed. He returned to the University after the war. He joined the Sigma Chi fraternity and played on the freshman basketball squad. Basketball Coach Forrest C. Allen said that Adams was a fine player and, had he stayed in school, would have become a star on the varsity cage team. "He was one of the most handsome young men I have seen and he possessed a pleasing and dominant personality," Dr. Allen added. Mr. Adams had his eye on a place on the 1920 University football squad and in preparation spent the summer in Bartlesville, Okla., getting in condition by delivering ice. But in September of that year he married a Bartlesville girl Miss Blanche Keeler, and remained in that city. He was asked to join the famous Phillip's 66 Oiler basketball team that fall and was given a job in the warehouse department of the company. Gradually transferring his attention from athletics to the oil business, he rose rapidly from warehouse to production division to accounting section, and by 1927 to the place of assistant secretary of the company. In 1932 he was appointed assistant to President Frank Phillips and in 1935 was made treasurer. On January 1, 1938, he became executive vice-president and four months later took over as president. He is the father of two children, Kenneth S. Adams, Jr., who lettered in football at K.U. in 1942, and Mary Louise Adams, who is married and has a young daughter. Contempt Of Court Avoided By Mouse Miami—(U,P)—Circuit Judge William A. Herin took no chances when he saw a mouse run into his court while two women were in the jury box. The judge whispered to the deputy clerk. The clerk nonchallantly opened a door and dropped a pad of paper close to the mouse's tail. The women jurors didn't notice a thing as the rodent scampered out. Expert Watch REPAIR Electronically Timed Guaranteed Satisfaction 1 week or less service. WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. SERVICE STATION They Sent It Over From The Airport! BUT THAT'S OUR MEAT! We like 'em tough—no problem on tires and wheels too large or too small for us. MEN WITH THE "KNOW HOW" and the equipment to serve you best—and that goes for LUBRICATION, too. CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. PHONE 4 8th and New Hampshire Try And Do This Today! CITIES SERVICE Hebron, N. H. (U.P.)—Town records disclose that when one Benjamin Woodman finished building the Hebron Church in 1803 he was "extended a vote of thanks and presented a bottle of brandy at the expense of the town for his generous and manly behavior while a resident of the town. Eye eye should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription Duplicated. Phone 425 1025 Mass. Lawrence Optical Co. WE HAVE RECORDS by FRANKIE LANE on 45 R.P.M. DISCS at the RECORD RENDEZVOUS L. L. SMITH CO. 846 Mass. Phone 725 THE NEXT LOOK IN SPORTSWEAR COMFORT PLUS SMART GOOD LOOKS IS THE SPORTSWEAR THEME FOR SPRING 1950 -At OBERS. Style right Shirts in Style bright colors. FROM $3.95 and a fine selection of Knit T Shirts FROM $2.00 s in Style ors. .95 selection thirts .00 Gabs, Flannels and Tropicals in spirit lifting style and colors. FROM $8.95 Th- The "DRIZZLER" by McGregor—a very fine lightweight wind-breaker in a durable Nylon Mixture. 810. 95 Ober's PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1950 Ex-Communist Talks Today On Lattimore Case Washington, April 20 —(U.P.) Louis F. Budenz the former communist editor who renounced the party five years ago, tells senate investigators today what he knows about Owen Lattimore. Budenz, now an economics professor at Fordham university, was called before a public session of a senate foreign relations subcommittee which is investigating charges by Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy, (R. Wis.) that Lattimore is a communist and a spy. McCarthy has contended that Budenz would back him up. He has said Lattimore was known to Budenz as an important communist over whom the party had disciplinary powers. Budenz has refused to discuss his testimony in advance. But he told reporters in New York Wednesday that McCarthy "may know in general" what he would tell the subcommittee. Lattimore, a far eastern expert who now is a professor at Johns Hopkins university, planned to be on hand for Budenz' testimony. The subcommittee has invited him to answer Budenz on the spot if he desires. He already has denied McCarthy's charges as a "malicious lie" and has denounced the senator as a "willing tool" of the Nationalist China jobb. McCarthy is not a committee member, but can put questions to witnesses through a member. He has said he will not use the privilege. There will be no cross-questioning between Lattimore and Budenz. Mearthy has said he is willing to "stand or fall" on his charges against Latttimore in his broader claim that the communists and fellow-travelers. He told newsmen he was certain that "Budenz will hear out completely what I've said. . I'm not worried." Lattimore has told reporters that he never has met Budenz and he has stated under oath that he is not a communist or a red sympathizer. Budenz' appearance was his fifth before a congressional committee since he broke dramatically with the communist party in '45, returned to the catholic church and told all to the F.B.I. At the time, he was editor of the communist Daily Worker and a member on the party's national committee. Heine's Blend at The PIPE SHOP 727 Mass. MEINE'S BLEND Natural Milk Dunking Tahari Be in style, Relax for a while! HEINE'S BLEND Irqrant PIPE TOBACCO UTILITY TOBACCO CO. S.E. COLL. "All of my patients are treated individually. That's why I take only three each night," Dr. Breuninger explained. German Doctor Says He Can Cure Insomnia Every night at 9 o'clock Dr. Man- fred Breuninger, nerve specialist, opens the door of his home to let in his three "students of sleep." Stuttgart, Germany—(U.P.)—A German doctor says he has found the answer to modern sleeplessness problems. He has founded a school, teaching students how to sleep. "I let them in, have some chatter about their daily life problems, do some exterior treatments—perhaps electricity or massage, if necessary, but no drugs—and then I send them to bed." Charging 12 deutschmarks ($2.85) a night, Breuninger said he tells his patients things to lead their imagination away from their ordinary worries. The 60-year-old doctor said the idea to found his "night hospital" came to him in 1933, and since then he has cured some 200 patients who called on him from all parts of Germany and many European countries, including Holland, Sweden, Switzerland and Austria. "Things like a star-sprinkled sky or a quiet lake in the mountains," he explained. "That usually makes them ease their minds and they fall asleep." "I used to have many guests every night in my home back in 1933, and I found that most of my friends were suffering from sleeplessness," he said. "So one Sunday I thought it over and decided to start a night hospital for such persons." "My first patient, a woman, came on the following Thursday and three weeks later she was cured." 2 Do not read exciting literature or thrillers before going to bed. Here are some of Dr. Breuninger's rules: 1 Smoke little and do not drink coffee after 3 p.m. 3 Get up in the morning. Don't stay in bed until noon. "I leave it up to my patients whether they choose blankets or quilts to sleep under," he said, "but the rooms are unheated. "The average age of my sleepstudents is 45, and ranges between 18 and 65. I am not too sure about any positive outcome of the cure on persons over 65 years of age." After his customers get up in the morning, Dr. Breuninger said he has them tell him their dreams "so I might be able to find the clues leading to the origin of their sleeplessness or the complex that is paining their minds. Doctors Take 5-Day Course The annual postgraduate course in ophthalmology and otolaryngology offered this week at the University of Kansas Medical center is drawing doctors from all over the nation, according to H. G. Ingham, director of the extension program in medicine. The first three days of the five day course will be devoted to ear, nose, and throat problems. Diagnosis and treatment of eye diseases are being taken up today and Friday. Some split enrollments are being received, according to Ingham. The formal program includes the dinner meeting at the Hotel President of the Kauai Society of Otolalangology, a promoter of the course. Seven guest instructors will assist 18 from the K.U. medical center faculty in presenting the course. Dr. Frank S. Forman, Kansas City, Kan, and Dr. John McLeed, Kansas City, Mo., are among the guest faculty. Others are Dr. Gordon F. Harkness, Davenport, Ia., Dr. Peter C. Kronfeld, Chicago, Dr. Cecil S. O'Brien, Iowa City, Ia., Dr. G. O Proud, St. Louis, and Dr. Henry Lane Williams, Rochester, Minn. Forum On Marriage Will Begin Sunday A forum in four sessions, "Foundations for a Christian Home," sponsored by the Keystone class of the church at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at the church. Dr. Paul Kochan of Baker university will conduct the meetings which are open to anyone but are primarily for married students. "Why Marriage Is Under Stress Today" will be discussed Sunday The topic Sunday, April 30, will be "The Silent Fartner in Marriage." Dr. Kochan's subject Sunday, May 7, will be "Marriage Means Adjustment. A study of 'What It Means Partners' will be held Sunday, May 14. Karl Edwards, principal of University High school, is the teacher of the class. MOTOR IN Your Chrysler-Plymouth Dealer Is The Place To- Get your Car in TUNE with SPRING Fuel Pumps Spark Plugs Brakes Shocks √ Carburetor Generator Motor In Service Station 827 Vermont Phone 607 Lindley Telescope To Focus On Mars Lindley observatory will be open to the public from 7:30 to 10 p.m. Friday. The telescope will be focused on the planet Mars which has recently been near the Earth, said Dr. N. W. Storer, associate professor of astronomy. If the night is clear, the snow cap, which is an identifying character of the planet, and other markings should be plainly visible. SONG WRITERS! We make piano arrangements for your songs, compose music for your lyrics. Marketing and Distribution Arrangements and Orchestra-ration for Band, Symphony Chorus Kansas Phone MISCHA GLUSCHKIN Studio: Hollywood, California, and 226 N. Broadway, Wichita. MISCHA GLUSCHKIN Prof. of Music, Wichita School of Fine Arts, Inc. Read the Want Ads Daily. TICKETS AND RESERVATIONS FIRST NATIONAL BANK BIBLER BIBLER WE SELL BERRY TOURS from Kansas City ALL EXPENSE California Canadian Saguenay Cruise - 12 days ___ $252.00 Rockies - 15 days ___ 335.00 Mexico - 13 days 239.44 New York - 8 days ___ 168.00 - No tickets to buy - No baggage to handle - No reservations to make * No leave to attend WE MAKE RESERVATIONS FOR ALL AIRLINES Exclusive Agents for American Airlines CITY TICKET OFFICE THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE TRAVEL AGENCY Aiss Rose Gieseman Manager 8th & Mass Sts. Telephone 30 SENSATIONAL VALUE! New Super SHOCK-RESIST 7 JEWEL SWISS MOVEMENT WATCH Approved by AMERICAN STANDARDS TESTING BUREAU, D.C. $795 SENSATIONAL VALUE! New Super SHOCK-RESIST 7 JEWEL SWISS MOVEMENT WATCH Approved by AMERICAN STANDARDS TESTING BUREAU, INC. $795 BRUNEL & CO. 11 HOURS MIDNIGHT 12H 30M 10AM 9AM 8AM 7AM 6AM 5AM 4AM 3AM 2AM 1AM 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 THE WATCH THAT DEFIES BREAKAGE! HIT IT! DROP IT! The opening scene which repertains a woman whose face is dramatic "bottomless" is a miniature, creature *homemade* ballet skirt two times of every height and of each other in this setting gives the viewer an impression of its little glitter. Given that it looks like the dwarf girl given to nurses of all kinds, One Year Guarantee Covering All Repairs No Watch at Any Price Offers More Features - Sweep Second Hand - Imported Swiss Movement - Shock Resistant - continuous digital - Unbreakable Crystal - Handsome Chrome Case - Removable Lugs Opposite SURPLUS WEAVERS STORES INC 904 Mass. - Attractively Boxed Opposite WEAVERS 904 Mass. THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE NINE 'Unsung Hero' Scientists Giving Man Health, Life New York—(U.P) The "unsung heroes" of this day of wonder drugs that are giving man better health and longer life are the scientists in the research laboratories. "The tortuous path to medical discoveries is opened by the work of thousands of scientists associated with our nation's research and teaching institutions. These unsung researchers are constantly moving into unexplored regions of human knowledge in the basic sciences. Often, the "miracles" are the application of knowledge thus unfolded. Robert Lincoln McNeil of Philadelphia, who has just finished a term as president of the American Drug Manufacturers' Association, expressed it this way: They are the men who know that the so-called "wonder" or "glamour" drugs are not "commonplace," but are the result of long, painstaking and sometimes heartbreaking efforts to discover the drugs and then find ways to make them in mass production so that all may benefit. "We contributed to the support of basic research, either through direct participation or by financial support. But the most important contribution of the pharmaceutical industry is the conversion of this basic knowledge into effective therapeutic agents," he continued. McNeil pointed out that after the conversion—that is the task of converting the discoveries into drugs to be used for humans—the hospitals and clinical doctors take over. They do the evaluating of the products and the final decision rests with them. "After research is successfully completed, ours is the responsibility for efficient production." McNeil said. "This involves tremendous research and development effort of another kind. To use an outstanding example, penicillin was first discovered by British scientists. The assistance of American industry was sought for the speedy development of sufficient production to meet wartime needs." The story of penicillin is well known. The American drug industry produced it on a mass scale. Later, new and improved types of penicillin were produced. Another spokesman for the A.D. M.A. is Carson Frailey, executive vice president, who pointed to the competition between members of the drug industry as a good sign for the development of drugs that will be effective against virus disease. effective training Frailey believes that competition between drug manufacturing firms will bring better results than production by government supervision. He recalled the race for a synthesis Appomattox, Va. — (U.P.) — When Lee and Grant met at Appomattox they smiled at each other, shook hands and talked about the weather. At least Robert E. Lee, IV, of San Francisco and Maj. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant. III, of Washington did. Lee And Grant Meet At Appomattox The two descendants of the civil war generals met here recently at the scene of the historic surrender to dedicate it as a national shrine, a symbol of the unified North and South. The original farm house where the surrender was signed was destroyed in 1893 but has now been restored by the National Park service. The bands played "Dixie" and "Battle Hymn of the Republic" as Grant and Lee cut the ribbon to open McClean house. The 5,000 spectators, many waving Confederate flags, cheered when they shook hands. It may have been different 85 years ago, but yesterday Lee said to Grant: "It's a pretty day, isn't it" LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence Kansas. B 60th Year, Modern-to-the-minute. Courses keyed to today's training needs. Secretarial. Training Civil Service, Higher Accounting and Auditing. Write for catalog. Box 424, 4 Lawrence Business College. of ACTH and Cortisone, two of the newest "glamour" drugs. "The winners in this competitive race ultimately will be chosen by the medical profession through its practitioners and its research clinicians," he said. "It is my opinion that we are moving faster toward our goal than we would have moved if government had succumbed to the pressure of last summer to take over the project." Relays Ball To Be Held The K.U. Relays ball will be held from 8 p.m. to midnight Saturday in the Union ballroom. Jay McShann's Decca recording orchestra of Kansas City, Mo., will play. Tickets are $1.00 a couple. During intermission Joyce Lawrence, the Relays queen will be presented. Chaperones at the dance will be Mr. and Mrs. William A. Reardon, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Shields, and Mr. and Mrs. William A. Stockdale. Miss Lawrence will be escorted by Clay Roberts, Jr., College freshman. The escorts for the two attendants, Jean Petracek and Marilyn Davis, will be Paul Uhlig and Allen Dagel, College seniors. Furniture Selling Not For Reporter Denver—(U.P.)—Jack Gaskie spent two days in the U. S. employment service office at Denver. Gaskie said he was an unemployed furniture salesman looking for a job. After 16 hours of tests, questions, more tests, and more question, the employment service agreed that Gaskie, although he said he was an unemployed furniture salesman, should take up newspaper work, or something much like it. Gaskie, it turned out, was a reporter for the Denver Rocky Mountain News, getting a story on how the employment service works. C. M. Baker, director of libraries, and deLafayette Reid, assistant director of libraries, and 12 University librarians, attended the northeast district meeting of the Kansas Library association in Baldwin Wednesday. 14 Librarians At Meeting Librarians representing the University included John Clinka, Mrs. Dorothy Coleman, Miss Frances DeArmond, Miss Elizabeth Dunn, Miss Kay Ewart, Miss Martha Hupp, Miss Eva Morrison, Miss Laura Neiswanger, Mrs. Pearl Smith, Miss Bessie Wilder, Miss Marion Wolfe, and Mrs. Gertrude Beattie from Emporia State Teachers' college, who is taking 10 days practice work in library science at the University. Also attending the meeting were Mrs. Virginia Maddox, director of the Extension library, and Mrs. Domenico Gagliardo, a member of the Kansas Library association from Lawrence. The Lawrence Public library was represented by Ralph Van Handel, director and Miss Margaret Perkins, librarian. Mike Masterson Guest speakers at the district meeting were Andre Nielson, director of the Evanston, Ill. Public library, and Jerome Cushman, director of the Salina Public library. As the director of the Kansas library survey, Mr. Nielson discussed results of the survey. Mr. Cushman is also the president of the Kansas Library association. Taxi Driver Blames Women For Fines Milwaukee, Wis., (U.P.)-Taxi driver Karl Entinger blamed women for two fines levied against him for speeding. He said five women whom he was driving home from a party were responsible for his second arrest for speeding. They were "cackling like mad." he said, so he drove fast to get rid of them as soon as possible. The sympathetic committee laid speeding. He told a common council committee, considering a police recommendation that his operator's license be revoked, that his first arrest occurred when his wife sent him to buy some frozen custard. He said the first two stands didn't sell the delicacy, so he speeded up to find a third. The sympathetic committee laid aside the police recommendation yesterday. Colorful Costumes Lend Authentic Touch As Austrians Sing, Dance In Old Vienna Bv EMLIN NORTH, JR. A concert of native Austrian folk songs and folk dances proved to be fun for both audience and performers at "A Night in Old Vienna" Wednesday evening in Hoch auditorium. ing, Jacob Eberl as Hias, a woodcutter and poacher, and Karl Martitsch as Karl, the village beau, played and sang their parts in perfect character. Vroni Stoeckel and Elfi Judmayr also displayed pleasing voices. High point of the evening was the Archduke Johann Yodel, a humorous song which pantomimed the milking of a cow while the male members of the cast performed several folk dances. MILEAGE! Although the audience was small, it was appreciative. Steady applause demanded three curtain calls from the 32 Austrian teachers and university students. GET MORE The opening scene took place in an Alpine pasture. Successive scenes portrayed a village festival, courtship in the mountains, a village inn, a forest, woodcutters, a dude and a visit to Vienna. Colorful, attractive costumes gave a touch of authenticity to each setting. likely to each setting. While no performer was outstand- Ph. 360 Education Causes Divorce Edinburg. Tex.-(U.P.)—Mrs. John Williams Harrington sued for a divorce because her husband has four college degrees and she never went to college. You'll save money by getting your car in top running condition. Darnell Electric "It's downright embarrassing." she said. Drive in today Next Time She'll Look Twice 615 Mass. Coral Gables. Fla.-(U.P.)-Mrs. Grace A. Flinje picked the wrong car to bump into when she turned to wave at a friend. Her car slammed into the rear of a police cruiser, doing $85 damage. Mrs. Flinje paid a $15 fine. DE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH DESOTO AMPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH Budley GALLAGHER MOTORS Ph. 1000 632-34 Mass. St. RELAY FANS-You'll enjoy our homecooked meals and informality. Come on out! Cube Steaks 70c Pork Tenderloin 75c Pork Chops 75c Hamburger Steak 65c CLOSED FRIDAY and 2----4:30 Sunday SHAVER'S 1 1/2 miles south U.S.59 Call 785-K-2 REGULAR DINNERS - Fried Chicken - Steaks REGULAR PRICES - Short Orders - RAY'S CAFE - Open Sundays 709 Mass. We will loan you a blanket while you have your winter coat cleaned. ROGERS Fashion CLEANERS 8 E. 8th Phone 498 943 Mass. Cotton Pickin' Time PICK YOUR COTTONS NOW WHILE STOCKS ARE COMPLETE DON'T WAIT UNTIL YOU'RE OVERCOME BY THE HEAT. Tissue Ginghams Chambrays Broadcloths Dotted Swiss With the '50 Silhouette Priced $7.95 to $16.95 Hamilton's Ph.1717 PAGE TEN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1950 The Editors Report - HAS PACHACAMAC GOT A Trojan Horse? ye ED Some rather odd things happened last night when the election judges counted the votes for All_Student council president and representatives. Some were amusing and some astounding. Balloting was extremely light, only a few more than 2,300 students voted. Evidently most students felt there was little use in voting. And as usual the belief that one man's vote means little was dead wrong. Let's take a look at the facts. As was expected the Pachacamac-N.O.W. candidate for A.S.C. president, Melvin Clingan, polled the majority of votes—1.323 to be exact. Yet the nonpartisan candidate Wilma Shore came up with an unexpected 922. Percentage-wise, this means that Clingan polled a bare majority and Shore a strong minority—58 per cent to 32 per cent. Shore, with no organized machine backing her, received only 400 votes less than the Pachacamac hand-picked candidate. And to further hamstring the party Pachacamac, the constitutional proposition to remove organizational representatives was defeated 1.300-910. While the organizational representatives have no political say-so in the council, they do have a good bit to do with bringing up topics their organizations believe should be brought before the A.S.C. for action." Something also went wrong with the Pachacamac-N.O.W. machine in the voting of council representatives. Out of the 16 voted on this spring, five independent non-partisan candidates swept into office. There are the facts. Isolated they mean little. But if you examine them all together, they seem to indicate one of two things. Either the Pachacamac political machine is beginning to creak around the edges or there was an organized revolt within the Pachacamac-N.O.W. junta. Or maybe both happened at once. We're only second-guessing, but here's how we size up what happened. There are about 1,650 Greeks. The members of the N.O.W., the women's Greek political association, number about 325. And strangely enough, this is just two less than the number of Greeks who must have voted against Clingan. We say "must have voted" because members of organized houses either vote or pay a fine. The tragic thing that happened here is not that a party candidate did not receive the solid backing of his party but that the members who voted against him did so in vain. Had the Independent party not thrown in the sponge last year, had they held on to a little hope and kept their chins up off the ground, there is a strong likelihood they could have carried the A.S.C. presidency and many more of the representatives this year. But the Independents were faint-hearted. They gave up too easily. Far more tragic is the fact that only 27 per cent of the more than 8,500 students enrolled in the University voted for representation in their student council. One fellow was so despondent that he decided Rodney Nipnap ought to have the presidency. Another voted for himself "because he needed the money." This is the tragic thing that we see that happened in the A.S.C. election. Seventy-three per cent of the students were either so disinterested or so disheartened that they didn't bother to express themselves at all. Yet this same 73 per cent never hesitate to criticize the A.S.C. They wouldn't be caught dead voting in an A.S.C. election yet they never miss an opportunity to run the council down. We wish we had a pat answer to offer you on what to do about the political situation here on the campus. We're sorry but we don't. If we did have one, we'd offer it to the country at large. For the very thing that is happening here is happening everywhere. Because democracy is a tedious process, it has become unfashionable. Yet we're more inclined to favor the freedom of long-drawn-out argumentation to the speed of a police state. THE MET'S MR. BING Is A Progressive Man ye Ed Rudolph Bing, the Metropolitan's new and progressive manager, says he will be glad to engage qualified Negro artists for the opera next season. This is a radical departure for the Met. No Negro performer has ever before appeared in a Metropolitan opera. Yet we think Mr. Bing's decision is a sound one. We don't know what particular Negro artists he has in mind, but there are several quite capable and talented ones available. Evidently, the Met's new manager is an intelligent man. He recognizes that a man's color has nothing to do with the color of his ability and talent. We'd like to see Mr. Bing make a resounding success of his new policy. So we'd like to take this opportunity to ask you for suggestions on what Negro performers you think Mr. Bing ought to engage. We'll forward your suggestions on to him. The job situation for engineers seems to be in fair shape. We overheard one aeronautical engineer telling another he had a job, top secret of course, working on flying saucers. He's going to design cups to match. By Bibler 一 眼间皆是花影 船底如海 舟声千重 船上千重 TODAY'S MAIL First Come, First...? Sir: This is my first letter to the University Daily Kansan, but my experience in voting this morning has prompted me to write. At the time the polls were scheduled to open, at 7:30 Wednesday morning, there was not a poll judge in sight of any of the polls in the basement of Strong. About fifteen minutes later, the ballot boxes arrived. About ten minutes later the key arrived to unlock the box and after a slow and inefficient handling by TWO JUDGES, I was happy to see my ballot go into the box at 8:05 a.m. This same difficulty was experienced by many others, such as ones who found it necessary to go on field trips without being able to vote at the time announced. I think those in charge of election did a poor job. Dean Robertson Business junior Ed. Note: Mr. Robertson's letter points up the futility of arriving early at the polls for voting. The All Student Council should look thoroughly into the question of when and how the polls should be operated. One alternative to the present voting arrangement might be to give students a half day off, say the morning of election day. This would give students a better chance to get down to their precinct without having to worry about making a class on time. Seattle, Wash. — (U.P.) — Special trains scheduled by the Milwaukee Railroad to take skiers to a nearby winter sports area were cancelled three week ends in a row. It wasn't because of lack of snow. Railroad officials announced that 142 inches of snow had covered tracks, making train movements impossible. Some arrangement should be made for students going on field trips and out of town laboratories. Students should not be kept from voting because they must attend class. If no other way can be found, students going out of town should be allowed to vote by "absentee" ballot. This privilege is extended in elections elsewhere. Excessive Snows Stop Trains University Daily Hansan Member of the Kansas Press Assn. National Press Assn, and the Associated College Press. Represented by the National Ad- vocate Service,420 Madison Ave. New York City. Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS News Room Adv. Room K.U. 251 K.U.376 James Morris Editor in Chief Editor-in-Chief Doris Greenbank James Shriver Managing Editor Business Mgr. Asst. Man. Editors Norma Hunsinger Kay O'Connor John Hill Ralph Hemenway City Editor Edward Chapin Asst. City Editors John Clover Marilyn Marks Elaine Elvig Steve Ferro Feature Editor Francis Seller Photograph Editor Frankie Wills Telegraph Editor Robert Sigman William Graves Richard Tatum Lily J. Howey Sports Editor Richard Dilsaver Asst. Sports Editors Bob Leonard Ray Soldan Arthur McIntire Mona Milliken Society Editor Faye Wilkinson Asst. Society Editors Billie Stover Emily Stewart Fate Mac Editorial Assets John Bannigan Keith Leslie Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner Cir. Mgr. Yvonne Joserand Nat. Adv. Mgr. Forrest Bellus Classified Ad. Mgr. Lee Dyer Promotion Mgr. John Wiedeman 2016/11/28 13:14:25 Little Man On Campus NO TIME LIMIT! "I'm afraid I can't talk very long tonite. Flossy, we've got a new kinda phone booth in th' house!" 'Small Things' LEST WE FORGET by Keith Leslie Augustana college men students, feel they were slighted by coeds during the recent women's week activities. They are retaliating with an "avoid women" routine. Until Saturday, the men will obey the following rules: 1. No dating. 2. No shaving. 3. No talking with coeds after 7 p.m. 4. No fraternization in the library. 5. All women's dormitories are off limits to men. A Texan near Fort Worth reports having seen flying bananas and a flying saucer. Now we're looking for somebody in Dallas to come out and say he saw a flying cream and sugar bowl. Ed. Note: If they had asked us, we could've told it won't work. LEAVE IT TO TEXAS GRADUATION BLUES: Haven't been able to study much lately. Must be the weather. Might be I'm just tired of school . . . no, I've been tired of school for at least four years. by Todd Seymour Work Or Vacation? Could be it's a combination of worries about what I'm going to do come June. Shall I get a job if I can, or take a vacation for a few weeks? I really need a vacation—at least I'd like to take one. Might be a long time before I'll get another. Understand most companies don't like to have their employees take too much time off for vacations. Oh well, I guess I'd better get into the swing of job hunting. Hear jobs are a little rough to get nowadays. Might be they won't want me to come to work till the middle of June or so. That wouldn't be too bad. I need a little time off. . . . But just where am I going to get a job? Understand they need officers in the army, could try that. It seems that I wore OD's a little while ago. Don't know if I ought to try that again so soon or not. It's possible that I might have to put them on again soon anyhow. Can't think of anything I'd rather not do, seems as if wars are so futile. Guess you just can't convince some people of that though. . . say, the army does get 30 days off a year. . . hmm. . . Wonder if they're hiring any ditch-diggers now? I suppose after four years of college I could qualify for that kind of job. Might be able to get in on the big money in that racket. They gets lots of time off too . . . strikes and things. I could get my vacation that way for sure. Wonder if I should make application down at the union office. Only trouble is I don't have enough money to pay the union dues. Suppose I'd better think of something else. Just don't know what to do but I do need a vacation. Wouldn't mind taking one right now. Guess the best thing to do is quit worrying about it all for a little while. Don't exactly know how to get it off my mind. They say that sleep is a pretty good way to get away from it all Oh well, I didn't need to study for that quiz tomorrow anyway. Ho, hum...mmm. --- 20,1950 THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE ELEVEN --- I will return your request. Leslie hted are s: 1. p.m. ories ying body sugar Kansan Classified Advertising Classified Advertising Rates One day Three days Five days 25 words or less ... 35c 65c 90c Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c FOR SALE WHITE TUX cont. size 42. Call James wolverine for assistance. DIRECT DARKKOOR equipment including federal enlarger Model 312 Must sell—very reasonable. Call W31W 25 '41 HARLEY 74 O.V.H.; smooth running, lotta chrome, see Bob. **112** 91 **123** 86 "BEE LINE" golf clubs for sale or trade "wo rons" from New York to New Jersey. Call 769-2841 between 7-9 p.m. 21 Two rouses and three woods. Complete with case. Call 793K36 between 7-9 p.m. J21 HERE IS one of the rouses by a wealthy old lady who drove it only to church and back. This car is owned by a college student. You must get rid of one. Mr. 1948 Crosley Convertible. New cast engine and new clutch. Car is in excellent condition. Seat is also in excellent condition. S21 ANN's formal coat. First Nighter, white. Size 42, long. Phone 3651 after 5:30 on Thursday. FIGURINE PAINTING is sweeping the campus. Get into the swing! The DIXIE CARMEL CORN SHOP has a complete line of figurines, paints and brushes. Ursula Carmel for your best result. DIXIE CARMEL CORN SHOP, 842 Mass. CHEVROLET, 1940 Convertible. Beautiful finish. All leather interior. Excellent mechanically. See to appreciate. Can after 6 p.m. Dan Cain, 3021. 1930 MODEL "A" Roadster. Mechanical product. Good body and paint. Phone 3224. CONERTIVE, 1941 Nash Ambassador. Baby Blue. Overdrive, radio, heater. One owner. genuine red leather upholstery. Body, interior, motor top, tires, extras. 414 W. 12th after 5. Phone 973-9. BOOK-EASE, a collapsible book holder. Can be used on a desk, in bed, anywhere. Now only 98c at your Student Union Book Store. THESEES ALL MALES! All weights of quality typing paper, carbon paper, and typewriter ribbons. Student Union Book Store. M4 FINEST TELEVISION - Best in sets and aurals at lowest price for up to see the newest Emerson table model set at $159.50 Easy terms. Bowman Radio and Electric. 826 Vermont Phone 138. tf HAVE YOU SEEN THESE? '47 Nash Ambassador sedan $1,295 '47 Chev. Areo sedan 1,245 '47 Chev. 2-ton truck with fender 1,095 '39 Ford de luxe 8 sedan 350 '38 Dodge 2-door sedan 345 '38 Chrysler convertible Many others to choose from BILL DODIN, Lincoln-Mercury 9th & Miss. Open Tonight FOR RENT WANTED TO RENT—Sleeping rooms or small apartment convenient to campus for couple. Here for summer school. Re- Reply Box 5, Kansan ___ 26 LARGE EIGHT room house; two blocks from campus. Excellent rooming and boarding properties, partly furnished. Furnished facility. Available immediately. CALL 2917 R. I. THREE room apartment. Excellent condition. Suitable for student and working wife. Apartment furnished or unfit for garage if needed. K1, Ky. Phone 1085-J. ROOM mate married over vacation. Need boy to share room with graduates. Save $400 in twin beds. $5.00 pays rent including breakfast for rest of semester. Phone 2447-R. WANTED SOFTBALL PITCHER to play intramural ball for 74 minutes. Call Ray Bowers 27641 after 7 p.m. B21 RIDERS — Topeka to Haskell; Monday thru Friday; leave Topeka 7 a.m. Haskell 5 p.m. Call Fitzsimmons—Haskell 938; Topeka 37965 25 RIDERS WANTED: leaving for Wichita every Friday at 4 p.m. Returning Sunday evening. Please call between 7-9 p.m. Harry Shultz. Ph. 3101J. ACCOUNTANT wanted by University of Kansas School of Law. First-time thereafter. Applicant to take Civil Service exam when given; Journalism building. See Mr. Rydus, Journalism building. FEMALE help wanted. Full time secre- cured handheld and typed in required all KU, 288, 301, 304, 306, 307, 315, BUSINESS SERVICE SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a digitized sales activity course and best known firm in the educational field. Applicants accepted will work by appointment on leads we furnish. Earnings $7.50 on to $12.50 and more per week. Please Write Mr. W. F. Crordudd, Jr., 100 Grand Ave. Kansas City, Mo. Giving qualifications, school and home address. tf HURRY! LAST 3 DAYS ENDS SATURDAY Clark and Loretta . They click like a key in a lock! Loretta Clark Loretta GABLE YOUNG 'KEY TO THE CITY' with Marilyn Maxwell Frank Morgan James Gleason Lewis Stone Raymond Walburn Gable was never better! Added Fun DRESS MAKING and sewing; all types of formulas and dresses made to order. Also shortened and remodeled—call Mrs. Scales, 3060W. 26 Added Fun COLOR CARTOON Soon: "BICYCLE THIEF" —Continuous Shows open 12:45 Patee PHONE 121 WILL DO all kinds of typing in my cave. Call 3884. 25 TYPING: Call Hazel Stanley, 2865M for prompt experienced service. **820% Mats** **Joe Smith**. TYPING, Theses, Term Papers, Reports, Notes, etc. Prompt Service. Mrs. Sheehan 1028 Vermont. Ph. 1168R. TYPING, Term papers, notebooks, term work. Accurate rates. Accurate work. Regular rates. Prompt attention Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601 TYPING: Nest accurate, regular. Regular rates. Prompt service. Mrs. Schear. Apt. R-36. 1810 Ln., Phone 3273-R. 24 JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our one-stop pet shop has everything for fur, fawn, kitten, dog, cat and Gift and Shop offer. 1218 Comp. St., Ph. 418 COMMUTERS—Topeka to Lawrence days. Williams, 19 E. 6th (Upstairs). THROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadi Bros. Motor Co. Complete repair, auto repair, auto repair, auto repair, auto repair, used cars 317 E. 17th. Phone 785 to 1821f or Read the Want Ads Daily. TRANSPORTATION "Movies Are Better Now Than Ever Before" TONITE AND FRI The drama of a TUMULTOUS ERA! Columbia Pictures present WESLEY RUGGLES' ARIZONA starring JEAN ARTHUR with Wm Holden • Warren William Added . . Cartoon "A Balmy Swami" Feature at 7:50-10:05 SUN thru WED OPEN NIGHTLY 6:45 THE 3RD MAN "Quack A Doodle Doo" Rain or Clear NO MATTER WHERE HE GOES OR WHAT HE DOES . . . HE'S MY MAN! Thru the twisting maze of the shadowy city they hunted him . . . the men who hated him . . . the woman who loved him! LATE NEWS EVENTS COLOR CARTOON Lawrence DRIVE-IN The gay and sexy music followed him wherever he went! Hear the magic fingers of Anton Karas play 'The Third Man Theme' Theatre - VALLI - ORSON WELLES Jayhawker We urge you to attend the afternoon shows for better seafs. Feature at 1:00,3:00,5:05,7:10,9:20. JOSEPH COTTEN Jayhawker MIDNITE SHOW SATURDAY Doors Open 11:15 Phone 132 for Sho Time VARSITY Phone 123 for She Time CHARLES STARRETT "TRAIL of the RUSTLERS" WITH SMILEY BURNETTE A COLUMBIA PICTURE Ends Today Bernard Shaw's "PYGMALION" Special Student Price 50c tax. incl. Friday-Saturday CHARLES STARRETT "TRAIL of the RUSTLERS" SMILEY BURNETTE A COLUMBIA PICTURE co-feature RING RACKETEERS. BODYHOLD WILLARD PARKER LOLA ALBRIGHT A COLUMBIA PICTURE NOW ENDS SATURDAY A picture that will touch every heart! Workmen Remove Fraser's Old Pillars Ch. 5 "Bruce Gentry" Late News Events Workmen have removed the pillars and roof of the stone portico at the east entrance of Fraser hall. The stone steps and porch will remain. Movies Are Better Than Ever When University hall, as Fraser once was known, was first used in 1872, only enough money remained to erect wooden steps to the front door on the east. In 1879, while making a portico for the State Institute asylum, Osawatomie, a stone cutter's mistake made it unfit for the asylum. The state architect then noticed that the portico fit University hall's east entrance. So it was moved from Osawatomie and added to the K. U. building, which This is the key to the most unusual picture of the year...M-G-M's Secret Garden The Secret Garden The Secret Garden starring MARGARET O'BRIEN HERBERT MARSHALL DEAN STOCKWELL with GLADYS COOPER ELSA LANCHESTER BRIAN ROPER REGINALD OWEN Special Sequences in Color by TECHNICOLOR Also— "OLD ENGLAND" Color Cartoon — News STARTS SUNDAY Laff Prevue Saturday 11:15 THE YELLOW CAR MOTORCYCLE MOTOR RED FOR SKELTON A RIOT ON WHEELS! THE YELLOW CAB MAN Mono Goldman Home RED SKELTON THE YELLOW CAB MAN GLORIA DeHAVEN WALTER SLEZAK • EDWARD ARNOLD THE YELLOW CAB MAN GLORIA DeHAVEN WALTER SLEZAK + EDWARD ARNOLD Granada PHONE 946 Club Will Hold Convention The Canterbury club, student Episcopal organization, at Kansas State College will be host to a general Canterbury club convention to be held in Manhattan Saturday and Sunday. Representatives will include students from Lawrence, Wichita, Emporia, and Pittsburg. at that time was the largest educational building in the nation. Deterioration of the soof and pillars made the removal advisable, according to Joseph J. Wilson, K. U. business manager. There are no plans at present to replace the portico. OOOH! HOW YOU'LL LOVE THAT NEW MITCHUM MAN! Mr. Hard-To-Get Goes Romantic in this Romantic Comedy of the year!! SKO presents Robert Janet Wendell MITCHUM • LEIGH • COREY DON HARTMAN Production Holiday Affair MITCHUM LEIGH in a DON HARTMAN Production Holiday Affair Starts Sat. Owl. 11:15 SUNDAY Patee PHONE 221 Patee PHONE 731 Jayhawker Jayhawker Phone 10 for Sho Time NOW thru Saturday IT'S WONDERFUL FUN! WILLIAM HOLDEN COLLEEN GRAY FATHER IS A BACHELOR Late news Events MARY JANE SAUNDERS CHARLES WINNINGER Technicolor Special "Camera Angles" PAGE TWELVE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1950 1500 Expected Here As 46th Relays Start Kansas schoolboys will swarm atop Mt. Oread Friday at the 46th annual Kansas Interscholastic Relays. Approximately 1,500 youths representing 165 high schools will be at the meet. Preliminaries will be held Friday morning starting at 9. Final event will get under way at 1:15 p.m. The three runner-up schools of last year's meet—Wichita East in Class AA, Kingman in Class A, and Coldwater in Class B—are favored to win. With some of the best talent in recent years on hand, at least seven meet records will be in danger. Sixteen defending champions in individual events will be on hand. Records endangered are in the 100-, 220-, and 440-yard dashes, mile run, low hurdles, high jump, and discus. Only a few marks seem beyond reach should some youngsters come up with unexpected performances. KU.'s track Captain, Bob Karnes, may watch his own record in the mile run broken. The Jayhawker's mark is 4:29.9. The threat is young Wesley Santee of Ashland, Santee ran only one second slower than the record in winning the state Class B meet a year ago, and milers usually improve with age. Coldwater also is unbeaten and appears the best of its class. The favorite expected to have the hardest battle is Kingman. Fredonia could stage an upset over the Eagles. Wichita East, its string of six straight championships ended a year ago by Shawnee-Mission, is unbeaten this year. Wyandotte is expected to give East the most trouble. The two Lawrence schools—Liberty Memorial High and Haskell Institute—are expected to do well in the Class AA competition. One Lawrence athlete—Bob Cannon of the Haskell Indians—will go for a record. The high jump mark is 6 feet $5\%$ inches and Cannon has jumped 6 feet 4 inches. Student Shows Unusual Stoicism Atlanta —(U,P)—A textile engineering class at Georgia Tech saw an unexpected demonstration in oriental stoicism by a young Chinese student. During class Wednesday, Sing-Wu Chu, 26, of Shanghai, got his hand caught in a carding machine. Although he was in severe pain, Chu calmly supervised the 40-minute rescue operation. Doctors later amputated one finger and sewed three others back on. Chu suffered shock and loss of blood but was in "fair" condition. His classmates could not see which of the rollers was crushing Chu's hand. He gave directions in broken English while they felt around inside the mechanism until someone found the right attachment to set him free. "That boy told us exactly what to do," Professor J. L. Taylor said. "He really showed a lot of grit." Student Completes Flight Requirements Dudley Elliott, College junior, has completed his flying requirements for a commercial pilot's license, and has received his commercial flight check from Miss Nancy Corrigan. University flight instructor. He will begin his written examination in Kansas City later this month and will finish in May. Elliott, who has more than 300 hours in the air, started flying at Wentworth Military academy in Lexington, Mo. He earned his private pilot's license in March, 1947, and recently decided to work for a commercial license. After passing the tests, Elliott plans to do charter flying this summer for an air passenger service in Kansas City. The Civil Aeronautics administration examination for the license covers material on meteorology, navigation aircraft engines, aircraft and theory of flight, and Civil Air regulations. World News At Press Time 11 Suidge Found Drunk Nashville, Tenn.—(U.P.)-Federal revenue agents who raided a whiskey still arrested three men and let 11 "drunks" go free. The "drunks" were identified as a sow and 10 pigs who had spent too much time with their noses in the mash. Truman Sians Housing Bill Washington, April 20—(U.P.)-President Truman today signed the S2.5, 500,000,000 housing bill intended to spur home building and development of rental dwellings for lower and moderate income families. The bill will make it easier for ex-GTs to get home loans. It provides, too, for limited direct federal loans to schools and colleges for housing. Mr. Truman signed the legislation although it did not contain a provision which he sought—a $1,000,-000,000 (b) program of direct federal loans to housing cooperatives. Taipei, Formosa, April 20.—(U.P) -Reports from Hainan island said today the Communists have established three beachheads within 15 miles of the capital, Hoihow, and are battling desperately to join them together. Reds Secure Beachheads Nationalist officials here declined to describe the Communist landings as an all-out invasion attempt. They insisted the situation was under control. Krestova, B. C., April 20—(U.P.) Armed guards patrolled the Crescent Valley bridge today, fearing fanatical religious Doukhobors might stage a mass nude parade on Nelson, B.C., as an aftermath to a fire raid on two homes. Nudes Scare Provincials The 334th anniversary of the death of Miguel de Cervantes, Spanish writer, will be observed by members of the romance languages department of the University Saturday, April 29. Forty nude men and women members of the 'sect' with a fanatic ten for violence burned the homes of two of their own followers last night. They chanted Russian hymns as the flames danced. Provincial police immediately issued strict orders to stop all Doukhobors at the bridge to prevent a mass movement across the span into the city of Nelson. Life Of Cervantes To Be Observed Dr. Ascher Christensen, professor of political science at the University of Minnesota, will speak on "The Need for Spanish—the layman's point of view." Other speakers will be Miss Agnes Brady, assistant professor of romance languages at the University, and Eugene Saviano, Wichita university. The Kansas section of the American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese will hold their meeting at the same time. Cervantes day, celebrated at the University for more than a quarter of a century, is held the first Saturday after the anniversary of the death of the great Spanish writer who has become a symbol of the unity of Hispanic thought and civilization. A luncheon will be in the Union followed by a party in Strong auditorium. The Engine Really Purred St. Clair, Mich.—(U.P.)—Ellsworth Bahr noticed a strange screech in the motor of the car. He lifted the hood and found a black and gray cat. Engineering Exposition To Open Friday Students and visitors to the 1950 Engineering Exposition Friday, Saturday and Sunday will have an opportunity to view the largest exposition ever to be presented by engineering students at the University. The Exposition is held annually in conjunction with the K. U. Relays, but because of last year's capacity crowd of 20,000 the executive committee has decided to extend the Exposition to Sunday afternoon. The grand opening of the students' display will be at 10 a. m. Friday. Exhibits will be open until 9 p.m. Friday. On Saturday the displays may be viewed from 8:30 a. m. till noon, at which time the Exposition temporarily closes for the opening of the K. U. Relays. The Exposition will be open from 2 to 6 p. m. Sunday. In past years, only one entrance and path through the show have been used, but this year an additional entrance and route have been planned. Spectators may go in either the front door of Marvin or Lindley halls. Exhibits will be held in Marvin and Lindley halls, electrical engineering laboratories, and aeronautical engineering buildings. Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, will award a trophy to the department with the most outstanding display. Tau Beta Pi, national honorary engineering fraternity, will furnish guides to assist spectators through the exposition to explain various items and displays. Electric counters will be set up to record the number that attends this exposition. SAM Hears Stock Expert Persons buying into the stock market should have a definite plan in mind so purchases will be in accord with their financial means, Donald Clinger, account executive of Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner, and Beane Investment Brokers, in Kansas City, Mo., told the Society for the advancement of Management Tuesday. The objectives of persons buying securities and "safety of capital, liberal gains or speculation," he pointed out. The "investment portfolio" of persons is determined by these three objectives. Least risk is taken in high grade bonds, and the greatest risk is taken in speculative issues. Mr. Clinger said. Corporations having listed securities on the stock exchange must make "quarterly earnings reports" to the stock exchange. Unlisted securities, over-the-counter and curbs, are not reported except in annual reports, he said. Mr. Clinger was graduated in 1940 from the University School of Business. Mr. Clinger listed persons dealing in securities as the investment dealer who buys for his own account; the investment banker who buys securities for resale at a "mark up"; and the investment broker who buys and sells securities for others at a commission. Analysis of securities for purchase should include a study of the market price and trends, not statistical data of former years, and an estimate of future earnings, he explained. New S.A.M. officers are: Charles Middleton, president; Robert Eggert, vice-president; James Riggs, treasurer; and Marion Roesler, secretary. Exposition Guides Must Sign Today Members of Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity, should sign for the time they will be guides at the Engineering Exposition in 111 Marvin by tonight. The three-day Exposition opens Friday. 'West O' Abilene' Tickets On Sale Tickets for "West o' Abilene," the 1950 College Daze production event on sale today. The musical play will begin Tuesday, May 2. The tickets may be purchased for 75 cents at the Student Union activities office, in the rotunda of Strong, in front of Watson library, and at Obers department store. Members of the cast omitted Wednesday in the University Daily Kansan are: Dick Hunter and Mike Getto, College sophomores; Adaliaide Schutz, College freshman; and Sally Sherwood, fine arts senior. Robert J. Cooper, college senior, Willard Straight, fine arts junior, and Eugene Hall, fine arts sophomore, composed the 19 songs in the production. Hall is musical director for the show, and Straight is choral director. A threat to mankind, potentially more dangerous than an H-bomb or any other weapon of modern warfare, will be discussed at the 27th annual honors convocation at the University of Kansas Wednesday, April 26. William Vogt, author of "The Road to Survival," and an outstanding naturalist, will tell of the threat of mass starvation faced by the world's growing population. Vogt believes that only by maximum worldwide practice of soil conservation and rebuilding, and a far more intelligent development and use of arable land is there a chance to feed everyone. Vogt To Speak At Convocation The convocation is the University tribute to its outstanding students. No attempt will be made to single out an individual as the "honor man." Until a year ago it was customary for an anonymous selection committee to bestow the title on a member of the preceding year's graduating class. Honor societies will make the first public announcement of their new members at the convocation. Mortar Board and Sachem, senior women's The convocation program will list the names of the upper 10 per cent of the senior class of each of the schools of the University. The names of the student or students leading the junior, sophomore and freshman classes will also be published. Russia Begins New Offensive In Cold War Washington, April 20—(U.R.)—Russia today pressed a series of power moves along Europe's eastern front in what diplomats here fear may be the start of a long-awaited soviet cold war offensive. The 'Moscow-directed campaign extended from the Baltic, where the United States claims red air force pilots shot down 10 U.S. navy airmen on a peaceful mission, to the shores of Asia Minor. The Russians fired a new brook side at Washington over the touchy Baltic incident, claiming that the United States ordered the navy plane to fly over Soviet territory and thus was guilty of a "deliberate international provocation." At the same time, they reopened their war of nerves against U.S.-backed Turkey at the other end of the iron curtain. They caught the state department completely by surprise with a new demand for control of the Dardanelles. The big push also was evident in the center of the front. Communist-dominated Czechoslovakia cracked down on U. S. propaganda activities and demanded the ouster of a U.S. embassy official on spy charges. The controlled press of communist-dominated Poland stepped up its attacks on the voice of America. The U. S. senate voted, 66-0. posthumous decorations for the 10 American fliers amid mounting demands that Russia be arraigned before the United Nations. House approval was considered certain but leaders said it probably would not be taken up before next week. Although the senate vote was unanimous, one voice was raised urging the American people to take a more "cautious" approach to the whole incident. "This is too delicate a thing to be popping off about," said Sen. Harry P, Cain, (R., Wash.) know that an incident occurred? ...how that an incident occurred? 2. Does it know where it occurred? 2. Does it know where it occurred? 3. Does it know that the Russians are responsible? and men's honor societies, will conduct brief induction ceremonies for their new members. Little Man On Campus PHONE CALL 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. by Bibler PHONE CALL 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. "This is the School Library. You have a phone!" 3 4 5 + 6. 7. BARBER B. B. "This is the School Library. You have a reserve book three days overdue, with a heavy fine. Would you please—" 0. 1950 Rus- power front may be soviet campaign were the force air to the oroon touchy at the navy and state in- opened U.S.-and of att the ly sur- control agent in unist-cracked activities a U.S. s. The unist-up its caa. post-10 Am-mands are the al was said en up as used by burghing more whole to be Harry raced? arred? ussians con- ves for bler University Daily Kansan to be Harry red? hurred? issians bler Features FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 SECTION C Student Engineers, Architects 'Show Off' At Exposition Today (Editor's note: This is second in a series of articles about the various schools in the University). Bv FRANKIE WAITS This is the day students of engineering and architecture have been working toward since September. Today, Saturday morning and Sunday afternoon the students will display their system of education and their talents in the form of the 30th annual Engineering Exposition. The "show" is under the auspices of the Engineering Student council headed by Glenn W. Anschutz, president and Elmer L. Dougherty, secretary, both engineering seniors. All of the work and construction of the projects was done by students in the School of Engineering and Architecture under the supervision of faculty members. The Engineering Student council has much to do with this annual project. The 17 members are elected representatives from each of the four classes. A. B. ROSENBERG Students and professors who have had anything to do with the exposition have worked extremely hard to make this year's show the best of all. Over 1,000 individual letters were sent to principals of high schools, deans of junior colleges, the governor and his staff, members of the board of regents, principle state officers, United States and Kansas senators, and representatives and to representatives of any company which has hired engineering graduates. The exposition will be shown in all engineering buildings on the west end of the campus, T. DeWitt Carr, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, said; "As to one of the buildings, Fowler shops, no better engineering shop practice facilities can be found anywhere. You might look over the Engineering Schools of the United States and find no more than three which have shop buildings comparable to ours." "New Fowler shops is ably administered by Paul G. Hausman, chairman of the engineering shop practice department who has a masters degree from the University of Missouri" continued Carr OF MESSENGER A short man with graying hair and a pleasant personality, Dean Carr is a married man, who enjoys playing golf. He is the seventh dean of the school. Kansan Photo by Bob Blank T. DoWITT CARR The School of Engineering and Architecture offers undergraduate and graduate work in a variety of majors for students interested in either engineering or architecture. When a student first enrolls in the School of Engineering he takes a common freshman course unless he elects Architecture of pre-business work. During this year he decides in which field he would like to major and at the beginning of his sophomore year, declares his major. Students may major in architecture, or in engineering division such as architectural, aeronautical, civil, electrical, mining, geological, mechanical, metallurgical, petroleum, chemical, or in engineering physics. From his freshman through his senior year, the student takes his entire work either in or under the direction of the School of Engineering and Architecture. If the student wishes to major in architecture, he takes a five year course in the Department of Architecture. The School also offers a two year course in industrial mana- Flying Saucer —Kansan Photo by Bob Blank ISAAC HOOVER, left, engineering senior, gives a "lift" to the lawyer's helicopter, while Paul D. Wilson, right, engineering senior, regulates the air flow of the vertical wind tunnel. Of the 12 degree-granting departments in the school, eight in engineering were accredited in November of 1949 by the Engineering Council for Professional Development. The architecture curricula was accredited by the American Institute of Architects. ement in connection with the School of Business. In the latter instance the student spends his freshman and sophomore years in the School of Engineering and his junior and senior years in the School of Business, being graduated with a decree in industrial management. Dean Carr said, "The aims of this school are to have every student who graduates take with him the maximum knowledge, he has plus the ability to acquire and to build character and good citizenship." The dean believes that by incorporating the departments of engineering and architecture in to one school, the individual students in engineering can learn something from architecture students and vice versa. The school was established in 1891 taking the place of the department of engineering which had been on the campus since 1870. In 1927 the name was changed to the School of Engineering and Architecture. The general aim of the school is to give thorough fundamental training in the physical and mathematical sciences, supplemented by the proper amount of work in the various branches of the school. Stress is also given to English composition, economics, and business principles. Since engineers and architects must deal with public works, enterprise, and industrial problems of many types, the technical training has become broader in spirit and scope. Class and laboratory exercises in technical departments are planned so as to give the scientific basis on which the graduate may build. The publication the Kansas Engineer, is done entirely by the students. It is entering its 34th consecutive year of publication. It is a quarterly magazine, edited this year by Charles H. Walker. Of the 1,600 students enrolled in the School of Engineering and Architecture, 13 of that number are women. The women in the school usually rank in the upper third of their class. Women who major in engineering or architecture are quite brilliant and in class the men have to keep on their toes to stay up with them. This year the greatest number of the women are enrolled in architecture, with a few in chemical and electrical engineering. Engineering and Architecture are especially good fields for women because their pay for comparable work is the same as that of men—two of the few fields in which this happens," said Dean Carr. This spring there will be 464 graduates, the largest in the school's history. Dean Carr personally handles most of the opportunities by contact with many medium and large companies in the United States. The school makes a special endeavor to secure jobs in the Middlewest for graduates. In the past few years, the trend has been for a greater number of the graduates to work in the Middlewest. The seniors take one or more field trips each year to Middlewest industries connected with their respective interests. "But the main things in the school are study, the development of initiative, clear constructive thinking, and good judgement," said Dean Carr. This is backed up with laboratory work and engineering shop practice. Enrollment is expected to drop AKHRELLA —Kansan Photo by Bob Blank RICHARD H. HARRIS, Engineering junior, left, and Maurice Mandelkehr, assistant instructor of electrical engineering, right, play with "Arabella," a robot constructed by Harris, which plays an expert game of Tic-tac-toe. The school has been the recipient of many scholarship and fellowship awards this year. In addition to the annual awards given before, there have been added the Muncicl Foundation scholarship for $15,000, the Stanolind Oil and Gas company award in mechanical engineering for $1,250, the Scony Vacuum Oil company award in civil engineering for $750, and the Kennecott Copper company award in mining for $750. Dean Carr commented, "It is noticeable and praiseworthy that students are applying themselves to their work in a most determined manner. This has been reflected over many years by a gradual increase in their average grades." slightly and gradually for the next few years. In about 1955 there should be an increase in enrollment in the freshman classes. From then on there will be a gradual increase in the number of students. For the first time in the history of the school, a doctors degree will be issued this fall in the department of chemical engineering. The school ranks 13th in the list of institutions, having graduates named in "Who's Who in Engineering", with a total of 219 alumni. As for the lawyers, the dean said. "The alleged feud between the Schools of Engineering and Law is now recognized in the spirit of mutual understanding and friendliness, although it might be admitted that there is a healthy competition between them!" Buralars Are Overworking Lawrence, Mass. — (U.P.)—Hardworking burglarls forced their way into 13 offices in two buildings during one night's toil but their loot totaled only $99. Smoke Eater In Exhibit The machine, built by William Ellis and Dean Hawley, engineering sophomores, is about 5 feet high and shows the application of vibrations. A Sonic Glomerator, a vibration machine that removes smoke particles from the air by means of sound waves, will be shown in the mechanical engineering laboratory during the Engineering Exposition. Other models have been built in 210 Marvin hall to illustrate different types of mechanical vibrations in machines. The models are not of any particular machines but were constructed just to show how vibrations can effect machines. Ellis explained. Vibration isolation mounts can be placed on the machines to prevent transmission of vibrations from the machine to its base or to other machines. Council To Meet, Attend Relays The 14-member Kansas Engineering council has scheduled a business meeting Saturday at the University. They will meet in the office of the School of Engineering and Architecture. While here, they will attend the 30th annual engineering exposition and the running of the Kansas relays. WARREN COLEMAN -Kansan Photo by Bob Blank BYRON MILLER, left, engineering senior, holds the larger plane, while Wayne Burnett, engineering senior, right, leans over the horizontal wind tunnel. They are preparing to find the lift and drag on the model airplanes. The horizontal wind tunnel is a model of the one used under the west end of the stadium. C.TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 GOOD LUCK To The K.U. Relays Teams from Carruth Harmon Co-op Corbin Henley House Foster Miller Hopkins Templin Jolliffe Watkins Welcome Fans ... To The Kansas Relays Silver Anniversary FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 7 C THREE 5 Photo By Frankie Waits We the undersider, 5,000 powers of Governor General, celebrate the occasion of the signing of the Treaty between the United States and Japan on June 27, 1945. The treaty is a fundamental agreement that endorses the war. JOHN BURNETT, engineering senior, presents the engineers challenge to the lawyers for a tug-of-war across Potter Lake on Senior Day, May 9, to Keith Wilson, 2nd year law. Barbecue, Lady Barbers To Highlight Senior Day "Hey there, pardner, wha' cha' doin' May 9?" "Hey, We Dood It,' what else?" You'll be hearing this greeting a lot on the campus between now and Tuesday, May 9. That's the day the seniors forget their books and classes at 3 p.m., by special order of the chancellor, and take off to celebrate "we dood it," meaning, "we're in the last lap now," or "graduation is just around the corner!" The seniors will don blue jeans and plaid shirts for the day and be "dudes," as a pun to the main theme of the day. Plans for an afternoon and evening of fun and festivity are already underway, Mary Helen Baker, chairman of the Class Day committee, announced. This year's Class Day will be carried out around a western theme Members of the graduating class will wear blue jeans and plaid shirts and tote corn cob pipes throughout the day. Seniors will meet on the Terrace of the Union during all free hours of the day. At 3 p.m. the seniors will parade across the campus to the Union where there will be entertainment. At 4:30 seniors will gather at Potter lake to witness a tug of war between the engineers and lawyers, who will pull the rope from opposite sides of the lake. Immediately after the dunking of either engineers or lawyers, the seniors will meet at the picnic grounds west of Potter lake for an old fashioned barbecue. While the seniors eat, they will be entertained by various skits and contests, which will carry out the western theme. A feature of the evening will be a contest in which lady barbers will compete in shaving the faces of senior men picked from those at the barbecue. Spoons will be substituted for razors. During this contest, a barbershop quartet will provide appropriate background music. Tickets to the barbecue are on sale this week. They may be purchased from members of the Class Day Committee and from representatives in the organized houses. They will be on sale until Wednesday, April 26. Tickets are 85 cents each. Members of the Class Day committee are Mary Helen Baker, fine arts senior, chairman; Marian Ripppeau, Edith Malott, V. Hardy Scheuerman, and Charles Hoffhaus, College seniors; Stan Englund, Peggy Baker, and Elmer Dougherty, engineering seniors; Grace Gwinner, education senior; and Jack Tusher, fine arts senior. Other entertainers will include Jim Hawes, fine arts senior, who will present an original skit, and Woody Davis and Win Koerper, College sophomores, who will sing and play their guitar and accordion arrangements of western ballads. Charleston, N. C. —(U.P.)—Jake Burch told the judge he guessed he was one who couldn't afford prosperity. Jake bought a 1938-model automobile, then took a few drinks. He bumped the fender off a parked car, ran over a curb turning a corner, ran into and injured a 13-year-old boy on a bicycle, ploughed into the rear of another parked car, jumped out and ran. Couldn't Afford Prosperity Library Additions Confuse Students There is no problem finding what you need in Watson library, if you know where to look. The location of texts in special fields or the extent of library services often puzzles University students. Relocation of certain reserve books has added to their confusion. There is the Green room on the first floor west of the library where students may smoke and read reserve books in sociology, social work, home economics, speech, journalism, and any reserve periodicals in the library. All these resources are provided on each of the ten tables in the only library room where smoking is permitted. Miss Carmen Novak is the Green room librarian. The Kansas room, directly above the Green room on the second floor, is another attraction of the library's new wester wing. Students may read Kansas history in texts, periodicals, specially prepared scrapbooks, as well as publications by Kansas authors; or they may maze at the Jayhawker murals painted on the red and blue walls. There is a store of information in the Kansas room unsuspected by many students. In the sound-proof reserve reading room students browse through publications, past and present, of schools of the University. There are student publications including the Sour Owl, the Bitter Bird, Upstream, the kansas Engineer, and the University Daily Kansan, from first to last editions, and a scrapbook history of the University in 12 volumes. Biographies of prominent Kansans, such as, Carrie Nation, Amelia Earlhart Putnam, Frederick Funston, or Dwight David Eisenhoover, scrapbooks on prominent University alumni, writings of faculty members, biographies of pioneer professors and all University chancellors, and graduation commencement programs are all to be found in this room. Here, too, are histories of Lawrence and larger cities in the state Works are available by such Kansas authors as Dorothy Canfield Fisher, author of The Bent Twig; A. E. Hertzler, The Horse and Buggy Doctor; Two-Century Old Wall Of China Being Dismantled By The Communists The Great Wall of China, built two centuries before Christ, probably has no equal for the amount of human labor bestowed upon it. Communists are now reported adding to the sum total of that labor by dismantling parts of the immense barrier to obtain stone and brick for new construction in north China's cities. fallen to ruin in places. Large sections were then rebuilt and new spurs were added. Some 300,000 troops were impressed for the building job as conceived by the dynamic emperor, Chin Shih Huang Ti. In addition, all available prisoners of war and criminals, "including many dishonest officials" history shows, were drafted for the task. Construction took 15 years, from 219 to 204 B.C., notes the National Geographic Society. Again, centuries later, Ming emperors (1368 to 1644) strengthened the wall from its eastern terminus at Shanhaikwan (Linyu) on Liaotung Bay of the Yellow Sea along much of its 2,000-mile tortuous west reach almost to Sinkiang. Ming policy concentrated, however, on construction in the east. The Great Wall was divided into distinct sections at the Yellow River west of Ningwu. Aesop, author of the book of fables, was a slave. Even that was not the beginning or the end of labor on the "long rampart." Parts of emperor Chin's wall were built on sections dating from three centuries earlier. Some four centuries after Chin, the Han dynasty extended the operation farther into central China. By the 6th century A.D., the wall had GOOD LUCK To the Kansas Relays Teams on the SILVER ANNIVERSARY of 1000 1000 The KANSAS RELAYS -Photo Bv Frankie Waits Carter's Stationery 1025 Mass. Ph.1051 Finding a book correctly by looking under subject, title, and author in the card files are Mary Douglass, education senior, left, and Mary Lou Ketchum, College junior, right. They will follow up the first step by taking the number on the card to the main circulation desk. The assistant librarians will then comb six levels and the subbasement looking for their book. or William Allen White. The Autobiography of William Allen White. Miss Maud Smelser, librarian is in charge of the Kansas room. The main reserve reading room is in the basement of the library. Periodicals are stored here as well as reserve books. Reading lists are posted on the south wall to the west of the main entrance to the room. Miss Flora Ewart is the librarian in charge. The second floor reference room with its high ceiling and red-walled alcoves is familiar to most University students. Here are encyclopedias, anthologies, reference handbooks, the Reader's Guide to Periodical Literature, yearbooks, certain Congressional records and publications, biographical and other dictionary, concordances, and other reference texts. A magazine index to the location of all library periodicals is on a desk at the entrance of the room. Miss Esther Norman, reference librarian, occupies the other desk. Reserve books in philosophy and psychology are located in the education reading room on the first floor to the west of the main entrance. Both reserve and stack books in education are here. Bound magazines in philosophy and psychology go to the main desk on the second floor while bound periodicals in education stay in the reading room. Two large fans add to the appeal of the gray-walled reading room, which is under the supervision of Mrs. Magda K. Jensen. Students can "keep up on the world of today" in the periodical room of Watson library on the first floor to the east of the main entrance. The current newspapers of larger U.S. cities are in racks located centrally in the room. Current popular magazines are in similar racks. Kansas county newspaper shelves take up part of the southwest wall. Other periodicals are shelves on all four walls by subject. Typed cards indicate the following classification of periodicals by topic: Sociology, Romance languages, political science, physical education, pharmacy, music, journalism, German, English, business, economics, secretarial training, ancient languages, history, and "Miscellaneous." Trade journals, as well as departmental journals, are available here. The librarian, Miss Priscilla Tjaden, guides students to reference material. As a federal government depository, Watson library receives all United States federal government documents. The document room is on the fourth floor. Monthly catalogues published by the government index publications and serves as a guide to literature. Miss Bessie Wilder oversees the documents room. A microfilm reading room, room 404 houses two library film readers. On microfilm the University has such newspapers as the New York Tribune from January 1853 to December 1914; Emporia Gazette Weekly issues from Aug. 1, 1855 to Dec. 26, 1946; Emporia Gazettes from May 5, 1893 to Sept. 8, 1908 and Sept. 9, 1909 to April 6, 1945 the New York Star; and the Kansas City Star and Times. Certain University of Chicago theses and the American Periodicals series from 1800 to 1825 may also be viewed on the screen which is approximately 18 inches square. A quaint, musty room on the fourth floor, 413, holds part of the collection of English and American literature of Charles Dunlap. The Dunlap room is open from 1:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. to graduate students in English only. Miss Cora Dolbee has charge of the room. In case of confusion most students wind up at the main desk on the second floor of Watson library. Relay Fans Call 75! Fur storage time is here again. Call in today - we'll call for your furs . . . Store them in our scientifically cooled and protected vaults . . . then deliver them to you again when you need them next fall. New York Cleaners 926 Mass. C FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 Casual Beginning Ends With $5000 Hobby For Loop The recent arrival of two tiny chinchilla has raised to $5,000 the value of the chinchilla-raising hobby of James A. Loop, custodian of the University Museum of Art. Beginning casually with the purchase of a pair of the animals for $1400 two years ago, Mr. Loop now has 10 chinchillas on his ranch, which is in the basement of his home at 1729 Louisiana street. (Chinchilla homes are called ranches and their owners are known as ranchers.) (1) THAT'S A GOOD GIRL! "Tiny," James A. Loop's year-old chinchilla, perches on her master's shoulder and peers shrewdly at the camera. "Tiny" is an offspring of the original pair which Mr. Loop bought to begin his hobby. He is custodian of the Museum of Art. "Chinchillas like the semi-darkness of the basement and it is an ideal place for them." Mr. Loop believes, "Many of the large ranches keep their animals in air-conditioned rooms. We try to maintain a temperature of 60 to 70 degrees Fahrenheit at all times. Of course, it is a little higher in the summer, but the chinchillas don't seem to mind." The chinchilla is a small rodent, about the size of a squirrel. It has a long, bushy tail curled under almost as much as the squirrel's tail turns up. Its head looks like that of a rabbit. It is covered with a delicate gray fur, mottled on the upper surface, and dusky white beneath. Their tur has long been recognized for its high quality. "Pelts bring about $275 each." Mr. Loop estimated, "depending upon the quality of the fur. To be sold to reputable pelting companies a pelt must be from a registered, pedigreed animal. It must be accurately identified by a ranch brand tattooed on the chinchilla's ear. This brand consists of the number of registration and the year of birth in code." All chinchillas, however, are not destined to adorn milady's costume. Many are bought and sold for breeding purposes. Others are raised to exhibit in contests and shows. And still others are "just pets." "Fortunately, they make very little noise," their owned smiled, "just a short, gentle bark. They are completely domesticated, clean, free of odor and free of parasites." They seem quite contented as they scamper about their cages during their "graveyard shift" playtime. Their dispositions vary in as many ways as those of man—some are nervous and easily aroused, and others are calm and easy-going. Some like to play and others would rather "think." Survival has been a major problem of the chinchilla family, a native of the South American Andes mountains near Chile and Bolivia. The fur was highly prized by the ancient Peruvians and the conquering Spaniards—so much that the family almost became extinct. Only its productivity, five or six young a year, kept it alive. Read the Want Ads Daily. Weaver 901 Mass. Track men wear 'em cleated Mercury wore 'em winged. Venus went bare, and One Ballerina chose red—but KU COEDS WEAR 'EM WEBBED To The KANSAS RELAYS Wait'll you snuggle YOUR tootsies into this comfy as duck down "Web Foot"—and you'll be glad you did! They also serve those who only stand at the tape and wait—but choose comfort in the meantime! 595 Silver Anniversary? Yes, but you'll like these better in tawny tan or white. Buy 'em at Weavers - Second Floor Las Animas, Colo.—(U.P.)Two airplane pilots who ordinarily hunt bugs from aloft, shouldered their trusty fire extinguishers recently and went gunning for rainstorms. Cropdusting Pilots Hunt Rainstorms Pilots E. L. Wilkins, Jr., and Ernest Stubblebird said every likely-looking cloud that came their way was fair prey to be turned into a rainstorm for the benefit of farmers in this area. They are partners in a firm that ordinarily dusts croplands to kill insects. But today they were after bigger game, armed with the fire extinguishers which shoot a spray of carbon dioxide. Observers on the ground said the cloud turned very dark after the flippers began shooting, then the rain stopped, the heaviest in a year. For an hour, the downpour lasted. Water poured from the skies and ran two inches deep in the gutters. Visibility was reduced to 100 yards. Witnesses said the clouds seemed to stop and hover over the city. But two miles north and east of town the sun was shining. Farmers hailed the two men as heroes for their work this weekend. They credited the pilots with starting rainstorms that came just in time to save crops parched by one of the longest dry spells in the area's history. But Wilkins and Stubblefield weren't sure whether they oo nature had turned the trick. Wilkins and Stubblefield had been on the prowl for rain for two weeks when they spotted a fine mass of clouds. They entered the cloud over Las Animas at 12,500 feet, then climbed to 14,000. There they fired their fire extinguishers in a series of short bursts. "The cloud was rather smooth when we went in." Wilkins said. "But before we got out it was quite rough. We started quite a disturbance." "We're not sure we made it rain," Stubblefield said. "We were up there trying, though. All we know is that it wasn't raining when we went up. But it was raining when we came down." The experiments carried on by the four Colorado pilots were similar to those being made in New York to replenish watershed reservoirs which supply the nation's largest city. Weather forecasters also couldn't say whether nature or carbon dioxide was responsible for the big rains. They said the clouds were "loaded and all they needed was something to touch it off." Two other pilots, Ray Perkins and Joo Kocco, "seeded" clouds near Pueblo, Colo., Sunday and heavy rains fell west of that city. The rain was still falling as a steady drizzle early Monday. But Perkins and Roco also weren't sure whether the rain was their doing. Detroit—(U.P.)—Frank Upton prevents his bagle puppy from howling and disturbing the neighbors by putting an alarm clock, wrapped in a blanket, in his dog house at night. The ticking makes the dog feel something alive is with him and the blanket keeps him warm. Alarm Clock Provides Silence SAYS Ann Blyth Starred as the High School Senior in the SAMUEL GOLDWYN production "Our Very Own" ELGIN Delfire 17 JEWELS $57.50 $62.50 "So lovely... an Elgin belongs in any graduation picture!" SAYS Ann Blyth Starred as the High School Senior in the SAMUEL GOLDWYN production Our Very Own Lord Elgin and Lady Elgin 21 JEWELS 19 JEWELS $67.50 $71.50 $71.50 Straped by Hanslee Lord and Lady Elgins are priced from $67.50 to $5,000. Elgin De-Luxe from $45.00 to $67.50. Other Elgins are priced as low as $29.75, including the Federal Excise Tax. ELGIN Deluxe 17 JEWELS $57.50 $62.50 Only an ELGIN has the DuraPower Mainspring* ELIMINATES 99% OF ALL REPAIR DUE TO STEEL MAINSPRING ELGIN DeLuxe 17 JEWELS $57.50 $62.50 Imagine the thrill of owning one of these new Elgin Watches! Their styling has won the highest praise of America's "best-dressed". Their performance and dependability are assured by such technical achievements as the DuraPower Mainspring. Lord Elgin and Lady Elgin 21 JEWELS 19 JEWELS $67.50 $71.50 $71.50 Styled by Hensin So let it be known that the gift you want most is an Elgin Watch. When you get your graduation Elgin, you can look forward to years of pleasure and satisfaction. It will be a faithful companion and constant reminder of your graduation day. Made in America by American Craftmen of a war pin na se Un ap of ge the Dr an "le and th the sa ar "To th or be le al be ar ha th be st in sa m ov lo tr st fe F ev re sk br FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS C FIVΞ Fitch Studies Daily Habits Of Animals On KU Reserve Dr. Henry S. Fitch, assistant professor of zoology, is one member of the University faculty who doesn't have to spend all his time in a stuffy classroom. Instead, he spends the major part of his day walking over 590 acres of brush and timber-covered land. Dr. Fitch's work consists of trap- tping, tagging, and clipping all the native animal life that inhabits the section of land which comprises the reserve, located approximately five miles northeast of Lawrence. "It will take years and years to get complete information on even the more common kinds of animals," Dr. Fitch said, "but I enjoy the work and think it is fascinating." The theme of the project is to "let things be as nearly as possible, and let the animals move around as they will," Dr. Fitch pointed out. The main hazard to the project is that the habits of the animals will be influenced by human interference. "We sometimes find the same mice in traps in the morning and the evening." Dr. Fitch said. "They come into the traps for the food and cover they provide." For this reason, the traps cannot be left open at all times, and traps must be moved around. "If they were left in the same position and open all the time, mice would constantly be in the traps." Dr. Fitch laughed. A complex set of notes and graphs are kept on all the animals that have been tagged. By this method, the movement of the animals can be charted, food habits can be studied and population trends noted. An average of 50 mice are caught in 100 traps each day, Dr. Fitch said. These traps are placed in meadows on the reserve. Another 100 traps are distributed over a line approximately a mile long. By this method, population trends and food habits can be studied in connection with the different habitats found along the line. In the course of his work, Dr. Fitch said he "has caught nearly every kind of animal found in this region—even skunks." He said skunks were hard to handle. "They wn't bother me too much, but I notice my students sit well to the back of the classroom." The modern automobile has deprived New Mexico's road-runner bird of its favorite diversion—racing horses and horse-drawn vehicles down the straight, flat roads of the western state. 一 —Kansan Photo by Bob Blank BAITING A POSSUM trap is Henry Fitch, animal trapper at the University farm. Uranium Ore Worth $10,000 A $10,000 bonus! That's what Uncle Sam will give if you can find a deposit of uranium minerals that will yield at least 20 tons of high grade ore. Estimates of the world's supply of uranium run from 30,000 to 500,000 tons, but many persons have expressed pessimistic views concerning our vanishing uranium supplies. David Lilienthal, ex-chairman of the United States Atomic Energy commission, says such views are not true and the people of the United States are entitled to know that they are not correct. The search for uranium has just begun. Discoveries of major importance have been made in Canada at Common lake, Beaverlodge and Hardesty lakes, Cameron bay, Great Bear lake, and in 1948 a deposit of 59 per cent uranium ore was found on the northeast shore of Lake Superior. Lower grade ores can be used as technological knowledge increases Uranium is widely distributed in the crust of the earth, but generally in very small quantities. The element is estimated to constitute 0.08 per cent of the earth's crust. It ranks 25th in abundance falling just below copper but exceeding tungsten. It is twice as abundant as zinc, four times as abundant as lead, and many times more common than tin, silver, or gold. Until 1939 the Shinkolobwe mine in the African Congo was a major source along with the Union Miniere du Haut Katanga mine in the Belgian Congo. Together they supplied about 60 per cent of the world's requirements. The remaining 40 per cent was mined by Eldorado Gold Mines, Ltd. in Canada, and the Joachimstal deposits in the Ore mountains of Czechoslovakia. An important low-grade source has recently been reported in the Ice Cubes Crushed Ice Union of South Africa. Here the gold ores of Witwatersand contain low concentrations of uranium, and by-product uranium will probably come from the huge gold-mining industry of that country. Sweden has already announced that she plans to recover uranium from oil shales. Other types of marine sediments which contain small amounts of uranium are under study in this country and other parts of the world. American ServICE Company Coolerator Electric Refrigerators Ranges, Home Freezers Picnic or Party Chests Rented Pop by Bottle, Carton or Case Phone 48 only area in the United States actually producing uranium. Smaller deposits have been found in north-west Arizona, North Carolina, South Carolina, Connecticut, Texas, and California. The Dakotas are said to be potential sources. 616 Vermont Relay Fans The known recoverable sources of uranium are so far limited to relatively few countries. The countries which have accounted for commercial production are: Belgian Congo, Canada, United States, Bohemia, Portugal, Australia, Norway, and Sweden. Countries which have had production or are said to be potential producers are: Madagascar, Brazil, India, England, Russia, Germany, Bulgaria, and perhaps others. At present the U.S. Atomic Energy commission is sponsoring the most extensive and intensive searches that has ever been conducted for a mineral. The incentives offered by the commission are primarily for the discovery and production of pitchblende-type ores, the major source of the world's uranium supply. Drive out to Miller's Bar-B-Q for good food. .. And avoid the rush in town! 4 miles Northeast U. S. 40 and 24 As in the United States, virtually all countries that possess radioactive minerals have established controls over movements of such materials or have nationalized the deposits. In the United States, including Alaska, all public lands that contain deposits of radioactive minerals were withdrawn by executive order on Sept. 13, 1945. Millie Was On The Job The chief source in the United States is an extensive area in southwestern Colorado and southeastern Utah. The plateau was the Relay Special Menu Three Rivers, Mich.—(U.P.)-Ray Hasbrouck began wrestling with two men who tried to rob his filling station. A telephone was knocked over. Mrs. Millie Knaub, telephone operator, heard the noise and called the police, who arrived before the fight was over. 1/2 Fried chicken dinner Pork chops Hamburger steak 12 oz. T-Bone Steak Large Cube Steak Bar-B-Q Beef and Pork Sandwiches Home-made pie Miller's Bar-B-Q Campus WEST © Jontzen "ROVER"—Big news here is the hug-me-tight waistband, railroad-stitched for extra good looks. A lot of shredd Jantzen designing went into the straight clean lines of this little classic—back-zipped for beautiful snug fit. Turn-up cuffs are another smart item, and so is the pocket-safe parking-place for lipstick, coins, keys. Fine Sanofiized Cotton Gabardine that tubs like a handkerchief. 10-18.3.95 WEAR "ROVER" WITH JANTZEN'S COLOR-COORDINATED TEE SHIRT. . . featuring the terrifically new, flattering plunge neckline. . . full-cut in length AND width, all-combed two-ply cotton yarns in eight exciting resort colors. . . from Lime to Moroque. Beautifully washable, of course, S-M-L. 2.95 C SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 WE'RE ROOTING for you TRACK E AM 10 5 AND COACH EASTON Pi Kappa Kappa Gamma Delta Beta Kappa Alpha Phi Delta Phi Gamma Theta Beta Delta Alpha Chi Omega Alpha Delta Pi Theta Phi Alpha Chi Omega Delta Gamma Alpha Omicron Pi Alpha Phi 21,1950 FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS C SEVEN Business School Will Graduate 279, Place 60 Per Cent PRESIDENT OF THE UNION FOR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS AND LIBERTY A.J. SCHWANSKY ROT BY FRANKIE WAITS (Editor's note: This is the third in a series of articles on the various schools in the University.) It won't be long before School of Business students will don their spring straw hats, and seniors are making appointments with employers to decide about their future jobs. The Business Placement bureau began last month to place graduates with companies all over the country and this service will continue until graduation time. —Photo By Frankie Waits Frank Pinet, director of the Business Placement bureau, said that in the last four years approximately 60 per cent of the graduates were placed through the bureau as compared with 40 per cent who went into family businesses and a few students who found jobs on their INTERVIEWING men at work is the first step in case material work. In the picture on the left, Howard Baumgartel, instructor of economics, left, and Frank Pinet, director of the Business Placement bureau, right, ask some questions of Art Gardner, head pressman at the Kansas Color Press building. After the material is gathered there is a meeting of the case clinic. Individual cases are read, discussed, and molded into their final forms as casebooks. In the center picture left to right, H. K. L'Ecuyer, associate professor of industrial management; Riley Burcham, executive This spring the job prospects look good from the basis of individual companies, Mr. Pinet said. There will be from 50 to 75 industrial organizations on the campus from time to time to interview prospective graduates. Another 100 companies will probably write to the school asking for University graduates to take jobs with their companies. The 1950 graduating class of 279 members is one of the largest in the history of the school. Since the war the classes of graduates have varied between 175 and 279. vice-president of the Lawrence National bank; Leonard H. Axe, dean; Jack A. Wichert, assistant professor of marketing; and Frank S. Pinet, director of the Business Placement bureau look over some cases. In the picture on the right, as the final step in the school's modern method of teaching case material in the classroom, Richard Hamilton illustrates a point on the blackboard while Jeanne Dodson, right, looks on and Betty Thompson takes notes. The students are all business seniors. The student wishing to go into the business fields must first complete pre-business requirements in the College. In his junior year, if he has a C-plus average, he may transfer to the School of Business. On entering this school he will not find a group of stereotyped courses and business processes, but rather a multitude of practical as well as dynamic specialized courses, with fresh material gathered almost daily from real situations in the mid-west area. The business junior will first be enrolled in the "core", the basic preparation_in the school. While in this section of the school he will take some required courses and, after general instruction in the business curriculum, he will select one field in which to major. The school includes in its curriculum general business, accounting, finance, marketing, and personnel management. Industrial Management is a section designed by the Schools of Business and Engineering and Architecture for those students having dual interests. Students in the school take a varied assortment of courses to gain a general background for their future work in the business world. There is economics, mathematics, speech, money and banking, political science, as well as trade, industrial, insurance, transportation, business law, statistical methods, and management courses. Contrary to the belief of some, the students in the School of Business do not merely type and take shorthand as college preparation for their future work. In reality, accounting, marketing, and general business, rank the highest in enrollment for any single majors in the school. Only 39 of the 685 students in the school are women. The secretarial training division draws most of the women. The secretarial training courses, with work on machines, are held behind Strong hall in annex D. Here the students are taught typing and shorthand as well as working with the more complicated business machines. This curricula is complete on the campus because all the machines used are provided here without the students having to go elsewhere to work with them. In the other divisions, however, practical experience is gained by taking field trips to industrial plants, factories, and companies in Kansas City and Topeka. Many trips of this type are taken each year by the students and professors. But the most important work of the School of Business, aside from teaching its students, is not done altogether on the campus. The school employs a unique program of one material work including the close contact of both faculty and students. For the courses in which users are used, the faculty members go out to industrial and manufacturing plants in and around Lawrence and interview workers and executives for their case material. The material is then gathered into individual cases and submitted to the business seminar. At informal meetings, Dean Axe and professors in the school discuss the cases and mold them into their final form before the individual cases are made into a composite casebook. DANCEABLE Blues In "Fabulous 15" Dean Axe is the second dean of the school as it enters its 27th year of operation. A tall, slender, well casebook. As the final step in this modern business teaching process, the case-books are then studied in regular classrooms by the students. The school feels that this fresh material is much more beneficial to the students than anything else they could offer the students in their study of understanding business techniques and personnel management. Before 1924 the business courses were included in the department of economics. The governing board of the University authorized the School of Business in June, 1924. It began actual operation in September of that year. In 1925 the school was admitted to membership in the American Association of Collegiate Schools of Business. THE TOMMY SCHLONGEN ORCHESTRA L. Loke Smith, 846 Mass "ERSKINE HAWKINS (above) plays W. C. Handy" . . . St. Louis Blues, Careless Love, Memphis Blues, 3 others . . . "DESIGNED FOR DANCING!" It is just one of 15 NEW dance albums by RCA Victor. 15 great bands, 15 great composers, 90 all-time hits played the danceable way! Like Glenn Miller days! Erskine Hawkin's album has the beat your feet adore! Get it at! groomed man with graying hair and blue eyes, the dean is a married man who is "all wrapped up in his work." But he also enjoys gardening. hawk Business news each fall and spring. This publication keeps the student on the campus acquainted with the newest business processes and the advancements of their profession. Dean Axe listed the main purposes of the School of Business as fourfold: (1) to train students to have the ability to work effectively with people, (2) to have the ability to make decisions, (3) to be able to accept responsibilities, and (4) to understand the basic forces at work in our society. Mo., and the Western Kansas Development association. Paul E. Malone, professor of economics and director of the Bureau of Business research, is now engaged in an economic survey of southern Kansas in connection with the Federal Reverse bank of Kansas City, The school is especially proud of the productivity of its staff, John Blocker, professor of accounting is the author of "Cost Accounting," a book in it third edition. Another of his books, "The Essentials of Cost Accounting" has been writing. B.Cupillaro, professor of economics, has written "American Social Insurance," one of the first books in its field. John Ise's "Economics." is in its second edition. "We are trying to develop ability in the student—not only to give him the tools of technical know-how, or merely to teach him how the questions of promotion should be handled, but rather to develop in him the ability to decide what he would do about a particular question of a particular company in a particular situation." Business students publish the Jay- Other than graduation day, perhaps the day most business students look forward to is the annual School of Business day. This year it will come on Wednesday, May 10. While other students at the University attend classes just as usual, the business students will tilt their straw hats on the sides of their heads, roam the campus, and soak up the spring sun, sans classes. In speaking of the future of the school, Dean Axe said that he hoped someday there would be a building to house the entire School of Business. As it is now, the school uses classrooms in almost every building on the campus. But during its 26 years the School of Business has overcome its minor handicaps and has become one of the largest and most well equipped schools on the Hill. SAVE MONEY Relay Fans! this can happen to you ... But not if you have your woolens moth-proofed at Acme Laundry and Dry Cleaners. Each garment is sprayed with Hoggatt Moth Spray to protect it from destructive moths all season. One treatment is taboo to moths, and if you like, your clothes can be cleaned at any time without affecting the moth resistance. All work absolutely guaranteed. Get your clothes moth-proofed at prices to fit your budget . . Men's suits . $1.50 Men's top coats . 1.50 Ladies' suits . 1.50 Ladies plain coats .1.50 Ladies wool skirts . . . .50 Sweaters ... .50 ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners 1111 Mass. --- C EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 Science—This Time A Kiss-Tester By Arthur Schaaf A kissing trophy is just the thing on your trophy room. EXPERTS LOVERS WORKER BUYER LOUSY Sunday afternoon at 3 the electrical engineers are offering a kissing trophy "in the interest of more and higher quality kisses" to the men's organization amassing the highest team score. Fraternity teams, pick-up teams, or single couples may enter, but every man must provide himself with a partner. The bussing contest will be held on the second floor of the electrical engineering laboratory during the Engineering Exposition. Visitors and sightseers are welcome even if they don't want to try for the prize So step up and pucker up at the Engineering Exposition where the electrical department's kiss-testing machine—the Nuclear Transmutational Oscilometer-carefully scores the passion potential of caressing lovers. Built from parts of five old pinball machines, plus incidental bells, flags, relays, and wires, the contraption classifies curious kissers into five categories—experts, lovers, reckers, buddies, and lousy. IF A BODY KISS A BODY—Running up a big score on the Nuclear Transmutational Osculometer (kiss testing machine) are Mary F. Hercules, business senior, and Theodore W. Tober, pharmacy senior. In the center, with an unidentified bystander peeking over his shoulder, is Richard H. Harris, engineering junior, who is operating the machine. Maurice M. Mandelkehr, graduate electrical engineering student and designer of the osculometer, beams proudly on the left. Mandelkehr will award a trophy Sunday, April 23 to the men's organization getting the highest team score in the kissing competition. An "expert" rating entitles the lucky couple to a triumphant sainte of banging and clanging, a brilliant display of flashing light bulbs, a two flag tribute, and a signed certificate designating the holder an "Omnipotent Osculatory Operant." The 1950 model has been completely rebuilt and Mandelkehr proclaims it a complete success. Built by Bert D Gordon, engineering sophomore; Allen Edward Green, Jr., engineering senior, and Mandelkehr, the new model made its debut at the Kansas City Electrical Progress show March 9-12. Designed by Maurice M. Mandel-Pear, graduate electrical engineering student, the first model of the machine was assembled three years ago. Difficulties and short circuits set in to prevent it from being a success. A second edition was put together just before the Engineering Exposition last year. It didn't work either. A couple being kiss-analyzed both hold an electrode in each hand as they embrace. When their lips touch the circuit is closed, a small current flows between them, and the score mounts. The secret of a good score lies in the eagerness with which the partners enter into the embrace, Mandelkeir pointed out. A bashful peck will net the participants a derisive "lousy" on the sensitive machine. The harder the couple kisses, the more current flows between them, and the higher their score. An apprehensive attitude toward the contraction can boost a couple's score, Mandelkehr said. That is, if the anxiety causes the partners' hands to perspire. The perspiration serves as an electrical conductor and ups the count. up the couch. Big, hulking he-men needn't think they can run up a high score over their skimmer, shorter compatriots. "At Kansas City Electrical Progress show," Mandelkehr said, "a tubby little sailor had one of the best scores of all. He was nervous, and afraid he wouldn't do very well, so his hands perspired and helped him get a terrific score." Lipstick tends to lower the score by acting as an insulator. The greasier the lipstick, the better the insulation, and the lower the score. For best results excess lipstick should be removed before taking the test. In 1925 Dr. Henry Gibbons scientifically defined a kiss as, "The anatomical juxtaposition of two orbicular oris muscles in a state of contraction." Science gallops on, hup, hup! Plug me in and pucker up! (Editor's note: This is the first in a weekly series of questions and answers appearing in the University Daily Kansan pertaining to campus problems about which students may desire to express opinions.) - Students' Forum - This week's question was: "Should the chancellor have veto power over the All Student Council?" The following answers were given: Carol Crow, College junior: "Yes. I think that the chancellor should have power to veto the All Student Council bills. So many of the proposals that are put before the A.S.C. are so trivial and unimportant, and so many of them would be passed if there were no one to check on them, that I am glad there is a power of veto. Besides, I'm sure that Chancellor Malott must have good reasons for vetuing the bills. Students are not as likely to use good judgment in matters concerning themselves as an adult is." Mrs. Shirley Bannigan, special student: "I do not think that the chancellor should have the veto power over the A.S.C. With the absolute veto that is now in effect, the Council is a farce and 'rubber stamp' instead of representing the will of the student body as it should. Any absolute veto is dictatorial and has no place in a democratic institution. If the chancellor is to retain this power, let's dissolve the Student Council and stop being hypocritical. Of course, the junior politics will be frustrated, but I think the school will be better off." Kenneth L. Allen, College junior: "Certainly, it's impossible for any form of government to function effectively and fairly without some system of checks and balances. This is especially important in the case override the chancellor's veto. I believe if the Council were to be granted this power it would not abuse it. It would add strength and unity to the organization on the Hill." James Lowman Childers, College sophomore: "It is necessary to have a more mature mind to keep things from getting out of hand. In view of the youth of present freshmen and the relative youth of the upper classmen, I don't believe they are able to govern themselves as well as the fading veterans could." Kansan Photo by Bob Blank William Taggart. College sophomore: "I think he should have a restricted, but not a complete veto power. With veto power similar to that of the president of the United States, the chancellor would be able to prevent legislation by a small majority which might be regretted later. However, with a decisive majority (three-fourths of the Council) the Council should be allowed to of the A.S.C. which is composed, for the most part, of representatives who are not quite mature enough to efficiently carry out their duties without some type of guidance." CAROLYN WILSON MEMBERS OF THE CAST of "West of Abilene" to be given Tuesday, May 2 through Friday, May 5 in Fraser theater are left to right: Roy Hadley, Hugh Eberle, Donald Little, Louise Lambert and John Wesley; center: James Hawes. Miss Lambert, owner of the Last Chance saloon, is trying to find out whether Hawes, the bartender, is Snake McCoy. Sorority Urges Safe Driving By BILL CHAPMAN There is a lesson being taught at the University. There is a lesson being taught at the University. It's not a lecture by one of the professors, but a series of talks by some of the students. It's not a course and there is no grade, but if you flunk, it may have a final ending. The lesson is "Drive safely—it can happen to you." Ever since an auto accident on March 14 in which two members of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority and their escorts were killed, the women in the house have felt they ought to do something about it. Money was given by the chapter to a memorial scholarship fund, in memory of the girls; Joyce Diller, College freshman from Salina, and Janice Kollmann, College junior from Kansas City, Mo. Still the chapter members thought they hadn't done enough. They felt they ought to do something more. A delegation called on Chancellor Malott. They wanted a letter sent to the State Highway commission at Topeka. He wrote requesting that the scene of the accident, the intersection of U.S. 50 and K-10 highways just west of Kansas City, be better marked. Still they had the feeling they hadn't done enough. That was when they decided to start teaching safety. For the past few weeks members of the sorority have been called in pairs on women's organized houses on the Hill. There they chat informally with members of other organized houses and remind them that it isn't always the other person who gets hurt or killed. "We want to make people conscious of the fact that it can happen to them. When some one close to you in your everyday living dies in such a horrible way it makes you stop and think," said Carolyn Weigand, president of the K.U. chapter of Kappa Alpha Theta. "The reason we are visiting the women's houses is to make them remember what can happen the next time they are out riding. "We feel that if the girl asks her date to slow down to a safe driving speed, he will out of respect for her. It is better to be late getting in than to have an accident and not get there at all." she went on. "Before we are through, we want to talk to all women on the Hill. It is our idea that maybe our talking to them will prevent other women from losing friends as we have." Art Ford,ROTC Captain And ASC Committee Head lord was born in Louisiana but moved to Kansas City, Kans., several years before entering the University in 1946. He is a captain in the R.O.T.C. and has been named a distinguished military student. This honor entitles him to a commission in the regular U. S. air force pending graduation in June. He likes the University and Kansas but feels that there is room for improvement in some respects. As far as racial discrimination goes, "there isn't enough difference between Kansas and Louisiana for Kansas to brag about." Being chairman of the smoking committee may not be the most popular job on the Hill, but after all, rules do have to be enforced believes Arthur Ford, College senior, who became the smoking committee head last fall. He represents the Negro Student association on the All Student council. "In Louisiana the Negroes say 'yes sir' to the white man," he said, "but so what? Right here in Lawrence in the movie theaters we are set off in reserved sections as if we were on exhibit." The smoking committee has studied old smoking rules and surveyed old buildings which might be hazardous if smoking were allowed in them. A bacteriology major, Ford hopes to do research in bacteria warfare if he joins the air force. Ford said that discrimination by University students and faculty members is practically nonexistent as he knows. "It's after we leave the Hill that we run into trouble. Outside the Union there is only one decent place we can go for entertainment and relaxation." When Ford was president of the Negro Student association in 1948, he and some friends talked personally with several cafe operators near the campus about allowing Negro students to eat there. "One owner was worried about the social relations between the Negro men and the white women," said Ford, "but he did propose opening a place in the basement for us. Ford says that cafe owners in Lawrence seem to think that if Negro trade is accepted their business would fall off. "I don't believe this is valid, at least where University students are concerned. Students don't stay out of classes or the Union when we are around. If the eating places would drop the JONATHAN GOSLING ARTHUR FORD racial bars, people would soon used to it. You can tell that to the owner but he always counters with, I don't want to be the first to try it.' "Certain of the student organizations at the University exclude Negro students from membership. The Pan-Hellenic and Inter-fra-ternity councils are both closed to Negro students. In some campus organization, however, the Negro takes a back seat, not because he is denied membership, but because of lack of interest." Ford said that he has heard of discrimination in the class room against the Negro students but that he has never run into it personally and doubts that much prejudice is displayed in the K. U. classrooms. Woman Bags Biggest Deer Augusta, Me. — (U.P.)—A woman nimrod bagged the biggest deer shot in Maine during 1949. Mrs. Merle Dwyer of Orient used only a single shot to set the record—a 12-pound 358-pound buck. of talks it may members thed, the about it, p fund, Salina. h. They a letter equest- 50 and that was they chat and them happen ang dies Carolyn ta. ke them ng. a safe be late ill," she on the prevent ne most enforced. ing co- nociation oon t to the ers with, t to try organiza- exclude bership ter-fra- closed to campus Negro house he because record of its room out that personally judice is in rooms. woman deer shot Merle a single 2-phy University Daily Kansan Sports FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 SECTION B SPORTS By RICHARD DILSAVER By RICHARD DILSAVER A year ago at Relays time, Daily Kansan sportswriter Doug Jennings, wrote: "Most of the attention has been given to the big names coming to the Relays—names like Charlie Parker, Gehrmann, Byrll Thompson, Cooper... and a few others. This is as it should be—an extravaganza as large as the Kansas Relays needs and warrants these names. "But a note of tribute to the little fellows, those who come in fourth or fifth or even last, should be extended somewhere along the line. They are too many to be named individually, but they, too, make the Relays what it is." A point well taken and worth repeating. But there is still another group of little men who usually go unheralded, yet are vital to the Relys' success. Those are the fellows from the small colleges—from Abilene Christian to Fort Hays State. Usually they don't have the training facilities and coaching fellows from bigger schools will get. But they try just as hard and run just as far. Long A Coach At KU Relays, Now A Referee A man who has entered a team in every running of the 25-year-old Kansas Relays, Dr. Garfield Weede of Kansas State Teachers college of Pittsburg is referee for Saturday's silver anniversary meet UNION Dr. Garfield Weede Long a molder of track and field champions, Dr. Weede has coached 19 Relays winners in four-man events and seven individual titleholders. His 1932 quartets swept every baton race in the college class from the 440 through the distance medley, and his 1933 mile relay foursome still holds the college class record of 3:17.3 for that event. Dr. Weede was a Walter Camp All-America end at Penn in 1904. On leaving Penn in 1906 he began his coaching career at Washburn university in Topeka. Since then he has coached in Kansas continuously for 45 years. He has been at Pittsburg Teachers since 1919. 1942 BILL EASTON, KANSAS TRACK COACH Easton Is A Holler Guy Should something happen to the public address system at Saturday's Relays, officials won't be too worried. For all they will need to do to keep the crowd informed is hunt up Kansas Coach Bill Easton, give him the information they want relayed to the audience, and he'll let loose with a vocal demonstration matched at few hog calling contests. Since coming to Kansas from Drake in 1947, Coach Easton set a spectacular success pattern in distance running. Under Eastern Jayhawk two-mile teams have swept three Big Seven championships. This winter K.U. took the Big Seven indoor meet at Kansas City by garnering 25 of its 40 winning points in distance events. Coach Easton hasn't limited his track success to coaching. He is recognized as one of the shrewdest relays promoters in the land. He headed eight nifty shows at Drake and has proved in just two years that he hasn't lost his touch since coming to Mt. Oread. His first K.U. carnival in 1948 was certainly a fine one for it produced six meet records—two of them world marks—although none had been broken since 1942. A year ago two records fell and another equalled. Both shows have drawn 10,000 fans. Should the Saturday carnival equal the two previous under his direction, Bill Easton may soon be known as Mr. Kansas Relays. 1923 - Silver Anniversary - 1950 Track and field truly exemplifies the American way of life. One man competes directly with his rivals and all against those most formidable rivals, time and distance. The individual is on his own. He is not burdened with inferior teammates; superior teammates can not carry him. He excels according to his ability, as modified by his conditioning and will to win. Only a few, common sense rules govern him, and they exist to assure fair play for each entrant. Yet in the relays and team totals there is the reminder that there must be high standards of group achievement. All this parallels the American way of life, which gives the individual opportunity to progress and excel to the maximum of his ability, checked only by a few rules to guarantee opportunity for all. The University of Kansas is proud that its track and field competitors have excelled in so American a sport. The University is equally proud that through the Kansas Relays it can be host to a great festival of achievement and sportsmanship. DEANE W. MALOTT, 25 Years Of Kansas Relays By DOLPH SIMONS Silver anniversary and all, the Kansas Relays will be celebrated Saturday with as great an array of track and field talent as has ever been assembled in Memorial stadium. From every part of the nation will come entries ranging from All-Americans to Kansas schoolboys, all of them seeking glory in the Mt. Oread Olympics. From 1923 to 1949, the Kansas Relays have steadily evolved to a tremendous Middle West spectacle that draws 10,000 or more spectators annually. And each year it seems to get better. On the afternoon of April 23, 1923, when the carnival in Lawrence was inaugurated, the dream of a Kansas alumnus came true. Dr. John Outland had envisioned a huge track and field meet on Mt. Oread while doing graduate work at the University of Pennsylvania, home of the prominent Penn Relays. Dr. Outland returned to the University and told his ideas to Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen, then K.U. athletic director. Dr. Allen and his track coach, Karl Schlademan, now of Michigan State, started forming plans for a Kansas Relays. That was in the spring of 1920. To promote the Relays, Dr. Allen gave radio speeches. He printed Relays stickers and a 62-page program. Coach Schlademan was general manager of the event with student representatives from each class working with him. This was the beginning of the Student Relays committee. In cooperation with the University, alumni in Lawrence formed a Kansas Relays club to help out. rence formed a Kansas relays club to help out. At the first Relays were a score of colleges and universities. All Missouri Valley schools were there, the Big Ten was represented, several Southwest conference teams entered, and the University of Pennsylvania came all the way westward for the event. Kansas wasn't too polite a host—dominating the meet by winning the 440- and 880-yard relays, finishing second in the mile relay, third in the two-mile relay, and taking two individual titles. Almost every event was run in a steady rain. A year later the Relays had attained national prominence with 95 schools from coast to coast entered. Little Occidental college came out of California to make one of the most wholesale sweeps in the carnival's history. The Californians slammed all four baton events held in the college class with record-breaking times and invaded the University division for a triumph in the quarter-mile relay. With the meet insured for $4,000 against rain, the 1925 Relays was one of the most eventful on record as three world records were broken. Famous Knute Rocke of Notre Dame was referee. Another football coaching great, Fielding "Hurry-Up" Yost of Michigan, refereed the 1926 meet, also a record-breaking affair. The meet of 1927 stands out because the Relays had a relapse with only 44 schools entered. But Dr. Allen arose to the occasion and a year later had things thriving by introducing the decathlon and a marathon from Topeka to Lawrence. - Things ran smoothly until 1931 when officials of the still-young Big Six conference met to consider banning the Relays. But the ban was not approved and the meet that year was one of the best of all time. Grid coaches were still favored for the referee's duties. That year it was Alonzo Stagg. Rain kept all records safe in 1932, a year in which Dr. Garfield Weede—1950 Relays referee—saw his Pittsburg State Teachers teams run off with most of the honors. In 1933 Dr. Weede's mile relay quartet set a college class record of 3:17.3 which stands to this day. Featuring the special mile race between immortal Glenn Cunningham and Gene Venzke, the 1934 carnival drew a crowd of 10,000. Cunningham won in 4:12.7. Kansas State Teachers college of Emporia broke the world record in the distance medley. Eight records went by the board in 1935 to make that year's Relays one of the best. In 1936, star of the meet was Glenn Morris who gave the greatest Relays decathlon performance in history. Again in 1937 it was the special mile run which drew 10,000 fans. Archie San Romani, Emporia State's greatest distance runner ever, defeated Cunningham with a nifty 4:14.1 showing. Despite sullen skies, the field in 1938 sent eight marks down the drain. A record Relays attendance of 12,000 saw Cunningham come back to win the special mile in 1939. Cunningham had his last Relays special mile appearance in 1940, and it was not a glorious one. For the Jayhawker all-time great was whipped by Blaine Rideout of North Texas State. But Rideout had set the present record of 4:10.1. Now the special mile is named the Glenn Cunningham mile. In 1941 Indiana dominated the meet. With World War II already beginning to squeeze the sports world, the 20th Relays in 1942 were almost a Big Six affair. And the war caused cancellation of the meet in 1943, 1944, and 1945. The first post-war Relays in 1946 got off to a steady start which saw respectable performances all along the line although every record survived. The worst rain and cold in the Relays history reduced the 1947 meet to a whisper. Six men tied for first place in the rain-drenched pole vault at 11 feet 6 inches, lowest height in the carnival's history. Bill Easton engineered the Relays for the first time in 1948 and the records again began to fall. Harrison Dillard, Baldwin-Wallace hurdler, and Michigan's Charles Fonville (he's returning for the 1950 shot put contest) established world marks. Don Gehrmann, Wisconsin's great miler, and Bob Walters, a virtually unknown Texas high jumper, were individual standouts a year ago. Gehrmann equaled the mile record of 4:10.1, and Walters elevated the high jump standard to 6 feet 8 3-16 inches. Thus through the years have been the Kansas Relays. This year many records—superior as they are—can not hope to survive. For the Kansas Relays attract many of the greatest track and field stars in America. 5 B TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 Here Are 1949 Kansas Relays Champions BOR WALTERS, TEXAS, HIGH JUMP BOB WALTERS, TEXAS, HIGH JUMP FREDERICK WILSON BYRL THOMPSON, MINNESOTA, DISCUS Thompson Not Safe This big man from the North, Minnesota's Byrl Thompson, will be hard pressed to retain the Kansas Relays discus championship he has collected here twice. Moving in from the Southwest conference as his top challenger is George Kadera, muscular all-round weight ace from Texas A. and M. The two will match grunts and spins Saturday in the silver anniversary of the Mt. Oread Olympics. To date Kadera has out-thrown his Big Ten rival. He threw the iron-rammed plate 165 feet and 10 inches to win the Border Olympics at Laredo, Texas, three weeks ago and repeated at the Texas Relays with a fine sail of 165 feet $119\frac{1}{2}$ inches. Thompson, N.C.A.A. runner-up to Yale's Yale Frank the past June, reached 159 feet in his lone effort this spring, and it was only good enough for second at the Florida Relays. It would be somewhat ironical if Thompson should fall victim to the swarthy Aggie. Kadera uses a style highly similar to the sudden, leaping whirl invented by Eob Fitch, former Minnesota record holder now track and football assistant at Iowa, and perpetuated by Thompson and Fortune Gordien, another Golden Gopher and current world record holder. After unreeling a record peg of 172 feet $5^{1/4}$ inches to win the 1947 Texas Relays, Gordon stayed around a bit to go over his technique with Kadera. The latter hit 165 feet a week or so later and has been classed in the 160-foot class since. Now he'll be coming to Lawrence to end a traditional Gopher grip on the Kansas title. Although only in his second varsity year, Byrl won a Kansas Relays title here in 1946 as a Camp Grant soldier with a toss of 142 feet 9 inches. His winning peg a year ago measured 16.1 feet 10¾ inches. If Thompson can bag his specialty here next Saturday, he can join the shrine of eight individual competitors who have coped three K. U. Relays championships. This means Minnesotans have captured the last four Relays discus titles, Gordien winning in '47 and '48. Both men will have to exceed their best to kayo the meet record of 171 feet and $6 \%$ inches which Indiana's Archie Harris erected in 1941. CJ JIM ALLEN, COLORADO SHOT PUT 10 JIM McCONNELL, NEBRASKA, DECATHLON Walters, Allen And McConnell Could Easily Lose KU Crowns Should Bob Walters, Jim Allen, and Jim McConnell repeat their 1949 Kansas Relays victories Saturday, they ought to be pretty happy fellows. For each will be faced with the stiffest of competition. Razzeto isn't entered, but the field includes such veterans as Vern McGrew. Rice Olympics leader; Jack Heintzman, Bradley perennial; Bev Baker, Arkansas; Dick Jones, Okla- Heading the list of Walters' opponents will be Virgil Severn of Kansas State. Although previous to this year he was little more than an also-ran, Severn leaped to fame at the Texas Raleys when he set a new records at 6 feet $8_{14}$ inches along with San Diego-State's Jack Razzetto. Walters, the blond Texan who soared to a new Relax record of 6 feet 8 3/16 inches a year ago when he was named the meet's outstanding performer, will probably have to equal or better his 1949 mark to win again. A host of jumpers who have leaped 6 feet 5 inches or better will oppose him. homan who jumps minus one shoe; and Bob Gordon, Missouri. McGrew and Heintzman shared the Texas Relays third place at 6 feet 6 inches with Walters. Baker and Jones tied at 6 feet $5\frac{1}{2}$ inches at the recent Oklahoma Aggie Relays. Gordon tied Severn for the Big Seven indoor title at 6 feet 3 inches. Allen won the Relays title last year with an effort of 50 feet 10 inches. The best he has ever done was 51 feet 3/4 inches a few weeks ago But more competition still will come from Charles Fonville, the muscular Michigan Negro. Fonville set a world record of 58 feet 3/8 inch here two years ago, and now he is coming back after missing 1949 because of a back injury. Allen, Colorado's best, scored an upset in 1949 by whipping such worthies as Byrl Thompson, Minnesota who captured the discus title, and Rollin Prather, Kansas State's always-threatening ace. That pair will be back on hand. McConnell, Nebraska's jack of all events, who does best in the weight department, appears to have a better chance to repeat than either Walters or Allen. But because the decathlon is not frequently held and therefore contestants are little publicized, a darkhorse could upset him. And that darkhorse might well be Brayton Norton of Santa Ana, Calif., Junior college. Norton recently compiled a 6,907-point total in California. Kansas will again have a decathlon entry. Delvin Norris, husky football letterman and ordinarily a high jumper with the Jayhawker squad, will compete. He, like Norton, is a darkhorse. Returning for another crack at the 10-event grind are Cornelius Anderson of Missouri Valley, and Mickey Dunn of Wyoming. They placed fourth and fifth respectively in 1949. Rounding out the field of 10 will be freshman Ronnie Dobson of Tulsa, Willis Kleinsasser of Tabor College at Hillsboro, Kan., Herb Falkenburg of Trinity, Paul Berry of Tulsa, and Anthony Persha of Marquette. Whether Walters, Allen or McConnell can come through won't be decided until Saturday. But it looks as though it will be interesting to watch and see. Read the Want Ads Daily. It's A Pleasure . . . To Eat Where The Service Is FAST And The Food Delicious BEEF COOKING Conveniently Located Gemmell's Cafe Always Ready To Serve 717 Mass. FRIDAY. APRIL 21, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS B THREE before, a will be Calif. com- ilfor- thlon football high quad, is a look at celius and They lively fold of obson Tabor Herb try of Mar- Mc- not be looks to Will They Regain Their Titles Saturday? WISCONSIN KANSAS STATE 1 DON GEHRMANN WISCONSIN GLENN CUNNINGHAM MILE HERB HOSKINS, KANSAS STATE BROAD JUMP HAWKINS JERRY BIFFLE, DENVER, 100-YARD DASH Jerry Biffle Must Fret Over Hoskins And Parker Jerry Biffle, spectacular Denver university whirlwind, will likely be a busy and bothered man at Saturday's silver anniversary Kansas Relays. Biffle must worry about protecting his 1949 100-yard dash championship and how to beat out defending champ Herb Hoskins of Kansas State in the broad jump. Then he'll probably take time out to compete in the high jump, an event chock filled with stars. Given any one of those problems alone, the Denverite could probably handle himself well enough. But his early performances this season indicate he may be best off in the broad jump. Texas' Charlie Parker will be foremost of a strong field of entries after Biffle's 100-yard dash crown. Bothered by ill-luck and successive disappointments, Parker at last seems headed for the national prominence forecast for him when he was a schoolboy sensation at San Antonio. Since then he has run 9.5 and 9.6 in the 100 and 21.0 in the 220. In his first competitive start this season, Parker astounded Border Olympics fans at Laredo, Texas, by flashing the 220-yard dash in 20 seconds flat, 3-10 of a second under Jesse Owens's world mark. He also smoked through the 100 in 9.4, the equal of the Relays Record. But—you guessed it—the hard wind behind him. Parker has ruled a pre-meet favorite for the past three Relays. Yet he has won only once, in 1948. As a freshman in 1947, he was upset by teammate Allen Lawler in a downpour. Last year he was forced out at the last minute by a pulled muscle which sidelined him nearly all year. Bigger things had been expected of a high school phenom who had ripped 20.5 in the furlong and matched 9.5 in the century several times. 10 JACK GREENWOOD, KANSAS 120-YARD HIGH HURDLES Until last week Hoskins, Ward Haylett's ace from Bennington, ranked a solid favorite in his specialty. He shared first place at the Texas Relays at 24 feet $11^{\frac{1}{2}}$ inches with Oklahoma A. and M.'s John Voight. He will be defending champion in the Big Seven outdoor meet and in March won his first league indoor title in Kansas City. Parker and Biffle must be ready to tackle one of the toughest Relays sprint fields of all time. The competition lines up this way: Paul "No Leags" Bienz, Tulane; Don Fetty, Drake; Clark Rice, Minnesota; Byron Clark, Missouri; Marcellus Boston, Iowa; and Perry Samules, Texas. Bienz is probably the most menacing. He beat Parker in 1948 at the Drake Relays and again at the N.C.A. that year. The Southeastern conference king is a chunky driver who runs with Parker's same power. Rice recently was crowned Big Ten indoor champ, while Clark is king of the Big Seven indoors. Pettie is defending Missouri Valley titleist in the 100 and 220 and was second to Biffle in 1949. Samuels ran fourth here a year ago. As a sophomore last year he unwrapped the second longest winning leap in K. U. Relays history, 24 feet $9\%$ inches to win the Wildcats' first Mt. Oread championship in that event. He went on to cop the National Junior A.A.U. championship 150 HARRY COOPER, MINNESOTA POLE VAULT HORSE Voight, of course, must be considered. He followed his effort at Austin with a 23-foot-75% inch span in Birmingham last Saturday to bag the Southern Relays crown. He won the Aggie Preview Relay at 25 feet 5% inches and the Border Olympics in 23 feet 1 inch. He also is defending champion in the Missouri Valley conference. They placed third and fourth respectively at Texas, only an inch apart at 24 feet $ \frac{1}{4} $ inches and 24 feet at $ \frac{1}{4} $ inches. Other top-flight contenders will be Jim Danielson, Hoskins's K-State stablemate; and Luther "Bugs" Fambro, North Texas State's all-purpose performer. Buttle probably could go after the decathlon title with respect. He is defending Kansas Relays king in the 100-yard dash and also owns marks well over 6-feet in the high jump, an event in which he tied for second here a year ago. BILL CARROLL, OKLAHOMA POLE VAULT Bifille's recent leap also was 3 inches beyond the ancient K.U. Relays record hung up by Iowa's Olympic champion, Ed Gordon, in 1931. Given fair weather the Hoskins-Biffle dual could threaten this standard for the first time since it was erected. Gordon is the only 25-foot jumper on the Relays books. Gehrmann Will Have Least Trouble The personal score between the two leapers stands at 2 to 1 in Hoskins favor. He clipped Biffle by $ \frac{1}{4} $ inches for the A.A.U. title last June and also sent him into second place here. Biffle outscored the K-State junior at the N.C.A.A. by finishing second to champion Fred Johnson of Michigan State. Hoskins sunk to eleventh there at 22 feet $ \frac{5}{4} $ inches far below his usual standard. Biffle reached 24 feet $ \frac{3}{4} $ inches. Don Gehrmann should win. Jack Greenwood might. Harry Cooper and Bill Carroll will probably have to fight amongst themselves again. That sizes up the situation for the defending champions in the Glenn Cunningham mile, 120-yard high hurdles, and pole vault at Saturday's 25th annual Kansas Relays. Gehmann, Wisconsin wonderman who rates as the nation's No. 1 miler, last year equalled the 4:10.1 record for the Cunningham mile. This year he may better that. He'll be opposed by five men. Topping the list are Alf Holberg of Tennessee and Javier Montez of in Los Angeles at 24 feet 7 inches, his second best jump of the year. If the sparkling Negro all-round ace can approach that mark here, Hoskins will be obliged to top his previous best effort to win. It remains to be seen whether or not Biffle's Boulder feat was a singleton flash. His previous high was 24 feet $5\%$ inches. Since April 1, however, Biffle has assumed a high rating. He let go with an indoor leap of 25 feet $7\frac{3}{4}$ inches at the Colorado Invitational Relays. This is just $1\frac{1}{4}$ record off the world's indoor record and .3 inches better than any United States broad jumper was able to accomplish last year even outdoors. West Texas State. Others are Bill Conrady, Loyola of Chicago; Frank Price, Savannah, Ga., State college; and Howard Johnston, Trinity of San Antonio. Holmberg is a transplanted Swede who won the Sugar Bowl mile Jan. 1 in New Orleans. Montez is mile champion of the Texas and Arizona Relays. Kansas' own Greenwood will have his biggest barrier to a repeat high hurdle championship in Bradley's Roy Greive. Greenwood, clocked in 14.6 while winning in 1949, was beaten by Greve at the Texas Relies in 14.7, although the Kansan had the best qualifying time of 14.5. Since then Grewe ran 14.4 at the Southern Relays, the best early outdoor time recorded this spring. More impressive, the Brave ran into the wind. Elliott ran third at Texas and, like Greenwood, always is better outdoors. He beat the Jayhawker by an eyelash last year for the Big Seven outdoor title, both runners being timeed in 14.4 while running Greenwood's Big Seven mates will furnish the remainder of the serious opposition. This lineup includes Earl Elliott of Kansas State, defending conference outdoor king; Nebraska's Ray Fagsam, the indoor champ, and Bob Berkshire; and possibly K. U.'s sonhombre Bob Devinney. over a heavy track into a raw wind. Elliott also finished third in last year's field here. Magsamen, a tough competitor who'll also be a threat in the javelin, won the Big Seven indoor 60-yard crown. Berkshire has been high in the loop picture for two years and was second to Greenwood in last week's K.U.-N.U. dual. Minnesota will present two other threats in Fred Brass and Jim Nielson. Cooper and Carroll simply appear due to perform an encore. Minnesota's Cooper did no better than third place at the Big Ten indoor this year. But he has been consistently between 13 feet 6 inches and 14 feet for two years and still can be classified as a major threat. Carroll, the lanky Oklahoman, has climbed 14 feet twice this year, the latest occasion being for a first-place tie at the Texas Relays with an even 14. He hit 14 feet $ \frac{3}{4} $ inches indoors in a dual against Kansas and later came within $ \frac{3}{4} $ inch of the 14-foot mark in the Big Seven indoor. Paul Faulkner of Abilene Christian, Ed Ulvestad of Michigan, and Don Cooper of Nebraska appeared the top three in the league but just week Cornhusker Cooper barely missed 14 feet in a dual meet with K. U. NOW OPEN 4:30 p.m. GOLFING - Open Weekdays—4:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. - Sat. & Sun.—2:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. - Use our clubs or your own. Come out and play our new 18 hole miniature golf course when it opens soon—it will be laid out on a 22,500 sq. ft. plot. H Jayhawk Golf Driving Range 1 Mile East of Haskell on 10 You drive 'em—We'll shag 'em 1.4.00 B FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 WOW! LOOK AT THOSE JAYHAWKERS GO! Stop in and see these Lawrence Merchants who are Boosting the Track Team Adelane's 823 Mass. Litwin's 831 Mass. Terrill's 803 Mass. Southern Pit 1834 Mass. Johnson's 835 Mass. Logan-Moore Lumber Co. 627 Mass. Ernst & Son Hardware 826 Mass. Shaw Lumber Co. 701 Vermont Greene's Ready-To-Wear 845 Mass. Lescher Shoe Shop 8121/2 Mass. F. FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS B FIVE Big Seven Athletes Will Fight For Honors At Kansas Relays Big Seven athletics will be in the thick of battles for every individual championship and university division relay title on the docket at Saturday's silver aniversary Kansas Relays. A year ago conference members won five of the ten individual events and shared a triumph in another. They coped four of the seven university relays. This year they probably won't win many more—competition from the outside is stiffer but they are quite likely to set better marks. As far as Relays records go, the Big Seven isn't so well off. It owns only three individual marks, and two of those are at metric distances, run only in Olympic years. No relay record belongs to the conference. It would doubtless like some. Host Kansas will send good four-mile and two-mile relay teams into action. Members of the squad are Cliff Abel, Pat Bowers, Captain Bob Karnes, and Herb Semper. They are admittedly after a new American record in the four-mile event. At the Texas Relays they came within 4.8 seconds of the present national standard. The Jayhawkers also have a top individual candidate in Jack Greenwood, defending champion in the 120-yard hard hurdles. The Jayhawkers' friend and neighbor, Kansas State from Manhattan, fields a squad not like Kansas'. Kansas State concentrates on performers in field events. And it will have a first-class man in every field match but the pole vault. Leading the Wildcat delegation will be Herb Hoskins, defending champ in the broad jump, and Virgil Severn, surprising high jumper. Each could win his specialty without pulling an upset. One of the Big Seven's steadiest performers— MCHS ROLLIN PRATHER KANSAS STATE But the Wildcats aren't blanked on the track. They have ace Earl Eliott who'll give Greenwood and others a hard time in the high hurdles. weight man Rollin Prather—is also with the K-State squad. Oklahoma has an individual cochampion in Bill Carroll, pole vaulter. He could easily win the skyclimbing event. The Sooners also have a relay title to defend, the sprint medley. However, they are That O.U. squad set a new record at the Texas Relays by running 3:15.6. Still the Sooners got no better than second, Rice to be on hand Saturday, swished in 3:14.5. Sparkling sophomores Charles Coleman and Jerry Meader lead the Sooner quartet. unlikely to do best with their one-mile foursome. Missouri is always strong in the dashes events and specializes in that field again this season. With Randy Vanet and Captain Bob Schuster recovered from injuries which wrecked them indoors, the Tigers can present potent strength in the 440, 880, and mile relays, Coach Tom Botts' squad has won the 880 here in the past five meets. With sprinting sophomores Byron Clark and Harold Carter to team with Vanet and Schuster, Botts may be in again. Nebraska offers defending decathlon king Jim McConnell, hurdler Bob Berkshire, and vaulet Don Cooper as its top individual entries. And the Cornhuskers could produce a top sprint medley team with Harry Meginnis, Harold Kopf, Loyal Hurlbert, and Lee Moore available. Colorado has defending champ Jim Allen in the shot put for an individual star, but is now minus top dashman Don Campbell. Campbell graduated the past quarter after a disappointing indoor season. Iowa State is probably the weakest entry, having deteriorated from its great wartime strength. Coach George Bretnall—who's always had a team in the Mt. Oread Olympics will have entries in the two-mile relay and shorter relays. In addition he'll be represented in the hurdles. Wrigley Missed His Calling Cleveland, Miss.—(U.P.)—When her automobile radiator started to leak, far out in the country, Mrs. E. J. Nott reached for a package of chewing gum. Then she used the chewed-up gum to plug the leak until she reached a service station. Boomerik Boomerik Boomerik Boomerik OKLAHOMA'S mile relay team, 1950 Big Seven champions. Left to right: Jerry Meader, Kenneth Biggins, Carroll Swickey, and Charles Coleman. WELCOME VISITORS To The 25th K.U. Relays HEAR STAN KENTON'S "Innovations In Music" After The Parade At The RECORD RENDEZVOUS L. L. SMITH CO. 846 Mass. Phone 725 A GREAT TEAM! Jayhawkers & Fords ALWAYS OUT FRONT With Record-Breaking Performances YOUR FRIENDLY FORD DEALER Morgan-Mack Motors 714 Vermont Phone 3550 B SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 Welcome 25th Anniversary Aniversa KANSAS Kansas Rel CAPTAIN BOB KARNES, Senior, is best Kansas distance runner since Glen Cunningham. Five times indoor and outdoor two-mile champion. Three times Fall two-mile king; second in Nat'l AAU 1,500 meters in '49; won Nat'l Junior AAU 10,000 meters in 1948. Won Mo-Valley AAU mile in 4:16.5; won Big-7-Southwest Dual two-mile in 9:28, eighth in NCAA 2-mile June,'49. ALL AMERICA, HONORABLE MENTION'49. 75 PAT BOWERS, Senior, one of Midwest fastest runners. Set Big 7 indoor record for $ \frac{1}{2} $ mile this March, 1:54.8. Established 1:52.2 mark in Big '7 - Southwest dual. Won Nat'l Junior AAU 800 meter; fourth in NC AA 880 with 1:51.2; 3rd in Senior division AAU 800 meters. ALL AMERICAN HALF-MILER 1949. X ,1950 FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS B SEVEN ery or, test oris b- bin. hl. UUC CORD UR- ER PETER GREENLEAF BILL EASTON, KANSAS HEAD TRACK COACH, has piloted KU two-mile teams to three Big 7 championships. Coach Easton's 'Hawkers' finished seventh in NC AA cross country in 1948, sixth in 1950. Easton runners have dominated distance events in the last two indoor and outdoor meets. He has produced such sensations as Bob Karnes, Pat Bowers, Jack Greenwood, Cliff Abel, Dave Breidenthal, Bob DeVinney, Herb Semper. JACK GREENWOOD, Junior hurdler, will be a Jayhawkier mainstay. He scored two upset wins Spring '49, Kansas Relays, 120 yd. high hurdles crown in :14.6, 220 yd. lows in :23.8 at Big 7-Southwest dual. Won 220 yd. lows in Mo-Valley, AAU trials last June. NBAYS The Fraternities of Kansas University are Rooting for you- SIGMA NU DELTA CHI SIGMA CHI KAPPA SIGMA ALPHA TAU OMEGA ACACIA LAMBDA CHI ALPHA PHI KAPPA PHI KAPPA SIGMA PHI DELTA THETA SIGMA PHI EPSILON SIGMA PI TRIANGLE PHI KAPPA TAU PI KAPPA ALPHA TAU KAPPA EPSILON SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON PHI GAMMA DELTA BETA THETA PI PHI KAPPA PSI DELTA TAU DELTA DELTA UPSILON B EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 Women's Intramural Program Is A Big Girl Now 1952 These women are top contestants in the University's intramural program for women. They are, from left to right; Betty Thomas, junior; Ruth Henry, junior; Elsie Lemon, senior; Rita Carl, sophomore; and Betty van der Smissen, 2nd year law student. This quintet has been particularly active in the program. By MONA MILLIKAN From a crawling one-sport, one-tournament baby, K.U.'s women's intramural program has grown until it now stands squarely on its own feet with a ninesport, nine-month schedule. It is composed of 18 different athletic events including 10 regular tournaments, four class-games tournaments, and four sports days. From a meager beginning of three to five times this year it now occupies more than 200 to 300 women in two or three different sports at any one time. Quack club for the swimmers and the women's rifle team provide opportunity for practice and advanced training in these fields. The Women's Athletic association, for women with 128 or more intramural points, joins with Sasnak physical education teams to social atmosphere for the athletes as well as a means of creating interest and solving problems. This increased activity in athletics on the part of K.U. women is due largely to the efforts of Miss Ruth Hoover, associate professor of physical education. She came' to the University in 1921 when women dressed for sports in cumbersome, outlandish garb, and braved the cold. With the help of her well as society. Aided by society's gradual-though-grudging change in attitude, she has built the program to its present size. Women's interest in physical education as a profession has grown with the interest in intramurals until 57 women are majors at present The work of Miss Joie Stapleton associate professor of physical education, in procuring the use of Lawrence elementary school playgrounds and pupils as a laboratory for p.e. majors, has greatly enhanced the University's entire departmental scheme. So today it is no shock for a K.U. fellow to find his "belle of the ball" is equally at home with the balls belonging to equipment of the various sports. Far from being looked down upon as an outcast and a tomboy, the modern female is often respected for her athletic prowess. In fact, a B.W.O.C. at K.U. is often tops in sports as well as in other activities, and may even outshine the physical education majors in all-around participation. Fantastic? Not a bit! For instance, let's take a look at four representatives of what the well-rounded career of a University woman can and should be. Helen Piller, personnel administration senior of Kappa Kappa Gamma, is a recent Jayhawker magazine "B.W.O.C." Present officer in Mortar Board and the A.W.S. Senate with past leadership in the A.S.C., Student Union activities, and the Y.W.C.A. she has, nevertheless, found time to play on the Kappa's volleyball and finalist basketball teams. Due to her outstanding performance during season play this year, she was selected for the senior class "A" basketball and volleyball squads. Arlene Hill, Alpha Delta Pi pc. junior, is W.A.A. president, a member of Jay James, and active in her church youth group. She was named a member of the honorary varsity hockey team and, because of her FISHING AND CAMPING IN THE Quetico - Superior Wilderness Complete outfitting service $3.50 a day with Grumman aluminium canoes. Food, your choice of 60-page Casse Country picture booklet mailed postpaid anywhere for $1.00 "BASSWOOD LAKE LODGE" on Ann.-Canadian border. Main Lodge and 20 log cabins. Modern bathroom facilities. American Plan rates $8.00 and up. Also housekeeping cabins. season performance, was selected for both volleyball and basketball junior class "A" teams. Lorraine Ross, humanities junior and member of Kappa Alpha Theta holds top offices in her sorority house, on the A.W.S. Senate, and in W.A.A. "Larry" played on the Theta's volleyball and semi-finalist basketball teams and was chosen for the junior class "A" basketball squad. She also received a letter at the W.A.A. honors banquet. WILDNESS OUTFITTERS One. ELY, MINNESOTA Now that you've had the proper build-up, let's see what has happened so far this year. Betty van der Smissen, second-year law student, holds active interest in Y.W.C.A., I.S.A., A.W.S., Mortar Board, and campus politics as well as participating in every sport but swimming. Erstwhile Locksley hall mainstay, but now Carruth hall proctor, "Vandy" holds this year's tennis championship, was badminton finalist, and was selected for membership on the varsity and honorary hockey and volleyball teams. While the men's Varsity teams were having their ups and downs, the women's Varsity squads continue their championship march in overwhelming Baker, Ottawa, and Washburn opposition for the fourth straight year in both the hockey and Jeanne Hillyer and Nancy Smart won the table tennis doubles tournament to put Kappa Kappa Gamma in a sport which had been dominated for two years by Locksley teams. In capturing the tennis singles title, Miss van der Smissen represented the fourth different house in as many years to win that sport. volleyball sports days. They hope to continue an equal record in the future softball and swimming competition. About 100 to 150 women are entered in each of the badminton, table tennis singles and doubles, and tennis singles elimination tournaments this year. The badminton title went to Rita Carl, Pi Beta Phi, who also showed up in the table tennis singles finals. She broke a two-year badminton reign by Locksley hall to win. Table tennis singles honors, however, went to Caroline Crosier, Jayette. Her victory upset three-time champion Doris Tihen, Gamma Phi Beta. Not satisfied with University titles, Miss Carl and Miss Crosier then teamed to win the women's doubles in the state table tennis tournament. Miss Carl went on to place second in women's singles and joined a former K.U. student, Oliver Layton, to win the mixed doubles. IT'S NOT TOO LATE !! You Can Still Make That Summer Trip To Europe WITH INTERNATIONAL YOUTH PARIS BY AIR $360 ROUND TRIP Flights to LONDON and ROME Write or phone International Youth Inc. 150 Broadway, The Kappa's tallied their third consecutive swimming title, aided by the meet's high-point women, Kathleen McKelvy and Josephine Stuckey. "Jody" won her fourth side overarm championship to best Doris Tihen's three-year table tennis singles reign as the longest individual hold on any event in the past four years. New York 7, N.Y. COrtland 7-0362 Corbin captured both basketball and volleyball championships to duplicate the A.D.PI's five-year-old feat. After erratic season and tournament play, the Corbin volleyball team managed to outpoint the Delta Gamma squad in the finals for triumph No. 1. They settled down in basketball and cautiously outmaneuvered all opposition through the season, and continued past the Kappa's, surprise finalist, to win their second title. To assure passage write immediately Yet to be completed are the softball and swimming sports days; the golf, softball, and tennis doubles tournaments; and the softball class games. Honorary varsity hockey and volleyball teams were named at the W.A.A. fall honors banquet, and the honorary varsity basketball and softball teams will be named this spring. Awards to high-point women will also be given. members of that team to Corbin will aid the attempt. Possible softball champion this year is Corbin. Twice winner in the past three years, it seeks to regain the title lost last year to the Jayettes. It may be that the move of several Golf and tennis, however, are completely open. Former tennis winners are either graduated or not entered. Golf has returned to the schedule once more with nearly 30 entries, and enthusiasts hope this time for success. Although the sweepstakes trophy was discontinued in 1948, the Kappa's led the field in total points for three of the past four years, with the Pi Phi's and A.D.Pi's close behind. Professor Hoover says the Kappa's won the trophy all but a very few times during the years the award was given. And so another intramural season will soon be over. Although competitive spirit is slackening some from that shown during the war years, it has been an interesting year. And the girls who participated know whom to thank for it—Miss Ruth Hoover. Cleveland, O.—(U,P)—A farmer in suburban Olmsted Falls saw a mouse run under the door of his broom closet. He stuffed his winter underwear into the crack under the door to hold the mouse until morning, when he could take measures. Came morning, the farmer pulled the underwear out of the crack and discovered (1) several large holes in the woolies, and (2) no mouse. Beaten At His Own Game Best of Luck To Kansas Relay Teams On Your SILVER ANNIVERSARY WELCOME RELAY FANS To The STUDENT UNION pohe tp5tttthI sslHtttthI FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 UNIVERSITY, DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS B NINE Men's Intramural Program Just Grows And Grows CHAPELBURG, GA. - THE JAMES C. HALL BASKETBALL GROUP WAS LOOKING FOR A THREE-MINUTE DECADE OF MASTERS AT THE BLAKE COUNTY MUSEUM. By RAY SOLDAN The men's intramural sports program at the University, one of the largest programs of its kind in the nation, keeps growing every year. A new record for participation in the program is being set during the present school year. Approximately 5,800 men will have participated in the 10 sports and 15 tournaments on the 1949-50 intramural schedule at the completion of play in May. This is an increase of nearly 1,000 participants over the past year. Don Powell, director of intramurals, and his assistants have organized the program so that men of all levels of ability will be able to compete. The program is primarily for the "recreation, relaxation, and enjoyment of the male population of the University," Mr. Powell stated. "There are limited facilities now, but the new fieldhouse—which was told to the legislature on the basis of the intramural program—should alleviate bad hours and week-end play." The intramural staff has succeeded in building up student interest as the 5,800 figure for participants in 1949-50 would indicate. The next big goal is to get the faculty interested in the program. Three faculty teams were entered in volleyball competition this winter—two from the physics department and one from the English department, and two faculty teams are entered in spring badminton play—Romance language department and football staffs. The intramural play is divided into three seasons—fall, winter, and spring. Sports on the fall schedule are touch football, horseshoes, golf, tennis and badminton. On the winter schedule are basketball, volleyball, and bowling, and on the spring program which opened the past week are softball, tennis, golf, horseshoes, handball, badminton, and swimming. A summary of intramural play in the various sports thus far in the 1949-50 school year is as follows: Touch football--More than 1,000 men played on the 58 teams which were entered, Beta Theta Pi won the class "A" championship and Sigma Chi won the "B" championship. Both teams were fraternity league champions. The Betas downed the Dix club, independent "A" league champs, 40 to 0, and Sigma Chi edgeged Jim Beam's Dream Team, kingpins of the independent "B" league, 13 to 7. Golf-James Houghton, Alpha Tau Omega, topped a field of 163 men to win the fall intramural golf championship, Dave Ritchie, Phi Gamma Delta, was runner-up, and Frank Prosser and Fred Brinkman were finalists. Tennis—Bob Swartzell, independent, defeated Charles Crawford, Phi Gamma Delta, 6-4 and 6-1, to capture the fall tennis tourney. Bill Thompson and Dale Ferguson were semi-finalists. There were 136 men entered in the single elimination tournament, a slight drop from the past year. Badminton — Hervey Macferran, Phil Gamma Delta, won his third straight badminton championship by decisioning Bob Timmons, Beta, 15-11, 15-12. Carl Lewton and Jack Banson reached the semi-finals in the 125-man field. Basketball—More than 1500 men took part in the largest basketball program in school's history. Three courts were used as 575 games were played during the three month season. There were 145 teams that competed. Horseshoes—Carl Cole defeated J. O. Biggs, 21-15, 21-5, to win the fall horseshoe tourney. Cole beat Hugh Kreamer and Biggs beat Frank McColloch in the semi-finals. A record number of 126 entrants were in the single elimination tournament. Beta Theta Pi, fraternity "A" champs, defeated the independent kings, the Dark Horses, 37 to 34 for the "A" crown. Phi Delta Theta captured the "B" title with a narrow 35 to 33 victory over Spooner-Thayer. The "C" crown was won by the Beta's in a playoff among winners of the three fraternity "C" leagues. There was no "C" class in the independent play. Volleyball—Phi Delta Theta won the "A" championship by defeating the Fijis, 15-5, 15-3. The "B" title went to Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Sig Alphined Scarab in the "B" championship match, 15-1, 15-13. A record number of teams were entered in volleyball play. About 1,000 men played on 110 teams. More than 200 matches were unraveled in the course of about a month. Seventy-five teams, a record number, are entered in softball competition this spring. Approximately 900 men will participate and about 200 games will be played. In 1949, 750 men on 61 teams played 150 games. Play in the spring sports—softball, tennis, horseshoes, golf, handball, and badminton—began the past week. The swimming meet will be held from Monday, April 24 through Wednesday, April 26, in the Robinson gym pool. It is expected that individual entries in the swimming meet will approach 1949's record of 210. In tennis there is also a record number of teams this spring. Thirty-six teams with four men to the team will play a round-robin tournament. Bowling — The Four Spares — Drexil Forkner, Harry Llorenegl, Jay Nixon, and Dick Routles—outclassed Oard hall No. 1 to win the intramural bowling championship. Play was divided into four leagues with the top two teams of each league entering a single elimination playoff. The Four Spires, Oread No. 1, Pi Kappa Alpha, and Phil Delta Theta were league champions. Forty-four teams and about 200 individual bowlers took part in the season's play. Entrants in spring horseshoes have dropped from the high mark of a year ago. Twenty teams will compete. There are three men to a team. Golf entries have also fallen off from 1949. Twenty-eight teams including 84 men are entered in play this spring. Badminton is on the spring sports program for the first time. There are 16 teams entered in badminton play with six men on a team for a total of 96 men who will participate. Play in intramural handball got under way with 22 teams, another new record, comprising 66 individuals. This is two teams and eight individuals more than the past season. Pat - Mike Finally Retire Boston — (U.P.) Pat and Mike Donoghue, brothers, retired from the Metropolitan Transit authority after a combined total of 91 years' service on the public transportation system. We have . . . The widest selection of smoking pipes in Lawrence. Over 50 tobacco mixtures and choice of straight blend tobaccos for mixing. all guaranteed fresh . . . . The PIPE SHOP 727 Mass. TOM HENRY MEN'S INTRAMURALS IN ACTION is shown in these two pictures. They show lively moments in the annual fight or I.M. basketball honors. Give Your White Elephants 'Green Backs' With KANSAN Classifieds. CONGRATULATIONS K. U. 4. 98 COTTON POPLIN SHIELD CAPS 98c 10 Cool lightweight and shapeholding, these slacks come in grey, green and blue in sizes 28-38. On Your 25th Year of Kansas Relays MENS TROPICAL RAYON SLACKS Enjoy the Relays and forget the sun with one of these caps. Green undervisors and eye-shields that swing up when not in use. Sweat band and inside seams are twill taped. Putty, or natural. 634-7 3/8. MENS KNIT POLO SHIRTS 1.49 a bright colored polo in raschel knit like this is all it takes to complete your outfit for the Relays. Your choice of colors and patterns. Short sleeves. Sizes S-M-L. FABRIC BY: CINEMA LABELS WASHABLE COSSACKS 3. 98 They'll all be wearing one of these because they're Sanforized vat dyed carded cotton poplin that's zelan treated to resist water. Quick zip front, elastic webbing across back for snug fit. 6 colors. S - M - L. ATPENNEY'S B TEN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 WELCOME To The SILVER ANNIVERSARY KANSAS RELAYS From These Friendly Jayhawker Merchants Boyer Motors Nash Dealer 617 Mass. Kirkpatrick's Sport Shop 715 Mass. KU Motor In Chrysler-Plymouth 827 Vermont Coe's Drugs Drugs - Sundries 1341 Mass. L. G. Balfour Co. Fine Jewelry 411 W. 14th Duck's Tavern Seafoods 821 Vermont Lawrence Sanitary Dairy Products 202 W. 6th Keeler's Book Store Books - Supplies 939 Mass. Dingman Furniture Upholstering 1803 Mass. Rapid Transit Bus Company 620 Mass. YOUR SATISFACTION IS OUR PLEASURE LEEDS ENG 21, 1950 FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 0 B ELEVEN No Sophomore Giant Has Bested Colossal Clyde By ROBERT NELSON Clyde Lovellet, Kansas' big, young point-getting machine, erased nearly every Jayhawker basketball scoring record this year with the greatest scoring exhibition ever turned in by a major college sophomore giant. He scored 545 points in averaging 21.8 points a game over a 25- game route. Lovellette, former all-state prep star at Garfield high in Terre Haute, Ind., surpassed the sophomore accomplishments of George Mikan and Bob Kurland, two of the nation's top college cagers of all time. Mikan, considered the top player in professional basketball today and recently voted the greatest basketball player in the past half-century, could average only 18.7 in his first varsity year. After graduating from Garfield in June, 1948, Clyde was perhaps the most sought-after prep player ever to play in Indiana. He considered invitations from 51 major colleges before casting his vote with Kansas. It was his desire to become a coach, so he sought the close tutorage of Kansas' Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen, dean of American basketball coaches. Lovellette, 6-foot 9-inch 230-pounder, moves with the agility of the average 6-footer. He can hook with either hand and score from close in or from the outside. Using this variety of shots, he compiled a remarkable 43 per cent from the field in scoring 214 goals out of 499 attempts to average slightly over 40 per cent throughout the season. Few big men have the terrific stamina of Lovelette. In several of the Jayhawkers' toughest games, he went the full 40-minute route without rest and often scored his most damaging blows in the final minutes when points were needed to win the game. At the free-throw line, he also scored well in hitting 117 out of 181 charity tosses for a respectable 65 per cent. In Kansas' 16th game of the season., against Colorado, Lovellette scored a field goal in the first minute of play to make him the owner of the ball for the second word for one season as he scored his 328th point of the season. The old record was 326 points set by Charlie "The Hawk" Black, former All-American, in the 1945-46 season. Black, considered by many as Kansas's greatest cager of all-time, scored a grand total of 1,082 points in 86 games during his four-year career. This total is the most points ever scored by a Kansas player. He averaged 12.6 points a game during his four years. Lovellette, in his first year, scored over half of Black's four-year total and averaged almost 10 points more a game than Black. Besides his scoring, Black was regarded as one of the greatest rebounders and defensive players ever to play in the Big Seven conference. KANSAS 16 Clyde was one of the best-liked players no matter where Kansas played and was regarded as one of the conference's finest sportsmen. Noted for his fine sense of humor and hisunting tactics, he is often "loving" or "The Clown" by his teammates. CLYDE LOVELLETTE Lovellette has captured the imagination of sportswriters and radio broadcasters who have told of his terrific scoring outbursts with multisyllable adjectives and double-spaced score books. Although only in his first year. Lovellette proved almost un- guardable to three Big Five teams. Here are a few of the nicknames given the fabulous rookie in just his first year: Cumulus Clyde, Cumbersome Clyde, the Peerless Percheron, Colossal Clyde, The Terra Haute Terror, the Prolific Percheron, the Leaning Tower of Kansas, Cloudburst Clyde, and Mt. Lovellette. Lovebettle proved almost unarguable to three Big Seven teams. Missouri, Cincinnati and Kansas State. In two league contests, each of these schools he averaged 34, 29.5, and 26 points respectively a game. With the national recognition K.U. gained in late season, Lovette received probably as many honors as anybody in the history of college basketball. Here are some of the laurels donsed on him by opposing teams and player - selection committees after the close of the season: He was selected on the Helms Athletic Foundation third All-American team. The Helms selections have been considered the most respected in basketball during the past 30 years. Dvide was one of three sophomores left by the No. 1 first-year player listed on either the first or second squads. The 1950 Associated Press third All-American team also included Lovellette. His 25 points against Holy Cross gained him first team honors on the all-Boston Garden team and also on Holy Cross' all-opponent team. Collier's magazine All-American team, selected by the National Association of Basketball Coaches, named only a first and second team, but placed Clyde on the fifth N.C. A.A. district all-star team. Look magazine, whose All-American squad was selected by the maskit all Writers of America, also paid for the cover on the fifth district all-star team. He was named to the all-tournament team following the Big Seven pre-season tournament in Kansas City where he scored 64 points in three games to the mark of Oklahoma's Gerald Tucker. With the three Big Seven teams to select all-opponent squads—Missouri, Kansas State, and Iowa State—Clyde was a unanimous selection. Duquesne university, ranked sixth in the nation by A.P., voted Lovellette as a unanimous choice on its all-opponent team. Associated Press, United Press, and International News Service all-conference selections found Lovellette a solid fixture. The Drake Bulldogs selected the all-in-one error on their all- appetition team also. Clyde finished the regular season as the fourth highest scorer in 1950 major college competition. In Big Seven play, he scored at least 22 or more points against every team but Nebraska. Since he'll meet all conference teams at least four more times in his remaining two years, Big Seven coaches see their work cut out for them. E.C. Quigley Has Enviable Record After Big League Umpire Career Bv JOHN BANNIGAN The man who has the enviable record of having umpired more games than probably any other man in baseball history is Ernest C. Quigley, retiring director of athletics at K.U. In August, 1945, a year after he took over the job as K.U.'s director of athletics, Quig received a letter which had traveled all the way from Europe and half-way across the United States to the Mt. Oread campus bearing the lone inscription, "You Can Do That!—U.S.A." When he opened the letter for him, he told the postoffice hadn't made a mistake in selecting him as the man whom those words had made famous. It was in basketball that these four words became one of sportsdom's legends as Quig's special property. It was the result of a habit he acquired while officiating on the basketball courts of the nation. A fast game was always more colorful with the addition of a streak in a black- and white striped shirt, who sometimes stopped short, pointed an accusing finger at an erring player, and, in a husky roar, bellowed, 'You can't do that!' That phrase, which would be immediately echoed His reputation and the fact that he has been called the most famous Kansas man in the field of sports are not resting solely on his attainments in baseball. His record includes six American World series games and one Japanese World series. The latter is of particular interest due to the fact that the two teams playing in this series were managed by two of baseball's greatest, Ty Cobb and Walter Johnson, and the fact that the games were part of the coronation ceremonies for the present emperor of Japan. "Quig" also conducted coaching schools in football, baseball, and basketball while in Japan. This was in 1928. His career as a baseball umpire started in 1910 and lasted until 1936 when he was made supervisor of umpires in the National league. His presence in the profession has done much to raise the standards of the umpiring fraternity, and many of his fellow umpires, give him credit for numerous improvements that had to do with the game's officials. He had a hand in improving the umpires' dressing quarters and has always been a crusader for better things. by thousands of spectators sem shudders through the frame of many a cocky cage star, and it has brought pleasant memories of great games on the boards to a generation of sports fans. In the field of collegiate football, he was a referee from 1904 through 1927 and he has officiated at three Rose Bowl games. In classics, and one Cotton Bowl game When Quigley took over as athletic director of the University in August, 1944, he faced two major problems. The first was the important task of building up Kansas' varsity teams, and the second was the financial headache of paying off the stadium debt of $113,000. To solve the first problem, Quigley helped legalize the open interviewing of prospective athletes for Big Seven schools. He then brought in George Sauer as football coach. This strategy paid off in 1947 when KU. played in the Orange Bowl. To overcome the second difficulty Quig used a plan by which alumni and friends of the University could buy war bonds, then turn them over to the Alumni association, and in this manner pay off the debt and interest. His efficiency and competence in this venture are evident from the fact that the debt was paid off before the date due. When Quig took over, he said that what he had in mind was a sports program that would interest "the entire state and attract sports-loving people to the University." His program has been successful, judging Lake Kanopolis Now Provides Nearby Vacation Spot For Kansans From now on, Kansans won't have to travel any great distance in order to find a good vacation spot. Lake Kanopolis, situated in Ellsworth county 20 miles_west of Salina, has possibilities of becoming one of the outstanding resort areas of the Middle West. The lake is about 30 miles long, and from one to three miles wide. Seven years ago, the army engineers began construction of a dam across the Smoky Hill river valley for flood control purposes. Two years ago, the dam was completed. It is constructed entirely of earth and stone. The dam is two miles long. 150 feet high, 1,300 feet wide at the base, and 100-feet wide at the top. The army engineers are surfacing roads to the lake, building shelter houses, and planting trees and grass. Welcome Relay Visitors to the 1950 Relays 10 University Radio at Bell Music Co. - Prompt and efficient radio service to accomplish what remains of the unfinished athletic program, but I am sure my successor will finish what is undone. - All work guaranteed 90 days - Pickup and delivery service - Sound and recording equipment "Dutch' Lonborg will bring to the University a life of successful coaching, with an experience in administration that has the stamp of success." from the attention received, not only in football and basketball, but also in the so-called minor sports, baseball, track, golf, and tennis. Speaking of his coming retirement, Quig said. "When one comes to the end of the road—there are always a few things yet to be done. I regret that I will not be on the job at Welcome Relay Visitors Fill up with STANDARD PRODUCTS Dye's Standard Service South Side of Town on Highway 59 WEYENBERG MASSAGIC Air Cushion Shoes Massagie Air Cushion Meet Massagic Comfort Masango for Custin Yields with hair * Aberbs shoes, jersey * Keeps you foot-free The best way to acquaint with Foot Comfort is to wear a pair of MASSAGIC Shoes. When you step into Massagics you'll say "This is it! Come in and FAITH IN IT 13. 00 HAYNES AND KEENE Ph.524 819 Mass. 6 B TWELVE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 Welcome to the 25th Kansas Relays WEST HILLS PKW RD WILL ST MISSOURI MAINE ALABAMA HLINDS Locksley McCook ST MEMORIAL STADIUM Oread H. Recreation Area Potter Lake SNOW STRONG DRIVE JAYHAWK MARVIN ANNEX INDLEY AERO LAB ENGLAND RES' CH. HOCH AUD. HAWORTH ROBINSON GVM FOWLER GROVE GREEN HOUSES VIRUS LAB POKER PLANT ANIMAL LAB STORAGE WATSON LIBR Journalism FRASER HOSP Nurses Home Home Mgmt. House Blake Annex Chancellor's Home Hormon Coop TKE TENNESSEE Intramural Athletic Fields Sunny Side KHK Manchonsia Hopkins Corbin H. Indiana St Sterling Louisiana AOTT Ohio Acacia Foster H AET NFN Mississippi St OREAD MEMORIAL UNION DYCHE MYERS SPOONER University H.S. Carruth H. Danfortth Ch Lilac Lane Bottenfeld WATKINS MILLER Don Henry Co-op KAB KKT JAYHAWKER EYE-VIEW OF K.U. This map is offered as a convenience to the many guests who will be on the campus today and tomorrow by the following Lawrence merchants: ELDRIDGE GIFT SHOP Gifts for every occasion CHARLTON INSURANCE For your every insurance need 'GIB' FRANCIS & SON 728 Mass. - Woodcraft and Sports Equipment UNION CAB Call 2-800 for quick service. RAY'S CAFE 709 Mass.- For that after the relays dinner. KU COLE'S IGA FOOD CENTER 2nd & Lincoln - Free parking while you shop. TOPP'S Cleaners & Self-Service Laundry Phone 243 for tops in cleaning service. ELDRIDGE DRUGS 7th & Mass. - Fountain Service and Drugs. LITTLE OWL SANDWICH SHOP 902 Mass. - Open 24 hours a day. M. F. HUDSON & CO. 800 N. H. - Your Oldsmobile Dealer in Lawrence , 1950 Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks. University Daily Kansan Friday, April 21, 1950 47th Year No.121 Friday, April 21, 1950 Lawrence, Kansas THE STORY OF A MAN WHO BECAME THE LANDMARK OF A FAMILY BY JOHN HOWE 1920 A man from a small town in New York City who became the landmark of a family. The story is set in the early 1920s, during the Great Depression. The family lived in a small town and faced economic hardship. John Howe, a young man, was raised by his parents and his siblings. He was a musician and a painter, but he was also an artist. John Howe's life was marked by tragedy and hardship, as he had to move to a new city in order to support his family. John Howe's life is a tale of resilience and perseverance. Despite the challenges he faced, John Howe remained dedicated to his family and his work. He was a talented artist and a painter, but he was also a writer. John Howe's life is a testament to the power of perseverance and determination. John Howe's story is a heartwarming tale of love and family. John Howe's mother was a strong woman who loved her children deeply. John Howe's father was a man of great strength and wisdom. John Howe's father was a man of great strength and wisdom. John Howe's story is a powerful reminder of the importance of family and community. John Howe's family was a close-knit community that was filled with love and kindness. John Howe's family was a true testament to the power of perseverance and determination. John Howe's story is a beautiful and inspiring tale of love and family. John Howe's family was a true testament to the power of perseverance and determination. Relays Edition - 32 pages Lawrence, Kansas STUDENT NEWSAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 100 Displays At Exposition By CHARLES PRICE The largest engineering students' display ever to be presented at the University got under way today with the opening of the 1950 annual Engineering Exposition. The exhibit is open for three days. Twelve departments of the School of Engineering and Architecture and five other departments of the University are presenting more than 100 interesting displays in Marvin and Lindley halls; electrical, hydraulical, aeronautical laboratories; Fowler shops, and surrounding areas at the southwest part of the campus. Exhibits will continue today until 9 p.m. The displays may be viewed Saturday from 8:30 a.m. till noon, at which time the Exposition will temporarily close for the opening of the K.U. Relays. The exhibits will again be open from 2 to 6 p.m. Sunday. The Exposition is being held to three days this year to accommodate the expected record-breaking crowd of more than 25,000 persons. The two entrances to the Exposition are the front doors of Lindley and Marvin halls. Visitors may enter either entrance to see the complete exhibit. Invitations to this students' display have been sent to Gov. Frank Carlson, members of the state legislature, high schools, and the public. The location of the departmental displays are as follows: Aeronautical engineering, quonset hut directly behind Marvin hall; applied mechanics, 8 Marvin hall and 116 engineering experiment station; architectural engineering, third floor Marvin hall. Chemistry, first floor Marvin hall; chemical engineering, Lindley hall; civil engineering. 7, 11, 207, 208 Marvin hall and hydraulic laboratory; electrical engineering, electrical laboratory behind Marvin hall; engineering drawing, 301s and 301n Marvin hall; mechanical engineering, second floor Marvin hall; and mechanical laboratory; geological engineering, Lindley hall. State Geological survey, Lindley hall; mining and metallurgical engineering, first floor and basement Lindley hall; petroleum engineering, Lindley hall; physics, first floor Marvin hall; shop practice, Fowler shops. Military science, first floor Marvin hall; Kansas Research foundation, KFKU radio station behind Marvin hall and Lindley hall. John Maxon, director of the University, Museum or Art, will give a lecture on "Corsini Master" at 3 p.m. Sunday in the museum. Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, will present a trophy to the department having the best display. The aeronautical department won the trophy last year. A judging team consisting of 12 members of Sigma Tau will tour the exposition at 3 p.m. today to choose the winning display. Each department of the engineering school will be represented by. one of the judges. The winning display will be marked and announced Saturday morning. Story On 'Daze' In New K-Union A story about "College Daze" and a feature editorial by Marian Rippeteau. College senior, will be included in the next issue of the K Union, official Student Union publication. Mary Louise Fischer, editor of the K Union, said the issue will also contain an unusually large number of pictures. It will be distributed on the campus Saturday morning. BETTIE Maxon To Lecture Sunday JOYCE LAWRENCE Queen of the Kansas Relays Young Bob Sankey of Republic was the winner of the first race of the week end when he triumphed in the initial qualifying heat of the Class B 120-yard high hurdles at the Interscholastic meet this morning. By RICHARD DILSAVER, Sports Editor The Interscholastic will continue throughout the afternoon, running concurrently with the first half of the grueling 10-event decathlon. The University's annual spring week end of athletic extravaganza—the 25th Kansas Relays and the 46th Kansas Interscholastic Relays—commenced today. And the best of it is yet to come. Track Stars Vie For Titles At 9 a.m. Saturday the big boys take over the show with Relays preliminaries scheduled. They go to work in earnest on final events at 1:15 p.m. following the opening ceremonies by the University band. Relays Queen Begins Reign Joyce Lawrence, Wichita university beauty, has been "fluttery inside" ever since she heard of her selection as queen of the 25th annual K.U. Relays. The 18-year-old brunette arrived in Lawrence at 8 p.m. Thursday. "I thought they were kidding when I was told I had been chosen queen," Miss Lawrence said. "When I realized it was true, I was very, very thrilled." Serving as attendants to the queen are Marilyn Davis, student at Washburn university, Topeka, and Jean Petcake, student at Kansas State college, Manhattan. Four University women will be hostesses in the queen's court. They are: Jonell Ascraft, College sophomore; Elaine Modrell, journalism junior; Marilyn Ringler, College freshman; and Jamie Estlack, pharmacy senior. A round of activities has been planned for the seven women by Student Union Activities. This morning they attended the Engineering Exposition. From 2 to 4 p.m. today they will be guests at an open house given by the Jay James in the Kansas room of the Union. The Relays Queen dinner is scheduled for 6:15 p.m. in the English room. Entertainment will be furnished by John Long, College freshman, who will perform magic tricks. Win Koerper, College sophomore, will be master of ceremonies. Following the dinner, the queen and her court will tour the campus and Lawrence. The queen and her court will lead the Relays parade tomorrow. Beginning at 10 a.m. at Sixth and Massachusetts streets the parade will move to South park. The queen will ride in the first car, her attendants in the second, two hostesses in the third and two in the fourth car. At 11:30 a.m. a luncheon will be held at the Castle tea room. When Miss Lawrence is introduced at the K.U. Relays Saturday, afternoon, she will wear a navy blue suit with navy and white accessories. She will be escorted by Clay Roberts, Jr., College freshman. Miss Davis will be escorted by Allen Dagel, College senior, and Miss Petracek, by Paul Uhlig, College senior. The seven women will be guests at the Relays ball which will be held from 8 p.m. to midnight in the Union ballroom. The queen and her attendants were selected from photographs of 32 candidates from colleges and universities in Kansas. They were judged by Ken Neuman of Neuman Photo laboratory, Kansas City, Mo. and Jack Stevens of Stevens Modeling school, Kansas City, Mo. —Photo by Bob Boh Miss Lawrence, an education major at Wichita university, plans to teach the fourth grade at Plainview Grade school, near Wichita, next year. She will be married in August to Merill Thompson, a Wichita university student. The 5 feet $7 \frac{1}{2}$ inches tall queen makes interior decorating her hobby. She also designs some of her own clothes. Miss Lawrence is a member of Sorosis sorority. This year she has been selected as queen of the Wichita university yearbook, "Parnassus." DONNA WILLIAMS 1948 AND HER SONS JEANINE BENNETT AND STEVEN ROBINSON The four K.U. hostesses were chosen by personal interview. They DRINKING A TOAST to members of the K.U. track team are the four hostesses in the court of the Relays queen. Left to right they are: Jamie Estlack, pharmacy senior; Elaine Modrell, journalism junior; Marilyn Ringler, College freshman; and Jonell Ashcraft, College sophomore. were selected from 49 candidates submitted by the organized houses. Jonell Ashcraft, who was the University's candidate for the queen, is a member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority. The 19-year-old ash blond is 5 feet 6 inches tall. She is a member of Sigma Tau, Junior Panhellenic, and the Y.W.C.A. Black haired, brown eyed Elaine Modrell is a member of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority, the Fencing club, and the Secretarial committee of Student Union activities. The past fall she was a finalist in the elimination round to choose a Lawrence candidate for American Royal queen. Marilyn Ringler, Pi Beta Phi, was football queen at Liberty Memorial High school the past year. The 18-year-old blond won first place in the 50 meter free style swim in women's intramurals this spring. Twenty-one-year-old Jamie Estlack is past president of Sigma Kappa sorority, a member of Kappa Epsilon, professional pharmacy sorority, and Iota Sigma Pi, honorary chemistry sorority. Miss Estlack received the Kappa Epsilon national scholarship award for having the highest grade point average of any member of the organization in the country. Gifts will be presented to the queen and her court. Miss Lawrence will receive a portable radio and a scholarship to the Patricia Stevens modeling school in Kansas City, Mo. All seven women will be given silver necklaces with trackshoes engraved with "KU. Relays-1950." Inquest Tuesday In Clinton Death An inquest into the death of Thomas "Steve" Clinton, 29, junior in the School of Medicine, will be held at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, April 25. Dr. J. A. Knoop, Johnson county coroner, said Thursday. Clinton was killed when his can stalled, and it was struck by a freight train three miles north of Olathe, Kan. I. A. Billings, Johnson county sheriff, theorized that Clinton had attempted to move his car from the tracks, then gave up and started moving things out of the car. Clinton got into the car again to try to move it, and the train hit the vehicle. Billings said. Funeral services will be held at 9 a.m. Monday, April 24, at the Cathedral Catholic church, Wichita. Burial will be in Calvary cemetery. Wichita - Students will be admitted to the Relays on activity tickets. Their seats will be on the east side of the stadium. The weather this week end is perfect for the Relays. Temperatures today will rise into the 70's and there is only a slight wind. It is expected to be warmer Saturday. The field of more than 1,500 boys from 164 schools is expected to endanger at least seven records in today's Interscholastic. The Saturday Relay competitors, more than 900 of them, will be given a chance to crack 10 records. Nine of last year's 10 individual champions are returning. Foremost aggregation with record-breaking intentions are the Kansas Jayhawkers who send their four-mile team of Cliff Abel, Pat Bowers, Captain Bob Karnes and Herb Semper after a new record. Always an attraction, the Relays parade is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. Saturday at the corners of Sixth and Massachusetts streets in its swing down the main thoroughfare to 11th street. William Leake, junior member of the Student Relays committee, who is in charge of the parade arrangements, said nine bands will join with the three University R.O.T.C. units, and approximately 30 floats from organized houses. Notable guests include fourteen former referees, five of Kansas' eight Olympic team members, and Glenn Cunningham for whom the special mile run is named. At the head of the parade will be the queen of the silver anniversary Relays, Joyce Lawrence of Wichita university, her attendants, and her hostess queens. The University band will not participate in the parade. Many dinners are being held in connection with the Relays. One of these is a buffet at the Eldridge hotel at 6 p.m. today for coaches and sportswriters. Another dinner of note is that being held by the K- club Saturday. The club will honor top high school athletes. The final event of the gala week end is the Kansas Relays ball in the Union ballroom from 8 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Music will be by Jay McShann's orchestra. Coach Bill Easton's full list of Jayhawker entries is as follows: 120-yard high hurdles, Bob Devinney and Jack Greenwood; high jump, Bill Richardson; pole vault, Jim Floyd; broad jump, Al Bouchard; discus throw, Bob Broady and Bob Kline; javelin throw, Bob Drummand and Jim Fotts; decathlon, Delvin Norris. In the mile relay—Devinney, Jim Dinsmore, Dave Fisher, Greenwood, and Emil Schutzel, with Fisher as alternate; 2-and 4-mile relays—Abel, Bowers, Karnes, and Semper with Dinsmore and Fisher alternates in the 2-mile and Dave Breidental alternate in the 4-mile. Distance medley relay (tentative entry)-Devinney, Dinsmore, Fisher, Greenwood and *Schutzel;* spring medley relay (tentative entry)*—Abel, Breidenthal, Devinney, Dinsmore, Fisher and Schutzel. A TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 After The Relays Are Over... The Fun Begins At The UNION BALLROOM An Informal Dance from 8 till midnight... . Dance to the Nationally Known Music of JAY McSHANN Decca Recording Artist Meet the Relays Queen and her Attendants ... Price ... $1.00 per couple Saturday ... April 22,1950 --- FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS A THREE 222 Juniors, Seniors Pass Enalish Proficiency Examination two hundred and twenty-two students passed the English proficiency examination given Saturday, March 4 to juniors and seniors in the College of Liberal Arts, the School of Education, and the William Allen White School of Journalism. The examination, given three times a year, is a pre-requisite for graduation in each of these schools. It is entirely a composition type of exam. Twenty-seven students in the education school passed, 11 in the journalism school, and 184 in the College. Mrs. Natalie Calderwood, chairman of the committee giving the examination, stated that K.U. was one of the first universities to give this type of English proficiency test, and that many colleges have written her requesting information as to the type of test and who takes it. Mrs. Calderwood also stated that "people are coming to realize the importance of proficiency in English in business and professional life." Other members of the committee giving the examination are A. C. Edwards, associate professor of English; Eldon J. Fields, associate professor of political science; James E. Seaver, assistant professor of history; Herbert Wilner, instructor in English. College: Tiecher S. Abbey Whitley LeRoy Adams Alienle Alderson Bernice M. Altenbernd Altenbernd Sohrab Anis Richard D. Anderson David Colwell Ashby Baldwin B. R. Bainu Catherine E. Barber Jacqueline Baum Hawkins B. Bees Paul B. Beisel Ruth Ann Belt Benjamin S. Benijaminov George P. Bielan Richard A. Blasdel Bernard A. Bodmer Bernice D. Beess Bernice Bossi Edward Boswell Robert Boyd W. Brendt, Jr. Laurine Brooker Schuyler H. Brookfield Carl C. Brown Thompson C. Barnet Donald B. Brown James C. Brown Beuben B. Brown Carl A. Budd William F. Casteen Thompson Cattcah C. C. Cavett J. R. Chamberlain Kenneth K. N. Chun-Ming Emily Clark Gleaves Lois Cook Malcolm G. Copeland Johnny L. Correll Lee Crane Carl J. Crown Wright W. Crummmet William P. Cunningham Dawn Nobert L. Drouhard Keith L. Durlall SHEAFFER'S STATESMAN ENSEMBLE Pen, $10.00—Pencil, $4.00 Complete Set, $14.00; no fed. tax GILHAPERTS LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE 735 Mass. Phone 548 Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add 1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and annexation periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. Education: John E. Earnest, Jr. Victor I. Eddy Michael K. McDonnison Yale Epstein Doyle W. Erkenbeck David M. Fanger A. Feinert Ocpal C. Fleming Phyllis Fortner Ferry W. W. Francis Dee Gagliano Phillip A. Godwin Robert C. Groth Joseph Gubar Hannah Hau Clifford D. Hargis Jack R. Harper Evelyn Harris Katherine Kline Melva J. Hatfield John J. Hayes Mary Lynn Hegarty A. Helgesen Robert Hilkeran Marcel Homan Lee E. Hoopes J. Lowe Hoepe Fred C. Huggins, Jr. Frank W. Hursh Ruth Barbara Hurwitz Wayne D. Jaynes Robert K. Jenkins Charles S. Jones Roland W. Kramprath Charles H. Keilhack Kenneth K. Kamer Kenneth D. Kelley Charles A. Kendall Marvin B. Kincaid Kenneth K. Kamer Richard E. Kukane Mary D. Lackey Donald M. Lanning Iva Ann Linnell Georgia M. Lukens Richard Lichtenstadter Robert D. Lindeman Iva Ann Linnell Georgia M. Lukens Richard Lichenstadter Dale Mallon University Daily Kansan Frank White Plans Senior Recital Journalism: Joseph H. Malone James R. Martin Robert Mercer Bernard B. Califalo Hobart E. Michael William D. Miller Ralph M. Mitchell Mike M. Milne J. Victor Nalley James P. Nelson Richard R. Rickell Ben L. Noten Gerald L. O'Connell R. S. O'Neill A. Clowsksi Jon F. Ortec Marcille Parker Charles A. Philbrick Michael Tickler Victor Pirine Albert R. Pollack Arthur B. Preston Washington W. Robinson Thomas Reger William D. Reilly, Jr. Beverly A. Rhodes Richard D. Rowe Jack L. Robinson Stanton L. Rosenberg Richard D. Rowe N.W. Goulding Marvin Ruggles Curtis G. Sales John W. Sambol Sarah W. Goulding E. Sanderson Delbert J. Scheid Julia Sanchen Rachel B. Chanson Emerson H. Shields Richard C. Showalter Gwendolyn Singer Call K.U. 251 With Your News Betty Lee Skinner Derral Sloan Rainbow Smith Joe Weston Smith Louis F. Smith Richard B. Snell Joseph W. Carroll D. Stenberg James M. Stout Don R. Swain Gerald L. Gerson Maurice J. Swords Delmer D. Tarver Howard Teeter Fred R. Teeter Edward A. Todd Kenneth D. Travius Clyde Tucker, Jr. Daniel V. Nippei John B. Vignery Orville Walker, Jr. Elizabeth H. Ward Marilyn H. McKinney John M. Warder Robert E. Warner R. Jack Warren David D. Moore Norman E. Wenger Robert A. West Edward R. Wheeler Elisabeth W. White Donna J. White Frederick H. Wittmore Esther M. Williams William Ruth Williams Nathan E. Wilson Robert H. Wood Julia J. Jr. Darrell E. Wright Howard E. Wyrick Katsuyuki Yokoyama Beverly Jean Arnold Nuncee Bell John Bockhorst Sarah G. Bowers Harry H. Hammond Nancy Ann Campbell Lawrence Casto Samuel Cheeseman Camille Coberg Mary Keeson Mary F. Hall George Herman Joan Holzapfel Rosemary Keenan Kerry Keean John Kuckelman Natalie Logan Doris McCuse McDonald Mary Alice Nibble John Olsson George E. Reed Louise Sanborn Eugene Thompson Jeanne Wolfie James H. Woods "Symphonic Etudes" from Schumann will be played by Frank White, fine arts senior, in his piano recital at 4 p.m. Sunday in Strong auditorium. Other selections will include Mozart's "Sonata in F Major" and "Concerto in G Major" by Beethoven. White came to the University in 1946. In his freshman and sophomore years he was awarded the Pi Kappa Lambda award as the outstanding student of his class. He also won first prize in a contest sponsored by the National Association of Negro Musicians and has played in piano recitals at Detroit, St. Louis, Columbus, Los Angeles, Indianapolis, and Kansas City, Kan. Jothman Christeron John R. Corporon Joseph E. Lewis Jim Lowther Dewayne Ogleesbier Charles R. Price John Sliman James Silvius Dolph Simons William R. Tatum Joseph B. Ward, Jr. Official Bulletin Friday. April 21 Jay Janes meet 9:30 a.m. Saturday, 6th and Kentucky. Line up behind No. 4. Will march behind queen. Wear uniforms. Unitarian Liberal club, 4 p.m. Saturday, East room, Union. Munroe Husbands, American Unitarian Association, Boston, speaker. K. U. Mennonite Fellowship, 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Plymouth Congregational church. Sigma Tau election of officers. 7:30 p.m. Monday, 426 Lindley. All members attend. Ward T regular meeting, 6:30 p.m. Monday, 205 Fraser. Mathematical colloquium, regular meeting, 5 p.m. Monday, 203 Strong. Mr. Alan Showalter, "On Topics Connected With The Riemann Zeta Function", Special meeting, 5 p.m. Tuesday, 203 Strong. Prof. C. C. MacDuffee, University of Wisconsin, "On Lorenzian Transformations." Bacteriology club, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, 502 Snow. Dr. Paul B. Lawson, "D.D.T." Pre-Nursing club, 4 p.m. Tuesday, dining room, Fraser. Bossie Makes Mis-step Luray, Va. —(U.P.)—Volunteer cowboys lasseod Bossie, Amos Doffelmoyer's prize Guernsey, when she fell into a 20-foot abandoned silo near here. They held her afloat until a canvas was slipped under her and she was pulled out. Now A baby is walking and talking loudly. in White or Pink KOOLEEZ Baby Pants Made with that amazing material, natural creamy liquid latex, with no seams or binding stitches - extradurable Koooleez Baby Pants all over for all over comfort. Waterproof. 10 seconds to suds dainty! . . 10 seconds to pat dry! In pink or white . . . order according to baby's weight. for happy babies small, medium, large and extra large in golden packages in golden packages 69¢ COE'S DRUG 9¢ KOOLEEER Baby Parts For Happy Parents Ph.234 1347 Mass. LINDLEY'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 Relays Weather Forecast?? IF IT'S WARM Long Bill Visor Caps from 49c Fancy T-Shirts from 79c Air Force Sun Glasses $3.88 Sun-Tan Trousers from 2.49 IF IT'S WET And Many Other Warm Weather Items Plastic Rain Coats $1.88 Waterproof Rain Hats 1.98 Water Repellent Jackets from 3.95 Just Received! WHITE TENNIS SHORTS A $3.50 Value for Only $1.98 LAWRENCE SURPLUS PASSING THE TEST The Original Army and Navy Stores 740 & 935 Mass. St. S Ph. 588 & 669 DON'T WAIT . . . DON'T BE LATE Get Your 1950 JAYHAWKER NOW A FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 Up And Coming Housemothers To Meet Housemothers To Meet The MEING. Housemother's association will meet at 2 p.m. Monday, April 24, at Miller hall. Mrs. R. G Roche will be the hostess. A musical program will follow the business meeting. Jolliffe Dinner Dance Jollie hall will get a semi-formal dinner dance from 7 p.m. to midnight Saturday. A circus theme will be carried out in the decorations. Chaperons will be Mrs. Elizabeth Kite, Miss Carlotta Nellis, Mrs. Athea Galloway, Mrs. Lorraine Gosney, and Mrs. Louis Stanley. Pi K A Poverty Party A "Poverty Party" will be given at the chapter house of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity from 9 to 12 midnight Saturday. Chaperons will be Mrs. Charles Mandigo, Mrs. Hugh Crawford, Mrs. Dean Nite, and Mrs. R. H. Wilson. Mu Phi Epsilon Pledges Mu Phi Epsilon Pledges Mu Phil Epsilon, national honorary music sorority, announces the pledging of Jacque Cook, Martha Heck, Benjamin Kehlman, Algen, and Mary Lynn Sommerville, fine arts freshman, and Beverly Wilson and Rita Yakle, fine arts sophomores. Design Club Officers At a recent meeting of the Interior Design club the following were elected to office for next year: Alan Sandeford, president; Judson Greer, vice president; and Jane Klooz, secretary-treasurer. Zimmerman Wins Revlon Contest Barbara Zimmerman. College sop- comore from Wichita, has been named the K.U. "Miss Fashion Plate of 1950" in a contest sponsored by Revon cosmetics. Runner-up was Kathleen Larson. College senior from Wamego. Third place went to Lorraine Mather, College freshman from Stafford. Ten contestants were selected by the Revlon fashion board and the XU. Revlon representative on the basis of beauty and charm, fashion knowledge, dress, personal grooming, personality, and poise. Ballots in the contest, which ended April 15, were counted by the Revlon board and a member of the University Daily Kansan staff. Miss Zimmerman now is eligible to enter the national contest for "Miss Fashion Plate of 1950." Candidates for the national contest are campus winners from many colleges and universities in the United States. Miss Zimmerman will receive a year's supply of Revlon cosmetics. Prizes for the national winner include an expense-free week in Bermuda via Pan American Clipper. WE'D RISK ANYTHING FOR YOU, K. U. TRACKSTERS RISK'S Self-Service Laundry 613 Vermont New officers of Kappa Beta, Christian church sorority, presided at their first meeting Thursday. Pi K A Pledges Welsh Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity announces the pledging of John Welsh College freshman, from Kansas City, Kan. President of the group is Faye Elen Bond, fine arts sophomore. Other officers include Jeanne Wilson, vice-president; Marian Hoecher, secretary-treasurer; Marilyn Barr, worship chairman; Maartha Heck, publicity chairman and historian; and Lois Penny, social chairman. New Officers Preside At Kappa Beta Recently pledged to the group were Karshia Lohman, fine arts freshman; Edna Symms, College freshman; and Carolyn Trayner, fine arts sophomore. New initiates include Marian Hoecher, College freshman, and Mary Lou Ketchum, College junior. Miss Habein To Review Book Before AAUW on April 24 Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, will review the book "Education for Our Daughters," by Lynne White, at a dinner meeting to the American Association of University Women at 6 p.m. Monday, April 24. Reservations should be made with Mrs. William McNown and Mrs. Paul Lawson before Saturday. "With a Song in My Heart," an American musicale, will be presented by Sigma Alpha Iota, honorary music fraternity, at 7:30 p.m. in Strong auditorium. Bernadine Read, fine arts senior, will direct and Lois Bradfield, fine arts freshman, will accompany the chorus and vocal soloists. SAI Stages Musicale Tonight 12 Photo by Frankie Walts Left to right are Rosemarie Hurtig, Carolyn Lacey, Virginia Penny, Gloria Simpson, Phyllis McFarlane, Carolee Eberhart, Martha Whiten, Grace Endacott, Mary Lee Hanry, Peggy Circle, and Shirley Foster. WITH A SONG in their heart, members of Sigma Alpha Iota, national music fraternity, practice for their musicale. With a Song in My Heart," which will be presented today. Shown are Bernadine Read director and Lois Bradfield, pianist. Perth, Australia—(U.P.)—Mrs. D. A. Owen has a cat which strayed into the duck pen a year ago and was accepted by the ducks and ducklings. Today it quacks and hisses. Cat Goes 'Quack-Quack' How much lovelier can a girl look? She's your "MISS FASHION PLATE OF 1950" A. L. H. BARBARA ZIMMERMAN Here she is! The girl you chose as Revlon's "Miss Fashion Plate of 1950". She's just won a year's supply of Revlon cosmetics FREE! Here she is! The girl you chose as Revlon's "Miss Fashion Plate of 1950". She's just won a year's supply of Revlon cosmetics FREI And she's the girl who has a chance to become "Miss Fashion Plate of 1950" for the whole United States! She'll compete in this Revlon-sponsored contest with candidates from colleges and universities from coast to coast for the Grand Prize... a glamorous trip to Bermuda by Pan American Clipper, including an expense-free week at the famous "Castle Harbour" ...and seven other thrilling prizes: an RCA-Victor portable radio; a Lane Hope Chest; an Amelia Earhart Party Case in "Revlon Red" leather; a necklace, bracelet and earring set by Trifari; a silver-plated lighter, cigarette urn and tray set by Ronson; a year's supply of Berkshire nylon stockings; a Wittnauer wrist watch! You all know a winner because you picked a winner! She's another lovely example of why so many girls and women ..to look their loveliest...always look to Revlon. The program will be as follows: For chorus: "With a Song in My Heart" (Rodgers-Hart, arranged by Barr); "Thou Art the Night Wind" (Gaul), "Wing Tee Wee" (O'Hara). "Seasons" (Gaines) and "My Lover He Comes on the Skee" (Clough-Leighter), by Lynn Lucas, contraltio; "Night and Day" (Porter), by Marilyn Barr and Carolee Eber-hart, duo-players. For chorus: "Water-Colors" (Nash) and "Things" (Read), "Music I Heard With You" and "Miranda" (Hageman), by Kitty Walter, soprano; "Scherzo" (Griffes), piano boss by Miss Bradfield. For chorus: "Hi Jinks" (Morrison), "The Rose of S.A.I." (Anonymous). "The Song Is Ended" (Berlin, arranged by Barr). Scholarship Halls Entertain At Tea Regidents of Battenfeld, Sterling, and Oliver halls were hosts at a tea and open house Thursday at Battenfeld hall. Mrs. Caroltta Nellis, Mrs. Althea Galloway, Mrs. Lorraine Gosney, Mrs. Laurence Woodruff, and Mrs. Donald Alderson were hostesses. Out-of-town guests were Mrs. J. R. Battenfeld and Mrs. Edwin E. Curry, of Kansas City. Later they were dinner guests of Battenfeld hall. The following women poured during the afternoon: Mrs. Lawson Kite, Mrs. J. R. Scott, Miss Julia Willard, Mrs. R. G. Roche, Mrs. Vivian Christian, Mrs. Louis Stanley, Mrs. H. M. Miller, and Mrs. Treva Brown. Well Stocked With Ancestors ARROW SPORT SHIRTS Memphis, Tenn.—(U.P.)—Little Duranne Burt of nearby Casilla, Miss., is well-equipped with living ancestors. A recent count showed Duranne had four living great-grandmothers, three great-grandfathers, two grandmothers and two grandfathers. at . . . . . . . Glad to show you CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES THE PLAID SHIRT ARROW COMFORTABLE! GOOD LOOKING! "Dude Ranch" Sports Shirts Short Sleeves $4.50 Long Sleeves $5 For that next square dance, for piemics, for sitting in the bleachers, you'll be most comfortable, and look your casual best in one of Arrow's smart "Dude Ranch" shirts. Bold plaids and checks in sturdy, washable cotton. They're honeys! ARROW SHIRTS & TIES UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS "A Complete Line of Arrow Products" at the Palace Clothing Company FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS A FIVE Two Pinnings, An Engagement Announced Today Varnum-Dausman Hopkins hall announces the pinning of Miss Joanne Varnum, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. W. L. Varnum of Yates Center, to Mr. Jack Dausman of Malibu, Calif. Ivy The announcement was made by Mr. Loren Corliss at the Alpha KappaLambda spring formal. Mr. Corliss entered the room and shouted, "Close the windows and shut the door, somebody has stolen Jack Dausman's fraternity pin." Miss Varnum confessed that she was guilty. MISS JOANNE VARNUM Miss Varnum is a fine arts junior. Mr. Dausman is a business junior and a member of the Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity. THOMAS AND ROSIE MAYER -Photo by Hank Brown. Bigham, Frieling Joan Bigham Pinned Chi Omega sorority announces the pinning of Miss Joan Bigham, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Bigham of Bethel to Mr. Jerry Frieling, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Frieling of Kansas City, Mo. The announcement was in the form of a poem read by Miss Ann Cowinger. The Sigma Alpha Epsilon quartet sang, "Miss Bigham's attentions were the Misses Joyce Bigham, Janet Morrison, Barbara Brown, Virginia Osborne and Flora Lee Pringle. They received yellow iris corsages. Mrs. R. H. Wilson, housemother, received a corsage of red carnations and Miss Bigham wore two white orchids. AUGUSTINE HENDERSON MISS JOAN BUSHEY Bushey-Mason Mr. and Mrs. Chester L. Bushey of Newton announce the engagement of their daughter, Joan, to Mr. Claude E. Mason, son of Mr. Harvey R. Mason of Wichita. Miss Bushey, a journalism senior, is president of Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Mr. Mason was graduated from the University in January with a degree in architecture. He is a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. 14th Queen, Second From Another School, To Reign On Silver Anniversary Of KU Relays When Miss Joan Lawrence of the Municipal University of Wichita dons her crown Saturday, she will be the 14th beauty to reign as queen of the Kansas Relays. The wedding will be in late June. The first Kansas Relays queen was Betty Lou McFarland. She was chosen by Gene Venkze, middle distance runner of the University of Pennsylvania in 1934. Miss Mary Margaret Manary was to reign as queen in 1935. Ted Husing, radio star, selected her and her two attendants from pictures submitted to him. The queen for 1936, chosen by Sophic Tucker, was Isabelle Perry. She was the third consecutive member of Pi Beta Phi sorority to receive the honor. Teams from Iowa, Nebraska, Wisconsin, and Minnesota chose Betty Martin, Kappa Alpha Theta; Helen Johnson, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Ruth Rodgers, Delta Gamma; and Virginia McGill, Kappa Alpha Theta, to present the trophies for the next four Kansas Relays. In 1937, the method of selecting the queen was changed. A participating track team was allowed to name the Relays queen. That year, Indiana's track team chose Isabelle Bash of Gamma Phi Beta for the honor. When the Relays were resumed in 1946, the tradition of the queens was carried on by Carolyn Campbell, Pi Beta Phi. Her successor to the throne in 1947 was Elizabeth Esterle, Delta Gamma. Nancy Lindemuth of Washburn University was the first queen of the Relays to be selected from another school, setting the most recent precedent in the contest. The thirteenth queen, Kappa Kappa Gamma's Diane Stryker, was again a University of Kansas student. She was attended by Dorothy Neises of the Municipal University of Wichita and Louise Burchman of Kansas State Teacher's College at Pittsburg. Delta Tau Delta Formal Delta Tau Delta fraternity will hold a formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday in the chapter house. Mrs. Nellie Hopkins, Mrs. Richard Blume, Mrs. Gertrude Stuart, and Mrs.' Dean Alt will be chaperones. Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity announces the pledging of Lyle Jenkins of Soldier and Ralph Stoppel of Dorrance. Two Pledge AKL RELAY FANS- SUNDAY 6 a.m. - 10:30 p.m. Make your visit thoroughly satisfying Enjoy our friendly service, delicious food. OPEN DAILY 6 a.m. - 8 p.m. Fountain Service also. ALAMO CAFE 1109 Mass. Phi Beta Pi Semi-formal Phi Beta Pi medical fraternity will hold a semi-formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday in the Erldridge hotel. Jim Sellards's orchestra will play. Chaperones will be Dr. and Mrs. W. C. Fleming, Dr. and Mrs. Noble Sherwood, and Dr. and Paul Roofe. Monchonsia Formal Dance Monchonsia hall will entertain from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday with a formal dance at the house. Chaperones will be Mrs. Ross Cole, Mrs. Vivian Christian, and Mrs. Johnston Bates. Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers Electronically Timed Guaranteed Satisfaction Expert Watch REPAIR 1 week or less service. WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. Gordon Maxwell IVCF President Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship president for the coming year will be Gordon Maxwell, College junior, Herbert Ketterman, president, announced following elections Thursday. Other officers for the fall semester of 1950 and spring, of 1951 include: Charles Leepold, vice-president; Eldon Baker, treasurer; Evelyn Westhoff, secretary; Janet Anderson and Gene Douglas, co-social chairmen; James Sommerville, missionary secretary; Ralph Wood and Charlotte Thomas, Bible study chairman; and Herbert Ketterman, publicity chairman. Sigma Nu Picnics Sigma Nu fraternity members and pledges will entertain with two picnics Saturday and Sunday at the chapter house. The first is scheduled to last from noon to 4 p.m., with Mrs. Andrew McKay and Mrs. Ralph Park as chaperons. The second picnic, for the pledge class of Kappa Alpha Theta, will be from 4 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Mrs. McKay and Mrs. Eugene Alford will chaperon. Alpha Chi Engaged Mr. and Mrs. Mahlon S. Weed of Kansas City, Kan., announce the engagement of their daughter, Martha, to Mr. Charles A. Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Miller of Junction City. Miss Weed, an education senior, is a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority and Sigma Alpha Iota, honorary music fraternity. Mr. Miller is a College junior. The wedding will be in July Relays Balt Saturday The Kansas Relays ball will be held from 8 p.m. to midnight Saturday in the Union ballroom. Joyce Lawrence, queen of the 1950 Relays, will be presented at intermission. Chaperons for the dance will be Mr. and Mrs. William A. Beardon, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Shields, and Mr. and Mrs. William A. Stockeus. Phi Chi 'Hypodermic Hop' CASTLE TEA ROOM Phi Chi medical fraternity will hold a "Hypodemic Hop" from 9 p.m. to midnight in the Community building. Clyde Bysom's orchestra will play. Chaperons will be Mrs. C. L. Leach, Dr. and Mrs. Robert Guthrie, and Dr. W. J. Baumgartner. 13th and Mass. L. L. D. C., the home of good grooming, wishes you GOOD LUCK TEAMSTERS so she can have more comfort. "Quality Outstanding" LAWRENCE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS Call 383 1001 N. H. Twin Bed Looking For New "HOLLYWOODS"? $ 49^{50} It's the trend towards modern, it's the desire for furnishings that will give your home that "smart" look that has made these Hollywood beds as popular as they are. Includes mattress, box springs on 6 legs. - at - ON LONG, EASY TERMS Sterling Furniture Co. 928 Massachusetts A SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1950 We're pulling for you Kansas Track Team KANSAS ku Captain Bob Karnes has been a sensation for the past three years. He has achieved national and Big Seven recognition as a miler. He is also as well liked by his teammates for the friendliness as the performances he turns in. TOM MURPHY KU Left to right—Herb Semper, Dave Breidenthal, Cliff Abel, Bob Karnes, and Pat Bowers. The four mile team is composed of Abel, Semper, Bowers, and Karnes running in that order; the two mile team: Abel, Semper, Karnes, and Bowers. The Distance Medley is run as follows: Bob Devinney (not shown) $ \frac{1}{4} $ mile, Abel, $ \frac{1}{2} $ mile, Bowers $ \frac{3}{4} $ and, Karnes 1 mile. This quiet senior, Pat Bowers, helped pace the K.U. track team to the Big 7 Indoor Track Championship this spring. From the beginning to the end of each race, he holds a blazing pace that only top runners can match. KANSAS 15 This ad sponsored by these service stations Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana Wuthnow's Conoco Service 900 Indiana Dye's Standard Service 23rd and Louisiana Shield's Standard Service 9th and Vermont Mack's Texaco Station 19th and Mass. Hartman Standard Service 1300 Mass. Bridge Standard Service 601 Mass. GI Joe's Service Station 6th and Vermont El Navajo Auto Court One mile west on 40 Hiway Stewart's Texaco Service 23rd and Barker Carter Super Service 1000 Mass. Fritzel Phillips '66' Service 19th and Mass. Tea D In O tea Sea stair chair swe T stair ok pro loss over ers op I sa sh Bo do to the ed dr kn we Sw the W FRIDAY. APRIL 21.1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS A SEVEN KU-MU Baseball Tilt Is Monday The Jayhawkers and the Missouri Tigers, each looking for their first Big Seven win, will play at 3 p.m. Monday on the home diamond. These teams will meet again Tuesday afternoon. Kansas will face some of the conference's best pitching as veterans Roger Englert and Bob Smith slender lefthander, and sophomore Floyd Eberhard have looked impressive in recent pitching roles and are rested and ready for mound duty. In two departments, the Jayhawkers and Tigers have been alike in their early season games. Both teams have shown weak hitting with few extra base blows and long ball hitting. The Jayhawkers' big righthander Carl Sandefur, 6-foot-3-inch 210-pound sophomore, will be the probable starting pitcher on Monday, Coach Bill Hogan announced today. Guy Mabry, who looked impressive in Kansas' 4 to 3 loss to Colorado in the conference opener, will hurl for Kansas in the second game. Missouri, sixth place club in the 1949 conference race, has hit .231 in winning one of seven games this spring. In losing six straight games, the Tigers collected only four extra-base hits, all doubles. Coach John "HI" Simmons' club beat Washington university of St. Louis, 8 to 5, in their last outing. Except for an eight-error conference opener against Nebraska last week-end, the Tigers have played good defensive ball making only 17 errors in seven games. Kansas, except for some lax play in the 11 to 10 win over Rockhurst Wednesday, has played excellent ball in the field. Kansas, in downing Rockhurst, 10 to 2, in the season opener, made only one error and two in the 4 to 3 loss to Colorado. Like Missouri, Kansas has shown a weakness at the plate, and has been out-hit in each game. They batted a weak .194 in their first two games and did little better in downing Rockhurst. While Kansas' outdoor drills were hampered by adverse weather conditions, Missouri was on a fourgame spring training trip through the south. The Tigers should be in better condition than Kansas, especially the pitching staff. Missouri's 1950 baseball record Missouri's 1950 baseball record Missouri 4, Arkansas U. 7 Missouri 11, So. Methodist U. 20 Missouri 2, Texas Christian U. 3 Missouri 4, Texas Christian U. 6 *Missouri 1, Tennessee U. 6 *Missouri 1, Nebraska 3 *Missouri 1, Wash. U. (St. Louis) 5 *Big Seven games Mo. 8. Wash. U. (St. Louis) 5 *Big Seven games. Won 1, Lost 6. Kansas and Missouri have nine lettermen returning but both are rebuilding and each club has four lettermen, listed as regulars. Coach Simmons is expected to start his ace righthander, Englert, in Monday's game and use his only lefthander, Smith, or rookie Eberhard in Tuesday's game. Englert, (0-1), has been the Tigers' mainstay for the past three years. In his only conference role, this cagey curveballer pitched 62-3 innings of relief against Nebraska giving up five hits and two runs. Here is Missouri's probable bating order with averages in parenthesis: Lefty Smith (0-2), junior letterman, lost a 3 to 1 game to Nebraska in 10 innings in his only conference start. He struck out 11 and walked six. Eberhard (1-2), slender sophmore, has been the Tigers' most pleasant surprise this spring with some excellent pitching. He lost a five-hitter to Texas Christian U., 3 to 2 RESISTANCE Bill Eatock (Capt.) ... ss (.320) Kent Kurtz ... 2b (.292) Clyde Langebeck ... 3b (.130) Jack Frier ... 1b (.280) Bob Phillips ... rf (.182) Walter Ulmer ... lf (.200) Bob Wachter ... cf (.333) Lowell Alexander ... c (.091) Englert or Smith ... p Kansas' probable batting order: Frank Koenig ss L. DeLuna or J. Cavonaugh 2b Floyd Temple 3b Carl Ellis lf Walter Hicks rf Herb Weidensaul cf Bill Mace c George Voss 1b Sandefur or Mabry p Tennis Squad Downed By OU In First Start Rv RAY SOLDAN Coach Disk Richard's K.U. tennis team bowed to the strong Oklahoma Sooners Thursday on the wind-swept courts in front of Memorial stadium. The defending Big Seven champion Sooners made a clean-sweep for a 7 to 0 decision. The Jayhawkers, making their first start of the season, played creditably despite the one-sided score. Oklahoma had played 12 matches previous to Friday, winning 10, losing one, and tieing one. The win over the Jayhawkers was the Sooners' 15th in a row over Big Seven opposition. opposition. Even Uck was against the Kansans, or they would not have been born. Hervey Macferran and Bob Swartzell were leading 5-4 in the third set of the number one doubles match, needing just a point to win. Then an Oklahoma shot hit the top of the net, rolled along the edge for several inches, and finally dropped on the Kansas side. This knotted the score and the Sooners went on to win. Maeferran and Swartzell were playing together for the first time. Results of the matches are as follows: Singles Guy Ewton defeated Macferran, 6-2, 6-2 Charles Cunningham defeated Swartzell, 6-4, 6-0. Abe Ross defeated Crawford, 6-3, 6-4. Glen Land defeated Jack Ranson, 6-3, 6-3. Dick Land defeated Thompson, 6-0, 6-4. Doubles Ewton and Cunningham defeated Macferran and Swartzell, 6-8, 4-6, 5-7. Land and Land defeated Crawford and Ranson, 8-6, 6-4 Women's Softball Results Lockshire 38, Watkins 30 Jayettes 9, Jolliffe 10 Sigma Kappa 28, Miller 10 The world's top post office is at Cerro de Pasco, Peru, in South America. It is at an altitude of 14,385 feet. Still higher settlements are reported in Tibet at well above 15,000 feet, but this Asiatic country does not belong to the International union. Nebraska Here Saturday For Golf, Tennis Meet The Nebraska Cornhuskers will send their golf and tennis teams against the Jayhawkers in matches to be played here Saturday. It will be the first meet of the season for Coach Bill Winey's K.U. golfers. The tennis team will be making its second start. Coach Dick Richard's net squat will meet the Huskers at 9:30 a.m. on the asphalt courts east of the stadium. The golf match will be at the Lawrence Country club course, beginning at 1 p.m. Dick Ashley, defending conference champion, heads the Kansas fourman golf team. Dave Dennis, the only other returning letterman, Gene Rourke, and Bob Dare are the other men who will tee-off against Nebraska. The Jayhawkers lost a dual match to the Nebraskans the past season, 7 to 11; however, they finished a notch ahead of the Cornhuskers at the conference meet in Lincoln. The Huskers made their first start of the season Tuesday, a successful one by downing Kansas State, 10 to 8 at Lincoln. Nebraska fielded an all sophomore foursome against the Wildcats, and probably will send the same men into the Kansas meet. The sophomores are Al Blessing, Douglas Dale, Joe Gifford, and Dick Spangler. Steve Flansburg, the only letterman on the Nebraska squad, may be used against Kansas. The Jayhawker tennis team, which lost its first match of the season to Oklahoma Thursday, will be out to even its season record. Nebraska, boasting only one letterman, lost to Kansas State, 6 to 1, in its opening conference net meet on Tuesday. Jamie Currin, the lone Nebraska letter winner, will play the No. 1 position against Hervey Macferran. Other Kansans' in the order of their positions will be Bob Swartzell, Charles Crawford, Jack Ranson, and Bill Thompson. They will be paired off against Andy Bunten, Jerry Magge, Bob Radlin, and Frank Redman. Kansas downed the Huskers, 5 to 2, in a dual match the past season, but was edged for fourth place by Nebraska in the conference meet. Bow, Arrow Fans Invited To Meet All students interested in archery are urged to attend the A r ch e r y club's next meeting, Wednesday, April 26, president Doyle Erkenbeck announced today. "We are interested in the inexperienced as well as the expert archers, and membership in our organization is open to all University students." Erkenbeck said. The archery club meets each Wednesday at 4 p.m. Intramural Softball Results, Schedule No softball games are scheduled for Friday or Saturday. The schedule for Sunday is as follows; Field 2:15 Independent A 1 Battenfeld vs. Alpha C. Sigma 2 Oread vs. Squirrels 3 Penguin vs. Leopard 3 Bronchos vs. Laissez Faires Indendent B 4 Sigma Chi "C" vs. Delta Sig, Pi 5 Phi Gam vs. Lambda Chi Fraternity B 7 Pi Kappa Alpha vs. Beta 6 Sig. Ep vs. Sigma Chi 7 Width Alpha vs. Peta 4:15 Fraternity B 1 Sigma Nu vs. Phi Delt 2 Chiu Chi Tai 3 Sigma Cv vs. Texas Leaguers 4 Alpha Eps Pi vs. Texas Leaguers 2 Signa Chi vs. Delta Tau Independent A 4 Wesley vs. A.I.E.E. Eight-Year Chase Ends Miami, Fla.—(U.F.)—The poor greyhounds, who have chased a rabbit around West Flagler track for eight fultile years, caught up with it Tuesday—and won a hollow victory at best. GIFTS The rabbit was artificial. Flustered track officials declared "no race" and refunded all pari-mutuel bets. FOR ALL OCCASIONS Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER 809 Mass. Ph. 911 WELCOME VISITORS AND ATHLETES To The 25th SILVER ANNIVERSARY Of The. K. U. RELAYS Gibbs Clothing Company 811 Mass. St. Ph.459 Give Your White Elephants 'Green Backs' With KANSAN Classifieds. After The Relays Parade Stop In At Frank's See the New Styles in Home Furnishings - Ethan Allen Solid Maple Furniture - Sealy Mattresses and Sofas - U. S. Foam Rubber Mattresses - Rembrandt and Deena Lamps - La-Z-Boy Comfort Chairs A Very Fine Selection for the Home Frank's Furniture Co. Ph. 834 834 Mass. We Welcomed You To The First KU Relays In 1923 Now-Welcome! To The 1950 KU Relays From Your Friendly Hudson Dealer HUNSINGER MOTORS 922 Massachusetts Phone 12 A EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 19 We're All For You ... KU Relay Team - 1950 Big 7 Indoor Champs- DAY *CLIFF ABEL PAUL AYLWARD - JACK GREENWOOD - FORREST GRIFFITH AL BOUCHARD JIM HERSHBERGER *PAT BOWERS - DAVE BREIDENTHAL *BOB KARNES (Captain) RALPH KING *BOB BROADY *BOB KLINE BOB CROWLEY ED LEE BOB DEVINNEY JIM DINSMORE CLARENCE NAUMAN *BOB DRUMM *DEL NORRIS DAVE FISHER JIM POTTS DICK FLETCHER JIM FLOYD JOHN POWELL BILL RICHARDSON *EMIL SCHUTZEL HERB SEMPER Lettermen PATRONIZE THE LAWRENCE BUSINESSMEN WHO SUPPORT KANSAS UNIVERSITY CARL'S CLOTHIERS 905 Massachusetts GRAVITT'S LAUNDRETTE 916 Massachusetts FRITZEL - JAYHAWK 834 Vermont DR. PEPPER BOT'L. CO. 815 New Hampshire LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK 647 Massachusetts BOWMAN RADIO 827 Vermont JAYHAWK CAFE 1340 Ohio AMERICAN LEGION POST 214 W.8th St. RADIO HOSPITAL 14 East 9th St. GREEN LANTERN CAFE 745 Massachusetts isc auc DAY, APRIL 21, 1950 IL 21, 19 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Deep Gun Shows CA System in exhibition of G.C.A. (ground troiled approach system for land-aircraft) and jeep-mounted 75 .57 mm. guns will be a part of military science department's excitation in the engineering extion today and Saturday. col. Edward R. Kumpe, professor military science, said the exhibitions have been gathered and preened by the joint efforts of the air, air force and the navy. the Military Science building will open for visitors both days, but all of it will be devoted to milli- y exhibits. Part of the building contain overflow exhibits from School of Engineering and Architecture; Colonel Kumpe explained. he navy has provided the demation of the new safety device landing aircraft in bad weather under these circumstances when possible for pilots to land it aircraft visually. The G.C.A. be demonstrated on the slope give the Military Science building. From Ft. Riley, the army has obeyed the jeep-mounted 75 and 57 guns. Formerly, this heavy air was mounted only on tanks other heavy equipment, but due new technology, recoilless guns we been developed that can be mounted on light vehicles. With the guns, the army will disy new radio equipment in the as All three of the R.O.T.C. units I be represented in the Relaysade Saturday, and R.O.T.C. students will participate in the colorsemony in Memorial stadium thede day. isconnected aucet Flows A "magic faucet," being displayed the hydraulics laboratory during Engineering Exposition today, sunday, and Sunday, will provoke Where does the water come questions. You can guess the civil engineers exhibiting "ever running faucet" won't elge the secret of their free water only the "magic faucet" is a common then faucet suspended in mid- by piano wire. There are no es or hoses running from it— at a small sponge tied on the back are a pipe would normally be unnected. A steady stream of ter flows from the tap to a funnel low and then into a flume under floor. Where the water comes m is for you to guess. other demonstrations and displays shown in the hydraulics oratory are working models of Meade county and Kanapolis ms, a "water clock," and models swing soil erosion and flood flow. Axwell Ravndal, engineering for, is in charge of the hydraulics play. Dil Well Pump shown At Lindley WANTS to the Engineering Examination today through Sunday will have a chance to see an oil well pumping unit in action in 238 Lindhall. The unit, which is six feet in and 10 feet long and weighs 10 pounds, is sponsored by the dorsis in petroleum engineering. The machine, which works on the principle as a water well top, is used to lift oil to the surface when there is not enough pressure to bring the liquid the top. It is also used in most low fields where there is no issue. the model is powered by a three seper motor and will lift a ximum of 2,200 pounds. Com-ly called a jack, the size used ends upon the level of the oil. me of the larger pumps stand 25 high and can produce as much 600 harrels daily. so on exhibit in room 238 will a model drilling rig and equip- used for gas measurement and Lawrence Church Schedule FIRST BAPTIST 8th and Kentucky george C. Fetter minister Church school, 9:45 a.m. University class led by Charles Thomas. Morning service, 11 a.m. Observance of Baptist Education Sunday. Sermon: "Why Christian Education?" Wilson O'Connell will lead prayer. Mildred Simpson will read the Scripture. Baptist Student fellowship, 5:30 p.m. William Fuqua will lead a panel discussion on "A Dynamic Christian Faith." WEST SIDE PRESBYTERIAN 605 Maine Daniel Knox Ford, minister Bible school, 9:45 a.m. The Rev. Mv. Roberts of St. Andrews University age class. Lesson topic: "Amos Attacks Social Injustice." Daniel Knox Ford, minister Morning worship, 11 a.m. Subject: "Who Crucified Christ?" Young People's fellowship, 7 p.m. Study in the gospel of Mark. Evening service, 8 p.m. Message: "Request to Israeli Court for a Retrial of Christ." Hymn sing and devotions led by Paul Christian. Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal. Archie. Kliwer, director. Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Prayer and Bible study. CHURCH OF CHRIST 1501 New Hampshire W. T. Carter, minister Bible study, 10 a.m. Morning worship, 11 a.m. Special song service, 7 p.m. led by Morris Yadon. Evening service, 8. FREE METHODIST 12th and Kentucky sports. Hamilton, paste Sunday school, 10 a.m. Dr. Clarence Grothaus, superintendent. Morning service, 11 a.m. Topic: "Forgiveness." Sunday radio program: "Light and Life." 12:30 p.m. KFBI. Young People's Missionary society, 7 p.m. Bible study:"Cities of Palestine." Evening service, 7:45 p.m. Wednesday prayer meeting, 7:45 FIRST CHRISTIAN 1000 Kentucky H. H. Sippel, minister H. H. Sippel, minister day school 9:30 a.m. Sunday school. Morning worship, 10:45 a.m. Sermon: "The Problem of Suffering" by the Rev. Mr. Sippel. Anthem solo: "Jubilate Deo" by George Peacock. Offertory violin solo: Bach's "Air for the G String" by Miss Maxine Albury. KU. Disciple fellowship, 5:30 p. m., Myers hall. ST. JOHN'S CATHOLIC 1229 Vermont The Rev. George Towle, pastor Masses, 8, 9, and 10 a.m. Newman club meeting after the 10 o'clock mass. EYE YOUR EYES Eye should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription Duplicated. Phone 425 1025 Mass. Lawrence Optical Co. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1701 Massachusetts Sunday school, 9:30 a.m. Sunday service, 11 a.m. Subject: "Doctrine of Atonement." Drake's Bakery Wednesday evening meeting, 8 o'clock. Rich, fluffy cakes topped with thick, creamy icing that tastes as good as it looks. We have chocolate white, and other delicious flavors. Order yours today. We deliver. HURRY! LAST 2 DAYS ENDS SATURDAY Clark and Loretta. They click like a key in a lock! Loretta Clark Loretta GABLE YOUNG 'KEY TO THE CITY' with Marilyn Maxwell Frank Morgan James Gleason Lewis Stone Raymond Walburn Gable was never better! Cooked in a simmering oven to preserve that true beef goodness as only our outstanding chef can do — - Roast Prime Ribs of Beef Au Jus 824 Vermont MAY WE MAKE A SUGGESTION FOR YOUR DINNER TONIGHT? Added Fun COLOR CARTOON Soon: "BICYCLE THIEF" —Continuous Shows open 12:45 at Patee PHONE 321 TRINITY LUTHERAN 1245 New Hampshire R. W. Albert, pastor Student Bible class, 9:45 a.m. Worship service, 11 a.m. Sermon: "The Good Shepherd." DUCK'S TAVERN Jayhawker Events Late news Jayhawker Phone 10 for Sho Time NOW thru Saturday MARY JANE SAUNDERS CHARLES WINNINGFP IT'S WONDERFUL FUN! WILLIAM HOLDEN COLEEN GRAY FATHER IS A BACHELOR Technicolor Special "Camera Angles" Granada PHONE 946 NOW ENDS SAT. MARGARET O'BRIEN • DEAN STOCKWELL HERBERT MARSHALL THE Secret Garden A LETTO-GOLDWITH-MATTE FILM GARDEN SEQUENCE IN COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR The picture that will touch everyone's heart!! Special Benefit WOMEN'S CLUB Shown at 1:34-3:34-5:34-7:34 and 9:34 Shows Continuous - Open 12:45 SATURDAY ON THE SCREEN AT LAST...! ...THE ADVENTURE IDOL OF MILLIONS! ON THE SCREEN AT LAST... ...THE ADVENTURE IDOL OF MILLIONS! "JUNGLE JIM" JOHN D. WEISSMULLER WITH VIRGINIA GREY GEORGE REEVES Lina BARON-Rick VALLIN A COLUMBIA PICTURE A SIX QUART CAN OF FREE POPCORN TO EVERY CAR with Six or More Persons SATURDAY "Movies Are Better Now Than Ever Before" Last Times Tonite "ARIZONA" starring Jean Arthur - William Holden SAT. OWL SHOW 11:30 Sun - Mon PARAMOUNT presents Alan LADD Robert PRESTON WHISPERING SMITH color by Technicolor Brenda Marshall - Donald Crisp - William Demarest Drive out early Saturday nite. See JUNGLE JIM as late as 10:15. Stay for the midnite show at no extra admission charge . . . See 2 shows for the price of one! Lawrence DRIVE - IN Theatre For Show Times Phone 260 A TEN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 19 The Editors Report — THE KANSAS RELAYS: Silver Lined ye ED Another year has rolled around and the Kansas Relays are here once again. We always look forward to the event because it is something worth seeing. The sports of track and field represent man's highest perfection in athletics. And yet they are perhaps the oldest. Many of the individual sports date back to man's beginning—when your life depended on how well you could throw a javelin, hurdle a tall boulder. As nothing else can, the sports of track and field explode the myth that "the men of yore were better men than they are today." Year after year, that myth has been blasted to bits as the youngsters better the records set by their fathers. The Kansas Relays are twenty-five years old this year. In a quarter of a century, the spring athletic event has grown to be one of the finest of its kind in the country. It seems to become better each year. More and more fine athletes come to participate in the events. By the time, perhaps long before, the spring meet has passed another silver anniversary, it will be the biggest and best in the country. There's nothing holding us back. Many people will be up on the Hill today and Saturday to watch the "thin-clads" do their stuff. And while we are glad to have so many spectators visit us, we think they, like ourselves, ought to pause a moment and think of the time and effort the boys "out there on the greens" have given up in training themselves for this one event. Each and every athlete who will be taking some part in the Kansas Relays will be out there to win for his team and himself. They will be doing the best they know how. Still, only one can be the "best man." Someone has to lose; someone will win. But regardless of which man wins and which man loses, we spectators should remember that they are all good sportsmen. Perhaps, we too, should remember to be good sportsmen and give each and every athlete fair treatment. They deserve it. They are going to give us a great show. IT'LL TAKE A GOOD MAN To Fill His Spot by Robert Leonard The Kansas Relays have come to K.U. today. Today and tomorrow, the men of the track and field will be down in Memorial Stadium "strutting their stuff." When the prizes have been won and last year's records broken, they'll be leaving. It was this thought that reminded us, with something of a shock, that another "star" on the K.U. horizon will soon be leaving. So today, on the last great sports event day of this year, we'd like to take time to say goodbye to that "star." For time does slip by so quickly. If you haven't already guessed, the "star" we refer to is E. C. Quigley, director of K.U. athletics, "Quig" has decided to retire. A new director of athletics will sit in the north office of Robinson gymnasium next year. Mr. Quigley has decided "to take things easy." Mr. Quigley is 67 years old. He has been at the University six years, since August 1944. When he retires this summer, he will leave knowing he has carried out his wish that more persons become interested in sports at the Jayhawker school. When he first took over his duties here, "Quig" faced two major problems. He has licked both of them. His first problem was to build title-winning varsities for the University. He has seen that accomplished. He was here only three years when the Jayhawk football squad was asked to play in the Orange Bowl. He also helped legalize the open interviewing of prospective athletes for Big Seven schools. To overcome his second difficulty, that of paying off the $113,000 Memorial stadium debt, he devised a plan in which alumni and friends of the University could buy savings bonds and turn them over to the Athletic association. In this way the debt and the interest on the debt was paid off—long before the date of payment was due. This is the kind of man our athletic director has been—a man who gets things done. We really hate to see him go. But he has made up his mind. Yet we hesitate to say "goodbye." We would rather make it "so long!" We hope that, like other K.U. alumni, this one "alum" will be dropping in to see us every so often. He's welcome any time. A LETTER HOME You know I told you about a big track meet which they are having down here. Boy it is really something to see. A whole dang bunch of guys will take off like a bunch of scared rabbits when a fellow shoots off a gun. They'll run and run, but I never seen any one of them catch anything yet. Dear Ma: Some others was trying to jump over a bar, and there was only one of them that finally did it. I see Pa jump that high anyway the time the bull got out and see Pa driving off the cows. Pa never had much of a start either, as I remember. Your loveable sun. A few of them can throw a plate-like affair for quite a ways. They ain't very accurate though. I seen Aunt Nettie glance a plate off of Uncle Earl's head from farther than that; and she wasn't even trying extra hard. TODAY'S MAIL It's Been Done Recent opinion voiced through the editorial column and through letters to the editor has shown that students and faculty of the University are in favor of honoring both Dr. Naismith, inventor of basketball, and Dr. Allen, "Mr. Basketball" of 1950, by naming the fieldhouse after them. A policy has been uncovered which supposedly would prohibit the naming of any University building after any man now living. The campus today boasts a contradiction of that ruling in Danforth chapel. Danforth chapel was named after William H. Danforth, founder of the Ralston-Purina company in St. Louis. Mr. Danforth is not an alumni, nor did he attend K.U. at any time. He did, however, contribute a large amount of money to be used for the erection of a chapel on this campus. Many other campuses have chapels named in his honor. Mr. Danforth is still very much alive. We fail to see where the question of naming a building after a living person should even arise since the rule, supposing there ever was one, has already been broken. Why then, should not the name of a man who has probably done as much as any living person to spread the fame of K.U. be honored together with basketball's inventor? Wendell E. Yockey Graduate Student Ed. Note: Like Mr. Yockey, we can see no reason why Dr. Allen's name should not be coupled with Dr. Naismith's to form a suitable name for the new fieldhouse. Yet however much others and ourselves may admire the name, it is unlikely that a few will be able to make the Naismith-Allen fieldhouse a reality. This will have to come by the concerted action of a large group. The suggestion for naming the new fieldhouse might be a suitable subject for the All Student Council to decide and then pass on their decision to the board of regents. That might do some good. University Daily Hansan News Room K.U.251 Adv. Room K.U.378 Member of the Kansas Press Assm. Associate of the Associated College Press Assn., and the Associated College Press. Represented by the National Ad- dress Service, $20 Madison Ave. New New York City. James Morris Editor-in-Chief Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Doris Greenbank James Shriver Managing Editor James Migr Asst. Man. Editors ...Norma Hunsinger Kay O'Connon John Hill City Editor ...Ralph Hemenway Edward Chapin Asst. City Editors ...Christopher Martinyl Marks Elaine Elig Steve Ferro Feature Editor ...Francis Kelly Photograph Editor ...Frank Watts Telegraph Editor ..Robert Sigman William Graves Richard Tatum Lloyd Holcke Sports Editor ..Richard and Danaher Asst. Society Editor ..Bob Leonard Ray Solidan Arthur McNellire Mong Kun Li Society Editor Faye Wilkinson Asst. Society Editor ..Billie Stover Emily Stewart Editorial Assts. Pete North John Bannigan Keith Leslie Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner Gt. Mgr. Yvonne Josserand Net Act Mgr. Potent Heath Classified Ad. Mgr. Lee Dyer Promotion Mgr. John Wiedeman Little Man On Campus By Bibb BiBee "Don't say anything about it but he's perty sensitive about being shorter than Marge." 'Small Things' by Keith Lesli Cambridge, Mass police officers have been issued instructions to give themselves a cooling-off period before approaching a law violator. It is recommended, however, that the arrest be made before the cooling-off reaches the feet, as it seems to have done in a fairly large city down the river. DAY. The Engineering Exposition got under way today and Rodney Nipnap says he has been through twice. He was going through the third time but then he found out it was free. We sneaked in to look at the robot wizard that can't be at tit-tat-toe. We're still not exactly sure but we think we caught him cheating in the game we played. We have always wondered a bit if all the clubs listed in the Official Bulletin are real. After reading an item in yesterday's paper under that heading which said, "Old Faithful," the University steam whistle, can be heard at Lone Star-lake, nearly 16 miles away, we're more suspicious than ever. Rain cancelled the intramural games recently. Harry Bilbop, student union junior, says that is enough for him. From now on Harry will be out for the swimming team. Memo to the new track queen from last year's queen: Don't depend on your legs to get away from these boys. Nine times out of ten, they'll jump the gun on you. Most of them have plenty of reserve energy that gives them a flashing finish. A hatpin is all the best defense. Yet there is one thing about that item on "Old Faithful" we were glad to find out. It answers our bewilderment as to why Lone Star is so popular with students in the spring. Engineers Show Magnified Clay Particles Now that the range of "Old Faithful" has been made official, we're waiting for some resourceful lad to come up with this answer to an irate housemother. "Sorry to get Flossy in so late, but we just decided on the spur of the moment to dash out to Lone Star and check on "Old Faithful." We waited and waited but didn't hear a thing." A film display of clay particles magnified 48,500 times will be an exhibit of the state geological survey in Lindley hall during the engineering exposition. If a human hair was magnified that much, it would have a width of nine feet. The micrograph display of clay particles was done through use of the electron microscope at the School of Medicine in Kansas City, Kan. Miss Ada Swineford, who prepared the clay samples for the micrographs, said the instrument, which cost approximately $25,000, was derived from funnel or cancer research. Under McUICLU's department of oncology, enlarged the micrographs it is possible to enlarge pictures of the clay particles to 100,000 times the size of the original particles. Miss Swineford is working on the mineralogy of windblown silts and the microscopic characteristics of ceramic glazes. The electron microscope will help determine the value of Kansas clays as a building material. Maxon On Speaking Tour John Maxon, director of the Museum of Art, is now touring the state, speaking to high school students on art at the University. Mr Maxon will visit Salina, McPherson, Hutchinson, and Winfield. He will return Saturday. a Can; Ca the u paid pr g the Satur Daily m bld before words itional E. green 12. W price. S). Fo- time. city Co PILET tell sel-' 7 p. r. JARLE 2. (A) 1.25, 3.75, 6.25, 8.75, 11.25 E L I N irons case. R not b who b u this k This so m u verbilt h Cal r p n 12, at 164 URINK pus g. G MEL o l g h p MEL MOD ect. C X-E A be u n ere N oom BOC ES E Ses M i y k Stor St at a nvee y term Vermc JA Nash Chew. Chew. aiform Ford c Dodge Cheetah. Mar BILL & Mis STA WILL Ch. 5 Sur " PA HOL Vel Kar PAH 21, 1: DAY, APRIL 21, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS A ELEVEN a3 Lesli ansan Classified Advertising truc- ching st be have dneyough k we ilbop, w on " we why Phone K.U.376 adicial, this in so out waited the day's Uni-early cus: Cash. Phone orders are accepted on the understanding that the bill will be sent to you at the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (e-saturday) or brought to the Univer- Wally Kansan Business office. Jour-nary billing is $45.45 p.m. the before publication date. Don't is out of city of cles Classified Advertising Rates on the stems and circles of micro- value emater- size of of the ing the ol stu- y. Mr erson. One day Three days Five days words or less ... 35c 65c 90c nitional words ...1c 2c 3c FOR SALE E green, ballerina length formal. E. Worn once. Excellent condition. E. Black dress. S1) For high paying summer and-time jobs don't miss the Kay-Dee City Co. ad in this section. 21 IPLETE DARKKROOM equipment inuring federal enlarger Model $449 battery reasonable. Call $81W 7 i.m. **ARLEY 74 O.V.H.; smooth running** **evening; See Bob 912** 812 **evening.** E LINE" golf clubs for sale or trade, irons and three woods. Complete a case. Call 793K3 between 7-9 p.m. 21 RE IS one of the few used cars that not been owned by a womans church and this Car is owned by a college stud who can't afford both a wife and a so must get rid of one. 1948 Crosley car that was in excellent condition. See r 4 p.m. at 831 Tenn. $595.00. NS' formal coat, First White, white, 42, long. Phone 3651 after 5:30 or at 1646 Kentucky. Phone at 1646 Kentucky is sweeping the purse. Get into the swing! The DIXIE 'MEL CORN SHOP has a complete of figurines, paints and brushes. Use JURINE PAINTING is sweeping the pus. Go into the swing. The paint completes the figureur, paints and brushes. Use of JURINE PAINTING DIXION CARMEL CORN SHOP. 842 Mass. DIXION CARMEL CORN SHOP. 842 Mass. MODEL "A" Roadster Mechanically Good. body and paint. Phot. 896-350-4122 ESES MATERIALS! All weights of this quality paper, carbon paper, a typewriter ribbons. Student Union book type. Me DK-EASE, a collapsible book holder be used on a desk, in bed, anyere. Now only 98c at your Student on Book Store. 21 FST TELEVISION—Best in sets and matters. Arrived $87.50 and up. See the ments Emerson table model set at $159.90. Morton and Electric and Elec- Vernant. Phone 138. tf FOR SALE HAVE YOU SEEN THESE? **HAVE YOU SEEN THESE?** Nash Ambassador sedan $1,295 Chev. Areo sedan 1,245 Chev. to-truck with form 1,095 Ford de luxe 8 sedan 350 Dodge 2-door sedan 345 Chrysler convertible 295 that choose from BILL BODIN, Largest-Mercury Many others to offer HLH HLH DINN, Lincoln-Mercury & Miss. Open Tonight VARSITY Phone 132 For Sho Time CHARLES STARRETT "TRAIL OF THE RUSTLERS" with SMILEY BURNETTE Today - Saturday - Co-Feature - BODYHOLD BUSINESS SERVICE WILLARD PARKER • LOLA ALBRIGHT WILLARD PARKEN LOUA ALBERTA ch. 5 "BRUCE GENTRY" Late News Events Sun - Mon - Tues Gene Autry "COWTOWN" - and - JOE PALOOKA MEETS HUMPHREY JOE KIRKWOOD, Jr. LEON ERROL Late News Events Color Cartoon "GLEE WORMS" SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a dignified sales activity representing the oldest, largest, most experienced field. Applicants accepted will work by appointment on leads we furnish. Earnings $75.00 to $125.00 and more per week on an advanced percentage basis. Write Mr. W. F. Cradockck, Jr., 100 Grand Ave., Kensington, MD, qualifications, school or home address. Welcome to the 25th Kansas Relays from Varsity Theater! DRESS MAKING and sewing, all types of formulas and dresses made to order. Also shortened and remodeled—call Mrs. Scales, 3060W. 26 I WILL DO all kinds of typing in my home. Caul 3884W. 25 I WILL DO all kinds of typing in my home. Call 3884W. TYPING: Nectar, accurate, rapid. Regular TYPING: Mrs. Carol, Mrs. Schear, Apt. R-36, 1810 La. Phone 3273-R. JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our one-stop pet店 has everything for fur. fur. Gift Shop. Gift Shop. 1218 Conn. St. Ph. 41R. TYPING: Call Hazel Stanley, 2865M for experienced service. $820% Mass (TYPING: Call Hazel Stanley, 286M for prompt experienced service. $200/Mass TYPING. Theses, Term Papers, Reports, Notes, etc. Prompt Service. Mrs. Sheeah, 1028 Vermont. Ph. 1168R. *t** TYPING. Term papers, notebooks. Prompt attention. Accurate work. Regular rates. Prompt attention Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601 THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.J. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. (516) 728-3034 or fence repair, auto painting, used cars. 317 E. 17th. Phone 785 or 1821R. WANTED 400 AGENTS to sell novelties and cards to drug stores, restaurants, gas stations, etc. Experience unnecessary $30 buys and unlimited field. Work at your convenience. No obligation. Write Kay-Dee Novelty Co., 212-768-5982. 21 FOOTBALL PITCHER to play intramural softball with Deuces Wild. Call RY Boywers 2766J after 7 p.m. 21 RIDERS — Topeka to Haskell; Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. Topeka 7 a.m.; Call IHisonmom—Haskell 938; Topeka 37965. 25 RIDERS WANTED: leaving for Wichita every Friday at 4 p.m. Returning Sunday every Saturday between 7-9 p.m. Shultz, Phi 3101J. ACCOUNTANT wanted by University of Maryland in May; June 1: Full-time thereafter. Applicant to take Civil Service exam when given; Journalism building. See Mr. Rydon. Journalism building. FOR RENT WANTED TO RENT—Sleeping rooms or small apartment convenient to campus for couple. Here for summer school. Reply Box 5. Kansan. 26 LARGE EIGHT room house; two blocks from campus. Excellent rooming and booning rooms furnished and fully furnished Available in mediately. Call 2917 R. 25 Testing Bomb To Be Shown A high-pressure "bomb" is among the many interesting machines to be exhibited in the Engineering Exposition opening today. Located in the Research foundation laboratory directly behind Marvin hall, this machine is used to study the reaction of various chemical combinations when placed under pressure. While the apparatus does occasionally explode it is not a "bomb" in the true sense of the word. When properly operated with chemicals of known reactions there is no safety precaution. As a safety precaution, however, the machine is in a sandbag barricade and operated by remote control. The "bomb" is essentially a heavy tube suspended on a rocker device. It can withstand cold pressures as high as 15,000 pounds, depending on the size of the tube used. Inside this hollow case is a rotary propeller to mix the chemicals. The whole tube is encased in a heating element capable of producing temperatures up to 900 degrees F. Read the Want Ads Daily. STARTS SUNDAY Peek Prevue Sat. 11:15 A NEW ROMANTIC COMEDY OF 1950 MITCHUM GETS THE LOVEBUG!! Baby, you're just what I want for Christmas RKO PICTURES ROBERT MITCHUM JANET LEIGH WENDELL COREY In a DON HARTMAN Production A NEW KIND OF ROLE FOR MITCHUM! A NEW HEART THRILL FOR YOU—when Mr. Hard-To-Get goes Romantic! Holiday Ends Sat. = Affair "KEY TO THE CITY" Added Fun Color Cartoon 'My Bunny Lies Overseas' Late World News — Feature Times — 1:33-3:33-5:33-7:33-9:33 shows Continuous - Open 12:45 Patee PHONE 321 NO MATTER WHERE HE GOES OR WHAT HE DOES . . . HE'S MY MAN! Thru the twisting maze of the shadowy city they hunted him . . . the men who hated him . . . the woman who loved him! 3 RD MAN - VALLI - The gay and sexy music followed him wherever he went! Hear the magic fingers of Anton Karas play 'The Third Man Theme' ORSON WELLES We urge you to attend the afternoon shows for better seats. Feature at 1:00,3:00,5:05,7:10,9:20. MIDNITE SHOW SATURDAY Doors Open 11:15 Jayhawker LATE NEWS EVENTS COLOR CARTOON "Quack A Doodle Doo" SUN thru WED WELCOME TO THE 25TH KANSAS RELAYS from the JAYHAWKER Theatre IT'S A RIOT ON WHEELS!! The Laugh Movie of the Year! Yellow Cab RIDE AND ROAR WITH Red SKELTON as "THE Yellow Cab MAN" co-starring Gloria DE HAVEN An M-G-M PICTURE Feature Times 1:34-3:33; 5:34-7:33; 9:34 Added Laughs Color Cartoon New Zealand Rainbows Latest World News Wait for These "Three Came Home" "Mother Didn't Tell Me" Starts SUNDAY Laff PREVUE SAT. OWL 11:15 P.M. Continuous Shows from 1 p.m. — Box Office Open 12:45 Granada PHONE 946 A TWELVE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY,APRIL 21,19 Here is the Schedule of Events for the 1950K.U.Relays THE ORDER OF EVENTS and Time Schedule MORNING EVENTS SATURDAY, APRIL 22 Event No. No. Time 110-Meter Hurdles (Decathlon) 9:00 Discus Throw (Decathlon) 9:30 Pole Vault (Decathlon) 9:50 Shot Put (Preliminaries) 10:00 120-Yard Hurdles (Preliminaries) 10:15 Javelin Throw (Decathlon) 10:20 100-Yard Dash (Preliminaries) 10:25 1. Javelin Throw (Prel, and Finals) 10:30 Discus Throw (Preliminaries) 11:00 120-Yard Hurdles (Semi-Finals) 11:00 100-Yard Dash (Semi-Finals) 11:05 1500-Meter Run (Decathlon) 11:25 AFTERNOON PROGRAM Opening Ceremony—K.U. Band ... 1:15 2. 120-Yard Hurdles (Finals) ... 1:30 3. 100-Yard Dash (Finals) ... 1:35 Event Event No. Time 4. College Two-Mile Relay 1:45 5. University Two-Mile Relay 2:00 6. College Half-Mile Relay 2:10 7. University Quarter-Mile Relay 2:20 8. Kansas City High School 880-Yard Relay 2:30 9. Presentation of Queen 2:40 10. Glenn Cunningham Mile Run 2:45 11. College Sprint Medley Relay 3:00 12. University Sprint Medley Relay 3:10 13. College Invitation Sprint Medley Relay (2 heats—6 teams each) 3:25 14. University Four-Mile Relay 3:50 15. Kansas High School Mile Relay 4:10 16. University Half-Mile Relay 4:20 17. College Distance Medley Relay 4:30 18. University Distance Medley Relay 4:45 19. Jr. College Sprint Medley Relay 5:00 20. College Mile Relay 5:10 21. University Mile Relay 5:20 22. Outstanding Athlete Award Closing Ceremony. JAYHAWK CLEANERS 626 W.9th THE STABLE 1401 W. 7th FIELD EVENTS 23. Pole Vault (Finals) ... 1:30 24. Shot Put (Finals) ... 1:30 25. Broad Jump (Finals) ... 1:30 26. High Jump (Finals) ... 2:00 27. Discus Throw (Prel. and Finals) ... 2:30 Presented By The Following Lawrence Merchants- HIXON STUDIO 721 Mass. UNIVERSITY MOTORS 707 N. H. CORN'S STUDIO OF BEAUTY 23 W.9th LAWRENCE HARDWARE 724 Mass. BEAMAN'S RADIO & TV 1200 N. Y. O'BRYON STUDIO 1024 Mass. FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY 8th & Mass. DARNELL ELECTRIC 615 Mass. RIL 21,19 Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks. University Daily Kansan STUDENT NEWS PAPER Lawrence. Kansas OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS --- EE's Win Award As 22,000 See Exposition A record breaking crowd of more than 22,000 persons attended the 1950 annual Engineering Exposition. The department of electrical engineering was awarded the Sigma Tau trophy April 22 for its exhibits in the exhibition. The judging committee consisted of members of Sigma Tau, national honorary engineering fraternity. There were more than 125 displays. The civil engineers were awarded second place and the aeronautical engineers won third. T. DeWitt Carr, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture presented the trophy to Neil E. Welter, exhibit chairman for the electrical engineering department. Following the Sigma Tau presentation, Dean Carr was honored by the Engineering council, engineering students' governing body. The council broke a tradition by awarding a council key to Dean Carr for his services as dean of the engineering school. It is believed that this is the first honorary council membership ever to be presented and Dean Carr is the first person other than council members to receive the key. The presentation was made by Glenn W. Anschutz, council president. Directly behind Marvin hall, an ear-splitting whine and the smell of fuel oil brought many of the spectators out of the halls to view the German jet fighter as its engine shot a blast of air toward Lindley hall. For many persons it was their first view of a jet plane and jet engine in operation. The ground control approach radar set offered an interesting and unscheduled display to spectators who happened to be at the radar exhibit as a large airliner flew over the campus. The plane was picked up on the radar scope and followed for twenty miles. In the electrical laboratory at the strength testing machine, a shot of air from the floor surprised many of the would-be testers. Mennonites Discuss 'Isms "Communism, Fascism, Capitalism, and Mennonites" was the topic of a roundtable discussion at a meeting of the K. U. Mennonite fellowship meeting Sunday. The discussion was led by Tal Hiebert, College senior. The group will elect officers at their next meeting, Sunday, May 14. Spring Jayhawker Is Now Available The spring edition of the 1950 Jayhawker is now available at the Jayhawker office. Union building. Covers for back issues are also available. Anyone desiring a subscription may obtain the cover and complete three issues immediately. KU Graduate Dies In Crash Lt. Col. Heinz Kuraner, a University graduate, his wife, and two children were among the 35 Americans killed when their plane crashed into a mountain southwest of Tokyo April 21. He was 43. The United Press reported that a group of 11 Americans and 12 Japanese reached the scene of the crash late Sunday and reported that there were no survivors. They said the plane, a four-engine C-54 enroute from Clark Field in the Philippines, apparently burst into flames when it crashed. Kuraner, a native of Leavenworth, received his A.B. in 1928 and an M.D. in 1931 from the University. During the war he was with the army in Europe and later with the adjutant-general's officeington in 1949, he was attached to headquarters of the Philippine command. General MacArthur issued a statement expressing the shock and sympathy of his occupation command over "this terrible tragedy" to those who "were from our midst." Kuraner is survived by his mother, Mrs. S. Kuraner, and sister, Miss Hilda Kuraner, of Leavenworth; another sister, Major Elsie Kuraner, K. U. '28, Warm Springs, Ga.; and three brothers, Alfred, K.U. '30, Irving, K. U. '40, both of Kansas City, Mo.; and Walter Kuraner, Heidelberg, Germany. His wife is survived by her mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Barber, of Toledo; a brother, Merrill Barber; and a sister, Miss Edith Barber, Cleveland. Jayhawker Needs Editor, Manager Students interested in applying for business manager or editor of the 1950-51 Jayhawker magazine should submit their applications and three letters of recommendation to Karl Klooz, chairman of the Jayhawker advisory board, by 5 p.m., Wednesday. Selections will be announced at 3 p.m. Thursday. Victory's Our Pattern Music Week Fine Arts Day Will Be Soon The Verdi "Requiem," with a festival chorus of 225 voices, the University Symphony orchestra, and four soloists will open the Annaul Music Week festivities on Sunday in Hoch auditorium. MOVING SOUTH along Massachusetts street in the Relays float parade is Alpha Delta Pi's first place winner in the sorority division, "Victory's Our Pattern." Nancy Lawrence, fine arts freshman, stands behind the silver spoon. Miss Maud Nosler, concert, oratorio, and radio artist from Chicago, will be the solo sopraniist on the Sunday program. Miss Irene Peabody, associate professor of voice, will sing the mezzo-soprano part. Clayton Krebhiel, who sang five years with the Robert Shaw chorale, of New York City and is now a graduate student at the University, will be the tenor soloist in the "Requiem." The baritone role will be sung by Reinhold Schmidt, associate professor of voice. Mr. Schmidt was a member of the Chicago and Philadelphia Opera companies for several years. D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, will direct the "Requiem." There is no admission charge, and the public is invited. Rudolph Ganz, Swiss-American pianist, will give a piano recital at 3 p.m. Monday, May 1, in Strong auditorium. Fine Arts day and the Fine Arts banquet in the Union will be held on that date also. Mr. Ganz and Karl Mattern, the latter formerly of the art department, will be guest speakers at the banquet. A novel and varied program is being arranged by a committee headed by Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra. The banquet will be limited to 200 plates. The annual Young American Artist program, started several years ago by Dean Swarthout, will present the young American violinist, Miss Frances Magnes. Miss Magnes will perform in Strong auditorium. Leonard Warren, baritone of the Metropolitan Opera company, will entertain Wednesday night, May 3, in Hoch auditorium. As part of the world-wide observance of Johann Sebastian Bach's death, E. Power Biggs, organist of Harvard university, will play an all-Bach program at 8:20 p.m. Thursday, May 4, in Hoch auditorium. The Kansas chapter of the American Guild of Organists will hold its meeting in Lawrence on that day so as to be present for the concert. Mr. Warren, known for his many appearances on the radio, will give his first concert in Lawrence. Vocal and instrumental music work being done in public schools will be displayed in a concert at 8 p.m. Friday, May 5, in Hoch auditorium. Recognition of Fine Arts week will also be made by the churches, civic clubs, and music club of the city. The K.U. Music Week festival was first given when Dean Swarthout came to the University in 1923 and has been continued each year. With his coming retirement as dean, Mr. Swarthout has arranged a group of nationally known artists to appear at the University. Special art exhibitions will be displayed at the University Museum of Art and in the exhibition halls of the art department on the third floor of Strong hall. Chapin Elected President Of Sigma Delta Chi Edward J. Chapin, journalism junior, was elected president of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity, at a meeting of the group. April 20. Other officers are Robert Sigman vice-president; Ray Soldan, secretary, and John Hill, treasurer. Francis Kelley was elected editor of the Sour Owl, campus humor magazine, which is published by the fraternity. Eight Records Broken One Tied In Relays By RICHARD DILSAVER, Sports Editor With the silver anniversary Kansas Relays and the 46th annual Kansas Interscholastic meet recorded as history, you could tell today the extent of a student's enthusiasm for track and field sports by looking him in the face. Parade Includes Unusual Floats Pasadena may have its Rose Bowl parade, but University boosters went all out with elaborately decorated floats in the 25th Relays parade Saturday. Various colored crepe papers formed the background of most of the floats which played up the theme, "Silver Relays." Tiered birthday cake, silver track shoes, and black phonograph records were on many floats. Visitors from Mars appeared in a red and silver flying saucer. The Martians with their brightly red painted bodies danced through the streets frightening small boys and delighting the crowd. Winners in the men's division were Delta Chi, first; Tau Kappa Epsilon, second; and Acacia, third. Winners in the women's division were: Alpha Delta Pi first; Alpha Omicron Pi, second; and Alpha Phi, third. The Delta Chi float consisted of a white ship tossing on a light blue sea. It was made of fluffy looking crepe paper. Men with silvered bodies in the struggling position of Olympic athletes were featured on the T.K.E. float. Behind the silvered athletes was a blue and white Jayhawk pole vaulting. Placing third was the float with a silver champagne glass, about 15 feet high, with a model in a white formal on top. Seated on the floor of the float were four women with hands raised. The A.D. Pi float played up the theme, "Victory's Our Pattern." It was made of purple and white crepe paper with a large silver spoon on it. A white victory barge rowed by "lady sailors" with pink oars won second place for A.O.P. The Alpha Phi's float was on an Oriental theme. Faces of the women on the float were painted white. Oriental costumes and fans added color. Above the huge fan forming the background was painted, "We're K.U.'s Fans." Should he be barn red, he's a track fan to the quick. If he's only bordering on the crimson side, he enjoys seeing a meet. But if he's just a blushing blue, he went to the Relays only to say he'd been there. The barn reds were on hand for the full two days of the gala carnival which thrived under a boiling sun that produced temperatures reaching into the upper 80's, warmest of the season. The Relays proper Saturday did suffer from a brisk 20-nile an hour wind. Yet it didn't keep the star-packed field of approximately 900 athletes from breaking eight records and equaling a ninth. Bill Carroll, soaring Sooner from the University of Oklahoma, earned one of the new marks by sky-climbing 14 feet 5 inches in the pole vault. For his efforts he was honored by the vote of sportswriters as outstanding performer of the meet. Kansas fans perked up most when the Jayhawker four-mile relay squad shaved the former meet record by 3.5 seconds with its time of 17:34.3 The blushing pinks probably arrived late for the meet and left after Kansas on the four-mile. And they issued off on many of the meet's greatest thrills. They didn't see Wisconsin's heralded DeGhramm, earlier winner of the Glenn Cunningham mile in 4:16.4, get a sound thrashing from nifty sophomore Don McEwen of Michigan in the university distance medley relay. They didn't witness Carroll flying to his new pole vault record. Nor did they see the meet ended in fit and proper manner by university one-mile relay teams who staged one of the best races of the day. The entire meet was run with precision, finishing up just five minutes behind time. And once the proceedings had to slow up because they were ahead of schedule. Comely Joyce Lawrence of Wichita university, queen of the Relays, and her court of six drew their share of attention. Her majesty had to put up with the wind like everyone else, but the royal reviewing stand was shaded by three large beach umbrellas. Testimony to the quality of the meet other than its production of new records was the fact that in only five events were performances not better or equal to those in the 1949 Relavs. Those were the 1950 silver anniversary Kansas Relays. SILVER ANNIVERSARY THE TREASURE BOAT DELTA CHI SAILED away with first prize in the fraternity division of the float parade with their white crepe paper ship, Barbara Nesch, education sophomore, left, and Patricia Edson, College sophomore, right, pose on the fo'c'stle of the ship. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS MONDAY, APRIL 24, 1950 Government Inconsistent As Oklahoma's Soil Blows Anadarko, Okla.,—(U.P.)—Government agencies have quarreled and pulled in opposite directions while a cycle of boom, dust, and bust entered its gloomiest stage in Oklahoma's "potential dust bowl." Despite millions of subsidies paid in the area during the past 17 years for soil conservation and crop price supports, some 150,000 acres of Oklahoma top soil is blowing away after six months of dry weather. The acreage dear here here must be dwarfed now in the making in the same section of the country hit hardest by drought and dust in the 1930's. Because they live in a strongly democratic community, few of the businessmen wanted to be quoted by name when they criticized federal farm policies. But W. D. "Jim" Finney, president of the Washita county bank at Fort Cobb, Okla., spoke out after noting that he has no quarrel with local farm agency officials. Mr. Fienny said the Production and Marketing administration—successor to the A.A.A., subsidizes contour planting. The R.M.A. program thereby overlaps the program of the U.S. soil conservation service, which encourages that and other farming practices by furnishing free engineering services, renting tools and showing farmers how to use them. The small town banker, sitting at a desk dusty with the wasted soil that keeps his community alive, believes far more citizens have protected their land from wind erosion than during the pre-dust bowl days 20 years ago. "Farmers have their ups and downs," he said. "They've been down before and came back. Those who ought to change their ways are starting to. I don't believe it's too late." The Caddo county P.M.A. secretary, Ben Craig, said about as many peanuts will be planted in this area in 1950 as last year if rain comes soon enough. Despite soil conservation service pleas to farmers that peanut acreage be reduced, P.M.A. has announced it will support the price of "goobers" even though peanut acreage remains the same. "The socialistic plan of subsidies has been emphasized rather than the permanent program of putting the money to the right use," Mr. Craig said. "Any farmer ought to know by now not to plant his rows up and down hill. He ought to plant on the contours without being paid by the government to do it." Egyptians' Well-Preserved Bodies Are Uncovered After 5,000 Years Helwan, Egypt—(U.P.)-Skilled Egyptian workmen recently uncovered the well-preserved bodies of four men and two women buried for at least 5.000 years. Kansan Calendar of Coming Events TODAY Tuesday, April 25 Curtis Clover, baritone, senior recital, 8 p.m. in Strong auditorium. Wednesday, April 26 Book of Switzerland, and Latin American Art, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily throughout April, Museum of Art. Mary Lynn Lucas, contralto, senior recital, 8 p.m. in Strong auditorium. Thursday, April 27 Honors convocation, Mr. William Vogt, 9:20 a.m., Hoch auditorium. Book of Switzerland, and Latin America Art, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily throughout April, Museum of Art. Friday. April 23 Film series, Buster Keaton in "The Navigator." 7:30 p.m., Hoch auditorium. Faculty Members Attend Math Meet Two members of the faculty appeared on the program at the joint meeting of the Kansas Association of Teachers of Mathematics and the Kansas section of the Mathematics Association of America in Pittsburg, Kan. April 22. Prof. G. W. Smith, chairman of the mathematics department reported for the co-ordination on mathematics. Dr. Gilbert Ulmer, associate professor of mathematics and assistant dean of the College, reported on the recent Chicago meeting of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. Several other members of the faculty attended. Call K.U. 251 With Your News University Daily Kansan Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University of Kansas summer holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. King Farouk financed the excavation in which workers specially selected for their delicate touch used shaving brushes to clear the last grains of sand from the coffins of grass in which the bodies had reposed for 50 centuries. A young archaeologist, Zaki Saad, headed the expedition which found the burial site, dating from the first dynasty, in this suburban town 15 miles south of Cairo. Census Shows Midwest Gains The old, dry grass disintegrated at the slightest touch as the coffins were being removed, and the bodies it had protected since the dawn of history began to be visible for the first time since about 3000 B. C. The first body uncovered was that of a woman. As the grass was cleared painstakingly away, her head still showed locks of hair. The skull and Denver—(U.P.)—The director of the census said recently that five Rocky mountain and plains states had shown above-average economic gains in the span from 1939 to 1947 despite a lag in population growth. Dr. Rov V. Peel reported to members of the Inter-mountain Editorial association that the five states had almost doubled their number of factory workers, had more than 10 million industrial installations in the area had nearly quadrupled in the eight-year period. The U.S. census chief said that only in population had Colorado, Wyoming, Nebraska, Kansas and New Mexico failed to keep ahead of the national average. There the region fell behind, principally. Mr. Peel said, because agriculture is predominant in the five states and the nation's farm population is declining. He said the 1949 estimate showed a 300,000 gain in the five states compared with 1940, a 6 per cent gain compared with a national average of 12.9 per cent. Mr. Peel said the excess of births over deaths for the region was about 600,000, but that the migration of population—people moving out of the area—had cut this by about half. The director said records showed that Wyoming and New Mexico have tripled their population since 1900, Colorado's has doubled, and the population of Nebraska and Kansas has grown by one-fifth to one-third in the half-century. The census official said the 1948 business survey had not yet been completed, but that retail trade in the five states had gained almost four times over the 1939 total. The retail trade volume for 1948, he said, should amount to about five billion dollars for the five states compared with $1,505,845,000 in 1939. teeth were well preserved, and there was a distinct feminine contour to the rest of the body. Jars and skillfully worked small alabaster vessels and necklaces of colored stones lay under the body. One of the male bodies showed clear signs of having had a leg fracture when alive. The bone was removed carefully for examination by medical experts. The ancient Egyptians worshiped cats and even built temples in their honor. When a favored cat died, notes the National Geographic Society, its body often was mummified. MAKE RECORDINGS NOW AT UNIVERSITY RADIO! School days now may seem as though they'll never end . . . but in future years you'll want many a remembrance of days at K.U. Have your voice or musical talent recorded now for yourself or friends. Someday you'll be glad you did! Recording studio available. Phone 375 for appointment. Recording studio available. Phone 375 for appointment A record made now provides pleasure for many years to come. UNIVERSITY RADIO at Bell Music Co. Had Your Afternoon SUNDAY Snack Yet? Then come down now for delicious— - SANDWICHES - DRINKS - SOUPS - ICE CREAM Larrick's Sundries 1847 Mass. Hopi Chief Wants No Part Of White Man's Handout Washington一(U.P)一Chief Katchongva of the Sun clan told the white man's government that it could take its 90 million dollars. Chief Katchongva came in the Hopi pueblo of Hotevilla, Ariz., where with other dignitaries he presides over nearly 500 members of his clan. He came to protest against the H-bomb, which he regards as an abomination to all mankind. He is staying on a while to protest against an Indian relief bill, which he regards as repugnant and insulting to the Hopis. The bill, approved by the House, would authorize expenditure of $88,570,000 to rehabilitate the Navajos and Hopis. The senate has not yet acted on it. The 70-year-old chief, speaking through an interpreter, told the United Press that the nearly 4,000 Hopis want no part of Uncle Sam's proffered handout. The Navajos can have it all, he indicated, the Hopis, he said, are a proud, intelligent, industrious and independent people who prefer to fashion their own destiny in accordance with their ancient traditions and culture. The Indian Affairs bureau disputes the claim of Katchongvay and others that the Hopis want no help from the white man. The bureau says the protesting Indians are a small minority. But the chief's reply is that the minority speaks for the entire people. The Hopis, whose very name signifies peace, say they never made war on the white man. They also say the white man never conquered them. They have made no treaties with the white man and are not willing now, the chief said, to become wards of the white man and accept his bounty. They have farmed their three mesa tops for hundreds of years without asking any favors from any source but their own gods. Maryland's choice of the white oak as the official state tree is credited to the majestic Wye Oak at Wye Mills, on the state's "eastern shore." It is 95 feet high and about four centuries old. B LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. 80th Year, Modern-to-the-minute. Courses keyed to train. training in Training. CService, Higher Accounting and Auc- tury. Box 424, Lawrence Business College. MEALS AT THEIR BEST! Cube Steaks 70c Pork Tenderloin 75c Pork Chops 75c Hamburger Steak 65c CLOSED FRIDAY and 2----4:30 Sunday 1 $ \frac{1}{2} $ miles south U.S. 59 SHAVER'S Call 785-K-2 Try the LAWRENCE CLEANERS Result .. Good Grooming VIP S HE'LL give you a rose for your lapel. A ND she'll thank us for cleaning your clothes the R IGHT way. T ELEPHONE us. Our air steam finish leaves clothes free from steam imprints or gaudy shine. LOOK M AKE compliments, 1040 1237897 "QUALITY OUTSTANDING" LAWRENCE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS Call 383 MONDAY, APRIL 24, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 19 PAGE THREE Goerz-Brown --- The engagement of Miss Guinevere Goerz to Mr. John Brown, son of Mrs. Treva Brown of Lawrence, is announced by her parents Mr. and Mrs. Harold Goerz of Newton. Miss Goerz was graduated the past semester from the School of education. She was a member of Delta Gamma sorority and Pi Lambda Theta and Delta Phi Delta, national honorary fraternity. She is now instructor at Independence Kan, High school and Junior college. Mr. Brown will be graduated from the School of Business in June. He belongs to Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. B. A. Miss Guinevere Goerz The wedding will be in July. Hilton Picks Shangri-la Friends Hollywood — (U.P.) — James Hilton said if he could flee to Shangri-la "to escape the mess the world's in now" the persons he'd take along would include Eleanor Roosevelt, Madeleine Carroll, and Ingrid Bergman. It's been 20 years since the distinguished British author created that mystic never-never land, where nobody worries about anything and everybody lives for hundreds of years. "I pick Miss Carroll and Miss Bergman not only for their beauty," he explained, "They're intelligent, too. I would take Claire Trevor and Deborah Kerr to Shangri-la with me. Also radio actress Lurene Tuttle and songstress Jo Stafford—to sing for me." Hilton doesn't want anybody to hoist a shocked eyebrow at his list. A couple of centuries is a long time, he said, and he wants to make sure his companions would be interesting. "As far as I know," he added. "there are no morals in Shangri-la. Everything is in moderation there. Nobody's too bad and nobody's too good." "I would also take Danny Kaye and Groucho Marx along," Hilton said, "to make me laugh. And Horowitz to play the piano and Clifton Webb to keep us on our toes." He'd invite some actors, too. Ronald Colman maybe, and Ralph Richardson. "And we'd have to have Ralph Bunche along—just because he's such a wonderful man." If Hilton had his way there wouldn't be any radio or television there, either. But if any of his companions insisted, he'd let 'em bring sets along—just so they didn't make him listen or look at the things. Seniors Only NOW Is The TIME to secure your Senior Class Ring He could always go off in a corner and talk to Madeleine Carroll. Frank Strong Hall Business Office Styles Of 1920's Seen In Home Economics Show A trend back to the fashions of the 1920's was noticeable in the style show presented at a meeting of the Home Economics club the past week. at About 50 women attended the show which featured costumes provided by the Simplicity pattern company and described by Miss Olive Berry, the college fashion director for the company. An unusual item was an extremely stiff black tulle overskirt which must be carried by standing it upright in a suitcase. Miss Berry commented that although it occasionally became bent around the edges it could easily be straightened out. Other costumes varied from sports wear to formal evening dresses. Miss Berry showed was in which they could be varied by the use of scarves and other accessories. The models, members of home economics classes, were: Priscila Richmond, Jo Ann Pace, Patricia Cheatham, Louise Hemphill, Virginia Daniels, Charlene Lashbrook, Delores Decker, Mildred Gulnik Patricia Edson, Lorraine Larson. JoAnne Blanke, Barbara Dunlap, Lois Ann Fuller, Nancy Taggart, Donna Craig, Nancy Neighbor, Lavon Brown, Anne Jordan, Arlene White, Irma Wagner. The co-chairmen in charge of the program were Patricia Brubaker and Charlene Farrell. Law Wives Picnic A picnic for the Law Wives and their husbands, bachelor law students, and the Law school faculty has been planned for Thursday, May 4. 350 See Planet At Lindley 'Show' More than 350 persons viewed Mars from the Lindley Observatory April 21 said Dr. N. W. Storer, associate professor of astronomy. While the planet was somewhat obscured by heat waves, the snow and ice cap at its north pole was plainly visible. Mars reaches a point in its orbit nearest the earth every 26 months. It reached this point last March 30 and, though still visible, has been daily moving farther away. Read the Want Ads Daily. MASSACHUSETTS UNIVERSITY OF STATES CHAPEL Capt. Paul Buskey, Middlebury,'38 Air Intelligence, U.S. Air Force US TENNIS An excellent student at Middlebury College, Vermont, Paul found time to win the coveted All Sports Trophy in his senior year. He graduated in June, 1938. 1 He then joined a coated paper mill firm as research and control man. Pearl Harbor changed all that—Paul went to Maxwell Field to begin Aviation Cadet training. 30 An outstanding Cadet, 2nd Lt. Paul Buskey was held over as an instructor after graduation. Then he was assigned as a pilot in the Air Transport Command. [Illustration of an airplane flying over a mountainous landscape]. His big plane education was topped with 23 missions over the far-famed "Hump," flying C-54 transports. After V-J Day, he stayed on in the Far East until March of 1948—specializing in Air Intelligence. THE MAN WHO WAS THE NATIONAL POLITICAL SUPPLEMENTARY. Back home, after accepting a Regular Air Force Commission, Captain Buskey went to Air Tactical school, was there rated an MSA Officer, and assigned to Command and Staff school. A man in a uniform is handing over a document to another man. The background includes a window with a plane visible outside. Today, Captain Buskey is an Air Intelligence Officer on MATS Headquarters Staff at Andrews Air Force Base near Washington, D. C. He looks forward to a rewarding future in the U. S. Air Force. AIRWING If you are single, between the ages of 20 and $26\frac{1}{2}$ with at least two years of college, consider the many career opportunities as a pilot or navigator in the U. S. Air Force. Procurement Teams are visiting many colleges and universities to explain these career opportunities. Watch for them. You may also get full details at your nearest Air Force Base or U. S. Army and U. S. Air Force Recruiting Station, or by writing to the Chief of Staff, U. S. Air Force, Att: Aviation Cadet Branch, Washington 25, D. C. U. S. AIR FORCE STATE OF MICHIGAN ONLY THE BEST CAN BE AVIATION CADETS! UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, APRIL 24, 1950 PAGE FOUR 10,000 Witness Relays Records Mass Produced Records were mass produced at the silver anniversary running of the Kansas Relays Saturday as a field of approximately 900 sun-drenched athletes cavorted in Memorial stadium. The crowd, estimated at over 10.- 000, witnessed 15 defending champions fail to retain their titles, eight 1949 winners repeat, and seven notable upsets. Records tumbled in the following events; college two-mile relay, college half-mile relay, college and university sprint medley relays, university quarter-mile relay, university distance medley relay, college and university mile relays, and pole vault. The equalled record was in the invitation college sprint medley relay. Champions of a year ago who couldn't do it again although they tried included five individual competitors. They were jerry Biffle, Denver, 100-yard-dash; Jack Greenwood, Kansas, 120-yard high hurdles; Jim Allen, Colorado, shot put; Herb Boskins, Kansas State, broad jump, and Bob Walters, Texas, high jump. The seven kings of 1948 who did come through again included three individuals—Bill Carroll of Oklahoma, pole vault; Don Gehrmann, Wisconsin, Glenn Cunningham mile; and Jim McConnell, Nebraska, deathlon. Two individual events say upsets recorded. Roy Grieve of Bradley and Greenwood had been favored in the hurdles after they finished one-two at the Texas Relays. But both were eliminated in the semi-finals. Virgil Severn of Kansas State was bested by Vern McGrew of Rice in the high jump, although the Wildcat had been tagged best of the field before the meet. Kansas got one of the new records, the four-mile relay, with its team of Cliff Abel, Pat Bowers, Captain Bob Karnes, and Herb Semper. They ran 17:34.3 against the record of 17:37.8. Some fans expressed disappointment because the team hadn't exceeded the American mark of 17:16.1 as they hoped to do after they had run 17:20.8 at the Texas Relays. But they weren't the folks who knew just how much the wind slowed down the Jayhawkers. Nor did they realize how the breeze plays havoc with a runner's sense of pace, especially in distance running. Biggest upset of the day was probably in the university sprint medley relay where Oklahoma upset Oklahoma A. and M. The Aggies had been advertised as on the verge of breaking the world record of 3:28 in the half-mile coach John Jacobs, came up with a dynamic burst in the half-mile anchor leg against Cowboy Harold Tarrant to win going away. The world mark stood pat by 3.1 seconds, but the RELays record fell. Another surprise was in the college mile relay when favored Oklahoma Baptist had trouble passing the baton on the third leg and lost out to both Abilene Christian and Los Angeles City College. All three teams were under the old Relays' record. Also of upset proportions was the anchor leg of the university distance medley. Don McEwen, Michigan's sensational sophomore, took his baton for the mile lap ten yards ahead of the great Gebhmann, rated as the race winner. By the conclusion of the race, Gebhmann was 40 yards back. Two outstanding performers failed to appear. Michigan's Charles Fonville, who set a world record in the shot put at the Relays in 1948, didn't come because of a back injury. Minnesota's Byril Thompson, defending the discus throw, couldn't make it because of pressing schoolwork. Honored guests were many. Besides hundreds of Boy Scouts, the guest list included 9 former Relays referees and five of K.U.'s seven men who have worn the colors of the U.S.A. in Olympic competition. KU vs. Missouri Today, Tuesday Kansas will play Missouri at 3 p.m. today in the Big Seven home opener with big Carl Sandefur or Guy Mabry slated to hurl for the Jayhawkers. The Tigers' pitching assignment will probably go to lefty Bob Smith or to Roger Englert, righthander. In Big Seven play, Missouri has won two and lost two while Kansas lost its only start to Colorado, 4 to 3. The Tigers defeated Iowa State 5 to 1 and 5 to 4 over the weekend at Columbia with Smith winning the former game on Friday. The final of the two-game series will be played Tuesday starting at 3 p.m. This will be the last home game for Coach Bill Hogan's club until they meet Iowa State here May 8 and 9. McConnell Again Wins Decathlon With a whirlwind finish Saturday, Cornhusker Jim McConnell came from behind to successfully defend his Kansas Relays decathlon title. Runner-up was 19-year old Brayton Norton of Santa Ana, Calif., Junior college. Norton led the Nebraskan by 56 points Friday night at the half-way mark of the 10-event competition. But McConnell took the lead with the first Saturday event, the 110-meter high hurdles, and stayed in front. The Cornhusker's winning total was 7,120 points. Norton finished with 7,083. Thus they became the first two Relays decathlon participants to break the 7,000 mark since Olympic champion and world-record holder Glenn Morris set the record of 7,576 in 1936. McConnell accomplished his victory by scoring at least 700 points in all but two of the 10 events. He dropped to 648 in the javelin throw and 325 in the 1,500-meter run Norton dropped into the 600-point bracket twice and as many times into the 500-point division. McConnell's best performance was in the shot put where he garnered 860 points by putting 47 feet 3-14 inches. Norton did best in the 100-meter run where he got 814 points by running 11.1. Kansas' Delwin Norris finished fifth in the field of eight. Norris had 6,271 points. He did best in the high jump when he scored 818 points with a leap of 6 feet 2 inches. Other competitors and their places were Mickey Dunn, Wyoming, 6,518 third; Herb Falkenburg, Trinity, 6,445 fourth| Paul Berry, Tulsa, 5,797 sixth; John Wilkenson, Drake, 5,601 seventh, and Willis Klein-sasser, Tabor, 5,140, eight. Three Records Fall Before Schoolboys Three records fell as the experts picked class winners right on the nose at the 46th annual Kansas Interscholastic track and field meet in Memorial stadium April 21. The 1849 runner-ups—Wichita East, Kingman, and Coldwater—had been picked to win the meet and they did just that. Speedster Dick McGilln of Immaculata at Leavenworth got the first new record of the day with a blazing 9.8 Class B 100-yard dash. McGilln also turned in a 22.0 220-yd dash, and anchored his team's winning half-mile relay team. The third record went to Don Feller of ELDorado who went 20.3 in the Class AA 180-yard low hurdles. But Feller wasn't winner of the race in the finals, taking second to Howard Swearer, Wichita East. Frank Cindrich of Wyandotte, winner of three events, got another class AA 440-yard field. Cindrick also won 220- and 100-dash dashes. Second places went to Wyndotte in Class AA, Fredonia in Class A, Lawrence in Class B. Lawrence won third and Haskell fourth in Class AA. Perfect weather permitted the approximately 1,700 performers to set good marks in all events. IM Swim Meet Preliminaries In Gym Tonight The three-day intramural swimming meet will get under way tonight in the Robinson gym pool with one of the fastest fields in recent years. Preliminaries in the individual events are on tap for tonight, beginning at 7:00. The individual events to be run-off are 50-yard breast stroke, 50-yard free style, 50-yard medley, 100-yard free style, and 100-yard back stroke. On Tuesday, the semi-finals will be held in the individual events and the qualifying round will be run-off in the relays. Finals in individual events, relays, and diving will be held Wednesday. Dee Roy, Phi Kappa Psi, who splashed his way to wins in the 50-yard medley and the 50-yard breast stroke in 1949, is returning to defend his crowns. However he will be hard pressed to repeat. Bill Stratton, Sigma Chi, and Gordon Stucker, Phi Gamma Delta, will offer tough competition to Roy in the medley. Both out-swam him in the semi-finals the past year, Stratton setting a new record in the process. Stucker is defending champ in the 50-yard free style. Three of the six individual champions of 1949 are entered in the meet. This, plus the fact that a host of point winners in 1949 are returning and some fast newcomers are on the scene, all adds up to a strong meet. The breast stroke is probably the most "loaded" event this year. Among the entrants are John Eulich, Phi Gam, runnerup to Roy in 1948; Rey Irwin Phi Delta Theta, fourth a year ago; and Hall Smith, Robin McGeorge, and Jim Olander, all respected newcomers. Jack Faerber, Phi Psi, and Smith will be strong in the 100-yard free style. Carl Privatera, Oread hall, looks to be the best in the back stroke. IM Swim Records 50 Yard Free Style—Sherman, Delta Chi, 1941, :25.3. 50 Yard Breast Stroke—Jervis 50 Yard Breast Stroke—Jervis, Beta Theta Pi. 1946. -29.6. 50 Yard Medley—Stratton, Sigma Chi, 1949, *30.0*. 100 Yard Free Style—Sherman, Delta Chi, 1941, 57.6. 100 Yard Back Stroke—Mckay, Phi Delta Theta. 1947, 1:05.2. 1 150 Yard Medley Relay — Phi Delta Theta, 1947, 1:30.6. Four-lap Relay—Beta Theta Pi, 1947, 1:07.0. New & Used Parts for All Cars AUTO PARTS and ACCESSORIES We Buy Old and Wrecked Cars Both teams journey to Topeka Wednesday for matches with Washburn. The Washburn tennis team is undefeated this season. One of its wins was over Nebraska, 6 to 1. The Ichabod golfers lost to the Cornhuskers the past week. Dave Dennis, the K.U. No. 2 man, showed the way to the Jayhawk golf win Saturday with a 70. Joe Giford, who played the No.1 spot for the team, and the team that won the team medal play score was 286 for Kansas and 300 for Nebraska. It was victory number one of the current season for both teams. The golfers were playing their first match in the second round and was bringing its record up to an even status, having previously been shut out by Oklahoma. Scoring was by match play with three points for an individual victory, and one and a half points to each player for a tie. Auto Glass Mirrors Glass Table Tops AUTO WRECKING AND JUNK CO. The inexperienced Nebraskans were no match for the Jayhawker tennis team. K.U. won all its singles in straight sets, and were pushed to the three-set limit in only, the number two doubles. Kansas Golf, Tennis Teams Win Easily Over Huskers Hervey Macferran, Kansas' No. 1 man, downed Jamie Currin, the Huskers' only letterman, 6-2, 6-3. Maecferran teamed with Bob Swartzell to beat Frank Redman and Andy Buten in the No. 1 doubles. Results of the golf match is as fol- Jayhawker golf and tennis teams swept easily past the Nebraska Cornhuskers in dual matches played here April 22. Coach Dick Richards' tennis team blanked the Huskers, 7 to 0, in a morning match, and then Bill Winey's linkmen took over in the afternoon to complete the rout with a $13 \frac{1}{2}$ to $4 \frac{1}{2}$ victory. Results of the golf match is as follows: Phone 954 712 E. 9th Dick Ashley (K) tied Gifford (N) Dennis (K) defeated Dick Spangler (N) Gifford-Spangler (N) defeated Asbley-Dennis (K) Bob Dare (K) defeated Doug Dale (N) Gene Rourke (K) defeated Steve Flansburg (N) Dare-Rourke (K) defeated Dale- Fleming (N) Results of the tennis match, all won by K.U. players, are as follows: Singles Macferran defeated Currin, 6-2, 6-3 Swartzell defeated Redman, 6-1, 6-0 Charles Crawford defeated Bunten, 6-4, 6-3. Jack Ranson defeated Bob Radin, 6-0, 6-4. Jim Thompson defeated Jerry Magee. 6-3, 6-3. Doubles Macferran-Swartzell defeated Redman-Bunten, 6-1, 7-5 Kaye Plays Berlin In Famous 15 C. W. SMITH "SAMMY KAYE (above) plays Irving Berlin." · Blue Skies, Always. How Deep Is The Ocean, 3 others on new danceable recordings! One of RCA Victor's history-making release of 15 albums "DESIGNED FOR DANCING". 15 great bands, 15 great composers. . . 90 famed hits with the rhythm that goes to your toes. Collect all 15. Start with Sammy Kaye's album. At Bell Music Co. 925 Mass. SPALDING SPORTS SHOW GOLF CALLS FOR GOVERNMENT BUT THE SELDOM THE GOLFER AT THE LARGE RIDOLP COUNTRY CLUB ON THE EDGE OF THE JUNGLE IN NORTH AFRICA GETS IT! SHOT UP! CAN'T YOU SEE THIS IS A Tough DOWN HILL PUTTY! ... BADDOORS COME GOT AND BARRY AT PLAYERS ON THE GREENS... In the New SPALDING CLUBS ...you can get the correct head weight and shaft flexibility for your build and style. Yes, a "CustomFit" set-that gives more power and control to your game. Vhaleima STROLLING LIONARD MIGHT HOLD UP FOR SOME... BLORES CAN PLAY THROUGH IF YOU WANT! GULP . AND THERE ARE SO MANY YOU ANOTHER BALL MAY BE DROPED WITHOUT PENALTY IT ONE IS SWALLOWED. SPALDING SETS THE PACE IN SPORTS 50 MONDAY. APRIL 24. 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE KANSAS STATE 39 ROLLIN PRATHER, Kansas State weight man and a figure familiar to K.U. sports fans, made his last competitive appearance atop Mt. Oread Saturday at the silver anniversary Kansas Relays. He left fans with something to remember him by. Prather putted the shot 53 feet $5^{1 / 8}$ inches for a Relays championship, and he threw the discus 164 feet $9^{1 / 2}$ inches for a second place. His discus effort was just $6^{1 / 2}$ inches away from the winning throw of George Kadera, Texas A. and M. Kansas Relays Summary Javelin: 1. Ray Marke, Texas, 205-4¾; 2. Rote, Rice, 203-11; 3. Frazier, Kansas, State, 201-4¾; Murphy, Notre Dame, 198-14. 120-yard high hurdles: 1. Russ Jerkel, Iowa; 2. Barkshire, Nebraska; 3. Fleming, Notre Dame; 4. Finley, Oklahoma. 14.5. 100-yard dash: 1. Charlie Parker, Texas; 2. Bienz, Tulane; 3. Pettie, Drake; 4. Biffle, Denver; 90.5. College two-mile relay: 1. Abilene Christian, John Sikes, Don Chisam, Sam Volpe, Leon Lepard) 2. Emporia State; 3. South Dakota State; 4. Chicago; 7:49.8. University two-mile relay: 1. Texas (Don Sparks, Edwin Salling, Richard Brooks, Lowell Hawkinson); 2. Oklahoma A. and M.; 3. Arkansas; 4. Minnesota. 7:43.9. College half-mile relay: 1. North Texas State (Richard Smith, Ray Renrifo, Lloyd Lowe, Jerome Zabonik); 2. Los Angeles City college; 3. Compton Junior College; 4. Oklahoma Baptist; 1:26. (New record Old record of 1:26.7 set by Riverside Junior college in 1938). Shot put: 1. Rollin Prather, Kansas State, 55-53-8; 2. Helwig, Notre Dame, 51-84-8; Allen, Colorado, 50-57-4; 4. Albright, Wisconsin, 50-29%. University Quarter-mile relay: 1. Rice (Ted Riggs, Ralph Gawnder, Art Brown, Tom Cox); 2. Drake; 3. Oklahoma A. and M.; 4. Texas; 4.13. Kansas City, Mo., 880-yard relay: 5. Southwest (Bill Powell, Victor Sweenst, Holton Foold, Jim Loomis); 2. Southeast; 3. Central; 4. Northeast: 1.31.9. Glenn Cunningham mile run: 1. Don Gehrmann, Wisconsin; 2. Monte, Texas Western college; 3. Prince, Savannah State; 4. Conrody, Loyola (Chicago). 4:16.4 College Sprint Medley relay: 1. Compton Junior College (Andrew Williamson, Menard Gentry, George Brown, Jerome Walters); 2. Howard Payne; 3. MacMurray; 4. Fort Hays State. 3:27.1. (New Relays record. Old record of 3:31.0 set by East Texas State in 1948). Invitation college sprint medley1. Drury (John Kiefor, Jack Farnham, Bill Overry, Hal Moore); 2. Ottawa; 3. Bethany; 4. Bethel. 3:36.7 (Ties old record set by Baker in 1940). Broad jump: 1. Jerome Biffle, Denver, 25; 2. Voight, Oklahoma A and M., 23-6; 3. Hoskins, Kansas State, 23-4¼; 4. Fambro, North Texas, 23-1/2. University four-mile relay—1 Kansas (Cliff Abels, Herb Semper, Pat Bowers, Bob Karnes); 2. Texas A&M; 3. Oklahoma A&M; 4. No fourth. 17:34.3 (New Relays record. Old record of 17:37.8 set by Illinois in 1931). University one-half mile relay— 1. Oklahoma A&M (Billie GRIest, John Voight, Dick Shippe) 2. Texas 3. Texas A & M 4. Drake, 1,25.5 Kansas high school mile relay—1 Hoisington (Ray Rose, Hazin Loe, Bill Nusa, Bill Folers); 2; Topea; Wichita Eight; 4; Kingman. 3:34.4 University Sprint Medley—1. Oklahoma (Charles Coleman, Jim Finley, Jerry Meader, Bill Jacobs); 2. Oklahoma A&M; 3. Nebraska; 4. Tulane. 3.24.3. (New record. Old record of 3.25.2 set by Indiana in 1941). High jump> 1. Vern McGrew, Rice, 6-6%3; 2. tie between Hustznant, Bradley, and Severns, Kansas State, 6-5%3; 4. Gordon, Missouri, 6-3%3. Discus—George Kadera, Texas A&M, 165-4; 2. Prather, Kansas State, $164-9_{1/2}$; 3. Lindelkugel, Minnesota, $157-1_{1/2}$; 4. Huxhold, Wisconsin, $149-3_{1/2}$ College Distance Medley - 1. Emporia Teachers (William Dudley, James Hobson, James Widrig, Dwight Wadell); 2. South Dakota State; 3. North Dakota State; 4. Ottawa 10:41.7. Pole Vault—1. Bill Carroll Oklahoma, 14-5; 2. tie between Cooper, Nebraska, and Simpson, Texas A&M 13-8; 4. tie between Gregg, Colorado, and Miller, Notre Dame, 13. (New record. Old record of 14-2 set by beef Bruyn of Texas in 1939.) University Distance Medley—1. Michigan Arthur Henrie, Charles Whitaker, Justin Williams, Don McEwen); 2. Wisconsin; 3. Missouri; 4. Arkansas 10:09.7. (New record. Old record of 10:12.7 set by Emporia Teachers in 1936). Junior College Sprint Medley—1. Coffeyville (Bill Journey, Leon Walker, Benny Hevel, Roland Cain); 2. Kansas City, Kan.; 3. Wentworth; 4. El Dora; 3.37.2 College Mile Relay-1. Abilene Christian (H. D. Terry, Bob Beaty, Pete Ragus, Leon Lepard) 2. Los Angeles City College; 3. Oklahoma Baptist; 4. Houston 3. 168 (New record. Old record of 3:17.3 set by Pittsburg Teachers in 1933.) University One Mile Relay—1. Rice (Jim Hoff, Jack Hudgins, Red Brown, Tom Cox); 2. Texas A&M; 3. Missouri; 4. Colorado; 3.15.0. (New record. Old record of 3.15.6 set by Texas A&M in 1948). WE DARE THEM ALL! YES, PHILIP MORRIS challenges any other leading brand to suggest this test In Just ONE MINUTE... you can prove to yourself PHILIP MORRIS is definitely less irritating — therefore MORE ENJOYABLE than the brand you're now smoking* I ...light up a PHILIP MORRIS THEN, just take a puff—DON'T INHALE—and s-l-o-w-l-y let the smoke come through your nose. Easy, isn't it? And Now . . . PETER HARRIS 2. .. light up your present brand Do exactly the same thing—DON'T INHALE. Notice that bite, that sting? Quite a difference from PHILIP MORRIS! MAKE NO MISTAKE . . . Only ONE cigarette is recognized by eminent medical authorities as definitely less irritating. That cigarette is PHILIP MORRIS! NO CIGARETTE HANGOVER means MORE SMOKING PLEASURE! PHILIP MORRIS & CO LTD INC. MADE IN U.S.A. Philip Morris CALL FOR PHILIP MORRIS Bob Dylan CALL FOR PHILIP MORRIS *Confirmed in signed statements by thousands and thousands of smokers all over American PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE KANSAS MONDAY, APRIL 24.1950 ION The Editors Report - HOW TO SOLVE YOUR Date Problem A friend of ours turned his wallet inside out the other day and wailed "me with a date tonight and no money." We've been like that, but the situation could be remedied rather easily. . . set up a "date board" with $5 bills tacked on it. Other colleges have them, and the boards are a success. So far, we hear no student has failed to return the money to the board within the week allowed for the loan. On these boards are cards for the borrowers name to be turned over when a loan has been made. If the money is not returned within the time allotted, his name is revealed to the public as a negligent debtor. The logical place for such a "date board" is the campus fountain, and we suggest that the Student Council or a club consider putting one up. It'd be worth a try.—The Haymaker, Phillips University, Enid, Okla. What A Weekend! DEAR MOM AND DAD: What a weekend! There was so much to see; so much to do. True, we were on the spectator side, doing the heavy looking-on, but it was all we could do to drag our limp carcasses to class this morning. The weather was ideal if you overlook the slight zephyr that blew most of the time. Anyway, the breeze didn't hurt a thing. The Relays floats were cleverly decorated. The parade came off without a hitch. What a grand sight it was—everything from flying saucers to the prettiest girl you could imagine. ye ED Down to Marvin hall the engineers put on a great show. The Engineering Exposition this year was better than ever. Flossy and I checked our osculatory ability on the Kiss-O-Meter. Wow! Also played a game of tit-tat-toe with a mechanical robot. But didn't win. The Kansas Relays themselves were about the finest we've ever seen. K.U. didn't do so well as we had hoped but didn't do too badly either. Placed about ninth in the unofficial scoring totals for university class teams. Where we really stood out was the university four-mile relay. K.U. set a new meet record: 17:34.3. The old record was set by Illinois in '31. It was 17:37.8. It sure was something to see. Cliff Abel got off to a flying start. He whirled around that track and handed the baton to Herb Semper. Semper took it going away like a Kansas jackrabbit. He really poured it on. By the time he handed the baton to Pat Bowers, he was half a Iap ahead. And Pat never lost that lead. It looked like he stretched it out some. In the final heat, Bob Karnes took the baton. By the time he was halfway around, he was going so fast he lapped the Oklahoma A. and M. runner. But that Aggie was game. He stuck it out to the end. He was typical of all the athletes. All of them were out to do their best. And they did it too! Seems as though those boys get better every year. How hard they must train! Hope you plan on making the Relays next year. It really is worth seeing. Ten thousand turned up to see it this year. It was just like Homecoming, almost . . . NEEDED: A FULLTIME Employment Bureau A glaring need arises at K.U. at the end of each semester. The need: a competent, full-scale employment bureau. A bureau capable of securing jobs or promising interviews for the hundreds of potential job hunters graduated each year. by Lew Sciortino This is not to say that the existing placement bureaus sponsored by several of the schools are not competent or that they are not doing a good job. They are, especially when the fact is considered that they are understaffed and that the funds allotted for the work is practically nil. Yet a more efficient job of placing could be done if the operation were expanded to a full-time staff and to the size required. The University averages close to a thousand graduates a year. The years immediately following the war have jumped this figure to nearly the two thousand mark. The prospects for the coming years is for at least one thousand graduates a year. What professional employment agency wouldn't like to boast of that many sure-fire job-hunters each year? Yet the University continues to funnel this large full scale operation through a few scattered non-integrated bureaus. How much better it would be to have a full scale full time placement bureau that would function for the entire University. A bureau adequately manned with sufficient funds to carry on a constant aggressive campaign for jobs. A bureau which didn't wait for the jobs and interviewers to come to the University. But a bureau which went after the jobs and who sold the value of K.U. trained graduates to the businesses and professional world. TODAY'S MAIL Ed. Note: Today's letters were received too late for prior publication. However, since they contain sidelights on a topic—student government—that students should continuously consider, they are being printed. Suggestions Sir: I was a poll worker at Lindley from 7:30 to 10 a.m. April 19, and had somewhat the same experience Mr. Robertson had. I arrived at 7:30 and there was no other worker in sight and no material in evidence with which to open the booth. So I sat down to wait and had to tell several persons the polls weren't ready yet, but would be soon. At 7:45, the ballot box and ballots with instructions for the workers were brought. (I was told later that only two of the election committee were taking the material to the poll.) People started coming in to vote and I was alone about 15 minutes trying to set up the stuff, read my instructions, hand out ballots, and go through all the necessary steps. It was a little difficult and several persons became impatient and left without voting. Finally, about 8 am. or after, one other worker came. Two more arrived about 10 minutes later. Then about 15 minutes before the hour at nine and 10, some of the workers had to go to classes—making us shorthanded at our busiest time. Maybe this couldn't be helped, but I was 25 minutes late to a class at Blake because I stayed to help until the rush was over. When I left there were only three workers at the polls. Another thing, I was the only Independent while at Lindley, and while I had no cause for worry, it is just such case that cause rumors—where only one group is represented. It seems to me the suggestion of a half day off wouldn't help matters any more than convocation hours. Students still wouldn't do what they were given time to do. University Daily Kansan Member of the Kansas Press Asm. National Press Assn. Press Assn., and the Associated College Press. Represented by the National Ad- servive Service, 420 Madison Ave. New York City. News Room Adv. Room K.U. 251 K.U. 376 Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS James Morris Editor in Chief Doris Greenbank James Shrive Managing Editor Business Mgr Asst. Man. Editors Norma Husinger Kay O'Connor Hena Ralph Hemenway City Editor Edward Chapin Asst. City Editors Nelson Ober Marinati Marinati Elaine Ewing Steve Ferro Feature Editor Francis Kelley Photograph Editor Wade Williams Telegraph Editor Robert Sigman William Graves Richard Tatum Lloyd Holbeck Sports Editor Richard Dilskew Asst. Sports Editors Bob Leonard Ray Solan Arthur McBeth Mona Milliken Society Editor Faye Wilkinson Asst. Society Editors Billie Stover Emily Stewart Pete McNeal Editorial Assts. John Bannigan Keile Leslie Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner Cir. Mgr. Yvonne Joserand At. Mgr. Forrest Bellus Classified At. Mgr. Dr. Promotion Mgr. John Wageman By Bibler Little Man On Campus COLLEGE DIPLOMA LEAKERS B.B. BERK "Boy it mus' feel great to have that old diploma an' be out in th' world." First, we need more polls. Many more booths. I doubt, however, that this council would allow that suggestion to go through any more than the previous one. Here are some suggestions from my experience: Second, there should be an even number of Greek and Independent workers at all polls at all times. It would prevent rumors of shady practices. Third, workers should be selected at least one week before the election. The Greek party could select their workers. The Independents could be reached through the aid of A.W.S. and I.S.A. precincts—if there is no other party by next year. Or ask organized houses, An Expression The editor's comment of April 20, "Because democracy is a tedious process, it has become unfashionable" is not well taken. He speaks about a Greek revolt, the indifference of 73 per cent of the students, the poverty of one and the despair of another. But he completely ignores the 40 Kallikak votes which represent, not indifference, but despair and revolt against a farcical student government. It means 40 students registered their complete rejection of a travesty on democracy. But not indifference. Sir: The editor was correct in saying, "Evidently most students felt there was little use in voting." The futility of voting is the reason 40 students would rather write in the name of a dead man, the father of a line of morons, than they would be a party to K.U. student government. Students do not want to vote against Pachacamac; they want something to vote for. The Kallikak vote was an expression of that need. The Kallikak campaign was an unorganized revolt. It materialized only twelve hours before the polls opened. It was a grass-roots movement. C. Clemens Cunnick College junior Greek and Independent, to furnish a quota. Fourth, poll workers should work at a time when they do not have to quit 10 or 15 minutes before the hour in the rush period of voting, and rush off to class. e Fifth, sometime in the week before election, the workers should be called together, given their instructions, allowed to practice under supervision (blank sheets for I.D. cards and ballots), and any questions they have should be answered at that time by the elections committee or A.S.C. members. Sixth, new students for the second semester, new ones transferring from other schools, old students whose classification changed at the semester, and old students who changed schools at semester, should be told for a week before election to go to the Registrar's office and get their slip of paper stating their school and classification. Too many persons didn't bother to vote because they either weren't listed in the student directory or were incorrectly listed. Seventh, isn't there some way to eliminate the step of crossing out the person's name in the directory? I know it is necessary to look up their classification, etc., but extra time taken could help in busy periods. That is all I have to say. Mona Millikan College sophomore West Of Abilene' Tickets On Sale Complete rehearsals for the 1850 College Daze production to be given Tuesday, May 2, through Friday, May 5, in Fraser theater started April 17 and will continue for two weeks. Tickets for "West of Abilene" are now on sale at Ober's and the Student Union Activities office in the Union. Craig Hampton, president of Student Union Activities said the scenery is almost complete and the costumes for the three act music farce are ready. All the music is been completed in preparation for five rehearsals with the orchestra. K Terms with be pa during cept S sity I lism 1. 25 wo Addit LIME Size 1 Half COMM cludin Mait Murt MAN' Size see at FIGU campa line o our CARM 1930 perfect TREES THEISIS and t Book FINE merial just a Easy 826 V UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS ONDAY, APRIL 24.1950 PAGE SEVEN 24, 1950 Bibler | | | | :--- | :--- | urnish I work have to be the voting. could be r under r ID. ques were com- com- sec- erring students at the who should section and their many be- ded in in- leadership Conference Set pay to g out tory? k up that ene" and office 1950 given day, erted two Stu- the the A Religious Leadership Training conference for the purpose of 'training College students from all if the religious groups on the campus to be better leaders in their own groups" will be held Saturday, at Westminster house, 1221 Oread. The Student Religious council is sponsoring the conference. University religious groups will and representatives. Registration blanks for delegates may be obtained at Westminster house now and must be returned before Wednesday. Opening the conference at 9:30 a.m. will be a discussion of the Ecumenical church led by Jerre Ann Quin, College senior, and Kathryn Conrad, College freshman. The "Qualities of a Good Leader" will be presented at 10:15 a.m. by Dev. Harold G. Barr, professor of Migation. A "Coffee Break" will follow at 10:45 a.m. Six discussion groups will be held from 11 a.m. to noon. A worship leadership group will be led by Mabel Ann Richardson, special student. The Rev. Dale E. Turner, miner of the Lawrence Plymouth Congregation church, will head the Recreation Leadership discussion. A publicity leadership section will be directed by David M. Riggs, secretary of the University Y.M.C.A. Presiding over the World Service Leadership discussion will be the The men's intramural softball schedule for today is as follows: All games will start at 4:15 p.m. Field. Softball Games Scheduled Today 1 Spooner Thayer v. Alpha Phi Alpha 3 Pi Kappa Alpha v. Texas Leaguers 4 Beta 69ers v. Jay Crows 7 Theta Tau v. Sterling-Oliver Today's schedule for women's intramural softball is as follows: Field 1 Jayettes v. Pi Phi's, 5 p.m. 3 Alpha Omicron Pi v. Kanza, 4 p.m. Entertaining Family Life Greenville, S. C. — (U.P.)—Sheriff R Homer Bearden sometimes takes a dim view of family life. At 6:45 p.m. he answered a "man-beating-woman" call. Ten minutes later, he hurried to where a man was beating his whole family with a hammer. At 7 p. m., Bearden went out to stop another man from slugging his wife. Rev. R. W. Albert, pastor of the Lawrence Trinity Lutheran church. Program planning will be discussed by Edwin F. Price, professor of religion. The general purpose of a University student religious group will be pointed out by John Patton, professor of religion, in a sixth group. Following lunch at noon for 50 cents a person, discussion groups will continue at 1 p.m. The same leaders will preside. Mathematical-Colloquium, 5 p.m. today, 203 strong hall. "On Topics Connected With The Riemann Zeta Function," Mr. Alan Showalter. Special meeting, 5 p.m. Tuesday, 203 strong hall. "On Lorenzian Transformations," Prof. C. C. MacDuffee, University of Wisconsin. Monday, April 24 Ward T regular meeting, 6:30 to night, 205 Fraser hall. Official Bulletin Y.W.C.A. Executive board, 4 p.m. today, Pine room, Union. Sigma Tau election of officers. 7:30 tonight, 426 Lindley hall. All members attend. Pre-Nursing club, 4 p.m. Tuesday, Dining room, Fraser hall. Bacteriology club, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, 502 Snow hall. Dr. Paul B. Lawson, "D.D.T." Phi Sigma, 12 noon Tuesday, 301 Snow hall. I. S.A. council, 7:15 tonight, Pine room, Union. Quill club initiation. 8 p.m. Tuesday, Hill Co-op instead of East room, Union as previously announced. Alpha Phi Omega, 7 p.m. Tuesday, East room, Union. Two Professors From KU Attend Hutchinson Meeting Richard Schiefelbusch, assistant professor of speech, and June Miller, associate professor in hearing, represented the University at Hutchinson April 21 at the Kansas Society for Exceptional Children. Kansan Classified Advertising Phone K.U.376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid by cash during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journals and publications of 45 p.m. before publication date. One day Three Five days days 25 words or less ... 35c 65c 99c Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c Classified Advertising Rates FOR SALE LIME green, ballerina length formal. 12 Worn once. Excellent condition. 95% cotton. COMPLETE DARKROOM equipment including federal enlarger Model 312—Must sell—very reasonable. Call 931W after 7 p.m. MANS formal coat, First Nighter, white. Size of coat 3651 after 5:30 or 1440 Kentucky. FIGURINE PAINTING IS sweeping the campus. Get into the swing! The DIXIE CARMEL CORN SHOP has a complete line of paints, figures and brushes. Use our paint! DIXIE CARMEL CORN SHOP 842 Mass. DIXIE CARMEL CORN SHOP 842 Mass. 1930 MODEL "A" Roadster. Mechanically perfect. Good body and paint. Phone 24. THESES MATERIALS! All weights of thesis quality typing paper, carbon paper, and typewriter ribbons. Student Union Book Store. M4 FINEST TELEVISION—Best in sets and carriers. In the showroom arrived $87.50 and use the new- est Emerson table model set at $195.50 and Electr and Electr. $94 Vermont. Phone 138. 124. 664. BUSINESS SERVICE SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several mature students with good perfor- mity for summer work. This is a digi- gnified sales activity, active in co- ulders' training and best known firm in the educational field. Applicants accepted will work by appointment on leads we furnish. Earnings $75.00 to $125.00 and more per week on an avi- anced percentage basis. Write Mr. F. Craddock, Grant Street, Aksana, Giving qualifications, school and home address. ff TYPING: Call Hazel Stanley. 2865M for prompt experienced users. 820% Max rate. DRESS MAKING and sewing; all types of formalts and dresses made to order. Also shortened and remodeled—call Mrs. Candler. 900W 27 JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field Their needs are our business. Our one-stop pet shop has everything for fun, fur and feathers. Grant's PET and Gift Shop. TYPING: Neat, accurate, rapid. Regular rates. Prompt service. Mesh network. 827-Apr. I WILL DO all kinds of typing in my home. Call 3884W. 28 TYPING. Theses. Term Reports. Reports Notes. Memo. Mrs Sheu 1039 Vermont. Ph. 1168R. TYPING. Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rates. Prompt attention. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601 THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadi Bros. Motor Co. to help repair cars. To help with fender repair, auto painting, used cars. 317 E.17th. Phone 785 or 1821R. WANTED FOR RENT RIDERS — Topeka to Haskell; Monday thru Friday; leave Topeka 7 a.m.; Haskell 5 p.m. Call Fitzsimmons—Haskell 93; Topeka 37965. 25 WANTED TO RENT—Sleeping rooms or small apartment convenient to campus for couple. Here for summer school. Really Box 5, Kansan. 26 LARGE EIGHT room house; two blocks from campus. Excellent rooming and property; partly furnished job location. Available immediately. Call 2917 R . 25 TRANSPORTATION FLY and Take advantage of reduced fares, dovetail connections, good accommodations, Miss Greemann at FIRE and talk for KKM and information. Telephone No. 30. First Love Is The Best Minneapolis—(U.P.)—Peter Johnson won an uncontested divorce when he testified that he has discovered "the one perfect man in the world—my wife's first husband." Managers of Organized Houses! MANHATTAN, NEW YORK NOW is the time to make arrangements It's time now to plan for having your rugs spic and span when your house opens next September. Have your rugs cleaned the easy way . . . let New York Cleaners clean and store them for you during the summer months. They'll be all ready when school opens. for summer rug cleaning. Call 75 today to arrange for summer rug cleaning. Expert rug cleaners will make a free inspection and estimate on all jobs.Call them to come out to your house now. New York Cleaners 926 Mass. VARSITY Phone 132 for Sho Time NOW Thru TUESDAY Gene Autry "COWTOWN" —And— "JOE PALOOKA MEETS HUMPHREY" Late News Events Color Cartoons "GLEE WORMS" "THE 3RD MAN" The most unusual entertainment of 1950! Features at 1:00-3:00-5:05 7:10-9:20 PLUS: Late Cartoon "Quack News A Doodle Doo" NOW THRU WEDNESDAY JAYHAWKER Phone 10 for Sho Time Read the Want Ads Daily. N-O-W SHOWING Don't miss Mr. Hard-to- Get in His New Role!! DEAR SANTA...PLEASE BRING ME THIS FOR CHRISTMAS! DEAR SANTA...PLEASE BRING ME THIS FOR CHRISTMAS! INTO LAND V ROBERT MITCHUM JANET LEIGH in Holiday Affair Shown 1:33-3:33-5:33-7:33 & 9:33 ROBERT MITCHUM JANET LEIGH in Holiday Affair ADDED FUN Color Cartoon Latest World News N-O-W! A Riot on Wheels! Shows Continuous - Open 12:45 PATEE THE COMMONWEALTH RED SKELTON IS THE YELLOW CAB MAN a riot on wheels MGM LAUGH ME UP LOGI GLORIA DE HAVEN WALTER, SLEZAK. EDWARD ARNOLD • JAMES GLEASON Feature times: 1:34, 3:33, 5:34, 7:33 and 9:34 ALSO Color Cartoon - News Continuous shows Open 12:45 Granada PHONE 946 Continuous shows Open 12:45 Granada PHONE 946 Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers Last Times Tonite Alan Ladd - Robt. Preston "Whispering Smith" in Color by Technicolor "Movies Are Better Now Than Ever Before" TUE - WED LOVE ON A DARE! LAUGHS TO SPARE! LOVE ON A DARE! LAUGHS TO SPARE! "I'snt it Romantic" Veronica Billy LAKE • DeWOLFE Mona Patric FREEMAN • KNOWLES Mary HATCHER Dick WEBB A PARAMOUNT PICTURE Also! COLOR CARTOON Buddy Rich Orch. Lawrence DRIVE - IN Theatre For Sho Times Phone 260 1.0112401 PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, APRIL 24, 1350 K.U. To Enter Four Programs Offered By State Department The University has been invited to participate in several training programs recently announced by the state department. Chancellor Deane W. Malott has appointed a committee to screen local applicants with Francis H. Heller, assistant professor of political science, as its chairman. Three programs are being operated by the state department and one by the United Nations. The United Nations' program is a summer internship for which the United States will send three to five students to Geneva, Switzerland, for on-the-job training with U.N. agencies in that city. Good knowledge of French is a prerequisite. Eligibility is limited to college students completing their degree work this June and graduate students. Professor Heller explained that the U.N. will pay an allowance for living expenses while in Geneva but transportation to and from Switzerland will have to be paid for by the student. The University may name one candidate for this program. As the candidate's name has to reach the state department before Friday, May 5, anyone interested should contact the committee at once. Professor Heller said. The three programs carried on by the state department are a year's training in Washington, work for the state department in Washington during the summer months only, and participation in a seminar on foreign affairs. Selections for the three programs will be made in the second week of May. Students and faculty members desiring to be considered should get in touch with Professor Heller, by Saturday, May 6. Two students may be named by the K.U. committee as candidates for the year-long internship program only seniors and graduates will be eligible. As department state department selection board will select about 25 individuals from the nominees of the participating universities. After their year's training in Washington they will have an opportunity to enter the service of the state department through the appropriate civil service examination. Trainees will be paid $2,850 a year, and may after the first six months, receive a raise to $3,210 a year. During the summer months only, the department will take 15 undergraduate or graduate students as student assistants. They will have an opportunity to work on current and routine assignments, on all levels of departmental activity. Lectures and group discussion meetings will be arranged for them to intensify their contacts with the problems and operations of American-foreign policy. They will be paid about $9.25 a working day. Eligible for this program are students completing the junior year this June, seniors who are definitely planning to return to school in the fall for graduate work, and graduate students who will return to school for continued study in the fall. There is a maximum age limit of 30 on both this and the internship program. Each participating university may nominate one candidate for the summer student assistant program. The state department is also sponsoring a "Professor and Student Summer Seminar on Foreign Affairs." An opportunity will be given advanced seniors, graduate students, and faculty members under 40 to pursue research on one of a number of topics listed by the department. This seminar will be conducted from July 10 to September 1. No monetary grants are available for this program. KU, may name one student and one faculty member to participate in it. Other members of the committee are H.B. Chubb, professor of political science, and Leland Pritchard, professor of economics. Major study qualifying for consideration may, in addition to the departments represented by the committee members, be in history, geography, foreign language and culinary psychology, ect. Knowledge of foreign languages is required only of those applying for the U.N. program. The nominating committee plans to interview all those who appear interested and qualified. Only those selected will be required to furnish supporting documents with a formal application. For the purposes of the local committee, it will be sufficient to indicate interest to Professor Heller. With A Song In My Heart' Musicale Is Presented By Sigma Alpha Iota An American musicale, "With A Song In My Heart," was presented by Sigma Alpha Iota, honorary music fraternity, April 21. Kitty Walter, fine arts senior, sang two numbers, including the spirited "Miranda." She enunciated very well in both numbers. A popular duo piano number, "Night and Day" (Cole Porter), was played by Miss Barr and Carolee Oeberhart, fine arts freshman. The audience especially liked the numbers, which she played back for an encore, for which they played the short, fast-moving "Jamatea Rumba." The theme song, "With a Song In My Heart," written by Richard Rogers and Lorenz Lynt and arranged by Marilyn Barr, fine arts sophomore, opened the program. It was sung by the chorus and followed by two other chorus numbers, "Thou Art the Night Wind." (Harvey Gaul) and "Wing Tee Wee" (Goefrey O'Hara). Lois Bradfield, fine arts sophomore, played a piano solo, "Scherzo" (Charles Griffes). The number consisted of the right-hand playing a melody in a minor key accompanied by the left and vice-versa, in a crossed hands technique. It had an abrupt, invasive ending. The alto section of the chorus carried its part exceptionally well in a short selection, "Water Colors" (Water Color), expression and good dynamics; the chorus also sang the plaintive "Things" (Bernardine Road, fine arts senior). Margaret Granger, College junior, was selected president of Student Union activities for the 1950-51 school year by the Union Operating committee. ly flat on the latter, "The Song Is Ended." written by Irving Berlin and arranged by Miss Barr, was sung by the chorus with good dynamics as the closing number. Mary Lynn Lucas, fine arts senior, sang "Seasons" (S. R. Gaines) and "My Lover He Comes on the Skee" (Clough-Leighter). With precise timing, the chorus next sang "Hi Jinks" (Adalgath Morrison) and "The Rose of S.A.I." However, the alto section was slight- Carlyle The other officers chosen are: Paul Coker, Jr., vice-president; Patricia Ames, secretary; and Curtis Coffey, treasurer. Granger Heads Revised Union The S.U.A. was reorganized to include eight directors, to replace the present committee chairman, who will be responsible for the individual projects. The directors will be chosen by the four officers of S.U.A. plus five members of the Union Operating committee appointed by the president. The board of directors will include the four officers and the eight directors. Margaret Granger Miss Granger announced that directors' petitions may be obtained at the Student Union office beginning today. All applications must be returned by noon Saturday The following persons have been appointed to the advisory committee for S.U.A.: L. C. Woodruff, dean of men; Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women; Ernest Friesen, College senior; Harold Edmondson, engineering junior; and Mary Helen Baker, fine arts senior. Dean Woodruff has become temporary chairman of the Union Operating committee following the resignation of Ogden Jones, geologist, wate. laboratory, because of ill health. Robert Bennett, first year law, was appointed temporary secretary. WEATHER KANSAS: Partly cloudy this afternoon and tonight with thundershowers in northeast and extreme east this afternoon. Tuesday partly cloudy and cooler in east; fair and somewhat warmer west. Low tonight 30-35 degrees northwest to 45-50 degrees southeast; high Tuesday 60-65 degrees. You, Too, Can Read About It! T Yes, at Risk's you can wash your clothes in a Maytag washing machine for only 60c per hour. Or leave them for a GE automatic wash. RISK'S SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRY 613 Vermont No Human Can Stop Life On Earth, Geologist Says No man should presume that anything he can do will terminate the biotic history of the earth. "Fundamentally such predictions are unworthy of a scientist. They are, indeed, an indication of a lack of prospective and a lack of faith." That was what Dr. Robert M. Dreyer, chairman of the geology department said at the ninth lecture in the "Atomic Energy and Man" series. "The geologist knows that the natural forces of an earthquake or a volcanic eruption involve the production of energy of such stupendous magnitude as to dwarf any conceivable manifestations of man-made energy." Dr. Dreyer described the principal minerals used in the production of fissionable materials and enumerated the known sources of them in the world. He pointed out the fact that although uranium and thorium, the most important elements used in the production of atomic energy, are present in 159 minerals, there are only three common minerals mined to supply them. Dr. Dreyer traced the course of monazite, the principal thorium mineral, from the original magma The Belgian Congo, Canada, the United States, and Czechoslovakia supply the world's demands for uranium. India and Brazil are the principal thorium sources. of molten rock, to its eventual deposition in the black sands of Travancore, India. Until 1947, these deposits were mined to obtain titanium dioxide, a pigment used to color paint white. In that year both the government of India and of Brazil put embargos on this mineral. Citing the Smyth report on atomic energy, he said that thorium could be used in the production of atomic energy, but that uranium was preferred because it was susceptible to both fast and slow neutron bombardment. Thorium was susceptible only to fast neutrons. This mineral would probably become more important as the need for fissionable material increases. He then described the characteristics of the two principal uranium minerals, pitchblende and carnotite, and quoted some of the known production figures from the four primary sources of the world's uranium. Up to 1940, only between 4,000 and 5,000 tone of uranium had been produced, mainly for the radium content. Two things every college man should know! 1. This is a Campus Queen. Her face is her fortune... runs into nice little figure. Voted girl most likely to. Thinks her exams come back covered with kiss-marks. Sweet enough to eat. Eats plenty. Says "Manhattan" sports shirts are real beauties. 2 2. This is a "Manhattan" Sportshirt. Reigning favorite throughout the land. Brilliant colors, exotic designs, luxurious rayon . . . Polynesian Print Sportshirts by "Manhattan." You'll want to own 'em all. CAMPUS FAVORITE Manhattan THE MANHATTAN SHIRT COMPANY Copr. 1950, The Manhattan Shirt Co. S 24.1950 Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks. University Daily Kansan minate cientist.ack of O F T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F K A N S A S STUDENT NEWS PAPER Lawrence. Kansas these de- nition tita- ces to our both and of mineral. Atomicic could atomic is pre- ceptible bomb- uscep- ly be- ne need cases. Character- anium carno- known four s ura- n 4,000 d been radium to we $1 per of be th Ju ma te co in o st o a g o i c Juniors May Study Abroad For KU Credit Beginning with the next school year, students in the College may study abroad and receive University credit during their junior year provided they can meet necessary requirements. Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College, said that the College faculty decided at its last meeting to appoint a standing committee for the Junior Year Abroad program. The duties of the committee will be: 1. The making of contacts and arrangements with sponsoring groups. 2. The selection of students for participation. 3. The assisting of students and their major advisers in planning the work of the Junior Year Abroad. 4. The providing of publicity for the program. Dr. J. A. Burzle, chairman of the German department, will head the committee on the program. He said that an applicant for study abroad must be of excellent character, show seriousness of purpose, be pleased to work generally qualified to represent the American college student abroad. To meet the requirements a student must have a grade point average of 1.5 and adequate preparation in the foreign language required. Each student's program must be approved by his major department and the dean of the College. Any exemption from College requirements must be approved by the administrative committee of the College faculty. The student must have the consent of his parents or guardians and their approval of the financial arrangements unless the candidate has an independent income. The student must also accept the supervision and authority of the "professor-in-charge," an American professor who is resident with the students throughout the year and who superintends all work. Fifty-five colleges and universities in the U.S. have such programs functioning today. They have formed the American Council on the Junior Year Abroad. The Council determines recognition, academic standards, scholarships, finance, and publicity. While some of the schools operate their programs independently, K. U. will join with a Junior Year group from some other school. Groups are now set up in France, Italy, Germany, Mexico, and Switzerland. According to a report submitted to the College faculty such a plan would cost the student between $1,400 and $1,800 plus travel expenses and "a reasonable amount of pocket money." This program has been approved by the Veteran's administration for those under the G.I. educational plan. Financial aid through scholarships is available. Dr. Burzle pointed out that the Junior Year Abroad is intended for mature and responsible students who are interested in the language, history, and civilization of a foreign country, or who desire to specialize in one of the liberal arts, fine arts, or social sciences. The program seeks to bring the student face to face with the peoples of the world thus leading to "an appreciation of other national backgrounds and of the essential unity of Western civilization." KANSAS—Frost or freezing temperatures over the state tonight. Low temperatures 25 to 30. Fair this afternoon, tonight, and Wednesday, cooler in east tonight, warmer Wednesday. Strong northerly winds this afternoon, diminishing tonight. High Tuesday in 60's. WEATHER Students desiring more specific information about the plan should contact Dr. Burzle. Bitter Bird Asked To Discontinue The management of the Bitter Bird, campus humor magazine, has been asked to discontinue publication by Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, and Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of men. The following statement was issued jointly by Dean Habein and Dean Woodruff Monday: "We have asked the management of the Bitter Bird to discontinue publication. This action has been taken because two years' experience has indicated to us that there is a place on the campus for only one humor magazine. "For at least 30 years the Sour Owl has been the humor magazine at K. U. It's present connections with the School of Journalism permits a continuity of policy and management which appears to be essential to the success of such a venture. Lack of such continuity has been responsible for many of the difficulties encountered by the Bitter Bird." Jayhawk To Get Resurfacing Job Jayhawk drive from 13th street and Oread avenue to West Campus road will be resurfaced as soon as contracts can be drawn up and let by the state architect's office. The board of regents at a recent meeting authorized $53,000 for the project and other repaving projects for University streets. A hot bituminous mat will be used on all the streets to be repaired. Mississippi street will be repaired from 13th street south to near Watson library. The drive in front of Fraser and Blake halls and Watkins Memorial hospital will be resurfaced. At Mississippi street and Jayhawk drive, the intersection will be widened and paved on the northeast corner. The road from the Jayhawk drive circle to the entrance of Memorial drive will be widened and resurfaced. Completion of the parking apron on West 16th street to Michigan street is also planned. J. J. Wilson, business manager, said that the weather would largely determine how fast the job could be done after the contracts are let. The board of regents also authorized the removal of a skylight from Spooner hall. Tile will be used for re-roofing. Phone Strike Still Unsettled; Rail Strike Off Chicago, April 25 — (U.P.) — The government struggled today to head off a nationwide telephone strike after winning an agreement from locomotive firemen to postpone a strike against seven railroads for two weeks. Chairman Francis A. O'Neill of the national railway mediation board won a promise last night from the brotherhood of firemen and engineer- men to hold off its strike until 6 am. on Wednesday, May 10. Meanwhile, O'Neill will meet with the union and the railroads in Chicago in an attempt to reach a permanent settlement on the union's long-standing demand for an additional fireman on multiple-unit diesel engines. U. S. conciliators scheduled last ditch meetings at New York this morning with representatives of the C.I.O. Communications Workers of America and various divisions of the American Telephone and Telegraph company. The telephone strike was scheduled for midnight tonight. The railroad walkout had been set for 6 a.m. Wednesday. 50 Years In Bailey To Be Celebrated Friday With barely 13-1/2 hours to go, the mediators were attempting to prevent a strike by 200,000 A.T.&T. employees that could tie up most of the nation's communication system. At the banquet in the evening several alumni and friends of the department will deliver short speeches. Invitations to visit the campus and tour the fifty-year old structure have been sent to alumni of the School of Pharmacy, the chemistry department, and other colleges and universities in the area. The C.W.A., in 24 separate negotiations, has attempted to win what amounted to a 15-cent per man package increase. But even if the mediators succeeded in postponing the big C.W.A. strike, it was highly probable that an unofficial walkout would start at 6 A.M. tomorrow in each time zone due to a separate strike by 11,000 equipment installers who are members of C.W.A. division 6. Fifty years of occupancy in Bailey Chemical laboratories will be celebrated Friday, by the chemistry department and School of Pharmacy, Dr. Ray Q. Brewster, head of the chemistry department announced recently. The installers struck Monday over a grievance involving television construction workers at South Bend Ind. Today, however, the installers officers said the strike involved wages. Dr. Wendell M. Latimer, professor of chemistry at the University of California, will give two speeches as part of the day's program. Dr Latimer will talk at 4 p.m. in 305 Bailey, and again at a dinner in the Kansas room of the Union building. The installers planned to set up picket lines at 6 A.M. tomorrow and to begin "jamming" telephone lines with an excessive number of calls. In that case, members of the C.W.A. were expected to honor the picket lines even if their own nationwide strike had been postponed. Dr. Latimer is the leading chemical consultant on atomic energy to the national government. He will speak on the relations of the principals of the hydrogen bomb and the energy of the sun and stars. His talk is entitled "Astro-Chemical Problems in Formation of the Earth." Visitors will be taken on conducted tours of Bailey chemical laboratories by members of the following student organizations: student affiliate chapter of t he American Chemical society; Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemical fraternity; Phi Lambda Upsilon, honorary chemistry fraternity; and the student affiliate chapter of the American Pharmaceutical association. Bailey Chemical laboratories, known in earlier days as "Bailey's barn," was erected around 1900 when out of an urgent need for building facilities lawmakers appropriated 55 thousand dollars for the structure. The aged building was officially dedicated to Edgar Henry Summerfield in 1938, a former instructor of chemistry at K.U. who did much for the development of the department before his death in 1933. Vogt Will Address Honor Convocation William Vogt, naturalist and author; will speak at the 27th annual Honors convocation at 9:20 a.m. Wednesday in Hoch auditorium. Mr. Vogt, author of "The Road to Survival," will speak on "Our Need for Conservation." S. C. MALONE WILLIAM VOGT Budenz Testifies Secretly Today Washington, April 25—(U.P.)—Louis F. Budenz goes before senate investigators today for a grilling on his charge that Red leaders regarded Owen Lattimore as a secret—and disciplined—communist. The one-time communist editor, now an economics professor at Fordham university, testifies at a closed session of a senate foreign relations subcommittee today. He will be asked to give names, dates, and places. Present at the hearing will be Lattimore and the man who has accused him of being the top Soviet spy in this country—Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy, (R., Wis.) Lattimore will receive another "day in court" at an open session tomorrow. Subcommittee members want Budenz to spell out these assignments specifically. In addition, he has promised to supply the names of at least 20 communist writers who contributed to the magazine Pacific Affairs while Lattimore was its editor. Budenz testified last Thursday that he did not know Lattimore personally, but that his fellow Reds told him during his communist party days that the Johns Hopkins professor was under their discipline. He was told, he said, that Lattimore was a member of a communist espionage cell and got "assignments" from top party leaders. The controversy over government loyalty files that has slowed the investigation from the start broke out in a new form. But McCarthy has insisted the files will furnish proof for his charges. But President Truman has defied a subcommittee subpoena for the records and has refused to open them. Subcommittee chairman Millard E. Tydings, (D., Md.) said he made three trips to the White House to discuss the issue. He said he found the president "ready, willing, and anxious" to turn over the files to the senate's investigators, but that F.B.I. director J. Edgar Hoover protested vigorously that this would break down the organizations investigative procedures. At the convocation the University will pay tribute to its outstanding students. A printed convocation program will list the names of the upper 10 per cent of the senior class in all schools. The leading student or students in the junior, sophomore, and freshman classes will also be recognized on the printed program. Chancellor Deane W. Malott will read the names of those students newly chosen for membership in the honorary fraternities and sororities at the University. Until a year ago it was the custom for an anonymous selection committee to select a member of the past year's graduating class for being the outstanding student. No such selection will be made this year. The speaker to address Wednesday's convocation has been warning the world and the U.S. in particular that unless we make an about face on our wildlife and cultivable land policies the world faces mass starvation. In 1948 Mr. Vogt was appointed chief of the conservation section of the Pan-American union. This union has been called the first "international conclave" to define and begin to solve the relationship between populations and resources. After winning an Inter-American fellowship Mr. Vogt studied climatology in Chile from 1939 to 1942. The War department called on him during the war as expert consultant on South America. In 1942 he became the associate director of science and education for the office of Inter-American affairs. Soon after becoming editor of "Bird Lore" in 1955 he edited Audubon's "Birds of America." In "Road to Survival" Mr. Vogt says that our past is catching up with us, and now while there is still time we must turn our attention and our efforts to preserving the strength and productivity of our still "lusty and fruitful land." He received his bachelor of arts degree from St. Stephens college (now Bard) at Annandale-on-Hudson, N.Y., in 1925. In his conservation studies he has travelled more than 100,000 miles in North and South America. Mr. Vogt holds to the idea that men cannot live happily and permanently on this planet except in "ecological harmony with the wildlife." The Girl's Glee club, directed by Miss Irene Peabody, associate professor of voice, will sing "Song of Merriam" (From). Reinhold Schmidt, associate professor of voice, will sing the baritone soo. The University band, directed by Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra, will play before and after the convocation. Inter-dorm Plans Election, Banquet Women's Inter-dorm will elect officers on Monday, May 1, and will hold the installation banquet Monday. May 15. Candidates for office are Diane Johnson, College junior, and Patricia Kennedy, College sophomore, president; Melva Lutz, College junior, and Evelyn White, education junior, secretary-treasurer; Doris Kendall, and Johnnie Shafer, College sophomore, social chairman. Runner-up for the presidency will be vice-president All girls living in dormitories who would like to be counselors next year are invited to attend a counseling breakfast Saturday morning, April 29. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1950 THEY'RE HERE THE ALBUMS OF K. U. SONGS RECORDED BY MEN'S GLEE CLUB GERALD M. CARNEY, DIRECTOR UNIVERSITY BAND RUSSELL L. WILEY, DIRECTOR A CAPPELLA CHOIR D. M. SWARTHOUT, DIRECTOR Songs of KU Songs of KU R. C.A. VICTOR 78 R.P.M. NON-BREAKABLE RECORDS $4.90 each Buy One For Yourself or Send One As A Gift A K. U. Alumni Association Project NOW AVAILABLE AT STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE We'll Mail Them Anyplace In The U.S. Free Of Charge K. U.HAS GONE ON RECORD aadThhlko 30474 7101 5. 1950 TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE THREE University Daily Kansan Presents— James Hawes Stars Again In 'College Daze Of 1950' "Humh, hum-m-m, come closer and I will tell you a story of avarice and greed, of evil men and wretched doings, the story of the Maltese—" Those are Sidney Greenstreet's lines, but James Hawes, a versa, ile campus luminary, can do a pretty convincing job as a vocal stand in for the famous "fat man." 1950 JAMES HAWES A commercial art senior whose first love is the stage, Jim has successfully carved his name in the annals of University dramatics. He has the leading male part in the "College Daze" of 1950, and has participated in the past three productions of the variety show. He has had important roles in University productions of "Hamlet," "Bury The Dead," and "Ten Little Indians." A comedian extraordinary, his hilarious facial expressions and vocal characterizations have served to make him one of K.U.'s best-loved funnymen. A product of Southwest high school, Kansas City, Mo., Jim entered the University in September, 1946. In his four years at KU, he has found time to participate in the University Players Forensic League and Student Union activities, of which he was decorations chairman as a sophomore. Jim has served on the art staff of the Jayhawker magazine for the past two years and this semester is social chairman of Delta Upsilon fraternity. He was recently elected to Sachem circle of Omicron Delta Kappa, senior men's honorary society. Upon graduation this spring, Jim intends to work in his native Kansas City, Mo. as an interior decorator. His long range plans include a tramp trip to Europe, New York, and a tour with a summer stock company in the East. He won't say when he will carry these out, but it's safe to assume he won't wait too long. Jim has very definite ideas about some difficult questions in his favorite fields, art and drama. About modern art he says, "Peace look at it in the wrong light. It's an entirely new and different medium of expression and the public refuses to accept it as such. It's impossible to compare Matisse or Picasso with the old masters; their art aims at very different things." TKE Spring Officers Officers of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity for the spring term are Kenneth Miller, president; James Martin, vice-president; Frank Byam, secretary; William Beilharz, treasurer; William Todd, scholarship chairman; Clinton Bull, pledge trainer; Kempel Wilhelmsen, Sergeant-at-arms; Joseph Jordan, social chairman. Lt. Comm. William A. Menn, U.S. N.R.O.T.C., a recent initiate, was named campus adviser to the K.U. chapter of the fraternity. Omicron Nu Initiates Salmon Omicron Nu Initiates Salmon Peggy Salmon, education senior, was initiated into Omicron Nu, home economics honor society, April 21. Read the Want Ads Daily. Socially Speaking The Delta Tau Delta Spring Formal was held April 22. The theme, used annually, was Oriental. the chaperons were Mrs. Dean Alt, Mrs. Thomas Stuart, Mrs. Richard Blume, and Mrs. Nellie Hopkins. Delta Tau Delta Formal Guests were Nancy Wilson, Bea Senor, Bonnie Marshall, Janet Stites, Jo Anne Pace, Susan Manovill, Helen Killgore, Cheri Montgomery, Betty Berry, Sally Young, Virginia Lightfoot, Annabel Hunge, Jerry Hesse, Sally Bunger. Ann Hague, Mary Agnes Hunge, Diane Wade, Helen Ulmer, Dorothy Johnson, Mary Lind, Lou Jean Hubble, Carol Beery, Diane Sherwood, Diane Brewster, Alice Sellers, Doris Lyons, Diane Hornaday, Mary Jewett, Jane Kirchoff. Carolee Eberhart, Jane Dannier, Carol Helmers, Barbara Parent, Nina Ritt, Donna Hobein, Patty Lloyd, Janice Horn, Grace Wicox, Barbara Zimmerman, Charlotte Jones, Marinell Hebert, Lu Anne Powell, Joan Boltz, Anita Andeen. Barbara Lamoreaux, Gayl DeFord, Sally Hobbs, Helen Sokenken, Eileen Parker, Jeannie Fredo, Juanita 'McWilliams, Sharon Harris, Jeanne Welsh, Charlotte Warren, Marilyn Hentzler, Mary Joe Bryant, Lois Johnson, and Pat Anderson. Templin Hall Elects Other new officers are Ruthene Baker, vice-president; Sue Plummer, secretary; Florence Dickerson, treasurer; Mildred Simpson, social chairman; Ruth Irwin, house manager; Mona Millikan, scholarship chairman, and Gertha Harper, Inter-dorm representative. Louise Sanborn was elected president of Templin hall Monday. University Daily Kansan Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and holidays. Entered second class termination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. Rita Swearingen, College junior, was elected president of the Spanish club at the spring election the past week. Swearingen Heads Spanish Club Mahanna Elected Kappa Epsilon Head Other officers elected were: Vice-president, Donna Bower, College junior; executive assistant, Bautista Murillo, business junior. See Co-secretaries are Verna Edwards and James Benefiel, College juniors. Co-treasurers are William T. Patterson, College freshman, and James Irby, College sophomore. Veda Russell and Dorothy Pearson, College sophomores, and Carl Tongier, College junior, were elected to the refreshment committee. Kathleen Mahanna, pharmacy junior, was elected president of Kappa Epsilon, professional pharmaceutical fraternity for women. April 20. Other officeholders are Ruthene Baker, vice-president; Virginia Copp, secretary; Donna Roberts, treasurer; Mary Ann Dilts, historian; and Mary Sue Knauer, social chairman. Plans were made to hold the annual Founders' Day Dinner, Friday, May 12, in the English room of the Union. Invitations to the dinner have been sent to alumni of the fraternity. New Pledges are Nancy Truby and Thelma Pusitz. FLYING? FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY LINDLEY'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 Now in White or Pink C KOOLEEZ Baby Pants Made with that amazing material, natural creamy liquid latex, with no seams or binding stitches - extradurable Kooleez Baby Pants stretch all over for all over comfort. Waterproof. 10 seconds to suds dainty! .10 seconds to pat dry! In pink or white . . . order according to baby's weight. for happy babies small, medium, large and extra large in golden packages in golden packages Every Girl A Beauty Queen With Modern Magic Potions 69¢ COE'S DRUG Hollywood—(U.P.)-Max Factor, Jr., predicted today that by 2000 A.D., every girl will be a Lana Turner or a Liz Taylor. 1347 Mass. KODLERZ Baby Printz For Happy Babies Ph.234 Mr. Factor, who is partly responsible for those gorgeous women who decorate the hollywood scenery, says housewives all over the country are picking up what used to be his secret tricks of make up. "I call them new worlds of beauty," he explained. "Just look how many more beautiful women there are today than there were 15 or 20 years ago. "The girls are learning how to develop and dramatize their natural good looks." They're discovering how to camouflage what is not so good, too. Out of little jars comes a mysterious paste that hides hook noses, crooked chins, and the other things that used to running to a girl nature was kinder to. If Mr. Factor and his cohorts keep messing around in their laboratories, the day isnt far off when the poor guys won't know what they're getting until the bride washes her face after the ceremony. "Back in the old days," Factor said, "there were just one or two famous beauties each decade, or even each century. Look how Cleopatra or Helen of Troy or Madame DuBarry dominated the beauty scene. Now, Hollywood presents beauties like this by the dozen, and so does any other community you can think of." They do it with creams and lotions and the rest of the hocus-nocus Factor whips up in his workshop. Movie queens who have had a hard night can smear their faces with this pancake make-up and fool almost anybody. Television will also improve the feminine scenery. Factor said. EGG SANDWICH 10c "More housewives will look at beautiful women all day. They'll want to look like them. Come the new century the competition will be terrific. But the world will be a pretty place." SANDWICHES JAPAN Home-Made Fudge Cake-10c ZIM'S SPECIAL for this week ending Saturday Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers ZIM'S SNACK SHOPE Open 7:00 a.m.to 11:30 p.m. ZIM'S East of Post Office PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1950 0 SHOWN AT THE ACTUAL MOMENT, Bill Carroll of Oklahoma breaks the Kansas Relays pole vault record by soaring 14 feet 5 inches. Carroll was named "outstanding performer of the Relays" by sportswriters on the basis of his tremendous vault. The former record of 14 feet 2 inches by B.F.Bryan of Texas had stood since 1939. I-M Swim Marks Fall Stealing a page from the Kansas Relays' book, the preliminaries of the intramural swimming meet produced two record-breaking performances Monday. New marks were rung up in the 50-yard free style and the 50-yard individual medley. Gordon Stucker, defending champion in the 50-yard free style, clipped off his specialty in 25 seconds to better by three-tenths of a second the old mark of 25.3 set by Sherman of Delta Chi in 1941. Stucker was joined by his Phi Gamma Delta teammate, Jim Olander, in establishing a new record in the 50-yard medley. The speedsters were both clocked in 29.6, four-tenths of a second better than the existing mark of 30.0. The old mark was set by Bill Stratton of Sigma Chi in 1949. Going into tonight's semi-finals, which are scheduled for 7 p.m., it looks like a repeat performance for the Phi Gams. The Flijs won the intramural swimming crown the past two years and eight times in the last 17 years. Phi Gam qualified 14 men for tonight's semi-finals in the five events run-off Monday. Trailing the Phi Gams are Beta Theta Pi, the 1949 runner-ups, who qualified seven men; Phi Kappa Psi, six; Sigma Chi, five; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Phi Delta Theta, and Oread hall, two each; and Delta Chi and Delta Upsilon, one each. Hall Smith, Sigma Chi, led qualifiers in the 50-yard breast stroke. He turned in a time of 30.3, six-tenths of a second better than the winning time a year ago, but short the lofty I-M record of 29.6. Dee Roy, Phi Psi, breast stroke champ in 1949, didn't enter that event this year. Jack Faerber, Phi Psi, had the best time among the eight men qualifying in the 100-yard free style event. Faerber scooted the distance in 1:02.5. TICKETS AND RESERVATIONS FIRST NATIONAL BANK BIBKER ATTENTION SOUTH AMERICAN STUDENTS MAKE RESERVATION NOW TO: - Panama, Balboa - Guayaquil - Santiago - Lima Quick connections with Panagra's flights from Canal Zone to Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia; El Transcontinental twice a week from Lima to Brazil; La Diagonal weekly from Lima to Argentina. - Buenos Aires WE MAKE RESERVATIONS FOR ALL AIRLINES Exclusive Agents for American Airlines CITY TICKET OFFICE THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE TRAVEL AGENCY Miss Rose Gieseman, Manager 8th & Mass Sts. Women's IM Victories Go To Kanza, DG Telephone 30 Kanza's hard hitting, aided by their opponents' errors in the field, brought them a resounding 21 to 10 victory over Alpha Omicron Pi. And they had to do it with only 7 players. Although the last game had to be called at the end of three innings, due to rain, women's softball continued according to schedule Monday. Batteries were Bloomer and Pepper for the losers and Wilkie and Tillotson for Kanza. Delta Gamma racked up 16 runs while their pitcher held Kappa Kappa Gamma down to only 4. Leading 8 to 4 when they came up to their last turn at bat, they "poured it on." Yancey and McKelvy were the battery for the Kappa's and Atkinson and Schindler for Delta Gamma. Pi Beta Phi came from behind in the bottom of the third to pull ahead of the Jayettes 8 to 4. But then the rain started and both teams agreed to appeal to finish the game at another time. Batteries were Baker and Stodder for Pi Phi and Moore and Jones for the Jayettes. Schedule of game for today is as follows: Diamond 1. Watkins vs. Jolliffe 2. Delta Delta Delta vs. Temtruth 3. Harmon vs. Miller Thirty-six out of every 100 bushels of wheat grown in the United States since the end of World War II have been exported. My cigarette? Camels, of course! WITH SMOKERS WHO KNOW... IT'S GOWN AND JEWELS BY SAKS FIFTH AVENUE CAMEL TURKISH & DOMESTIC BLEND CIGARETTES CHOICE QUALITY Camels for Mildness! Yes, Camels are SO MILD that in a coast-to-coast test of hundreds of men and women who smoked Camels and only Camels—for 30 consecutive days, noted throat specialists, making weekly examinations, reported NOT ONE SINGLE CASE OF THROAT IRRITATION due to smoking CAMELS! 1950 TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE hels ates have Missouri Takes 9-2 Triumph In Big Seven Game The Missouri Tigers scored three runs in the third inning and five in the fourth to down the Jayhawkers 9 to 2 in the home conference opener Monday. The game was played on a cold wind-swept diamond that found the adverse weather chasing most of the fans to shelter before the final out was recorded. Kansas, with Guy Mabry on the mound, lost its second Big Seven game in as many starts. BIG SEVEN STANDINGS Won Lost Pct. Colorado 1 0 1.000 Oklahoma 3 1 7.50 Nebraska 3 1 7.50 Missouri 3 2 6.00 Kansas State 2 2 5.00 KANSAS 0 2 0.00 Iowa State 0 4 0.00 With Bob Smith, slender left-hander, on the mound, Missouri won its third straight conference game to move into fourth place in the Big Seven standings with a 3-2 record. The two teams play again at 3 p.m. today with Carl Sandefur hurling for Kansas and veteran Roger Englert or sophomore Floyd Eberhard starting for Missouri. Smith allowed no earned runs, only six scattered hits, including triples by Floyd Temple and Herb Weidensaul. He struck out eight, walked six, and left 10 Jayhawkers stranded on the bases. Missouri batted around in the third and fourth innings in scoring a total of eight runs. Singles by Walt Ulmer, Jack Frier, Ross Boeger, and a double by Bob Davis combined with two walks provided three runs and the margin of victory in the third inning. Herman Philipp, Kansas' ace relief pitcher, limited the Tigers to one run and three hits in the final five innings. In making his fourth effective appearance in a relief role, Philipstruck out four and walked one. Kansas scored one run in the second and fourth innings, both unearned. In the second, Henry Lamping beat out an infield roller and scored following an error by second baseman Redden and an overthrow at third base on a pick-off play by catcher Alexander. In the fourth, catcher Bill Mace walked to start the inning. Near perfect bunts by Lamping and Weidensau load the bases. Mace scored when first baseman Frier let the ball get away at home on a cutoff play on a throw-in from the outfield. MISSOURI (9) AB R H PO A E Eatock, ss 5 1 1 1 1 1 Harting, rf 3 2 0 1 0 0 Ulmer, lf 3 2 1 2 0 0 Frier, 1b 5 2 3 11 0 1 Davis, cf 5 0 1 1 0 0 Boeger, 3b 5 0 1 0 2 0 Redden, 2b 5 2 3 1 3 1 Alexander, c 3 0 3 10 1 4 Smith, p 5 0 0 0 4 0 Totals...39 9 13 27 14 4 KANSAS (2) AB R H PO A Koenig, ss 5 0 1 1 1 0 DeLuna, 2b 2 0 0 3 1 1 Temple, 3b 4 0 1 4 3 0 Ellis, lf 4 0 0 1 0 0 Mace, c 3 1 0 5 3 1 Lamping, cf 4 1 2 1 0 0 Weidensla, rf 4 0 2 4 0 0 Voss, 1b 3 0 0 7 0 1 Mabry, p 2 0 0 1 1 1 Philipp, p 1 0 0 0 1 0 McConnell 1 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 33 2 6 27 10 4 Missouri 003 500 001 — 9 Kansas 010 100 000 — 2 YOUR EYES Eye should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription Duplicated. Phone 425 1025 Mass. Lawrence Optical Co. 31 KANSAS RELAYS CHAMPIONS AND RECORD HOLDERS, the Jayhawker four-mile relay team of: left to right; Cliff Abel, Herb Semper, Pat Bowers, and Captain Bob Karnes receive first-place gold watch awards and royal congratulations from Joyce Lawrence, queen of the Relays. FRESH SEA FOOD Direct From The Atlantic OYSTERS CRABS JUMBO SHRIMP FISH DUCK'S TAVERN 821 Vermont SENIORS! SAVE NOW BY SUBSCRIBING TO TIME Special College Rate—1 year of TIME for only $4.75, saving you $1.25 under the 1-year U. S. subscription rate . . bringing you 20c-a-copy TIME for less than 10c an issue. READ TIME-FOR THE NEWS YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO MISS In class or out, you'll want to know the important and interesting news of the world—and TIME is the favorite news source of college graduates everywhere. Every week, TIME organizes the news under 21 logical department headings—tells it so briefly you can make it your own in a single evening, so vividly it is fun to read, easy to understand, hard to forget. SUBSCRIBE TODAY AT THIS SPECIAL COLLEGE RATE—$4.75 FOR A FULL 52 WEEKS OF TIME Even bigger savings! If you subscribe to TIME now,you can continue your subscription for the next five years and get the same savings $1.25 each year under the regular subscription price. Take advantage of these long-term savings by giving your order to your college subscription representative—today. STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE Today's Intramural Softball Schedule Today's schedule in men's intramural softball is as follows: Field Fraternity "A" Fraternity A Sig Epi Sig Kappa Lambda Lambda Chi v. Delta Tau Beta v. Sigma Nu Phi Psi v. T.K.E. Sigma Chi v. Delta Chi Pi K.A.v. Triangle Independent "A" 4 Phi Chi v. S.A.M. The identifying "wedding band" for Taiwal brides, in Formosa, is a tattooed marriage mark that spreads from her mouth to her ears. The tattooing is done with a black substance obtained from burning oil nuts. UNIVERSITY SHOP UNIVERSITY SHOP Photographed in Bermuda with the cooperation of Colonial Airlines. Ship Wheel NAVIGATOR charts you through cool waters TAILORED BY Dennis OF NEW YORK Stand at the prow of a racing schooner and you'll get some idea of the breezy comfort The Navigator gives you. Tailored in washable Sierra Spun Rayon, this short sleeve pullover has a contrasting two-way collar and chest stripe with a secret pocket. Waistband is resilient Durene knit. Many colorful combinations. $395 SOLD EXCLUSIVELY AT The University Shop ACROSS FROM LINDLEY 1420 Crescent Rd. Phone 715 PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS TUESDAY; APRIL 25,1950 Little Man On Campus By Bibler CLASS OF 50 "I'm not surprised, Worthal—You're flunking psychology you know." The Editors Report NATIONWIDE AID FOR A National Institution by Charles Reiner The Menninger foundation needs $1,300,000 for expanded research and educational programs. In their first general appeal for funds, the Topeka psychiatrists and their board of governors and trustees recently met in New York. In 1949, the foundation had a deficit of $40,000. The reason for this is found in a statement recently made by Dr. Karl Menninger. He said, "We started on a shoestring and grew into a national foundation. If we are going to keep on being national, I guess we'll need nationwide help." The foundation has never had enough money to carry out all its special projects—especially experiments in research training and child psychiatric care. Yet it is the country's most successful clinic for treatment of neurotic children. When the Menninger clinic was begun more than thirty years ago, many Kansans were suspicious of the venture. In 1919, it was an innovation in Midwest medicine. But now, at the end of thirty successful and productive years, the term, "The Menningers," has come to mean the world's best known psychiatric center. The original Menninger clinic was a remodeled farmhouse on the edge of Topeka. It began when Dr. Karl Menninger put out his shingle alongside that of his father, Dr. C. F. Menninger. Later, the younger son, Dr. Will, joined them. From the small remodeled farmhouse, the clinic has grown into twelve buildings on the 34-acre Menninger property near Topeka. It is now the place where doctors, psychologists, nurses, therapists, social workers, and teachers flock to see and study the latest techniques in psychosomatic medicine. In 1941, the Menninger foundation was established. It was chartered as a non-profit organization and authorized to accept tax-free contributions. The Menninger brothers, Dr. Karl and Dr. Will, gave their savings, earnings from private practice, and proceeds from their book sales to the foundation. But it was not enough. The money the foundation seeks will be used in exploring the value of new and powerful drugs and chemicals on mental illness, new techniques in brain surgery, how to make group therapy more efficient, and research of a way to salvage now-hopeless cases of chizophrenia. In their request for nationwide help, the Meningers have a strong case. Statistically, they say that one million children in this country suffer from behavior disorders. That fifty per cent of all physical illness results from emotional conflicts. That 90 per cent of industrial accidents have their roots in personality problems. Yet for every $130 spent on all types of medical research in this country, only two cents is spent on psychiatric research. Nose Is Familiar Feature Danville, Va.— (U.P.) —Detective Juby Towler is sure of the effectiveness of one disguise. He wore a plastic nose home one evening and his wife wouldn't let him in. Pugilists With Painters Milwaukee - (U.P.) - Books on football and boxing at the Milwaukee public library are kept in the art and music department. TODAY'S MAIL Surely Sir: In connection with a recent communication in the Kansan, the editor asked others to express opinions about the name for the fieldhouse. I have no wish to detract from Dr. Allen's honors. He has brought credit to himself and to our school. Blanche Woodbury, '07 Lawrence, Kan. Nevertheless, I do cast a vote for Dr. Naismith. His long years of valuable service are marked, but beyond that his hand in developing basketball is outstanding. Surely it should be recognized at the institution to which he gave a lifetime of teaching and influence. University Daily Hansan News Room Adv. Room K.U. 251 K.U. 376 Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assn. Press Assn., and the Associated Collegeate Press. Represented by the National Ad- vocate Service420 Madison Ave. New New York City. James Morris Editor-in-Chief Messrs Morris Editor-in-Chief Doris Greenbank Managing Editor Asst. Man. Editors .. Norma Hunsinger Kay O'Connor John Hill Ralph Homemann City Editor Edward Chapin Asst. City Editors .. Nelson Ober Martlin Marks Ethan Fly Steve Ferro Feature Editor Francis Kelley Photograph Editor Frankie Waits Telegraph Editor Roger Gawen William Graves Richard Tatum Lloyd Holbeck Sports Editor Richard Dukes Asst. Sports Editors .. Bob Leonard Ray Solidan Arthur McIntire Martha Milline Society Editor Faye Wilkinson Asst. Society Editors .. Billie Stover Emily Stewart Editorial Assts. Keith Leslie Adv. Mgr. Gr. Mgr. Yvonne Josserand Nat. Adv. Mgr. Formalized Ad. Mgr. Lee Dyer Promotion Mgr. John Wiedeman Want South Seas Paradise? The Answer Is Yes, But — — But whether a would-be immigrant can expect to find a genuine Utopia there all depends on what he seeks. If, for instance, it's isolation, there probably are few places in the world more peaceful. News from the outside is meager, supply ships make only occasional calls, and planes are rarely seen. Or if it's a superb ocean climate, the thermometer seldom dips below 72 degrees or rises above 92 in the shade. Washington, D. C.—(U.P.)Want to live in a tropical paradise? British Colonial Office reports it operates a real one—the dime-size Gilbert and Ellis Islands of the South Seas. Among other attractions, the islands have no housing shortage, no poverty, and low taxes. Finally, some sportsmen claim there is no finer fishing ground anywhere than in the Gilbert group. The surrounding waters boast an abundance of "big ones," including sharks, spearfish, barracuda and others. However, life on the sandy coral islands has its austere aspects. Few fruits and vegetables can be raised, except for the coconut palm and taro plant. The handful of European residents must rely heavily on canned foodstuffs for variety in their meals. The native population numbers about 36,000 and is composed of two distinct racial groups speaking entirely different languages. The Gilberts are inhabited by copper-colored Micronesians, generally a reserved people, while the Ellices are populated by light-skinned Polynesians, a vivacious and demonstrative race. In all, the colony comprises 37 coral atolls and isles scattered over more than 2,000,000 square miles of ocean. Since the end of World War II, its government headquarters have been located on Tarawa, the island in the Gilberts which the U.S. Marines wrested from the Japanese in November, 1943. Libya, scheduled by United Nations resolution to become independent by Jan. 1, 1552, will be the fourth independent African country. Dress Links and Studs by HICKOK When Tuxedo or tails are in order, Dress Links and Studs by Hickok are first choice with well-dressed men. $3.50 to $5.00 plus Fed. Tax. 905 Mass. St. CARLS GOOD CLOTHES Phone 905 Make your appointment now for that Mothers' Day Portrait by calling 3199. We guarantee satisfaction. No one can give her your portrait but YOU She'll be well pleased because our aim is to make your portrait the most pleasing picture of your career. 10 The GRAHAM STUDIO 211 W. 8th St. "The House of Personality Portraits" --- TUESDAY, APRIL 25. 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Lost Wig Makes Excitement As Players Tour Kansas Life is far from dull if you're traveling with the University Players' road show. Goldsmith's "She Stoops to Conquer." After presenting the show four nights at K. U., the University Players on April 10 loaded the scenery lights and costumes aboard a trailer truck and started on a two week tour of 11 Kansas towns. The following letter from Tom Rea, instructor in speech, who plays a leading role as young Marlow, gives a brief account of some of the unexpected difficulties that make a road show a long-remembered affair. "We are set up here in Ulysses and waiting for 'teaser time'. Thus far everything has gone quite smoothly with only a minimum of confusion. " . In Kingman, Coldwater, and Ulysses we have found it necessary to cut out several sections of scenery because of small stages. 'On Tuesday night, April 11, as we were making up for the show in Kingman we discovered that we had left my boots (part of the costume) in Wellington. And so that night I worked without boots. Mrs. Fiest immediately called back to Wellington, located the boots and they were sent ahead. The next morning Mrs. Feist drove down to Harper to pick them up from the train. It was the nearest connection point even though it was 30 miles in the opposite direction from our move of the day. "Bernice Brady wears a false fall of hair in the show as you know. She rinses it red to match her own. Last night after the show she gave the false hair another rinse and hung it in the basement to dry. She forgot it this morning. We called back to Coldwater and it is being sent to her. Tomorrow, when we arrive in Ellinwood, Bernice's 'hair' should be there waiting for her. Everyone is well, working hard, and having a wonderful time. After receiving Rea's letter we learned that L. Edward Stollenwierck, College senior, who plays a part in the show, had to leave the cast in order to go to the West Point debate in New York. Orr, College who plays Stingo the tavern keeper, took over his part and the show went on. The players returned to Lawrence Sunday. International Club Gets Acquainted With Neighbors By Dances And Talks "...We are being royally entertained at every stop and are finding 'vacationing' K. U. students in each town. We have the truck loading down to a quick schedule now and can strike and load exactly 50 minutes after the final curtain. Slides, dances, and talks acquainted International club members with their neighbors at a recent meeting. Official Bulletin Tuesday, April 25 Bacteriology club, 7:30 p.m., 502 Snow. Dr. Paul B. Lawson, "D.D.T." Pre-Nursing club, 4 p.m. Dining room, Fraser. Quill club initiation, 8 p.m., Hill Co-op. ___ The following are notified to appear before student court. 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Green hall: Lewis L. Sandidge, William H. Petrich, Edward Balda. Y.W.C.A. Cabinet board, 4 p.m. Wednesday, Pine room, Union. Mathematical colloquium special meeting, 5 p.m., 203 Strong. Prof. C.C. MacDuffe, University of Wisconsin, "On Lorenzian Transformations." Alpha Phi Omega, 7 p.m., East room, Union. Kappa Beta tests for National, 5 p.m. Wednesday or Thursday, Student room, Myers hall. Contact Mabel Anne for tests. Sociology club, 4 p.m. Thursday. East room, Union. Virginie Baroudjian, "Life in Egypt, Syria, and U.S." All invited. A. W.S. House Representatives, 4 p.m., Alpha Phi house. Union Activities Executive board, 4 p.m. Wednesday, Student Union Activities office. Jay Janes, 5 p.m. Wednesday. "We feel that a knowledge and understanding of the life of other people and nations is the first step for improvement of the world situation and for the development of better political, economical, and social co-operation among the different countries," said Nehemiah Kronenberg, club president. Slides describing the history and development of Turkey were shown by Faruk Mutman, pharmacy senior. Dr. Peter Spycher, assistant instructor in German, emphasized the traditional neutrality of Switzerland in his talk about his native land. Baaqer Shirazi, education senior, told the club that not all Indians are magicians. Alfred Sim, sophomore from China, explained the recent developments in his country. "The people of China prefer freedom under democracy to abundance under communism," he said. Life in Iraq was described by Adnan Abdullah, education freshman, and the story of Chile was told by Hector Donoso, graduate student. Bautista Murillo, business junior, and Rose Marie Novotny, fine arts freshman, presented two South American dances and Karshia Lohman, finite arts freshman, gave a number of Hawaiian dances. Physical Therapy field trip, meet 12:30 p.m. Saturday, Union. Notify Miss Warner, Watkins hospital, by Wednesday noon if you plan to attend. Newman club invites all Catholic students to meet 2 p.m. Saturday, St. John's church, to march in All American Day parade. After the Show For LUNCH - DINNER or CHATEAU DRIVE-IN the Is the place to go - Tasty Sandwiches - Fountain Specials - Tempting Dinners Daily Kansan Classified Ads Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will promptly. Ads must be canceled during such a period (except Saturday) or brought to the office. Journalism bldg. not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. Phone K.U. 376 Classified Advertising Rates 25 words or less ... 35c Additional words ... 1c BUSINESS SERVICE SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a dignified sales activity and best known firm in the educational field. Applicants accepted will work by appointment on leads we furnish. Earnings $7.50 to $125.00 and more per week on an A-F valued percentage basis. In affiliation bring Grand Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Giving qualifications, school and home address. tt DRESS MAKING and sewing; all type of formals and dresses made to order Also shortened and remodeled—call Mrs Scales, 3060W. 27 I WILL DO all kinds of typing in them. Caul. Calu 384W. 25 JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our one-stop pet shop has everything for fur. Our pet shop has the Gift and Gift Shop. 1191 Comm. St. Ph. 418. TYPING: Call Hazel Stanley, 286M for prompt experienced service. 820% Mass TYFING, Theses, Term Papers, Reports, 1908 Vernom. Ph. 1168R. 1908 Vernom. Ph. 1168R. THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. of Chicago. Visit www.hadlbros.com for fender repair, auto painting and cars. 317 E. 17th. Phone 785 or 1821R. tf TYPING. Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rates. Prompt attention. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601 FOR SALE LIME Wear, ballerina length formal- Size 12. Worn with a formal condition. Tieback. #50, Kentucky. COMPLETE DARKROOM equipment completing federal enlarger Model 312- Must sell–very reasonable. Call 931W after 7 p.m. 25 FINEST TELEVISION—Best in sets and serials at late night on FOX, 9:30 p.m. and up. See the new Emerson table model set at $159.50. See the new Vermont and Electr $269.95 Vermont, Phone 138. THESES MATERIALS! All weights of thesis quality typing paper, carbon paper, and typewriter ribbons. Student Union Book Store. M4 TRANSPORTATION RIDERS WANTED: leaving for Wichita every Friday at 4 p.m. Returning Sunday evening. Please call between 7-9 p.m. Harry Shultz, ph. 31013. 27 RIDE WANTED. Kansas City, Mo. to Lawrence and return. Preferably daily Arrive 8 a.m. Contact Frank Orte, phone 1220 or Kansan Office Box No. 6. 1 FLY and Take advantage of reduced fares, dovetail connections, good acco nditions, free cancellation, Bank for reservations and information. Telephone No. 20. 26 MAN'S CROTON watch. Lost on campus or downtown Thursday afternoon. If found please call 2418J after 5 p.m. Reward. 27 LOST C N-O-W Showing O-o-o-h You'll Love That New Mitchum Man! MITCHUM PLAYS SANTA ROBERT: MITCHUM JAMET LEIGH Holiday Affair Added Color cartoon ROBERT MITCHUM JAMY LEIGH News WANTED ALL SUMMER BARGAINS for boys or couples. Large rooms, twin beds, private bedroom, block room can cost $1250 and more. You now own new apartment. 1213 Ohio. Phone 2917-R. Soon "BICYCLE THIEF" Shows continuous Open 12:45 FOR RENT Patee PHONE 121 SLEEPING ROOMS for rent at $25 per month or a large 3 room apartment for unruly duties paid. $20 per month. Buries from campus. 1215 Ohio Phone 2917-R "ANTED TO RENT—Sleeping rooms or small apartment convenient to campus for couple. Here for summer school. Reply Box 5, Kansan. 26 LARGE EIGHT room house; two blocks from campus. Excellent rooming and balcony furnished or furnished on sub lease fully furnished in mediately. Call 2917 RAVAL. 25 Alumnus Dies In California Dr. George A. Walker, '35, former pathologist at the University Medical center, died of a heart attack at his home in Oakland, Calif. In 1940 Dr. Walker invented a cathode ray electrocardiograph which won several prizes at medical conventions. He was a contributor to numerous scientific medical journals. His wife, Dr. Nellie Gross Walker, '35, formerly was an instructor at the Medical Center and a general practitioner in Kansas City. In addition to his wife, Dr. Walker is survived by two daughters, his mother, and two sisters. Call K.U. 251 With Your News. "Movies Are Better Now Than Ever Before" TONITE And Wednesday Gay, MUSICAL FUN! "I Sit it Romantic" Veronica LAKE Billy DeWOLFE Mona FREEMAN Color Cartoon Buddy Rich Orch. Lawrence DRIVE-IN Theatre For Show Times Phone 260 "THE 3RD MAN" Hear the magic fingers of Anton play The most unusual entertainment of 1950! Features at 1:00-3:00-5:05 7:10-9:20 PLUS: Late Cartoon "Quack News A Doodle Doo" JAYHAWKER WEDNESDAY NOW Phone 10 for Sho Time THRU White Exhibits Feeling In Recital By MELVA LUTZ With rich tone quality and a very sensitive touch, Frank White, fine arts senior, played "Twelve Symphonic Etudes" from Schumann in his piano recital Sunday. The etudes included minor chords, staccato technique, triplets, and long runs in both hands. White demonstrated better skill in the etudes than in his other numbers. He changed considerably the style of Mozart's "Sonata in F Major," which played very accurately. White demonstrated not only technical proficiency, but he put feeling into his music. His phrasing was beautiful. Alberta Stuhl, White's piano instructor, accompanied him with fine technique on a second piano in his selection. "Concerto in G Major," Op. 58. (Beethoven). High School Will Present Play 'Imaginary Invalid' The play concerns an invalid who finds his wife working for his death in order to take advantage of his will. The cast will consist of eight boys and four girls. Moliere's face, "The Imaginary Invalid," will be presented by Liberty Memorial High school students at the school Friday. Phone 132 For Sho Time VARSITY Ends Tonite Gene Autry "Cow Town" "Joe Palooka Morte Huwkhey" Meets Humphrey" Wednesday-Thursday Barred From Men! A SENSATIONAL STORY "PRISON GIRLS" —Co-Feature— Six Fugitives Break For Freedom "MARKED MEN" Plus: Musical ELLIOTT LAWRENCE N-O-W! A Riot on Wheels! RED SKELTON IS THE YELLOW CAB MAN a riot on wheels NGM LAUGH MISTER 1001 CO-STARRING GLORIA DE HAVEN WITH WALTER SLEZAK EDWARD ARNOLD · JAMES GLEASON Feature times: 1.34, 3.33, 5.34, ALSO Color Cartoon - News Continuous shows Open 12:45 Granada PHONE 946 instant PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1950 10 HONOR INITIATES at the Inter-Fraternity Council banquet are top row from left to right: Stanford Lehmberg, and Albcrt Park, Alpha Kappa Lambda; Charles Hyer, Sigma Nu; Sam Wilcoxen, Acacia; Dave Hills, Alpha Tau Omega; Damon Simpson, Phi Kappa Psi; Mahlon Ball, Sigma Chi; Vernon Sutton, Sigma Phi Epsilon; William Nulton, Beta Theta Pi; Tom McGuire, Phi Delta Theta; George Howell, Tau Kappa Epsilon; Fritz Widick, Phi Gamma Delta; and Donald Butler, Sigma Pi. In the bottom row from left to right are: Steve O'Brien, Kappa Sigma; William Tobler, Phi Kappa Sigma; W. William Schmidt, Pi Kappa Alpha; Joseph Christy, Delta Tau Delta; Donald Ellis, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Martin Rogoff, Alpha Epsilon, Pi; James Garr, Phi Kappa Tau; Philip Owen, Lambda Chi Alpha; Barton Hoglund, Delta Chi; Doyle Miller, Triangle; and Raymond Slavic, Phi Kappa. Fraternity Honor Initiates Given Banquet By IFC Twenty-four men were honored at the annual honor initiate banquet sponsored by Inter-fraternity Council Monday night in the Kansas room of the Union. Guest speakers were Dr. L. C. Woodruff, dean of men, and Prof. Emil L. Telfel, assistant professor of journalism. Attending the banquet were the three LF.C. members from each of 25 organized houses and the honor initiate. Dale Helmers, master of ceremonies, introduced the speakers. Dean Woodruff briefly commended the honor initiates on their outstanding scholastic achievement. In refuting the contention of many students that half a college education is participation in extra curricular activities, Prof. Telfel stated that outside activities have their place, but that "scholarship should be the ultimate goal in attending college." He questioned the possibilities of a lazy student who loafs through four years of college achieving a worthwhile goal in later life. "You are a C student for one of two reasons," Professor Telfel said. "Either you haven't the ability to do better than C work, or you are lazy, waste time, or don't do your work." Entertainment was provided by four members of Delta Delta Delta sorority. Members of the quartet were Bernadine read and Kitty Walter, fine arts seniors; Patricia Brubaker, College junior; and Marilyn Barr, fine arts sophomore. Glover's Voice Is Flexible, Beautiful In his senior recital Monday, Calvin C. Glover demonstrated a flexible and beautiful voice to a delighted audience that responded well to his dramatic emotionalism. Opening with "Lasciatiemi Morire" by Monteverde, Glover went on to prove that he is able to interpret the music with great sensitivity. "Alle Gingen, Herz, Zur Ruh" (Hugo Wolf), three songs of the "Dichterliebe" cycle (Schumann), "Du Bist So Jung" (Erich Wolff), and "Bottschaft" (Brahms) were sung with appealing tenderness. In the final group, Glover scored with Malotte's colorful "Upstream." John Payne's arrangement of "Crucifixion" was ably done with a deep feeling of religious devotion. The program also included Faure's "Clair de Lune" and "Nell." Saturday Night Made Safe Lambert, Miss., —(U.P.)— When John Oakes made a temporary chicken brooder of his bathtub until the wiring on the regular brooder was fixed, his two small children had one happy comment. "Good we won't have to take any more baths." Civil Service Exam Open To Engineers The United States Civil Service commission has announced an ex-amination for engineers to fill positions paying from $4,600 to $6,400 in various federal agencies in Washington, D.C. and vicinity. To qualify, applicants must have completed a four year college course, and a bachelor's degree in engineering, have four years of progressive experience in technical engineering, or a combination of the two. In addition, they must have two to four years of professional experience. Graduate study may be substituted for this experience. KU To Instruct City Managers From Nine States Nine states will be represented at the third annual City Managers' school to be sponsored at the University Wednesday through Friday by the Bureau of Government Research and University Extension. Approximately 40 persons from Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Colorado, Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota will attend the school sessions in the Union building. E.B. Stouffer, dean of the University, will welcome the city executives following registration Wednesday morning. Clarence E. Ridley, director of the International City Managers association, Chicago, Ill., and Asher N. Christensen, professor of political science, University of Minnesota, will be discussion leaders from outside of the state. Hugo Wall, head of the department of political science, Municipal University of Wichita, will be the only other person to teach at the conference not from K.U. Those who will instruct from the University are Ethan P. Allen, director of the Bureau of Government research and chairman of the political science department; Dwight Metzler, director of the division of sanitation of the State Board of Health and assistant professor of civil engineering; Marston McCluggage, associate professor of sociology; James O. Maloney, director of the Research foundation and chairman of the chemical engineering department; Edwin O. Stene, research associate of the Bureau of Government research and professor of political science. Discussion subjects will concern inter-governmental relations and the city, politics and the city manager, university-city relations, chemical engineering and sanitation in regard to city government, and cases in city management. Staff functions and good principles of public management will be emphasized. Professor Christensen and Mr. Ridley will be honored at a dinner in the Kansas room of the Union Thursday. Chancellor Deane W. Mallot will present graduation certificates at the close of the school Friday. The Bus-(Adv.) the Bus—(Adv.) By Bible RAPID TRANSIT CO BUS STOP 'We have come to the decision that Flossie is standing you up, Reginald, would you take us to town?' Norwegian Student Likes KU But Misses Winter Sports Bv DEWAYNE OGLESBEE In the United States only a year, Henrick A. Knudsen, College freshman, says he "likes this country a lot but misses the winter sports" of his home in Son, Norway. Knudsen is tall and square-built and it is not difficult to imagine him as a rugged outdoorsman. He said he misses the mountains near his home where he skied in cross-country contests. Son is a small resort town located on the Oslo florid, and "Nothing I've seen in the U. S. rivals the beauty of the florid in the summertime," commented Knudsen. Knudsen is a pre-dental student in this country on an A. S. C. scholarship, and will he here until his graduation. He said his parents are "very enthusiastic" about the United States. He "practically knew New York City" before he came to the country the Norwegian added. Knudsen has relatives in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Knudsen dresses and acts like a native American. The only trace of Norway is in his speech. "I had a great deal of trouble with my speech when I first came to this country," he said. "A friend of mine in Pennsylvania took me to a lunch counter and asked me if I wanted a hotdog. I knew what a dog was and what hot meant, but I wasn't sure I would like to eat one." Knudsen likes the students at the University and says, "I think American youth is outstanding. It is so much easier to make friends in this country. At home there are small cliques of young people, and it is very difficult to get in one of these." Such common sights in the United States as automobiles, washing machines, and refrigerators are scarce in Norway. "Life is much easier in this country," he said. "Here, you can have a car without being a millionaire. Knudsen expressed the belief that Groups Attend History Meeting A delegation from the history department at the University is recently attended the annual meeting of the Mississippi Valley Historical association in Oklahoma City. "The only way we can hope for a chance in event of war is by keeping our defense in as good order as possible and by relying on the Atlantic pact," he stated. Allan G. Bogue, a research assistant in the department of history last year, presented a paper entitled "The Land Mortgage Company in the Early Plains States" at a session on American agricultural history. Mr. Bogue is now connected with the University of Western Ontario. "the Norwegian people really fear invasion by the Russians." He pointed out that the population of the country is only three million, and that the country depended on weapons from Marshall plan aid. James K. Hitt, registrar, is attending the annual meeting of the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers in San Francisco recently. He returned to Lawrence Sunday. Those who attended from K.U. are Dr. George L. Anderson, a member of the program committee. Mrs. Anderson, Dr. Anderson's children, and Jack W. Hines and Kenneth Beall, graduate students in the history department. N F F Hitt Attends Meeting Are you a campus leader? Do you have nerve? We dare you to wear these new pullovers! Such blinding colors . . . such zany patterns! Yet some Bright Man On Campus is going to start sporting one of these Tee-zers . . . and the fad will spread like wildfire (and we mean, wildfire). Solid colors in fine new Van Gab gabardine . . . stripes and patterns in cotton. Short sleeves, knitted waist, completely washable. $2.95 up. Q you're sure to be seen in TEE-ZERS Van Heusen shirts Reg. T.M. "the world's smartest" BUILLIPS-JONES CORP., NEW YORK 1, N. Y. 1950 U University Daily Kansan 47th Year No. 134 Wednesday, April 26, 1950 STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Notables Here For Saturday's Patriotic Event His eminence Francis Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York, Gov. Frank Carlson, and other notables will celebrate "I Am An American Day" in Lawrence Saturday. An address by Cardinal Spellman following a dinner for 750 persons in the Community building will be broadcast by WDAF and WREN. An afternoon parade and convocation in South park will highlight the celebration sponsored by the Lawrence Citizen's committee. "I Am an American Day" is celebrated to show unity among all the faiths and groups that make up the United States said Nicholas F. Lopes, general chairman of the Citizen's committee. He added that it is necessary to show this unity in order that American citizens will be mindful of the dissension which communist organizations are promoting in this country. Floats and bands representing civic, fraternal, military, labor and school groups will parade at 3:15 p.m. Saturday from sixth and Massachusetts north to South park. At the park, a convocation will be held for an expected crowd of 5,000 persons. On the speaker's platform will be Cardinal Spellman, the Rev. Dale Turner, pastor of the Plymouth Congregational church, Perrin McEliray, labor leader from Kansas City, Mo. the Rev. George Towle, pastor of St John's Catholic church, and Rabbi Samuel Mayberberg, of the Congregation B'nai Jehudah, Kansas City, Mo. Cardinal Spellman will talk or "Freedom by Right Divine" at the 6:30 p.m. banquet in the Community building, Toastmaster will be Harry Woodring, former Kansas governor and United States secretary of war Other speakers on the program include Governor Carlson, Senator Harry Darby, Mayor William J. B Turner of Lawrence, and Chancellor Deane W. Malott. Special guests at Saturday's ceremonies will be 23 foreign student officers representing 15 nations from the Command and General Staff college at Fort Leavenworth. Walter Winchell spoke highly of Lawrence on his program Sunday evening, saying that "the world should take a hint from little Lawrence, Kansas." He mentioned that Lawrence will demonstrate the principles of religious freedom on Saturday, when Cardinal Spellman, archbishop of New York, will be flanked by a Protestant minister and a Jewish rabbi at the "I Am An American Day" celebration. Two seniors, George Davidson and Richard Starr, and eleven juniors, Robert Capen, Carl Stenstrom, John Jameson, Neal Post, Robert Meiens, Harold White, Neal Collins, Edward Sell, James Porter, William Hayward and Stanley Staats, were initiated into the fraternity. Scarab Initiates 13 Upperclassmen Following the initiation a dinner was held at the Dynamite Inn. George M. Beal and Joseph Kellog, professors of architecture, and Var- Smith, associate professor of architecture represented the faculty. Scarab, honorary architectural fraternity, held its annual spring initiation at 5 p.m. Tuesday in Marvin hall. ISA To Sponsor Treasure Hunt A treasure hunt will be sponsored by the Inner-ward council of Wards T and P-Z of the Independent Students association. It will start Thursday, and clues will appear in the Daily Kansan each day until Friday, May 5. The object of the hunt is to find "Abigail." This name has been arbitrarily assigned to an object on the campus. For example, "Abigail" might be Jimmy Green's statue. Prizes for contest winners will be displayed in the Union Thursday. Joint Engineer's Meeting Tonight The annual joint meeting of the Kansas City section and University student chapter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers will be held today. C. Y. Thomas, vice president and general manager of the Spencer Chemical company, Pittsburgh, will be the speaker. A dinner at 6:30 p.m. in the Union will precede the formal meeting in Lindley auditorium at 8. Mr. Thomas will speak on "The Professional Engineer," a subject of concern to all members of the profession and students of engineering. For the past four years he has been chairman of the Kansas Engineering council. He was also active in seeking enactment of the present Kansas engineering registration and license law. He has been vice president and general manager of the Spencer Chemical company since 1941. Mrs. Thomas is the former Dorothea Engel, daughter of Dr. E. F. Engel, professor emeritus of German and Mrs. Engel. Open House Will Show Lice, Ants, Eating Chow The largest insect collection of any university in the United States will be on display at the first open house of the entomology department. On the main floor of Snow hall from 1 p.m. to 7 p.m. Friday, Charles Michener, associate professor of entomology announced today. Visitors will see how colonies of lice are fed and raised for research work at the University. Visitors may also inspect chiggers, ants, scorpions, termites, and other insects. Professor Michener said the purpose of the exposition is to show the relationship and balance necessary between the world of humans and insects. Movies will show the drama and tragedy of life in the insect world and the functions insects perform in maintaining life in the world. The economic entomologists will show spray machinery, including a fog machine used in controlling mosquitoes. If the wind is right, they may smoke up the campus with the sprayer. Medical entomologists will have living colonies of many disease-carrying insects. Louis Lipovsky, a graduate student, who, Dr. Michener says, "probably knows more about chiggers than any other man," will have a battery of microscopes ready for examination of the "little beasties," both dead and alive. The live ones will be controlled. Mortor Board Is Tops In Honors For Women On display will be specimens of insects that actually have been the inspiration for designs of wallpaper and jewelry. At the Honors Convocation today the names of the new members of Mortar Board, senior women's honor society, were announced by Chancellor Deane W. Malott. Since Mortar Board is the highest honor a University woman can achieve in her junior year, there is always a great deal of conjecture before the announcement, and often understandable puzzlement afterward. This is because the standards by which women for Mortar Board are chosen are not generally known. When these lists are returned to the chapter, members consider every By the Mortar Board national constitution it is necessary for the active chapter to obtain a campus opinion as to the work junior women have performed on the campus. To do this the chapter prepares a mimeographed list of all junior women which is sent to all department heads and all deans of schools. The letter accompanying this list cautions them to make their choice seriously and to consider a woman's activities as well as her grades. As a further check, this list is taken to the heads of campus organizations and to ministers actively working with students to obtain a broader cross-section of opinion. In the past years Mortar Boards was a secret organization and the names of members were not announced until the end of their senior year. It is no longer a secret group and the standards by which its members are chosen can be revealed. In choosing new members the active chapter considers three things: scholarship, leadership, and service to the University. All junior women are considered and all their grade averages are figured for the past five semesters. The grade standard is set by the national organization at three-tenths of a point above the all-University average. The grade standard for this year is 1.77. After this meeting the active chapter discusses the suggestions of the advisory board and takes a final vote. The final list is submitted to the national organization for approval. Save Resources Naturalist Urges The completed list is then submitted to the advisory board. This board is composed of persons actively interested in l.Mortar Board who watch the progress of University women through their first five semesters. This board prepares a suggestive list that prepares the active chapter. Women whose names appear on both lists are automatically members of Mortar Board. Those whose names are on one list only are discussed. By JOHN R. CORPORON A unanimous vote is necessary for a woman to be chosen for Mortar Board. By national standards the chapter must have five members and no more than twenty. junior woman who meets the required grade average, regardless of the number of times her name has been checked by faculty or student members. However, this check list gives a basic idea of the work the women have performed and is used as one point in consideration. Transfer students are considered on the basis of their academic and extracurricular activities at their previous school as well as their work on the K.U. campus. If Americans continue their irresponsible use of natural resources "we will be just as guilty of genocide as were the Nazis when they set up their concentration camps," William Vogt, author and naturalist, told students and faculty at the 27th annual Honors convocation today. West Point Is Contest Scene Stolenwerck and Shearer will debate the affirmative and negative on all four questions Thursday and Friday. The 16 top ranking teams will enter the elimination rounds Saturday. L. Edward Stolenwerck, College senior, and Kent Shearer, College junior, left by plane this morning to take part in the national West Point Invitational Debate tournament, West Point, N.Y., Thursday through Saturday. This is the third consecutive year that the University has been invited to participate. K.U. debaters will compete with the nation's 34 top debate teams in the tourney. The main subject of discussion will be the nationalization of basic non-agricultural industries. Three sub-divisions will also be debated. They concern the nationalization of steel, the control of the business cycle, and national defense. Both men are members of Delta Sigma Rho, honorary debate fraternity. They have debated at the University since their freshman years. At the 1949 West Point tournament Stollenwerck tied for highest honors. E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, who is accompanying the two-man team will serve as a judge. K. U. was the first school selected from District IV to compete at West Point. Other schools chosen from the district are: Central State Teachers college, Stevens Point, Wis.; Luthet college, Decorah, Iowa; and the College of St. Thomas, St. Paul, Minn. They were chosen by a district selection committee on the basis of their debate records for the entire year. 1,000 Foreigners Leave Red China Washington. April 26 —(U.P.) About 1,000 foreigners, including 300 Americans, left Shanghai by rail today for Tientsin and will be evacuated from there and by sea, the state department announced today. This marked the start of the long planned western evacuation of Communist China. The United States on Jan. 14 ordered all official American personnel out of red held China and invited American business men and missionaries to leave if they wished. Scholarships Available Now Any woman student in the School of Education who wishes to apply for scholarship funds for next year is asked to report to 103 Fraser hall immediately. Several scholarships have recently been made available but applications must be filed by Friday. The announcement was made today by George B. Smith, dean of the School of Education. "In our reckless destruction of natural resources today, we are faced with a greater danger than the atom bomb. There is a chance that the A-bomb won't be used. Our depletion of resources is a situation that is going on 24 hours a day," Mr. Vogt warned. Honor Students The names of students honored for scholastic standing at the Honors convocation are listed on pages 2 and 3. The names of 127 elected to the honor societies are on page 8. Unless the people of the United States educate themselves and start preserving the natural resources our standard of living will drop and the whole world will suffer as a result, he said. "Each person needs from one to 2,000 pounds of food a year. He also needs clothes and housing. Before any of these can be made available water is needed. It is needed for sanitation, agriculture, and industry." "When the Marshall plan started operation in Europe they needed boxes for factory products and ties for railroads. The timber for these products was not available in Europe and the wood had to be found in other parts of the world." We need timber for the protection of watersheds and we need water-sheds to insure grass for our grazing animals. Grass maintains a good soil structure by preventing water erosion. "All the resources which we possess in the U.S. combine to give us a high standard of living." Mr. Vorg explained. "It is from our surplus wealth that we are able to have such fine school buildings. Democracy cannot survive without a reasonably educated electorate. The things we have to offer the rest of the world depend on our surplus wealth and standard of living." He described ways in which lack of control of water, soil, and timber affects the average person. When persons buy a house they run into high prices due to the lumber shortage. The conditions of grazing ranges show up in high meat bills. Henry Thoreau built his little house on Walden pond for $29. "Europe and Japan are overpopulated. Italy is desperate. Her population is growing by half a million every year. Great Britain depends on one-half of her food supply now from overseas. If we were to have another depression and felt that we could not spend all this money for aid what would these countries do who don't have the money?" We have aided the Japanese now to the extent that their death rate has fallen greatly. They may double their population in the next 35 years. General MacArthur has said that the Japanese could barely feed themselves if left alone, Vogt pointed out. "People who are opposed to birth control have no substitute for it. Population pressures are going up and famine may break out in India and China this year. It is the most elementary common sense to head it off," he argued. "We need to hold down birth rates and raise production, but we don't know how to get it across to the people." Realey Is Topeka Speaker Charles B. Realey, professor of history, will speak Saturday, at the 24th annual meeting of the Kansas Association of Teachers of History and Related Fields in Topeka. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1950 HAVE YOU SEEN IT? The NEW - NASH RAMBLER 10m² All the Thrill of the open car with the comfort and safety of a sedan. - Famous Weather Eye - Radio and all other custom extras as Standard Equipment. NEW LOW PRICE INCLUDES: NOW ON DISPLAY AT YOUR LAWRENCE NASH DEALER Boyer Motors 617 Mass. Phone 407 Give Your White Elephants 'Green Backs' With KANSAN Classifieds. LINDLEY'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 Matched Perfection FOR A PERFECT UNION PARKLAND WEDDING CEREMONY Your love story is brilliantly recorded in the beauty of this triple ensemble a radiant Regal Crown* diamond engagement ring, with classic wedding bands for you, for your bride. A beautiful beginning for your life together. ROBERTS JEWELRY-GIFTS Phone 827 833 Mass. Official Bulletin April 26.1950 The following are notified to appear before student court. 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Green hall: Lewis L. Sandidge, William H. Petrich, Edward Balda. Kappa Beta tests for National, 5 p.m. today and Thursday, Student Room, Myers hall. Contact Mabel Anne for tests. Y.W.C.A. Cabinet Board, 4 today. Pine Room, Union. Union Activities executive board, 4 today, Student Union Activities office. Jay Janes, 5 today. AlCHE joint meeting, K.U. and Kansas City chapters, dinner 6:30 tonight, Falm Room, Union, Meeting, 8 tonight, 426 Lindley, Mr.C.Y. Thomas, Spencer Chemical Co., "The Professional Engineer." A. S.C.E., 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 101 Snow. Nominations of officers. Talk on "Employment Outlook for Civil Engineers." Refreshments. Sociology club, 4 p.m. Thursday. East Room, Union. Virginie Baroudjian, "Life in Egypt, Syria, and U.S." All invited. Mathematics club, 4 p.m. Thursday, 203 Strong. A. Kruse, "Reflected Triangles." Refreshments. All Engineering students: class meetings for nomination of 1950-51 Engineering Council representatives, 12:30 p.m. Friday, Hoch auditorium. Newman club invites all Catholic students 20 meet 2 p.m. Saturday, St. John's church, to march in All American Day parade. Gamma Alpha Chi, 5 p.m. Thursday, 102 Journalism building. Attendance required. Ku Kus, important pre-initiation meeting, activities 7:30 p.m., pledges 8 p.m., Thursday, 105 Green. Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday, 131 Strong. Gene Thomas, speaker. All invited. Square Dance club, 7:30 tonight. Recreation room, Union. S. A.M. field trip to Fiberglass Corporation, Kansas City, Kan, meet 12:30 p.m. Thursday front of Union, in continental Europe was presented Snow Zoology club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 201 Snow. Election of officers; picnic plans. All members attend. Ten cheerleaders will be chosen in tryouts at 7 p.m. today in the East side of Robinson gymnasium. Students selected for the coming year's pep squad will be announced in Thursday's University Daily Kansan. Cheerleaders Will Tryout Students unable to attend at 7 p.m. because of the Biology test may try out following the exam. All candidates must sign up at the cheerleaders' training school. Students must indicate whether they will arrive late. Selecting the new cheerleaders are members of the Pep committee. These include: L. C. Woodruff and Donald K. Alderson, dean and assistant dean of men; Miss Margaret Habein and Miss Martha Peterson, dean and assistant dean of women; Fred Ellsworth and Marvin Small, secretary and assistant secretary of the Alumni association; F. C. Allen, basketball coach; Jules V. Sikes, football coach; E.C. Quigley, director of athletics; Donald Giffin, chairman of the traditions committee of the All Student Council; and Richard Wintormete and Leslie Roenigk, presidential appointees from the All Student Council. University Daily Kansan Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University of Kansas summer holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. Students Get Honors At Convocation The Senior students whose names are listed below constitute the highest ten per cent in scholarship in their respective schools; COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES Edmund G. Ahren Barbara Aitis Sydney Anderson Alice Armstrong Alla Beebe Ruth Belt Margaret Beltz Joan Bennett Ralph Brock Robert Brock Lauraine Brooker Ralph Calvin Richard Capps Jeanne Carpenter Ida Mae Clairborne Dean Collins Ralph D. Comer Charles Cory Diane Danley Robert L. Davis John Eberhardt Edith Ann Elam Thomas Fritzlen Lamont W. Gaston Harry Gibson Mario Hirson Dale Griswold Marriote Grunder Howard Halman Joyce Harkerler William L. Hayes Robert Heaton Loren Hepler Bryce Hinkson Charles Hoffhaus Wallace Holderman Maurice Huling Edward Huycke John Johnson Lucille Jones Michael Justice John D. King Jeank Khran Portentus Latimer Sidney Lida Festus Liverrett Emuice Mathes Hugh McCauley Orcena Michelson Thomas Milne Ralph Moon Arthea North Gene Peterson Eugene Petry Richard Randall Samuel Rapport Henry Hofman Reed True Rice Fred Rollins Jerome Rozen Patricia Runner Elmer Rusco William Ruth Vernal Scheuerman Eugene Adams Robert Berkley James Black James Blocker Alfred Bowman Laired Bowman Owen Byrn Kenneth Caldwell Dwight Chambers Mabel Conderman John Crader Jeanne Dodson Theodora Schreiber Arnold Shafer Ralph Simmons Loren Simpson Philip Smith Doranne Snyder Charles Staley Richard Stavely Elmer Stegman Philip Stevens Ed Stollenwerck Doris Tihen Richard Traskowsky Theodore Utschen Elizabeth Ward Kathryn Ward James Webb Benjamin White James Wilson Donn Braden Wimmer SCHOOL OF BUSINESS John Emerson Jack Knight Roger Ewing James Masterson Gerald Friedeman Robert Maupin Clark Griswold William Meier Wallace Grundem Otis Mitchell Francis Hansen George Monson Thomas T. Hawkins Leland Nelson Donald Helm Ernest Neuer Mary Hercules Raymond Olinger Donald Hyten Glen Olson Keet Honey Richard Reed SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURE Jack Robinson Piggyn Shenm Robert Shmallbear Clifton Smith Morton Stearns Lawrence Stevens Austin Turney Romald Weddie Byron Werges Nancy P. Williams Donald Yockey Delton Yohe William Barnett Donald Finn Thomas Fisher David Foley Robert Beansfield Fred Brinkman Dean Broderson John Burnett Howard Hamacher John Campbell Lee Chapman Lyle Cludean Clyde Coe Conrad Conrad Charles Coulter Neal Crane Isaac Hoover Stanley England Joseph Keil Robert Kite Boyd Larrewe Vernon Larrewe Herbert Lewis John Miller Norman Miller Charles Mullin Robert Murrell John Nelson James Page Arthur Patterson, Jr. Donald Payne Francis Prosser, Jr. Frank I. Reynolds, J. Dennis Willard John Riesemeyer, J. John Young SCHOOL OF EDUCATION Doris Barackman Carry Graham Howard R. Lloyd Dana Richmond Dorothy Christensen David Johnson Barbara Nash Peggy Salmon Kathryn Dittemore Mary Kerr Harley Oberheldman William Shaw John Doornbs Majorie Lane Mary Pinkney Verla Steffey Harold Ehrlich Festus Liverett Pauline Reade Caroline Upp Azim Wiley THE WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM AND PUBLIC INFORMATION SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS James L. Cunningham Betty Hayward Joyce Rohrer Frank White Billie George Jack McCoy Jean Waters Lee Dyer Douglas Jennings James Morris Louis Sciortino Doris Greenbaun Yvonne Josserand Kathleen O'Connor Jessimat Strange Dorothy Hogan Nora Temble SCHOOL OF LAW Willard A. Burton, Jr. Jesse H. Foster, Jr. Joe Lill Forrest Wilson Anthony Dealy J. Glenn Hahn Dean M. Miller SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Paul Carpenter J. D. Kabler Robert Puntenney Robert Fairchild Alexander Mitchell Bartlett Ramsey Thomas Hogan Dewey Nemee Alexander Roth SCHOOL OF PHARMACY Everett Baker Darrell Hobson Marilyn Lindberg Honter Scarborough Jamie Eslack Walter Wulen Geraldine Probst Brandt Covers Globe And Likes It A University graduate who "shot his way through college" has become one of the most traveled press photographers in the business. Since his graduation in 1939, he has covered stories in almost every foreign country, crossed the Atlantic ocean six times, and taken more than 5,000 pictures. This photographer for The Newspictures is Bert Brandt of Topeka. After being graduated from the University, Mr. Brandt began work with the Kansas City bureau of Acme. In 1942 he was transferred to Washington, D.C., and soon after became a war correspondent. This photographer for Acme® His pictures have been used in many books about the last war and his byline is familiar in every paper served by Acme or the N.E.A. news service. At present his assignment is the world, which according to him, "is one of the biggest and most pleasant jobs in the business." Netherlands Geologist To Speak Here May 1 Dr. P. H. Kuenen, professor of geology at the University of Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands, will speak on "Turbity Currents" 8 p.m. Monday, May 1 in 426 Lindley. Dr. Kuenen is an international authority on marine geology and is the author of a new textbook to be published soon on that subject. Dr. Kuenen comes to Lawrence under the sponsorship of the Geological Society of America. 1950 on WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Students Get Honors At Convocation The following Juniors, Sophomores, and Freshmen lead in their respective classes. Where the decision was close, more than one name is given: COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES Wayne Attwood Donna Bower Roger Beth George Betz Clinton Foulk Dale Hornbaker Juniors Duane Morrow Donald Rice Carl Tongier Carl Ambler Eldon Baker Raymond Becry Sophomores Freshman Charles Oswald Sophonfores Patty Jo Bottorf James Logan Henry H. Bradshaw David Mohilner Frederick O'Brien Donald Ormond Freshman Jeanne Fitzgerald Allie Grove Harriet Flood Margaret Love Myron Geore Jerome Lysandt SCHOOL OF BUSINESS Junior Lloyd Davis SCHOOL OF EDUCATION Marian Kyser Mary Lou Lane Sophomore Marilyn L. Smith SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURE Junior: Joyce D. Holmberg Sophomore: Damon G. Simpson Freshman: Mahlon Ball SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS Junior Robert Wynne Sophomores Delores Wunsch Lois Bradfield Freshman Martha Heck THE WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM AND PUBLIC INFORMATION Junior Patricia Jansen SCHOOL OF LAW Second-year Lloyd Faust John Rader First-year Ralph Brock SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Herman Hiesterman Melvin Kettner Sophomore Marion M. Sumner Freshman William E. Ruth Junior: Roy Muntzer Sophomore: Lowell Macy Freshman: Albert Park, Jr Work Of KU Artists Selected For Show Three artists on the University faculty have work in the National Decorative Arts and Ceramics show at Wichita. It is sponsored by the Wichita Art association. Carlyle H. Smith, assistant professor of design, is represented by four pieces, including some of the new pebble jewelry. J. Sheldon Carey, associate professor of design, has two pieces in the show and Donald Kane, instructor in design, one. Managers Are Needed For 1951 Rock Chalk Revue The 400 exhibits in the show were selected from more than 2,000 entries. Lohr To Discuss Home Ec Applications for production manager, business manager, and publicity director for the 1951 Rock Chalk Revue should be submitted at the Y.M.C.A. office in the Union building by Friday. Miss Helen Lohr, associate professor of home economics, will participate in a panel discussing majors in home economies in Topeka today. Miss Lohr will cover the field of apparel merchandising. Several Kansas colleges will participate in the program which will be given before 130 Toppa high school girls. Applicants should give any background or previous experience which would qualify them for the job and ideas or suggestions for next year's show. IVCF Conference To Meet In Topeka The Inter-varsity Christian fellowship State-Wide Spring conference will be held Friday through Sunday at Forrest Park camp in Topeka, "Looking unto Jesus, the Author and Finisher of Our Faith" is the theme of the conference. Dr. E. E. Bayles, professor of education, delivered the Honors convocation address at Washburn university in Toneka recently. Bayles Discusses Japan In Convocation Address He discussed the development of democratic education in Japan. During the fall semester Professor Bayles was on leave from the University to serve as a civilian consultant to the Supreme Commander of Allied Powers in Japan. Picnic To Be Given For YW Freshmen The junior cabinet of Y.W.C.A. will give a picnic for all freshmen members 5 p.m. Thursday, May 4 at Potter lake. John Paterson from Cambridge university in England will be featured as a guest speaker. He is now doing graduate work at the University of Wisconsin. The I.V.C.F. staff worker in Kansas, Colorado, and New Mexico, Mr. Eugene Thomas, will also address the group. The purpose of the picnic is to bring the members closer together so that they can help the Y.W. more next year. The junior cabinet will send post cards to all freshman members telling about the picnic. The cabinet will buy the picnic lunches. The junior cabinet reported the picnic at the Y.W. executive meeting Monday. Diana Sherwood, College junior, was chosen to be the nominee for student leader at the Estes park Y.W.C.A.-Y.M.C.A. conference this summer. Picnic Date Change Announced By Clubs Jefferson county students have changed plans for a picnic to 6 p.m. Friday. May 5 at Potter lake instead of this Friday. Parents will be notified of the change of date. Plans were also furthered for a program featuring a potluck supper with a motion picture of K.U. High school seniors, high school principals, and University alumni of Jefferson county will be invited. The party will probably be in Oskaloosa. A short meeting will be held 5 p.m. Thursday, in Miller hall to complete plans for this project. Lucas To Sing In Senior Recital Early English and Italian selections will be sung by Mary Lynn Lucas, fine arts senior, in a senior recital at 8 tonight in Strong hall auditorium. Miss Katherine Mulky, instructor of music theory, will act as accompaniest, and Maxine Alburty, education senior, violinist, will assist in a violin obbligato. Other numbers Miss Lucas, contralto, will sing are a number from the "B minor Mass" (Bach), songs in German from Wagner, Grieg, Zoellner, and Brahms, a French group from St. Saens, Ravel, and Faure, and closing with a group of songs in English from Foote, Rachmaninoff, Clough - Leighton, and others. Miss Lucas has been a member of the A Cappella choir serving this year as treasurer. She is also a member of Sigma Alpha Iota, honorary music fraternity. She took solo parts in the K.U. Opera Guild production of "Gondoliers," "Sweet-hearts and The Mikado." She came from El Dorado Springs. Mo., where she took a prominent part in music and oratorical contests in high school. Miss Lucas also attended National Music camp at Interlochen, Mich. two years as a camper and another two years as a counselor. Medical Center Nurse Meets With Pre-Nursing Students A tea honoring Miss E. Jean M. Hill, chairman of the department of nursing of the University of Kansas Medical center, was given Tuesday by the pre-nursing students. Miss Hill answered questions concerning the new nursing plan which is now being carried out at the University. YOUR EYES Chemical Company Officer To Address AIChE eye The vice-president of the Spencer Chemical company will speak on "The Professional Engineer" at a joint meeting of the student branch of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers and the Kansas City section of the organization at 8 p.m. today in 426 Lindley hall. The speech will follow a dinner at 6:30 p.m. in the Palm room. should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription Duplicated. Phone 425 1025 Mass. Lawrence Optical Co. 图 SUMMER FORMALS you can relax in! After Six BY RUDOPKER Clever design means "sport coat comfort!" The shoulders are roomy, the lines are casual, the crease resistant rayon is c-o-o-l. 26.95 Palm Beach Dress Trousers $10.50 as ordverti in LIFE CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES The Book Book 1891 MAY 23 PHONE 666 CITY LANDING Fiction Poetry Drama Non-Fiction Children's Books and Rental Library The Book America Is Reading THE WALL by John Hersey, author of A Bell for Adano. For sale and for rent here. No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money. LAKE BEND Do you know someone having... a birthday? or an anniversary? Whether her favorites are golden sun-kissed rose buds or rainbow-assorted sweet peas, flowers are sure to make her eyes sparkle with joy! Phone 998 to place your order. Prompt delivery. THE BLOSSOM SHOP PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1950 KU Wins First Big Seven Tilt Coach Bill Hogan's Jayhawker baseball team scored four runs in the fifth inning and three in the sixth to win the second of a two-game series with the Missouri Tigers, 9 to 3, here Tuesday. The victory was Kansas' first conference win in three starts and the Tigers' third loss in six league contests. Missouri won Monday's game 9 to 2. The Jayhawkers' win resulted largely from the combined efforts of Carl Sandefur, big sophomore righthander, and left fielder Carl Ellis, who hit three for four including a triple to drive in two runs. Sandefur, in winning his first Big Seven start, kept sir Missouri hits well scattered, walked two, both in the ninth, and, struck out seven. He gave up two earned runs while Missouri's six errors allowed Kansas to score five unearned runs. Missouri took a 2 to 0 lead in the third on two hits and an error. Catcher Lowell Alexander reached first on an error to start the inning. Englert hit a sharp grounder between first and second moving Alex Battilolo and Bill Eatowock sacrificed the runners to second and third for the first out. Neither team scored in the first two innings as Roger Englert, Missouri's veteran righthander, and each faced only seven batters. Right fielder Bob Harting hit a long triple to left center scoring Alexander and Englert. Sandefur left Harting stranded by retiring the next two batters on fly balls to center fielder Guy Mabry. Kansas scored in the third as catcher Ken Morrow reached first on an error. After Sandefur moved him to second with a sacrifice, Jim Cavonaugh drove him home with a double to left-center. The Jayhawkers scored four runs after two were out in the fifth with 10 men going to bat. Sandefur struck out, Cavonaugh walked, and short stop Frank Koenig struck out. He was next to center. Ellis hit a line-drive triple just inside the left-field foul-line scoring both runners. Walter Hick's long fly to right bounced out of Harting's glove allowing Ellis to score. Guy Mabry dropped a Texas leaguer into short left moving Hicks to third. Hicks scored as Englert walked George Voss and Morrow to force in a run before sophomore Floyd Eberhard replaced Englert to retire the side. Missouri scored in the sixth on first baseman Jack Frier's home run to center field. The box score: MISSOURI (3) AB R H PO A Eatock, ss 4 0 0 0 5 Harting, rf 4 0 1 0 0 Wachter, rf 0 0 0 0 0 Ulmer, lf 5 0 2 2 0 Frier, 1b 4 1 2 9 0 Davis, cf 4 0 1 0 0 Boeger, 3b 3 0 0 3 2 Langenbeck, 3b 1 0 0 0 1 Redden, 2b 3 0 0 3 0 Alexander, c 3 1 0 7 1 Murrey, c 0 0 0 0 1 Englert, p 2 1 2 0 1 Eberhard, p 1 0 0 0 3 Crenshaw 1 0 0 0 0 Totals ...35 3 6 24 14 6 KANSAS (9) AB R HPOA E Cavonaugh, 2b ...3 2 1 1 3 0 Koenig, ss ...4 0 1 0 2 3 Temple, 3b ...4 1 1 0 1 0 Get Danforth Chapel Notecards PAT READ "Across from the Courthouse" IT'S NOT TOO LATE !! You Can Still Make That Summer Trip To Europe WITH INTERNATIONAL YOUTH PARIS BY AIR $360 ROUND TRIP Flights to LONDON and ROME Write or phone International Youth Inc. 150 Broadway, New York 7, N.Y. COrtland 7-0362 Totals 31 9 14 9 3 Crenshaw struck out for Eberhard To assure passage write immediately Ellis, lf ... 4 2 3 0 0 0 Hicks, rf ... 4 2 0 1 0 0 Mabry, cf ... 4.1 1 4 0 0 Voss, bt ... 3 0 1 12 0 0 Morrow, c ... 3 1 0 8 1 0 Sandefur, c ... 2 0 0 1 2 0 Totals ... 31 9 8 27 9 3 Missouri .002 001 000—3 Kansas .001 043 01x—9 RBI—Harting 2, Frier, Cavonaugh, Ellis 2, Hicks, Voss, Marry. 2B— Cavonaugh. 3B—Harting, Ellis, HR- Frier, SB-Elleys, Mabry 2. SH— Eatock, Temple, Hicks, Sandefur. LOB—Missouri 9, Kansas 10. Pitching summary; BB—Englert 3, Eberhard, 3, Sandefur. 2 SO—Englert 5, Sandefur 7. Runs and Hits off—Englert 5 and 6 in 4 2-3 innings, Eberhard 4 and 2 in 3 1-3 innings, Earned runs off—Englert 2, Eberhard 2, Sandefur 2. BK—Sandefur. PB—Morrow 4. HBP—Hoenck (Koenig, Voss, Sandefur), Sandefur (Redden). Losing pitcher—Englert. Umpires—Michael's (p) and Edwards. Time—2:25. Atts. 350 (est.) Intramural Softball Tuesday's Results Beta A 11, Sigma N 10 Phi Chi 11, S.A.M. 1 Lambda Chi Alpha 9, Delta Tau Delta 8 Teke's 17, Phi Psi 6 Pi K.A. 19, Triangle 7 Sigma Chi 23, Delta Chi 10 Harmon 11, Miller 8 Jollife 20, Watkins 12 Tri Delt 21, Temruth 11 Today's games Field Fraternity A 1 ATO v Kappa Psi 2 Phi Kappa Tau v Alpha Kappa Psi 3 Phi Delt v D.U. 4 Phi Gam v Acacia 5 Phi Kappa v Pi Kappa Alpha 6 Sig Alpha v Kappa Sigma Independent A 7 Dix Club v Squirrels 1 Alpha Phi v Chi Omega 2 Alpha Chi Omega v Corbin 3 Gamma Phi Beta v Sigma Kap- She Loves To Open Gifts Memphis, Tenn.—(U.P.)—Christmas comes but once a year and that's too long to wait, says Mrs. W. C. Moore. She has all her packages gift-wrapped, "just for the thrill of opening 'gifts.'" STOP IN FOR A BITE ANYTIME OF THE DAY OR NIGHT We Serve Delicious Sandwiches Soup Dinners Pop Open 24 hours A Day Hundley's Cafe 8381/2 Mass. Phone 303 At Colleges and Universities Call K.U. 251 With Your News throughout the country CHESTERFIELD is the largest-selling cigarette. * BRENDA MARSHALL Famous North Texas State Teachers College Alumna says “Chesterfields are so much milder and better-tasting that I find them completely to my liking.” Brenda Marshall STARRING IN "IROQUOIS TRAIL" AN EDWARD SMALL PRODUCTION RELEASED THRU UNITED ARTISTS ADMINISTRATION BUILDING NORTH TEXAS STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE *By Recent National Survey Always Buy CHESTERFIELD They're MILDER! They're TOPS!-1 IN AMERICA'S COLLEGES WITH THE TOP MEN IN SPORTS NORTH TEXAS STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE Copyright 1950 LIGGETT & MVERS TOBACCO CO. IN AMERICA'S COLLEGES WITH THE TOP MEN IN SPORTS WITH THE HOLLYWOOD STARS WEDNBESDAY, APRIL 26. 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE 1950 E Y us Day e news. L s ON TB Fijis Near Intramural Swim Title Rv RAY SOLDAN It won't be official until after the completion of the finals which begin at 7 tonight, but Phi Gamma Delta is the 1950 intramural swimming champion. In Tuesday's semi-finals, the Phi Gams qualified eight individual performers and both relay teams. Phi Kappa Psi, four-place finisher in 1949, and Sigma Chi, the fifth-place team of a year ago, are the only teams with even an outside chance of up-setting the Phi Gams. The Phi Psi's qualified four individual performers and both relay teams for the finals. Sigma Chi will base its slim championship hopes on three individuals and one relay team. The order in which the events will be run-off tonight is as follows: free style relay, 50-yard breast stroke, 100-yard free style, 100-yard back stroke, 50-yard free style, 50-yard individual medley swim, 150-yard medley relay, and diving. Spectators will be admitted to tonight's finals. Three more intramural records were shattered Tuesday—bringing the record-breaking performance to five in two days. Bill Stratton, Sigma Chi, clicked off the 50-yard medley in the whirlwind time of 28.9 seconds to erase the one-day old mark and regain possession of the medley record. Gordon Stucker of Phi Gam, who barely qualified for the finals, sped the distance in 19.6 Monday to better by four-tenths of a second a mark set by Stratton a year ago. The other new records were set in the relays—the free style and the 150-yard medley. The Phi Gam foursome of John Amberg, John Ashley, Gordon Stucker, and Jack Ranson was clocked in 1:05.2 in the tree style relay, one and eight-tenths of a second better than the old mark. The Beta's, who had held the old record since 1947, equalled it Tuesday in finishing second to the Phi Gams. Record number three for the evening was broken in the final event—the 150-yard medley. Jack Faerber, Dee Roy, and Robin McGeorge of Phi Psi combined to cover the distance in 1:24.7. They broke a record set by a Phi Delta Theta trio in 1947. The old record was 1:30.6. Jim Olander, Phi Gam, topped the qualifiers in the 50-yard breast stroke with a time of 30.3 seconds. Olander finished second to Hall Smith of Sigma Chi in the preliminaries. Jack Faesher, Phi Psi, registered the best time in the 100-yard free style for the second day in a row. Faerber swam the distance in 1:02.5 Monday and was cocked in the fast time of 59.5 Tuesday. Ken Carey, Phi Gam, turned in a time of 11:60 to lead all qualifiers in the 100-yard back stroke. Carey, second-place winner in 1949, also posted the best time in the preliminaries. Jack Ranson, the number three man a year ago, finished second to his teammate Tuesday. Amberg, who finished second to Stucker in the preliminaries of the 50-yard free style, edged his Phi Gam teammate in the semi-finals. Amberg recorded a time of 25.5 Tuesday, a full second better than his preliminary performance. Stucker, the defending champion, splashed to a record Monday, but slipped down a little in the semi-finals. Orthwein, Phi Psi, and Smith, Sigma Chi. Time .30.3. 100-yard free style: 1. Faerber, Phi Psi; 2. Walls, Phi Psi; 3. Rankin, Oread; 4. Hughes, Phi Gam. Time: 59.5. Those qualifying for the finals are: 100-yard back stroke: 1. Carey, Phi Gam; 2. Sessions, Delta Chi; 3. Ranson, Phi Gam; 4. Halverhout, Beta. Time: 1:16.0. 50-yard breast stroke: 1. Olander, Phi Gam; 2. McGeorge Phi Psi; 3. 50-yard free style: 1. Amberg, Phi Gam; 2. Stucker, Phi Giam; 3. Floyd, Beta; 4. Cross, Sig Alpha. Time: 25.5 50-yard individual medley: 1. Stratton, Sigma Chi; 2. Olander, Phi Gam; 3. Smith, Sigma Chi; 4. Stucker, Phi Giam. Time: 28.9 Free style relay: 1. Phi Gam, 2. Beta, 3. Phi Psi, 4. Sigma Chi. Time 1:05.2 BETTER USED CARS FOR SALE Read the Daily Kansan daily. At our new lot Buy - Sell - Trade Easy Payments Vern Schneider 1010-1012 Mass. Ph. 424 Read the Want Ads Daily. ATTENTION CHARTER A BUS GOING SOMEWHERE Let us help you plan your trip why not ANYTIME, ANYWHERE Insured Vehicles CHARTER SERVICE Call us for rates Phone Bonner Springs, Kansas 177 Safe Drivers KANSAS CITY KAW VALLEY BUS LINES Seniors Only NOW Is The TIME to secure your Senior Class Ring at Frank Strong Hall Business Office Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers Strawberry Sundaes Dairy Queen Date-Treats HEALTHFUL DELICIOUS DAIRY QUEEN Malts and Milk Shakes Read the Want Ads Daily. 1835 Mass. "ALL DRESSED UP /" VOL. III. SEVENTH EDITION Come in and see our new, modern Greeting Card Display. Special- MOCCER WOLF MOSSER WOLF Now $.89 Regular $1.29 10-piece GLASBAKE GIFT SET (glass oven ware) DAVIS PAINT Phone 1078 931 Mass. GET YOUR CLOTHES MOTH-PROOFED AT PRICES TO FIT YOUR BUDGET. Have your woolens moth-proofed at Acme Laundry and Dry Cleaners. Each garment is sprayed with Hoggatt Moth Spray to protect it from destructive moths for seasons to come. All work guaranteed. Ladies plain coats .. $1.50 Ladies' suits 1.50 Sweaters .50 Ladies wool skirts .50 Men's suits $1.50 Men's top coats 1.50 Ladies' suits 1.50 ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners 1111 Mass. UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD The Pleasant Way to California SINCE 1950 AIR MART convenient,too! - No worry about where you'll stay overnight . . . or finding an enjoyable place to eat. It's all there for you; comfortable Pullmans or—for economy—restful, reclining Coach seats. And Pacific Dining Car "meals that appeal" add to your pleasure. You avoid driving strain en route and, if you wish, you can take advantage of economical rent-a-car service at your destination. See your local Union Pacific Agent for reservations and travel information. UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1950 Little Man On Campus By Bibler HOW COME, HUM? HOW COME? IN ENGLISH I I GOT A "B= ON THIS PAPER - ENGLISH 2 GOT ME AN' A- ---- NOW YOU GIVE ME A 'C= WANNA CHECK IT AGAIN? Bessie SATISFIED? SATISFIED? The Editors Report一 TELEPHONE STRIKES Hamstring Defense ye ED Trouble and disruption of service once again threatens telephone service. Ten thousand equipment installers have gone out on strike. Eventually, an estimated 300,000 workers of the Bell system may be affected. Union officers directed long distance lines be jammed with "hang up" calls. This, it was felt, would bring Bell around to terms in short order. While the union, the C.I.O. Communications Workers, said the move is legal, it's a moot point to argue. And yet, clearing away the verbose verbage, is it a moot point to argue? Is what the C.W.A. says not actually a defense that sabotage is legal? Would the result on telephone service be any different if the lines were blown up instead of being jammed? Strictly speaking, of course there is. But— This is the twentieth century. It is imperative that communications be maintained continuously. The reason for this is simple. Man, has after many thousands of years of search, at last found the means of wiping himself out. He has B-bombs, A-bombs, and H-bombs in profusion. He has jet and conventional type aircraft that can carry these bombs a quarter of the way around the world in half a day. Half a day, . it will soon be less than that. It follows that if death and destruction can be carried over tremendous distances in a matter of hours, a country must be able to instantaneously intercept any invader. To do this, a country must have an efficient and ever-working communications system. By communications system we mean radar, radio, telephone, their relations. Perhaps most important is telephone or wire communication. It is relatively easy for radar and radio to be put out of service. It can be done long distance—as the "Voice of America" has found. But wire communications is quite a bit harder to put out of commission. It must be done at close range. For this reason the C.W.A.'s contention that jamming telephone lines is legal becomes dangerous. If the lines could be legally jammed only half a day, what might result? We're not trying to frighten you with bugbears but it is possible that a subversively-dominated union could put the nation's communication system out of order for subversive purposes. And there have been cases of subversively-dominated unions. What we're trying to point out here is that a strike against a natural monopoly such as the telephone should not be tolerated. Aside from the serious damage that could be caused to business and individuals by a rupture in communications, the effect on the country could be fatal. As we see it, there is only one sensible way to prevent rupture of service of a natural monopoly. Like the postal service, it should be run by the federal government. Bailey will celebrate fifty years of service Friday. Rodney Nipnap, who has been valiantly struggling with chemistry all semester, hopes the occasion will be properly celebrated by the detonation of a small atom-bomb. TODAY'S MAIL Two Per Cent Sir: In April 19's election, better than two per cent of the students voting turned in their ballots for Martin Kallikak-a person living at the time of the revolution. He fathered a long line of idiots. These Kallikak fans were not trying to be funny; they believed it was their democratic duty to vote. As it was explained to me, the Kallikak movement was begun Wednesday morning by students who felt voting for a student government which cannot govern would be a complete waste of time; an organization which can do little more than recommend in the students' behalf is useless. If university men and women are unable to govern themselves, nothing is possible. Given an opportunity to vote for something other than the extending of an honor to a fellow student, the student body of K. U. will vote. The United States harvest of tung nuts, which yield an excellent fast-drying oil for paint use, has climbed steadily from 6,200 tons in 1943 to 66,000 tons in 1949. Terryl W. Francis College junior Your College Education isn't complete until you've seen the golf department- - Ladies woods and irons - Practice balls - Popular brand golf balls - Golf ball markers - Open stock clubs - Sport shirts at KIRKPATRICK'S SPORT SHOP 715 Mass. Ph.1018 CLEARANCE ON ALL WOOL SPRING TOPPERS 14. 75 to $1000 19.75 Values LITWIN'S EVERYTHING TO WEAR 831 Mass. Wes Berg, Mgr. Rust Craft MOTHERS' DAY CARDS Choose Early While Our Selection is complete. 833 Mass. ROBERTS Jewelry — Gifts Phone 827 GET YOUR JAYHAWKER NOW.. ONLY A FEW LEFT ALARM In years to come, you'll take your Jayhawker out time and time again to keep alive your memories of K.U. Get yours today while a limited supply is still available. Subscription Now $5.25 at the Jayhawker Office No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money. WILLIAMS PERRY'S. CAUGHT EVERYTHING BUT THE BALL SINCE HE STARTED USING VITALIS! VITALIS Vernonia de Italy Made in Italy Distilled by Alcibiara Dolce Vino Cantina di Alcibiara Federico Borboni PRODUCE OF ITALY You can't miss with the misses—if you use your head—and "Live-Action" Vitalis care. Pitch into that mop of yours with the famous "60-Second Workout." 50 seconds' scalp massage (feel the difference!) . . . 10 seconds to comb (and will the gals see the difference!). You'll look neat and natural. Bye-bye loose, flaky dandruff and dryness, too. So make your play with the help of Vitalis—get it at any drug store or barber shop, LIVE ACTION VITALIS "60-SecondWorkout" 27 1950 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Journalism School Judges High School Newspapers Forty-six Kansas high schools were recognized today by the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information for journalistic work of merit this year. The 647 entries from 65 schools in the 11 competitive divisions of the 30th annual K.U. High School Newspaper contest were new records, Dean Burton W. Marvin said. The old record set in 1949 was 438 entries from 58 schools. Enrollments of the school entered varied from 23 to 2,400. Dean Marvin said the judges were particularly pleased by the showing of many of the smaller schools. Publications produced by ditto or mimeograph submitted excellent work in some divisions won prizes over larger schools with more elaborately produced papers. The newspapers of three schools earned more than one first place rating. The Record, published by Ottawa high school, submitted the best news story and won first in the news and feature pictures division. The Saına High News, Sarina, received first places for the best interview and the best retail advertisements. The Mentor, Manhattan high school, had the best human interest story, and in the miscellaneous division it submitted the best verse. The Messenger of Wichita East high school was first in the "service to school" division. The pictures division drew the most entries, 91. There were 80 entries in the editorial division and 68 for sports stories. The entire faculty of the William Allen White School of Journalism were the judges. The winners were: News story: first, The Record, Ottawa; second AHS Booster, Abilene; third, Cheyenne Indian News, St. Francis. Editorial: first. The Buzz, Hutchinson; second. The Budget, Lawrence; third. The Pantograph, Wyandotte high. Kansas City. Feature story: first, the Echo, Emporia; second (tie), The Newtonian, Newton, and The Budget, Lawrence; third, The Messenger, Wichita East high school. Human interest story: first, The Mentor, Manhattan, second, The Trojan, Stafford; third, KHS Breezes, Kinsley. Interview: first, Salina High News; Salina; second, The Record, Ottawa; third (tie), The Buzz Hutchinson and the North Star, Wichita North high school. Sports story; first, The Budget, Lawrence; second, Salina High News, Salina; third, The High Spot, Irving. News and feature pictures; first, The Record, Ottawa; second, The Messenger, Wichita East high school; third, The Budget, Lawrence. retain advertisements: first, Salina High News, Salina; second, The Cuban, Cuba; third, The AHS Booster, Abilene. Service to school: first, The Messenger, Wichita East high school; second, The Echo, Emporia; third, The Rosedalian, Rosedale high, Kansas City. Business management: first, The Rosedalian, Rodeseal high, Kansas City; second, The Bulldog Blazer, Delia; third, The Times, Garnett. Miscellaneous awards for special merit for features not included in the above classifications: Verse: first, The Mentor, Manhattan; second, The Courier, Summer high, Kansas City; third, The Record, Ottawa. Departments: first, The School Reporter, Parsons; second, The Stampede, Atwood; third, The Buzz Hutchinson. Columns: first. The Outburst, Ward high, Kansas City; second, High School Reporter, Paola; third, The High Life, McPherson. Line drawings, mimeegraphed or ditto: first, Oxford, Oxford; second, The Oriole, Augusta; third, The Bulldog's Growl, Neosho Rural, Erie. Line drawings, letterpress chalk plate or line cut: first, Washingtonian, Washington high, Bethel; second. The Student, Independence; third, The Newtonian, Newton. Linoleum block and wood cuts; first, The School Crier, Madison; second, The Nugget, Norton; third, the Newtonian, Newton. University Daily Kansan News Room K.U.251 Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Adv. Room K.U:376 Member of the Kansas Press Assn. National Press Association. Perf. Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Ad- service; Service420 Madison Ave, New York City. James Morris Doris Greenbank James Shriver Managing Editor Business Mgr Asst. Man. Editors ... Norma Hunsinger Kay O'Connor John Hill Ralph Heinemey Edward Chauk City Editor Edward Chaph Asst. City Editors Nelson Ober Meyer Ad. Mgr... Charles Reiner Civ. Mgr... Yvonne Jossserand Forsyth Mgr... Forrest Jossner Classified Ad. Mgr... Lee Deyer Promotion Mgr... John Wiedeman DRESS MAKING and sewing; all types of formalts and dresses made to order. Also shortened and remodeled—call Mrs. Scales. 3060W. 27 SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a dignified sales activity representative known firm in the educational field. Applicants accepted will work by appointment on leads we furnish. Earnings $7.500 to $12.500 and more per week on an active basis. W.F. Cradock Jr., Jnr. 600 Grand Ave. Kansas City, Mo. Giving qualifications, school and home address. tf JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our one-on-one pet shop cat is available for picking up or renting. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Conn. St. Ph. 418. tf TYPING: Call Hazei Stanley, 286M for prompt experienced service. $200/Mass I WILL DO all kinds of typing in my home. Call 3848W. . . . . TYPING, Theses. Term Papers, Reports. TSU, Theses. Ms. Shee. 1928 Vermont. Pp. 1068R XYPNG. Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rates. Prompt attention. Mrs.Shields, 1209 Ohly, Phone 1601 THEOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadi Bros. Motor Co. Complete overhaul, engine repair, paint, painting, used cars, 317 E. 17th. phone 1825 or 182I '40 CHEVROLET 2 door, heater, radio, exceptionally clean. Good rubber. Even the clock works on this one. One owner. The car has Schneider Motors. 10 Mass. Phone 424. 10 FOR SALE LIKE NEW Zenith Trans Oceanic portable 49 model, 9 tubes. Wave Booster Whipcord antenna. Underwood portable 25RR or see at 1116. Miss, after p. 6. m. BUSINESS SERVICE LIME green, balerina length formal. Half price, 2027 Kentucky. WALNUT full-sized bed with in-ersper- gation of old bed. Excellent con- tractor. Phone 288SW '40 PLYMOUTH, sleek grey, radio, heater. Body in perfect condition. Seat covers. Good transportation. See at Cy Barncard Motors, 19th and Mass. 28 TRUMPET for sale. Conn 22B in excellent condition, complete with large size lifftone case. Call Jim Sellards. 9954 2 VARSITY Phone 132 For Sho Time COMPLETE DARKROOM equipment including federal enlarger Model 312 - Must sell-very reasonable. Call 931W 7 p.m. 25 Today-Thursday Kansan Classified Advertising 47 CHEVROLET. Maroon, radio, heater, gross, matching seat covers. See to appreciate. Cy Barncord, 19th and Mass. lines. 28 BARRED FROM MEN! A SENSATIONAL STORY THESES MATERIALS! All weights of thesis quality typing paper, carbon paper, and typewriter ribbons. Student Union Book Store. M4 "PRISON GIRLS" THE YELLOW CAB MAN with GLORIA DeHAVEN N-O-W SHOWING Feature Times: 1:00 - 3:13 - 5:26 - 7:39 and 9:37 A RIOT ON WHEELS! RED SKELTON "MARKED MEN" -PLUS- MUSICAL ELLIOTT LAWRENCE —AND— SIX FUGITIVES BREAK FOR FREEDOM! 12c - 39c More Laughs Per Mile than you can count on a Laugh-Meter! On The Way—Watch For “EAST SIDE, WEST SIDE” “FRANCIS” — “3 CAME HOME” — “MOTHER DIDN'T TELL ME" Continuous Shows—Open 12:45 Granada PHONE 946 THURS-FRI From the SATURDAY EVENING POST'S Exciting Serial! DICK POWELL JANE GREER in Station West with AGNES MOOREHEAD BURL IVES "Movies Are Better Now Than Ever Before" Also: Donald Duck Cartoon Novelty "Helicopter Magic" HURRY . . Ends Tonite "ISN'T IT ROMANTIC" FINEST TELEVISION-Best in sets and just arrived. $87.50 and up. See the new- west Emerson table model set at $159.50. $85, Vernon, Phone 138. Veronica Lake—Billy DeWolfe Feature at 8:05-10:00 49 CHEVROLET heater, good tires. appreciate at Vern 1010 Mass. Phone 42 Styleline. Green. There's plenty of in this one. See the one. Schneider Motors. Lawrence BOOK-EASE leaves both hands free no writing or typing, marks any reference section such as vocabulary, etc. Get your Upson 86e at your Student Union Book Store. One-half Mile West of Law- rence on Hiway 59 ___ Phone 260 ___ TRANSPORTATION 49 BUICK SUPER Maroon, radio, heater, new white sidewalls. Excellent condition. This one is really a honey. See Cy Cat Baccord Motors, 19th and Mass. 28 DRIVE - IN Theatre RIDERS WANTED: leaving for Wichita day evening. Please call between 7 9 p.m. Harry Shultz. Ph. 3101J. 27 RIDE WANTED. Kansas City, Mo. to Lawrence and return. Preferably daily. phone 817-266-1200 or IKRAN Office Box No. 6. 1 FLY and Take advantage of reduced fares, dovetail connections, good acco- ditions, justisses Gisseman at First National Bank for information and information. Telephone No. 30. 26 MAN'S CROTON watch. Watch on campus or downtown Thursday afternoon If found please call 2418J after 5 p.m. Rew- 27 WANTED RIDERS — Topeka to Haskell: Monday thru Friday; leave Topeka 7 a.m.; Haskell 5 p.m. Call Fitzsimmons—Haskell 938; Topeka 39765 25 SUMMER BARGAINS for boys or couples. Large rooms, twin beds, private bathrooms. Call 800-325-1499 per month. House now under new management. 1213 Ohio. Phone 2917-R.1 FOR RENT WANTED TO RENT—Sleeping rooms or small apartment convenient to campus for couple. Here for summer school. Reply Box 5, Kansan. 26 SLEEPING ROOMS for rent at $25 per month or a large 3 room apartment. Furnished offices paid $50 per month. blocks from campus. 1213 Ohio Phone 2917-R NICE COOL rooms, also sleeps怕疼 in campus on South. Call 2674j after 4 p.m. LARGE EIGHT room house; two blocks from campus. Excellent rooming and boardroom furniture, fully furnished or bible use, fully furnished. Available in mediately. Call 2917 R. 25 Read the Daily Kansan daily. N-O-W Showing O-o-o-h You'll Love That New Mitchum Man! MITCHUM PLAYS SANTA ROBEAT MITCHUM JAMET LEIGH Holiday Affair Added Color cartoon Soon "BICYCLE THIEF" Shows continuous Open 12:45 Patee PHONE 131 HELD OVER! PLEASE NOTE: Due to the tremendous response and requests from hundreds of our patrons who have been unable to obtain seats, we are holding "The Third Man" over for two extra days. We urge, if possible, that you attend the afternoon shows for better seating. "The Third Man" will positively end Friday night. TODAY THRU FRIDAY No Matter Where He Goes or What He Does...He's My Man! Hear the magic fingers of Anton Karas play the gay "3rd Man" theme. He'll have you in a dither with his zither. "THE 3RD MAN" Thru the twisting labyrinth of the shadowy city they hunted him . . . the men who sought his life . . . and the women who sought his love! FEATURES AT 1:00 - 3:00 - 5:05 7:10 - 9:20 by-ITY THE Late Color Cartoon "Quack A Doodle Doo" THE MOST UNUSUAL ENTERTAINMENT OF 1950! Jayhawker MOVIES ARE BETTER THAN EVER PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE KANSAS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28. 1950 127 Students Named To Honorary Societies Chancellor Deane W. Malott read the names of 127 students elected to various honorary fraternities and sororities at the 27th annual Honors convocation today. Initiation ceremonies were held at the convocation for the Sachem circle of Omiron Delta Pi, national honorary scholastic fraternity for men, and for Mortar Board, national honorary society for women. Thirty-three students were named for membership in Phi Beta Kappa. Phi Sigma Award. The Phi Sigma award, given annually by Phi Sigma, national professional society in biology, to the student who has done outstanding work in biological science during the year—this year a double award; Roy Peterson, a graduate student in zoology; Katsuyuki Yokoyama, senior. Elections to Pi Kappa Lambda (national honorary society in music): Billle George, Betty Hayward, Eu- Linda George, Cindy McCoy, Joyce Fohrer, Frank, White. Elections to Delta Phi Delta (national honorary society in art): Jear Alimon, Faye Ellen Bond, Jeanne Schindler, Donald Shurtz, Luanda Sevens, Elizabeth Swigart, Judith Veatch. Elections to Sigma Delta Pi (national honorary society in Spanish); William Belt, Donna Bower, Edna Drury, Shirley Matson, Jeanne Mueller, Herbert Ragsdale, Ora Scholfield, Beatrice Senor, Richard Sas, Rita Swearingen. Elections to Pi Delta Phi (national honorary society in French): Alleen Armstrong, Diane Dewis, Warren Johnson, Jacques Maze, Leonard Pronko, Kenneth Sinclair, Corrine Temple, Margaret Tillotson, Henry Turk. Alpha Kappa Psi Scholarship Medallion (awarded to the ranking senior in the School of Business) James Blocker. Delta Sigma Pi Scholarship Key (awarded to the top-ranking senior in the School of Business who will graduated in June) James Block- The W. A. Tarr Award. The W. A. Tarr Award, presented to the outstanding senior in the earth sciences by Sigma Gamma Epsilon, honorary earth science fraternity: John Arcand Nelson. Sigma Tau Scholarship Award. Given by Sigma Tau, national honorary society in engineering, to the freshman student in engineering with the highest scholastic average: Damon George Simpson. Pi Sigma Alpha (national honorary political science fraternity): Edcrund Ahrens, William Busby, William Cape Mariorie Grunder, Josephine Hahn, Raymond Harbaugh, Blair Helman, Charles Hoffhaus, Dan Hopson, Calvin Lakin, Bromeleigh Lamb, Robert Lovelace, Harrison Madden, James Masters, Roger McKinley, Barbara Nash, Donald Rice, Richard Ryan, Elmer Rusco, Floyd Schrittfield, Charles Staley, Eugene Wells, Amelia Young. Pi Lambda Theta (national honorary society for women in education); Jo Ann Alkire, Donna Brown, Marilyn Brown, June Bukowski, Margaret Donelan, Isabelle Gaddis, Grace Gwinner, Maxine Holsinger, Mary Lou Lane, Mary Ellen Lembo, Shirley Rice, Dana Richmond, Anna Marie Siemers, Caroline Upp, Mary V安 Horten, Evelyn White. Elections to Owl Society (Honorary society for junior men): Warren Andreas, George Betz, Heywood Davis, Donovan Hull, Robert Kenney, Aubrey Linville, James Logan, Clyde Lovellette, Graydon Luthey, Thomas Murphy, H. Thomas Payne, Gerald Petersen, Lee Sheppeard, Orval Svander, Dean Wells Elections to Sachem Circle of Omicron Delta Kappa: (national honorary society for senior men) John Amberg, Glenn Anschutz, Joseph Balloum, Melvin Clingan, Paul Coker, Dwane Crow, Roger Davis, Clinton Foulk, George Gear, Donald Giffin, Robert Allan Hanson, Lane Harold, Jack Howard, Bromleigh Lamb, John McKinley, Steve Mills, Eton Noble, Wilson O'Connell, Charles Oswald, Robert Reiswig, Alan Shearer, Fred Six, Willard Straight. Elections to Torch Chapter of Mortar Board (national honorary society for senior women): Marilyn June Brown, Patsy Cameron, Marjorie Crane, Margaret Dickinson Margaret Granger, Maxine Holsinger, Diane Johnson, Mary Lou Lane, Natalie Logan, Shirley Rice, Lorraine Ross, Carolyn Weigand. Elections to Phi Beta Kappa (national honorary society for students in liberal arts): Richard H. Capps, Edmund G Ahrens, Thedore M. Utschen Arthea Elnora North, Mrs. Lucille Jones, Thomas A. Milne, Jeanne A Carpenter, Vernal H. Scheuerman, Joyce A. Harkleoad, Charles H. Corv, Jr. Festus C. Liverett. Philip L. Stevens, Patricia Ann Rummer, Edward Stollenwerk, Howard W. Hallman, Arthur Gene Petersen, Alice Armstrong, Robert Henry Cheksey, Robert Edwin Heatnaby M. Ward, Ward. True Albert Rice. Harry Everett Wheeler, Richard Allen Traskowsky Diane Danley, Maurice Dean Huling, James Linville Webb, Doranne Snyder, Ralph Brock, Robert Lee Brock, Ruth Belt, William Lawrence Hayes, Elmer Ritter Rusco, Arnold W. Shafer. Ross Explains Rush Counseling The freshman counseling system for next fall was explained to Associated Women students by Lorraine Ross, College junior, Tuesday. There are two divisions of the counseling system, Miss Ross told them. "They are the rush week counseling system and the summer counseling plan for new women students," she said. Under the rush counseling system there will be 13 counselors, one from each sorority, who will be responsible for planning parties and other activities to keep freshman girls busy during rush week next September, she pointed out. Each rush week counselor will live away from her sorority while counseling the new students. Each sorority has sent in three petitions for the counseling jobs. The A.W.S. and Pan-hellenic will choose one of the three girls from each house for a counseling job, she added. The summer counseling group will write letters to women who will go through rush week and who will live in private homes, she told the group. The summer counselors will not write to women who will live in organized houses, as big sisters within the houses will take care of them. There will be 25 summer counselors. They will come to the University after rush week is over to counsel women who didn't pledge and who will live in private homes and to help those who had already planned to live in private homes, she explained. The counselors will give advice to the girls concerning orientation and registration. Petitions were given to house representatives at the meeting. The representatives will distribute them within their houses, and any women who want to counsel may fill out one. Women not living in organized houses may get petitions at the dean of women's office Monday, May 1. The petitions are due in at the dean of women's office Tuesday, May 2. Miss Ross announced that there will be a counselor's training program at 7:15 p.m. in the Pine room on the tentative dates Tuesday, May 9 and Thursday, May 11. Dolph Simons, publisher of the Lawrence Journal-World, was elected first vice-president of the Association by a dayday by the A.P. board of directors. Journal-World Publisher Elected To A. P. Post Mr. Simons of the class of 1925, is attending the 64th annual convention of the American Newspaper Publishers Association in New York: Persons in the School of Business who ordered straw hats may pick them up in the hall in front of the business school office Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday. Business Students May Pick Up Hats The hats may be worn officially, May 1. Seaver To Speak At Conference Dr. James E. Seaver, assistant professor of history, will make two addresses to the forty-third annual meeting of the Classical Association of Kansas and Western Missouri Saturday. Dr. Seaver will talk on the "Technology of the Greek and Romans" as the featured speaker at 9:30 a.m. in 206 Fraser hall. In the afternoon he will give an illustrated lecture on "Classical Sites in the Peloponnesus and Southern Italy" in the auditorium of Liberty Memorial High school. The morning program for the meeting will begin with a review of the Iowa Latin workshop held in the summer of 1949, by Sister Marie Antoinette of Marymount College, Salina. "Calpurnias Silculus, Poet," will be discussed by Dr. Ida H. McCain of Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia. "A word For the Journal" will be the subject of Dr. Maude Beamer of the University High School. At noon, luncheon will be served to the meeting in the Castle Tea room. The meeting will be resumed at 1:30 the next morning of Liberty Memorial, High school. "The Interpretation of the Dative of the Personal Pronoun in Certain Passages of Biblical Greek" will be discussed by Dr. F. M. Derwaer of William Jewell College at Liberty, Mo. Miss Lorina C. Knoll, of Kingman High school, Kingman, Kan., will report on the Junior Classical league. "Satire-Then and Now." will be the subject of Father Marion G. Budzinski of Rockhurst college, Kansas City, Mo. Dr. Seaver's illustrated talk will conclude the program. Three Companies Interview Seniors Three major companies have representatives on the campus this week to interview June graduates from the School of Business for jobs essentials on the campus this week to interview June graduates from the School of Business for jobs. J. R. Kniesly, representative of the Firestone company, interviewed students Tuesday. William Harsh, representative of Hall Brothers makers of Hallmark greeting cards, will give interviews to applicants Thursday. Mr. E. G. Bach and Mr. M. A. Marshall will interview accountants and other applicants for positions with the commerce department of the Southwestern Bell Telephone company Friday. They will be accompanied by Mr. C. H. Weiser, personnel manager for the company. Appointments for interviews may be made at the School of Business office, 214 Strong hall. 800 Boy Scouts Visit University April 22 A record number of scouts were on the University campus for Scout Visitation day, April 22. 800 scouts from surrounding areas in Kansas and Missouri were here, said Dave Reeser, president of Alpha Phi Omega, at a meeting of the service organization last night. Reeser expressed his appreciation for the help of Max Falkenstien, business manager of the Athletic office, and E. A. McFarland. Extension division manager of institutes and conferences, in making the annual Scout Visitation day a success. A cub scout kite flying contest is to be held Sunday. May 7, will be sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega, Reeser announced. He said the next meeting would be Tuesday, May 2. Pupils To Serve In City Offices For One Day Forty-five Liberty Memorial high school students will learn about city government by serving in city offices during the annual City Day activities Thursday. They will learn about city government by being appointed by high school teachers to observe and carry on the work of some city officer or employee for the day. Tom Childers, a senior, has been chosen to be mayor of Lawrence. The rest of the participants are juniors, and from this group will be chosen the delegates to Boys State and Girls State, the schools in county, state, and national government conducted each summer by the American Legion and its auxiliary. KC Engineers To Address AIEE Two Kansas City engineers will be guest speakers at a joint meeting of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers-Institute of Radio Engineers and the Kansas City branch of the A.I.E.E. at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Pine room. The speakers, C. M. Lyle of the Kansas City Power and Light company, Kansas City, Kan., and C. G. Rausch of Westinghouse company, Kansas City, Mo., will speak on the electrical engineering profession. WEATHER KANSAS—Partly cloudy tonight, and Thursday, warmer in east and north tonight, cooler Thursday. Lows tonight 35 degrees northwest to 48 degrees southeast; high Thursday 55 degrees northwest to 65 degrees southeast. Court Convicts Maragon Washington. April -(U.P.)- A federal court today convicted John Maragon on two counts of lying to a senate investigating committee. VACATION TOURS Transportation, hotel accommodations and special sightseeing—all included for one low cost! California Yellowstone Pacific Northwest Colorado Rockies Historic East Pacific Coast Chicago Fair New York City Old Mexico Alaska - Other enjoyable Tours also available. FREE FOLDER! Get your copy of Greyhound's Amazing America Vacation Folder, giving day-by-day descriptions of scores of carefree tours. POLITICS WASHINGTON 2016 PRESIDENT JIM COLEMAN SECOND RULE FOR THE TOWN OF WASHINGTON THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA WASHINGTON, D.C. 2024 When you return home this summer — go Greyhound — frequent schedules, low fares! See your Greyhound Agent about your vacation plans, and full travel information. Miles of Adventure GREYHOUND BUS DEPOT Lawrence, Kansas 638 Mass. We Specialize in Satisfied Customers at Dye's Standard Service 23rd and La. 50 1950 ed- john g to Topeka, Ks. University Daily Kansan 47th Year No. 135 Thursday, April 27, 1950 Lawrence, Kansas STUDENT NEWSPAPER —Photo by Frankie Waitu 15 ON A FIELD TRIP at Baldwin hill these entomology students are looking beneath rotten logs for horned Passalids. The students above, from the entomology class of Miss Kathleen Doering, associate professor of entomology, are on their first of three field trips to be taken during the semester. Left to right: William Gordon, John Twente, Allene Wenke, Raymond Beamer, professor of entomology, and Robert Bottoms. All are College seniors except Gordon who is a College junior. Entomologists Open House Friday To Show Rare Insects P. M. F. D. Field trips train students to observe live things first hand as they live in their native habitats. When the campus casanova kissed a coed, his stomach might flutter instead of his heart if he knew that her rosy lips were colored with crushed bugs. The Cocchineal insect, which lives on the Prickly Pear cactus, is the source of the red color in cosmetics. Originally the insect was used by the Aztec Indians to make red dye. Students will have the opportunity to see this and other interesting insects at the open house exhibit of the department of entomology on the main floor of Snow hall, from 1 to 7 p.m. Friday. This collection is the largest in any university entomological collection in the world. There are between 2 or 3 million specimens in the Francis Huntington Snow entomological collections. A large number of these will be included in the display. Both live and "pin" exhibits from all over the world can be seen. And this is all because a harrassed construction foreman 90 years ago told a nosey sidewalk supervisor to quit bothering him, and go hunting, the University can claim the largest university entomological collection in the world. "So Dr. Snow took the foreman's advice and went hunting, and that was the beginning of Snow entomophagy." The chener declared with a straight face. According to Charles Michener, associate professor of entomology, the bothersome onlooker was Dr Francis Huntington Snow, chancellor of the University from 1890 to 1901, and founder of the museum. Dr. Snow made his "hunting trip" into an annual affair and each summer took a group of students to different states to collect insects. The practice is still carried on each summer. The present expeditions are headed by Dr. R. H. Beamer, professor of entomology, and curator of the museum. Dr. Snow's first expedition went with the purpose of collecting any and all kinds of animal life. Now the field trips are organized and have a specific assignment to study a certain type of insect. Secured under close guard to protect the visitors will be numerous human body lice. These vicious little parasites will be displayed under microscopes so the public can see them. A demonstration will show how they are fed on a rabbit. They will also be placed under light which excites them and causes them to go through various contortions. For the picnicker and woodman will be a close-up view of their most president source of irritation, the chigger. Contrary to common belief however, it is not the adult but the larva which embeds himself so solidly into the skin. Many common fantasies can be disproved by the lectures and explanations that accompany the exhibit. Among these misconceptions are ones such as: the black widow spider will attack you, a tarantula can jump as high as a man's head, and that scorpions are deadly poisonous. All these are strictly "poppy-cock." The most colorful and largest exhibits will be those of the butterflies and beetles. Numerous pinned specimens of butterflies of brilliant hues will be displayed. In addition to the displays short talks will be given and movies will be shown. One of these will be a twenty minute film entitled "Beneath our Feet". It will show the dramatic struggles of the insect world that go on around us every day. A familiar friend of the fisherman will be the black fly which will also be on display. This small inhabitant of the North American woods is known to all would be anglers by his painful and vicious bite. One of the outstanding exhibits of the Medical Entomology dept. will be the one on Tuleramia, or Rabbit Fever. This disease is transferred from one rabbit to another by insects and these have been isolated. Ticks and lice are the most common of these carriers. As many as 100,-000,000 Tuleranima organisms have been found in a single tick. More than 50,000 species are now in the collection. These insects range in size from pin-point creatures to the large rhinoceros beetle, some of which are six inches long. These beetles are the most ferocious looking in the collection. They have long black curved horns two or three inches long, which they use in fighting their enemies. Of the many bugs in the collection about 1,000 have red labels instead of the customary white ones. This signifies that insects in this group are extremely rare. In some instances they are the only known specimens. Clarence E. Ridley, director of the International City Managers association, Chicago, Ill., and Asher K. Christensen, professor of political science at the University of Minnesota, will be honored at a dinner in the Kansas room of the Union at 6 p.m. today. One of the more interesting of these rare creatures is the black scarab beetle which was once worshipped by the Egyptians. Both men are discussion leaders at the third annual City Managers' school being held Wednesday through Friday at the University. They will give brief informal speeches following the dinner. City Managers Will Honor Two Tonight "The ancient Egyptians used to worship the sun and since the scarab beetles produced round balls of Perhaps the most valuable specimens in the collection are the tiger beetles or Amblychila cylindriformis. Records show that Dr. Snow, who had a reputation as a shrew businessman, once received $40 for a single pair of them from a university in Germany. dung, the were worshipped by the Egyptians who associated the roundness of the balls with the sun." Professor Michener commented. Fifty-four persons from nine states have registered for the managers' school. All of the insects are classified and labeled with the name of the collecter, date and place found printed on small cards. The smaller specimens are impaled on special steel pins imported from Czechoslovakia. Another specimen which draws a large number of "ah's" and "ohs" from museum visitors is the gold-bug, which was made famous in the story by Edgar Allen Poe. SAM Visits Glass Factory Museum tours will be conducted each half hour during the open house. The Society for the Advancement of Management is visiting the Fiberglass corporation in Kansas City, Kan., today. The 15 persons making the trip left from the Student Union at 12:30 p.m. The group will see the various products of the factory, and the processes of making and handling glass. Students Will Be Counted Here A student at or above college level will be counted in the census where he resides the greater part of his time. if a student lives "five days a week in Lawrence and week-ends of Lawrence" he will be counted in Lawrence, explained Glenn Kappelman, crew leader for the west half of Douglas county. Those commuting to Lawrence will be counted at those points. It is not likely that a student living in Lawrence will be counted outside the city even if he votes outside. Some students are asked a few questions and others many. Why? Kappelman, a political science graduate student, pointed out that "every fifth person is used as a sample", who must answer not only general but particular questions. In Lawrence the census districts have been unequally divided according to political wards. As a result wards two and three comprise most of the students and are exceedingly heavy. Even with late reports on these two wards, the Lawrence census is expected to be completed the first part of May. Co-working with Kappelman is Malcomb Pfautz, second year law student and crew-chief for the east half of Douglas county. Out of 24 numerators in Douglas county, seven are University students. KU Man Is Nominee For Elks Award Joseph E. Balloun, business junior from Russell, has been selected to represent Kansas men students as a candidate for an Elks National Foundation scholarship, it was announced recently by the selection group headed by Wynne W. Ester of Gorham. Other Kansas students honored were Norma Lou Fallette, high school senior at Arma, to represent Kansas women students; and Miss Beulah M. Fisher, a student at the state school for the blind in Kansas City. 15 Cheerleaders Are Chosen For Next Year Nine cheerleaders and six alternates were chosen at the final tryouts Wednesday to serve for the 1950-51 school year. The 10th cheerleader is yet to be named from the Ku Ku pep organization. The cheerleaders named were Donovan Hull, College sophomore, head cheerleader; H. Thomas Payne, College sophomore, assistant head cheerleader; Patricia Ames, College junior; Patsy Landes and Sydney Ashton, education sophomores; Beverly Jennings and Warren Cook, College sophomores; and Albert Gorsky, College freshman. Judith Buckley, fine arts sophomore, representing the Jay James pp organization completes the group of principals. The six alternates selected are Max Whitson, Shirley Strain, and Nancy Lichty, College freshmen; Grace Endecott, fine arts freshman; and Nancy Anderson, College sophomore. 25 Will Be In 'Our Town' Twenty-five students have been chosen for the cast of Thornton Wilder's "Our Town" to be presented in the Little theater of Green hall Tuesday, May 16, and Wednesday, May 17. More than 50 persons tried out for this first three-act play to be given by the University Players laboratory theater. Scenery and lights will be brought from Fraser theater and will be remodeled to fit the smaller stage. Don Harling, College senior, will direct the production. Those in the cast are: Ernest Coombs, Thomas Welch, Richard Grey, Ronald Sundbye, Betty Sage, Phyllis Clegg, Thomas Payne, Carolyn Oliver, Ray Berry, Ann Nelson, Robert Allen, Harvey Jetmore, Katy Coad, Edward Lynn, Barbara Donovan, Glenn Helgesen, Melba Cantrell, John White, Lee Stone, William House, Louise Hamilton, Nona Prettyman, and Leah Ross. Kay Conrad will handle properties, and Mary Beth Moore will be prompter. Math Club Hears McDuffie Math Club Ree's McDuffie C. C. McDuffie, professor of mathematics at the University of Wisconsin, discussed "Lorenzian Transformations" with members of the mathematics club Tuesday. Annual Music Week Will Present Recitals By Top Artists and KU Festival Chorus Music Week at the University will begin at 11 a.m. Sunday when the Lawrence churches will make a special recognition during the regular church services. The high spot of the week's activities will come at 3 p.m. Sunday when the University Festival chorus, directed by Donald M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, will present Giuseppe Verdi's "Requiem." Dean Swarthout and the Festival chorus have been preparing the mass since the beginning of the spring semester. Rudolph Ganz, for more than 50 years a concert pianist, will present a recital at 3 p.m. Monday in Strong auditorium. There will be no admission charge. At 4:15 p.m. Monday, the annual Fine Arts banquet will be held in the Kansas room of the Union. Mr. Ganz will be the principal speaker. Other speakers on the program will be Dean J. B. Smith of the Kansas City Art institute, Kansas City, Mo. Prof. Alexander Tillotson, chairman of the art department at Washburn university, Topeka; and Dean Swarthout. Guests will be limited to 200 persons. Tickets may be obtained at the fine arts office in Strong hall. The annual young American artists program will present Miss Frances Magnes, violinist, who will play a recital at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Strong auditorium. No admission fee will be charged. Leonard Warren, Metropolitan Opera company baritone will appear in a recital in Hoch auditorium at 8:20 p.m. Wednesday. His recital is included in the University Concert course. Thursday will be devoted to the organists. At 9:30 a.m., the American Guild of Organists, Kansas chapter, will hold a meeting and organ recital in Hoch auditorium. At noon Thursday, the Lawrence Kiwanis club will hear a talk by E. Power Biggs, concert organist from Harvard university. At 2 p.m., the Guild of organists will continue its meetings at the Congregational and Methodist churches. The guild will have a dinner at 6 p.m. Thursday in the English room of the Union. Swartwhout will attend the Charity Carers in Church Music—a Retrospect." Mr. Biggs will give an organ recital at 8:20 p.m. Thursday in Hoch auditorium. Admission is free. Music Week will close with a concert presented at 8 p.m. Friday in Hoch auditorium by the Lawrence Public schools. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, APRIL 27,1950 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES presents the 1950 "COLLEGE DAZE" PRODUCTION "WEST OF ABILENE" A MUSICAL FARCE IN THREE ACTS BOOK AND LYRICS BY CRAIG HAMPTON MUSIC BY GENE HALL, BILL STRAIGHT, BOB COOPER 8:00 P.M. FRASER THEATRE MAY2,3,4,5 8:00 P.M. FRASER THEATRE TICKETS ON SALE AT THE STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES OFFICE, IN UNION ALL SEATS RESERVED SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS 25 BEAUTIFUL COSTUMES 25 19 ORIGINAL SONGS 19 - "WEST OF ABILENE." Sung by Bernie Reed, John Wesley, and chorus. - "THE WOMEN OF BALI," Sung by Jim Hawes. - "SAGE BRUSH ROMEO," Sung by Marilyn Barr, Georgette Spears, and Virginia Walsh. - "THE BALLAD OF BILLIE BLUE," Sung by Roy Hadley, Hugh Eberly, Don Little, John Wesley, and chorus. - "I'M NOT THE MARRYIN' KIND," Sung by Don George. - "TVE GOTTA FANCY," Sung by Bernie Reed. - "MY DREAMS ARE IN YOUR EYES." Sung by Dutch" Gutherie, and Jack Stewart. - "THAT'S THE WAY IT IS," Sung by Erma Lutz. - "IT'S SPRING AND I'M IN LOVE," Sung by "Dutch" Gutherie. - "DRUMS," Sung by Cathy Stewart, and Jim Hawes - "WHEN I WAS IN MY PRIME," Sung by Lui Lambert, Bailey Wagner. - "PEDRO, THE BULL FIGHTER," Sung by Jim Hawes. - "HE LOVES ME, HE LOVES ME NOT," Sung by Dutch" Gutherie, and Jack Stewart. - "IF YOU LOVE 'EM AND LEAVE 'EM," Sung by Bernie Reed. - "BLACK LACE STOCKINGS," Sung by Kitty Walters. - "TVE BEEN IN THE SADDLE TOO LONG," Sung by Woody Davis, and Win Koerper. - "THE RIGHT DAY FOR A WEDDING." Sung by Bernie Reed, Don George, and chorus. - "ROLLIN' PLAINS," Sung by Don George, and men's chorus. - "SNAKE McCOY," Sung by Mike Getto, Norman Wenger, and Snake McCoy THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE 050 Lambda Chi Alpha To Be Host At Great Plains Conclave More than 100 delegates from 14 chapters of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity are expected for the Great Plains Conclave of the fraternity which will be held at the University Friday and Saturday. Three national officers of Lambda Chi Alpha will attend the meeting, Richard Hite, general chairman for the host K.U. chapter, announced. They are Houston Karnes of Baton Rouge, La., vice-president; Tozier Brown of Denver, Colo., chancellor and legal adviser; and Cyril Flad of Indianapolis, Ind., administrative secretary. The program of the conclave includes a smoker Friday and general meetings and classes in fraternity work Saturday. L. C. Woodruff, dean of men, will address a Saturday morning session. The University chapter will entertain the delegates and other guests at a banquet and dance at 6:30 p.m. Saturday in the Union. Sigma Pi fraternity entertained April 21 with its annual spring dance, the "Orchid Formal," in the Community building. Chaperons were Mrs. Fannie DeLozier, Mrs. Thomas A. Clark, Mrs. R. H. Wilson, Mrs. Kenneth M. Whyte, Mrs. Richard Blume, Mrs. E. F. Beth, and Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Strait. Members of the concitative committee are John Fredericks, secretary; Ronald Hill, treasurer; and the following chairmen: Gerald Boyd, publications; Charles Bether, publicity; Robert Howerton, program; George Fraser, housing; Gene Hatfield, social; Joseph Warkeczewski, food; James Owen, hospitality; Darell Kellogg and John Luttrell, entertainment. Sigma Pi Formal Guests Ann Martin, fine arts sophomore, was chosen by the members as the "1950 Orchid Sweetheart of Sigma Pi". During the intermission, Miss Martin was presented a lavender orchid by Burt Robson, president, while members sang the traditional sweetheart song. Guests were: Margaret Love, Bonnie Egansperger, Barbara Findley, Sarah O'Bryon, Dorothy Pearson, Kitty Whitehead, Evelyn Murray, Barbara Mangus, Pat Gay, Ann Shade, Gloria Simpson, Beverly Chaffin, Elizabeth McKie. Chloe Warner, Ann Martin, Mary Flo Spillman, Shirley Rothberger, Betty Cattell, Colleen Gamble, Virginia Johnston, Eloise Dlabal, Yvonne Hammer, Donna Kempster, Donna Schleiffer, Barbara Zimmerman, Zella Nightingale, Alice Ann Sellars. Frieda Sahm. Helen Ulmer, Norma Guthrie, Jean Quisenberry, Kay Peters, Marjorie Crane, Marie Marie Novotny, Jovce Emick, Virginia Holloway. Mr. and Mrs. Guy May, Warren Parkhurst, Balie Waggener, Tista AUTO PARTS and ACCESSORIES New & Used Parts for All Cars ALTERNATOR We Buy Old and Wrecked Cars - Auto Glass • Mirrors • Glass Table Tops AUTO WRECKING AND JUNK CO. Phone 954 712 E. 9th Murilla, Roy Wonder, Marion Roe sler, Gaylord Alexander, Kennet Grubb Carl Sldridge, Kenneth Harris, Paul Enhart, Royce Walz, and Stan Cummings. Out of town guests were: Donis Hanfield and Joyce Heckart, Osawatonie; Virginia Wilhite and Robert Tripplet, Wichita; Wilma Kuhn, Virginia Brain, Mary Elizabeth Zercher, and Gerald McCarthy, Topeka; Naomi Crellin and Donald Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Clardy of Wichita recently announced the engagement of their daughter, Mary Anne, to Mr. Tom Hanna, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Kanna of Newton. Clardy-Hanna Miss Clardy is a College sophomore and a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Mr. Hanna will be graduated from the School of Business in August and is a member of Fhi Delta Theta fraternity. The wedding will be in the early fall. Watson, Paola; Jean Fleck and Helen Miller, Kansas City, Mo.; Marge Patrick, Independence, Mo.; Peggy Jones, Haddam; and Linda Sanborn, Belleville. Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers No Perfect Mate Exists, Says Acting Coach Who Decides It Wouldn't Work Anyhow Washington—(U.P.)—We have the word of a girl who has made a study of the perfect mate situation and has come to the conclusion there is no such thing. She is dark-haired, pretty Betty Cashman, an acting and personality coach on Broadway. As Betty looks at it, its a good thing that no mate is perfect. "It would be awful," she said. "Being married to a person who was perfect would be—well, insufferable. Wed either be bored stuff or find ourselves spending all our time beating off competitors for their affections." Betty is the author of a personality development book called "You In Personality and Acting." Not even celebrities, she said can be rated tops in more than a few attributes. "To approach perfection, the perfect woman would have to wear the figure of Marie McDonald, the intensity of Bette Davis, the piquancy of Mary Martin, the wit of Dorothy Parker, the intellect of Clare Booth Luce, the "projection" of Tallulah Bankhead, the sheer "femaleness" of Hedy La Marr and the lovely mysteriousness of Vivian Leigh, Betty said. "The perfect man ought to hang on his frame the physique of Mr America, the magnetism of Cary Grant, the glib tongue of Groucho Marx, the personal ease of Arthur Godfrey, the he-manness of Clark Gable, the wisdom of Bernard Baruch, the business acumen of Billy Rose, and the sex appeal of Tyrone Power," Betty added. She arrived at something resembling a formula to follow in the search for a mate, however imperfect. "Select one for the basic quality that seems closest to or most lacking in your own personality," Betty said, "and then let said mate relax and be himself or herself. "Actually, every woman has more of the quality of which La Marrs are made than she suspects. Every man has a little more of the Gable in him than he knows. Everybody has personality." University Daily Kansan Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Unposted by students. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. for Mother on May 14 80th Year, Modern-to-the-minute. needs Secretarial Training Civil Service, Higher Accounting and Au- dministration Box 424, Lawrence Business College. Quilted Sewing Baskets in her Favorite Color, or covered with Flowered Chintz. Handy Compartments hold Thread and Scissors neatly in place. $2.25 to $4.95 Personal, Feminine, Satin Quilted Hosiery Bags $1.00 W Something to cut her Sewing Time in Half: PINKING SHEARS SCISSOR SETS BLIND STITCHERS BUTTONHOLE ATTACHMENTS SINGER SEWING CENTER Phone 247 927 Mass. Jay Janes Install Crane, Eight Other Officers Marjorie Crane, College junior, was installed as president of Jay Janes recently. Other women who took office were Mary Swanson, fine arts sophomore, vice-president; Arlene Hill. College junior, secretary; Virginia Coppedge, journalism junior, treasurer; Georgia Ginther and Peggy Circle, education juniors, notifications committee chairmen; Ruth B. Hurwitz, College junior, social chairman; Diana Sherwood, College junior, publicity chairman; and Joan Holazpfel, education junior, historian. Miss Crane will be a delegate from the Jay Janes to the national convention of Phi Sigma Chi society, pep organization, which will be held at Ames, Iowa, Saturday. LINDLEY'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 at the CHATEAU DRIVE-IN MAY 19TH CHATEAU DRIVE-IN MAIL AT 1871 For that afternoon snack or Coke date. Curb Service after 4 p.m. Open daily 11 a.m. Open Season California COBBLERS OPEN SEASON, Style No.110 . . . You'll bag your limit of compliments and comfort in this fashion-hued sandal of Cobblers-quality custom-tanned leather with its featherweight, cushion-y platform. The toe strap adjusts to your own special width! And only . . . Red, Straw Blonde, White, Blue $5^95 Royal College Shop 837-39 Massachusetts PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1950 Official Bulletin Thursday, April 27 Kappa Beta tests for National, 5 p.m. today, Student room, Myers hall. Contact Mabel Anne to get tests. Gamma Alpha Chi, 5 p.m. today. 102 Journalism building. Attendance required. Mathematics club. 4 p.m. today. 203 Strong hall. A.Kruse, "Reflected Triangles." Refreshments. Sociology club, 4 p.m. today, East room, Union. Virginie Baroudjian, "Life in Egypt, Syria and U.S." All invited. Inter-varsity Christian fellowship, 7:30 to 8:30 tonight, 131 Strong hall. Gene Thomas, speaker. All invited A. S.C.E., 7:30 tonight, 101 Snow hall. Nomination of officers; talk on "Employment Outlook for Civil Engineers." Refreshments. L. I.V.C.F. missionary meeting, 12 noon Friday, Danforth chapel. Mr Arthur Emmaus Bible school, speaker. The following are notified to appear before Student court, 7:30 tonight, Green hall: Lewis L. Sandidge, William H. Petrich, Balder Dalba. Ku Ku's important pre-initiation meeting, actives 7:30, pledges 8:00 tonight, 105 Green hall. Water Supply Is Adequate Washington — (U.P.)— Secretary of Interior Oscar L. Chapman reports that there will be "an adequate" water supply for crops on federally irrigated lands of the West despite spring droughts in some areas. He said April 1 forecasts by the bureau of reclamation showed that in most areas there would be enough water for all crops even if there is no precipitation during the coming months. "While there is still no positive indication that we may be entering another major dry cycle," Chapman said, "it is reassuring to know that the April 1 forecast of the bureau of reclamation indicates that there will be ample water for irrigated lands on federal projects regardless of the weather during the coming crop season." Chapman said "it is also reassuring to know that if a drought does hit, we will be much better off than during the 1930's by reason of new acreage brought under irrigation and supplemental water developed ofr use onlands which previously lacked a sufficient supply in an ordinary year." Reclamation Commissioner Michael W. Straus said only three western areas may feel a water shortage He listed these as the Salt river project in Arizona, the Tucumcain project in New Mexico and the Belle Fourche propect in South Dakota. Reclamation reservoirs held 44,651,500 acre-feet of water as of April 1. this year, compared with 43,871,000 acre-feet on the same date a year ago, the bureau said. Spring and summer snow melt, which has not yet begun in the highlands, is expected to raise storage levels considerably before the heavy midsummer drain begins. Physicists To Give Papers At Meeting A physics professor and two graduate students in physics will attend the annual meeting of the American Physical society in Washington, D.C., today through Saturday. Dr. Max Dresden, associate professor of physics, Ronald Reed, and Jean Delord, graduate students, will present two research papers. Dr. Dresden and Reed collaborated on the paper entitled "Bloch's Theorem and Superconductivity"; Delord and Dr. Dresden collaborated on "The Uncertainty Principle for an Arbitrary Number of Variables." The world's oldest town, Cadiz, Spain, has maintained its identity and name for about 3,000 years. K. U.T.T.A., 7:15 tonight, Recreation room, Union. Beginner's clinic at 6:30 p.m. Snow Zoology club, 7:30 tonight. 201 Snow hall. Election of officers; picnic plans. Mortar Board, 9 tonight, Dean of Women's office. Senior chapter only. Christian Science Organization regular meeting, 7:30 tonight, Danforth chapel. N. A.S. meeting, 7:30 tonight, 9 Strong hall. Election of 1950-51 officers. International club dance for Allied officers from Ft. Leavenworth 9 p.m. Friday, Palm room, Union. Everyone invited. All Engineering students: class meetings for nomination of 1950-51 Engineering Council representatives, 12:30 p.m. Friday. Hoch auditorium. Der deutsche verein versammelt sich Heute um 5:00, 402 Fraser hall. Lieder und Tanzan. Mathematical colloquium special meeting, 5 p.m. Monday and Tuesday, 203 Strong hall. Prof W. W. Rogosinski, Oklahoma A. and M., "The Principle of Subordination." Ward T regular meeting, 6:30 p.m. Monday, training school at 7 p.m. Pine room, Union. Miss Martha Peterson, speaker. All members attend. Engineering Exposition bills must be turned in to Dean's office, 111 Marvin hall, or to Dwane Crowl, 1602 Louisiana before Mav 1. Summer Courses University of Madrid Study and Travel A RARE opportunity to enjoy memorable experiences in learning and living! For students, teachers, others yet to discover fascinating, historical SPAIN l language Courses include Spanish language, art and culture. Interesting recreational program included. For details, write now to SPANISH STUDENT TOURS 500 Fifth Ave., New York 18, N.Y. KuKu Initiation Changed To May 4 The Ku Ku club has re-scheduled initiation services for Thursday, May 4, it was announced at a meeting April 20. A cheerleader from the club will also be selected at this time. A meeting Thursday will be held to make further plans for the initiation. A $200 appropriation granted to the organization by the All Student Council was itemized. The appropriation is a $20 increase over that given the past year. A portion of the fund will be used for a card section to be used at football games, Ku Ku jackets similar to those worn by the Froshhawks may be purchased by members at their option. Harvard Appoints KU Man Professor of Economics Edward S. Mason, '19, has been appointed George F. Baker professor of economics at Harvard university. He will continue as dean of the Graduate school of public administration. What are you planning? this weekend? ..a picnic? ..a weiner roast? ...a bicycle ride in the country? Outdoor get-togethers mean you'll want to get your portable radio fixed up for perfect operation. Bring your portable down today for expert repair service. University Radio at Bell Music Co. Is Your Car Ready For A New Set of TIRES? Give you all These- - 18 month guarantee - Cold rubber for longer wear O - Deep cut sturdy treads Just one of the superior quality goods at your Chrysler-Plymouth Dealer 827 Vermont MOTOR IN Call 607 FOR AUTOMOBILE REPAIR Trust your car to men with "KNOW HOW" "DEPENDABLE SERVICE IN LAWRENCE FOR OVER 20 YEARS" at HUNSINGER MOTORS Ph.12 No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classified Save You Money. Varsity Town Clothes PACEMAKERS FOR SMART AMERICA SPORT ATTIRE SUPERIOR FASHION FROM $30 This spring put your "look" on the brighter side of life with smart wardrobe planning. Select Varsity-Town Sport Jackets that give zest and variety to your business appearance and put a lift into your leisure life! FEATURING VARSITY-TOWN CLOTHES 905 Mass. St. CAPL'S GOOD CLOTHES Phone 905 --- THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Graduates Use Gimmicks In Pressure For Jobs 0 Chicago—(U.P.) — College students are using elaborate advertising and fancy gimmicks in their search for jobs. They are invading the tightening labor market with everything from billboard advertisements to personalized match covers designed to attract the attention of employers. At East Lansing, Mich., Michigan State college senior Art Miller set up a 14-by-7-foot sign informing employers that he was a mechanical engineer "trained in better methods." Dwayne Brown, who was graduated from Creighton university in Omaha in January with a major in journalism, was plying editors with match covers containing his picture, name, address and catch phrases. At last report he was still looking for a job. Standard Oil of California received a brochure with a mirror attached in one corner. A big arrow pointed to the mirror with the inscription "are you looking for this man?" Another arrow pointed to a picture of the applicant with the question, "or are you looking for this man?" A University of Missouri student sent out a brochure with a headline reading, "Ed English hits labor market." English included five cartoons, one showing him being kicked out of school with diploma in hand. The personnel director of Kaiser corporation at Oakland, Calif., received a brochure with a dollar bill Air Engineers Build'Saucers' Flying saucers were reported seen on the campus recently by several persons that visited the 1950 Engineering Exposition. The "saucers" were part of the aeronautical engineers' exhibit in the aeronautical laboratory behind Marvin hall. The "saucers" are disc-like and painted red and blue. Each is complete with cockpit and the lower part is ribbed to give circular motion as it "flys" above the vertical wind tunnel built by the students. Also in the same laboratory are the original wings of the "mystery S" a small plane flown by Capt. Frank Hawks, speed pilot. Captain Hawks made several cross-country records in this plane. The aeronautical engineers have several cut-away models of aircraft engines and photos of some of the latest aircraft being put into production. 50-60 Geographers To Visit University From 50 to 60 members of the American Society of Professional Geographers stationed in the northern great plains area will be guests of the department of geography Friday and Saturday. The geographers will come from an area east of Salt Lake City between the Canadian and Oklahoma borders. During their two-day stay in Lawrence the main part of their program will be a field trip to northeastern Kansas. The geographers will study particularly the transitional nature of the agriculture from the humid eastern part to the less humid middle section of the state. Dr. Walter Kollmorgen, head of the geography department, is in charge of arrangements. Research Unit To Be Organized Students interested in joining the navy research unit to be established here are advised to turn in their applications to the navy offices in the Military Science building or to any member of the organizing committee. Applications and further information can be obtained from any of the above. Officers and enlisted men of the navy reserve of any classification who are, or plan to be, engaged in research are invited to join the organization. attached. The brochure informed him that the applicant would bring dollars to the company. Bill Gorski of the University of Washington said he approaches all personnel managers with the blunt statement, "I want your job." "It itches them for a loss for a minute and I can start my pitch," he said. But so far his pitches haven't landed him a job. Howard Baumgartel, instructor of economics and a member of the Y.M.C.A. advisory board, will speak Friday at noon before the faculty forum in the East room of the Union building. Baumgartel Will Speak To Forum Mr. Baumgartel's talk will deal with a particular method of investigating problems in human relations. Coal sometimes ignites spontaneously in a shaft, the phenomenon being called a "gbb fire." MEALS AT THEIR BEST! Cube Steaks 70c Pork Chops 75c CLOSED On Victor Long Playing Records CLOSED Pork Tenderloin ___75c Hamburger Steak ___65c FRIDAY SHAVER'S and 2----4:30 Sunday Call 785-K-2 RAVEL'S BOLERO 1 $ \frac{1}{2} $ miles south U.S.59 BEETHOVEN'S FIFTH SYMPHONY ROSSINI OVERTURES BACH-WELL-TEMPERED CLAVIER, BOOK I BELL'S Phone 375 925 Mass. Put Pep In The Pocket Book—Put KANSAN Classifieds On The Job. Weavers Millinery - Every hat in store — Milans, panamas, sisals— all colors. By Dobbs, Christine originals, Jay-nith, Ray, Young-towners. April Shower of Values 1. 00 off Reduced Prices Friday and Saturday ONLY It's real values at real savings during the good old fashioned Dollar Day at Weaver's. Hurry down Friday and Saturday . . . regular prices again effective Monday. Gloves - String and fabric—odds and ends with values to 2.98. While 600 pair last! All perfect full fashioned 15 denier 51-54 or 60 gauge. Extra special— 1. 00 pair Main floor Hosiery - 1. 00 Main floor BLOUSES 1. 00 main floor Midriffs . . eyelet embroidered piques and prints, white and pastels Batiste blouses . . . white and pastels 1. 00 main floor Handkerchiefs - Scarfs Imported handkerchiefs, pure linen, hand rolled hems in prints. 2 for 1.00 main floor. Printed, pure silk, hand rolled oblong scarfs. 3 for 1.00 main floor. Stationery One group including children's. 2 and 3 boxes 1.00 Main floor Jewelry Pearl Necklaces one group with 3, 4, or 5 strands. 1. 00 Main floor COSMETICS Main floor Seaforth Shaving Lotion and Cream. Both for price of lotion alone. 1.00. To the first 300 customers purchasing above, a sample bottle of shaving lotion and one blade FREE. PANTIES Main floor Rayon pantie brief. 2 for 1.00 LINENS Main floo Turkish towels in plaids reg. 99c, 3 for 1.00 Wash cloths to match towels 12 for 1.00 Wash cloths, odd lots 3 for 1.00 Dish cloths with colored stripes 4 for 1.00 Month-End Clearance 153 dresses Values to 10.95 - - - - Now 3.00 Values to 15.00 - - - - Now 5.00 Values to 17.95 - - - - Now 7.00 Values to 25.00 - - - - Now 10.00 Values to 35.00 - - - - Now 15.00 Values to 35.00 - - - - Now 15.00 WeaverS BLOUSES Odd lots at 1/2 prices MONTH-END SHOE CLEARANCE Dress and Casual Wedges, all makes. Formerly priced to 9.95 Now 3.90 Paramount, Rhythm Step, Air Step. High and medium heels. One group to 10.95-NOW 6.90. Second group were 12.95-NOW 9.90. All Sales Final PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1950 Fiji Swimmers Grab Third Straight Title Winning both relays and three individual events, Phi Gamma Delta swept easily to the intramural swimming championship Wednesday. It's Phi Gam's third straight championship and ninth in the past 18 meets. The Phi Gams placed in every event except diving in piling up 55 points. Phi Kappa Psi finished a distant second with 29 points. The Phi Psi's didn't win a single event, but placed second in five of the eight events on the program. Sigma Chi's 15 1-2 points placed them third, followed by Beta Theta Pi 12, Delta Upsilon 9, Oread hall 7, Phi Delta Theta 4 1-2, Delta Chi 4, and Sigma Alpha Epsilon 3. Individual honors in the meet were divided as only three swimmers placed in two events. Jim Olander of Phi Gam was the leading scorer with 11 and two-thirds points. He won the 50-yard breast stroke and placed second in the 50-yard medley. He also swam a leg on Phi Gam's winning 150-yard medley relay team and picked up two points for qualifying. The other men who placed in two events were Hall Smith, Sigma Chi, and Gordon Stucker, Phi Gam. Times were a good deal slower than the two previous nights when four records were broken—one of them twice. The Phi Ghi free style relay team upped the record of 1:05.2 it set in the semi-finals to 1:04.5 in the only record-breaking performance Wednesday. This year's meet was one of the best in the history of the intramural swimming program. Competition in all events was keener than at any time since the war. Intramural swimming records from 1928 through 1950 are as follows: 50-yard free style - Stucker, Phi Gamma Delta, 1950, :25.0. 50-yard breast stroke — Jervis. Beta. Theta Pi, 1946, :29.6. 50-yard medley—Stratton, Sigma Chi, 1950; 28.6. 100-yard free style - Sherman. Delta Chi, 1941, 578. 100-yard back stroke—McKay, Phi Delta Theta, 1947, 1:05.2. 150-yard medley relay—Phi Kappa Psi (Faerber, Roy, McGeorge) 1950.1:24.7. Free style relay-Phi Gamma Delta (Amberg, Ashley, Ransona, Stucker), 1950, 1:04.5. The results of the various events are: Free style relay: 1. Phi Gam, 2. Phi Psi, 3. Beta, 4. Sigma Chi, Time 1:04.5. 50-yard breast stroke: 1. Olander Phi Gam; 2. McGeorge, Phi Psi; 3. Orthwein, Phi Psi; 4. Smith, Sigma Chi. Time: 311. 100-yard free style: 1. Rankin Oread; 2. Faerbe, Phi Fsi; 3. Walls, Phi Psi; 4. Hughes, Phi Gam. Time 1:03.1. 100-yard back stroke: 1. Carey, Phi Gam; 2. Ranson, Phi Gam; 3. Sessions, Delta Chi; 4. Halverhout, Beta, Time 1:16.0. Intramural Softball Today's Schedule Independent "A" Field Air Screws v. Wesley Battenfeld v. Laissez Faires Navy v. Sterling-Oliver Jim Beam v. A.S.C.E. A.R.O.T.C. v. Y.M.C.A. Spooner-Thayer v. A.I.E.E. Independent "B" 3 Jay Crows v. S.A.M. Wednesday's Results A.T.O. 26, Kappa Alpha PSi 11 S.A.E. 21, Kappa Sigma 18. Phi Delta Theta 18, D.U. 14. Dix 16, Squirrels 4. Phi Gam 14, Acacia 0. Phi Tau 7, Alpha Kappa Psi 5. Phi Kappa 30, Phi Kappa Sigma 18 Jayhawkers Leave On Four-Game Trip A 16-man traveling squad ac-companied by Coach Bill Hogan will leave at 5 p.m. today by chartered bus for Ames, Iowa, where Kansas will play Iowa State in Big Seven baseball games Friday and Saturday. The team will stay at the Sheldon-Munn hotel in Ames, Friday and Saturday, before moving on to Columbia. Mo., Sunday where the Jayhawkers play the Missouri Tigers Monday and Tuesday, May 1 and 2. They return to Lawrence late Tuesday night following the second Missouri game. The following players are making the trip: Pitchers—Carl Sandefur, Herman Philipp, Guy Mabry, Loren Hepler, and Curtis Harris. Infielders—George Voss, Jim Cavonaugh, Lou Deluna, Frank Koenig, Floyd Temple, and John McConnell. Outfielders—Carl Ellis, Herb Weidensaul, and Walter Hicks. Catchers—Bill Mace and Ken Morrow. 50-yard free style; 1. Amberg, Phi Gam; 2. Stucker, Phi Gam; 3. Floyd, Beta; 4. Cross, S.A.E. Time :25.8. 50-yard medley; 1. Smith, Sigma Chi; 2. Olander, Phi Gam; 3. Stratton, Sigma Chi; 4. Stucker, Phi Gam. Time: 30.0. 150-yard medley relay: 1. Phi Gam, 2. Phi Psi, 3. Delta Upsilon, 4. Delta Chi, Time 1:31.3. Diving: 1. Christopher, Delta Upsilon, 2. Schumacher, Phi Psi; 3. Irwin, Phi Delt; 4. tie between Howell, Sigma Chi, and Mehl, Phi Delt. Don't Forget! EGG SANDWICH FOR 10c at ZIM'S SNACK SHOPE East of Postoffice Open 7:00 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. 811 MASS. STREET Smart Comfortable Sport Shirts and Slacks Gibbs CLOTHING CO. H THRIFTY BEAUTIES ARE SHOPPING NOW, FROM OUR FINE SELECTION OF SPORT SHIRTS . . . AND SLACKS THAT ARE STYLED RIGHT FOR COMFORTABLE SPRING AND SUMMER . . . BUY YOURS NOW. Sport Shirts by Van Heusen---Mark Twain VAN HEUSEN SHIRTS ... $ 3^{9 5}_{\mathrm {t o}} 5^{9 5} $ Tans, blues, greys and greens in washable gabardine . . . or pastel shades in comfortable rayons. A complete size range for men. MARK TWAIN SHIRTS... $ 2^{9 5} \, \infty\, 4^{9 5} $ Slacks 4aggar----Mayfair Your spring wardrobe won't be complete without gabardine slacks. Select the shade you want from our complete stock. HAGGAR SLACKS ... $ 5^{9 5}_{\text{to}} 12^{9 5} $ ... MAYFAIR SLACKS... $ 8^{9 5} . 1 4^{9 5} $ HOSSE TOTOHTUH. 1950 THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN KU Wants No Wind At Drake Coach Bill Easton's Kansas track squad travels to Des Moines today for the Drake Relays, and the Jayhawkers are hoping they won't find the brisk wind which bothered them at their own Kansas Relays the past week end. That wind demolished all hopes Easton's four-mile relay squad of Cliff Abel, All-American Pat Bowers, Captain Bob Karnes, and Herb Semper had of setting an American intercollegiate record for the event. They had come within 4.8 seconds of the mark earlier this month at the Texas Relays. At their own carnival, they were a disappointing 18.2 seconds from the mark although they did nail down the Re-lays record. The intercollegiate mark is 17:16.1. At Texas they ran 17:20.9. Their mark Saturday was 17:34.3. They also will be after the Drake record of 17:29.6. Easton will send three relay teams and six, individuals into competition. The list of K. U.'s individual entries is headed by revenge-bent Jack Greenwood. The Jayhawk hurdler was defending champion in the 120-yard highs at the Kansas Relays and he didn't so much as make his way into the finals Saturday. Now he's dead set on proving it was just a bad day. However, he'll be bothered by a knee injury received during practice Tuesday. Friday the four-mile relay team makes its bid. Saturday the Jayhawkers will enter the two-mile and distance medley relays. That means they'll be after a triple crown similar to the one they got at Texas. At the Mt. Oread Olympics they entered only the four-mile. Abel, Bowers, Karnes, and Semper make up the two-mile squad as well as the four-mile. Then Semper drops out for the distance medley and Emil Schutzel or Bob Devinney steps in to run the quarter mile leg. Other Javhawker individuals entered are Bob Broady, discus; Bol Drumm, javelin; Del Norris and Bil Richardson, high jump; and Devinney, hurdles. The contingent leaves Lawrence by train Thursday night, excepting the four-mile team which goes by plane Thursday afternoon because it will compete Friday. Jayhawkers Split With Washburn The Jayhawkers split with the Washburn Ichabods—winning in golf and losing in tennis—in matches played Wednesday at Topeka. Coach Bill Winey's golfers swamped the Ichabods, $13\frac{1}{2}$ to $4\frac{1}{2}$, while Dick Richards' tennis team was nipped, 4 to 3. It was the second win in as many starts for the golf team. The tennis team has dropped two of three matches. Both will see action again Saturday against Missouri here. The meets will start at about 1:30 p.m. Dick Ashley, Big Seven conference golf champion in 1949, and Clayton Kline, three-time champ of the Central Intercollegiate conference, hooked up in the top match of the day. Ashley stroked a 73 for KU to win medalist honors and gain a 2 to 1 point edge over Kline. The Washburn ace carded a 77. Jayhawkers Dave Dennis and Howard Logan also out-pointed their opponents—Dennis, 3 to 0, and Logan, 2 to 1. Bob Dare, Kansas' fourth man, was out-scored by his opponent, 1 to 2. The tennis match was close all the way with each point hard fought. Kansas lost the number one singles, but took a 3 to 1 lead by sweeping the No. 2, 3, and 4 singles. Washburn then rallied to take the other singles and both doubles for the victory. Bob Swartzell, Charles Crawford, and John Freiburger, who replaced letterman Jack Ranson on this trip, won their singles matches. The remaining schedule for the golf and tennis team is as follows: April 29, Missouri, here. May 1, Washburn, here. May 3 Missouri, Columbia May 9 Nahweka, Lincoln May 9 Nebraska, Lincoln. May 12 Kansas State, here May 16 K. State, Manhattan. May 19-20 Big 7 meet. May 19-20 Big 7 meet Results of the Washburn golf match are as follows: Ashley (K) out-pointed Kline (W), 2 to 1. Dennis (K) out-pointed Jim Sallee (W) *3* to 0. Ashley-Dennis (K) out-pointed Kline-Sallée, $ 2 \frac{1}{2} $ to $ \frac{1}{2} $ Bill Barter (W) out-pointed Dare (K). 2 to 1. Logan (K) out-pointed Bill Maloney (W), 2 to 1. Dare-Logan (K) out-pointed Barter- Maloney, 3 to 0. Pancake Flats IN SOFT WHITE SMOOTH LEATHER Connie lo-heelers 5'85 AA to C, 4 to 10 Keep cool! Keep comfort!...in fashion's newest barefoot striplings! Smart wherever you're bound. So long-wearing in all-leather easy to clean. As seen in SEVENTEEN. BEST BUYING GARAGE OF THE MARKET Guaranteed by Good Housekeeping and as advertised herein. HAYNES and KEENE Ph. 529 Results of the tennis match are as follows; Dick Mechem (W) defended Herv Macferran (K), 6-0, 3-6, 6-3. Singles 819 Mass. Swartzell (K) defeated Gene Echols (W). 6-1, 7-5. Crawford (K) defeated Gene Powell (W). 6-1, 6-2. Freiburger (K) defeated Clement Shakle, 6-2, 6-4. Phil Blackburn (W) defeated Bill Thompson, 6-1, 6-3. Doubles Mechem-Powell (W)> defeated Macferrain-Swartzell, 6-1, 10-8. Echols-Shakle (W) defeated Crawford-Freiburger, 6-1, 6-1. Read the Want Ads Daily. LE Genuine Leather BRIEF CASES British Tan LAUNDRY MAILING CASES Zipper Closure $5.98 With Lock $7.49 Hard Fibre • Double Strap Special -----$1.69 LUGGAGE All Types FOOT. LOCKERS 2. SUITERS O'NITE BAGS CANVAS BAGS 92 First Door South of Patee Theatre Brown's TOGGERY 830 Mass. St. Women Show They Can Hit Two Teams Get 60 Runs Slowly catching up on their rain-delayed schedule, women's intramural softball teams cleared another three games off the boards Wednesday, engaging in a slug-fest for two of them. Chi Omega edged Alpha Fni 3 in an evenly-matched contest that turned into a pitcher's duel after the first inning when the winners rolled in four of their runs. Corbin smashed out a 20 to 2 victory over Alpha Chi Omega with their usual championship style. A homer by Mary Lou Conrod with bases loaded helped set them up. Sigma Kappa snowed Gamma Phi Beta under with a 40 to 9 total in a merry-go-round hatting spree. Hardly gaining even a good practice from the game. Sigma Kappa rolled in many of the runs in the last inning. Expert Watch REPAIR Electronically Timed Guaranteed Satisfaction 1 week or less service. WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. Why Be 'Cash Out' When You Can 'Cash In' With KANSAN Classifiers? FOR ARROW SHORTS AND SHIRTS Glad to show you. CARLS GOOD CLOTHES ARROW is your ticket to the Best Seat In The House! shorts $1.25 up t-shirts $1.00 up One way to be sure of complete comfort below decks is to buy ARROW shorts! Made without creeping center seam, they're full cut—plenty roomy! Ideal teamed with Arrow T-shirts! ARROW SHIRTS & TIES UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS "A Complete Line of Arrow Products" at the Palace Clothing Company PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1950 Watkins Hospital May Get Addition Approval of a $250,000 Watkins Memorial hospital addition is now being considered by the State Board of Health in Topeka. The first part of a four part application has already been approved. The funds, if appropriated, would be part of a federal assistance to hospitals program throughout the country through the Hills-Burton act. The University would be responsible for 60 per cent and the United States Public Health service for 40 per cent of the cost. The state board is working in conjunction with the federal board. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the University Health service, pointed out that "the main objective of the addition is not to increase the number of services, but to improve services we now have, and to treat patients with less delay." One new clinical psychologist and two psychiatrists will be added to the staff of the hospital in September. If the addition is completed, more space will be allowed for this service. A special diet dining room will be included in the addition. Dr. Canutelson said 18 to 20 students on special diet eat at the hospital all the time. At present, they must eat in a small diet kitchen on the third floor. The physical therapy department would be given more space in the addition. Classroom space would be increased, and this space could be used for emergency bed rooms, Dr. Canuteson said. Eleven additional patient bed rooms are included in the tentative plans. These rooms would have a normal capacity of 19 beds, with room for extra beds in case of emergency. Office space would be more than doubled by the new addition. Dr. Cauteson said the present files on students must be kept in the basement. By use of additional space provided by the addition, the entire present office space could be devoted to files. Another window for admittance of students is included in the plans, and additional seating space plus a reading table, would be provided for waiting patients. An eye specialist will be added in the program is authorized. A special dark room will be built, for use in depth perception tests and distance tests. At present, Dr. Canuteson pointed out, Watkins Memorial hospital has no extensive eye service. A dental room will be used basically for preventive dentistry. Both the eye service and the dental service will probably be run one-half day daily, Dr. Canuteson said. A sound proof room for hearing tests will be added. At present, hearing tests are given in a clinic room which is needed for examinations. Additional clinic space is the immediate need in the hospital. Dr. Canuteson said that in the past year the average daily clinic census was 203 patients in a space intended to accommodate half that number. The new addition, if present plans are adopted, will extend 57 feet to the rear of the present building. The addition, which will be six floors will contain 173.00 cubic feet. Dr. Canuteson pointed out that "we are dealing with an impressionable student group, many will be teachers and all will be active in their communities. The standards of medicine we demonstrate here will in many cases be the standard of medical care they will expect in their community." Heine's Blend at The PIPE SHOP 727 Mass. Hastings, Neb.—(U.P.) Robert Gray, professor of business administration at Hastings college, believes there are more important things than just text books and classroom work in preparation for a career. Gray insists that his students wear suits and ties for all Friday classes so they will know how to act like executives when they get out of school. Fifty students in a historical geology class under the supervision of Dr. Cecil G. Lalicker professor of geology will leave Friday, May 5, on a three day field trip to the St. Francis mountains in southeastern Missouri. Both groups of students will travel by chartered bus. He Makes Them Dress Like Executives Of Distinction Lecture Series To End Tonight H. T. U. Smith, associate professor of geology, and 40 students enrolled in structural geology will leave today on a four day field trip to the Arbuckle mountains in southern Oklahoma. HEINE'S BOOK THE BOOK SHOWING MOTION 90 Students Take Geological Trips The convention date has not been set definitely, but it will probably be held during spring vacation to facilitate housing, Krimminger said. Everyone cheers When this package The picture drawn on the wall of world cultures by the advent of atomic energy will be the subject of the tenth and concluding lecture tonight of the Sigma Xi "Atomic Energy and Man" series. Dr. Carlyle S. Smith, assistant professor of sociology and anthropology will be the speaker. The lecture, open to the public without charge, will start at 7:30 p.m. in Strong auditorium. He will explain how developments in atomic energy promise changes for our civilization as great as those brought about in previous epochs by the introduction of fire and the industrial revolution. Extending the invitation of the University for the 1950 meeting were eight representatives of the local group who attended the National Independent Student association convention in Bloomington, Ind., recently. The University was the unanimous choice of the 410 delegates from more than 50 schools. The University will be host for the 1951 National Independent Student association convention, Dick Krimminger, president of I.S.A. announced. ISA Convention At KU In 1951 appears ... HEINE'S BLEND Fragrant PIPE TOBACCO SUTHERT TOBACCO CO. SUTLIFF TOBACCO CO., 45 Fremont, S.F. Calif. Presto! Smoother Driving! Quality Lubrication - We have what it takes. Trojan Lubricants --- the correct types for each requirement. It's as simple as that! Trained men with the "Know-How" to do the job. FIRST— SECOND—— Men's Medium and Small HOT SPECIAL - PLASTIC RAINCOATS A $3.95 VALUE—while they last Men's-Medium and Small Ladies-Medium and Large A $3.95 VALUE-while they last CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. PHONE 4 8th and New Hampshire CITIES SERVICE 30 Students To Visit Hospital Thirty students of the Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy departments will visit Station hospital in Fort Leavenworth and Wadsworth hospital in Wadsworth Saturday. The purpose of the trip is to see the entire hospital in action. Spee- cial attention will be paid to the Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy departments in the hospitals. The field trip is sponsored by the Physical Therapy club. Miss Lilyan Warner, instructor in physical medicine, will accompany the group. UNIVERSITY SHOP MEXICO Photographed in Bermuda with the cooperation of Colonial Airlines THE ACAPOLO Summer comfort with a South American flair styled by An intriguing south-of-the-border print stretches across the chest and around the collar of this Dennis-designed pullover. There's a secret pocket, too. Tailored of cool, washable Sierra Spun rayon with a Durene knitted waistband. We have this gay shirt in a variety of sprightly color combinations. Dennis OF NEW YORK $4.95 Sold exclusively at THU the university shop GEN'S APPAREL ACROSS FROM LINDLEY 1420 Crescent Road H M mati T who ingt Th quest which soph Here 4. hottil What fare 1. Inde tures signe Phone 715 vers In Earl Ior, busi eng enth centr C o m he colli cla self me T Cara whi Del ine M istic ecu are hav sive cha ass for F tion awa bus sch of Lec day S E C T ed me Pit M ret stu con O W R jun Isa Pa ph Co Da 7,1950 THURSDAY. APRIL 27, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE NINE to the national hes ly the Lilyan med- up. High School Sophomores Must Be Getting Smarter Washington—(U.P.)—This acts a little like a quiz program. As a matter of fact, it is. This one was fancied up by Edward Boykin, a historian of note, who is the adviser on history and culture for the forthcoming Washington sesquicentennial. The professor has selected 100 questions on American history which he thinks every high school sophomore should be able to answer. Here are a few samples: 2. What was the Emancipation proclamation? Did it free all the slaves? 1. Who wrote the Declaration of Independence? How many signatures are on it? Who was the first signer? 3. What, roughly, were the boundaries of the United States as fixed by the Treaty of Paris which ended the American revolution in 1783? 4. What two ships fought the first battle between ironclad vessels? Where did this fight take place? What was its effect on naval warfare? 5. What was Christopher Columbus looking for when he sailed the Atlantic in 1492? Where did he make his first landing? Who financed his expedition? What were the names of his ships? How many voyages did he make to the New World? 1. Thomas Jefferson. 56. John Hancock. 2. The proclamation was signed by Abraham Lincoln which freed three million slaves held in southern states. It freed only the slaves in the states at war with the United States, excluding eight other states. 3. The boundaries were fixed as Canada on the north; the Atlantic ocean on the east; Florida on the south; and the Mississippi river on the west. Answers: 5. Columbus was looking for a shorter route to the Orient. He made his first landing on the island of San Salvadore in the West Indies. His expedition was financed by Spain. His ships were the Nina, Pinta, and the Santa Maria. He made four voyages to the New World, but never set foot on the North American continent. 4. The Merrimac and the Monitor, At Hampton Road, Va., it changed the whole course of naval warfare by ending the days of wooden ships. Bridge Team Places Third Four University bridge players won third place in the team-of-four division of the Big Seven Bridge tournament held at the University of Missouri, April 21 and 22. In the individual team division Earl Watson, first year law, and Herman Lohrengel, engineering junior, won fourth place. James Feitz, business senior, and Hubert Berger, engineering sophomore, placed seventh. The University of Colorado won top honors in this division. Competition Keen, Instructor Says won top honors in this division. The same four University bridge players participated in the team-of-four event. First place in this division was taken by the University of Missouri. That was the opinion of John T. Cannon, instructor in economics, who spoke April 20 at a meeting of Delta Sigma Pi, professional business fraternity. Competition in college is sligh compared to future competition in the business world. Therefore, the college business student should clarify his ideas about the future and self-appraise his own personality to meet this competition. Mr. Cannon listed four characteristics for a successful business executive. The desired characteristics are to be technically competent, to have ambition and controlled agressiveness, to have an eye for the main chance, and to have good working associations and cultivate the ability for leadership. For the first time since reactivation in 1947, Deltasigma Pi will award a scholarship key to the male business senior with the highest scholastic average. The presentation of the key will be made by Dean Leonard H. Axe on Business School day. Wednesday, May 10. The fraternity will hold its initia-t at its next meeting on Sunday, pay 7. Students Attend Conference Ten University students attended the Methodist student movement spring conference held in Pittsburgh, Kan., April 21 and 22. Molly Kelly, College junior, secretary of the Kansas Methodist student movement, attended the conference. Other University students were: William Baker, graduate student; Robert Bell, Donna Hull, College juniors; Janice Broadword and Isabelle Gaddis, education juniors; Paul Nelson and George Sheldon, pharmacy juniors; Donovan Hull, College sophomore; and Glenna Davis, Fine Arts freshman. Dr. Edwin F. Price, Methodist ment minister, accompanied the b. Air Education Conference Set An aviation education conference for Kansas school supervisors, curricular consultants, elementary and secondary school principals and other school personnel will be held at the University July 12 through 14. The conference is sponsored by the School of Education and the Extension Bureau of institutes and conferences. About 200 people are expected to attend. State and national aviation school officials will teach the sessions. Some of the subjects to be discussed will be, "Implications of Aviation for Education," "Kansans Use Wings," and "Aviation in the High School Community Learning Program." Business Faculty Attends Meeting Seventeen members of the University economic and business departments attended an annual meeting of the Midwest Economics association held April 21 through Sunday in Des Moines, Iowa. Dr. John Ise, professor of economics, was the principal speaker at a dinner session April 22. He spoke on "The Sales Problem In Education." Keith Weltmer, assistant professor of economics, talked on "Teaching Tax Accounting." Edward G. Nelson, professor of accounting, was in charge of the accounting section of the convention. Domenico Gagliardo, professor of economics, participated in a discussion on international labor problems. Others from K.U. attending the meeting were: Leonard H. Axe, dean of the school of business; Leeland J. Pritchard, professor of finance; Richard S. Howey, professor of economics; John G. Blocker, professor of accounting, and Ronald G. Herd, instructor in economics. Don V. Plantz, instructor in economics; Frank Pinet, instructor in business; Howard F. Stettler, assistant professor of accounting; Joe G. Schoggen, instructor in economics; Howard Baumgartel, instructor in economics; Robert S. Eckley, assistant professor of economics; Jack Chernick, assistant professor of economics, and Richard Pfister, instructor in economics. Davidson To Visit Omaha University Dr. Arthur W. Davidson, professor of chemistry, will visit the University of Omaha, Monday, May 1, as a visiting associate of the committee on professional training, a branch of the American Chemical society. While at the university Dr. Davidson will talk to faculty members and students of the chemistry department and will tour the chemistry building and examine the facilities. He will also meet the president of the University. The reason for the visit, Dr. Davidson explained, is that the committee on professional training prepares a list of colleges and universities whose chemical curricula meet certain standards set by the society. society. If the school has an accredited department graduate students from the school become eligible for membership in the American Chemical society two years after graduation. Dr. Davidson has worked as a visiting associate since 1940. He will return to Lawrence Tuesday, May 2. The Library of Congress is 150 years old. Looking For Something Extra Special In Ice Cream? Fritzel-Jayhawk has a variety of party specialties - ICE CREAM MOLDS CUPS FANCY BRICKS Call — Chi Galloway Lost Your Pajamas? Look In The Hospital FRITZEL-JAYHAWK Are you minus a scarf, slippers, shaving equipment, gloves, pajamas, tooth brush, hair brush, belt, robe, or underwear? Ph.182 If you are and have been in Watkins Memorial hospital since September, there is a good chance that the lost and found department at the hospital has the missing article. Approximately 30 articles have been collected from the rooms since the first of the present school year. They will soon be turned over to the Salvation Army if not claimed. In its 33 centuries, the city of Jerusalem has endured more than 20 sieges and blockades. "Movies Are Better Now Than Ever Before" Tonite and FRI DICK POWELL JARE GREER in AN AMED RADIO PICTURE Station West WITH AGNES MOOREHEAD Feature at 8:05 and 10:05 Lawrence DRIVE-IN Theatre VARSITY Phone 132 For Sho Time ends tonite "PRISON GIRLS" "MARKED MEN" FRIDAY - SATURDAY Hopalong Cassidy "LUMBER JACK" and Joan Woodbury "Cipher Bureau" plus Ch. 6 "Bruce Gentry" 12 & 39c eye YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription Duplicated. Phone 425 1025 Mass. Lawrence Optical Co. Read the Daily Kansan daily. NOW ends SAT. OHHH... IT'S THAT MITCHUM MAN... ... IN NEW KIND OF ROLE! Mr. Hard-To-Get Goes Romantic! HE MAKES MY GROWN ROSES ROBERT MITCHUM ANET LEIGH WENDY COREY. A DON HARTMAN Produced HOLIDAY AFFAIR Added- Bugs Bunny Cartoon Barnyard Skiing Starts Sunday Prevue Sat Owl 11:15 Five Great Stars in the BIG Picture ! ! Forbidden Love! THE Red Danube Mom Grabby Mom Starting WALTER PIDGEON • ETHEL BARRYMORE PETER LAWFORD • JANET LEIGH ANGELA LANSBURY Shows Continuous - Open 12:45 Patee PHONE 121 Give Your White Elephants 'Green Backs' With KANSAN Classifieds. It's Sparkling It's New It's For You! A&P's Most Modern Food Store GRAND OPENING TODAY GRAND OPENING VALUES Jane Parker 1 lb. carton Potato Chips $ .59 Shotwell's 6½ oz. pkg. Circus Peanuts .15 Mild Wisconsin 1 lb. Cheddar Cheese .39 Armours Star 1 lb. pkg. Sliced Bacon ___55 A & P Super Market PAGE TEN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 19 THU The Editors Report — OUR CONGRESSIONAL Hooky-Players ye ED Columnist Drew Pearson has lately begun a new crusade. This time it isn't a Friendship Train but an expose of how Congress conducts itself. If Mr. Pearson's deductions are correct—and anyone who has attended several sessions of either house will be inclined to think they are—then it looks like we do indeed have a "Congress in absentia." There are probably a good many reasons why the "people's representatives" show up so seldom for business. They have many pressing engagements. Some of them have to drop in on Hollywood to check the morals of movie stars. Others are quite busy seeking out subversive elements in the state department. Still others have speeches to make, calls to pay, luncheons to eat We admit being a Congressman is no easy job. It requires the stamina of a Missouri mule, the elusiveness of a Kansas Jayhawk, and a loud booming laugh. These seem to be the important qualities demanded in a Congressman. Of course, we have heard of other qualities a Congressman needs. But these have always been explained away with the wave of a hand. The debunkers tell us it really is not so important that Congress get anything done so long as it can make the public believe it is hard at work. This is the myth we humble voters must swallow down whole: Congress is hard at work. Yet what happens when—through some oversight usually—a bill is passed? It may be a bill involving millions of dollars and thousands of persons. It may have been passed by a bare quorum. Nothing is said unless the bill is an unpopular measure. If the bill passes unnoticed or is favorably received by the press and the nation, the gentlemen never fail to point out they voted for it. Often this is true. They were following instructions of party leaders. Then, with roaring tongue and burning eyes, the gentlemen in Washington tellffi us it is the nefarious work of a group of lobbyists. They neglect to mention that had they been present when the bill was brought up for a vote, they might have been able to prevent the bill being accepted. Congressmen, like everybody else, can't be wrong all the time. However, we feel the congressional hooky-players ought to turn up once in a while to find out when they are right. STANDARD DIALOG IN Union Cafeteria by Dale Fields "Cold hamburgers again today! You must be kidding." "No. . . corn fritters and apple sauce, too. It's a wonderful menu. Roast beef only 38 cents." "I think I'll eat somewhere else today. I've had enough of the Union's chow to last me a long time." "Well, it's a fact you can eat at most restaurants for the same price you pay at the Union. Only the food is better." "What gets me is how the Union serves ketchup—open bowls to collect dust. Did you know a student took some of that ketchup and ran tests on it? He found bacteria culture so thick you could literally peel it off in layers." "And how about the silverware? I don't think they've been checking it too closely. Noticed bits of food and soap scum on it. Been making a point to check mine closely before putting it on a tray." "What I get so burned up about is the price they charge. And they call it a non-profit cafeteria. I can get portions just as small downtown. Only I'd pay less." "Only bargains they have are pie and soup—ten cents. The rest of the glop can be matched elsewhere." "But what soup! They must throw in all the leftovers. You can always tell what they had last week if you buy soup. I use the term advisedly." "You don't get the service you pay for, either. And yet you end up with just about the same size bill in both places. I don't get it." "A lot of other students aren't getting it either. They are eating somewhere else. . . and not regretting it." "You would think the University would see that its cafeterias were kept in tip-top condition for students. I know lots of schools that have swell cafeterias. Prices much cheaper than here. And they even manage, I hear, to pay their help a living wage." "Well, I think I'll skip the Union tonight. Get a decent meal for a change." "Too bad something can't be done to better things." "What could we do?" "What could you do that hasn't been done?" "Perhaps an investigation?" "May as well ask for student council interference." "How about it?" "I 'How about a letter to the Kansan?' "That would be worse than useless." A graduate entomology student is reported as knowing more about chiggers than any other man. Rodney Nipnap, R.O.T.C. general, loudly denies this since he spent last summer in Texas where he became intimate with the "little beasties." TODAY'S MAIL Snake In The... Seated in a car parked in front of Dyche museum was a man. In the man's lap was a writhing snake—a snake about an inch in diameter and more than two feet long, yellowish in color with dark markings. Kind? Sir: With gloved hands the man held the snake and talked to a friend standing near the open window. As he talked the snake in the man's lap would crawl into the man's chest. The gloved hands would pull it down. The snake would squirm out over the ledge of the car window and the gloved hands would pull it back. Perhaps the snake was of a harmless variety. Perhaps the man with the gloved hands knew all about handling the snake. Perhaps the gloved hands were strong enough to keep the snake captive. If the snake were destined for a laboratory on the Hill, then it should have been brought there in a carrier. If no carrier were available and the snake had to be brought in then it should have been brought directly to its destination and not fondled in a parked car with an open window on a campus road. But the snake could have escaped. Harmless or not it could have scared the daylights out of a lot of Hill people. It might have bitten someone. Lew Sciortino Journalism senior Belated Sir: I would like to reply to a letter, printed April 19, for-the benefit of those who know me and who realize it more fully than I, that I am not, have never been, nor foresee any possibility of being the angel of divine goodness and right that Mr. Wildman, bless him, makes me to be. Still, I like to think I hold the interests of my fellow students close at heart. Walter Brown College junior University Daily Hansan News Room K.U.251 Adv. Room K.U.376 Member of the Kansas Press Assm. National Editorial Assm., Inland Daily Press Assm., and the Associated Collegeate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service,420 Madison Ave., New York City. Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS James Morris Editor-in-Chief Doors Greenbank Managing Bank Business Mgr. Asst. Man. Editors ... Norma Hungerman Kay O'Cannon John Hill City Editor ... Edward Chapin Asst. City Editors ... John Jackson Martilyn Marks Elaine Elvig Steve Ferro Feature Editor ... Erika Kelley Photograph Editor ... Frankie Walts Telegraph Editor ... Robert Sigman William Graves Richard Tatum Lloyd Hollow Mona Millikin Sports Editor ... Richard Dilsaver Asst. Sports Editors ... Bob Leonard Roy Soland Arthur McInerny Mona Millikin Society Editor ... Fave Wilkinson Asst. Society Editors ... Billie Stover Emily Stewart Editorial Assts. ... Keith Leslie Adv. Mgr. ... Charles Reiner Cir. Mgr. ... Vyanne Josephand Nat. Adv. Mgr. ... Forrest Barb Classified Ad. Mgr. ... Lee Dyer Promotion Mgr. ... John Wiedenman REGULAR DINNERS - Fried Chicken - Steaks - Short Orders - RAY'S CAFE - REGULAR PRICES 709 Mass. Open Sundays Springtime means Ice Cream Time- You can be sure that those spring parties and picnics will be a complete success if you serve— Lawrence Sanitary Ice Cream Made from Creamy, Rich Milk to Produce That "Home Made" Goodness. Phone 696 202 W. 6th No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money. FOR THE TOPS IN TENNIS EQUIPMENT Come to Ober's Sporting Goods Department. Wilson and Spalding rackets . . . designed for performance and durability. In a wide range of models and styles. K 25 w Addl Expert Racket Restringing is done in our store by an expert (15 years of experience). It takes only a short time to give new life to your racket and your game. 4. 95 up 3. 50 up and du of moden Ober's IL 27,19. THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE ELEVEN Mass. Kansan Classified Advertising Phone K.U.376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be received by 10 a.m. during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Student Office. Journals should be submitted late 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 ON MOTHER'S Day say "I Love You" with a box of assorted cremes and nut filled chocolates from the DIXIE CARAMEL CORN SHOP. Found box of creme and nut wrapped by CornShops. for mailing. THE DIXIE CARAMEL CORN SHOP, 842 Mass. 3 FRESH shrimp served every day at the Mission Inn. 45c a plate. 1904 Mass. 3 NOROLA TV Portable. Used only 3 months. Unpaid balance only $99.49. See at B.F. Goodrich. Easy terms if desired. R.E. Goodrich Co., 929 Mass. **SALIBOAT** Rhodes Bantam. Built by Rhodes Bantam in 1862 and gid material. Donald Kay, 1603-R. GOLF Clubs, 7 irons and 3 woods with bag. Good condition and reasonably priced. Friendly. April 14th through June 10th. FREE TROLLEY. 6 door, heatter, radio, exceptionally clean. Good rubber. Even the clock works on this one. One owner. Mass. Phone 424. 169 Mass. Phone 424. LIKE NEW Zenith Trans Oceanic portable 49 model, 9 tubes. Wave Booster 36 model, 2 tubes. Typewriter typewriter. Need to sell quick. Call 2768 or see at 116 Miss. after p. 6月. LIME ballerina length formal. LIME ballerina condition. Half price. 2027 Kentucky. WALNUT full-sized bed with inner- padding. Phone 2603W Excellent condi- tion. Phone 2603W NIRST TELEVISION - Best in sets and airials at lowest prices. New shipments just arrived. $87.50 and up. See the new- est Enmerson table model set at $159.50. Easy terms. Bowman Radio and Electric, 826 Vermont. Phone 138. tf '40 PLYMUTH, sleek grey, radio, heater. Body in perfect condition. Seat coats. Good transportation. See at Cay Barncord Motors, 19th and Mass. 28 TRUMPET for sale. Conn 22B in excellent condition, complete with large size liftene case. Call Jim Sellards. 2954 2 47 CHEVROLET: Maroon, radio, heater, good tires, matching seat covers. See to appreciate. Cy Barncord. 19th and Mass. 28 THESES MATERIALS! All weights of thesis quality typing paper, carbon paper, and typewriter ribbons. Student Union Book Store. M4 BOOK-EASE leaves both hands free for writing or typing, marks any reference section such as vocabulary, etc. Get yours today for only 89 at your Student Center. 48. CHEVROLET Styline, Green, heater, good tires. There's plenty of good transportation in this one. See to appreciate the new Schneider Motor. Phon. 424 Phon. 424 49 BUCK SUPER Maroon, radio, heater, new white sidewalls. Excellent condition. This one is really a honey. See at Cy Barncorn Motors, 19th and Mass. 28 BUSINESS SERVICE SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a dignified sales activity representing the oldest, largest, most skilled applicant field. Applicants accepted will work by appointment on leads we furnish. Earnings $75.00 to $125.00 and more per week on an advanced percentage basis. Write Mr. Craddock Jr., 1006 Grand Ave., Kansas City, Mo. qualifications, school tt DRESS MAKING and sewing; all types of formalms and dresses made to order. Also shortened and remodeled—call Mrs. Scales, 3060W. 27 JIAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jawhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field Their needs are our business. Our onestop pet shop has everything for you and Gift Shop 1191 Comp St, Ph 418. tt THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor, Auto repair, and fender repair, auto painting, used cars 317 E.17. Phone 785 or 1821R. HELD OVER! PLEASE NOTE: Due to the tremendous response and requests from hundreds of our patrons who have been unable to obtain seats, we are holding "The Third Man" over for two extra days. We urge, if possible, that you attend the afternoon shows for better seating. "The Third Man" will positively end Friday night. TODAY THRU FRIDAY No Matter Where He Goes or What He Does . . . He's My Man! Hear the magic ingers of Anton Karas play the gay "3rd Man" theme. He'll have you in a dither with his zither. "THE 3RD MAN" laby- city THE MOST U 3RD MAN N" FEATURES AT 1:00 - 3:00 - 5:05 7:10 - 9:20 THE MOST UNUSUAL ENTERTAINMENT OF 1950! Late News Color Cartoon "Quack A Doodle Doo" Jayhawker MOVIES ARE BETTER THAN EVER TYPING, Theses, Term Papers, Reports, Reports, and Briefs. Ms. Stuart, 1082 Vermont, Ph. 1168R. FYPING, Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rates. Prompt attention. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601 TYPING: Call Hazel Stanley, 2865M for prompt experienced services. $20% Manage TRANSPORTATION RIDERS WANTED: leaving for Wilcha every Friday at 4 p.m. Returning Sun- day evening. Please call between 7-9 p. Harry Shultz, Phil. 3110J. 27 RIDE WANTED Kansas City, Mo. to Lawrence and return. Preferably daily. Arrive 8 a.m. Contact Frank Orto, phone 1220 or Kansas Office Box No. 6. 1 MAN'S CROTON watch. Lost on campus or downtown Thursday afternoon. If found please call 2418J after 5 p.m. Reward. LOST FOR RENT NICE COOL rooms, also sleepporn for summer school students, adjoining campus on South. Call 2674J after 4 p.m. SUMMER BARGAINS for boys or couples. Large rooms, twin beds, private kitchenette. House now under new management, 1213 Ohio. Phone 2917- R1 Senior Recital Shows Ability But 'Warranty Deed' Evokes Laughter By DALE S. ROMIG A senior recital that evoked at times, much applause, and at another time, gales of laughter, was sung Wednesday by Mary Lynn Lucas, contralto. Though a complete showing of her abilities was perhaps hampered by a lack in program variety, Miss Lucas nevertheless sang a pleasing recital. The best group she sang was the German lieder. Her diction was good and her voice which at times can be powerful, got a good chance to show both its power and its gentleness. Of the lieder, Brahms' "Von Ewiger Liebe" seemed the most enjoyable. The final group of songs was English and was enjoyable except for the fortunate appearance on the program of something called Warranty Deed (Vermont Hills This is Hurt). Thus was the piece which brought forth the back-slapping type of laughter from the audience. Its connection with anything requiring musical talent is purely coincidental. The French group was in a lighter vein—dominated by Faure's "Mandoline." STRAP ON YOUR BELTS! STRAP ON YOUR SEAT-BELTS! THE SCREEN'S ROARING WITH JET-THRILLS THAT HIT YOU FASTER THAN SOUND! the FIRST STORY OF THE JET PLANES and the fearless. sky-jockeys who fly them! HUMPHREY BOGART ELEANOR PARKER CHAIN LIGHTNING the FIRST STORY OF THE JET PLANES and the fearless sky-jockeys who fly them! BOGART ELEANOR PARKER RAYMOND MASSEY RICHARD WHORF Flight Times 1:10, 3:05, 5:00, 6:55, 9:00 BOGEY'S A TEST PILOT FOR JETS and does he move fast! LATE NEWS—COLOR CARTOON "OFTEN AN ORPHAN" JAYHAWKER Thru Tuesday Why Mrs. Alice Moncrieff, professor of voice, requires her students to go through such vocal gymnastics is beyond this writer's comprehension. SATURDAY NOTE: "CHAIN LIGHTNING" will be shown on the Saturday night prevue. . . Come as late as 11:00 o'clock Saturday night and see a complete show. About 85 per cent of the nation's corn crop goes to market in the form of meat. HELLO, SUCKER! YEAH, YOU! I MEAN ALL OF YOU SELFCON- FIDENT WIVES WHO THINK YOU HAVE YOUR HUSBAND ALL SALT- TED AWAY! ALL I HAVE TO DO IS CALL HIM AND HE'LL COME RUNNING! AND HELL BE JUST LIKE ALL THE Others! VIVIENNE ROBINSON Granada PHONE 946 BARBARA STAWYCK JAMES MASON VAN HEFLIN AVA GARDNER "EAST SIDE, WEST SIDE" STARTS SUNDAY Previe Saturday 11:15 Granada PHONE 946 HURRY! LAST 3 DAYS Ends Saturday Roar with Red! RED SKELTON IS THE YELLOW CAB MAN a riot on wheels LAUGH MARTIN LOGI CO-STARRING GLORIA DE HAVEN WITH WALTER SLEZAK EDWARD ARNOLD · JAMES GLEASON Added Fun TOM and JERRY COLOR CARTOON — NEWS Shows Continuous - Open 12:45 Granada PHONE 946 PAGE TWELVE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1950 WORLD NEWS at Press Time Budenz Called A Liar Washington, —(U,R)—Earl Browder, former boss of American Communists, said under oath today that Louis F. Budenz gave "false" testimony when he said Browder had termed Owen Lattimore a Communist. Browder, testifying before a senate subcommittee, took direct issue with statements made by Budenz about Lattimore last week before the same committee. Asked by committee counsel Edward P. Morgan about Eudenz remark that Browder had told him "officially" that Lattimore was a Communist, Browder replied firmly "I deny that categorically. It is false." Dock Strikers Still Out London, April 27 —(U.P.)— One thousand Royal air force men went to work on the strike-bound London docks today as the government reported only a slight decrease in the number of men out in the Communist-led walkout. The strike was called to protest expulsion from the Transport and General Workers union of three allied Communists who played leading roles in the July, 1949, dock strike in sympathy with Canadian seamen. Senate Quizzes Costello Washington, —(U.P.)—Frank Costello admitted today that he "probably violated the law" in his former operations as a "betting commissioner" and that he has owned several hundred illegal slot machines in the New Orleans area. But he refused to tell in detail about its operations on the constitutional grounds that it might incriminate him. Costello denied to a senate commerce subcommittee that he is part of any nationwide gambling syndicate. He said he is "practically retired" but has "several investments—real estate, oil leases and a Louisiana nightclub. Don Coleman Wins Contest Quill club has announced Donald J Coleman, College junior, is winner of its spring literary contest. Virginia Doan, education senior, won Honorable mention. Coleman, Miss Donn, and 12 others consecrated the service were in- liged into the church Tuesday. Coleman's winning entry was a story, "The Red Indian Blanket." Miss Doan was named for her story, "The Shop Keeper." Both stories will appear in the May issue of Trend, official Quill club publication. Manuscripts not accepted by the club may be claimed at the office of Thomas Sturgeon, instructor in English, 211 Fraser hall. Other contestants initiated into the club were Edward Y. Kalpakian and Leonard C. Pronko, graduate students, Norma Lea Bishop, Theron L. Brewer, and Ernest C. Friesen, College seniors; Donald Gulick, and Sim Meyers, College juniors; Richard F. Hetschel and Sam L. Sebesta, College sophomores; J. Paul Ly-saught, College freshman, and Carolyn Smith, fine arts freshman. Colgate-Palmolive Man To Interview Students R. L. Robinson, a representative of the Colgate-Palmolive Peet company, Kansas City, Mo., Friday will interview students in chemical engineering, mechanical engineering with industrial options, and students in industrial relations from the School of Business. Mr. Robinson will hold a group meeting with interest 1 students at 8 a.m. in 417 Snow hall. The interviews will be conducted in the office of the dean of the School of Engineering. Jayhawker Staff Has Photos Taken Members of the business and office staff of the Jayhawker will have their pictures taken for the fourth issue of the Jayhawker at 4:30 p.m. Friday. Meeting place is the Jayhawker office in the Union. Students of the School of Engineering and Architecture will meet at 12:30 p.m. Friday to nominate three class representatives to the engineering council. School Petitions Council Positions Election for the 17 council positions will be held Thursday, May 11. The freshman class representative will be elected at the beginning of the 1950 fall semester. Nominations for council president, vice-president, and secretary-treasurer are now being accepted by the engineering council. These three executive officers must be nominated by petition. To be nominated, a petition stating the name of the candidate, position for which he is nominated, and 40 signatures of engineering students must be turned in to the engineering council. Class representatives may also be nominated by petitions. The council will accept petitions bearing the name of the nominee, position for which he is nominated, and 40 signatures of engineering students of to the council will be chosen at the same class. Ten departmental representatives meetings of the departments this week and the early part of next week. A maximum of three candidates will be chosen from each department. All petitions and announcements may be turned in to the engineering council through Dean Carr's office, 113 Marvin hall. Monday, May 8, is the deadline for all petitions to be in the possession of the council. A copy of the council's constitution is on the bulletin board on the first floor of Marvin hall for the convenience of petitioners. To Talk On Near East-US Virginia Baroudijian, College junior, will address the Sociology club on "Life in Egypt, Syria, and the U.S." at 4 p.m. today in the East room of the Union. Miss Baroudjian was born in Egypt, and lived in Syria before coming to this country. Third Annual Speech Contest Set For May The third annual Campus Intramural Speaking tournament will be held at 7:30 p.m. on three consecutive Thursdays, May 4, 11, and 18 in classrooms of Green hall. William Conboy, instructor in speech, announced that three events have been scheduled. These include: demonstration speeches, May 4; informative speeches, May 11; and entertainment or after-dinner speeches, May 18. The men and women contestants will be judged in two separate divisions. The contestant may be any undergraduate student who is not a member of the varsity debate squad a member of Delta Sigma Rho, honorary debate fraternity, or one of the top three winners in any pre-communus speaking contest including intramural events, of past years. The length of speeches for each contest will be from five to eight minutes. Mr. Conboy said that there are no regulations forbidding the use of notes, but he advised that they be kept to a minimum. The man and woman winner in each division will be awarded a trophy. Second and third place winners will receive special certificates Besides the individual awards, two grand trophies, one for men and one for women, will be given the houses or organizations amassing the most sweepstakes points during the entire tournament. All entries should be sent to Mr Conboy, 1 Green hall. They must be in the speech office by the Tuesday of the week of each contest. Rector Outlines Courses For Pre-Seminary Study The courses most valuable to students planning to enter a seminary were outlined by the Rev Louis Basso Tuesday evening. Reverend Basso, associate rector of the Lawrence Episcopal church, addressed a meeting of pre-theological students. He also discussed the personal discipline of the minister. DE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH 632-34 Mass. St. Buddy GALLAGHER MOTORS Ph. 1000 GREAT SERVICE FINE CARS SQUARE DEAL THIRD MAN THEME ... Anton Karas HEAR THE HITS MY FOOLISH HEART . . . Billy Eckstine . . Gene Krupa at the DUST Record Rendezvous L. L. SMITH CO. 846 Mass. Anonymous Gams Keep On Growing Ph. 725 CO. In an advertisement on this page today are more of those legs that have been seen in the past two issues of the Kansan. That we don't know, but we have found out what they were doing. Whose legs are they? The legs were inserted to warn students that the Sour Owl, K.U.s only humor magazine, is going on sale Monday, May 1. Doug Jennings, editor, says that Sour Owl will be sold in Marvin hall, the Union, Strong hall, and in front of the library. "Our cover girl is on the front of one of the best Sour Owls ever." Jennings said. "Even those who buy it will think so." Chamber Music Concerts Chosen The program for the fourth season of the University of Kansas Chamber Music series has been announced by the University concert course management. no concerts scheduled are: Nov 12 13- The Hungarian string quartet. The five concerts scheduled are: Dec. 4—Nikolai and Joanna Graudan, cello and piano duo. March 12—The Loewenguth string quartet. Feb. 19—The Pasquier Trio, violin, viola, and cello. The management said that although the series is losing money the response has been so gratifying continued for at least another year. Season ticket reservations may be made at the office of the School of Fine Arts with a $1 deposit. Total cost of a season ticket is $5 plus tax. NSA To Elect Officers Tonight The Negro Student association will elect officers at 7:30 p.m. today in 9 Strong hall. A president, vicepresident, All Student Council representative, and two other officers will be chosen. Richard McClain, president, urges all members and persons interested to attend. Student Search For 'Abigail' Gets Underway SFFF "Abigail," a mysterious something somewhere on the campus, will be the prize-winning objective in a treasure hunt scramble which begins today and ends Friday, May 5. The hunt is being sponsored by the Inter-ward council of Wards T and P-Z, social organization for men independents. Appearing daily in the Kano, until Friday, May 5, will be clubs designed to give away a little bit more information about "Abigail." Today's clue is: The name, "Abigail," was arbitrarily assigned to the unknown object which could be anything from Uche Jimmy Green to the flag on top of Fraser hall. The hunt has started Prizes to be awarded will be displayed in the lounge of the Union throughout the hunt. Prizes include an Emerson portable radio, a photograph album, a coffeemaker, a pin-up lamp, 12 pairs of free passes to the Granada or Patee theaters, and a carton of 100 watt light bulbs are the rewards for the winners. There may be 18 winners. eligible to participate in the hunt. On Friday, May 5, a booth will be set up in the lounge of the Union. As soon as the last clue appears in the Kansan, students may present their answers at this booth. Winners will be notified as soon as all prizes are won. You're looking for me I'd be stylish in K.C. Any student at the University is eligible to participate in the hunt. Following the convention Dean Reese will represent the School of Pharmacy at the United States Pharmacopoeial convention in Washington, D.C. He is expected to return to Lawrence on Thursday, May 11. Dr. J. Allen Reese, dean of the School of Pharmacy, will attend meeting of the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy being held in Atlantic City, N. J. Sunday through Friday, May 5. He will leave Friday. Dean Reese To Attend Two Pharmacy Meetings If You Want To See More . . . 100 WE FOUND THE GIRL! We advertised in the Daily Kansan for a pretty size 36 coed to fill a french-type bathing suit. She filled it! ... Buy a SOUR OWL Monday! 27,1950 Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks. University Daily Kansan STUDENT NEWSPAPER nothing will be in a begins 5. The the In- T and r men arbiwn obg from flag on of the iation held unday wi Karin clues tle bit bigail." the dis- Union include photo- a pin toes to, s and obs are There Lawrence, Kansas isity is hunt. will be Union. years in present winners prizes Dean pool of States in inneded to, yesterday. Students Must Fill Out Cards For Registration All students now enrolled in the University who plan to return for the summer session or the 1950 fall semester should sign a former student's application card in the registrar's office before the end of this semester. James K. Hitt, registrar, announced Wednesday. ! The signing of this card does not take the place of registration which is held at the beginning of each session and semester. The card is used by the registrar's office to assure the student a place in the University for the coming summer session or fall semester, whichever the student plans to attend. It gives the University data for planning and will eliminate much of the waiting at the students' next registration. If students fail to sign the cards at the scheduled period, they will find their next registration a longer process than usual, James K. Hitt, registrar, explained. Students are asked to sign in the registrar's office, 122 Strong hall, according to the first letter of their last name. The schedule is: Tuesday, May 2 A. B, C. Wednesday, May 3 D. E, F. Thursday, May 4 G. H, I. Friday, May 5 J. K, L. Monday, May 8 M. N, O. Tuesday, May 9 P. Q, R. Wednesday, May 10 S. T, U. Thursday, May 11 W. V. X, Y, Z. Howell, Eulich To Run Jayhawker Friday, May 12, and Saturday, may 13, will be for all students that were unable to sign on their scheduled days. Mr. Hitt pointed out that if a student owes the University for parking fines, hospital bills, or library fines, that these debts must be paid before that student will be allowed to register again. He suggested that all fines and bills be paid before the end of this semester. 'Requiem' Practice Saturday The final rehearsal on Verdi's "Requiem" will be held at 7 p.m. Saturday in Hoch auditorium. All the guest soloists will be present at that time. PETER H. KING Parade Honors American Day WILLIAM HOWELL "I Am An American Day" will be celebrated in Lawrence Saturday by the visits of such prominent leaders as His eminence Frances Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York, and Gov. Frank Carlson. A parade at 3:15 p.m. Saturday moving from Sixth and Massachusetts streets south to South park will open the event. On the reviewing stand at Ninth and Massachusetts streets will be Cardinal Spellman, the Rev. Dale Turner, pastor of the Plymouth Congregational church, Perrin McElroy, labor leader from Kansas City, Mo., the Rev. George Towle, pastor of St. John's Catholic church, and Rabbi Samuel Mayerberg, of the Congregational B'nai Jehdah, Kansas City, Mo. Turning to the mode of living of the Egyptians, Miss Baroudjian explained the Mohammedan religion and beliefs prevalent in the country. Cardinal Spellman will speak following a dinner at 6:30 p.m. in the Community building. His address "Freedom by Right Divine," will be broadcast by radio stations WDAF and WREN. "When a girl is born, the parents are very sad, and act as if they are ashamed," she said. "Girls are married when they are twelve, usually and they do not meet their bridegroom until after a marriage contact has been signed. The marriage Speaking of Armenian culture, Miss Baroudjian said that Armenian music and dances are much like that of the Russians. Their language and songs are vigorous and enthusiastically used, for the people try to keep them alive in the face of persecution. Much of this persecution has ceased in the last 30 years, she explained. Foreign Student Speaks About Egyptian Customs Life in Egypt was explained by Virginie Baroudjian, College junior, in a talk given Thursday to the sociology club. She also told of the history of the Armenian culture. "The Armenians suffered Turkishsecution for 600 years, and after World War I, chose to form an alliance with Russia." Miss Baroudjian explained. "The Armenians asked England, France, and the United States to accept their country as a mandate, but were refused." "A few years ago, every boy was supposed to serve a term in the Egyptian army. This could be avoided by paying 20 Egyptian pounds (about $100) to the government. Some poor fathers worked all their lives to pay that sum to keep their sons out of the army. is usually arranged through a third party. "Boys are treated much better. When a boy is born, the father holds open house, and food, candy, and drink is served to all visitors for seven days, and ceremonies are performed to protect the child from illnesses and evil spirits. Miss Baroudjian who speaks five languages used phrases in Arabic and French to help express herself in English. She has been in the United States for three years, and plans to become a citizen next year. "That is changed now. The only exemption from military service is given if the boy goes to college for a higher education." William Howell, College sophomore, was elected editor and John Eulich, business junior., was reelected business manager of the 1950-51 Jayhawker by the advisory board Thursday. During the past year Howell has been make-up editor for the Jayhawker and business manager for Upstream. He is also editor of the Kansas Sig, annual publication of Alpha Xi chapter of Sigma Chi fraternity. The 18-year-old business major came to the University this year from the University of Chicago, where he was public director of the Student Assembly-Student Government, equivalent to K.U.'s All Student Council. Howell was also on the business staff of the Chicago Maroon, University of Chicago's newspaper. Marian Rippeetau, present Jayhawketer editor, said that Howell has been "an invaluable asset on this year's annual." When asked about plans for the 1950-51 Jayhawker, the new editor replied that he was considering changing it from magazine to book form, but that such a move would depend upon the student's opinion. Eulich will be the second man in more than 30 years to hold one of the two major staff positions for two consecutive years. He comes from Kansas City, Mo, and he is 20 years old. Eulich has been business manager of the Bitter Bird for two years and was previously advertising manager of the Jayhawker. He has also been on the dean's honor roll. After graduating in 1951 he wants to work in the publishing field. Howell will assume his duties as editor in the fall. Members of the Jayhawker advisory board who chose the new staff are: Karl Klooz, chairman; Elmer Beth, professor of journalism; Raymond Nichols, executive secretary; Thomas Yoe, director of public relations; L. C. Woodruff, dean of men; Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women; Keith Wilson, former editor of Jayhawk; Mervin Clingan, business junior; Patricia Gardenhire, College freshman; Marian Ripplepeteau, retiring editor; and Thomas Sturgeon, instructor in English. Water Ballet Is QuackClubProject Members of the Quack club, women's swimming organization, will present a water ballet at 8 p.m. Tuesday, May 2, in the Robinson gym pool. The theme of the performance is the calendar year, with each routine representing a different month. Preparations for the ballet have been under way since the beginning of the school year under the supervision of Miss Ruth Hoover, associate professor of physical education, beginning its students' techniques, the 25 women have concentrated on complete routines the past few weeks. Church Symbolism Is Subject Of Methodist Discussion Women only are invited to attend and the admission price is 50 cents. Church symbolism will be discussed by Mrs. R. F. Gallup, Kansas City, Mo., at a meeting of Kappa Phi, national organization for Methodist student women, at 7 p.m. Friday in the First Methodist church, 946 Vermont. From her travels about the United States, Mrs. Gallup has gathered photographs, slides, charts, and other illustrations of church symbols. She will trace symbol histories from pagan origin to modern times using these illustrations. WEATHER KANSAS—Cloudy, showers and thunderstorms this afternoon and tonight in the east and central portions. 124 JOHN EULICH Chorus To Sing Requiem Sunday The Manzoni "Requiem" by Giuseppe Verdi which will be performed by the University of Kansas Festival chorus at 3 p.m. Sunday in Hoch auditorium has an interesting history. Shortly after the death of the Italian composer Gioacchino Rossini, Verdi suggested that the Italian composers combine their talents and write a requiem as a tribute to Rossini. The requiem would be performed at the cathedral of Bologna every hundredth year on the centenary of Rossini's death. The project was accepted and 13 composers began working on it. However, when all were finished, the product lacked unity. A short time later Alessandro Manzoni, an Italian statesman, died and Tedi agreed to write the whole notice and this time dedicate it to Manzoni. Verdi's final work is what the audience will hear Sunday. There are 13 divisions, the last of which "Libera Me" is the part that Verdi originally wrote for the Rossini requiem. The performance requires approximately one and one-half hours. But Mazzucato of Milan was so impressed by Verdi's part of the work that he asked Verdi to write the whole requiem. Final Movie In Film Series Shown Tonight The final movie in this semester's film series will be an American silent picture, "The Navigator," with Buster Keaton. It will be shown to-day at 7:30 p.m. in Hoch auditorium. In case the audience doesn't know when to laugh or cry, Clarence Stewart, employee of the Bell Music company, will play mood music on a piano from the stage much in the same style before "talkies". If the action becomes stormy or violent Mr. Stewart may play the Lone Ranger's theme song, and if sad he may start in on Chopin's Funeral March. Little of the latter type music will be used to accompany "The Navigator" for when Kansas-born Buster covers a picture, laughs usually follow. The University of Kansas marching band will participate in the statewide Boy Scout Jamboree parade at Topeka on Saturday, Russel L. Wiley, director, announced today. Eighty-five men will march in the parade One critic of Keaton, who plays the part of Rollo Treadway, said that "his wildest emotions are reflected by an occasional upward turn of the eyebrow." Raymond Nichols, who is chairman of the committee responsible for selecting movies this semester, said that because of the success of the series this year the University is planning to continue the film series next year. Other members of the committee are: W. H. Shoemaker, professor of Romance languages; J. A. Burzle, chairman of the German department; Herman Chubb, professor of political science; John Maxon, professor of music; Susan Allen Crafton, professor of speech; and Robert Thaver, engineering senior, Professor Crafton, who will introduce today's movie, said that the director's goal was to help gestions as to films that might be obtained for next year's series. KU Band To March In Boy Scout Parade The band will leave Saturday morning. Following the parade an outdoor concert will be given on the state house grounds. Included in the parade will be the Washburn university and Santa Fe bands, drum and bugle corps, Scout flag displays, Cub scout processions, and floats. Army Engineers Aid Defense By Research, Conservation Brig. Gen. Samuel D. Sturgis, division engineer for the army's Missouri river division stressed these two points in a speech that preceded his presentation of a charter to the local post of the Society of American Military Engineers. The primary mission of the corps of engineers is to provide for the national defense through conservation, research and development. General Sturgis explained the civil responsibilities of the corps of engineers as largely that of carrying out a long range policy in maintenance and control of rivers and harbors. With the passage of the flood control act of 1944, a flexible framework for development of the Missouri river basin was established. "The chief of engineers is assisted by various boards and commissions in planning and recommending flood control of river and harbor projects to congress." he said. When a project has been approved, the corps of engineers then carries it out. velopment of water resources can the great plains area survive. General Sturgis, who is currently concerned with the flood on the upper Missouri river, is convinced that only through control and de- The general said the plan provides control of destructive floods, irrigation, development of hydro-electric power, navigation, soil erosion control, fish and wild life conservation, and public recreation. "Two basic problems, flood and drought, confront the seven million persons who make their homes in the valley. In the lower basin, the problem is generally too much water in the form of destructive floods." At present, the corps of engineers is working on five multiple purpose reservoirs and a number of levees to aid in the control of the flood conditions, he said. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE TWO FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1950 Cervantes Day To Feature Three Speakers Professor Eugene Saviano, University of Wichita, will discuss "Peereda's Portrayal of the Clergyman." Mrs. Laura Kinsey, Kansas City, Mo., will speak on "The Need for Spanish" the layman's Point of View." Students of MacAllaster grade school of Lawrence will give a demonstration in methods of teaching Spanish. The 28th annual Cervantes day celebration by the department of Romance (languages will begin at 10 a.m. Saturday when Dr. Ashar Christensen of the University of Minnesota will speak on "Inter-American Cultural Relations." Cervantes day is held in honor of Miguel de Saavedra Cervantes, author of "Don Quixote" and the founder of Spanish culture. Cervantes died 334 year ago. A Cervantes day luncheon will be held at 1pm, in the Ballroom of the Student Union. Medals awarded by the local chapter of the American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese to high school and junior college students will be presented at the luncheon. Dr. W. H. Shoemaker, chairman of the department of Romance languages will address the luncheon after the presentation of the awards. Tertulia, a variety show will be held in Strong auditorium at 3:30 p.m. The program will be songs, dances, and music of Spanish culture. Two pieces of Latin-American art are now on display in Spooner-Thayer museum of Art in connection with the celebration. Justice Is Now Family Affair Boston — (U.P.) — Among 193 new lawyers sworn in by Supreme Court Justice Edward A. Counihan, Jr., was his daughter-in-law. WAA Emblems May Be Picked Up Emblems for W.A.A. letter sweaters may be picked up at the women's intramural office. The emblems, which were ordered several months ago, consist of a red and blue jayhawker and letters W.A.A. in the middle of a white field surrounded by a blue border. Members of the organization wear the sweaters as a group on Thursdays. 12 Democrats To Wichita Twelve members of the K. U. Young Democrats club will go to Wichita Saturday to attend a convention of the statewide Young Democrats organization. The purpose of the meeting, to be held Saturday and Sunday, is to adopt a platform and elect officers for the next two years. Rip Collins, 1st year law student, is present treasurer of the group and Tom Page, instructor in political science, is parlementarian. Four members of the K. U. chapter of the Young Democrats are committee members for the coming meeting. Collins is chairman of the finance committee, Page is chairman of the constitution committee, Robert Brock, College senior, is a member of the resolutions committee and Paul Wolf, president of the local group, is a member of the credential committee. The meeting of the Collegiate council of the Young Democrats is to be held in conjunction with that of the statewide group. Phillip Hill, 1st year law student, and Miss Evelyn Homichiol, College senior, are the council representatives for the University organization. Some Ambition For Man.104 Marilboro, Mass.—(U.P.)-The ambition of 104-year-old Dennis Sullivan is to live as long as his mother did. She died in Ireland at the age of 108. Official Bulletin Tau Sigma Reds, 5 p.m. today, Robinson gym. Friday. April 28 People working on Tau Sigma posters meet 7 p.m. Wednesday, May 5, 330 Strong hall. Newman club invites all Catholic students to meet 2 p.m. Saturday. St. John's church to march in "I Am an American Day" parade. International club dance for Allied officers from Ft. Leavenworth, 9 p.m. tonight, Palm room, Memorial Union. Everyone invited. Ward T regular meeting, 6:30 p.m. Monday, training school at 7 p.m. Miss Poor, Memorial Union. Miss Miss Person, speaker. All members attend. Engineering Exposition bills must be turned in to Dean's office, 111 Marvin hall, or to Dwane Crowl, 1602 Louisiana before Monday, May 1. Mathematical colloquium, special meetings, 5 p.m. Monday and Tuesday, 203 Strong. Prof. W. W. Rogosinski, Oklahoma A. and M., "The Principle of Subordination." Ward PZ meeting, 6:30 p.m. Monday, 206 Fraser. Three Graduate Students Finish Reading Tests Three graduate students in Spanish have taken their reading list examinations for the master of arts degree. They are Laurence M. Finney, Helen A. Bigelow, and Flora Flores. The reading list examinations are preliminaries to the oral examination required for a master's degree. Miss Bigelow and Miss Flores plan to receive their degrees in June and Mr. Finney will be graduated in August. University Daily Kansan Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence账单 $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Unknown. Mail to Lawrence Department of Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. Profs Discuss Careers In Great Bend Three University professors will address students of the Great Bend High school at their "Career Day" assembly today. They will speak on subjects related to the fields they are teaching at the University. The speakers are: H. A. Ireland, professor of geology; T. J. Geraughty, assistant professor of architecture; and Emil L. Telelf, assistant professor of journalism. The purpose of the "Career Day" is to bring traveled and experienced personnel to the high school to talk to groups of students, especially juniors and seniors who are interested in planning for their vacation. Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers FOR THE SPRING PARTIES Shawl collar styles, also in bamboo shade. WHITE SUMMER TUXEDOS A $26.50 Tux shirts $6.50 Tux ties $1.00 Tux trousers $10.95 Stud sets $ 3.50 The Palace 843 Mass. The Good Ones Are Going Fast! Yes, we mean the tickets to "West O' Abilene,"the 1950 College Daze production. The best seats are getting scarce. Get Yours Now a musical comedy of the old west. WEST O'ABILENE Plenty of Shootin' - Plenty of Romancin' - Plenty of Entertainment It Begins NEXT TUESDAY Fraser Theatre and Runs WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, & FRIDAY Price - 75c (At Student Union Activities Office) You'll Be Sorry If You Miss It. 8:00 p.m. 28,1950 FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE end alism ber Day" bereienced to talk especially are in- eir vo- 4.4 ertisers Military Ball At 9 Tonight The air force, navy, and army R.O.T.C. cadets will hold their spring Military Ball at 9 p.m. today in the Military Science building. This year more than 500 cadets will have as their theme the "Spirit of 50." Intermission entertainment will be directed by Cadet (army) Myron Thomason, master of ceremonies. A painted backdrop carrying out the theme depicts an army cadet, a midshipman, and an air force cadet as the fife player, flag bearer and drummer. The flag carried by the midshipman in the backdrop is the University of Kansas flag. The first of four acts at intermission will be the presentation of the queen, Nancy Anderson, College sophomore. She will be escorted by Midshipman Kenneth Dubach, education sophomore. In the third act, Bautista Murillo, business junior, and Rose Marie Novtay, fine arts freshman, will present Spanish dances from Murillo's native country, Costa Rica. Preston Hunter and Barry Davis, Colleges juniors, will give a sword and saber demonstration. The second act will feature the Sigma Phi Epsilon quartet. Preceding the ball, members of Pershing Rifles and their guests will attend a dinner at the Eldridge hotel. ALEXANDRA BURTON AND RALPH KING Kansan Photo by Hank Brown. Wall, Strickler Gamma Phi Beta sorority announces the pinning of Miss Bonnie Strickler, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. E. B. Strickler, Chickashka, Okla., to Mr. Douglas Wall, son of Mr. and Mrs. Stone Wall, Moran, Kan. The announcement was made at dinner April 22 by Miss Donna Schmaus. She was assisted by Miss Shirley Siefkin, Miss Marjorie Herschberger, Miss Jeanine Willis, Miss Margaret Longwood, and Miss Jane Hollingsworth. Picnics, Formals Highlight Social Calendar Strickler-Wall Pi K A Tea Dance Miss Strickler wore a purple orchid and her housemother, Mrs Ralph Park, received a corsage of dutch iris. tv. At Lake Shawnee Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity will entertain with a tea dance at the chapter house from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday. Mrs. P. H. Klinkenberg and Mrs. Charles Mandigo will be the chaperons. Waterfront Costume Party Co-ops To Give Picnic Party At Lake Shawnee Delta Chi fraternity will have a party at four from 3 to 4 on Saturday, Claperons will Mrs. H. J. Overhalter, Mrs. Dean, Nite, and Mr. and Mrs. Lee Davis of Topeka. Acacia To Dance Co-ops To Give Picnic Interco-op will hold a picnic and party at Lone Star from 4 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Hiebert, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Witt, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Eichorn will be the chaperons. Pi Phi's To Entertain Acacia fraternity will hold a dance at the Community building from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday. The chaperons will be Mrs. T. L Collier, Mr. and Mrs. Max Fessler, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Heysinger. Pi Beta Phi sorority members will entertain with a dance at Lone Star Lodge from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday, Mrs. Dean Alt, Mrs. A. J. McKay, and Mrs. J. H. Kraemer will attend as chaperons. Read the Daily Kansan daily. Waterfront Costume Party Sterling Hall will hold a Waterfront Costume party at the house from 8:30 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Chaperons will be Mrs Althea Galloway, Mrs. Lorraine Gossey, Miss Carlotta Nellis, Mrs. C. L. Veatch, and Mrs. J. R. Scott. Coe's Drug 1347 Mass. Drugs - Drug Sundries Drinks - Sandwiches We Deliver 10 To 10 Phone 234 Dance for Alpha Chi's A D Pi's Will Have Picnic Alpha Chi Omega sorority will entertain with a formal dance in the Crystal Room of the Eldridge hotel from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Chaperons will be Mrs. Ralph Park, Mrs. M. M. Kreiger, Mrs. W. S. Shaw, Mrs. Kenneth M. Whyte, Mrs. Eugene Alford, and Mrs. F. L. MacCreary. A D Pi's Will Have Picnic Alpha Delta Pi sorority will entertain with a picnic at Roney's farm from 12:30 to 4 p.m. Saturday. Chaperons will be Mrs. Thomas Clark and Mrs. Andrew McKay. Carruth Hall Dance Carruth Hall will have a dance at the house from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Chaperson will be Mrs. Treva Brown, Mrs. H. M. Miller, and Miss Marjorie Austin. Phi Kappa Founders' Day Phi Kappa fraternity will observe its Founders' day with a dinner at the chapter house today. Jerome S. Koehler, national president of the fraternity, will be present. Sig Ep Convention Here This Weekend Phi Kappa Founders' Day Kansas Gamma chapter of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity will be host to seven chapters from Nebraska, Missouri, and Kansas for the 13th District convention today and Saturday at the chapter house. W. E. Rogers, district governor, will represent the national chapter at the meeting. Speakers in addition to Mr. Rogers will be Dr. L. C. Woodruff, dean of men, who will address a Saturday session; and Dr. E. R. Elbel, professor of physical education, who will speak at a banquet Sunday. The fraternity will entertain the guests at a dance Saturday. The program of the convention will include discussions of fraternity policies on rushing and pledging, pledge training, scholarship, social program, chapter house management, public relations, and chapter financing. A model initiation will also be held. Members of the convention committee are Eugene Bullinger, secretary; John Whealan, treasurer; Robert Mathers, scholarship chairman; Vern Sutton, social chairman; and William Snook, pledge trainer. Sessions-Talley Miss Sessions is an education senior and a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Mr. Talley was graduated from the School of Business, in 1948, and is a member of Sigma Nu fraternity. The Rev. and Mrs. Will Anderson Sessions, Jr., of Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Toveylou Sessions, to Mr. Harry Leslie Talley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Luther Talley, also of Kansas City. Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will have its spring formal at the Ur. on from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Mrs. Abby Henry, Mrs. Glenn Porter, Mrs. John Scroggs, Mrs. James A: Hooke, Mrs. Edna Ramage, Mrs. R. G. Rock, and Miss Hermina Zipple will attend as chaperons. Chi O Dinner Dance The wedding will be June 17 at the Independence Boulevard Christian church, Kansas City, Mo. Kappa Spring Formal Chi Omega sorority will entertain with a formal dinner dance at the chapter house from 6 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Chaperons will be Mrs. Richard Blume, Mrs. Thomas Clark, and Mrs. Charles Mandigo. Watkins hall will have a hayrack ride at 5:30 p.m. Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Macceau and Miss Julia Ames Willard will be the chaperons. Watkins Hayrack Ride IT'S NOT TOO LATE !! You Can Still Make That Summer Trip To Europe WITH INTERNATIONAL YOUTH PARIS BY AIR $360 ROUND TRIP Ward-Chittenden Flights to LONDON and ROME Write or phone TOM MILLER AND MARY SCHNEIDER Kansan Photo by Hank Brown Chittenden, Ward International Youth Inc. 150 Broadway, New York 7, N.Y. COrtland 7-0362 To assure passage write immediately Mr. and Mrs. Byron R. Ward of Topeka have announced the engagement of their daughter, Marilyn, to Mr. Bruce E. Chittenden, son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Chittenden of Norton. It's the Frame of Your Old Furniture That's Valuable - Misses Leah Helen Ross and Phyllis McFarland told of the engagement at dinner Sunday. The theme of the announcement, "It's A Gamble," was carried out by table decorations of dice and cards. Mrs. Richard Blume, housemother, and Miss Ross and Miss McFarland wore white carnations. Miss Ward wore red roses. Guests at the dinner were Miss Marcia McCue, Mr. Vernon Archer, and Mr. Wayne Hescher of Topeka, and Mr. Jack Ward, College junior. The wedding will be Sunday, August 27. Miss Ward is a member of Alpha Phi sorority, and Mr. Chittenden attends Washburn university. A man working on a brick chair. Don't discard those worn pieces and lose that valuable frame. Let our skilled creftsmen give them new life and beauty with new upholstering. SPECIAL: Plastic top dinette set at our cost with every custom built living room suite. Dingman Furniture 1803 Mass. Ph. 1503 LINDLEY'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 Put Pep In The Pocket Book—Put KANSAN Classifieds On The Job. MONTH-END CLEARANCE Formerly Now SUITS $49.95 $29.00 35.00 19.00 DRESSES up to 22.95 4.85 (limited number) DRESSES 12.95 to 22.95 8.85 SKIRTS up to 15.00 7.00 SKIRTS 10.95 3.00 Corduroy PEDALPUSHERS 7.95 5.85 T SHIRTS 2.50 1.50 JACKETS 22.95 12.00 Campus WEST Across from Lindley $ \circ $ PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1950 KU After Three Drake Titles As usual, Kansas trackmen are setting their sights high this week end when they perform at the 41st annual Drake Relays. Coach Bill Easton's main objectives are three relay championships and at least one Drake record. K. U.'s big three relay entries will be in the two-mile, four-mile, and distance medley events. They won all three at the Texas Relays early this month. A week ago at their own Kansas Relays they went after only the four-mile and won it. That means that they would own an unprecedented Kansas sweep of a single Texas-Kansas-Drake relay title should the four-mile championship come back to Mt. Oread. Kansas teams last year won at least one relay in each meet for the first time in Jayhawker history. But never before has the Crimson and Blue been victorious at the three Relays in the same event. Cliff Abel, All-American Pat Bowers, Capt, Copt B Karnes, and Herb Semper will be the K.U. quartet gunning for the two- and four-mile titles. Should they get good weather (today's forecast for Iowa is cool and cloudy), they might get the American intercollegiate record of 17:16.1 today they'd hoped to better at the Mt. Oread Olympics. And if they are to win the two-mile and distance medley, stiff competition could boost them past the Drake records Saturday. Chances are the Jayhawkers will find their toughest competition in the distance medley. Against them will be mighty Michigan and Wisconsin. Here in Lawrence the past Saturday, the Wolverines upset Wisconsin's defending champions when sophomore Don McEwen ran the nation's premier miler, Don Gehrmann, into the ground over the mile anchor leg. Michigan got a new Relays record of 10:09.7 then. At Texas the Jayhawkers wers far off that pace in 10:21.9. The Drake record is 10:06.1. Sophomore Semper drops from the four-mile team and is replaced by Bob Devinein or Emil Schutzel to make up the medley entry. Opponents in the two-mile won't be lacking. Texas surprised here a week ago in upsetting Oklahoma A. and M. in 7:43.9 and both will be there. Kansas, defending champ in the event at Drake after a surprise themselves in 1949, ran 7:46 in Texas. The Drake mark is 7:41.8. One big difficulty Easton's four-mile team has had in its quest for the intercollegiate mark is lack of competition. That may be remedied today with two foes missing from the Texas and Kansas meets. Ohio State, with the sensational Leonard Truce at anchor, and Illinois will be on the Des Moines scene. The K.U. time in Texas was 17:20.9, at Kansas 17:34.3, the Drake record is 17:29.6. Easton's top individual entry will be hurdler Jack Greenwood. The timber-topping Jayhawkwer failed even to qualify for the finals in the 120-yard highs here last Saturday, and he was defending champion, the eve of the race to make up his list of prestige. He also will run a leg of the mile relay with Schutzel, Jim Dinsmore, and Devinney or Dave Fisher. Other individual entries are Bob Brady, discus; Devinney, low hurdles; Bob Drumm, javelin, and Del Norris and Bill Richardson, high jump. 110 Girls Play On Hill Saturday By MONA MILLIKAN An expected total of 110 girl. from 12 Kansas high schools will come to the University Saturday for a "play day" sponsored by the Women's Athletic association. They will participate in a program of sports and entertainment lasting from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. The girls will come from Atchison, Haskell, Hoisington, Kansas City (Shawnee Mission and Rosedale), Lawrence, Olathe, Osawatomi, Paola, Russell, Tonganoxie, and Topeka. Frances Pence and Lorraine Ross are co-chairmen of the planning committee for the event which is designed as a service function to provide a "get-together," as well as to cultivate good sportsmanship under the guidance of qualified women. It will also give practical experience to majors in physical education. Included in the planning committee are Nancy Smart, placards and symbols; Barbara Smith, programs; Jackie Simpson and Sydney Ashton, entertainment at lunch; and Vinita Bradshaw, education freshman, awards. Members of Gamma Phi Beta sorority, the Quack club, and Tau Sigma will assist W.A.A. in the entertainment. Team captains will supervise the girls after registration and will be responsible for them the rest of the day, as well as serving as referees for the various sports. The captains are Margo Smith and Dorothy Wood, education seniors; Geneva Fleshman, Jane Koelzer, Nancy Moore, Beverly Pepper, Elisemarie Randell, Betty Thomas, and Margaret Wellman, education juniors; and Sue Neff, Sally Todd, and Chloe Warner, education sophomores. Saturday morning the girls will register and be organized into 12 mixed teams. Team symbols will be given out to keep the groups separate and points will be awarded to and winning teams. The high-point group will receive an award at the end of the day. Shirley Mickelson, College sophomore, is official scorekeeper. Following the schedule of events with students in charge: 8 a.m.— registration, Lois Lacy, Education junior, and Kathleen McKelvy, College senior. 8:30-Get-acquainted games, Arlene Hill, education junior, and Ada Watson, education sophomore. 9:00-Volleyball, Frances Pence education junior. 9:45 - Relays, Rita Carl, education sophomore, and Miss Hill. 10:30- Quack club, Miss Ruth Hoover, associate professor of physical education will supervise, aided by Miss Randell. 11:15—Lunch with entertainment provided by Gamma Phi Beta sorority and Tau Sigma, Miss Jackye Simpson and Miss Ashton. 1 p.m. softball, Miss Ross. The schedule is completed by 2:30 p.m. and the girls will begin to leave by 3:00. Harmon Scores Upset With Triple Play Winners of Thursday's women's softball games protected their perfect records despite gloomy skies and a chilly wind, with one team scoring an upset to do so. Harmon co-op squeezed past Kappa Kappa Gamma 13 to 12 and the game was called there in the bottom of the fifth with no one out. Scoring a decided upset, the co-op team pulled the game out of the fire in the top of the fourth with a triple play originating in left field to retire the Kappa's. Batteries were Kesterson and Hopkke or the wintry ones. A Kappa Kappa Kappa. Delta Gamma swamped Gamma Phi Beta 34 to 1 for their second vic- Fishing AND CAMPING IN THE Quetico - Superior Wilderness Complete outfitting service $3.50 a day with Grumman airmi- num e canoes. Food, your choice of drinks. $50 page Goose Country pic- ture booklet mailed postpaid anywhere for $1.00 "BASSWOOD LAKE LODGE" on Milu, Canadian border. Main Lodge and 20 dog cabins. Modern bathroom facili- ties. American Plan rates $8.00 and up. Also boasts keeping cubs. Coppedge and Tessendorf went all the way for the winners, but Temruth used van der Smissen, Grice, and Meils as hurlers, with the same trio plus Millikan taking turns behind the plate. despite the losers' 6-run rally in the fourth inning. A.D. Pi pitching completely handcuffed Temrith batters while their own hitting was consistent. WILDENESS QUITFITERS One E.J. MINNESOTA tory. It was a sloppy game all the way, with fielding errors and slow pitching largely responsible for the loss. For the losers Bradshaw relieved Schmaus on the mound and Carpenter was behind the plate, while Dodt Hendershot won for Delta Gamma. Alpha Delta Pi pitched their way to a 20 to 15 victory over Temtruh VISA Let's Face It - There's no other place in town where you can get such a combination of—— - Delicious Food - Quick, Friendly Service - Pleasant, Restful Atmosphere as at Duck's Tavern 824 Vermont Intra-Squad Teams To Battle Saturday Probable Offensive Starters | Reds | | Blues | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Lyn Smith | LE | Orbon Tice | | Bob Talkington | LT | S. P. Garnett | | Art Spratt | LG | Jack Luschen | | Wint Winter | C | Bud Roberts | | John Idoux | RG | George Abel | | George Mrkonic | RT | Mike McCormack | | Bill Schaake | RE | Aubrey Linville | | Jerry Bogue | QB | Chet Strehlow | | Charley Hoag | LH | Wade Stinson | | Hal Cleavinger | RH | Dean Wells | | Galen Fiss | FB | John Amberg | Coach J. V. Sikes will send hisVarsity football team through its fourth intra-squad football game Saturday at 1:30 p.m.in Memorial stadium as the team finishes the fifth week of spring practice.With the squad evenly divided, the game should be a highly spirited affair. The three previous games have® been highlighted by the high-powered running of halfbacks Charley Hoag, Dean Wells, and Wade Stinson, and fullbacks John Amberg, Galen Fiss, Bud Laughlin, and Bob Brandeberry. Freshmen Hoag and Fiss and sophomores Laughlin and Brandeberry are expected to add plenty of speed and bruising power to the Jayhawkers' ground attack this fall. Kansas has all three of the past year's top receivers returning in "We expect to do more passing in Saturday's game than we have in the previous contests," Coach Sikes said. The running attack this spring has been one of the highest time in three years. Leading passers have been Bogue, Hoag, and Wells. KU Photographer Takes Second Place ends Lyn Smith, Bill Schaake, and Aubrey Linville. A second place ribbon was won by Robert Rose, director of the University photographic bureau, for a picture entered in the commercial division of the Kansas Professional Photographers association convention in Wichita Monday. The award winning picture was of a lamp, the brass base of it printed in tones, Mr. Rose said, and the remainder dark. VARSITY Phone 132 for Sho Time Today-Saturday Hopalong Cassidy "Lumber Jack" and Joan Woodbury "Cipher Bureau" Ch. & Burke Couture Ch. 6 "Bruce Gentry" SUN MON TUES Buster Crabbe "JUNGLE MAN" and Buster Crabbe "Jungle Siren" plus Late News Cartoon 12c 39c De Sica's "BEST FILM IN 30 YEARS" —Rene Clair in Time and Vogue "BICYCLE THIEF" STARTS THURSDAY Patee SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT PHONE 321 STARTS Sat Owl 11:15 FIRST TIME SUNDAY IN LAWRENCE A Most Unusual Love Story! SHE NEVER MEANT TO FALL IN LOVE! ... BUT SHE DID ... AND IT CHANGED THE LIVES OF FOUR PEOPLE! The Red Danube The Red Danube Walter PIDGEON · Ethel BARRYMORE Peter LAWFORD · Janet LEIGH Angela LANSBURY FEATURE TIMES 1:00, 3:11, 5:22, 7:33 and 9:44 NOW Ends Saturday "HOLIDAY AFFAIR" Added Color Cartoon Late News Continuous Shows—Open 12:45 Patee PHONE 311 28,1950 FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE h its memorial With offa and Kansas Meets Cyclones, Tigers By BOB NELSON Kansas' baseball squad will open a four-game week end road trip this afternoon playing Iowa State in the first of two games at Ames. Coach Bill Hogan will start his mound ace, Carl Sandefur, as the Jayhawkers seek victory No. 2 in their fourth conference game. Iowa State, third place team in 1949, is still looking for its first win in Big Seven play. The Cyclones have lost a pair of games to Oklahoma and two to the Missouri Tigers, all on the road. Today's contest will be their first home conference game. BIG SEVEN STANDINGS Conference Games W. L. Pct. Colorado 1 0 1.000 Oklahoma 3 1 750 Nebraska 3 1 750 Missouri 3 3 500 Kansas State 2 2 500 KANSAS 1 2 333 Iowa State 4 0 400 next home game. Don Burgess, junior righthander, will oppose Sandefur in the series' opener. Burgess has won two and lost two to pace the Iowa State pitching department. He lost a 5 to 1 game to Oklahoma's Jack Shirley, one of the conference's top hurriers, and a 5 to 1 game to Missouri's Bob Smith. Iowa State will play Kansas two games here on Monday and Tuesday, May 8 and 9, in the Jayhawkers next home games. In Saturday's game, Coach Hogan will send Herman Philipp to the mound in his first starting role after making a creditable showing as a relief hurler in four of the Jayhawkers' first five games. Philipp, a slender sophomore righthander, has shown excellent control to gain a starting role along with Sandefur and Guv Mabry. Iowa State is expected to start Sterling Singley in Saturday's game. By winning both games, Iowa State could push the Jayhawkers into the cellar. I-M Softball Slate, Results Saturday's Schedule Independent "A" Field 1 Oread v. Bronchos 2 Phi Gam v. Sigma Pi 3 Phi Psi v. Sig Ep 4 Lambda Chi v. A.T.O. 5 Sigma Nu v. A. E Pi 6 Delta Tau v. Beta 7 Phi Delt v. Sigma Chi Thursday's Results A.R.O.T.C. 1, Y.M.C.A. 11 Battenfeld 17, Laissez Faires 4 Jim Beam 11, Theta Tau 2 Navy 16, Sterling-Oliver 6 Spooner-Thayer 7, A.I.E. 6 Jay Crows 25, S.A.M. 14 Wesley 25, Air Screws 20 It's All In The Know How Abington, Mass. — (U.P.) — T two youngsters, too small to reach a fire alarm box, showed firemen how they turned in a false alarm simply by standing on the seat of their tricycle and pulling the lever. ENDS TONITE The Most Unusual Entertainment of 1950 ENDS TONITE THE 3RD MAN Plus: Late News Events Cartoon "Quack A Doodle Doo" JAYHAWKER L. C. "Cap" Timm, Cyclone baseball coach, is continuing a rebuilding program at Iowa State, started the past year, and has built his 1950 club around nine returning lettermen. This list includes the three top pitchers on the 1949 club—Burgess, Singley, and Ken Johnson, all juniors. Coach Timm's club lists no less than 15 sophomores, 12 juniors, and three seniors. Several of his best hitters are first-year men and have added scoring punch to go along with better than average pitching. In winning three out of eight games this year, Iowa State is hitting .247 as compared to a .193 average compiled by the Jayhawkers through their first five games. Iowa State's 1950 Record: Iowa State 0, Ia. St. Teachers 6 Iowa State 10, Ia. St. Teachers 3 Iowa State 5, Simpson 1 Iowa State 8, Simpson 4 *Iowa State 1, Oklahoma 5 *Iowa State 5, Oklahoma 9 *Iowa State 1, Missouri 5 *Iowa State 3, Missouri 4 The Cyclone's infield is built around Capt. Bob Henley, shortstop. His keystone partner is Dale Foell while Bob Sennewald holds down the third base spot. Bob McLuen, a long ball hitter, holds down the first base job. *Big Seven games Won 3. Lost 5. Coach Timm has used a combination of several players in the outfield in order to get the best hitters into the line-up. Johnson, listed as a pitcher, has been playing in left field. Singley when not pitching, is also a fixture in the outfield. Irving Stone, sophomore, is the regular center fielder. Jack Delbridge, junior, and sophomore Ray Stewart give the Cyclones a first class catching staff. Both are good hitters and Delbridge has been used in the outfield to get the most out of his hitting when Stewart is catching. Here is Iowa State's probable batting order with averages: Bob Henley (Capt.), ss .345 Dale Foell, 2b .167 Irving Stone, cf .357 Bob McLuen, 1b .281 Sterling Singley, rf .200 Ken Johnson, lf .273 Bob Sennewald, 3b .217 Ray Stewart, c .286 Doug Burges, p .(2-2) Following Saturday's game, Kansas will move on to Columbia, Mo., where the Jayhawkers play Missouri in games Monday and Tuesday May 1 and 2. Nebraska and Oklahoma, tied for second with 3-1 records, clash today and Saturday at Norman. The Cornhuskers' power-laden club will run into the conference's best pitching one-two punch in Jack Shirley and Jim Kirk, a pair of junior right-handers. Kansas State and Missouri play today and Saturday at Columbia with each club showing a .500 mark in conference play. The Tigers have split even in six games and the Wildcats have broken even in four games. Colorado, leading the Big Seven with a 1-0 record, plays at Colorado college today and Saturday in non-conference games. NOW SHOWING Ends SATURDAY Red Skelton Gloria De Haven "THE YELLOW CAB MAN" STARTS SAT.OWL 11:15 SUNDAY "All I have to do is call him and he'll come running!" That Girl Is Back In Town! HE HAD A Secret CHARM! THE LOWDOWN ON THE PLEASURE-MAD SMART SET! BARBARA STANWYCK JAMES MASON · VAN HEFLIN AVA GARDNER "EAST SIDE, WEST SIDE" CYD CHARISSE SALE SONDERGAARD BY THE AUTHOR OF THE VALLEY M DECISION Feature Times—1:00, 3:13, 5:26, 7:39, 9:37 AVA GARDNER IN "EAST SIDE, WEST SIDE" BY THE AUTHOR OF "THE VALLEY OF DECISION" CYD CHARISSE DAVID SALE CONDERGAARD SOON ON THE WAY "Mother Didn't Tell Me" "Reformer and Redhead" "Wabash Avenue," "Francis" Also Latest News Granada PHONE 94 HURRY . . . Ends Tonite 'STATION WEST' Dick Powell Jane Greer "Movies Are Better Now Than Ever Before" SATURDAY in CINECOLOR Shaggy Brenda JOYCE Robert SHAYNE George TOKEN and "Shaggy" SATURDAY in CINECOLOR "Shaggy" Brendon JOYCE Robert SHAYNE George TOWES and "Shaggy" Come as late as 10:30 to see this feature. . stay for the midnite show at no extra admission charge!!! SATURDAY MIDNIGHT SUN-MON MON Lawrence DRIVE - IN Theatre MY, OH MY, the LAWYS! MY Friend IRMA with John LUND Marie WILSON on stage Diana Lynn Don DeForee instage Dean MARTIN and Jerry LEWIS ALSO Disney CENTER ALSO Disney Cartoon "Pluto's Surprise" OPEN NIGHTLY AT 7 P.M. - Phone 260 for Sho Times Why Be 'Cash Out' When You Can 'Cash In' With KANSAN Classified? STRAP ON YOUR T-BELTS! STRAP ON YOUR SEAT-BELTS! THE SCREEN'S ROARING WITH JET-THRILLS THAT HIT YOU FASTER THAN SOUND! the FIRST STORY OF THE JET PLANES and the fearless sky-jockeys who fly them! P the FIRST STORY OF THE JET PLANES and the fearless sky-jockeys who fly them! HUMPHREY BOGART ELEANOR PARKER CHAIN LIGHTNING HUMPHREY BOGART ELEANOR PARKER RAYMOND MASSEY RICHARD WHORF Flight Times 1:10, 3:05, 5:00, 6:55, 9:00 BOGEY'S A TEST PILOT FOR JETS -and does he move fast! LATE NEWS—COLOR CARTOON "OFTEN AN ORPHAN" JAYHAWKER SATURDAY Thru Tuesday NOTE: "CHAIN LIGHTNING" will be shown on the Saturday night prevue. . . Come as late as 11:00 o'clock Saturday night and see a complete show. night and see a complete show. PAGE SLX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS FRIDAY,APRIL 28,1950 The Editors Report - NATIONAL MUSIC WEEK Festival Of Sound by C. A. Burmeister Ed. Note: We have a treat for you today. Mr. Burmeister, graduate student in music education and Director of Instrumental Music, Central Missouri State college in Warrensburg, has done us the service of writing the following editorial. We highly recommend it for it is excellent reading. National Music week is a city, county, state, and nationwide celebration in honor of music. It is a spontaneous participation, through performance or listening, in the most democratic of the arts. It is a seven-day "drive" by the friends of music to make more widespread the enjoyment of music by the general public and to extend the recognition of its value as an individual and a community asset. The first Music week was held in Boise, Idaho in 1919. Following New York's first Music week in 1920 (which was widely publicized), National Music week originated as a series of local observances. It was organized as a national celebration in 1924. The first week in May was chosen as a time for annual observance. First chairman of the national committee was that noted patron of the arts, Otto H. Kahn. Calvin Coolidge was the first honorary chairman and each President since then has accorded his moral support to the affair by accepting titular chairmanship of an honorary committee composed of the governors of every state and territory in the Union. The active national committee is composed of the presidents of 34 national organizations including the Music Educators National conference, National Federation of Music clubs, Music Teachers National association, General Federation of Women's clubs, the D.A.R., Federal Council of churches, and service groups. National Music week will be observed at the University in a full week of varied activities beginning Sunday. There will be a rich offering of musical programs open to students and the general public without charge. In addition to the programs of the Music Week festival proper, students and the public will have an opportunity on Sunday, May 7, to hear a concert of the music of Bach performed by students and faculty members under the sponsorship of Phi Mu Alpha, professional music fraternity. National Music week is an opportunity for everyone to subject himself to the substance of the fine arts by attending these outstanding offerings in the field of music. During the past two years, the University has placed increasing emphasis on the Humanities. The Music Week festival intensifies and focuses attention on a fine arts program which throughout the year offers many opportunities for continuing participation in the best of music. Under the guidance of Dean D. M. Swarthout of the School of Fine Arts, the University Concert course has presented six major attractions at a nominal cost to students. The school is the source of scores of concerts and recitals. What is the dynamic potency of the most moving of arts which we honor during Music week? In a sermon delivered at Plymouth church, Brooklyn, in June 1872, Henry Ward Beecher expressed it. . . If you rise still higher, out of the tribe of uninstructed animals into the human race, you find superior musical gifts and endowments. There the sense of music takes possession of the understanding, and of the whole realm of taste, and of the heart itself. And the tongue by which men evolve the highest thoughts and feelings is the tongue of music . . . So the griefs which come and go in a day can be easily soothed; and the sorrows and cares which will not go can be made tolerable by the sweet sid of song. "Joy can be excited out of sadness. Patience can be inspired out of discouragement. The sweetest and richest experiences can be attained through the voice of music." AMERICA'S TRAGEDY: B-Class Citizens by Dale Fields Saturday, many eyes will be focused on Lawrence. Flags will be flying that day, bands will ring out with stirring marches, military and veterans' organizations will march, speeches will be given. Yet while famous dignitaries tell us of our splendid heritage of freedom, there will be some in Saturday's crowd who have only the vagueest idea what that freedom actually means. These persons will be of a different color, a different race than those dominating the day's festivities. The climax will come when the huge parade groups around the bandstand and pledges allegiance to the United States. This is the schedule for "I Am An American Day." They will listen to speeches telling of equality; but they will find Lawrence restaurants still closed to them. They will be allowed to mingle with the crowd pledging allegiance to its country; but they will have to sit in a special section if later they attend the theater. After watching school children march side by side in the parade, they will send their own children back to a segregated elementary school. These people are America's B-class citizens. TODAY'S MAIL Hecklers We at K. U. have had trouble before with our spectators at athletic events. Baseball is no exception. Sir: When we play other teams on their diamond, their students join together and cheer for their team WIN OR LOSE, and razz the opposing team. When we play on our own pasture, students yell for us only when we are ahead and razz us when we are behind. Baseball is known for its hecklers but why should K. U. students run down their own team. If the boys in the stands don't want to yell for us and think they can do better, they should remember that uniforms are still being checked out at the stadium. If you aren't a good enough player to come out and try for the baseball team, you can still be a good enough sport to yell for the team that represents your own school. Education senior Next Sour Owl Spiced Up A Bit? Carl Ellis By Bibler "What will the next issue of the Sour Owl be like, Doug?" a student asked Doug Jennings the other day. "Well," replied Doug, journalism senior and editor of the campus humor magazine, "I figure it has to sell, so we're planning to spice it up a bit." "But, Doug," complained the student. "A humor magazine doesn't have to contain suggestive cartoons and off-color jokes in order to sell." "Famous last words my boy." retorted Doug. "Those are the identical words uttered by the magazine's faculty adviser last semester." "Where is he now?" inquired the student. "In a breadline," said Doug, "And if the next issue of the Sour Owl fails to sell, I shall join him there." "Then," summed up the student, "You plan to make the next issue of the Sour Owl a risque one?" But on that point Doug refused to risque statement. The oldest still-existing tax-supported library is at Peterborough, N. H. Daily Kansan University Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS News Room Adv. Room K.U. 251 K.U.376 Member of the Kansas Press Assn. National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service,420 Madison Ave., New York City. James Morris Editor in Chief Little Man On Campus ONE WAY OLD PROF SMARF WORK WORK WORK TRUE STORY FICTION COMICS LOVE LINE SOUGH SYRUB MAN'S OFF! BILDER "Yeah he was a good student until this semester. Last year he promised his girl they'd be married when he graduated this spring." AMERICA'S SUPER— by Robert Sigman Detective Force Times do change. Yet even the greenest freshman on the Hill can recall when Congress limited its activities to lawmaking. Today its business seems to be more detective work than legislating. Is this a natural trend in a working democracy? If Congress does develop into a super-detective force, will another way of passing laws originate? Is it possible that Congressmen have so much spare time between refusals to pass President Truman's proposals that they must play "Dick Tracy" to occupy themselves? It is rather doubtful that any Congressman can do a top-notch, really efficient job as a law-maker while he is carrying on a full-scale investigation of Hollywood's morals, or how badly the Navy navigates its ships, or something equally as foreign to the job of legislating. If the state department really is loaded to the gills with communists, then the job of rooting them out should be given to the agency best qualified to root them out—the F.B.I. J. Edgar Hoover and his boys did a superb job during the war of anticipating the moves of subversive agents of the Axis powers. There is good reason to believe they could do the same with communists. With Congress split into investigating committees, what is going to happen to our lawmaking body? The thing has long passed the stage where it could be called a time-filler. With the committees investigating everybody in sight—including themselves—it is now a fulltime job. I am AN AMERICAN Tomorrow is I AM AN AMERICAN Day. On that day we honor all our new citizens who for the first time this year can join us in saying I AM AN AMERICAN. Let all of us-new citizens and old—work together to preserve our hard-earned heritage of freedom. Drake's Bakery 907 Mass. er Phone 61 5 FRIDAY, APRIL 28,1950 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Lawrence Church Schedule WEST SIDE PRESBYTERIAN 605 Maine Daniel Knox Ford, minister Bible school, 9:45 a. m. The Rev. Mr. Ford teaches the University- age class. Morning worship, 11 a. m. Subject: "A Mount of Tragedy." Young People's fellowship, 7 p.m. Study of the gospel of Mark. Evening service, 8 p. m. Sermon: "Lost Men and a Sufficient Savior." Singspiration led by Paul Christian. Wednesday, 6:30 p. m. Choir rehearsal, Archie Klewer, director. Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Prayer and Bible study. Theme: "Why Study the Bible?" THE REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS 1201 Vermont G. R. Norris, pastor Church school, 9:45 a. m. Church school, 9:45 a.m. Morning worship, 11 a. m. W Wallace Smith, member of the Presidency of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, will speak. Mr. Smith, who has been on the 12 apostles of the church, was made counselor to his brother, Pres. Israel Smith, at the World General conference of the church held early this month in Independence, Mo. CHURCH OF CHRIST 1501 New Hampshire W. T. Carter, minister Bible classes, 10 a. m. Bible classes, 10 a. m. Morning worship, 11 a. m. Sermon: "The Beginning of the Church of Christ." Communion, 11:50 a. m. Teacher training class, 7 p. m. Evening service, 8 p. m. Subject: "The Church and Kingdom of Christ." Ladies' Bible class, 2 p. m. Wednesday. Wednesday Bible classes, 8 p. m. FIRST CHRISTIAN FIRST CHRISTIAN 1000 Kentucky H. M. Sippel, minister Worship service and communion, 10:45 a. m. Sermon topic: "A Worthy Vocation." Choir selects "Sweet Lady," by Hadrian and "Was God and I," by Sepher Sunday school, 9:30 a. m. University class taught by Reginald Strait. M. U. Disciple fellowship, 5:30 p.m. Meyers Hall. Installation of officers FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST 1701 Massachusetts 1701 Massachusetts Sunday school, 9.30 a.m. Sunday service, 11 a.m. Subject: English, history 'Everlasting Punishment.' ST. JOHN'S CATHOLIC 1229 Vermont The Rev George Towle, pastor Masses, 8, 9, and 10 a. m. Newman club meeting after the 10 o'clock mass. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN FIRST PRESBYTERIAN 9th and Vermont Sunday school, 11 a. m. Morning worship, 11 a. m. Observance of "Music Week Sunday." Choir selections; "Hallejah Chorus" from "The Messiah" by Handel and "As Discord 'Neath Master's Hand" by Andrews. Sermon topic: "Spiritual Vitamin D." Theodore H. Aszman, minister Westminster fellowship, 5:30 p.m. Westminster house, 1212 Eread. IMMANUEL LUTHERAN 17th and Vermont Norman Brandt, pastor Bible class 10 a.m. Norman Brandt, pastor Male class, 15. a.m. Morning worship, 11 a. m. The Rev. L. W. Drahein of Kansas City, Kan. will speak. Lecture series at 7:30 p. m. Monday on "Chief Teachings of Lutheranism," at 1538 Vermont. Congregation night, 7 p. m. Friday. Dinner and motion picture: "Beyond Our Own Horizon." Kansan Classified Advertising Phone K.U. 376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepté with the understanding that the order will be called in during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University by someone else. Journalism bldg, not later than 3:45 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 FRESH shrimp served every day at the Mission. Inn 452 a plate. 1904 Mass. 3 ON MOTHER'S Day say "I Love You!" with a box of assorted crescent and nut filled chocolates from the DIXIE CARAMEL CORN SHOP $1.25 Five pouches for $6.95. Wrapped free free shipping THE DIXIE CARAMEL CORN SHOP, 842 Mass. 3 MOTOROLA TV Portable. Used only 3 months. Unpaid balance only $99.40. See at B.F. Goodrich. Easy terms if desired. B.F. Goodrich Co., 929 Mass. SAILBOAT. Rhodes Bantam. Built by Skanateles. Used two seasons. Nylon jib and mainsail. Donald Kay. 1603-R. 1 GOLF Clubs, 7 irons and 3 woods with bag. Good condition and reasonably priced. Front Apartment, 820% Mass. 3 *40 CHEVROLET 2 door, heaters, water exceptionally excellent. Works on this one. Even more expensive on this one. One owner. See at Vern Schneider Motors, 1010 Mass. Phone 424. 28 LIKE NEW Zenith Trans Oceanic portable 49 model boat. Booster mounted underground. Underwood portable typewriter. Need to sell quick. Call 2768R or see at 1116 Mass. after 6 p.m. 2 WALNUT full-sized bed with immersed mattress. seen old. Excellent compass. 826WW 826WW 2 FINEST TELEVISION—Best in sets and serials at lowest prices. New shipments just arrived $87.50 and up. See the best estemation Napoleon Radio and Electric, 826 Vermont. Phone 138. 2 *40 PLYMOUTH. sleek grey, radio, heater. Body in perfect condition. Seats covered. Good transport on radio and Electric, 826 Vermont. Phone 138. 2 BOOK-EASE leaves both hands free for writing or typing, marks any reference section such as vocabulary, etc. Get yours today for only 98s at your Student discount. TRUMPET for sale. Conn 22B in excellent condition, complete with large size liftone case. Call Jim Sellards. 2954. 2 47 CHEVROLET: Maroon, radio, heater, gift, matching seat covers. See to appreciate. Cy Barncord, 19th and Mass. 28 THESES MATERIALS! All weights of thesis quality typing paper, carbon paper, and typewriter ribbons. Student Union Book Store. M4 BUSINESS SERVICE REGULAR DINNERS 49 BUICK Maroon, radio, heater, new white sidewalls. Excellent condition. This one is really a honey. See at Cv Barncord Motors, 19th and Mass. 28 49 CHEVROLET Styleline, Green, heater, good tires. There's plenty of good transport in this one. See to hold up. Vern Wem Motorbikes 1010 Mass, Phone 424. TYPING: Theses, term papers, letters, etc. Regular rates, Prompt, accurate work, Mrs. Schear, Apt. R-36, 1810 La. phone 327217 WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a dignified sales activity representing $75.00 to $125.00 and preponderance basis. Write Mr. W. F. Craddock, Jr., 1006 Grand Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Giving qualifications, school and home address. JYAHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant job. Give your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our one-stop pet shop has everything for fur. Fun, pet gift and Gift Shop. 1218 College St. Ph. 418 THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. Complete overhaul, engine tune-up, body care, maintenance. Pet Gift and Gift Shop. 317 E. 17th. Phone 788 or 18218. TYPING: Theses, Term Papers, Reports, Notes, etc. Prompt Service. Mrs. Sheehan, 1028 Vermont Ph. 1168R TYPING: Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, promotional rates. Prompt attention M - Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601 - Fried Chicken TYPING: Call Hazel Stanley, 2865M for prompt experienced service; 820% Mass ONE PAIR glasses, blue case, plastic for this air at Kansan office and paper for this ad. - Steaks FOUND - Short Orders REGULAR PRICES - RAY'S CAFE - 709 Mass. TRANSPORTATION RIDE WANTED. Kansas City, Mo. to Lawrence and return. Preferably daily. Arrive 8 a.m. Contact Frank Orto, phone 1220 or Kansan Office Box No. 6. 1 FOR RENT Open Sundays NICE COOL rooms, also sleeps porch campus on South. Call 2974J after 4 p.m. SUMMER BARGAINS for boys or couples. Large rooms, twin beds, private kitchenette. Dining room, kitchen. House now under new management. 1213 Ohio. Phone 2917- R. 1 PEARL BRACELET. Sunday, evening REWARD. Betty Brown, phone 353 REWARD. LOST For Mother on Mother's Day The Gift that only you can give— Your Portrait NATIONAL CHAMPION For Mother on Mother's Day The Gift that only you can give— Your Portrait It's a little bit of your heart that goes along with your gift to Mother... so why not make it the gift that only you can give... a portrait of you ... from our studio. O'Bryon STUDIO 1024 Mass. Ph.526 FIRST METHODIST 946 Vermont scar E. Allison, minister Oscar E. Allison, minister Sunday school, 9:30 a.m. Morning worship, 10:50 a. m. Wesleyan choir will sing Parts I and II of "The Creation" by Joseph Haydn. Gerald Carney, choir director, and Sylvia Delicath, organist. Soloists: Jeannette Cass, Donna Rumsey, Betty Lou Richards and Verla Steffey, sopranos; Merton Anderson, tenor; Barry McDaniel, Jerry Delicath and Charles Howard, baritones, and Robrey Beahm, bass. Wesley foundation, 5.30 p. m. Discussion: "The Bible and the Contemporary Mind." Special attention on books of Amos. Westminster Group Elects Delber Robb The fer-de-lance, poisonous American pit viper, reaches a length of seven feet. Delber Robb, College sophomore, will head Westminster fellowship, Presbyterian student group, as moderator for the 1950-51 school year. Vice-modeler will be Marvin Reed, education sophomore. Other newly-elected officers include: Shirley Thomson, education freshman, secretary; Leon Stromire, engineering sophomore, treasurer; Donald Kerle, education sophomore, public relations chairman; Mary Gilles, College sophomore, and Kathryn Conrad, College freshman, Student Religious council representatives; Rita Roney, College sophomore, chairman of Sunday evening fellowship; and Ed Perkins, College sophomore, vice chairman of Sunday evening fellowship. Good Food at Moderate Prices T Fast, Efficient and Courteous Service SPECIAL EVERY DAY! Center-Cut Boneless Pork Chops 75c GEMMELL'S CAFE ALWAYS READY TO SERVE 717 Mass. Cotton Time Means Lawrence Laundry Time - You'll need fast, expert laundry service during those warm days ahead. Our fast service will keep you supplied with cotton blouses, skirts, and dresses. Our expert service will make sure your clothes are given the right treatment for longer wearing. 3 DAY SERVICE PICKUP and DELIVERY MENDING and REPAIRING "QUALITY OUTSTANDING" LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS Phone 383 1001 N.H. PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1950 Conclave Today At KU Tozier Brown, national chancel- tor and legal adviser of Lambda Chi Alpha social fraternity, will speak at a banquet Saturday before approximately 100 delegates and representatives from 14 colleges and universities located throughout the Middle West. The group is meeting in Lawrence this week-end for the fraternity's annual Great Plains conclave. The meetings were to begin at 1 p.m. today with the registration of the delegates. A smoker this evening in the local chapter house will end the first day's activities. Saturday's events will begin with an address to the group by L. C. Woodruff, dean of men. Classes will be held Saturday morning and afternoon in the Union. Fraternity endeavors and interests will be stressed at these meetings. The Lambda Chi Alpha national office will be represented at the conclave by Houston Karnes national vice-president; Cyril Flad, administrative secretary, and Mr. Brown. D. E. F. H. TOZIER BROWN Foreign Officers Visit KU Thirty-seven foreign officers representing 19 nations will visit the University today from the General Staff school at Ft. Leavenworth. As guests of the International club, their tour of the campus will begin with a reception at 7 p.m. in the Union. A club member will act as host for each officer. Twenty-six of the visitors will be accompanied by their vives. From 7 to 9 p.m. there will be a tour of the campus with visits being made to the Museum of Art, Watson library, Strong hall, three organized houses, and the Military Science building. At 9 p.m. the group will return to the Palm room of the Union to be officially greeted by Nehemiah Kronenberg, International club president, and Donald K. Alderson, assistant dean of men, who is faculty advisor to the foreign students enrolled at the University. There will be a dance in the Palm room from 9 p.m. until midnight with intermission entertainment given by members of the club. Miss Dagmar Hasalov, fine arts senior, will sing a series of Hawaiian and South American dances will be given by students enrolled in the University from those countries. Second Clue Says 'Abigail' No Baby Here's the second clue to be used in the search for "Abigail," a mysterious something somewhere on the campus, which is the prizewinning objective in a treasure hunt. The hunt, which is sponsored by the Inter-ward Council of Wards T and P-Z, social organization for independent men, started Thursday and ends Friday, May 5. My name is Abigail You might call me a flapper In 1920 I was older than Capper. Workmen Repair Roof Leaks Two roof leaks in Strong hall and the Journalism building were repaired by workmen from Buildings and Grounds this morning. The leaks were noticed during the rain which began about 8:30 a.m. today. C. J. Posey, Lawrence weather observer, reported 36 of an inch of rain at 11:30 a.m. Photos Show Old Buildings The first of a four section photographic survey of American architecture from 1650 to 1812 will be displayed today through Monday, May 1 on the third floor of Marvin hall. Entitled "From Colony to Nation" the photographs are of famous American buildings and sponsored by the American Federation of Arts, Washington, D.C. the schedule for the complete exhibit is as follows: First section, "Medieval Survivals." Friday through Monday, May 1. Second section, "Colonial Classicism." Monday, May 1 through Thursday, May 4. Third section, "Public Buildings of the Colony and Republic." Thursday, May 4 through Monday, May 8. Final section "Early American City Planning," Monday, May 8 through Wednesday May 10. Parts of the exhibit will show large photographic reproductions, old mansions and national landmarks such as Mount Vernon, Monticello, Westover, the national capitol, and the White House. The entomology open house will be open until 9 p.m., today instead of 7 p.m. as previously announced. Paul B Lester>dean of the College said Entomology Open House To Be Open Until 9 p.m. "We are extending the hour because of public requests. Many of the exhibits are of particular interest to children, and families are invited 'o see the displays,' he said. Professors Attend Atomic Conference Dr. Barr To Speak At Eudora Dr. Harold G. Barr, dean of the School of Religion, will speak at the Evangelical Reform church in Eudora, Sunday. Two members of the University faculty will attend a conference on atomic energy at the Waidorf Astoria hotel in New York City, Friday and Saturday. Dr. Hilden Gibson, professor of political science, and Dr. W. J. Argersinger, associate professor of chemistry, will be the official K.U. delegates. Both Dr. Gibson and Dr. Argersinger gave talks as part of the "Atomic Energy and Man" lecture series. Sponsored by the Nation Associates organization, the conference devoted to a discussion of the atomic and hydrogen bomb, and other weapons of mass destruction. It will also deal with the revolutionary potential of atomic energy, its economic impact, its social effect, and its bearing upon our foreign policy. @ Dr. Argersinger delivered the fourth atomic energy talk March 9, on the role of chemistry in the development of radio activity. He was a group leader on the Manhattan project for two years prior to coming to K.U. Dr. Gibson opened the atomic energy series on Feb. 16, with a talk on "Atomic Energy—Progress or Disaster?" Home Ec Show Will Fete 100 Girls Saturday Nation Associates, whose president is Freda Kirchwhey, editor of the Nation, held a conference in 1945 which is reported to have done much in taking the exclusive control of atomic energy out of military hands. One hundred high school girls are expected to attend a High School day which the home economics department, Omicron Nu, national honorary home economics fraternity, and the Home Economics club will hold at the University Saturday. The object of the program is to give the girls who are attending high schools in Eastern Kansas, a better understanding of the role of home economics in higher education. In the area of foods, the girls will see a demonstration of a foods class in operation presented by Miss Viola associate professor of home economics. The girls will be greeted upon arrival by Miss Edna Hill, professor of home economics, and several home economics students in the morning and will hear a short talk by Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, following lunch in the Palm room. Miss Hill will also speak to the girls on "Careers in Home Economics" later in the day. Featured in the program will be a tour of the home economics department, including the nursery school and home management house. The tour will include various exhibits and demonstrations. One of the outstanding exhibits in the area of clothing design will be special problems completed by Irene Mathes and Marilyn Swenson, College seniors. The women have each designed and constructed a dress which they adapted from historic costumes. The dresses will be modeled on mannequins borrowed from the Museum of Art. Another feature of the program will be a style show, "The Clothes We Wear at K.U." About 35 different costumes, most of which were made in clothing classes, will be shown. Rita Roney, College sophomore, will be the commentator for the show, which will present a fashionable uniform with an emphasis on low cost through home sewing. The costumes will be those worn on an imaginary weekend at K.U. starting with sweaters, skirts blouses, and school suits for Saturday morning classes. These will be followed by Saturday afternoon clothes such as tennis shorts, jeans, windbreakers and clothing suitable for football games. Saturday evening dress will include costumes for both formal and informal parties. For Sunday the outfits will be pajamas and robes for early morning, followed by church outfits, and costumes for teas and concerts. Everybody has Gone Fishing- NO USE ADVERTISING THIS WEEK— Before you go stop to check the fine selection of tackle available Final Sour Owl On Sale Monday A man fishing from a boat. AT KIRKPATRICK'S Sport Shop 715 Mass. The final issue of the Sour Owl for this school year will go on sale Monday. It will feature a double-page layout of campus coeds. In addition it will include a story entitled "Passion Before 10:30" and other articles for the enlightenment of the student body, editor Doug Jennings announced. Rudolph Ganz Plays Monday One of the major attractions of Music week will be the recital of Rudolph Ganz, Swiss-American pianist, at 3 p.m. Monday in Strong auditorium. As a young man he appeared first as a cellist. Mr. Ganz later turned to piano, and with the performance of three concertos before a Berlin audience in 1899, established a reputation that has continued for 51 years. In 1921 he was guest conductor or the St. Louis symphony orchestra. His success there was so great that he was asked to become the permanent conductor of the orchestra. He held the post for six years until he accepted the presidency of Chicago Musical college. As a composer, Mr. Ganz is also nationally known. His "Annual Pictures" and "Four Symphonic Sketches" have been performed at New York, Chicago, San Francisco, and other leading cities in this country. Manager Urges Effective Use Of Personnel A tactful but continuous and forceful attack on the personnel problem, the single remaining prospect for large economies in municipal administration, was urged last night by Clarence E. Ridley, director of the International City Managers association. He spoke to the 60 city managers from six states attending the third annual City Managers institute at the University. "Two-thirds of your budgets go into pay envelopes," Mr. Ridley said. "You can effect only minor economies in the one-third that goes for supplies and equipment because you're tied to the market price. Get on the two-thirds going for personnel. That's where the real waste is and where real economy can be effected by the better utilization of employees." Mr. Ridley said that by the end of 1950 more than a thousand cities would have city managers. "And the only propaganda for the plan is the job you men are doing." Eye YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Duplicated Eye Prescription Duplicates Phone 425 1025 Msg Lawrence Optical Co. Shop At Landrith's This Week End POTATO SALAD, Home Made ...lb. 35c WEINERS, Armours Star ...lb. 49c LUNCH HAM, All Meat ...lb. 49c KRAFT'S KAY CHEDDAR CHEESE ...1/2 lb. pkg. 39c KRAFT'S AMERICAN CHEESE, Sliced ...lb. 49c BUNS, 6 large ...14c POTATO CHIPS, Kitty Clover ...lb. pkg. 59c SWEET PICKLES, Libby Cross Cut ...pint jar 19c PAPER FORKS or SPOONS ...pkg. 12 for 10c PAPER PLATES ..pkg. 15c PAPER MARKINS pkg. 15c Landriths FINER FOODS 1007 Mass. Phone 173 Performance is PROOF Performance "After all, the service itself speaks better than a lot of talk about it." You are cordially invited to acquaint yourself with our Performance. Delbert C. Richardson and nel osciastorers ersirdat goeynorntetenghener ndesndan Insurance Agency Phone 509 927 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass.