1 CENTIMETER = 0.3937 INCHES - 1 METER = 39.37 INCHES OR 3 28083 FEE T OR 1.0936 YDS - 1 INCH= 2.54 CENTIMETERS - 1 DECIMETER= 3.937 IN. OR 0.328 FOOT
University Daily Kansan
STUDENT NEWS PAPER
Lawrence, Kansas
Sigma Xi Names 38 KU Men To Membership
Thirty-eight University students and teachers became members of Sigma XI, national honorary scientific research society, and five faculty members were honored at a meeting of the University of Kansas chapter Thursday.
Membership in Sigma Xi is awarded in recognition of competent scientific research. The University chapter, established in 1890, was the first west of the Mississippi river.
Honorary life memberships were given D. C. Guffey, professor emeritus of obstetrics and gynecology; W. C. McNown, professor of civil engineering; F. A. Russell, professor of engineering drawing; G. S. Smith, professor of mathematics; and E. B. Stouffier, dean of the University.
Four faculty members given full membership were Sar'adaman Chowla visiting professor of mathematics; H. L. Daasch, professor of biology and management; and Harli biophysics and medicine; and Carlyle S. Smith, anthropology.
Full membership was given 15 graduate students: Oscar D. Bonner, Keith Bowman, Lowell P. Hager, Robert N. Hazlett, W. A. Hetzer, Henry E. Hughes, John Otto, Claude Lepine, Thomas D. Browne, liam P. Stephen, Robert Terrill, Joseph K. Thompson, Lee Dean Volle, and Richard P. White.
Received into associate membership were ten graduate students and nine undergraduates. The graduate students are: Daniel L. Aiznorko Arthur H. Fitch, Manus R. Foster H. Fitch, Charles S. Leibert Mary Ruscha, Charles Slouaker Thomas P. Whaley, Ellis L. Yochelson and Robert Zinser.
Undergraduates are: Robert Beu,
Dan H. Buie, Richard H. Capps,
James C. Hayward, Robert L. Kite,
Ralph M. Moon, Jr, Jerome G. Rozen,
William E. Ruth, Rex E.
Thomas.
Officers elected for the coming year are; Dr. A. J. Mix, president; Dr. A. B. Leonard, vice-president; Dr. James M. Maloney, secretary; and Dr. H. T. U. Smith, treasurer.
[Image of a man in a suit with a tie and glasses. The background is plain white.]
Dr. Forrest C. "Phog" Allen, basketball coach of the year, will direct his talents toward another night tonight and Saturday when he will appear as the interlocutor for a local minstrel show.
BEN HIBBS, editor of the Saturday Evening Post, who will speak at 6:30 p.m. today at the annual Kansan board dinner in the ballroom of the Union building. Mr. Hibbs was a 1923 journalism graduate of the University. Several awards will be made to outstanding students in both news and advertising.
Minstrel Will Feature Allen
It's nothing new for K.U.'s basketball coach, however. He was interlocutor for a minstrel show in 1942 and has appeared in several campus theatrical productions.
The show is directed by Charles W. Kassinger Jr., '50. Henry Asher '05, and Junius Underwood, a student in 1924, will be end-men.
The show will be in the auditorium of Liberty Memorial high school beginning at 8:30 p.m. It is sponsored by Alpha Gamma, Beta Mu, and Xi Gamma chapters of Beta Sigma Phi international non-academic sorority.
Shrubbery which was located in the area of proposed expansion for the Union building and on the south campus sites for the field house and science building is being moved to the east campus location. That and the drive has been curved and the land around it smoothed and landscaped.
A. C. Thomas, University landscape architect points out that the spring digging and re-planting serves the important function of saving valuable plants which might otherwise be destroyed by building projects on campus.
Profits from the show will help finance the Bert Nash mental health clinic, soon to be established in Douglas county. The late Bert Nash was formerly director of the University educational clinic.
Shrubs Need To Migrate Landscape Architect Says
B. EMILY C. STEWART
BY ELLY C. SCHWARZ
A campus wag once suggested that trees and shrubbery at the University should be planted in pots in order to facilitate the labor of building and grounds workmen. Each spring the more imposing vegetation on the campus begins a mass migration from one end of the campus to the other.
Small pine trees are being removed along the driveway, thus
This year, if anything, there has been more activity than usual. To those inclined to regard the transplanting as a mysterious joke on the student body, the serious nature and scope of the landscaping program at the University should be explained.
It is anticipated that the central walk down the hill from the campanile will eventually be re-located on a curved approach to the tower. Flowering shrubs and evergreen will be planted in the area. The project will not be completed for several years. Mr. Thomas said.
Trenches between Marvin and Lindley halls will accommodate new automatic sprinkling systems. Eventually they will also be installed around Snow Hall and Hoch auditorium. A pipeline has been laid to irrigate the Griesa Memorial garden east of the Union.
preventing their destruction when it is graded to correct the sharp drop at its outer edge, Mr. Thomas said. In the future there will be a great deal of planting along the driveway, grassy areas and campus and juniperis. Many of them will be moved in from other parts of the campus.
Another project to beautify the campus is the planting of Hall's honeycandle in the small plots between the sidewalk and street along Jayhawk drive. This plant is the only one hardy enough to stand the abuse of student jaywalking, he said. The cooperation of pedestrians in using only the crosswalks is requested by Mr. Thomas.
DP's, Money Discussed In Winning Talks
Thomas Fritzlen, College senior, won the men's section of the informative speaking division of the Intramural Speaking contest Thursday. Lorraine Mather, College freshman, placed first in the women's contest.
Fritzlen's speech was a satire on the modern concept that earning money is the most important aim of life. According to the new religion of mammon, he said, "any good mammon works hard to enter the paradise of mammon—wealth."
The problem of displaced persons was discussed by Miss Mather. She pointed out that many Americans believe that D.P.'s are shiftless persons who do not work because they are lazy. Actually, she said, they are skilled workers. She said that many are displaced persons because they do not want to live under Russian domination.
Winning second place in the men's section was Richard Houseworth, business senior, who gave a biographical study of Damon Runyon and told of the success of the Runyon School at the University. Cheksy Jr., College junior, placed third with his talk on the history of Arabian horses.
In the women's division, Kay Peters, College sophomore, won second with her discussion of the unification of Germany. Jane Sullivan, College sophomore, placed third with her speech on the causes of suicide. At a speaking contest will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, May 18, in Green hall. At that time, entertaining or after-dinner speeches will be given.
Elect Anderson Semantics Head
Myrta Anderson, College senior, was elected president of the General Semantics club at a meeting Thursday.
Others elected are: John Ryerson, vice-president, and Russell Annis, secretary-treasurer and librarian.
A "General Semantics Bibliography" was given by Abraham Persky, instructor in English. He sketched briefly from the time of Plato and Aristotle up to the present time the interest that has grown in language problems. His sketch included from a study of words per se, to an elaborate system of studying their complex relations with symbolized things and human beings.
Marysville, Kan., May 11 (U.P.)- Miss Martha Ann Whiten of Marysville has faith in the Kansas City, Mo., police department.
Miss Whitten is a student at the University. Someone stole her flute, valued at $150. Her father suggested she notify the Kansas City police.
Kansas City Police Now Have A Fan
Sure enough, a detective called her. He'd located the instrument in a pawn shop. She got it back for the $7 the pawn shop operator had loaned on it.
Mosley Will Head ADS
Gerald Mosley and Forrest Bellus journalism juniors, were elected president and vice-president respectively of Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternity, Tuesday.
Other officers elected by the fraternity were Richard Hale, College sophomore, secretary; Robert Jornayvaz, College sophomore, treasurer, and Richard Nash, journalism junior, corresponding secretary.
Applications Due For SWA Head
Students interested in the general chairmanship of Statewide Activities for the 1950-51 school year should submit applications to Damon Simpson, 1100 Indiana street, traditions committee chairman of the All Student Council.
Applications should be turned in by Saturday.
Local Columns Best, Editor Says
The small town newspaper editor would have more successful editors if he put them in column form, John M. Henry, editor of the Main Street column in Cosmopolitan magazine, told members of The Editorial class today.
"Surveys have shown local columns are the most popular thing in small newspapers with the exception of local news," Mr. Henry said. He believes well-written editorials require time that is not available to the local editor, and that columns are good substitutes.
Mr. Henry was editor-in-chief of the Daily Kansan in 1917 and gives much credit for his success to the former department of journalism and the teaching of L. N. Flint, professor of literature at the University. He is also director of public relations for the Des Moines Register and Tribune.
Interdorm Council Elects Zimmerman President
Roy Zimmerman, College freshman, was elected president of the Inderdom council at the Steering Ball mill with the steering ball were admitted to the council.
Ed Perkins, College sophomore,
was elected vice-president, and Bill
Hampton, College freshman,
was elected secretary of the council.
Arthur Kaaz, engineering sophomore, was elected All Student Council representative.
Engineers Elect Smith, Philo To Head Council
Keith C. Smith, engineering junior, will be the 1950-51 president of the engineering council. He was elected Thursday by a 10-vote margin as students of the School of Engineering and Architecture voted for the 16 members of their governing body.
Kenneth W. Philo, engineering junior, was elected vice-president and Thomas A. Hendricks, engineering junior, secretary-treasurer.
Other engineering students winning positions on the council are as follows:
Senior representative: Richard H. Harris, junior. Junior representative: Robert Kipp, sophomore. Sophomore representative: Dean Barrett, freshman. Freshman representative will be elected in September, Engineering and Architecture is allowed one representative to the council. Departmental representatives are:
Chemical, Dean Kloeper; electrical, Frank Reenmeis; Civil, Chester Leonard; mechanical, Robert Strobel; mining and metallurgy, Kermit Bass; chemical, John Holmes; petroleum, Carl Nelson; aeronautical, Clifford Newberry.
Because of a tie in the number of votes between the candidates in the architecture and engineering-physics departments, run-off elections will be held from 4 to 5 p.m. Tuesday, May 16. Architectural students will vote on the third floor of Marvin hall. Engineering-physics students will vote on the first floor of Blake hall. Representatives of the engineering council will conduct the election.
THE WEATHER
KANSAS — Partly cloudy east, light scattered showers west this afternoon and tonight. Warmer east and central tonight. Saturday partly cloudy and warmer.
UN Is Only Way To Peace Five Professors Believe
By Samuel H. Price
Five political science professors polled on the advisability of barring Russia from the United Nations as proposed recently by Herbert Hoover, disagreed unanimously with the former president.
All five agreed the U.N. is the only remaining means of establishing world peace, and then only if all nations are represented in the forum.
Professor Ethan P. Allen, head of the department of political science and director of the Government Research bureau, said the banning of Russia would "accelerate the tenacity toward war."
"If Russia is in, at any rate there is the possibility of reaching some agreement sometimes," he said. "If you vote Russia out you have made it increasingly difficult to reach any kind of understanding with Russia."
"If one really desires to find a peaceful solution to the present tension between Russia and the United States, it ought to keep Russia in the U.N."
Professor Hilden Gibson said he would regard the banishment of Russia as the "begining of the end."
"I believe the U.N. is potential the best arena that we have to achieve some sort of settlement, Professor Gibson said.
Francis Heller, assistant professor of political science, also expressed the opinion war would be in force. Mr. Hoover's plan was carried out.
"I feel the U.N. right now is the
only remaining forum in which there is even a possibility of meeting the Russians face to face. Whether or not the Russians want to go down the road of war is something which I daresay Mr. Hoover has no better source of information on than anyone else.
"As long as the possibility exists that we can talk to them, we haven't completely surrendered to war as an inevitable consequence. I believe Mr. Hoover's proposal expressed the same degree of pessimism and lack of belief in the resourcefulness of man that he displayed in the face of the depression in 1931 and 1932.
Professor Herman B. Chubb regards the proposals as "foolish."
"It would be better for the U.N. to keep going and, if necessary, use the U.N. charter to expel Russia only as a last resort."
A renewed attempt to come to some conclusion with Russia about the atomic bomb was advocated by Professor W. E. Sandelius. He pointed out this could only be attained if Russia remains in the U.N.
He also emphasized the need for a union of democracies in addition to the U.S.
"At the same time we should make as much progress as possible within the U.N. on a renewed version of the atomic energy proposal. We should make another attempt to come to some decision with Russia about the atomic bomb and armament in general."
FAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1950
Church Schedule
WEST SIDE PRESBYTERIAN
63 Madison
Daniel Knox Ford, minister
Bible school, $9.45 a.m. Classes for all ages and groups.
Morning worship, 11 a.m. Sermon theme: "Our Debt to Motherhood." Music by Men's chorus and Junior choir.
Young Peoples fellowship, 7 p.m.
Devotions and questions and answer
study of the gospel of Mark.
Evening service, 8 p.m. Congregational hymn sing and sermon.
Choir rehearsal, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday. Acobie Kleeweg director.
Prayer and Bible study hour, 7 p.m. Wednesday.
Instruction class, 2:15 p.m. Saturday. May 20.
Sunshine Guild and choir practice 3 p.m. Saturday, May 20.
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST,
SCIENTIST
1701 Massachusetts
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.
Morning service, 11 a.m. Sermons "Mortals and Immortals."
TRINITY EPISCOPAL
1011 Vermont
The Rev. Robert C. Swift, rector
The Rev. Louis Bassor, Jr.
associate rector
Holy communion, 8 a.m. Church school, 3:30 a.m. Morning service, 11 a.m. Morning prayer and sermon: Mozart's Requiem, 5 p.m. Canterbury club, 7 p.m. Holy Communion, 7 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Holy Communion, 10 a.m. Holy Communion, 7 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Thursday, May 18.
ST. JOHN'S CATHOLIC
1229 Vermont
The Rev. George Towle, pastor Masses, 8,9, and 10 a.m. Newman club meeting after the 10 a.m. mass.
George C. Fetter, minister
FIRST BAPTIST
Church school, 9:30 a.m. University class taught by Rev. Charles W. Thomas, Morning worship, 11 a.m. Subject: "Christian Motherhood." Choir anthem: "O Love That Will Not Let Me Go" by Spross. Trio: "Songs My Mother Taught Me" by Dvorak sung by Jacqueline Kreider, fine arts sophomore; Marilyn Bailey, College freshman, and Mary Lee Haury, fine arts freshman. Senior Youth fellowship, 5:30 p.m. Annetta Smith, College freshman, in charge.
CHURCH OF CHRIST 1501 New Hampshire street
CHURCH OF CHRIST
W. T. Carter, minister 10 a.m. Bible study
11 a.m. Sermon: "Our Attendance" by Mr. Carter.
11:50 a.m. Lord's Supper
7 o'clock. Flight attendant class
7 p.m. teacher's class
Siemens: "The Min
8 p.m. Sermon: "The Mind of Paul"
by Mr. Carter
2 p.m. Wednesday: Ladies Bible class
8 p.m. Wednesday: Regular Bible class.
Sunday School and Bible Class 9:45 a.m.
IMMANUEL LUTHERAN CHURCH 17th and Vermont
Sunday Worship Hour 11 a.m.
Monday, May 15, 7:30 p.m., 1538 Vermont, Chief Doctrines of Lutheranism.
Saturday, May 20, 6:30 p.m., Gamma Delta Lutheran Alumni Banquet at the Union.
FREE METHODIST 12th and Kentucky
Lester Hamilton, pastor
Sunday school, 10 a.m. Dr. Clarence Grothaus, superintendent.
Morning service, 11 a.m. Subject "Our Mothers."
Young People's Missionary society 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting, 7:45 p.m.
Evening service, 7:45 p.m
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
100 Kentucky street
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
100 Kentucky street
H. M. Sinniel minister
9:30 a.m. Sunday school. University class taught by Dean R. A. Schwegler.
10:45 a.m. Morning worship with communion and sermon.
Sermon: "A Mother's Place" by Rev. Sippel. Anthem: "A Mother's Day Prayer" from the tune, "Dundee."
Soloist: Mr. George Peacock. Offeratory Solo: "Oh Divine Redeemer" by Gounod.
Soloist: Mrs. Ralph Johnston
12:45 p.m. K.U. Disciple fellowship Spring Planning retreat Meet at Mvers hall.
PLYMOUTH CONGREGATIONAL 925 Vermont
Date E. Turner, minister
College age Sunday school class 10 a.m.
Morning service_11 a.m. Sermons
"It Runs in the Family."
Youth meeting. 6 p.m.
Musical program, 7:30 p.m. "The Creation," (Joseph Havdn) sung by the church choir.
SOCIETY OF FRIENDS—OREAD MEETING.
Regular unprogrammed, non-pastoral meeting for worship at 9:30 a.m. Sunday in Congregational church, 1st floor, southeast room. Note change of time. Monthly meeting: 8 p.m. at J. N. Carman residence, 1020 Main street.
Twenty-eight pictures of the passion play are on display in the showcase outside the German office, 402 Fraser.
Pictures Of Passion Play On Display In Fraser
The pictures are the property of Dr. J. A Burzle, chairman of the German department. He bought the pictures in 1930. The passion play commemorates the life of Christ, and is given every 10 years by the inhabitants of Oberammergan, a farming community in Bavarian Alps. They have given it since 1634.
Now That Spring Is Here Try Us For That Spring Food
FRENCH FRIED ONIONS
Mathematical colloquium, 5 p.m. Monday, 203强 hall. Mr.G.W Griffith, "Iteration Methods and An Application."
KU. Disciple Fellowship Retreat,
Sunday, May 14, Lone Star, Meet
at 12:30 p.m., front of Myers hall.
Bring sack lunch and 75 cents.
The seventh annual Fire, Casualty, and Marine Insurance school will be held Tuesday, June 13, through Thursday, June 15, at the University. The educational committee of the Kansas Association of Insurance agents and University Extension will present the short course.
Veterans' requisition books for equipment and supplies will not be honored after Saturday, May 20.
Today is the deadline for K.U. dance manager applications. Send to Tom White, 1111 W. 11th.
A. S.C., 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Pine room, Union.
Satisfaction Plus SERVICE
Automobile insurance, agency ownership, and office practices will be the principal subjects. The faculty will include E. H. Hosford, Kansas City, Mo.; Richard J. Layton, Indianapolis, Ind.; and Fred Sharpe, University Extension lecturer.
Position of freshman woman representative to All Student Council is open due to the resignation of Pat Gardenhire.
STEAKS
K.U. Mennonite Fellowship picnic,
5 p.m. Sunday, Clinton Park.
SEAFOODS
Official Bulletin
Insurance School To Be June 13-15
Friday, May 12
Heute abend versammelt sich der Deutsche Verein am Potter see um 6:30 für den ausflug.
Dr. Alpha H. Kenna, executive manager of the Kansas Association of Insurance Agents, Topeka, will be general chairman for the school. Robert Charlton, Lawrence, is chairman of the association's educational committee. E. A. McFarland, manager of the Lawrence Extension center, will be program coordinator
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Chemical Society Hears Dr. Remick
Oxidation-reduction mechanisms were discussed Tuesday before members of the Kansas City section of the American Chemical society by Dr. A. E. Remick, member of the department of chemistry, Wayne university, Mich.
Dr. Remick spoke to members of the chemistry faculty, undergraduates and graduate students in Bailey chemical laboratories following a dinner in the Kansas room of the Union.
University Daily Kansan
Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Unattended mail to Lawrence. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
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FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1950
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
1
PAGE THREE
Social Activities On The Hill
Battenfeld Elects Cooper Russell Cooper, fine arts sophomore, has been elected president of Battenfeld hall.
Theta Phi Alpha Guests
Other new officers elected are: Melvin Reuber, vice-president; Richard Millikan, secretary, and Neal Anderson, treasurer.
Guests at a picnic given by Theta Phi Alpha sorority May 6 were: Marvin Keller, Charles Hyer, Don Williams, Jim Gilland, Lane Brown, Darrell Larson, Dewey Nemec, Bill Root.
Frank Norris, Jack Prager, Jim McNerney, Bob Miller, Jack Koelzer, Lyman Frasier, Don Grob, John Alexander, Bill Hadel, Alan Armstrong, Bob Lacy, Terry Evans, and Bill Price.
Mrs. Mary Carby and Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Telfel were chaperons.
Miller hall entertained with its annual Mothers' Day tea Sunday. Approximately 50 guests including Miss Margaret Habein and Miss Martha Peterson attended.
Honor Mothers At Tea
A musical program was presented by Vera Smoots, Sally Adams, Joyce Rohrer, Mary Van Houten, Isabelle Gaddis, and Anne Siemers.
Hayride And Pichic Held
Miller hall entertained with a hayride and picnic May 5. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Reeve, Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Cooley, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Sperry were chaperons. Guests were Kirk Smith, Edward Haynes, Gerald Peterson, Clifford Reusch, Marvin Liggett, William Tobler, Gene Unruh, Donald Coync, Robert Dunwell.
Edward House, Robert Casad,
James Thomas, Lyle Wolfrom,
Charles Molina, Max Palih, Ross
Purcell, Darrrell Rhudy, Bryan
Sperry, Charles Sloan, Ray Deanne,
Topeka; Harold Hula, Topeka;
Donald Harmonson, Norton; Aspet
Marijan, Topeka.
Advertising Group Elects
Alpha Delta Sigma, national advertising fraternity, recently elected the following officers: Jerry Mosley, president; Forrest Bellus, vice-president; Richard Hale, secretary; Robert Jornayvaz, treasurer, and Richard Nash, corresponding secretary.
Picnic For Housemothers
Picnic For Housemothers
The K.U. Housemothers' association will hold a picnic, Monday, May 15, at Gage Park in Topeka.
Mrs. C. J. Thomas and Mrs. Eugen Alford are co-chairmen.
New York, May 12—(U.P.) The American Mother of the Year, who is half American Indian and half German, said today she didn't think the younger generation was "going to the bow wows."
Mother Of Year Has Good Word For Youth
Mrs. Henry Roe Cloud, of West Linn, Cre. arrived here by plane to receive an award from the American Mothers' committee.
The 59-year-old mother of four
children had a good word for today's
youth when reporters asked her if she thought this generation was worse than the last.
1947
"I think modern children are more alert to the lives they live
Buhler-Francis
Photo by Carlos Photos
Miss Carol Buhler
Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Paxton of Lawrence recently announced the approaching marriage of their sister, Miss Carol Buhler, to Mr. George Francis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Francis of Lawrence. The wedding will be June 10.
Miss Buhler, a journalism senior, is a member of Delta Gamma social sorority and Gamma Alpha Chi and Theta Sigma Phi honorary sororities.
and have a greater opportunity, she said.
Mrs. Roe Cloud's four daughters, all married, were college graduates and one, Mrs. Edward Hughes, 32, is a member of the governor's welfare conference in Oregon. Her late husband was the first Indian ever graduated from Yale.
Jay Janes Choose 16 New Members
Sixteen women will be pledged to Jay James at 5 p.m. Wednesday, May 17, in the Palm room of the Union. The women were chosen for membership in the pep organization at a rush tea Wednesday.
The women and the groups they represent are:
Peggy Jo Croyle, Hopkins hall; Neda Butts and Mary Helen Ryder. Miller hall; Marese Ball, Monchonsia hall; Blanche Pierson and Leta Baker, N.S.A.; Gertha Harper, Templin hall; Nancy Anderson, Kappa Alpha Theta.
Jean Almon and Constance Petterson, Corbin hall; Alberta James, Gamma Phi Beta; Grace Endacott, Delta Delta Delta; Patricia Kennedy and Patricia Lappin, Watkins hall; Jean Proudfit, Pi Beta Phil and Marian Miller, Sigma Kappa.
Alumni Stag Weekend
Gamma Omicron chapter of Kappa Sigma fraternity held its 38th annual alumni stag weekend May 6 and 7 at the chapter house. Alumni from Kansas, Illinois, Missouri and California attended the reunion.
A stag party was held at the house and a dinner was given in the Union. Entertainment at the dinner was provided by the Kappa Sigma quartet.
Lindberg Engaged
DANIEL SCHWARZMAN AND BERNICE CARTWRITER
—Photo by Bob Crowley
Harwood, Lindberg
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lindberg of Topeka announce the engagement of their daughter, Marilyn, to Mr. Claude M. Harwood, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Harwood of Larned.
Formal announcement of the engagement was made by Mrs. Elizabeth Kite, housemother of Jolliffe hall, at the annual spring formal April 22. Announcement was also made at the Phi Beta Pi fraternity formal. Miss Johann Kendall'and Margaret Heatwolove passed chocolates. Miss Lindberg wore a corsage of tallisman roses and her attendants and housemother wore carnation corsages.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1950
IM Softball Will End Sunday
By JOHN McMILLION
The final week of intramural softball finds things all jammed up in each league with three way ties the common thing. With the final games being played Sunday, it is pretty apparent who will be in the playoffs. All four divisions of the fraternity "A" were quite close and there were no undefeated teams with the exception of the Sig Alphs who have one game left on their schedule.
The playoff berths in division I and III of the Fraternity "A" have been decided with the Sigma Chi's and Phi Psi's the representatives. Both of these teams have a three and one record and have not met as yet. The Phi Psi's lost to the TKE's 8 to 7 and Triangle edged the Sigma Chi nine by the same score. The Sigma Chi's and the Phi Ppsi's meet Sunday in the game that will decide the champion from that division.
In division I of the Independent "A" the Jim Beam's finished the season undefeated. Also the A.R.O.T.C. of division II and the Dix Club of division III haven't been topped but they still have games remaining to be played.
In division III the A.T.O.'s are the champions with the Phi Delts the runnerups. A.T.O. finished the year with a four and one record. The Phi Delts won three and lost two to finish ahead of the Delta Upsilon and Phi Kappa Tau entries.
In division II both the Sig Eg and the Sigma Nu's are in the playoffs for sure. Both teams have a record of four wins and one loss. The Sig Eg lost to the Sigma Nu's 7 to 6 and the Sigma Nu's lost to the Betas 11 to 10 in a tight battle. The Betas
Ties For First In Women's IM Softball
The situation in women's intramural softball has become rather desperate as well as highly amusing. Due to the outcome of Thursday's games, there are now three devises with first-place ties which must be played off before the final tournament can be scheduled.
Alpha Omicron Pi created the deadlock in division IV by edging past the Tri-Delts 12 to 10 in the most surprising upset of the year of the previously undefeated team. This makes it necessary for a play-off for the division title between the Tri-Delts and the A.D.Pi's.
The winners scored their first victory with home-runs by Beverly Pepper and Virginia Holloway, plus a triple from Miss Holloway with the bases loaded. They allowed their opponents nine runs in the first inning, before they settled down to win.
Bloomer and Pepper made the successful victory attempt, while Richmond and Brubaker took their first loss.
Chi Omega scored an 11 to 3 victory over Alpha Chi Omega to take over third place in division II with a split record. They pulled in all 11 runs in the first inning, then were held scoreless for the remainder of the game.
Godding and Webb registered the victory as Schafer and Landis went down to defeat.
Delta Gamma completed the three-way tie in division III by clamming cut a 21 to 8 total against Miller. They scored half their runs in the third inning, before the one-sided contest was called in the fourth. Harmon and Sigma Kappa are the other members of the tving trio.
Greenbank and Hendershot retained the D.G.'s chance for division honors as Logan teamed with Prettyman for the loss.
Kansas High School Tourney Baseball Scores At Wichita
may end up in the playoffs also as they have only one loss to their credit, a 13 to 1 shellacking by the Sig Eps. However they were tied by the Lambda Chi's at the end of seven innings when the game had to be called because of darkness and they must play this off and win to get in the playoffs.
Wichita North 10, Wyandotte 5.
Wichita St. Mary's 7, Dodge City 3.
Wichita East 5, Phillipsburg 1.
Topeka 1, Eldorado 0.
The Veterans Administration in February was in the process of acquiring land or sites for eight new hospitals.
In division IV there is another possible three-way tie with the Sig Alphs and Phi Kappas in the playoffs for sure and the Phi Gams a possible third team if they win their final game. The Sig Alphs are as yet undefeated and if they win their final game they will be the division champions. If they lose the loop may end up in a clear cut three-way tie for first.
The Sigma Chi's, 1949 champions, the Sig Eps, the past year's runner-
ups, the Sigma Nu's, and the A.T.O.'s look like the teams to beat in the Fraternity "A" playoffs. The Sig Alphs should be classed as a darkhorse however.
In the Independent "A" the Jim Beams and the A.S.C.E. will represent the first division and the A.I.E. team and the A.R.O.T.C. club will be in the playoffs from division II. Division three is too close to determine their representatives with the exception of the Dix Club who is in for sure.
Thursday's afternoons games were confined to the Fraternity "B", Independent "A" leagues. In the Fraternity "B" the Phi Psi squad downed the Phi Gams 11 to 7, The D.U. "B" team downed the Kappa Alpha Psi nine 15 to 6. In the Independent "B" two games were played with the Bonded Fifths and Men of Distinction emerging victorious. The Bonded Fifths downed the Silent Men 19 to 12 and the Men of Distinction topped Oread Hall 27 to 11.
In the Independent "A" Theta Tau forfeited to the Navy 7 to 0 and the A.S.C.E. beat the Don Henrys 12 to 4.
Drake's Donuts Are Taste Teasers
Whether you "dunk 'em" or not you'll agree that Drake's donuts are delicious. They're fried to a crispy, goldenbrown and iced in lemon, vanilla, and chocolate. Take home a dozen today - 40c.
DRAKE'S
Phone 61
907 Mass.
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a wide variety of knitted cottons in plain colors and fancies.
Akom and Puritan
$1.95 up
T-SHIRTS
The Palace
843 Massachusetts
REGULAR DINNERS
- Fried Chicken
- Steaks
- Short Orders
REGULAR PRICES
- RAY'S CAFE -
-
709 Mass.
Open Sundays
Leave Those Winter Clothes Here!
Don't be bothered with carrying those heavy winter clothes home. Leave them in our insured refrigerated vaults. Forget your worries about shipping costs and packing. Our shop located storage vaults are your insurance against damaged clothes.
Safety Deposit Box
740 Vermont
Independent Laundry AND DRY CLEANERS
Phone 432
Phone An Ad, Then Be Glad, With Kansan Want Ad Results.Call K.U. 376.
MINSTRELS
BENEFIT
Bert Nash Mental Health Clinic
Sponsored by
Sponsored by BETA SIGMA PHI NU PHI MU LAWRENCE ADULT EDUCATION PROGRAM
Today & Saturday May 12th & 13th 8:30 p.m.
LMHS Auditorium
Adults $1.00
Children 50c
TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT . . .
TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT ...
Bell's Music, Rankin Drug, Round Corner Drug.
FRIDAY,MAY 12,1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Jayhawk Nine Meets Wildcats Today, Saturday
The Jayhawker baseball team invades Manhattan this afternoon to play the Kansas State Wildcats in the opener of a two-game series at Griffith field. The second game will be played at 2 p.m. Saturday. Today's game is the first of four contests between the Jayhawkers and Wildcats to be played in the next week. These two clubs play here Wednesday and Thursday, May 17 and 18.
A win for Coach Bill Hogan's team today would push the Jayhawkers above the .500 mark in Big Seven play as their record now stands at five wins and five defeats. By sweeping the series, K.U. would move into a fourth pace tie with the idle Missouri Tigers.
Coach Hogan is expected to send Guy Mabry (1-3) or sophomore righthander, Herman Philipp (1-0), to the mound in today's game. Big Carl Sandefur (5-1), sophomore righthand fast-baller, will pitch for Kansas in Saturday's game.
K
JIM DYERSON P. BESTEMEIER
P. RESTEMEIEP
JIM IVERSON
Sandefur, who pitched a 3-hitter against Iowa State Tuesday, is one of the conference's top hurlers. In league play, he has won four games and lost one. His lone setback was a 4 to 3 loss to the league leading Nebraska Cornhuskers.
Kansas State is expected to start their two ace sophomore righthanders, Jim Iverson, and Perk Reitemeier, against the Jayhawkers in the weekend series. Saturday's game will match two of the league's top sophomores, Sandefur for K.U., and either Iverson or Reitemeier for Kansas State.
Iverson pitched a 3-hitter against the Oklahoma Sooners as the Wildcats recently split a series with O.U., 5 to 2, and 5 to 7.
Reitemeier, a 6 foot 170-pounder, is the Wildcats' No. 1 choice as the tough-luck pitcher of 1950. He has won one and lost three in Big Seven play, but it took Oklahoma 10 innings to down him, 7 to 5. He also lost a 3-hitter to Missouri, 3 to 1, the past weekend, and a 6 to 3 game to Nebraska earlier in the season.
Kansas, with a team batting average of .233, has shown increased power at the plate in recent games. The Jayhawkers collected a total of 21 hits in sweeping the two-game home series with Iowa State, Monday and Tuesday, 7 to 6, and 7 to 2.
Included in the batting against the Cyclones, were three homers and three doubles. Carl Ellis leftfender, and Lou DeLuna, first baseman, each pounded out a four-bagger and a double to lead the long-ball hitting
In losing five Big Seven games, Kansas dropped three contests by slim 4 to 3 margins. The league leading Nebraska Cornhuskers downed the Jayhawkers 7 to 2 and Missouri defeated K.U. 9 to 2 for the other setback.
Kansas State's season record shows five wins and seven setbacks. In Big Seven play, the Wildcats have won three and lost five to hold down the sixth spot in the conference standings. Coach Fritz Knorr's team has had its ups and downs this year winning some of the toughest games and dropping others.
The Wildcats split even in twogame series with the conference's leaders, Nebraska and Oklahoma. They defeated Nebraska, 7 to 6, and downed Oklahma, 5 to 2, to pick up two of their three wins.
In 1949, Kansas split even in four games with Kansas State. At Manhattan, K.U. won 11 to 0 and lost 2 to 0, while winning 2 to 1 and losing 8 to 3 at home.
Kansas State's Season Record
Kansas State 9-15, Tulsa 1-12
Kansas State 0-2, Oklah. A-M. 3-22
Kansas State 3-7, Nebraska 6-6
*Kansas State 5-5, Oklahoma 2-7
*Kansas State 1-6, Iowa State 2-3
*Kansas State 2-1, Missouri 6-3
*Big Seven games.
Won 5, Lost 7.
Through early season games, both Kansas State and Kansas have suffered from lack of hitting, especially with men on base. One of the Wildcat's biggest disappointments has been the weak hitting of outfielder, Dick Johnson. He is hitting a mild 217 and his long-ball hitting has also been below par this spring.
Coach Knorr is expected to start this probable Kansas State batting order with averages:
Tim Scannell, 2b .341
Dale Carr, fr .267
Hank Specht, ss .286
Dick Hilts, lf .282
Bob Bremner, 3b .318
Dick Johnson, cf .217
Keith Thayer, c .182
Dave Bremner, 1b .250
Jim Iverson, p (1-1)
Perk Reitemeier (2-3)
A 15-man traveling squad accompanied by Coach Hogan left here at 9:30 this morning by chartered bus for Manhattan. The team will stay at the Gillette hotel tonight and return to Lawrence following Saturday's game. Bob Nelson and Bob Leonard will cover the games for the Daily Kansan.
Before boarding the bus this morning, Coach Hogan indicated he would start the same line-up that defeated Iowa State here on Monday and Tuesday.
The following players are making the trip: Pitchers: Sandefur, Philipp, Mabry, and Curtis Harris. Infielders: DeLuna, Jim Cavonaugh, Frank Koenig, Floyd Temple, and George Voss. Outfielders: Ellis, Walter Hicks, Henry Lamping and Arnold Stricker. Catchers: Ken Morrow and Bill Mace.
Hornet Pitcher
Hurls No-Hitter
Emporia, Kan., May 12—(U.P.)—Fred Kipp hurled a no-hit, 2 to 0 victory for Emporia State Thursday night as the Hornets ended their season against Washburn.
The triumph was the 12th in 16 contests and was made possible by Dick Kuhn's home run in the last of the seventh, breaking a scoreless deadlock.
Chick Gordon hurled three-hit ball for Washburn and gave up the winners' final run in the eighth on a walk, an error and a wild pitch.
Why not spend that free hour playing Snooker on the best tables available amidst a pleasant atmosphere?
- Snooker
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TIM SCANNELL
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KANSAS STATE'S INFIELD for today's game at Manhattan against the Jayhawkers is expected to contain Keith Thayer, catcher; Bob Bremner, third baseman; Hank Specht, shortstop; Tim Scannell, second baseman, and Dave Bremner, first baseman. The Wildcats' inner defense has been good this year with veterans manning all but one position. The newcomer is sophomore Scannell, one of the Big Seven's best second basemen.
Besides being one of the best defensive infielders, Scannell is leading the Kansas State hitting with a .341 average in 12 games. Thayer, senior backstop, has split most of the catching with another senior, Clifford Schumacher. Dave Bremner, first baseman and brother of third baseman Bob Bremner, is one of two players on the Wildcat squad that has lettered three years. Bob is a junior who hails from Orleans, Mass. The shortstop, Specht, is a converted third baseman that adds strength through the middle of the Wildcats' infield.
How The Major League Clubs Stand Today
National League
| | W. L. | Pct. | G.B. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Philadelphia | 13 | 8 | .619 |
| Brooklyn | 11 | 8 | .579 1 |
| St. Louis | 11 | 8 | .579 1 |
| Chicago | 8 | 7 | .533 2 |
| Boston | 11 | 10 | .524 2 |
| Pittsburgh | 10 | 10 | .500 2½ |
| New York | 5 | 10 | .333 5 |
| Cincinnati | 5 | 13 | .278 6½ |
American League
Detroit 12 5 .706
New York 12 7 .632 1
Washington 11 7 .611 $1\frac{1}{2}$
Boston 14 9 .609 1
Cleveland 8 9 .471 4
Philadelphia 7 12 .368 6
Chicago 4 11 .267 7
St. Louis 4 12 .250 7
Thursday's Results National League
Boston 3, Chicago 0
Philadelphia 3, Pittsburgh 2
Brooklyn at Cincinnati postponed rain
New York at St. Louis postponed rain
American League
Américan Lifestyle
Cleveland 4, Philadelphia 3 (10 inning-
Washington 8. Chicago 5
New York 5—6, St. Louis 1—5
Detroit 13—5, Boston 4—3
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Today's Probable Pitchers (Won and Lost records in parentheses)
American League
Philadelphia (Hooper 2-1) at New York (Byrne 1-1)-night.
Washington (Searborough 2-2) at Boston (McDermott 2-1)
Boston (McDermott 2-1)
Chicago (Wight 2-2) at Cleveland
(Only Games Schedule) National League
Pittsburgh (Chesnes 1-2) at Chicago (Rush 2-0)
Rushi 2-0 Cincinnati (Blackwell 1-1) at St. Louis (Breecheen 2-1)—hight!
(Only Games Scheduled!)
(Only Games Scheduled)
REMEMBER MOM
CAROLYN CARTER
with her most appreciated Gift-
Choicest Flowers
From
927 Mass. Ph. 363
ALLISON
AT
THOMAS
Flower Shop
Flowers by wire
Flowers by wire
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
The Editors Report -
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 195
NATIONAL MALADY:
Bossism
By Arlo Bailey
Do we want continued control of our states and cities by political bosses and the underworld? If we do, let's stay in the horse-drawn buggy and keep our eyes closed.
The system of checks and balances so faithfully used since our founding fathers set them up is the most fertile breeding ground for bosses. Checks and balances assume that concentration of power is dangerous and must always be avoided. Effective leadership by legal means is thereby forfeited.
A boss can step in, pick up the loose ends, and become the man who can get things done. All of us prefer doing business with a man who will always be around to deal with. We don't want to run hither and yon, getting fouled up in red tape. When city and state governments provide for responsible leadership, the need for bossism and too much red tape will be ended.
This is the way it is done nationally: the president of the United States is given broad authority by the constitution. He is recognized as the political leader of the nation because he is able to appoint his assistants and so not be forever compromising with their suggestions.
The governor of most states is handicapped by having to attempt to get along with a horde of popularly elected officials such as the treasurer, secretary of state, assessor, and so forth. Why not let the governor appoint these men? If we are going to have responsible government, these officials should be administrative assistants of the governor's plan.
It seems to work. We have never had a national political boss.
SLEEPY CATS, DOGS
Once Over Lightly
Gangway! Get your automobiles off the streets. Send your children to the movies. Shut your windows. Lock your pets in the basement. The tree sprayers are coming.
by Robert Leonard
to, at least, temperate.
Lean men holding long hoses perch on the sides of the trucks, peer in all directions, stalk anything that moves—and some things that don't. These men will knock at your door and ask you if you wish to have your trees freed of pests. You, thinking that this is the best thing that has happened all day, say "go ahead."
Each year, about this time, the city of Lawrence wages war on the invincible insects that feed on trees. Battered tank trucks roam the streets filled with a milky-white liquid that is supposed to, at least, temporarily stymie the culprits.
Ahead they go. A motor starts. The liquid starts from the nozzles. But where is the stream directed? At the bugs? At the trees? In the shrubs? No!
Sleepy cats are soon spotted. Unwary dogs receive one coat, once over lightly. Automobiles change color in a matter of minutes.
When you see the truck park in front of your house, don't get excited. Just start moving. Gather anything of value and put it away. Move your car down the street a couple of blocks, but don't forget to go after it—the men will be moving on. Just holler "gangway" and everything will turn out all right. . . .
1950 STYLE
by Charles Reiner
Pump Priming
Maybe it wouldn't hurt for President Truman and Congress to glance through Ben's almanac before putting into effect the recommendations on aid to small business.
The president's recommendations include government insurance of bank loans to private business, national investment companies to enforce observance of sound financial practices (for which the government is noted?), easier direct loans to private business through the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, and government insurance to protect United States business investments abroad.
The plan is to make private credit, on easy terms for the borrower and with small risk for the lender, do the pump-priming job of the '50s that federal spending did in the '30s. The New Deal goal was to end a depression. The Fair Deal goal is to perpetuate a boom.
The effective difference between the New Deal program and the Fair Deal plan is that this new system places the pump handle more firmly in the hands of the tax-payers.
This shifting of the risk from private lenders to the government has already gone a long way. The outstanding federal loans, loan guarantees, and loan insurance amounted to about $12 billion in 1939.
Now, the total stands at more than $35 billion—nearly three times the volume ten years ago. In the future, the government's stake in the field of credit to business and individual is likely to keep growing—if Congress goes along with the Fair Deal ideas.
Government, when it comes to financing, is just another name for tax-payers. Whether the government lends money directly or guarantees the loans that private banks make, the risk shifts to the tax-poyers. Evidently, high prices mean prosperity.
/
Editing H students in charge of running the copy desk for today's Kansan are Emily C. Stewart and Richard Tatum, journalism juniors.
University
Daily Kansan
News Room Adv. Room
K.U. 251 K.U.376
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn.
National Press Assn, and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Ad-
vocator Service;420 Madison Ave., New York City.
Dr Powell Named WU Education Dean
James Morris
Editor-in-Chair
Doris Greenbank ... James Shriver
Managing Editor ... Business Mgr.
Asst. Man. Editors ... Norma Hunsinger
Kay O'Connor
John Hill
Ralph Heineman
City Editor
Edward Chapin
Asst. City Editors ... Nelson Ober
Marliness Marks
Elaine Elvig
Steve Ferro
Feature Editor ... Francis Kelley
Photograph Editor ... Wendy Woods
Robert Sigman
William Graves
Richard Tatum
Lloyd Holbeck
Sports Editor ... Richard Dillon
Boyle Leonard
Ray Soldan
Arthur McIntire
Mike Miller
Society Editor ... Faye Wilkinson
Asst. Society Editors ... Billie Stover
Emily Stewart
Editorial Assts. ... Keith Leslie
Adv. Mgr. ... Charles Reiner
Cir. Mgr. ... Vyonne Josserand
Asst. Mgr. ... Forrest Bellum
Classified Ad. Mgr. ... Lee Dyer
Promotion Mgr. ... John Wiedeman
Dr. Jackson O. Powell, assistant professor of education at the University of Kansas, will become dean of the college of education and professor of education at Wichita university effective September 1. His appointment has been approved by the regents of the Wichita school.
Dr. Powell, who is 30 years old, came to K.U. a year and a half ago after receiving his doctorate degree at Syracuse university. He is a specialist in educational evaluation. He has taught such courses and had administrative charge of the psychometric division, service programs and entrance examinations for the K.U. Guidance bureau.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
VARSITY
Phone 132 for sho time
12c-39c
TONITE - SATURDAY Laurel and Hardy in a "Chump at Oxford"
"Lone Rider Ambushed"
plus
SUN - MON - TUES
2 big sea pictures
Ann Southern in
"Hell Ship Morgan"
plüs
"Sea Bandits"
Nothing's really lost unless a KANSAN Classified can't find it.Call K.U.376.
Jane Marlene Richard
WYMAN • DIETRICH • TODD
THE STAGE IS SET FOR EXCITEMENT!
ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S
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FRIGHT
A WARNER BROS. PICTURE
ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S
STAGE
FRIGHT
A WARNER BROS. PICTURE
Features at 1:00 - 3:00 - 5:05 - 7:10 - 9:15 Today thru Saturday JAYHAWKER
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CHAMPAGNE TIMES: 1:20, 3:20,
5:20, 7:20 and 9:20
PLUS: LATE NEWS EVENTS
Bugs Bunny "Homeless Hare."
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RIDAY, MAY 12. 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
University Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
V
Phone K.U. 376
with terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid by a bank within 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. during the hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Bank Business office, Journalism bldg, Kansas City, 8:45 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five
day days days
words or less ...35c 65c 90c
Editorial words ...1c 2c 3c
FOR SALE
PONTIAC, 1940, '80 convertible. Good jeeps, radio and underseat heater. Top very good condition. Must sell. Call 124- J or see at 547% Indiana. 18
BILBOAT. Rhodes Bantam. Built by
nauticales. Used two seasons. Nylon
and mainsail. Donald Kay, 1603R. 16
5-FT. Universal Trailer House. Sleeps one. hot water heater. Crosspray refrigerator (optional), air conditioner. Perform living for here or traveling. 136
FOR SALE by owner, 1948 Mercury
miles, miles excellent. Call 1275J.
15
VORDOR DOCK. Mechanically perfect.
01. 1045 Wort Bike. Phone 1700. 17
601. 1045 Wort Bike. Phone 1700. 17
HREE CLEAN cars! 1947 Chevrolet. 2
vertible, new top! 1939 Ford Deluxe,
slick. All in top condition; see to ap-
picate. West 9th Auto Sales. Phone
HERMAN Shepherd dog for sale. 16-
months old. Exceptionally good dis-
position. Registered, W. O. Nelson, Phone
541. 545 E. 19th. 16
EXPERIENCED Remington portable
portable typewriter with Italian keyboard in good
condition for only $12.50. Student Union
Book Store 16
M7 FORD Business Coupe, R. & H., 5.
Carpenter sidewalls, a good chair.
Call Krete, 38749M.
NOW AVAILABLE! A fountain pen
especially designed for left-handed
writers. Only $5.00 at your Student
Union Book Store. 16
TWO CHEVEROLETS, 1940. Master Deluxe and Special Deluxe, both with radio, heater, good tires, body sound. See these books. Van Wemmick, Schoenfeld, Van Mass. Ph. 424
THERE IS STILL time to let College Outline Series help you get you a better grade. One for every subject at the Student Union Book Store. 16
SENIOR1 ONE of your treasured remembrances of your days at KU. Will be a record album of KU. songs, wined by the Alumni & Athletic Club,
DINNER: Spaghetti and meatballs; 6:30
church lower auditorium, at 12th
Vermont. Tickets available at Round Cor-
rison, Mass. 75c. Come and
be your friends.
1914 HARLEY-DAVIDIS motorcycle 125.
new chassis 8000 miles. Call Richard at
(312) 276-3845.
1940 STUDEBAKER Commander Coupe
troller and hill holder. 50,000 actual miles
FOR RENT
FINEST TELEVISION—Best in sets and displays of the season. Installments arrived $87.50 and up. See the best Emmerson table model set at $195.50. Radio and Electronics $265.95. Vermont, Phone 312-425-5000.
RIDING HORSES for rent by the hour.
Bridle paths and trails nearby. For hay-
ride rides, call Mott Stables, Phone 1842,
1720 West 4th.
HONEYMOONERS! Vacationers! For rent in Estes Park area, modern housekeeping cabins. Completely furnished, big stone fireplaces, electricity, bath, gorgeous mountain view. June and July vacancies only. Mimi, Elaine, 2474, Denver, Colorado
31. ROOM apartment near campus. Pri-
tice kitchen. Will furnish if desired.
Kitchen.
Available now. A similar apartment available June 15-1101 Tenn. 16
THREE APARTMENTS for rent, rea-
ball phone 2082 or 3331 16
THREE APARTMENTS TO
onable, phone 2082 or 3331. 16
MER SCHOOL Yooms 10F
m.M. 1234 Oreden. Few vacancies for
if
ROOMS for summer or fall 3 double and
at single. Sleeping porch. Single beds.
10.00 a month per person. 1222 Miss.
Phone 485. 24
NEW four-room house, completely furnished, garage, automatic washer, modern and comfortable. Available June 1 to September 3. U.S. $17 before December 29, 2021. 1 a.p. on Friday.
MAKE BETTER GRADES! Bent a portable or standard typewriter for $3.50 a month or $1.00 a week. All makes and models at Student Union Book Store, tf
TWO LARGE, cool rooms for summer students. Single beds, linens furnished, rooms kept clean, kitchen privileges if desired. Phone 25223 or can be seen 12345.
WANTED
SELL ALL your used books to the Student Union Book Store Monday, May 29 Tuesday, May 30 Wednesday will pay top cash prices for all current books, and the Wilcox and Follette representative will buy all obsolete and discontinued titles. Students
EXPERIENCED stenographer qualified to take dictation. Permanent work for right person. Full or part time. Russell Hebey, Band Dept., Phone KU 385 15
BUSINESS SERVICE
ATTENTION social chairmen and party managers. See us for table and chair rentals. For information call Mrs. Anderson. Telenphone 252. 18
SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a dignified sales activity represent the best known firm in the educational field. Applicants accepted will work by appointment on leads we furnish. Earnings $7.50 to $12.50 and more per week on an advanced percentage of commissions. 608 Grand Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Giving qualifications, school and home address. 24
FORMALS AND DRESSES of all types made to order. Also alterations and remodeling. Call Mrs. Scales. Phone 3600-W. 1414 Tenn. 15
STUDENTS! Bring or send your Tennis, Badminton, Squash racquets to Guilfoil Sporting Goods, 1711 Minnesota, Kansas City, Kansas. Prices start from $2.25 up.
*TYPING; Thesis. Term Paper. Reports.*
*Mrs. Wilde M. Teen. Phone 30288.*
*15 Thru 19. Phone 30288.*
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-time fee is $125 for pet care and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Conn. St. Ph. 418. **tf**
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 palm shift,
and safety equipment at 1618Rr tTFINGY. Theses, Term Papers, Reports,
Notes, etc. Prompt Service. Mrs. Sheehan, 1028 Vermont. Ph. 1168Rr t*
TFINGY. Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rates. Prompt attention.
TRANSPORTATION
RIDERS WANTED: Leaving for Wichita every Friday at 4 p.m. Returning Sunday evening. Please call between 7-9 p.m. Harry Shultz, phone 3101J 12
N - O - W!
OUTLAW QUEEN!!!
DAKOTA L
CINECOLOR
YOU'LL LOVE "LIL"
ENDS
SATURDAY
IL
starring George MONTGOMERY Rod CAMERON Marie WINDSOR
ALSO COLOR CARTOON LATEST WORLD NEWS
STARTS SAT.OWL 11:15 SUNDAY EVERY WORD IS TRUE!
"Movies are better than ever You'll Agree When You See...
"THREE CAME HOME"
One woman's own true experience. . . told the way it happened.
Filmed where it happened!
WOMEN
WITHOUT
THEIR
MEN
At the Mercy
At the Mercy
---
OF MEN
Can the heart ever forget what the flesh has endured?
WITHOUT
This was the price for defiance...paid in full!
Added
Latest
Fox
Movie-
tone
News
Agnes Newton Keith's Own Great Book of the Month Is Now A Powerful Motion Picture.
THEIR
WOMEN!
DARRYL F. ZANUCK presents
CAME
THREE
HOME
CLAUDETTE COLBERT
PATRIC KNOWLFS • FLORENCE DESMOND • SSFIESE HAYAKAWA
MOTHER'S DAY TREAT! Two mothers will talk to their sons in Japan from our stage at 3 and 9 p.m.
WANT RIDERS or share the driving to summer school. Leave Plaza 7 a.m. return 11 a.m. JE 3178, Kansas City, Mo. after 6 p.m. TF
LOST
Continuous Shows
Granada
PHONE 946
Open 12:45
Nearly half of the world's olive oil comes from Spain.
LIGHT colored plastic rimmed glasses in brown case. Reward. Eldon Ament, Phone 4025-J. 16
PLASTIC rimmed glasses in brown case with Molder Optical company written inside. Possibly near Jayhawker Theater. Marvin Liggett, Phone 3445. 12
FOUR-MONTH-OLD blond cocker pup. Reward. Phone 3437 or 1996J. 12
'West Of Abilene' Is Now On Records
"West of Abilene" is now on records.
coros.
At the final performance of the 1950 College Daze, the entire show was tape recorded by Fred Sutton of University Recording. Complete albums of the show are now on sale at the Bell music company. Complete albums contain all the music, dialogue, and applause on nine 12-inch records. A small album of six records containing just the music may also be purchased as may individual records.
STARTS SUNDAY
(Prevue Sat. Owl 11:15)
Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers
Open 12:45
Continuous shows
IT'S SENSATIONAL!!! (is the word for this movie must) "PICTURE OF THE MONTH"
Look Magazine
Patee
PHONE 321
Intruder
on the
Dust
All the EXCITEMENT and SUSPENSE
OF THE GREAT
NOVEL...NOW
COMES TO THE
SCREEN!
Intruder
in the
Dust
INTRUDER
IN THE DUST
PETER J. MAYER
Claude JARMAN, Jr. • David BRIAN • Elizabeth PATTerson • Juano Hernandez
Ends SAT.
"ROUGHSHOD"
"I Married a Savage"
---
Added Entertainment Color Cartoon Comedy Late News
LAST
TIMES
TONITE
William HOLDEN
"STREETS OF LAREDO"
William
BENDIX
SAT ONLY
Plus: Land of Lost Jewels, World News,
Fairway Champs. Shown at 8:25, 10:30
MacDonald
CAREY
REDO"
Don't miss this Thrills & Laughs Program!
Burning up the Highways with
2 BIG HITS
SPEED TO SPARE with RICHARD ARLEN
Shown at 9:16
One Round After Another of Laughs
THE LAUGH BATTLE
OF THE CENTURY!
FIGHTING FOOLS
starring
Leo Gorcey
and The BOWERY BOYS
HUNTZ HALL
Shown 7:40----10:20
Also Popeye Cartoon OWL SHOW MONDAY SAT.
OWL SHOW MONDAY SAT.
[Image of a man with short hair and a serious expression.]
SUNDAY OWL SHOW SAT. MONDAY
Cary Grant
The Merriest Chase in Husband-
Hunting History!
Every girl should
be Married
FRANCHOT TONE • DIANA LYNN
Cary Grant
Shown 8:17----10:16
Shown 8:17—10:16
Kiddies Under 12 Free
½ Mile West on Hiway 59
Phone 260
Just Drive In • You'll love it
Just Drive In • You'll love it
Always a Color Cartoon
Lawrence DRIVE-IN Theatre
Theatre
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1950
World Wide News
Locomotive Derailed
Chicago, May 12—(U.P.)-A freight locomotive was derailed at Cleveland in an alleged act of sabotage today as the coast-to-coast railroad strike forced 150 thousand rail workers into idleness and tightened its grip on dependent industries.
A New York Central freight locomotive hauling 59 cars over struck tracks from Chicago to Buffalo was derailed at Cleveland's Collinwood yards. D. W. Taylor, New York chief of police called it "a deliberate act of sabotage." He said he had called in the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Chief Taylor said the front wheels of a two-unit diesel left the tracks when an automatic switch failed to close because a piece of wood had been jammed into it to keep it open.
Winnipeg, Man., May 12 (U.P).-The worst thing that could happen to flooded Winnipeg happened today. It rained.
Water from the skies lengthened the odds against thousands of flood fighters winning their battle to save Canada's fourth city from the Red river.
Rain On Flooded Winnipeg
Water was cutting Winnipeg into a dozen isolated sections and forcing the evacuation of 40,000 more persons.
Taipei, Formosa, May 12—(U.P.) Chinese Government forces poured heavy artillery fire into the Tinghai area of the Chusan islands today.
Chinese Reds On Offensive
A private, reliable source said fighting for the islands already was underway. But the Nationalist defense ministry said no "large scale" offensive had started.
Westminster Group Will Hold Barndance
Some sources believed the Communists would launch simultaneous invasions of Tinghai, Quemoy and Wanshan islands, the only remaining Nationalist-held islands outside of Formosa.
Dancing, country style, will be featured at a Westminster fellowship party at 8 p.m. Saturday. The participants will meet at Westminster house, 121 Oread street at 7:30 p.m. They will go from there to the dance.
Music will be furnished by "Stewart's Parlor Four," which consists of Pauline Reed, education senior Robert Steward, education junior Keith Riggs, fine arts sophomore and Donald Stewart, College sophomore.
The Fellowship commission will act as host, Riggs, who is party chairman, has announced the appointment of the following committee chairmen: William Behrmann, invitations; Sammy Sebesta, entertainment; Betty Stevenson, square dance demonstration; Genevieve Gaines, refreshments; Beverly Dodds, arrangements; and Robert Endecott, calling.
Edna A. Hill Will Attend Home Economics Meeting
Miss Edna A. Hill, professor of home economics, will attend a workshop sponsored by a committee of the American Home Economics association in Austin, Texas, Thursday through Saturday.
fishing AND CAMPING IN THE
Fishing
AND CAMPING IN THE
Quetico - Superior Wilderness
Complete outfitting service $3.50
a day with Grumman alumi-
num canoes. Food, your
chalet servies.
60-page Canoe Country pic-
ture booklet mailed postpaid
anywhere for $1.00
"BASSMOOD JAY MOODGE"
on Minn.-Canadian border. Main
Lodge and 20 log cabins.
Modern bathroom faci-
ltiles. American Plant
rates. Cash up. Also house-
keeping cabins.
WILDNESS OUTFITTERS One.
ELY, NINETEEN
League Elects New Officers
Fred Six, College junior, was elected president of the Forensic league for the 1950-51 school year at a meeting of the club Thursday.
Other officers elected were: Heywood Davis, College sophomore, vice-president; Patricia Gardenhire, College freshman, secretary; and Win Koerper, College sophomore, treasurer.
The new officers will be installed at a dinner at 6:30 p.m. Sunday, May 21. Koerper is in charge of arrangements for the dinner and reservations may be made by calling him at 443. It was announced that the price of the dinner is included in membership dues. It was also decided that members may bring dates to the dinner.
Business school seniors soundly defeated the business faculty 22 to 10 in the annual Business School Day softball game Wednesday.
Business Seniors Win Softball Game
The seniors scored in every inning. They gained their biggest lead in the third inning, when they scored 12 runs.
The faculty team didn't get started until the last inning. Hindered not a bit by the no-hit pitching of Jim Blocker, they scored six runs.
The score between faculty and seniors is now even. This year's win, coupled with last year's, makes up for losses to the faculty in 1947 and 1948. One straw-hatted senior expressed his attitude by remarking, "Watching them get beat helps make up for four years of exams and shotguns, even though it is all in fun."
Edward F. Arn. Republican nominee for governor, will speak to the K.U. "Arn for Governor" club at a dinner at 7 p.m. Monday, May 15 in the Kansas room of the Union.
Edward Arn Will Speak To KU 'Arn For Governor' Club
Tickets for the dinner are $1 and may be obtained by calling Tom Welsh at 991. Reservations have been made for 200 persons.
"Our Town" Tickets On Sale Today
Tickets for the University Players laboratory production of Thornton Wilder's "Our Town" are now on sale at the ticket office, 1 Green hall.
The play will be presented at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday, May 16 and Wednesday, May 17 in the Little theater in Green hall. Tickets cost 50 cents each.
Bacteriologists To Baltimore
Seventeen faculty members and graduate students of the bacteriology department will leave Saturday for the 50th annual meeting of The Society of American Bacteriologists. It will be held Sunday May 14 through Thursday May 18 in Baltimore, Md.
Leading bacteriologists from industry, universities, and private research organizations will conduct the golden anniversary meeting which will be attended by 4,000 bacteriologists.
Faculty members for the University who will attend are: Dr. Robert Guthrie, Dr. E. L. Treece, Dr. N. P. Sherwood, Dr. Cora M Downs, and Dr. Francis Jarvis.
Dr. Sherwood, Dr. Guthrie and graduate bacteriology students Keith Bowman and John Ott will read papers at the meeting on certain bacteriological research problems conducted at the University of Kansas.
Richard C. McClain, College junior, was awarded the Hannah Oliver Latin prize of $25 for the year. The announcement was made at the meeting of the Classical club Thursday by Dr. L. R. Lind, associate professor and chairman of the department of Latin and Greek.
Latin Prize Won By Richard McClaim
Wilcox Museum was the topic of discussion in an informal talk given by Miss Mary Grant, associate professor of Latin, at the meeting.
Kappa Beta To Hold Picnic
IT'S NOT TOO LATE !!
Kappa Beta, Christian church organization for women students, will have a picnic from noon to 3 p.m. Saturday at Potter lake, Members, rushes, and senior high school girls from Lawrence will attend.
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Flights to LONDON and ROME
PARIS BY AIR $360 ROUND TRIP
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To assure passage write immediately
Veterans Need Certificate To Enter Graduate School
Any veteran who wishes to enter graduate school must obtain a supplemental certificate of eligibility and entitlement whether he attended school here prior to entering graduate work or not,Mr. E.R. Elbel, Director of Veterans Service, announced Thursday.
Prior to this time a supplemental certificate was required only if the student was transferred from another school. Applications may be obtained at the veterans service office.
When a veteran transfers from one division in the University to another, it is considered by the V.A. as a change of course and the veteran must request a supplemental certificate before he can pursue the new course on the G.I.Bill. The V.A. will accept the recommendation of the University in this respect. However, such application must be made prior to the start of the course. Only one such change may be authorized by the University.
"If a veteran completes work in a field and wishes to take additional undergraduate work in that field he must convince the V.A. that it is necessary for his rehabilitation," Elbel said. In such a case it will be necessary for the veteran to request a supplemental certificate of eligibility and receive approval from the VA.
Applications for supplemental certificates of eligibility must be made prior to the beginning of the new
course because entitlement is not honored to the veteran until the certificate reaches the regional office of the VA.
"For graduate students who are working on a thesis and expect the assistance of the VA on having the thesis typed, bills must be presented and dated prior to the close of this semester," Mr. Elbel said. "In other words, the thesis must be completed in the semester in which the veteran is enrolled. After Saturday, May 20 no supplies will be honored to veterans for the current semester.
ASCE Elects Haworth
Lee O. Haworth, engineerin freshman, was elected president the American Society of Civil Engineers Wednesday.
Other officers are Byron E. Jones, treasurer; John T. Vohs, recording secretary; Donald E. Trull, corresponding secretary; and Henry E. Ford, alumni secretary. Jones and Ford are seniors and Vohs and Trull are juniors in the School of Engineering.
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Y T
1950
Topeka, Ks.
University Daily Kansan Monday, May 15, 1950
STUDENT NEWS PAPER
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Lawrence. Kansas
are the
the
the
this
other
dete
eran
y 20
vet-
ones,
ding
res-
E.
and
trull
egin-
Hawes Wins Award For Best Acting
James Hawes, fine arts senior, was given the award for excellence in acting and J. Steve Mills and Alan Kent Shearer, College juniors, were named the debate honor men of the year at the 25th annual speech department dinner May 12.
Approximately 85 members of the speech and drama department, the debate squad, the Forensic league, University Players, and majors in speech and drama attended the dinner.
Mills and Shearer were selected to the top debate honor for "three years of high quality debating." E. C. Buchler, professor of speech said. Hawes received his award for general excellence in acting, particularly for his performance in "Ten Little Indians."
Other dramatic awards went to Mary Lou Lane, education junior; for the greatest improvement in acting; Frank La Ban, College freshman, as the most promising beginning actor; Ernest Coombs, fine arts special student, for the most service in the theater; and Craig Hampton, fine arts senior, for the most original stage work.
The three new members elected to Delta Sigma Rho, honorary debate fraternity, were announced at the dinner. They are: Guy Goodwin, and Wander Colege sophomore; and Harold Lee Turner, first year law.
Eight students were named for junior forensic honors. They were: Betty Whaley, education senior; Eugene Balloun, Jack Stewart, business juniors; Elizabeth Dillon, College junior; Miss Lane; Heywood Davis, and Win Koerper, College sonhomores.
A special award was given to Lloyd Houston, manager of Bell Music company, for being "the most faithful forensic fan" by Allen Crafton, professor of speech. Mr. Houston has attended most of the speech and debate contests at the University for the past 25 years.
650 Persons See Old Minstrel Show
Sixty Lawrence businessmen and students entertained 650 persons with "Dry Bones" and other numbers on their Old Time Minstrel show at the Lawrence Memorial High school auditorium the past weekend.
Roger Butts, fine arts junior, gave two piano solos and the high school quartet sang "Carolina Moon" in true barbershop quartet style.
"I Had a Dream Dear," "Dry Bones," and "Shine" especially delighted the audience. Other hits were "Dark Town Strutters' Ball," "Waiting for the Robert E. Lee," a tap routine by Jimmy Jackson, a Lawrence resident, and "Lucky the Sun," "Accentuate the Positive" was sung in the best Al Jolson manner.
F. C. "Phog" Allen, University basketball coach, who was interlocutor on the program, kept the audience "in stitches."
The chorus was directed by Charles Kassinger, education senior
YMCA Secretary To Speak Tuesday
Objectives and progress of the Y.M.C.A. will be the subject of a talk to be given by Ted Thornton at an all-membership dinner at 6:15 p.m. Tuesday, May 18, in the Känsas room of the Union.
Several senior members of the organization will receive special recognition for outstanding service to Y.M.C.A. during this past year.
Mr. Thorton is general secretary of the Y.M.C.A. at the University of Haskell. He completed work for his doctor's degree in the theology at Columbia university.
The dramatic awards were presented by Mrs. Frances Feist, instructor in speech. The forensic awards were given by Professor Buehler.
Physics Group To Be Installed
Eighteen undergraduate students, four graduates, and six faculty members will be initiated into Sigma Pi Sigma, national physics honor society, following formal installation of the chapter here today. Mr. Marsh W. White, national executive secretary from Penn State College will preside. A dinner at 7 p.m. in the Palm room of the Union will follow the ceremony.
Sigma Pi Sigma was founded in 1921 at Davidson college, Davidson, N.C., and now has 71 chapters in universities and colleges throughout the nation. The purpose of the society is to recognize students with high scholarship, promote interest in research work, encourage a professional spirit in persons with special ability in physics, and to popularize physics on the college campus.
Officers of the University chapter are: Richard Moore, president; Norman P. Baumann, vice-president; John McKinley, secretary; Arthur House, treasurer; and Dr. L. W. Seagondollar, faculty advisor.
Summer Jobs Are Open To Engineering Juniors
The Proctor and Gamble manufacturing company wants several junior men from the School of Engineering to work this summer in their Kansas City factory. The jobs will last from eight to 10 weeks.
Mechanical, civil, electrical, and chemical engineering students who are interested may obtain interview information blanks from the heads of their departments. These blanks must be filled out and returned to Dean T. DeWitt Carr's office not later than Tuesday afternoon.
Expert On Asia To Speak Friday At Convocation
Phillips Talbot, one of the nation's experts on southern Asia, will speak in Fraser theater at 10 a.m. Friday, on the "Eleventh Hour in South Asia." He will address a joint convocation of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, the department of Political Science and the department of history.
Mr. Talbot has spent most of the time since 1938 in Asia, particularly as a foreign correspondent in India. He is now a member of the Chicago Daily News Foreign service, a senior associate of the Institute of Current World Affairs and visiting assistant professor of political science at the University of Chicago.
He recently returned to the United States after spending several months covering developments in Pakistan, India, Southeast Asia and the Far East. In his talk at the University he will take up the current situation in Asia, considering in particular the Communist victory in China and what it means to South Asia.
Mr. Talbot was graduated from the University of Illinois in 1936 and from 1936 to 1938 worked as a reporter on The Chicago Daily News. In 1938 he won an Institute of Current World Affairs fellowship for advanced, on-the-scene study of India. For a year he studied at the London School of Oriental Studies, and from 1939 to 1941 he studied aspects of life in India, living and working successively in an Indian university, an Indian village, Indian religious centers and several Indian towns.
During the war he was U. S. naval liaison officer at Bomby from 1941 to 1943 and assistant naval attacke at Chungking, wartime Chinese capital, from 1943 to 1945. In 1946 he returned to India and southeast Asia for the Chicago Daily News and the Institute of Current World Affairs. In 1948 he taught at the University of Chicago and directed the Harris Institute on "Nationalism and Regionalism in South Asia."
In addition to newspaper articles, he has written reports for the Institute of Current World Affairs, Foreign Policy Reports and numerous articles for other journals and magazines. He is editor of "South Asia in The World Today."
Surveys Overrated Post Editor Says
It is impossible to edit a magazine by arithmetic, Ben Hibbs, editor of the Saturday Evening Post, told journalism students and guests at the annual Kansan Board dinner Friday.
"There is a trend which is growing up in this country of trying to edit by a mathematical formula," Mr. Hibbs said. "The theory is that you find out, by surveys and sampling methods, what the public wants and then edit accordingly."
"There are times that come almost every week," he said, "when an editor must fly in the face of known popular appeal if he is to maintain the character and responsibility of his publication."
Mr. Hibbs, a 1923 University journalism graduate, pointed out that these surveys are often fallacious and that the greatest folly an editor could commit would be to follow them too slavishly. He gave as an example public sentiment during World War II. People all over the country were complaining that they were tired of war and tired of reading about it, yet it was found that articles concerning the war were the best read.
Mr. Hibbs told the seniors present that he was aware that the field of journalism is crowded and that finding a job is not going to be easy and advised that, "there is still a place in our chosen profession for the man who is willing to work long, sweaty hours, and on whose shoulder perches the little devil of ambition."
Mr. Hibbs believes that balance is one of the most important qualities of magazine character. He said that if the only objective of the Saturday Evening Post was to achieve high readership figures, space would be filled with sports stories, sketches of Hollywood personalities, and adventure stories. More serious articles on national and world affairs would be excluded. This would quickly destroy the character of the magazine.
Twenty-nine students in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information received awards for superior work.
The Henry Schott memorial prize was awarded Francis Kelley. The Schott award to the "junior man who shows the most promise for success in journalism" is a cash prize.
The Sigma Delta Chi citation of achievement was awarded to James Scott as the outstanding man in the School of Journalism. His character, scholarship, and competence were cited. Mr. Scott was graduated in February and is now a reporter for the Kansas City Star.
Sigma Delta Chi certificates for superior scholarship were awarded to Frederie Brooks, a February grad
uate now employed by the Hutchinson News-Herald; Lee Dyer, Doris Greenbank, Doug Jennings, Yvonne Josserand, Dorothy Hogan, Harrison Madden, Kathleen O'Connor, Louis Sciortino and Jessimal Shidler Strange, journalism seniors.
Band Plays Tonight In Last Concert
Mary Kay Dyer and James Scott were named the outstanding seniors in the news and editorial sequence. Yvonne Josserand and Louis Sciorino were cited in the advertising sequence.
The following were cited for outstanding work on the University Daily Kansan:
NEILL HUMFELD, trombone
Best news story: Edward Chapin and Francis Kelley, co-authors; first; Edward Rogers, second; and Robert Sigman, honorable mention.
Tschaikowsky's "Overture of 1812," cowboy ballads, and Hungarian melodies will be played by the 115-piece University band in its annual Spring concert at 8 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium. Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra, will direct.
best feature story; Doris Greenbank, first; Kathleen O'Connor, second; William DeLay, third; and Francis Kelley, honorable mention.
TOM LOVITT, cornet
program of the 1949-50 school year The last official appearance of the band will be during Commencement week.
- Students will be admitted to the concert free if they present their activity cards at the door. General admission tickets are 50 cents each.
JAMES HUGHES
For its opening number, the band will play the "Fresques Suite" (Haydn Wood). Next it will present "Fantasia di Concerto" (Boccalari), with a trombone solo by Neill Humfeld, education senior. He is president of the band.
The remainder of the program will consist of the following selections:
"Brunnhlide's Awakening" from the opera, "Sigfried," (Wagner); "March, opus 99" (Prokofeff); "American Folk Songs" (Seimeister); and "Overture of 1812" (Tschaikowsky).
Tonight's concert is the band's final
The band will also play Capriccio followed by "Hungarian Melodies" Espagnolen (Rimsky - Korsakow), (Vincent Bach) Tom. Lovitt, fine arts sophomore, will play the cornet solo on the latter number.
Best editorial: James Scott and Warren Snaas, tied for first; James Morris, second; James Scott and John Bannigan, tied for third; and William Stratton, honorable mention.
Best promotional advertisement:
Carol Buhler, Natalie Bolton,
Forrest Bellum, Elizabeth Hunter,
Mary Elizabeth Webb, and
Mary Mary, honoree, mention,
Best institutional advertisement:
Douglas Jones, first; Richard Hunter,
second; Robert Bottoms, third;
Natalie Bolton, honorable mention
With a full voice and genial personality, Mrs. Thelma Mims presented her senior voice recital Sunday afternoon.
Full Voice Heard In Mim's Recital
Faure's "Les Bercaeaux" was very subtle. 'L'Amour We Moi," arranged by Tierset, became a little tiresome. Mrs. Mims handled the "Connais tule pays" (Thamos) very well.
"Der arme Peter" (Schumann);
"In Der Schatten Meiner Locken"
(Wolf); "Der Tod Und Das Madchen"
(Schubert), "Die Drie Ziegeuner" (Liszt) were included in the second group of songs.
The first group of selections consisted of music by Handel, Bach, and Giovanni Paisiello, Mrs. Mims was moderately dramatic in the "Aria di Polissena" from Handel's "Radmim da Polissena" from Handel's "With a poised with praiseworthy simplicity." In Bach's "Jesus Schaffl" she displayed admirable breath control.
The latest group of songs included "Dusk in June" (Fay Foster) "Animal Crackers" (Hageman) "Fix Me, Jesus" arranged by Johnson, and "My Journey's End" (Fay Foster),
Grigsby, Stites Win Pi Delta Phi Award
Jack Grigsby and Kenneth Stites,
College sophomores won the Pi Delta Phi awards for outstanding scholarship in French at the annual French club picnic May 11.
The award is presented each year to the two sophomores who have done work of the highest quality in the study of French.
The picnic was held at the home of Mattie Crumrine, assistant professor of Romance languages.
FAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 15, 1950
Official Bulletin
Monday, May 15
Veterans' requisition books for equipment and supplies will not be honored after Saturday, May 20.
Inter-dorm banquet, 6 tonight.
English room, Union.
Mathematical colloquium. 5 p.m. today, 203 Strong hall, Mr. G. W. Griffing, "Iteration Methods and an Application."
Alpha Kappa Psi business meeting, 7 p.m. Tuesday, West end ballroom. Union. Installation of officers; demittance of seniors.
Position of freshman woman representative to All Student Council is open due to resignation of Pat Gardenhire.
A. S.C., 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Pins room, Union.
Engineers Wives family picnic, 0 p.m. Tuesday, Potter lake.
"Russian Ballerina" film, in Russian with English subtitles, 7 pimtonight Lindley auditorium. Free Sponsored by German department Tschaikowsky's "Swan Lake" ballet.
Alpha Phi Omega. 7 p.m. Tuesday, 200 Strong hall. Election and installation of officers. Last meeting of the year.
Last I.S.A. Council meeting of this year, 7:15 tonight, Pine room, Union. Bring unsold copies of Smoke Signals and money tonight.
City Built Over Volcano Noted For Beauty, Suicides
Atami, Japan's fire- devastated "Atlantic City" now faced with a major reconstruction job, is literally a hot spot even in normal times.
This resort town by Sagami Bay, southwest of Tokyo and Yokohama, sits above the perennial subterranean fires of volcanic activity. Along with sea bathing, it offers the hot-bath addicts of Japan additional health and recreation facilities in the way of hot springs, medicinal waters, and steam vents.
One of the volcanic show spots there is the geyser O-yu, known as the "Great Hot Water." Until this region's disastrous earthquake in 1923, it spouted regularly in a roaring, hissing stream of hot water and steam. Today, only steam shoots forth, but the water that still boils up as far as the surface at this point is rated the hottest in Japan—226.4 degrees Fahrenheit.
There are a number of steamvents in the town and many of Atamil's 25,000 inhabitants find practical use for them in cooking and heating. Such volcanic helpfulness, however, is not always an unmixed blessing.
The 1923 earthquake which destroyed much of Yohohama and Tokyo, had its center near Atami at the bottom of the sea—a reminder that the city's name comes from Atsu-umi, meaning "hot sea."
At the time, the floor of Sagami Bay sank 960 feet; the land tilt affected the whole surrounding area, and soundings along the shores
In a gentler mood, nature has given Atami the setting of a floral fairyland. Its rich volcanic soil and balmy climate promote the luxuriant growth of bright flowers, orange groves, and camphor trees. The early-blooming cherry blossoms and the plum garden with more than 3,000 trees, have made the spring season there a favorite vacation time for many Japanese and foreign visitors.
changed in places from 300 to 1,200 feet.
So romantically beautiful are the seacapes around Atami that this region has become notorious for its appeal to unhappy lovers tempted by the traditional Japanese suicide pla. Along Brocade beach, where blue waters churn over coral reefs, and grotesque grottoes and caves form a sinister background, as many as a dozen young couples have embraced death within a single month.
The waters off Atami provide the area with its chief industry, fishing. A professional watcher blows a big shell horn whenever he spots a school of deep-sea fish entering the bay, as a warning to fishermen to place their nets.
Other activities for which the town is noted include the manufacture of wooden articles, candied fruits, and a special kind of paper called "wild - goose - skin." The paper-making fiber, mixed with silk from wild silk worms, also is woven into cloth for handbags, scarfs, and various coverings.
Volunteer Naval Research Reserve To Hold Formal Activities Today
A Lawrence unit of the volunteers naval research will be formally activated at 7:30 p.m.today. The meetin will be held in 105 Military Science building.
Commander R. W. Mayhew from the Chicago division of the office of naval research will conduct the installation. The unit has 21 charter members.
Members of the naval reserve and others engaged in research may attend, said Dr. Russell C. Mills, associate professor of biochemistry Persons engaged in research in any
Students Went Romance,
School Proft Money
University Daily Kansan
Hanover, N. H—(U.K.)—When 4-000,000 board feet of lumber was harvested from the Dartmouth College land grant, undergraduates hopefully noted that the yield would provide enough planks to build a 110-mile boardwalk to Smith, a girl's college at Northhampton, Mass. Unromantic college officials ordered the lumber sold to furniture dealers to finance Dartmouth scholarships however.
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays for examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
of the physical, natural, or social sciences may be assigned to the unit. Most of those now assigned are students or faculty members at the University but confection with an academic institution is not required. Retirement points and promotion credits may be earned throughout the unit.
This will be the second reserve research unit for Lawrence. The army has had a research and development unit for nearly two years.
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L.S.U. Conducts Poll To Find Cause And Cure Of Headaches
New Orleans—(U.P.)-The Louisiana State medical school is trying to tame headaches with pencil and paper and a mechanical calculator
The L.S.C. amends a headache census on forms that can be used as a calculator among employees of New Orleans business houses and industries. Dr. Henry Ogden, who is making the census, said he hopes to get enough information to correlate the factors common to headache sufferers.
The survey form asks some 200 questions, 100 of them related to headaches alone, and the others to vital statistics, occupation, marital status, medical history, physical condition, allergies, education, and other personal information.
Dr. Ogden said a lot of manhours are lost in industry and business because of headaches, and that if he gets enough data it "may be of tremendous value in the management of headaches."
Two Types Listed
He wants to find out what causes leachades, who is most likely to save them and how frequently leachades plague people in various occupations.
Headaches generally are in one of two classifications, he said, vascular and non-vascular. Vascular headaches are caused by swelling arteries in the cranium, which causes painful pressure on the brain. Non-vascular headaches can be caused by such things as eye strain, and apparently are not so much of a problem as the vascular type.
The vascular group includes migraine headaches and those caused by allergies, infections and tension.
Dr. Ogden said they are best treated by special drugs, perscribed by physician, which reduce the arterial swelling, Ordinary pain-killing drugs have little or no effect on them he said.
The L.S.U. allergy specialist said that to make his survey scientifically valid, he needs 100 per cent co-operation from individual business and industry groups polled and must have reports from people who never have headaches, as well as from sufferers.
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MONDAY, MAY 15, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE THREE
---
Music Publisher Says Hula Will Replace Charleston
Hollywood, May 11—(U.P.)—It's gonna take a lot of pep to keep hep with the musicians this year. Right now they've got everybody kicking up their heels in the "Charleston."
This comes straight from Irving Mills, a music publisher who owns 150 thousand dollars worth of songs and can tell you what you'll be singing two years before you know it yourself.
Next, it'll be the hip-swingin' nula.
And if your ole muscles are all kinked up from trying to keep pace with the Dixieland two-beat, blame it on this gent. He's the one who started the revival. He had a lot of help, however, from a British lord who ordered a flock of Dixieland tunes for London.
"I took him over a lot of swing records and he liked those, all right. Then he asked, kind of timidly, if we had any Dixieland. I sent him some and they sold like crazy all over the British empire."
hired or timidly. Mr. Mills says, 'He is not responsible for this wild Charleston erase.' Ernest Fisk, head of the electrical music industry in England.
"It's kind of funny." Mr. Mills
ys, "but a British is responsible
That gave the publisher an idea. The minute he got home from London he went into action with his two-beat bands. And first thing anybody knew, jitterbugging and jive were out and the Charleston was in.
Movie stars do it. . . housewives and businessmen are brushing up
Back him into a corner and he'll admit he might hurry 'em up a little once in a while—to get ahead of the competition. But he says the Dixieland revival would've happened along anyhow.
on it. . . even cowboys are having a fling at it. A local barn dance palace has a special "Charleston night" for energetic cowpokes. And we hear those bow-legged versions are a sight to see.
"And you want a scoop?" he whispered. "I'll tell you what's going to be next. Maybe in six months ... maybe sooner. It's Hawaiian music."
"The signs are all over. Steamship companies are plugging the islands for vacations. . . department stores are getting up big displays of Hawaiian clothes. . . everybody's Honolulu happy."
Including him. He's got stacks of hula music all ready and it's beginning to look like we'll have to practice shakin' our chassis before we even get our breath back from that Charleston.
These things run in cycles," he explained. "I've been watching musical generation starts a new rage that was going strong 20 years ago."
Mr. Mills says it was "inevitable."
Nancy Ruthrauff Is ATO 'Esquire Girl'
Alpha Tau Omega fraternity held its Esquire spring party recently at the chapter house. During the intermission Miss Nancy Rhuraffu, College junior, was presented with a trophy as "ATO Esquire Girl for 1950". The ATO Quintet sang several numbers. Music for dancing was furnished by Harlan Livingood and his orchestra.
Ane guests were Patricia Ann Lloyd, Bette Jones, Elinor Rice, Pat Landis, Mary Anne Foreman, Aimee Guinotte, Pat Beal, Ann Wagner, Charlene Farrell, Natalie Logan, Ann Snyder, Jo Breidenbach, Betsy Thessa, Margaret Quigley, Doris Bondank, Jane Kirchoff, Marjorie Crane, Judy Carothers, Pat Haas, Darlene Stuart, Nancy Gross, Barbara Comstock, Nina Phillips, Nancy Rutraff, Priscilla Richmond, Sharon Fitzpatrick, Sue Woodward, Pat Grove, Betty Mattocks, Rosetta Snow, Charlene Lashbrook, Nancy Dennen, Jane Pope, arilyn Brown; Lois Bradfield, Shirley Hybarger, Marian Rippeatone. Doris Williams
Anne Southwick, Gloria McManus,
Marilyn Whitney, Hillane Mather, Dolores Brown, Portia Baldwin, Helen Patterson, Carolyn Young, Jean McGinnis, Josephine Stucky, Jean trantum, Jo Ann Sherman, Marilyn Woolley, Ruther Abercrombie, Ann
Teke Formal Guests
Guests were Joyce Hoyt, Phyllis Rogman, Barbara Klanderud, Barbara Spalding, Lou Hoffman, Mary Agnes Leach, Phyllis Modane, Marge Kirkpatrick, Polly Owen, Nancy Carey, Patty Lloyd, Beth Scalph.
Members of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity held their spring formal dance recently.
Barbara Lamoreaux, Lois Lacy,
Lou Jean Hubbell, Mary Loux Vess,
Winifred Miller, Betty Larson,
Darleen Geiman, Pat Kimbrough,
Gloria Johnson, Jamie Estack,
Virginia Keeney, Georgia Kuffel.
Theta Phi Alpha Pledges
Jane Koelzer, Peggy Shay, Patricia Landes, Marilyn Sunders, Jo Ann Ogg, Pat Obenland, June Alefs, Carolyn Lientz, Jeanette Stiener, and Virginia Hunholz.
Theta Phi Alpha Pledges
Theta Phi Alpha announces the pledging of Mary Hadeley, Muscatine, Iowa, and Mary Joe Kassleman, Kansas City, Kan.
Honors Housemother
Sigma Kappa sorority entertained with a tea in honor of its housemother, Mrs. Mary Younkman, Sunday at the chapter house. The guests included housemothers, representatives of organized houses, and members of the faculty.
Beelman, Patt Schraader, Retta Desmond, Doris Margreiter, Joe-Amm Bousman, Maxine Brown, Margaret Shay, Pat Nason, Guinevere Goerz, Barbara Brown, Marilyn Frizell, Mr. and Mrs. Don Schaake, Mr. and Mrs. Richard N. Millikan, Mr. and Mrs. J. Richard Martindell, Mr. and Mrs. Chester A. Laniewski, Mr. and Mrs. Ellis L. Anders, Mr. and Mrs. DeWitt Dearborn.
Chaperones were Mrs. John Skie,
Mrs. Eugene Alford, Mrs. F.L. Mac-
Creary, Mrs. C.J. Thomas, and Mrs.
H.J. Overholser.
A traveling alarm clock to keep her awake on her trip to Columbia University, N.Y., was presented to Miss Joie Stapleton, associate professor of physical education, at a "going-away" party at her home Tuesday night.
Farewell Party For Miss Stapleton
She was entertained at a "Coke party" in her home by 14 junior and senior women majors in the physical education department. Miss Stapleton is leaving at the end of this semester on a year's sabbatical leave during which she will work on her master's degree at Columbia.
DG, Teke Pinned
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Hastings-Gieman
Delta Gamma sorority announces the pinning of Miss Darlene Geiman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. I. Geiman of Hoisington, toMr. Jim Hastings, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hastings of Pratt.
The announcement was made at dinner recently by the housemother Mrs. W. S. Shaw, who received a mixed spring corsage. Miss Geiman wore a white orchid corsage and her attendants, Miss Dorothy Williams and Miss Bettina Gagliarlo, received corsages of yellow roses.
Each member of the sorority received a May basket filled with sweet peas.
Miss Geiman is a fine arts junior Mr. Hastings is a business senior and a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity.
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Hollywood—(U.P.)—Every time Bing Crosby makes headlines, his brother Bob said, he gets a new title himself.
"For years," the younger Crosby grinned, "I was 'Bing's kid brother.' Now, with his kids turning crooner, too, I'm 'Gary Crosby's uncle'."
And if Bing and Dixie are having family squabbles—which they say they aren't—his next title might be: "Dixie Crosby's exbrother-in-law."
"People are always trying to scrape up a feud between Bing and me," Bob said. "I can't even wear a loud Hawaiian sports shirt without somebody giving me the 'trying-to-copy Bing-huh?' routine.
"They did it when I cracked the entertainment business. Heck, I turned singer because it paid more in picking cucumbers, which I had been doing.
"Then when I went on the radio, I got it again. Same with movies. And records. At least Bing hasn't recorded 'The Stars and Stripes Forever,' yet.
"I couldn't even take up golf without somebody accusing me of latching on to that because Bing plays it."
Now he's getting ready to make a series of comedy pictures with crooner Frankie Laine. And he's bracing himself for the inevitable: "Huh, making like Bing and Bob Hope, hmm?"
"They had 'The Road' pictures." Bob shrugged. "Ours'll be 'The Path' movies...we have a very limited budget."
This feuding business goes on and on, he says, and has been so long nobody can even remember now where or when it started.
"Actually, we're very good friends," Bob explained. My position with Bing is that of a small boy who walks up to his big brother and says: "Blow my nose for me."
'The big brother hands him a handkerchief and says: 'Blow it yourself.'
"That's Bing and me. But we
can't ever seem to get the idea through anybody's head."
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY,MAY 15,1950
Jayhawkers Split With Wildcats At Manhattan
By BOB LEONARD Daily Kansan Sports Editor
Coach Bill Hogan's Jayhawk baseball team split a two-game series with the Kansas State Wildcats at Manhattan Friday and Saturday. K.U. lost the first game 7 to 9 with Guy Mabry on the hill and won the second game 7 to 3 behind the eight-hit pitching of Carl Sandefur. The Jayhawkers will meet the Wildcats Wednesday and Thursday on the K.U. diamond, the games starting at 3 p.m.
KU 7, K-State 9
Five hits, including two home runs over a short right field wall, cost Guy Mabry, slender Jayhawker righthander, six runs in the first two innings of the first baseball contest played at Manhattan. The Wildcats won 9 to 7. Eleven errors were committed in the ragged game.
Mabry, after his ineffective showing in the first two innings, settled down to hurl six hit ball for the remainder of the contest. In the fourth inning, the K.U. righthander retired the Wildcats on four pitched balls.
Coach Bill Hogan's Jayhawkers picked up three runs in their half of the fourth. Temple opened with a double to right and scored on Hicks' single. Marbry got a two-base hit down the leftfield foul line. De-Luna singled to score Mabry and Hicks to bring in the K.U. three-run total.
The K.U. nine came to life again in the sixth when Floyd Temple singled, stole second, and came in on Mabry's single to centerfield.
The Wildcats touched Mabry for two runs in the seventh. Dick Johnson doubled to right and moved to third when Schumacher grounded out. Carr hit a long fly ball to center field and Johnson came in to score after the catch. Reitemier, K-State pitcher, got on by an error and moved to second when Mabry hit Scanell with a pitched ball. He scored when R. Bremner singled to right. The throw from the outfield was to the plate and a battle royal almost started as Jayhawker catcher Ken Morrow protested the umpire's decision that the runner was safe.
In the eighth, the Jayhawkers tallied three more runs to end the Kansas scoring for the day.
Kansas-Kansas State Box Score:
(First Game)
KANSAS (7) AB R H PO A E I
Cavonaugh, 2b 5 0 1 4 2 1
Koenig, ss 5 0 0 1 4 1
Temple, 3b 5 3 3 3 5 0
Ellis, lf 4 1 0 1 0 0
Hicks, rf 4 1 1 1 0 0
Mabry, p 4 2 3 0 1 0
Lamping, cf 4 0 0 2 1 0
DeLuna, b 3 0 1 9 0 0
Morrow, c 4 0 1 3 1 3
Totals 38 7 10 24 14 5
K-STATE (9) AB R H PO A E
Scannell, 2b 4 1 1 6 3 0
R. Bremner, 3b 4 1 3 0 3 4
Specht, ss 5 1 2 2 2 0
D. Bremner, 1b 5 1 0 7 1 0
Hilfs, lf 4 2 0 1 1 2
Johnson, cf 5 2 4 3 0 0
Schumacher, c 2 0 1 8 0 0
Carr, rf 4 0 1 0 0 0
Reitemeier, p 4 1 0 0 2 0
Totals 37 9 12 27 12 6
Kansas 000 301 030-7
Kansas State 421 100 20x-8
RBI: B. Bremner, Specht 2, Johnson 3, Reitemeier, Hicks, Mabry, DeLuna 2. 2B: Johnson, Temple 2, Mabry. HR: Specht, Johnson, S.B. R. Bremner 2, Temple, SH; Schumacher, DP: Reitemeier to Scannell to D. Bremner, Specht to Scannell.
LOB: Kansas 5, Kansas State 9.
Pitching summary: BB: Mabry 4, Reitemeier 1. SO: Mabry 2, Reitemeier 8. PB: Schumacher 2. HBP: Mabry (Scannell). Earned runs Kansas 4, Kansas State 5. Umpires Roark and Jessup. Time: 2:15. Att. 750 (est.)
Think Your Feet Hurt? So Did Abe Lincoln's
Boston—(U.P.)-President Abraham Lincoln was the first person to direct national attention to the importance of foot care.
"He said when his feet hurt he couldn't think," says the National Foot Health council.
Lincoln's feet were $12\frac{1}{2}$ inches long and had so many corns and calluses he had to have a personal foot doctor, a chiropodist named Zacharie, according to the council.
KU 7, K-State 3
Big Carl Sandefur, Jayhawker pitching ace, scattered eight hits over nine innings to win the second game of the series with Kansas State 7 to 3. Sandefur struck out 11 and allowed only two earned runs.
The Jayhawkers looked considerably sharper than they did the previous day. Sandefur was effective in the clutches and K.U. made only one error during the entire contest.
Sandefur got in trouble in the second when he hit Dave Bremner, Wildcat first baseman, with a pitched ball. Bremner moved to second on a passed ball. Dick Hilts, K-State leftfielder, slammed the second ball pitched to him over the rightfield fence for a home run and the Wildcats led 2 to 0. Dick Johnson walked. Dale Carroll followed with a single, Johnson going to second. A passed ball advanced both runners into scoring position with none away.
Sandefur, who won his sixth game of the year against one defeat, retired the side by striking out catcher Keith Thayer and second baseman Tim Scannell and getting pitcher Duane Holder to ground out short to first.
In the fourth, Coach Hogan's Jayhawkers pushed across three runs on three singles, a walk, and a fly ball. Frank Koenig led off with a single and moved to second on Floyd Temple's sacrifice. Carl Ellis walked and Walter Hicks singled sharply on the ground into rightfield loading the bases.
Guy Mabry singled between third and short on the ground into left-field with Koenig and Ellis scoring and Hicks moving to third base. Hicks scored after tagging up on Lou DeLuna's long fly to center for the third K.U. run.
The Jayhawkers scored two more runs in the fifth. Sandefur walked and moved to second on Jim Cavonaugh's sacrifice hit. Koenig drove the pitcher home with a triple to left-center field. With two away, Ellis singled into left scoring Koenig and sent K-State pitcher Holder to the showers.
Sophomore righthander, Jim Iverson, pitched the next two and one third innings for the Wildcats allowing no hits and pitching to only eight batters.
The Jayhawkers scored two run in the eighth inning off the third Aggie pitcher, Gene Kubicki. The runs were obtained on three singles, a walk, and a two-run single by Sandefur.
Sandefur retired the Wildcats in order in the fifth, sixth, and eighth innings. In the seventh, he walked Cliff Schumacher, who batted for Thayer, but got Perk Reitemeier, batting for Iverson, to hit into a fast double-play, second to short to first.
In the ninth, the Wildcats scored an unearned run. Hilts opened the inning with a single to rightfield.
Schumacher struck out for the first out. Reitemeier then grounded to DeLuna who threw to Koenig forcing Fitzgerald with Hils scoring from third. Scannell lined to Mabry in centerfield to end the game.
Johnson reached first on an infield single and Sandefur filled the bases by hitting pinch hitter Lyndall Fitzgerald with a pitched ball.
Kansas-Kansas State Box Score:
(Second Game)
KANSAS (7) AB R H PO A E 0
Cavonaugh, 2b 4 0 0 1 3 0
Koenig, ss 4 2 2 3 4 0
Temple, 3b 4 0 0 0 1 0
Ellis, lf 4 2 3 1 0 0
Hicks, rf 4 1 1 0 0 0
Mabry, cf 4 1 2 3 0 0
DeLuna, 1b 3 0 0 8 1 0
Morrow, c 2 0 0 11 1 0
Sandefur, p 3 1 1 0 2 0
Totals 32 7 9 27 11 1
K-STATE (3) AB R H PO A E
Scannell, 2b 5 0 0 1 0 1
R. Bremner, 3b 4 0 0 1 3
Specht, ss 4 0 0 0 3
D. Bremner, 1b 3 1 1 12 0
Hilts, lf 4 2 2 3 0
Johnson, cf 3 0 2 4 0
Carr, rf 3 0 1 0 0
Kubicki, p 0 0 0 0 0
Pine, p 0 0 0 0 0
Fitzgerald 0 0 0 0 0
Thayer, c 2 0 1 3 0
Schumacher, c 1 0 3 1 0
Holden, p 2 0 1 0 4
Iverson, p 0 0 0 0 0
Reitmeier,rf 2 0 0 0 0
Lamping ran for Koenig as a courtesy runner in 7th.
Totals 33 3 8 27 14 0
Fitzgerald hit by pitch for Pine in 90h
Kansas 000 320 020—7
Kansas State 020 001 01—3
RBI: Koenig, Ellis, Mobry 2, DeLuna, Sandefur 2, Hilts 2, Reitemeier, 2B: Ellis, 3B: Koenig, HR: Hilts, SB: Ellis, SH: Cavonaugh, Temple, Morrow, DP: Cavonaugh to Koenig to DeLuna, LD奥劳, Kansas 7, Kansas State 7, Pitching summary; BB: Sandefur 2, Holder 3, Kubicki 1, Pine 1, SO: Sandefur 11, Holder 2, Iverson 1, Kubicki 1, Pine 1, Hits and Runs off: Holder 5 and 5 in 4-2-3 innings, Iverson 0 and 0 in 2 in 1-3 innings, Kubicki 3 and 2 in 1 inning, Pine 1 and 0 in 1 inning. Earned runs off: Sandefur 2, Holder 5, Kubicki 2, HBP: Sandefur (D. Bremner, Fitzgerald), Iverson (Koenig). PB: Murphy 3, Thayer 1. Losing pitcher. Holder, Umpires: Jesup and Wildcatski. Time: 2:25. Att, 700 (est.)
Didn't Know The Right Combination
Chicago (U.P.)—What three bandits didn't know about cash registers made Harry Block, 52, a happy man.
Block and his sister-in-law, Mrs. Evelyn Pillar, 40, stood hopefully silent while one of the bandits thumped a key on the register in Block's store. The register failed to open and the bandits left empty-handed.
Block explained that the register opens only when two or more keys are pressed.
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In the first game: The K-State crowd applauded Frank Koenig on his attempt to stop Dick Johnson's line drive in the fifth . . . a K.U. miscue occurred when DeLuna pulled in almost into the plate for a possible bunt by Bremner, and the Aggie third baseman immediately hit safely to rightfield leaving first base uncovered . . . K-State fielder Dick Johnson made an excellent catch of DeLuna's line drive in the seventh . . . a small scale war almost started when Aggie pitcher Perk Reitmeier came in from third on a single to right by R. Bremner and K.U. catches Ken Morrow thought he had tagged the runner out. Coach Hogan was immediately on the scene arguing in Morrow's behalf. As the K-State players ran out of the dugout they were met by K.U. players Bill Mace, Lou DeLuna, George Voss, Floyd Temple and Carl Ellis who ran in from leftfield. Umpire Roark did a great deal of listening, but after the Jayhawkers had had their say, he motioned them away—the run was in and it counted . . . the short rightfield fence, which measures 264 feet at the foul line, cost Mabry two easy outs at home . . . Coach Hogan left the ball park mumbling, "It's going to be different tomorrow" . . . and it was . . .
In the second game: in the fifth inning, after the plate umpire had called several pitches by Sandefur as balls which had let two men get on base, the third Aggie batter Hank specht was up. Sandefur pitched what catcher Kern Morrow thought were two good strikes to Specht, but the umpire called them balls. Red Morrow called time. He held up the ball in his hand and said: "Do you want to send him down now or have him (Sandefur) pitch the other balls?" . . . K-State president Milton
Eisenhower was deeply concerned when Frank Koenig was knocked unconscious by a pitched ball . . . Koenig returned to the game when it was K.U.'s time at the field . . . Mr. Eisenhower sat in the press box during both games.
Plumber Invents Sanitary Hot Dog
Danville. Va. (U.P.)—The hot dog has gone modern.
He invented a device to keep the weiners sanitary. On the handle of his patented fork is a button on a spring. On the spring is a lever.
Clyde Brady, a Danville plumber, got tired of seeing restaurant men dislodge weiners from the fork by the finger method.
Just press the button and within being touched by anybody's finger the weiner is gently nudged off the fork into the waiting bun.
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MONDAY, MAY 15. 1950
4
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
1950
Karnes, Kansas Lose To Missouri
Jayhawker Capt. Bob Karnes met defeat in the mile run for the first time this season and the Kansas track team dropped its first 1950 outdoor meet, 53 1/3 to 77 2/3, in the K.U.-Missouri dual at Columbia Saturday.
Bill McGuire of Missouri had to turn in the fastest collegiate mile of 1950 to beat Karnes. The Missouriian's time was 4:10.7. Karnes' was 4:10.9. Needless to say, it was a new meet record. And neither of the Big Seven aceds had ever run so fast.
Three more records fell. Coach Bill Easton's other two Jayhawker distance stars, half-miler Pat Bowers and two-miler Herb Semper, produced new marks. The final standard went to Missouri high jumper Bob Gordon.
McGuire and Karnes waged a terrific race all the way through. Coming off the final curve and trailing by barely a yard, Karnes made his move to pass McGuire. But the Missourian merely moved wider, breaking Karnes stride and holding off the K.U. ace to the finish line.
Coach Easton said, "I think Bob could have whipped him if he'd gotten past on the backstretch before that last curve. The guy who is ahead around that curve and in the home-stretch can keep moving wider so another fellow can't pass him. And that's what McGuire did." Easton had the following lap times for Karnes: *61.6*, *65.4*, *63.* and *60.9*.
Bowers, who ran third in the mile, came up with a brilliant 1:52.3 for his new 880 record. And Karnes, despite the last pace of the mile, ran second in 1:54.
For the first time this season, Semper had opposition over most of the two-mile route. Missouri's No. 2 distance man, Robert Fox, stayed with the Jayhawker sophomore sensation until the last 660 yards when the dynamic Semper kick finished him off in 9:20. Fox was clocked at approximately 9:30. Kansas' capable Cliff
Abel was third in 9:50. Usually he does better than that, but the first mile of 4:37 was too much for him.
Gordon barely got over the former record of 6 feet $ \frac{4}{2} $ inches by Jayhawker Tom Scofield in 1947. The Missouri's height was 6 feet $ \frac{4}{8} $
Closest race of the day was the 440-yard dash with Tiger Randy Vanet winning over Kansas' little Emil Schutzel in a photo-finish. Vanet's victory came on a desperate lunge at the tape.
Individual scoring honors were tied for by Jayhawker Jack Greenwood, who finished first in both hurdle races, and Tiger Byron Clark, who won both the 100- and 220-yard dashes.
Missouri won the meet in the field. The Tigers outscored K.U. 42 2/3 to 11 1/3 there while trailing 35 to 42 on the track. Much of the M.U. edge came by sweeping the two weight events, the shot put and discus.
In winning, Coach Tom Botts' Missourians proved they will be the team to beat come the week end and the conference meet at Lincoln. The outstanding individual stars, but they make up for it in team balance.
K. U., along with Kansas State and Nebraska, will give Botts' team a battle for the league title. In fact, the finish in team standings should be one of the closest ever. K.U, and K-State will pit most of their strength in a few events, the Jayhawkers on the track and the Wildcats in the field. But should either team come through in a few vital events, it could end up the winner. Nebraska, like Missouri, lacks an abundance of individual stars, but has more balance than either K.U. or K-State.
The conference record books are due for wholesale rewriting.
Missouri 77 2/3, Kansas 53 1/3.
Missouri 17 273, Kansas 53 173.
100-yard dash-Won by Byron
Clark, M; 2, Bob Devinney, K; 3,
Harold Carter, M.: 10.
Mile run—Won by Bill McGuire,
M; 2, Bob Karnes, K; 3, Pat Bowers,
4:10.7. New meet record, Old record of
4:11.6 by John Munski, M. 1940.
440-yard dash-Won by Randy Vanet, M; 2, Emil Schutzel, K; 3, Jim Whitacre, M.: 49.5.
Shot put—Won by Phil Brusca, M, 48-9%; 2, Ron Middleton, M, 47-5%; 3, G. L. Pelst, M, 45-5%.
High-jump—Won by Bob Gorden, M. 6-4/4; tied for 2 and 3, Bill Richardson, K, and Mitchell Launius and Richard Odor, M. 6-2. New meet record. Old record of 6-4/4 by Tom Scofield, K. 1947.
Javelin throw—Won by Don Zimmermon, M, 176-9½; 2, Jim Potts, K, 176-7½; 3, Bob Drumm, K, 175-1.
120-vard high brudles—Won by Jack Greenwood, K; 2, Frank Bardot, M; 3, Bob Foster, M. 148.
880-yard. run—Won by. Bowers, K; 2, Karnes; 3, Duane Wolfe, M.
4, New York record, 8 record, 1 record of 1.55 Gum. Reeves, K 1932 and Marshall Reeves, M. 1940.
220-yard dash—Won by Clark, M;
2, Devinney, K; 3, Laddie Stovall,
M.; 22.
Two-mile run—Won by Herb Semper, K; 2 Robert Fox, M; 3, Cliff Abel, K. 9:29.2. New meet and K.U. records. Old meet record of 9:40.7 by Ray Harris, K, 1939. Old K.U. record of 9:21.3 by Semper, 1950.
Pole vault—Won by Jim Floyd, K, 12-6; tied for 2, Paul Warne and Richard Moore. M. 12-0.
220-yard low hurdles—Won by Greenwood, K; 2, Carter, M; 3, Bard-dot. M; 23.8.
Mile relay—Won by Kansas (Schutzel, John Stites, Jim Dinsmore, and Devinney) 3:20.9.
Discus throw—Won by Pelts, M,
141-2%; 2 Middleston, M, 136-10; 3,
Brusca, M, 135-11%.
Broad jump—Won by Stovall, M,
22-11½; 2, Lorne Buchner, M, 22-0;
3, Devinney, K, 21-7¹.
Golfers Drub Wildcats, Netmen Lose
K. U. golfers and tennis teams will journey up the Kaw river Tuesday for return matches with the Kansas State Wildcats. Coach Bill Winey's golfers will be after their second win of the year over the Cats, while the net team under Dick Richards' direction will be out to even the score with them.
With Dick Ashley, 1949 Big Seven champion, and sophomore Gene Rourke showing the way, Kansas swept past the Kansas State linksmen $15 \frac{1}{2}$ to $2 \frac{1}{2}$, May 12. The pair toured the well-kept Lawrence Country club course in 70 strokes—two over par—to tie for medalist honors. Jayhawker golfers have won or tied for medalist honors in each of their six matches this year.
Bob Dare, who played in the No. 2 position in place of the absent Dave Dennis, carded a very fine 71. Howard Logan completed the Kansas foursome with a 78. The victory was the fourth in six starts for the Jayhawkers.
The opposition was the same on the tennis courts in front of Memorial stadium, but the result was different as K-State's fery sophomore duel of
Roger Coad and Chris Williams slashed and slammed the Wildcats to a 5 to 2 victory in tennis.
Kansas victories were chalked up by Macferran and John Freiburger. The bespeckled Mr. Mac dropped Wildcat veteran Jim Neumann, 6-2, 7-5. Macferran has won three of seven singles matches this year. Freiburger defeated Dick Nichols, 6-1, 7-5, for his fourth win in singles play against two defeats. Both of the sophomore's losses were in matches against the strong Missouri Tigers.
Results of the golf match are as 'allows':
Ashley (K-70) defeated Dick Atkinson (78). 3 to 0.
Dare (K-71) defeated Bob Funk (74), 3 to 0.
Ashley-Dare (K) defeated Atkinson-Funk, 3 to 0.
Rourke (K-70) defeated Bob Batt (81), 3 to 0.
Results of the tennis match are as follows:
Rourke-Logan (K) defeated Batt-
Myers, 3 to 0.
Mike Myers (KS-77) defeated Logan (78), $ 2_{1/2} $ to $ 1/2. $
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The Thinker
Singles
Coad (KS) defeated Swartzell, 6-4,
6-2
Williams (KS) defeaten Ranson, 6-2, 6-2.
Don Upson (KS) defeated Charles Crawford, 3-6, 6-0, 6-3.
Freiburger (K) defeated Nichols 6-1, 7-5.
Macferran (K) defeated Neumann, 6-2, 7-5.
Doubles
Neumann-Upson (KS) defeated Ranson-Crawford, 6-2, 6-4.
Coad - Williams (KS) defeated
Swartzell-Macferran 6-3, 3-6, 6-4
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 15, 1950
The Editors Report —
THE HIGH PRICE OF
Holding A Job
The three men in the room looked up as the brash young reporter burst through the door and shouted, "What's the news today?" Judging from the eagerness with which the young cub bounded over the threshold, he evidently had just received notice of a two-dollar raise "come payday if you keep on the ball this week."
Yet the men in the room—not knowing of the cub's possible windfall—seemed less than enchanted at his arrival. They had been deep in serious discussion when the unwelcome interloper burst in on them. Now, by turns, they regarded him with looks of disgruntlement, boredom, and bewilderment.
Summer Slicker, a somewhat superannuated economist—he never failed to mention he had been one of the original "Rooseveltian brain-dusters"—but a sage man nevertheless, looked at the newcomer and wished he would leave immediately. Ever since the time a careless reporter had spelled his first name Simmer instead of Summer, Slicker had always distrusted "newspapermen." From the way Slicker mouthed the word, you knew right off that he used "newspapermen" because his innate courteous nature forbade him using stronger language.
As inaudibly as he could, Slicker sighed as Secretary of Unemployed Robot boomed out a hearty greeting to the young man. He gently rubbed his temples while he waited for Robin to get rid of the "news-paperman." Slicker was eager to get on with their talk. After fifteen years of silently suffering the indignity of being ignored, the plan dearest to Summer's heart was at last about to go into effect.
Somehow, the brash "newspaperman" has gotten wind of Slicker's plan. He was now asking Robot what it was all about.
"From a reliable source," the newspaperman said, "I understand that Professor Slicker's plan is due to start next Monday. Would you care to fill in the details for me? We've got five million readers waiting to find out all about it!"
As the newspaperman uttered the last sentence, he attempted a light laugh. Yet, as usual, his listeners had the feeling the reporter was using the "five million readers" as a sort of poling-ax. If you didn't tell him what he wanted to know, you'd get the poling-ax across the head...
Robot boomed out his hearty laugh as the young man left off talking. Slicker started involuntarily and looked around; he never had been able to reconcile that booming laugh with Robot's rotund potbelly and weak chin. Robot's laugh, Slicker thought, was about as well suited to the man as was his—Slicker's—wife's mania for South American dances. Summer sighed again, as inaudibly as possible, at the thought of his wife doing the samba in a smoke-filled cabaret.
Slicker sat up and tried his best to look interested as Robot began filling in the background of his—Slicker's—plan. After a decent interval, he broke in, saying, "My dear Secretary Robot, suppose you let me tell the dear lad what we were just discussing?"
Robot boomed out his laugh
again — not quite as heartily this time, told Slicker to go right ahead, then made him wait while he saw to it that the reporter got Summer Slicker spelled out correctly. Slicker smiled appreciatively at the gesture. He did so dislike having his name misspelled.
The reporter jotted *down* the name, then looked up brightly at Slicker and told him, "Shoot." And Slicker, choosing his words carefully, began outlining his plan.
"As you most likely already know," Slicker began, "we now have some ten million persons above 65 years of age in this country. Approximately ninety per cent of these persons are still employable. However, as the present state of affairs exist, government has combined with management to force these "employables" to retire.
"Many have no wish to do so. After working all their lives, they wish to continue. Yet it is now the habit, willy-nilly, of most employers to force, willy-nilly, all employables, on their reaching the age of 65, to retire.
"It is to correct this unpleasant situation," Slicker continued, "that I devised my plan. The purpose of the "Slicker Plan to Retain Retirable Employables in Employment" is to give employables past the retirement age an opportunity to stay on the job.
"Since the passage of the Social Security Act in 1935, there has been an enormous acceleration in the retirement of employables past 65. Indeed, it was the purpose of this act of our Congress to enable employables past 65 to retire.
"Yet that which was designed to enable employables to retire has now attained the stature of a mandate to retire!" (Slicker unsuccessfully tried to put a bit more emphasis in his voice on this point.) "Congress, of course, did not foresee this frightful possibility."
"Still," Slicker went on, "something must be done to correct the situation as it exists today. That is what my plan shall do.
"Briefly, this is how the plan will operate: let us assume that an employable has worked long enough to attain forty quarters of social security benefits. Arbitrarily, let us say he has a monthly pension of $500 a month due him for the rest of his life.
"Our employable, now at the age of 65, has decided he would rather continue working than to retire on his small monthly income from social security insurance. Yet our employable realizes he cannot continue to work. His employer, willy-nilly, has formulated the policy of forcing all his employees to retire on their attaining the age of 65.
"Previously, there would be no alternative for our employable. He would, willy-nilly, have to retire. But under the 'Slicker Plan to Retain Retireable Employables in Employment,' our employable does indeed have an alternative.
"It is simply this; our employable turns over fifty per cent of his monthly pension—which he will receive after the age 65 from social security benefits—to his employer in return for the privilege of retaining his employment.
"Thus, the employable may have
his wish to stay in employment and the employer is given an incentive for retiring him. No employer can say he wishes to retire an employable because the employable's age has reduced the employable's productivity, when the employable himself is willing to refund the employer a portion of his social security benefits to recompense the employer for any possible loss due to the employable loss of productivity! It is as simple as that!"
The brash young reporter made a few inquiries to clear up a point or two that he was uncertain of. Then smiling brightly, he flew out of the room. Through the open door, they heard his voice telling the elevator operator to "give it the full throttle for I've got a hot story to get on the press!"
For a moment, the three men sat around the table in silence. But at last, the third man in the room spoke. He had been silent during the entire time the reporter had been there and so had gone unnoticed. His name was S. E. McNility. He was chairman of the "League for Retaining Employables Past Retirement Age in Employment."
"Slicker," said McNillity, then amended his rough English, "Professor Slicker. I have been going over in my mind what we were talking about before that young feller came in like the wind.
"Let me see if I have it right. You were suggesting that employables should begin recompensing employers as soon as they start working so that the drain on their social security benefits would be less than when they reach 65. Is that what you said?"
Slicker allowed himself the brief pleasure of a wide-mouthed grin before replying seriously, "Yes, dear fellow, that it's it. You see..."
Editor's note: We thought we would let you see what we consider the editorial of tomorrow will look like. Today's editorial was inspired —we use the term for lack of a better— by a story headed, "Government Bonus to Keep Men on Job After 65 Gains Favor."
For further details, we suggest you write your Congressman. A plan identical to the one in our editorial was proposed to Congress more than two months ago.
University
Daily Hansan
News Room K.U. 251
Adv. Room K.U.376
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
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National Press Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Ad-
ministration Service,420 Madison Ave. New York City.
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Managing Editor Business Mgr. Asst. Man. Editors Norma Hunsinger Kay O'Connor John Hill Ralph Hemenway City Editor Edward Chapin Feature Editor Francis Kelley Photograph Editor Franklin Vauts Richard Wilson Society Editor Fave Wilkinson Asst. Society Editors Billie Stover Emily Stewart Editorial Assets Keith Leslie Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner Nate. Mgr. Yvonne Nat. Adv. Mgr. Porrest Bellus Classified Ad. Mgr. Lee Dyer Promotion Mgr. John Wiedeman
By Bibler
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Secretarial Training Civil Service, Higher Accounting and Auditing. Write for catalog. Box 424, Lawrence Business College.
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Make Those Group Recordings Now... Before School Is Over!
Special group rates on recordings made for organizations . . . church groups bands, fraternity and sorority groups etc. $1.50 per 10-inch disk.
Recording Studio Available Phone 375 for appointment.
University Radio At Bell Music Co.
Soiled clothes make tasty morsels for moths. Don't encourage them to dine. Always store clothes freshly cleaned.
Cleaned Stored Clothes Spurn Moths
Let us clean your winter woolens and store them for you all summer. Proper cleaning and storing methods extend the life and good looks of your clothes. Store your woolens and furs with us now . . . they'll be ready for you when you return to school next September.
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4
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
MONDAY, MAY 15, 1950
Oxylin Tablets Contain Acid
Washington—(U.P.)—The food and drug administration has issued an emergency warning that thousands of potentially-deadly uncoated oxylin tablets containing dangerous amounts of borac acid have been distributed throughout the East and Midwest by a Pennsylvania drug firm.
All hospitals, physicians, druggists and consumers in the area were warned against use of the tablets, which are being sold across drug counters without perscription.
The tablets, used to combat urinary infections, gonorrhea and occasionally influenza, were distributed by Drexel laboratories and Louis E. Evon, of Drexel Hill and Upper Darby, Pa.
The government agency said that the tablets contain "dangerous amounts of boracic acid" and that their use may "result in serious poisoning."
The agency said that people who have been using the tablets should stop doing so immediately. And it said that dealers and others who have them should notify the food and drug administration and return the tablets to the manufacturer.
Two former University students, Antonio Tommasini and Fred Pickett, carved one of the gargoyles used in decorating the columns of Dyche museum. Their feathered creature is said to be the original representation of the Javhawk.
Terms; Cash. Phone orders are accented with the understanding that the bill will be delivered during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Business office, Journals, and 45 p.m. the day before publication date.
Phone K.U.376
FOR SALE
PONTIAC. 1940, blue convertible. Good tires, radio and understeer head. T器 in very good condition. Must sell. Call 2124-J or see at $474.2$ Indiana. Call 18
One
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Additional words ...1c 2c 3c
55-FT. Universal Trailer House. Sleeps four, hot water heater. Crosley refrigerator (optional), air conditioner. Per- rent or living here or traveling 138 Mass.
SAILBOAT Rhodes Bantam Bulli by
camera equipment. Donald Kay, 1603R,
16
1938 FORDOR Ford. Mechanically perfect.
Good body, and paint. $229.00. See Jack Schlegel. 1045 West Hills. Phone 1700. 17 FOR SALE by owner. 1948 Mercury convertible. 26.000 miles, excellent condition. Call 1275J. 15
GERMAN Shepherd dog for sale. 16-month old. Exceptionally good disposition. Registered, W. O. Nelson, Phone 2651. 545 E. 19th. 16
EXPERIENCED Remington portable typewriter with Italian keyboard in good condition for only $12.50. Student Union Book Store. 16
NOW AVAILABLE! A fountain pen especially designed for left-handed writers. Only $5.00 at your Student Union Book Store. 1f
University Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
THEERE IS STILL time to let College Outline Series help you get you a better grade. One for every subject at the Student Union Book Store. 16
Ten students being graduated this month from eight Kansas high schools will enter the University next fall as Summerfield scholars James K. Hitt, Summerfield committee chairman, announced today
New Summerfield Scholars Represent Eight Towns
If a Summerfield scholar continues superior work at the University, the award will be the amount needed beyond his personal resources to assure him a four-year course. An annual gift of $20,000 from estate of the late Solon E. Summerfield, K.U. alumnus and New York manufacturer, supports the scholarships.
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Approximately 45 Summerfield scholars will be attending the University next year. The 10 new scholars were chosen from among 250 candidates who took examinations in March, 38 of whom came to K.U. for additional testing. Basis of choice is scholarship, character, leadership, and promise of future usefulness to society.
The following graduates received scholarships: Ben Hall, Lawrence; Hugh Bowden, William Carr; and Donald McClelland, Wichita East high school; Ala Caster, Oberlin; Kenneth Dam, Maryville; Wesley Ewbank, Garnett; George Langworthy, Shawnee - Mission high
Monday - Tuesday One too many love affairs! DAN DURYEA * DOROTHY LAMOUP MANHANDLED
DAN DURYEA * DOROTHY LAMOUP MANHANDLED
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Lawrence DRIVE - IN
Theatre
school, Johnson county; Frank Newby, Jr., Columbus; and William Spencer, McCracken.
Newman Club Elects Bergmann President
John Bergmann, College junior was elected president of the Newman club at a recent meeting.
Other elected officers are: Joseph Malone, vice-president; June Seymour, secretary; Robert Rebein, treasurer; Eloise Dlabal, historian; Maurice Swords, men's membership chairman; Therese Weigand, women's membership chairman; and Patricia Jansen, publicity chairman. Executive committee members are Robert Kuckleman, chairman; Dugan Scanlan, and Marcia Hale.
.0
THREE CAME HOME
THREE CAME HOME
starring CLAUDETTE COLBERT
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THREE CAME HOME
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Granada
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Also, for summer session only, another
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127 after 5 p.m.
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Phone 235J3.17
TWO CHEVROLET'S, 1940, Master Deluxe and Special. Deluxe; both with a hardtop roof, one or two seats. See these to appreciate at Vern Schneider Motors, 1010 Mass. Ph. 424
DINNER: Spaghetti and meatballs; 6:30
church service; 7:30 church hearth auditorium at 124th
Vermont. Tickets available at Round Cor-
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SENIORS! One of your treasured re-
source albums will be a record album of K.U. songs.
Produced by the Alumni Association and now available at the Student Union Book
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ROOMS: Two singles and two doubles for men or couple. Convenient to town and KU. Two baths, one shower. Avail. March 18 and fall. 113rd Vermont. Phone 1497.
LARGE DOUBLE rooms for boys. Twin bed, beds linen furnished. On second floor with bath and private robesh瑟蒂. Two wheelchair beds $12,500. Room 1213 Ohio. Phone Mrs. Rhyll, 2917R.
FINEST TELEVISION-Best in sets and
just arrived. $75.50 and up. See the new-
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Downtown. Bowers Radio and Electr
826 Venerable.
FOR RENT
$31\%$-ROOM apartment near campus. Private bath and private entrance. All electric kitchen. Will furnish if desired. Available now. A similar apartment
THREE APARTMENTS for rent, reasonable, phone 2082 or 3311. 16
SUMMER SCHOOL rooms for boys
2017M, 1234 Oread. few vacancies.
ft
NEW four-room house, completely furnished, garage, automatic washer, modern and comfortable. Available: June 14 p.m. or 3791-J after 5 p.m.
ROOMS for summer or fall. 3 double and
1 single. Sleeping porch. Single beds
$10.00 a month per person. 1222 Miss
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TWO LARGE, cool rooms for summer students. Single beds, linens furnished, rooms kept clean, kitchen privileges if in evening phone. 25223 or can be seen phones.
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ATTENTION social chairmen and party managers. See us for table and chain rentals. For information call Mrs. Anderson, Telephone 259 18
FORMALS AND DRESSES of all types made to order. Also alterations and remodeling. Call Mrs. Scales. Phone 3060-W 1414 Tenn. 15
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 Gift Pet and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Conn. St. Ph. 418. tf
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STUDENTS! Bring or send your Tennis, Badminton, Squash racquets to Guilford Sporting Goods, 1711 Minnesota, Kansas City, Kansas. Prices start from $2.25 up.
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SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several students and staff, with special sonality for summer work. This is a dignified sales activity representing the academic department of the educational field. Applicants accepted will work by appointment on Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. $125.00 and more per week on an advanced percentage basis. Write Mr. W. F. Craddock, Jr., 1006 Grand Ave., Kansas City, MO 64113, qualifications, school and home address.
TYPING: Thesis. Term Papers. Reports.
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THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. and overhaul, engine tune-up, body and fender overhaul, car repair services. 317 E. 17th. Phone 785 or 1821R tF TYPING, Theses, Term Papers, Reports, Notes, etc. Prompt Service. Mrs. Sheehan. 102 Vermont. Ph. 1168R t* TYPING. Term papers notchable.
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WANTED
TEEN OR FIFTEN Graduation Announcements or fewer if you have them. Write Walter Diehl, 1104 High Avenue, Topeka, Kansas. 19
SELL ALL your used books to the Student Union Book Store Monday, May 29. Tuesday and Wednesday may. We will pay up on cash for current books, and the Wilcox and Follette representative will buy all obsolete continued titles. Students of Union Book Store.
EXPERIENCED stenographer qualified to take dictation. Permanent work for right person. Full or part time. Russell L. Wiley, Band Dept., Phone KU 385.15
VARSITY
Phone 132 for Sho-Time
Tonite and Tuesday 2 Daring Sea Adventures "Sea Bandits"
12c-39c
Plus
'Hell Ship Morgan'
with Dennis Morgan
Also: News "Cat Tastrophy"
'
TRANSPORTATION
WANT RIDERS or share the driving to summer school. Leave Plaza 7 a.m. return 11 a.m. JE 3178, Kansas City, Mo. after 6 p.m. TF
LOST
LIGHT colored in brown case.
Phone 4025-J.
'Exclusive Photo' Wasn't Much
plastic rlmmed glasses
Reward. Eldon Ament.
16
HARRY M. POPKIN
Y
Durango, Colo. — (U.P.)—The picture editor of the Durango Herald-Democrat produced an "exclusive photo" of the western dust storms. The eye-catching "picture," bearing the outline "Dust Clouds Cut Visibility to Zero," was a four by four inch blank on the front page.
A
RONALD COLMAN
CELESTE HOLM
VINCENT PRICE
ART UNKLETTER
BARBADA BRITTAN
BARBARA BRITTON
"Champagne for Caesar"
Late News Events
Bugs Bunny
"HOMELESS HARE"
Champagne Times 1:20-3:20-5:20-7:20-9:20
TODAY thru WED
JAYHAWKER
A Beautiful Story of the Life of PASTOR ARMIN RITTER In the hills where "God" was only a name,
STORY LONG
NEEDED TELLING!
THE BABY AND THE FOOTMAN
LA SCHOLASTICHE
YOU'LL LIVE A LIFETIME IN AN HOUR & A HALF!
A MOTION PICTURE YOU'LL NEVER FORGET!
1980
staring
JOHN BEAL as Pastor Armin Ritter
"Messenger of Peace"
JAYHAWKER
Thursday-Friday
Saturday
A Picture Every Churchgoer Should See
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 15, 1950
At the Flicks By Bill Stratton
"Champagne For Caesar' Jaybawker Theater
"Champagne For Caesar" is a funny picture that ridicules giveaway shows. Although the last quarter of the film spoils a good idea by becoming exaggerated, the movie is still a full hour and a half of entertainment.
Beauregard Bottomley (Ronald Coleman), who is a most erudite gentleman, is disguised with quiz shows, particularly that operated by Happy Logan (Art Linkletter) and sponsored by soap tycoon Burnbridge Waters (Vincent Price).
The savant appears on the Happy Logan television quiz show, answers every question, but refuses to take the $160 in prizes. Instead, he asks for the right to continue the following week. It's agreed and Beau-regard keeps coming back until he's built up the jackpot to $40,960. Waters next hires Flame O'Neil (Celeste Holm), an allegedly beautiful blonde, to go to work on Beau-regard.
The following events are hard to believe, particularly the one in the final show, at the Hollywood Bowl, when Beauregard tries for $43,000,-000. However, with a little more imagination, on the part of the patron the last portion of the movie is tolerable.
"Intruder In the Dust" Patee Theater
"Intruder In The Dust" attacks the racial problem without a sermon and from a new angle. Filmed in Oxford, Mississippi where the anti-Negro feeling is most intense, the movie is M-G-M's version of William Faulkner's best-selling novel.
Lucas Beauchamp, a Negro played by Juano Hernandez, is charged with the murder of a white man. Lucas, who had white blood in his viens and was financially independent, was considered by the white folks as arrogant and "uppity." Knowing the belligerence of the townpeople, he retains his dignity and withholds facts in the building of a court defense. Chick Mallison (Claude Jarman, Jr.), whom Lucas had befriended some time before his arrest, turns up a piece of evidence that confirms the Negro's innocence. John Stevens (David Brian), an attorney who had reluctantly taken Lucas' defense, becomes enthushed with the opportunity to give a Negro justice. Chick and John secure an ally in Miss Habersham (Elizabeth Patterson) an eighty-year-old spinster known for her indomitable will. The movie runs into some tremulous excitement as these three Whites buck community traditions in an attempt to deter lynch-minded citizens and free Lucas.
The picture approaches sublimity with the superior performance of Juano Hernandez and unusually good photography direction by Robert Surtees.
"Three Came Home Granada Theater
The Japs are ugly rats and the Americans are brave patriots in "Three Came Home," Twentieth Century-Fox's drama of Japanese prison camp life. Claudette Colbert Patric Knowles, Florence Desmond and Sessue Hayakawa, play the lead roles.
When the Jaws took Borneo in 1941, Mr. and Mrs. Keith and their son, George, were split up into different concentration camps. The movie follows Mrs. Keith (Claudette Colbert) through her hardships until she is re-united with the rest of her family at the end of the war. Mrs. Keith has no easy time in the Jap camp. She is slapped, knocked down kicked, hit with clubs, beaten with fists, thrown in mud, and caught in a cloudburst before Uncle Sam's fighting forces come to the rescue
With the aid of a true story am the superb performance of Claudett Colbert, Director Jean Negulesco produces an absorbing tale.
Mennonites Elect Ewert
Alden Ewert, graduate student,
elected moderator of the K.U.
Mennonite fellowship at a picnic in
Clinton park Sunday. About 50
persons attended the meeting which
also included a volleyball game.
Council Candidate To Be Elected
Architectural and engineering physics students of the School of Engineering and Architecture will vote from 4 to 5 p.m. Tuesday for their departmental candidate to the engineering council. Architectural students will vote on the third floor of Marvin hall. Engineering physics students will vote on the first floor of Blake hall. Representatives of the engineering council will conduct the election.
Styles For Men Start New Show
Something new in the way of clothing merchandising was introduced at the Hotel Jayhawk in Topeka Sunday by more than 300 students from the University of Kansas, Washburn university, and Kansas State college, who turned an experimental men's fashion show into an annual event.
Featuring the show were futuristic overcoats, a cameltone polo coat with huge white buttons called the Hunt club, an English ragan donnegal with a Tyrolean roll style hat, and a "Big Scoop" plaid in woodland tone.
Campus suits were shown in three groups of three each according to materials shown as "woodland," "vibrant," and "commander." They included double breasted and single breasted with patch pockets and hand nicked edges.
Other clothing styles shown were campus night wear, back to campus fans' apparel.
Phil Gobson, president of Ray Beers' Clothing company, which sponsored the show, said that "our audience today represents the best cross-section of the most style conscious and best dressed young men in the heart of America. This is one of the first events of its kind held in the nation and should have far-reaching effect on styles," he added.
Gerald Maloney, business senior,
gave a typical comment of the crowd.
He said it had long been his desire
to see men's fashions worn and displayed at a show where he could determine preferences. "I think the show will mean a lot to college students around here," Maloney said.
"It is an excellent idea."
Kappa Beta Holds Picnic
Eight members and two rushees attended a picnic of Kappa Beta, Christian church organization for women students, May 13 at Potter lake.
Winblad Wins Medical Center Research Prize
James N. Winblad, instructor in anatomy, received the student research prize presented May 12 at Student Research day in Clinic auditorium, University Medical center, Kansas City, Kan.
Dr. Paul G. Roofe, professor of anatomy, announced today that Mr. Winblad received the award for his paper, "The Effects of Narcosis on Motility in the Embryonic Toadfish." The prize is awarded to a student regularly enrolled in the School of Medicine.
Dr. Franklin D. Murphy, dean of the School of Medicine, who presented the award emphasized that the good physician has an inquisitive mind and that every patient or case history is actually a problem in research. Those students doing research who have the fire and spark of inquisitiveness benefit a great deal. He also pointed out that there were eight entries for the prize and urged that there be three times that many in 1951.
When Shields first reported he had heard a singing mouse while studying at nights in the laboratory, his friends told him, "You're studying too hard, you'd better go home." The night watchman almost called him a liar too.
Botanists Offer Home To Singing Mouse, Turtle Dove
The singing character is $2\frac{1}{4}$ inches long with a tail the same length. Shields maintains it has a range of four notes. Its musical voice is caused by a growth in the throat or by heritility, he said.
Other entrants and their papers in the competition were: Leon W. Berube, freshman in medicine, "The Determination of Isolose Curves for Use in X-Ray Therapy;" Bernard Brock, freshman in medicine, "The Histochemical Demonstrations of Lipoidal Material in the Nuclei of Normal and Abnormal Mouse Liver Cells;" Gilbert Casady, freshman in medicine, "A Study of the Feulgen Nucleal Reaction on Isolated Nuclei Lambert-Beer's Law."
Things have gone haywire in the botany department. The botanists are rearing a singing mouse and turtle doves.
Dr. Paul W. Schafer, professor of surgery at the Medical center was master of ceremonies for the program.
Dr. J. Garott Allen, associate professor of surgery at the University of Chicago, guest speaker, pointed out the need of student as well as faculty participation in the performance of medical students who had contributed to the knowledge of medicine and made great discoveries while still in school.
William B. Gerlach, senior in medicine, "Evaluation of Blood Pattern Studies in the Diagnosis of Cancer;" John K. Griffith, senior in medicine, "Stephen Hales' Original Thoughts and Contributions to the Physiology of Respiration;" Barbara E. Russell, senior in medicine, "New Antibiotic Substances Produced by Beta Hemolytic Streptococci," and Richard N. Todd, senior in medicine "Influenza Virus A--FM1 as the Etiology of the 1949-50 Winter Influenza Epidemic."
The other pet, the turtle dove, is Professor Mix's pride and joy. About a week ago the dove built her nest on the window sill of room 416. There are now two eggs in her nest.
The mouse, which has been in captivity for a week, now does its singing in a small cage on top of Shield's deck in 415 Snow hall. Shields feeds it corn, oatmeal, lettuce, and candy bars.
The singing mouse was caught Ivan Shields, graduate student, and Everett Sutton, business senior, after they chased it through the second floor of Snow hall. When the mouse ran from behind a specimen cabinet, the two slammed a wire basket over the songster.
Since then, workmen have been cleaning vines from the side of the building. Professor Mix put a sign outside the window which said, "Please do not take the vines off the window sill. We'll do it after the eggs hatch. Thank you." Just one patch of vines is visible on the building. It is around the dove's nest.
John Jacques will be the president of the K.U. chapter of Alpha Rho Gamma, national silversmithing fraternity, for the coming year. Other new officers are Lois Etherington, vice president; Morton Yoemans, secretary; James Stoner, treasurer; Jules Reed, public relations chairman, and Opal Fleming, historian.
Jacques To Be President Of Silversmithing Group
Maloney Has Job Information
Any June graduates in chemical engineering wishing to apply for a job with Socony-Vacuum Oil company should contact Prof. J. O. Maloney in 124 Lindley hall for particulars.
Russian Movie Will Be Tonight
"Russian Ballerina," a Russian movie with English sub-titles, is being sponsored by the German department at 7 p.m. today in Lindley auditorium.
One scene of the movie is the "Swan Lake" ballet with Tchaikowsky's music in the background. No admission will be charged.
Wichita Honors Former Student
This week has been designated as "Coleman week" in Wichita by Mayor Earl K. Duke to recognize the 80th birthday of W. C. Coleman, a student at K.U. in 1896-97 president of the Coleman Lamp company.
The man whose name has come to be synonymous with lamps and lanterns the world over will be honored in daily events leading up to his birthday anniversary Sunday. Civic, church, business, and youth organizations, which Coleman has served during his nearly half a century of residence in Wichita, will pay him homage.
Mr. Coleman was mayor of Wichita in 1922-23 and served four years as a member of the city commission. He has also served as president director of the Central Y.M.C.A. for 35 years and is now the only member emeritus of the board.
Brought to Kansas in his infancy when his parents moved from Chatham, N.Y. to settle near Mound Valley, Coleman was educated in country schools and what is now Emporia State Teachers college.
He attended the University School of Law in 1896-97, after a stint as a country school teacher. He was trying to earn some money for his school expenses by selling gasoline lamps when he came to the turning point in his life. He was tipped off by a friendly saloon keeper as to why his lamps weren't selling and then decided to rent his lamps instead of selling them. This was the beginning of the occupation which has made his name famous as a maker of gasoline pressure lamps, lanterns, and stoves.
Former Missionary Speaks To IVCF
It is necessary to have an understanding with Jesus Christ and God the Father, Mrs. Anna Bryars, former missionary to China, told students at a meeting of Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship May 11.
"In order to communicate with God, the Holy Spirit must be present." she said.
"Pride is about the worst sin and accepting Christ is hard because of pride," she stated. "The more we are in love with God, the more we realize what it is to be without him."
A trio composed of Charlotte Thomas, College sophomore; Jo Ann Rothenberger, fine arts sophomore; and Alice Kitchen, medicine freshman; sang "Now I Below to Jesus."
Kansan Calendar of Coming Events
TODAY
Annual Spring concert, University band, Hoch auditorium, admission 50 cents or Activity tickets.
Tuesday, May 16 Faculty Art display, University Museum of Art, through May.
Wednesday, May 17
Advanced students of music in recital. 7:30 p.m. Strong auditorium.
Thursday, May 18
University lecture, Harris Armstrong, architect, on "The Middle Western House," 2 p.m. Strong auitorium.
WORLD NEWS at Press Time
Venezuela Bans Communists
Caracas, Venezuela, May 15 (U.P.) The government banned the Communist party today. In its decree, it charged the party with "delaying democracy" by illegal strikes, sabotage and banditry. All party offices and publications were ordered closed.
Progress In R.R. Strike
At Topeka, 2,500 Santa Fe shop employees faced layoffs at the end of their shifts today.
Chicago, May 15—(U.P.)—Federal mediators reported "definite progress" toward settlement of the coast-to-coast railroad strike today but the walkout was spreading.
Paris Police Arrest Nazis
The men were charged with illegal possession of machine guns, grenades and bombs discovered in large quantities in a series of police raids. It was hinted that their arrest might uncover a large and well organized Nazi ring.
Paris, May 15—(U.P.)—Police said today they have arrested three men suspected of being leaders of a French Nazi gang with a list of French Jews marked for "elimination."
Berlin, May 15—(U.P.) A U.S. court convicted six Soviet zone German policemen today of wearing military uniforms and carrying former German army weapons.
Convict Six Berlin Police
The judgement confirmed an earlier commission court ruling that the Soviet-sponsored eastern police force is a para-military organization. The decisions were expected to form the basis of a U.S. protest to Moscow that the Russians have established an army in east Germany.
Polio is striking down an increasing number of teen-agers and young adults, according to Dr. Hart E. Van Riper, medical director of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. Five precautions recommended by the foundation are:
1. Keep children with their own friends—many persons have a polio infection without showing any signs of sickness.
Foundation Lists Polio Precautions
4. Keep clean:
2. Do not become over-tired:
Some of the symptoms of polio are headache, sore throat, upset stomach, sore muscles, stiff neck and rhinoplasty, double in swallowing or breathing.
5. Watch for early signs of sickness.
In the event polio does strike, call your doctor at once. If the diagnosis is polio, call the local chapter of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. The local chapter will pay the cost of the care which you cannot meet.
Arn is a former attorney general and supreme court justice of Kana-
**ANNOTATION:**
Ed. Arn, Republican candidate for governor, will speak at a dinner sponsored by the Arn-for-Governor club at 6:30 p.m. today, in the Kansas room of the Union.
Approximately 200 persons from the Collegiate Young Republicans, the Young Republics of Douglas county, and the county Republican organization are expected to attend.
Candidate Ed Arn To Speak Today
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ASCE Selects Stoutimore
Ralph Stouttimore, engineering junior, was elected president and vice chairman, engineering freshman, vice chairman of the Society of Civil Engineers, May 10.
The University Daily Kansan story of May 12 was incorrect in listing the name of the president.
University Daily Kansan
47th Year No. 148
Tuesday, May 16, 1950
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Topeka, Ks.
Laboratory Theater Will Give Wilder's 'Our Town' Tonight And Wednesday
Life, love, and death in a small New England town are the principal ingredients in Thornton Wilder's play "Our Town," which is being presented at 8:15 p.m. today and Wednesday in the Little theater in Green hall.
Using scenery that suggests the scene rather than reproduces it exactly and effective lighting, the cast of 21 make the town of Grover's Corners come to life. The stage manager acts as guide and master of ceremonies, talks directly to the audience and introduces the actors. The play, which is the first three-act production to be presented by the University Players laboratory theater, was selected because of its simplicity in staging and its adaptability to a small theater.
Don Harling, director; Milton Commons, production manager; John White, stage manager; Katy Coad and Barbara Donovan, costumes; Mary Beth Moore, prometer.
The production crew will include
Members of the cast will be Ernest Coombs, stage manager; Dick Grey, Dr. Gibbs; Bettie Sage, Mrs. Gibbs; Phyllis Clegg, Mrs. Webb; Ann Nelson, Emily Webb; Raymond Beery, Wally Webb; Carolyn Oliver, Rebecca Gibbs; Tom Pane, George Gibbs; Bob Allen, professor of history; Harvey Jetmore, Mr. Webb; Tom Welsh, Si Crowell; John White, Bill Warren; Ronald Sunbye, Howie Newsome; Edward House, Joe Stodard; Lee Stone, Sam Craig; Melba Cantrell, Mr. Soames.
Supporting members of the cast are Louise Hamilton, Nona Prettyman, Frank La Ban, and Leah Ross.
Tickets are now on sale in room 1. Green hall, for 50 cents.
Small Audience Hears Excellent Band Concert
Bv DALE S. ROMIG
Band concerts are not known to attract large audiences here, and Monday's concert by the University Concert band was no exception. If excellence could produce audiences, however Hoch auditorium would have been nearly full.
The band, directed by Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra, played a distinctive concert that ranged from modern to classic in style and romantic to nationalistic in content.
The program opened with a work called the "Fresques Suite" written by Haydn Wood. The piece seemed interesting and well played. It was divided into three parts called "Vienna, 1913," "Sea Shanties," and "Le Kiosque de Hyde Park." The piece had some fine muted trumpet passages, and was based on folk tunes that Wood had gathered in various places, Professor Wiley said.
"Capriccio Espagnole," a five part feat in orchestration by Rimsky-Korsakov, was handled adroitly with an agile interplay o solo instruments, notably the French horn and flute in the "Quartet and Variations."
Two soloists appeared on the program—each showing a good bit of talent on his instrument. The first was a trombonist, Neill Humfeld, education senior, who played the solo in the rhythmic "Fantasia di Concerto" by Boccalari.
The other, Tom Lovitt, fine arts sophomore, performed the cornet solo in "Hungarian Melodies" by Vincent Bach.
Campus Streets Will Be Resurfaced By Graduation
The program closed with a spirited, colorful presentation of Tchaikovsky's "1812 Overture." With the aid of a few tympanic devices plus background gunshots, Professor Wiley produced a great amount of realism in the piece.
The Constant Construction company bid of $44,890 was accepted today for the resurfacing, repairing and widening of campus streets at the University, J. J Wilson, K.U. business manager, announced.
The work will start as soon as materials arrive from southern Kansas. Since the railroad strike has ended, the materials should move immediately, an official of the Constant Construction company said today. The resurfacing will be completed in time for commencement.
The resurfacing will begin at the west end of Memorial drive on West Campus road, and extend the entire length of Jayhawk drive and north on Oread avenue to 13th street. A second stretch to be resurfaced will be on Mississippi from 13th street across Jayhawk drive down to the newer paving at the library and power plant.
Blake halls will be resurfaced to Lilac lane. The driveway from Oread to Mississippi behind the Union building and completion of the parking apron on West 16th street to Michigan street are the other projects.
The one-way drive to Fraser and
Part of the circle at the intersection of Jayhawk drive and West Campus road will be widened, and West Campus road will also be widened north to the Memorial drive entrance. The northeast corner of the Jayhawk drive-Mississippi intersection will also be widened.
World Wide News
Assemble Airlift For Winnipeg
Washington, —(U.P.) Harold G Robinson, chief sleuth for the California Crime commission, today was appointed to head the investigation staff for the senate's $150,000 inquiry into organized crime.
Robinson Heads Inquiry
Robinson, a former F.B.I. agent, worked from 1941 to 1945 for the senate war investigating committee, which once was headed by President Truman.
Cairo—(U.P.) — The crown council advised today that King Farouk's sister, Princess Fathia, should be required to leave the commoner husband she married in San Francisco.
Winnipeg, Man.—(U.P.)—The federal government today organized a gigantic airlift capable of removing the remaining residents from this flood-threatened city should the Red river break through the remaining dikes.
Advise Fathia To Separate
The decision rests with King Farouk, who earlier criticized the marriage of his sisters and his mother. The council acts only in an advisory capacity.
The council also advised that Queen Mother Nazli's properties should be seized because she sanctioned the marriage of Fathia, 19, and Riad Ghali.
The city's remaining 20 miles of dikes were weakening under the peak pressure of the river's thrusting 30-mile-an-hour current. A 30.1 foot flood crest was pounding them. The army warned that the zero hour was at hand. Ten main dikes already had been smashed.
Chicago Editor Dies
The federal air transport board assembled enough military, commercial, and private planes—together with their pilots—to fly 9,000 persons a day out of Winnipeg. Almost one third of the city's 320,000 residents already had fled.
New York, —(U.P) -Glenn Griswold, first editor of the Chicago Journal of Commerce and for the past five years publisher of Public Relations News, died yesterday at his home here.
Griswold, 61, was widely known as a leading business publisher and authority on public relations.
Firemen's Union Ends RR Strike
Chicago, May 16—(U.R.)—The Locomotive Firemen's union ended its coast-to-coast strike today and the four crippled railroads raced to get trains back on full schedules by nightfall.
The strike was ended during a nightlong negotiating session in which the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Engineen abandoned its demand for an additional
fireman on big multiple-unit diesel engines.
In return, the railroads agreed to submit two other issues to routine arbitration under the Railway Labor law which will be binding on both parties.
In one issue, the union has demanded that a fireman be placed aboard 200 small "teapot" switch diesels now manned only by an en-
Local Church Assures Russian D.P.'s Of A Home And Jobs In Lawrence
A family of displaced persons from the Russian Ukraine is being brought to Lawrence by the Plymouth Congregational church which has raised the funds to bring the family from Europe and guaranteed that a home and jobs will be found for them.
The five members of the Ivan Kiosow family will arrive in New York city today and will probably come to Lawrence the latter part of next week, according to Clayton Crosier, who was chairman of the Plymouth social action committee last year when the project was initiated.
Plymouth church has provided all the assurances required under the "DP" law. Kiosow, the head of the family, will work as a gardener at Ward's greenhouse and nursery. Housing will be available June 1 on a farm adjoining North Lawrence: The church is paying the family's transportation from New York to Lawrence, and women's groups of the church have collected much of the furniture and articles needed to set up housekeeping.
The Kiosws are a farm family from the Russian Ukraine and after the Germans conquered it in 1942 the family was taken to Germany where Kiossw worked as a plasterer. The children of Kiossw are both 53 years old, Maria, the elder daughter, is 24 and Feodora is 14. The son, Zinwaej, is 12.
gineer. Both sides agreed that "teapots" now manned by firemen would continue to carry them, notwithstanding the arbitration results.
The union said the railroads further agreed to assign firemen on any new switch engines put into service. The roads had nothing to say on this matter, however.
The Kiosmos will be the second DP family in Douglas county. Lost fall a Hungarian family was brought to the Lone Star community by church groups there.
The three children speak German as well as Ukrainian Russian. None of the family has more than a smattering of English.
D. B. Robertson, president of the brotherhood, sent telegrams to locals throughout the nation advising the 18,000 striking firemen to halt their picketing and return to work.
The second dispute to be submitted to arbitration involves union charges that the companies are violating various working rules.
Santa Fe Strikers Return To Work
Topeka, Kan., May 16—(U.P.) Settlement of the railroad strike sent a small section of Santa Fe's 2,900 idled workers in Topeka back to their jobs today.
A conference was called in Chicago to reach a decision on the return of the bulk of the employees, the 2,500 men furloghed from the railroad's giant shops here.
About half the 400 workers in Santa Fe's office headquarters for the eastern lines were called back by telephone after the firemen's walkout ended early this morning. Most were employees in the car service department
Junior Wins Taylor Award
The Danny Taylor scholarship award for 1950-51 will go to Joyce Duane Holmberg, engineering junior, Dean T. DeWitt Carr of the School of Engineering, and Architecture announced today.
This year's award will be $50. The scholarship was established the past year by Dr. C, F. F. Taylor of Norton, and friends, in memory of his son, Daniel Webster Taylor. Taylor was an engineering student at the University who lost his life in an automobile accident.
Holmberg was announced as the highest ranking junior, academically, in the school of engineering and architecture at the annual Honors convolution in April. He was elected this spring to membership in Tau Bet Pi and Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternities.
Kennedy Installed As Inter-Dorm Head
Patricia Kennedy, College sophomore, was installed as president of the Women's Inter-dorm council at a candlelight service Monday.
Other officers installed were Diane Johnson, College junior, vice-president; Evelyn White, education junior, secretary- treasurer; and Johnne Lou Shafer, College sophomore, social chairman.
Three Quads Still Live
Kirksville, Mo., —(U.P.)— One of quadruplets born late last night to a 19-year-old Kirksville mother died early this morning, but the other three—two boys and a girl—are "doing quite nicely," Dr. Martin L, Riemann said.
The parents are Mr. and Mrs. Dean Potter. She is 19, and less than two years ago gave birth to twins, both of whom died, Dr. Riemann said.
"The quadrupets were a bit premature," Dr. Riemann said, "and so we placed them in incubators immediately."
The father is a laborer, according to Dr. Riemann.
"We suspected triplets," Dr. Riemann said, "but we were surprised."
Seeks End To UN Deadlock
Moscow, May 16- (U.P.)- UN Secretary-General Trygve Lie conferred today with Wang Chia-hsiang, Communist China's ambassador to Moscow. Wang called on Lie while diplomatic circles still were speculating on the Secretary-General's 90-minute conference last night with Soviet Premier Josef Stalin.
Lie said before his departure for Moscow that he intended to seek a solution to the deadlock resulting from Russia's refusal to attend UN meetings at which representatives of Nationalist China were present. Russia has pressed for the seating of Peiping representatives in the UN. His other avowed objective was to discuss means of easing the east-west cold war.
Charles Hall To Be IFC President For Next School Year
Charles Hall, Phi Delta Theta, was elected president of the InterFraternity council Monday night at the final meeting of the council for the spring semester.
Other officers elected were vicepresident, Bill Van Bebber, Acacia;secretary, David Sailor, Alpha TauOmega; treasurer, Donald Signa,Kappa Sigma; members at large onthe executive council—John Keller,Sigma Chi; Dale Helmers, SigmaAlpha Epsilon; Bruce Zuercer,Sigma Nu, and Joseph Wimsatt, PhiKappa.
A certified list of all fraternity membership will be turned in to the office of the dean of men by Wednesday, June 24. The roster must be signed by the president of each fraternity.
Final plans for the council's Mid-Century ball were made. The ball will be at the Lawrence Country club, 9 p.m. Friday.
FAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1950
Official Bulletin
Tuesday, May 16
The position of Freshman Woman representative to All Student Council is open due to resignation of Pat Gardenhire.
A.S.C., 7.30 tonight, Pine room,
Union.
Veterans' requisition books for equipment and supplies will not be honored after Saturday.
Phi Chi Thea, 6:30 tonight, Castle Tea room.
Stateswomen club, 7:15 tonight.
Watkins ball.
Alpha Kappa Psi business meeting, 7 tonight. West end ballroom, Union. Installation of officers; demittance of seniors.
A. I.C. E., 7 p.m. Wednesday, 429 Lindley hall. Election of officers. L. T. Kierer, Dicalite Div. of Great Lakes Carbon corporation "Use of Filter Ads."
Alpha Phi Omega, 7 tonight, 200 Strong hall. Election and installation of officers. Last meeting of the year.
Engineers Wives Family picnic, 6 tonight. Potter lake.
Jay Jones, 5 p.m. Wednesday, Pine room, Union, Wear uniforms.
International club, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. Potter lake pavilion. Dance and refreshments.
"Emil and the Detective," German language film, 4 p.m., and 7 p.m. Wednesday, 15 Fraser hall, Free.
Delta Sigma Pi election of officers, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, West end of ballroom, Union.
N. S.A., 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 37 Strong hall.
Canterbury club communion, 1
t am. Thursday, Trinity church.
Quill Club final meeting, 7:30 to night. East room, Union.
Theta Sigma Phi Elects Coppedge
Theta Sigma Phi, honorary and professional fraternity for journalism women, has elected Virginia Coppeidge president for the coming year.
Other officers elected are: Patricia Jansen, vice-president; Janet Ogan, secretary; Faye Wilkinson, treasurer; Doris Greenbank, keeper of the archives, and Emily Stewart, Matrix Milestones chairman. All are journalism juniors except Miss Copedge, Miss Stewart, and Miss Greenbank who are journalism seniors.
A special pledging service was held for Marian Rippeteau May 9. She is a College senior and editor of the Javhawker.
Miss Rippeteau, Miss Wilkinson,
Miss Jansen, and Miss Ogan will be
initiated at a banquet Wednesday at
the Hearth. Miss Frances Grinstead,
assistant professor of journalism,
will speak.
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $2 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 as examination periods Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
Tired of Studying?
Take a break and Enjoy a Delicious Sandwich and Malt at the-
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St. Louis Architect To Speak Thursday
Harris Armstrong, practicing architect of St. Louis, will be guest speaker at the annual architects' banquet in the Kansas room of the Union at 6:30 p.m. Thursday. He will speak about the "Small Architectural Office."
Students, alumni, staff members, and guests of the architectural department of the School of Engineering and Architecture will attend.
Several awards including the
Scarab medal, A.I.A. award and medal, Schmidt cash prize, Thayer cash prize and medal, and Alpha Rho Chi medal will be given at the banquet for outstanding work in architecture. The winners of these awards will be announced later this week.
Mr. Armstrong, a graduate of Washington university and Ohio university, will speak to architectural students on the "Mid-western
House" in Strong auditorium at 2 p.m. Thursday. This lecture, open to the public, is sponsored by the student chapter of the A.I.A.
Where Wishing Paid Off
Dodge City, Kan. — (U.P.) — Mrs.
Mary Barton, who longed to be a
grandmother, has had her wish five-
fold. In the last eight months, each
of her five children has presented
her with a grandchild.
"MY VOICE IS MY LIVING..."
says Vaughn Monroe
Radio and recording star
...so it's only common sense that I smoke the cigarette that agrees with my throat—CAMEL!
HIS VOICE is in demand around the clock—network radio ...theater appearances ...motion pictures ...dance dates (over 100 last year) ...plus recording hit tunes that sell in the millions of copies. Vaughn Monroe is the singingest band leader in the U. S. A.
NOTED THROAT SPECIALISTS REPORT ON 30-DAY TEST OF CAMEL SMOKERS...
Not one single case of throat irritation due to smoking CAMELS
T
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Yes, these were the findings of noted throat specialists after a total of 2,470 weekly examinations of the throats of hundreds of men and women who smoked Camels - and only Camels - for 30 consecutive days.
Make your own 30-Day Camel MILDNESS Test in your "T-Zone"(T for Throat...T for Taste).
2 en he
rs. a e ch ed
4
TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Spring Formal Dance Lists Announced
Delta Upsilon Spring Dance
Delta Upsilon Spring Dance Delta Upsilon fraternity held their annual spring formal dinner-dance at the Eldridge Hotel recently. Spring flowers decorated the dining room and ballroom.
Guests were: Mary Virginia Douglas, Dorothy Williams, Carol Kendall, Jeanne Rose, Nancy Carey, Jingle McCleary, Pat Brown, Nancy Mitchell, Kay Collins, Joanna Jones, Barbara Boleman.
Jean Proudfit, Barbara Howard,
Peggy Moore, Barbara Maldoal,
Virginia Krehbiel, Vivian Mille;
Marcia McCambell, Delores Nixon,
Georgia Haun, Alice Milligan, Carol
Krehbiel, Ann Galloway, Darlene
Schindler, Sammy Johnson.
Carolyn Isern, Wilma Partington,
Helen Kittle, Virginia Coppedge,
Suzan Armantrout, Lora Stenzel,
Helen Zimmerman, Barbara Fletcher,
Mary Jo Busch, Margaret Martin,
Margaret Quinley, Shirley Selig,
Pat Matkin.
Mary Ann Deschner, Shirley Reams, Jean Bush, Anne Bonecuter, Ann Lambert, Wanda Denney, Marlene Underwood, Mary Gayle Loveless.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Woolcott,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Veatch, Mr.
and Mrs. Lee Hoopes, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hubbard, Mr. and Mrs. John Meyer, Mr. and Mrs. Loren Weltmer, Mr. and Mrs. Roderick Weltmer, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Nichols, Ernie Crates, Miles Light, and Jack Comstock.
Chaperons for the formal were: Mrs. B. A. Weber, Mrs. Wilson, Mrs.
Charles Mandigo, Mrs. C. H. Wentworth, and Mrs. James A. Hooke.
Music was furnished by the Gene Moore band of Kansas City, Missouri.
Lambda Chi Alpha Formal
Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity held its annual "White Rose" Spring formal May 13 in the Crystal Room of the Eldridge Hotel. Music was furnished by Gene Hall and his orchestra. The chaperons were Mrs F. L. MacCreary, Mrs. Ralph Park, Mrs P. W. Henry, and Mrs. Thomas H. Stuart.
Other guests were Tolene Dudley,
Jean Johnson, Nancy Danforth, Jean
Hausermmann, Bonnie MacMarshall,
Maxine Lindley, Pauline Simcox,
Marilyn Swartz, Yvonne Bryan,
Shirley Lindquist, Donna Hillyer,
Eunice Mayhew, Carolyn Wells,
Janet Morrison
H. M. McSewell, Joanne Payne,
Nola Herman, Pat Rutledge, Anne Murphy, Janine Willie, Mary Lee Dawkins, Ellen Jane Lupton, Lynn Wingett, Mary Ann Smith, Jane Gray, Doris Milliken, Elinor Rice, Mary Pretz, Doris Jo Williams.
Glennia Rose Folkerts, Kay Conrad,
Shirley Hillier, Betty Berry,
Pat Oliver, Kathleen McKelvy,
Joyce Lanning, Pat Cameron,
Shirley Hobbs, and Beltianne Gartell.
Gamma Phi Pinning
Gamma Phi Beta sorority announces the pinning of Miss Janice Nielsen Manuel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Manuel of Wichita, to Mr. James Milo Stewart, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Stewart of Wichita.
Miss Manuel is a College freshman. Mr. Stewart is an engineering sophomore and a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity.
Phi Tau Pledges Brockman
Phi Tau Pledges Brockman The Beta Theta chapter of Phi Kappa Tau announces the pledging of Harlan E. Brockman, business junior from Kansas City, Mo.
Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers
Kappa Phi Initiates Honors 13 Women
Seven women were initiated into Kappa Phi, Methodist sorority, the past week. They were: Dolores Commons, Phyllis Fink, Dorothy Becker, Ellen Osborn, Susanne Plummer, Shirley Lyon, and Mona Ratzallz.
Senior women who received the degree of the rose were: Serilida Clapp Thompson, Marian Cox, Mary Kerr, Nola Kallige, Dorothy Lear, Shirley Matson, Mary McKinney, Janette Pololl, Roberta Purnell, Miss Ratzlawz, Lois Timken, Esther Thrasher, and Marian Walters. The Kappa Phi alumnae who gave the degree of the rose were: Alice Wells, Mrs. Isadelle Ostrum, Mrs. Roberta Griffing, Mrs. Helen Storbeck, Donna Snart, and Mary Jane Pistorius.
Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Osmond of Lawrence announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Marian, to Mr. Ronald Hayenga, son of Mrs. Mary Hayenga of Ames, Iowa. Mr. Hayenga in an instructor in electrical engineering.
Osmond-Hayenga
Son Born To R. L. Burwells
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee Burwell announce the birth of their son, Charles Lee, on Sunday at the Lawrence Memorial hospital. Mr. Burwell is a senior in the School of Engineering and Architecture.
"Oxen of the sea" is the appropriate nickname given by Spaniards to the big, tasty crabs weighing five pounds and more, caught in the Bay of Biscay.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1950
Wildcat Nine Here Wednesday To Open Two Game Series
Coach Bill Hogan's Jayhawkers open a two-game series with the Kansas State Wildcats at 3 p.m. Wednesday on the Varsity baseball diamond with Herman Philipp or Guy Mabry slated to hurl for Kansas. The second game will be played Thursday with big Carl Sandefur pitching for the Jayhawkers.
Kansas split a two game series with the Wildcats, 7 to 9 and 7 to 3, the past weekend at Manhattan. Coach Hogan's hustling club needs to win both games to remain in the fight for a first-division berth as they lead the fifth place Wildcats by only a full game.
reminer, with a season record of three wins and three losses, beat the Jayhawkers, 9 to 7, at Manhattan, although hit hard in the late innings.
Philipp, who has been used as a relief hurler, is expected to get the mound assignment for K. U. in Wednesday's game. His season record is one win and no defeats with most of his 18 2-3 innings worked as a relief pitcher.
Jim Iverson and Perk Reitmeier, Kansas State's ace sophomore right-handers, are expected to hurl for the Wildcats with Iverson taking the mound in the opener.
the moon Iverson beat the Oklahoma Sooners, 5 to 2, on a three-hitter for his best pitching performance this year. He lost to the Missouri Tigers, 6 to 2, on six hits for his only setback.
His losses have been of the heart-
breaking variety. He lost a 7 to 5
game to Oklahoma in 10 innings, a
three-hitter to Missouri, 3 to 1, and
dropped a 6 to 3 game to Nebraska.
Reitmeier is also a good hitter and
often plays in the outfield when not
pitching.
In the second game, Sandefur will go after his seventh win of the year, against a single setback. In his last 18 innings, he has given up only 11 hits and three earned runs in stopping Iowa State, 7 to 2, and the Wildcats, 7 to 3.
The Jayhawkers, with a team batting average of .239, are paced by the hitting of Marry and Carl Ellis. Mabry, who plays in the outfield when not pitching, leads K.U. in all hitting departments. He is batting 395 in 12 games, has scored 12 runs, drove out 17 hits for 27 total bases, batted in 13 runs, and has a slugging percentage of .628. In the recent
HANK SPECHT DICK JOHNSON
K. U.-Kansas State series, he had five hits in eight times at the plate.
five hits in eight times at the plate
Ellis, who is K.U.'s tough-luck
long-ball hitter, is hitting 294 and
has batted in eight runs with 15
hits for 24 total bases. Against the
Wildcats, he had three or four in
the second game, won by K.U., 7 to
3.
Kansas State, with a season record of six wins and eight defeats, is expected to field this probable
batting order with averages:
Tim Scannell, 2b .302
Bob Bremner, 3b .327
Hank Specht, ss .275
Dick Johnson, cf .309
Dave Bremner, 1b .227
Dick Hilts, lf .277
Dale Carr, rf .269
Cliff Schumacher, c .288
Jim Iverson, p (1-1)
Perk Reitmeier, p (3-3)
| rater | G Ab | R H | Rbi | Av |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Sunye, 3b | 1 4 | 2 | 0.500 | |
| Mabry, p-cf | 12 43 11 | 12 17 13 | 3.995 | |
| Ellis, if | 13 51 11 | 12 15 | 3.894 | |
| Lamping, cf | 6 17 | 2 5 | 1.294 | |
| Cavonaugh, 2b | 12 39 6 | 6 11 8 | 2.882 | |
| Temple, 3b | 12 47 8 | 18 13 1 | 2.777 | |
| Philipp, p | 6 4 0 | 1 2 | 1.270 | |
| Koenig, ss | 13 49 7 | 7 11 3 | 2.224 | |
| Morrow, c | 10 24 1 | 1 5 1 | 1.208 | |
| Voss, 1b | 6 15 4 | 3 2 2 | 2.000 | |
| Houk, f | 2 5 2 | 1 0 0 | 1.883 | |
| DeLuna, 1b | 11 32 5 | 6 8 8 | 1.883 | |
| Weidauens, af | 5 11 0 | 2 0 0 | 1.822 | |
| Hicks,rf | 11 33 7 | 5 3 3 | 1.852 | |
| Sandefur, f | 7 19 1 | 2 4 1.05 | 1.005 | |
| Mace, c | 6 15 3 | 0 0 | 0.000 | |
| McConnell | 3 3 0 | 0 0 | 0.000 | |
| Peete, 1b | 1 1 0 | 0 0 | 0.000 | |
| Hepler, p | 1 1 0 | 0 0 | 0.000 | |
| Harris, p | 1 1 0 | 0 0 | 0.000 |
JAYHAWKER BATTING*
KU PITCHING RECORDS
KU. C.P.
Pitcher W L IP R H BB So
Sandefur 6 1 52 17 40 18 38
Mabry 1 4 35 30 40 16 11
Philipp 0 0 18 10 20 3 7
Hepler 0 1 3 3 4 4 1
Dick Johnson, Wildcat centerfielder,
raised his batting average .092
*Note: Totals through May 15, Rockhurst college game at Kansas City not included.
Sooners, Huskers Lead Baseball Race
BIG SEVEN STANDINGS
The Oklahoma Sooners and the Nebraska Cornhuskers are running neck-and-neck down the home-stretch in quest of the 1950 Big Seven baseball championship. Oklahoma, who owns a slight .050 percentage margin, and Nebraska each have four conference games remaining. The Sooners' games are on the road while the Cornhuskers play two at home and two away.
W. L Pct.
Oklahoma 6 2 .750
Nebraska 7 3 .700
Missouri 7 5 .583
KANSAS 6 6 .500
Kansas State 4 6 .400
Colorado 2 3 .400
Iowa State 2 9 .182
Friday and Saturday's Results
KANSAS 7-7, K-State 9-3
Colorado 13-2, Oklahoma 14-7
Nebraska 6-9, Iowa State 7-8
This Week's Schedule
Wednesday and Thursday
Kansas State at KANSAS
Friday and Saturday
Oklahoma at Missouri
Colorado at Nebraska
Nebraska, who finished last in 1949, lost its first place spot over the weekend to Oklahoma by splitting a pair of games with Iowa State, 6 to 7 and 9 to 8, while the Sooners defeated Colorado, 14 to 13 and 7 to 2.
Jack Shikley P Jim Kirk R
Jack Shirley, p im Kirk, p
Better over-all team balance gives Coach Jack Baer's Sooners a slight edge in the stretch drive. Oklahoma owns the conference's best one-two pitching combination in junior right-handers, Jim Kirk and Jack Shirley.
Kirk, a 6 foot 3 inch, 210-pounder is the leading Big Seven pitcher with four wins and no defeats. Oklahoma's other ace, Shirley, has won one and lost two conference games.
In order for Oklahoma to win the 1950 title, they must beat two of the league's best hurlers, Carl Sandefur, Kansas' big righthander, and
Missouri's cagey lefthander, Bob Smith. Each of these pitchers is expected to hurl one of their teams' two games with the Sooners.
Oklahoma plays Missouri at Columbia on Friday and Saturday. Following the Missouri series, they move on to Kansas to meet the Jayhawkers. Monday and Tuesday, May 22 and 23.
Sandefur and Smith will offer severe tests for Coach Baer's club. Sandefur, the conference's top sophomore pitcher, ranks with Smith and Kirk as the best hurriers in the Big
Seven. Sandefur has won five conference games while losing only a 5-hitter to hard-hitting Nebraska, 3 to 4, at Lincoln.
Smith has won five games and lost one to rank as the top southpaw in the Big Seven. He owns a 3 to 0 shutout over Colorado and has given up only 11 runs in 53 innings.
Kansas and Kansas State play Wednesday and Thursday at K.U. to complete this week's Big Seven schedule.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
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percentage points, from 217 to 309,
by getting six hits in eight times at
bat against the slants of Mabry and
Sandefur. His hits included a 3-run
homer, a double, and four singles.
Kansas State has a better than average infield with Bob Bremner on third, Sprecht on short, Scannell, one of the conference's best keystone men on second, and Dave Bremner on first base.
The Jayhawkers and Wildcats, the only two Big Seven schools without fieldhouse facilities, got off to a slow start due to little early outside work, but have come along fast to rank as two of the better teams in the conference. The two teams are evenly matched in several departments and the series should be hotly contested and well played.
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AN OUTLINE OF FIRST YEAR COLLEGE CHEMISTRY
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EXAMS
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HISTORY. History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.00
ANCIENT MED. and MOD. HISTORY . . . . . . . . . . . 1.25
BACTIERIOLOGY. Prin. and Proc. of . . . . . . . . . . 1.25
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GOVERNMENT American . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.00
GRAMMAR. English Prin. and Proc. of . . . . . . . . . . 1.00
GRAPHICAL USAGE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.00
JOURNALISM. Survey of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.25
LATIN AMERICA History of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.25
LATIN AMERICA History of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.25
LATIN AMERICA Cultivation Readings in . . . . . . . . . . 1.50
★LAT. AMER. Economic Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.25
LITERATURE, American . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.25
LITERATURE, English, Dictionary of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.00
LITERATURE, English, Hist, to Dryden . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.00
LITERATURE, English, Hist, since Milton . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.00
LOGARITHMIC & Trigonometric Tables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
MUSIC, 1500-1500, History of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.00
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PHILOSOPHY, An Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.00
POLITICS, Readings in . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.00
PHYSICS, First in College . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.00
POLITICAL SCIENCE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7.25
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RAMAJA, General . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7.55
PSYCHOLOGY, Educational . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7.55
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SYMPHONY GRAMMAR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.00
STATistical METHODS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
STUDY, Best Methods of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.00
TIMELOGO, Spherical . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.00
UDOR AND STUART'S Plays, Outline of . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.00
U.S. in Second World War . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7.50
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UNITED STATES, to 1885, History of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.00
WORLD, since 1914, History of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.00
ZOOLOGY, General . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.00
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4
TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Battle For Hill Championship Begins Today In I-M Softball
By JOHN McMILLION
The struggle for the Hill championship in intramural softball will get under way this afternoon at 4:15 when the first round of the fraternity "A" playoffs begins. The opening session of the independent "A" playoffs will start Wednesday afternoon.
Four fraternity "A" teams drew first round byes and will not play until Thursday. These teams are the Phi Psi's, winner of division I, the A.T.O.'s winners of division III, the Sigma Nu's, who finished in a three way tie for first in division II, and the Phi Kaps, who tied for second in division IV.
Today's games find Sigma Chi 1949 champions, pitted against the Beta's on field six; the Alpha Kappa Psi nine versus the Ph Gams on field two; the Sig Eps, 1949 runner-up, meet the Delta Upsilons on field three; and the Sig Alphs will play Triangle on field one.
The teams to watch should be Sig Alph, Sigma Nu, Sig Ep, and Phi The Sig Alphs are somewhat of darkhorse but have a well rounded aggregation and will be strong. In Harry Koons, business senior, the
Sigma Nu's possess probably the best pitcher in the fraternity "A" league. His closest rival is Bell of Sig Ep, a pitcher he beat 7 to 6 earlier in the season. The Phi Psi's proved their potentialities when they blasted Sigma Chi 19 to 2 last Sunday to win their division.
The champion could well be decided Thursday when the Sigma Nu team meets the winner of the Sig Ep-DU game. This should be the Sig Eps and a Koons versus Bell duel appears to be in the making. In their first meeting both men pitched nine hitters but Koons struck out 10 men to Bell's two to cop the game.
always a scrappy bunch. His pit-
ter Bill Conboy, is also a top-notch
hurler. He bested the Sigma Nu's 11
to 10 in the regular season.
The division champions will be determined by how far a team gets in the playoffs. Therefore the team from each division that gets the farthest will be awarded the division trophy. This is only in the case of those divisions where there were ties as the A.T.O. and the Phi Psi teams have already won a clear cut championship in divisions I and III.
The Beta-Sigma Chi game should be a close one. The Sigma Chi's will be on the upgrade after the shellacking that the Phi PSi team handed them on Sunday and the Beta's are
The playoffs will be finished by next Tuesday unless bad weather causes some postponements. The first round of the independent "A" will be Wednesday and then the second round of the fraternity "A" will be played Thursday.
In the independent "A" bracket it looks as if the Jim Beam's, A.R.O. T.C. and the Dix Club will be the teams to beat. Each of these squads were winners of their divisions.
It is hard to say just what team will be the ultimate Hill champion but Phi Psi, Sig Ep, or the Sigma
Women Near Softball Finish
Suspense is almost over as the championship of two divisions was determined in Monday's women's intramural softball games. The last tie play-off will be this afternoon when Harmon meets Delta Gamma for the title in division III.
Jayettes pounded out a 27 to 6 victory over Pi Beta Phi to become champions in division I after a three-way tie with the Pi Phi's and Jolliffe. The winners "poured it on" for a 14-run spree in their half of the first inning while allowing their opponents only one score. The game tightened down after that, but home runs by N. Blackwood, Scott, and Schiller for the Jayettes and Maloney for the losers kept the game interesting. Moore and Jones registered the victory as Baker and Stodder went down for the loss
Warner led off with a homer for the Tri-Delts and set the pace for the contest that was won in the first 3 innings. The winners came out of the second ahead 6 to 4 and blanked the A. D. Pi's the rest of the way while adding 12 of their own, 11 in the last inning.
Delta Delta Delta scored an 18 to 4 victory to defeat Alpha Delta Pi and regain full title to division honors after being dumped to a tie with them by a defeat at the hands of the cellar-dwelling A.O.Pi's in their final game.
Richmond and Brubaker are credited with the victory as Coppedge and Tessendorf take the defeat.
Women Will Play Class Ball Games
Women's softball class games will be played at 4 p.m. Thursday. In the first round the freshmen will meet one juniors and the sophomores will meet the seniors.
Following these contests, the winners will play each other and the losers will meet. All will be three-inning games.
The 56 women chosen for the sounds are as follows:
Seniors: Peggy Baker, Barbara Burnham, Mary Lou Conrod, J. Dodson, Anne Gage, Ann Hendershot, Anne Hunter, Betsy McCune, Kathleen McKelvy, Lorraine Seibert (mgr.), Anne Stodder, Josephine Stuckey, and Allene Wenk.
Sophomores: Sydney Ashton, Dolores Dolson, Joyce Herschell, Norma Kesterson, Janet Maloney, Shirley McKelson, Suzanne Neff, Constance Mckerson, Jo Ann Rothenberger, Freida Sahm, Neyan Seaman (mgr.)
Juniors: Joan Bigham, LaVone Daily, Geneva Fleshman, Arlene Hill, Maxine Holsinger, Nancy Moore, Frances Pence, Beverly Pepper, Marjorie Raash, Elsiemarie Randell, Lorraine Ross, Barbara Smith, Betty Thomas, and Mary Verschoyle (mrr.)
Dave Dennis Slams Way To Invitational Golf Win
Dave Dennis, K.U.'s lone entry in the fourth annual Colorado college invitational golf tournament, walked off with individual honors. The tourney was held May 12 and 13 on the swanky Broadmore golf course in Colorado Springs.
Dennis topped a field of 60 with his true driving and keen putting. Dave turned in a 36-hole total of 147—seven over par—to edge Skip Carlson of Iowa university by two strokes for the championship. Another Big Seven golfer, Oklahoma's Jim Vickers, carded a 152.
in 1948 while playing for Independence, Kan., junior college. Dennis has competed in several tournaments around the state, winning among others the Lawrence city medal play tourney last October. He has won or shared medalist honors in four of the six K.U. dual meets this season.
Lila Tessendorf, Chloe Warner, and Ada Watson.
Freshman: Vinita Bradshaw, Lorraine Godding (mgr.), Esther Harms, Marilyn Hanson, Ada Hatfield, Shirley Hillier, Catherine Holloway, Joyce Jones, Jere Mueller, Darlene Schindler, Donna Schleifer, Jerry Tillotson, Virginia Tinker, and Shirey Wilkie.
Scores were high in the Colorado college tourney due mainly to extremely fast, slick greens. Putting was greatly hampered and playing was difficult if the golfer got off the fairway. Long, accurate driving by Dennis kept him out of trouble.
In team play, Oklahoma, who won the tourney in 1949, placed third and the Colorado Buffalos fourth. Denver won the team title from a field of nine.
It was the second major championship captured by the battling business senior in two years. He won the national junior college championship
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1950
The Editors Report —
PEACE—
It's Wonderful
by Bill Stratton
Until a few weeks ago everybody in Kansas was talking about scandalous Missouri. Then, as if someone had stuffed a gag in their mouths, they "clammed up."
They had been screaming at how rotten Missouri must be with all the gambling the newspapers had talked about. After the revelation of state-wide gambling activities in Kansas, the Wheat State natives found themselves in an embarrassing spot.
Their faces turned even more red when they found the liquor syndicate in Kansas City had gained much of its revenue from unlawful operations in Kansas.
Binaggio had his fingers in the gambling and tax-cheating liquor operations in the major part of eastern Kansas and portions of the West. After the repeal of prohibition, the bootleggers found they still could rake in sizable amounts of money by skipping the state tax and using Missouri liquor.
But now, the Kansans think their state is clean. They think they can rest at ease, now, after one day of state raids supposedly have halted all gambling operations. With the death of Binaggio and the arrest of some Kansas City liquor racketeers, Kansans are relieved.
All the Wheat State natives now have to do is lean back, feeling secure that "all is well," and let the vice in Kansas climb to even greater heights.
ALTERNATIVE TO
Confusion
The controversy over loyalties and Communism in the Government has reached a point of such confusion that it can be labeled as a national emergency. It seems clear that present methods of procedure are making this confusion worse confounded.
There is a mixture in the public mind and in political circles of honest doubts and fears, of partisanship, bitterness and perhaps a little dishonesty here or there. The world is getting a picture of American divisions and weaknesses that is a danger to the West.
We have aroused the same bewilderment, fears and doubts abroad that are manifest here, plus a degree of disillusionment and lowered prestige that can only be a great comfort to the Kremlin.
The question arises whether the time has not come to break through this baneful spell that has been cast upon us. One way of doing this would be to get a judgment on the disputes at issue so lofty and so free from partisanship or bias as to carry nation-wide conviction.
Supposing that Congress, or the Administration with Congressional consent, were to appoint a three-man commission headed by such men as former President Herbert Hoover, General Eisenhower and Bernard Baruch. Other names could be put forward, but these three would be typical of statesmen who are above partisanship.
Such a commission, if created, should have full access to all documentation, including F.B.I. files, however secret. Its members would have to be convinced that they had seen (and heard if they desire to interrogate anyone) everything that is pertinent.
The commission should meet in secret. Its terms of reference could be worked out to include the major issues under dispute, such as loyalty in the State Department, the Amerasia affair and the cases of such accused men as Messrs. Lattimore, Hanson and Service.
The commission might be instructed or urged to present a report to Congress or the Administration within a period of, say, two months.
If such a commission could present an agreed report, it would go a long way, if not all the way, toward ending this distressing and perilous controversy. Where it might prove impossible to resolve the commission's doubts about a man or an issue, there could be further investigation later, but at least the issues would be greatly narrowed.
It would require patriotism and self-sacrifice for men of the required stature to give their time to such a task, but if it is granted that the nation faces an emergency, one may hope that a call to duty would be answered.—New York Times.
'Small Things'
by Keith Leslie
After remarking that we'd seen pictures of several male cows on the front page of a certain Midwestern City's newspaper, Sophocles Mulligan smirked and said wasn't the first time he'd seen a lot of bull on the first page of that paper.
We're awaiting a Republican protest that the pearls Mrs. Truman received for Mother's day were paid for with the taxpayers' money.
TAKES HIS BUSINESS SERIOUSLY
O. D. Jennings, slot machine manufacturer from Chicago, testified that his machines weren't bought by gangsters, and his machines returned 80 percent of the take to the players. Oh yes, Mr. Jennings showed up at the testimony with his right arm in a sling.
TODAY'S MAIL High Time
A recent issue of the University Daily Kansan has come into my hands. In it I find the answers given by some students to the question, "Do you believe the fieldhouse soon to be built should be named Naismith-Allen fieldhouse?"
Sir:
Those interviewed were aware that Dr. Naismith invented basketball, but several made statements which reveal how quickly a great man is forgotten.
One recalled that Dr. Naismith "was at K.U. several years," when as a matter of fact he was associated with the University from 1898 until his death in 1939. Another remarked that "most people don't know who Naismith was or what he was famous for."
It is time they do know—especially at the University which he served so long and so well. And in my opinion the fieldhouse should be named solely for him.
Those who had the privilege of knowing Dr. Naismith will never forget his quiet, kindly ways. As befits a truly great man, he was modest to the extreme about the
Daily Kansan
University
News Room Adv. Room
K.U. 251 K.U.376
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANASA
James Morris
Editor-in-Chief
Member of the Kansas Press Assn.
Press Assn, and the Associated Collegiate
Press. Represented by the National Ad-
dicative Service;420 Madison Ave, New
New York City.
Doris Greenbank James Shriver
Managing Editor Business Mgr.
Asst. Man. Editors Norma Hunsinger
Kay O'Connor John Hill
Ralph Howard Ralph Henning
City Editor Edward Chapin
Asst. City Editors Nelson Ober
Martlyn Marks Elaine Elvig
Steve Ferro
Feature Editor Francis Nelley
Photograph Editor Frankie Waits
Telegraph Editor William Guest
Richard Tatum
Lloyd Holbeck
Sports Editor Richard Dillenbey
Asst. Sports Editors Bob Leonard
Ray Soldan
Arthur McIntiire
Monica Monroe
Society Editor Faye Wilkinson
Asst. Society Editors Billie Stover
Emily Stewart
Editorial Assts. Keith Leslie
Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner
Dr. Mgr. Yvonne Josserman
Cat. Adv. Mgr. Forrest Rush
Classified Ad. Mgr. Lee Dyer
Promotion Mgr. John Wiedeman
contribution which he had made to sports.
It always seemed to amaze him that a game which he had started in a small gymnasium was being played around the world and was giving pleasure and recreation to so many thousands of people.
One of the high points of his life was the trip given him to the 1936 Olympics where basketball was first installed as a feature of world games. He returned from there, moved by the experience of seeing his game played by teams of many nationalities, but still the same, modest, humble man he had always been.
In naming the fieldhouse for Dr. Naismith, therefore, K.U. would be honoring a plain man who won permanent place of fame in world of sports and who spent the major part of his career at the University. The worth of his life and achievement deserves no less tribute than this.
J. Hubert Anderson, '37 Arlington, Va.
Reese Elected President
J. Allen Reese, dean of the School of Pharmacy, was elected president of the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy at a convention in Atlantic City, N. J. the first week of May. Dean Reese returned from the convention Thursday.
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
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BIBLER
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Sky Coach from Chicago: (tax incl)
Depart Kansas City—7:45 p.m. Complete trip
Sky Coach from Chicago:
Arrive New York 5:20 a.m. ___$62.95
Arrive Washington 4:20 a.m. ___ $56.86
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DUCK'S TAVERN
DUCK'S TAVERN
1950
1
TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
t the Uni- and trib-
n, '37
school incident Col-ention wee! from
University Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
A
Phone K.U. 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted without understanding that the bill will be paid during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univer-sity press office, Journalism bldg., not later than 45 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
FOR SALE
One day Three days Five
15 words or less ... 35c 65c 90c
Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
ATTENTION K. U.! Come in now and make your use, and uphold for your drapes, wall panels, and cell walls. material we guarantee our work with. Upholstery, 837 Vermont, Phone 143.
TRAILER house, 19 ft. U.T. Traveler Electric refrigerator, butane range, fuel heater, Sleepes four Electric brushes side cabinets. South end of Mat 224 to sell
PONTIAC, 1940, blue convertible. Good
radio, and underseat heater. Top
very good condition. Must sell. Call
J or see at 547% Indiana. 18
SAILBOAT. Rhodes Bantam. Built by Skanateles. Used two seasons. Nylon and mainsail. Donald Kay, 160R. 16
25-FT. Universal Trailer House. Sleep four, hot water heater. Crosley refrigerator (optional), air conditioner Perform or live here or travel 1330 Mass.
7938 FORDOR Ford. Mechanically perfect
good body, and paint, $29.00. See Jack
Schlegel. 1045 West Hills. Phone 1700. 17
GERMAN Shepherd dog for sale. 16-months
exceptionally good dispo-
sition. Register O. W. Nielson. Pho-
6251, 545 E. 19th. I.
EXPERIENCED Remington portable typewriter with Italian keyboard in good condition for only $12.50. Student Union Book Store. 16
NOW AVAILABLE! A fountain pen especially designed for left-handed writers. Only $5.00 at your Student Union Book Store. JF
THERE IS STILL time to let College Outline Series help you get you a better grade. One for every subject at the Student Union Book Store. 16
DINNER: Spaghetti and meatballs; 6:30
church elk church, 12:45 church elk church lower auditorium, at 12th Vermont. Tickets available at Round Corner Dog. Mass, 75c. Come at Welcome for your Friends.
SENIOR! One of your treasured re-
sources is the record album of KU. songs.
Produced by the Alumni Association and
now available at the Student Union Book
FINEST TELEVISION-Best in sets and
partials available. New shipments
upstream: BEST 875.500.3211 or
est Emerson table model set at $159.50
& Electric 826 Vermont. Phone 158.
FOR RENT
RIDING horses for rent by the hour
Bridle paths and trails nearby. For hay-
rack rides, call Mott Stables, Phone 1842
West 40th, West 22.
ROOMS for summer students. Also nice
rooms for the winter months.
1005 Induva. Phone 1169-800-22
22
ROOM AND BOARD for summer session
Phone 2535J. 17
NICELY FURNISHED sleeping room Also, for summer session only, another very desirable sleeping room to man stu-
ding or drinking. Photos 127 after 5 p.m.
SUMMER SCHOOL rooms for boys
M. 1254 Oread. Few vacancies for
fall.
NOW ENDS
WEDNESDAY
Every Word Is True!
Told the Way It Happened!
THREE CAME
HOME
Starring
30th Century Fox KIDS
CLAUDETTE COLBERT
Also Latest News
Starts Thursday
J. ARTHUR RANK presents
FREDRIC MARCH
Christopher
Columbus
COLOR BY
TECHNICOLOR!
Granada
PHONE 940
Continuous Shows open 12:45
ROOMS: Two singles and two doubles for men or couple. Convenient to town for couples, one shower. Available for summer session and fall. 1129 Vermont. Phone 1497.
31%-ROOM apartment near campus. Private bath and private entrance. All elec-
Available now. Will furnish if desire
available June 15, 1101 Tenn.
THREE APARTMENTS for rent, reasonable. phone 2082 or 3311. 16
LARGE DOUBLE rooms for boys, Twin beds, linen furnished. On second floor. Bathroom with shower and blocks from campus. $12.50 per month. 1213 Ohio. Phone: Mrs. Rylil. 2917. 19
ROOFS for summer or fall 3 double and
1 single. Sleeping porch. Single beds.
$10.00 a month per person. 1222 Miss.
Phone 495. 24
TWO LARGE, cool rooms for summer students. Single beds, linens furnished, rooms kept clean. kitchen privileges if deain. Phone 25223 or can be seen on line.
FORMALS AND DRESSES of all types made to order. Also alterations and remodeling. Call Mrs. Scales. Phone 2060-W, 1414 Tenn. 22
BUSINESS SERVICE
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasure 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
ATTENTION social chairmen and party managers. See us for table and chair rentals. For information call Mrs. Anderson. Telephone 252. 18
STUDENTS! Bring or send your Tennis, Badminton, Squash raucers to Gulliford Sporting Goods, 1711 Minnesota, Kansas City, Kansas. Prices start from $2.25 up.
TUTOR, mathematics. Need help? Call
860-727-9344 or see at 1200 Oread. Apt. 9.
www.tutor.com
SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a dignified sales activity representing the college's educational knowledge beyond 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 ad-anced percentage of salary. Granndale 1006 Grand Ave. Kansas City. Mo. Giving qualifications, school and home address. 24
THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the check at Had Bros. Motor, motor complete. Complete motor, body and fender repair, auto painting, used cars. 317 E. 17th. Phone 785 or 1821R. used cars. 317 E. 17th. Phone 785 or 1821R. Repair Notes, etc. Prompt Services. Mrs Repair Notes, 1028 Vermont. Ph. 1168R. tf*
TYPING. Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rates. Prompt attention Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601
TRANSPORTATION
FLY AND TAKE Advantage of reduced fare, dovetail connections, good accommodation. Miss Glesman at First National Bank Bank and information. Telephone No. 30.
RIDERS WANTED-leaving for Wichita every Friday at 4 p.m. Returning Sunday evening. Please call between 7-9 p.m. Harry Shultz. Phone 3101-18. J
IT'S THE COMEDY TOAST OF THE YEAR!
RONALD COLMAN
HARRY M. POPKIN
---
Late News Events Bugs Bunny "HOMELESS HARE"
Champagne Times
1:20-3:20-5:20-7:20-9:20
BARBARA BRITTON
WANT RIDERS or share the driving to summer school. Leave Plaza 7 a.m. return 11 a.m. JE 3178, Kansas City, Mo., after 6 p.m. TF
Champagne for Caesar
CELESTE HOLM
VINCENT PRICE
ART INKLETTER
BARO MAYTON
WANTED
TODAY thru WED
JAYHAWKER
TEN OR FIFTEN Graduation Announcements or fewer if you have them. Write Walter Diehl, 1104 High Avenue, Topeka, Kansas. 19
SELL ALL your used books to the Student Union Book Store Monday, May 29 and Thursday, May 31. We will pay top cash prices for all current books, and the Wilcox and Follette representative will buy all obsolete limited titles. Students of Union Book Store.
WOULD person who took the car-puller design report from Room 210. Marvin, please return it. I'd hate to stay here another semester. 18
LOST
Patee PHONE
Continuous shows Open 12:45 Patee PHONE 121 N-O-W Ends Wed. IT'S A MOVIE MUST INTRUDER IN THE DUST Starring Claude Jarman, Jr. MICHAEL HERT
D.
INTRUDER IN THE DUST Starring Claude Jarman, Jr.
Feature Times: 1:33, 3:33,
5:32, 7:33 and 9:33
Added Color Cartoon Comedy Latest news
NEXT
NEXT
"SALUDOS AMIGOS"
"DUMBO"
TONITE and WED.
"TONIGHT SHE'LL PART WITH
HER JEWELS OR HER LIFE!"
DAN DOROTHY
DURYEA • LAMOUR
MANHANDLED
with
Sterling HAYDEN
Irene HERVEY
Feature Times 8:17, 10:17
Added Joy: Cartoon "The Pest Who Came to Dinner" and "What's Hatchin'
Box office opens 7:00
Lawrence DRIVE-IN
MAN'S diamond ring. Believed to have been lost at Jayhawk Golf Driving Range. Finder please call 2023-W. Re-ward. 18
Theatre
PHONE 260
LIGHT colored plastic rimmed glasses
brown case. Reward Elden Ament
4025
Chancellor Malott Greets Pakistan Prime Minister
Chancellor Deane W. Malott extended greetings on behalf of the people of Kansas to Liaquat Ala Khan, prime minister of Pakistan, May 13 in Kansas City, Mo.
Chancellor Malott greeted the Moslem ruler as part of the academic ceremonies convocation held in his honor.
VARSITY Phone 132 for Sho Time 12c - 39c
Ends Tonite
"Hell Ship Morgan"
"Sea Devils"
Starts Tomorrow
"The Hasty Heart"
Starring
Ronald Reagan
Patricia Neal
True facts of the Colorado
State Prison Break
"Canon City"
with Scott Brady
Why Be 'Cash Out' When You Can 'Cash In' With KANSAN Classifieds?
THE LIFE STORY OF OME OF GOD'S MINISTERS
MESSENGER OF PEACE
POPE BERNARDINI
A BEAUTIFUL STORY OF THE LIFE OF PASTOR ARMIN RITTER
IN THE HILLS WHERE "GOD" WAS ONLY A NAME.
You'll live a lifetime in the hour and a half it takes to see "Messenger of Peace."
There are tense moments when the little congregation votes on the right of a penitent sinner to portake of communion . . . when Torgel goes into the woods and fails to return . . . when a soldier on crutches knocks at the pastor's door.
And all along the way you'll find something tugging at your heart-strings . . . tickling your sense of humor . . . lifting up your spirits.
You'll like handsome young Pastor, Ritter when he rides into churchless, Godless Norwald. And you'l love him as an old man looking back on bright and shining years . . . when the time comes for him to surrender his flock to younger hands.
And there are scenes you'll remember for years to come . . . the people of Godless Norwald at last howing a church out of the wilderness and singing as they work; the children of the congregation paying a Christmas call on aged Grandma Frommel; the heart-touching tribute to Pastor Ritter for the year that have stooped his shoulders and dimmed his eyes.
The in-between years were never dull for Pastor Ritter, nor will they be for you. Not with drunken Peter Kerl to worry, about . . . with arrogant Jacob Torgel so badly needing a lesson in Christian humility . . . with the pastor's own happy romance and the forbidden marriage of a backwoods boy to Jacob Torgel's daughter.
"Messenger of Peace" is a picture not only of Christian inspiration, but contains all the elements of excellent entertainment. . . Your entire family should see this great film together.
I PERSONALLY GUARANTEE "MESSENGER OF PEACE" TO BE ONE OF THE FINEST RELIGIOUS PICTURES EVER PRODUCED IN THE HISTORY OF MOTION PICTURES.
—J. MARK CADLE, Manager.
Jayhawker
Thursday - Friday
Saturday
"Messenger of Peace" shown at 1:00-2:30-4:05-5:40-7:20-9:10
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1950
Bowling Alleys, Photo Studio In Union Additions
Working plans for the million dollar addition to the Union building have been completed and construction should begin some time this summer, said George Beal, director of the University building program.
With the two new wings, one on the north and another on the south, the size of the building will be doubled. Included in the plans will be the enlargement of present Union facilities plus such additions as bowling alleys, private dining rooms, and a photographic studio. Mr. Beal estimated that it will take more than two years to finish the construction.
THE ARCHITECT'S DRAWING of the proposed additions to the Union building is shown above. Work on the project is expected to begin this summer. With the completion of the work, the size of the Union building will be double. Included in the plans are a photographic studio and a bowling alley. George Beal, director of the University building program, estimated that it will take more than two years to finish the additions.
The project will be financed by floating a bond issue that will be liquidated by money received from the Student Union activity fee, Karl Klooz, bursar said.
He explained that no definite plans will be made for floating the bond until it is known how much the additions will cost. Mr. Klooz estimated that it will take from 25 to 30 years to liquidate the debt.
According to plans approved by the Union Operating committee, the main lounge will be extended to the south. Opening into this extension will be a new entrance, twice the size of the current one. Also included on this floor will be enlarged music and browsing rooms and additional student offices.
Since 1946, the Union activity fee of $5 a semester for each student has gone into a fund to finance extensions to the Union. From this fund, $100,000 was spent on the Palm room, and approximately $200,000 remains to be used on the two new wings.
The ballroom will be extended approximately 75 to 80 feet south.
Several balconies will be constructed from this level, and conference rooms will be built on the mezzanine level of the ballroom.
Student craft rooms, dark rooms for photographers, and private dining rooms will be added on the cafeteria level. The cafeteria and the kitchens will be enlarged.
To facilitate moving tables and chairs from one floor to another, a freight elevator will be installed. A passenger elevator will be completed near the present main stairway.
A northwest terrace to be built off an enlarged Kansas room will provide "one of the grandest views from anywhere on the campus," Mr. Beal remarked. Two fireplaces, one for the Kansas room and one on the terrace, will also be constructed.
When the Union is completed, it will be approximately 200 feet from north to south. This is about two-thirds the length of a short city block. The east and west width of the building will remain the same.
In the basement, the Student Union bookstore will be enlarged and several student offices will be added. A lower level to be known as the sub-basement will include bowling alleys, ping-pong tables, and storage space.
Nationalists Move Troops To Formosa
Taipei, Formosa, May 16—(U.P.) The Chinese Nationalists announced they have abandoned the Chuishan islands main base for their blockade of Communist Shanghai in the face of a powerful Red assault.
Loss of the Chushan Archipelago, some 80 miles south of Shanghai, leaves only Formosa in national hands. Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek has vowed to fight to the death here.
Gen. Chou Chili-Jou, Nationalist chief of staff, said the Nationalists "voluntarily transferred" their air navy, and air forces from the Chinese Archipelago to Formosa.
"The evacuation of 150,000 troops and part of the civilian population, together with large quantities of equipment and war supplies, was started May 13, and was completed according to plan." Chou said.
The Communists began harrassing attacks on the Chushans soon after they captured the big south China island of Hainan last month.
He said the abandonment of the Chushans was ordered so that "our armed forces can deal a heavier blow to the enemy at the most favorable time and place"—obviously when the Communists attack Formosa.
They stepped up the assault to an almost continuous artillery bombardment from the mainland and nearby islands the past week and started landing invasion forces from junks.
Republicans Will Fight Truman's 'Socialistic' Plan
Communist conquest of the Chu- chans may lead to the opening of Shanghai to foreign trade. The port of Shanghai has been practically closed to foreign shipping since the Nationalists announced last year they had mined its approach.
Washington, May 16—(U.P.)-Republican leaders countered President Truman's call for the ouster of the "worst obstructionists" in congress by promising an all-out fight against his "totalitarian" and "socialistic" program.
To a man, they soffed at his claim that the Democratic 81st congress has a better legislative record than the Republican 80th. This congress, they said, is just as reluctant as the 80th to enact his legislative program.
Kenneth S. Wherry, (R.-Neb.) senate leader, noted that the Democrats at Chicago gave away 1,000 balloons with certificates exchangeable for $2 bills.
"The Democrats are giving away only a few dollars in Chicago to get votes," he said. "but this is emblematic of the billion-dollar give away that has been conducted under the New Deal and Fair Deal to the four corners of the earth."
Sen. Robert A. Taft, (R-Ohio), promised to answer the President in detail in a nation-wide radio broadcast tonight over four major networks. A GOP spokesman said Taft will present "the Republican case for 1950."
"There is considerable opposition to some parts of the President's program in every section of the country," he said. "In the last analysis the voters must determine who will reflect their views."
Mr. Truman, he said, "will not be able to purge any southerner because of opposition to his misnamed civil rights program."
But Sen. Richard B. Russell, (D.-Ga.) who opposes the civil rights and some other features of Mr. Truman's program, said he personally does not know "to whom the president is referring when he speaks of obstructionists."
Democrats generally hailed the President's speech.
Wherry keynoted the Republican reaction to the speech.
THE WEATHER
KANSAS—Generally fair this afternoon, tonight and Wednesday. Little change in temperature. Low tonight 45 degrees northwest to 55 degrees southeast; high Wednesday 80-85 degrees.
350 Expected At Music Camp
Approximately 350 high school and college students from 16 states are expected to attend the 13th annual Midwestern Music camp at the University June 19 through July 30, Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra, said.
During the six week course, studies in theory, conducting, private lessons in voice and instruments will be offered. The national champion baton-twirler, Bill Sears, will teach courses in baton twirling.
Ensemble work in madrigals will be given for the first time this summer. Mr. Wiley announced. Madrigals are unaccompanied lyrics sung by a small group seated informally about a table.
The A Cappella choir will consist of 100 voices, the band of 150 pieces, and the orchestra of 35 pieces. The orchestra will play at 4 p.m. each Sunday in Hoch auditorium and the band at 8 p.m. each Sunday outdoor theater. The band and orchestra will be supported by the A Cappella choir in their concerts.
Have Another Dairy Queen
1835 Mass.
rally was "as successful as the 1948" meeting when Mr. Truman campaigned here.
Truman Pledges Welfare State
Sen. Robert A. Taft, (Ohio R.), will respond on behalf of the Republican party tonight with a nationwide speech over four networks.
Aboad Truman Train, May 16—(U.P.)-President Truman speed toward Washington today, winding up a 6,000 mile "non-political" tour that was climaxed Monday night when he pledged himself and the Democratic party to remove "obstructionist" congressmen blocking his fair deal program.
The president's big speech, delivered over four networks from Chicago, also was the high point of the Democrats' biggest rally in history.
See
He promised he would fight "this year, next year, and the following year" for repeal of the Taft-Hartley act, and enactment of his medicine, housing, education, farm, and civil rights bills.
FLYING?
The Chicago stadium was jammed with 25,000 listeners and an overflow crowd watched television screens outside. William M. Boyle, Democratic national chairman, said the
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Come and Get It!
Your 1950 JAYHAWKER
will be on sale tomorrow
A girl in a dress stands in front of a window.
Get yours at Frank Strong Lobby Library or Union. Available are covers and three previous issues.
SUBSCRIPTION $5.25
THIS IS YOUR LAST CHANCE
TO GET YOUR 1950 JAYHAWKER!
V W f v R i l e t o a f l s t e p
6, 1950
University Daily Kansan
47th Year No. 149
Wednesday, May 17, 1950
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
troops stationed in China waspleted of the "our leavier favoriously for passing after China to an bomber and from Chu-
longing of the porrifically use the year
Sell-Out Crowd Sees 'Our Town And Enjoys It
Good acting and ingenuity in staging techniques made the University Players laboratory theater production of Thornton Wilder's "Our Town" a highly successful and enjoyable experiment in dramatic presentation.
Despite the rain Tuesday evening standing room only was the box office report at curtain time, and the actors showed their appreciation by giving a heart-warming, and sincere performance.
As Howie Newsome, the milkman, Ronald Sundbye was outstanding in his characterization, and Robert Allen, as Professor Willard, brought a sterotyped character to life.
The lighting effects, the novel scenic devices, and the resourcefulness displayed in the skillful utilization of all available parts of the small theater, gave the production a spark of originality that was refreshing.
Ernest Coombs, as stage manager, skillfully guided this play of life, love, and death in a small New England town. The everyday drama of life with its pathos, simple joys, and inevitable monotony was enchantingly enacted, stirring genuine emotions in the audience. Coombs' authentic "down east" twang contributed to the atmosphere of the New England setting.
Noteworthy for their performances were: Betty Sage and Phyllis Clegg as Mrs. Gibbs and Mrs. Webb; and Nelson Son and Tom Payne as the childhood sweethearts Emily Webb and George Gibbs.
As the first three-act play to be given in the laboratory theater, its success should encourage the Players to present more of the same.
There is another performance at 8:15 p.m. today in the Little theater of Green hall.
Courses covering many phases of camp counseling will be offered to the public 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday in the East room of the Union.
YM Offers Camp Counseling Courses
The show, held in Snow hall, featured more than 45 species of wild flowers common to eastern Kansas.
The camp counselors training program is sponsored by the Y.M.C.A. Interested students and townpeople should contact Gerald Peterson, chairman of the program, or register with the Y.M.C.A. office in the Union.
Organization, administration and functions of a camp will be one of the important subjects. What is expected of a camp counselor is another phase of discussion.
Nearly 500 persons attended a wild flower exhibition at the University Sunday.
Following the completion of the program certificates indicating participation in the courses will be given.
Two other features were the colored prints of American wild flowers from the Smithsonian institute and a demonstration of techniques used in mounting fossil plants for inspection by microscope.
500 Persons See Wild Flower Show
The botany department's display included several varieties of violets, three types of orchids including the yellow lady's slipper and showy orchid, and many types of ferns and mosses.
German Film Shown In Fraser Today
The German film "Emil und die Detektive" or "Emil and the Detectives" picturing life in Berlin about 1932 will be shown at 4 p.m. in the Visual instruction room 15 Frasier hall today.
Taken from the novel by Erick Kastner, Emil and the Detective describes the search of a youth and 15 of his friends for the thief of 140 stolen marks. English subtitles are included in the Germandialogue film.
Engineers Elect Two Councilmen
Davis H. Crawford, engineering junior, and Don Schaake, engineering senior, were elected departmental representatives to the engineering council Tuesday to complete the 1950-51 council list.
Crawford will represent the engineering physics department and Schaake the architecture department newly-elected council is installed.
It was necessary to hold run-off elections to break ties between candidates in the architecture and engineering physics department. The election of other council members was held May 11.
A joint meeting of the present council and the council-elect will be held today. This meeting will be the last for the present council.
Marvin To Speak At Emporia
Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information will give the commencement address at Emporia High school Wednesday, May 24.
Second Recital By Students To Be Tonight
The second advanced student recital will be presented at 7:30 p.m. today in Strong auditorium. Eighteen students will participate in the program.
The program: Voice: "With Verdure Clad" from "The Creation" (Haydn), Theodora Ericsson. Cello: "Symphonic Variations" (Boellman), Carl Bilger. Voice: "Arm, Arm, Ye Brave" from "Judas Maccabaeus" (Handel), Boyd Bainter. Piano: "Toccata" (Schumann), Lois Pradfield. Voice: "Agnus Dei" (Bizet), Ann Hogue.
Violin: "Legende" (Wieniawiki), Mary Lynette Sommerville. Voice: "Caro Nome" from "Rigoleto" (Verdi), Shirley Esplund. Voice: "O Del Mio Dolce Ardor" (Althea Owen. Piano: "Polonaise in FSharp Minor, Opus 44" (Chopin), Jacquelyn Stoops. Voice: "Le Reve" from "Manon" (Massenet) and "E Lucevan Le Stelle" from "Tosca" (Puccini), William Wilcox.
Violin: "Sonata in A" (Corelli),
Isabelle Gaddis, Voice: "With Joy
the Impatient Husbandman" from
"The Seasons" (Haydn), Jerry Delicath.
Piano: "Etude in C Minor,
Opus 25, No. 12" and "Etude in A
Minor, Opus 25, No. 11" (Chopin),
Willard Straight. Voice: "Ah! Perfido"
(Beethoven), Ruth Reisner
Harwood. Ensemble: "Trio in E
Flat Opus 1, No. 1" (Beethoven),
Mary Lynton Sommerville, violin;
Dale Kempter, cello; Martha Heck,
piano.
ASC To Study Seating At KU Football Games
In its last meeting of the semester Tuesday, the All Student Council formed a committee to study the student seating problem at University football games.
Last of his series of five talks at the University will be presented by Philip A. Katzman at 7:30 tonight in 103 Haworth hall. His topic is "Hormones of the Endocrine Glands That Are Related to Sex Functions."
Katzman is associate professor of biochemistry at the St. Louis university-Medical school. His series of talks began Monday. All who are interested in the field of biochemistry are invited to attend.
Katzman Ends Series Tonight
Since graduating at St. Louis in 1932, Katzman has worked with Dr. E. A. Doisy there. Dr. Doisy was awarded a Nobel prize in 1944 for work on vitamin K.
Katzman is the first guest speaker to come to the University in an annual series of talks to be sponsored by the biochemistry department.
THE WEATHER
KANSAS Partly cloudy to cloudy, scattered thundershowers central and west tonight and Thursday and extreme east Thursday. Warmer central and extreme west tonight. Low tonight 52-56 degrees to 58-60 degrees east; high Thursday 80-85 degrees.
Tau Sigma To Give Recital Thursday
Tau Sigma, modern dance fraternity, will present "Exemoco" as its annual spring recital at 8 p.m. Thursday, May 18, in Fraser theater. It is under the direction of Miss Georgia Westmoreland, instructor of physical education.
Speech Contest Will Be Thursday
Based on the themes exercise, emotion, and color—exemoco, the presentation will interpret colors by physical expression. Choreography for the production was written by Miss Westmoreland with the assistance of her students.
Entries for the after-dinner speaking contest to be held at 7:30 p. m. Thursday in Green hall should be in Thursday morning. William Conboy, instructor in speech, will accept the entries.
Explanation of the titles and the dance, was made by its author, Harley Holladay, fine, arts senior and member of the east. He said, "Color stimulates the human emotions and is expressed in compositions by physical form and movement."
About 25 members of Tau Sigma, including the only males in the group—Holladay, Wilson O'Connell, College junior, and George Hixon, fine arts sophomore, will participate in the program.
The recital will include members based on blue, black, chartreuse, green, pink, purple, red, yellow, and white. Costumes, mood music, and lights corresponding to the various routines will emphasize the theme.
The contest is part of the intramural speaking tournament being sponsored by the speech department.
Tickets are on sale for 50 cents in the women's gym and may also be bought from members of the organization.
Any student wishing to try out for membership in Tau Sigma should contact Miss Westmoreland at 104 Robinson gymnasium.
"Exemoco," the title of the recital, means physical expression of emotion stimulated by color. Music for the production will be supplied by drums, piano, and records.
-Photo by Frankie Waits
Membership in Tau Sigma is open to anyone in the University. Students are pledged for an entire year, or until they have taken part in a large production.
I
FOUR DANCERS practicing for the annual Tau Sigma recital are, left to right, Donna Lee Harrison, College junior; Darlene Schindler, education freshman; Nancy Ball, education sophomore; and in the foreground, Shirley Strain, College freshman.
The dance recital, "Exemoco," will be given by approximately 25 members of Tau Sigma at 8 p.m. Thursday, May 18, in Fraser theater.
Members of the committee will be Melvin Clingan, president, and Marcia Horn, secretary. They will contact other Big Seven schools about their seating arrangements
The problem had been discussed before the meeting by a student-faculty group composed of Clingan, Paul Coker, cheerleader; Jack Howard, business junior; E. C. Quigley, director of athletics, L. C. Woodruff, dean of men; and Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women.
Suggestions made by that group included: that gates be opened at 10 a.m. instead of noon, that drawing for seats be held, that seats be allotted by seniority; and that seats be divided by use of colored tickets. Under the latter system, students would take turns during the season for the better seats.
Ernest Friesen, past president, asked the Council to approve the sending of a representative from Sachem and Mortar Board, honor organizations, to a student planning committee sponsored by Kansas State College this summer. The Council granted the request and agreed to pay the fees of the two representatives. Kansas State has offered to pay the fees of two A.S.C. members.
Tom White, social committee chairman, said a junior-senior class dance will be held next year and that the A.S.C. would pay the expenses up to $500. Phillip Basson, engineering freshman, has been named舞 dance manager.
The Council decided to turn the sale of freshman hats over to the Ku Ku's and the Jay Janes. One hundred and 14 hats remain to be sold, mostly in two sizes, $ \frac{7}{3} $ and $ 7\% $ .
The junior-senior dance will be the only closed date of the year, The date has not been set officially. No other dates can be scheduled on a closed date.
Grace Endecott, fine arts freshman,
has been selected by N.O.W. Greek,
would succeed Patricia
Gardenhire, who resigned as freshman
representative.
James E. Seaver, assistant professor of history, was elected president of the K.U. chapter of the American Federation of Teachers at the last meeting of the organization.
Clingan announced new appointments to the Student Court. They are Patrick Thiessen, chief justice; Ralph Brock, Jerome Jones, O. J. Kaufman, and Earl Watson, justices; and Ted Ashmore, prosecutor.
A new acoustic type ceiling will be installed in Hoch auditorium sometime this summer.
Teachers Elect Four New Officers
Other officers elected were: Hilden Gibson, professor of political science, vice-president; Jack Chernick, assistant professor of economics, secretary; J. M. Osma, professor of Romance languages, treasurer.
Hoch Auditorium To Get New Ceiling This Summer
J. J. Wilson, business manager, said the new ceiling would be installed in hopes of improving the acoustics in the building.
Jobs Open For Engineers
Several opportunities are open to young graduate sanitary engineers who have aptitude and interest in the field of public health and in the U.S. air force. Correspondence about these opportunities is posted on the bulletin board of the civil engineering department, and on the bulletin of the office of the dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture.
FAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 1950
Original Onventer's Models Will Be Sold At Gimbels
Garrison, N.Y., May 17—(U.P.)Workmen burrowed into packing crates in a warehouse today, looking for the original models of Bell's telephone, McCormick's reaper, Otis' elevator, and other famous inventions.
The crates hold all but 4,000 of the estimated 155,000 inventor's models submitted for patents between 1820 and 1890. Big things are in miniature, but they all "work."
And they'll all go on sale in Gimbel's New York department store starting June 4, with price tags ranging from $1 to $100 or higher.
After Sir Henry's death, the still unopened crates were sold for storage charges to a group including O. Rundel Cilbert, New York auctioneer. Gimbel's will sell them on consignment from this group.
One of the first unpacked was a barrel-shaped object with protrudances fashioned in handsomely polished inlaid wood and complete with engraved silver plate reading: "R. J. Gatling's imp'd battery gun." The patent bureau's date card is missing, but if that's Gatling's first machine gun it should read 1861.
In 1925 the entire collection was sold at auction to the late Sir Henry Welleome, who planned to build a museum to show them off. But the stock market crash halted the plans.
The collection represents almost every major invention—and thousands of gadgets that didn't pan out—produced in the United States in the 70-year period. In 1890, the harassed patent office stopped asking for "working models."
The present owners don't know which of the most important inventions were reclaimed by the inventors before the patent office sale. All the patent holders had been invited to pick up their models, but only 4,000 did.
There's a possibility, therefore, that the unpackers may stumble upon models of Howe's own sewing-machine. Merganthaler's linetype, the first typewriter, the first lawman, the electroscope, the first Sperry gyroscope compass, the original paper collar or the original safety pin.
As far as the telephone is concerned, it may turn up. A "patent model" is on display in the Smithsonian institution, but it was not known here whether that is the actual model or a copy of it.
Already unwrapped are a group of wierd and wonderful contraptions.
A double steamship paddle wheel in shiny brass, patented in 1863, is in perfect whirling condition and highly decorative.
A little oil should get a collapsible spiral staircase back in working order. One B. F. Card patented it in 1879 with the idea it could be set up outside a window for a fire-escape.
Latin America Jobs Open To Engineers
Civil engineering positions are now open with the Inter-American Geodetic survey in Latin America. The company is interested in graduating civil engineers.
Employees will remain civilians but will work with the civil service department of the army. Formal civil service examinations are not re-
The I.A.G.S. is a corps of engineers agency under the intelligence division, U.S. army headquarters for Latin America.
Engineering students who are interested may contact G.W. Bradshaw, chairman of the civil engineering department, for complete information and application blanks.
State Taxes Must Be Cut, Says Arn
In fairness to the public, state taxes will have to be lowered, Ed Arn. Republican candidate for governor told the local Republican party at a dinner sponsored by the K.U. Arn for Governor club Tuesday.
In outlining his platform, Arn declared that he will insist on economy and efficiency in government spending, and stated his opposition to mounting governmental controls.
He said that the public is entitled to help from the state in law enforcement, schools, aid to the aged mentally ill, handicapped, highways, and protection of minority groups. He added that he would allow no "chiseling" in the welfare benefits program.
In Spain, which is about twice as large as Oregon, 5,000 rod-and-line fishermen live by catching trout and salmon for market. Trout and salmon streams abound, notes the National Geographic Society, but netting is forbidden.
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence哎哎 $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Unexpired mail may be mailed to Entered as second class mutter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
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Official Bulletin
Veterans' requisition books for equipment and supplies will not be honored after May 20.
"Emil and the Detective," German language film, 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. today. 15 Fraser. Free.
May 17, 1950
International club, 7:30 p.m. today. Potter lake pavilion. Dance and refreshments. In case of rain meet in Strong hall rotunda.
Jay Jane, 5 p.m. today, Pinco room, Union. Wear uniforms.
Mathematics club picnic, 5 p.m.
Thursday. Potter lake. Election of officers. Students and faculty who wish to attend sign up by noon
Thursday. 205 Strong.
A. I.Ch.E. 7 p.m. tonight, 426 Lindley. Election of officers, L. T. Kiefer, Dicalitie Div. of Great Lakes Carbon Corp.b. "Use of F filter Aids." Canterbury club Communion, 7 a.m. Thursday, Trinity church.
I. S.A. Executive council, 7:30 to night, 226 Strong.
German club, 5 p.m. Thursday, 402 Fraser. Last meeting of semester.
N. S.A., 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 37 Strong.
Delta Sigma Pi election of officers, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, West end of ballroom, Union.
Christian Science Organization regular meeting, 7.30 p.m. Thursday Danforth chapel. Business meeting and election of officers following regular meeting.
Society of American Military Engineers election of officers, 1 p.m. Saturday, Military Science. New members welcome. Last meeting of semester; all members required to attend.
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
ds?
Discouraged Cub Asks Help In Finding Elusive Swander
By RICHARD HUNTER
Where is Orval Swander? Five days ago a Daily Kansas reporter was assigned to get a personality interview with Orval, a College sophomore and one of our best debaters. The reporter looked in the student directory and found that Orval is a member of Sigma Nu fraternity. He telephoned the fraternity house.
A pledge answered the phone, our reporter said. "Is Orval Swander there, please?" (all Kanans reporters being exceedingly polite). The pledge answered, "Yes, I saw him here just a few minutes ago, hold the line."
The last words the Kansan reporter heard were those of the pledge who had answered the phone, yelling strongly, "Orval Swander, Orval Swander," then weakly, "Swander, Swander wanted on phone." Then there was a mechanical click on the other end of the line and all was silent.
Not being the kind to give up easily, even when a telephone is hung up in his ear, the reporter called the house again, partly to give the number to the operator, 3456, which is a number that fascinated him, and mostly to get the interview from Swander, before his city editor wrote something nasty on the reporter's assignment sheet.
Neglecting his own supper, the reporter jumped in his car and drove to the Sigma Nu house at 5:45. He had decided to see Orval Swander in person, having an ear that is sensitive to having telephones hung up in it.
The phone was answered by the pledge in a voice showing calm emotions but much overuse. The reporter queried, "Did you find Swander?" The pledge answered, "No, but he will be here for supper at six." "Thank you very much." Answered the still polite reporter.
Upon reaching the fraternity house he walked to the front door, notebook in hand, pencil behind ear. "How do you do, sir, may I help you?" "Yes, please, is Orval Swander here?" "I am sorry but Orval will not be here for supper this evening"
Using a few strong words, peculiar to journalists, the reporter climbed in his car and drove to the journalism building. He had decided to tell the city editor of his plight, and wouldn't the city editor, sir, please assign this interview to someone who doesn't have to take the Western Civilization final this week?
Then, he struck upon a bold plan. He telephoned the Sigma Nu house and asked the phone boy if he would please ask Orval to phone him at 3255 when he came in. The plan was to sit back and wait for Orval to find him.
One night passed, two nights passed, still no call from Orval. "Why doesnt Orval Swander come home?" The anxious reporter asked himself. "All I want is a personality interview per person, that we have a a personality, but that we heard sociology professor told us everbody has a personality."
Hhaca, N. Y., — (U.R.)—A Cornell University professor found that the "iron curtain" is more than just a phrase on trains traveling between Helsinki, Finland, and Turku, which now belongs to Russia.
"Perhaps, then, Orval is lost." If anyone sees Orval Swander, would they please telephone the Dally Kan
Man Says Curtain Is Really Iron
At the Russian border, Russian personnel go through the train and put up iron curtains at every window, said Prof. Joshua Cope on his return from a six-months' stay in Finland.
Prof. Cope was so indignant about the iron-curtained windows that he took a bus and went around the Parkkala area.
He said passengers neither may look out nor get out while the train passes through a certain area, and the general assumption is that the Soviets are fortifying the section.
"That was an indignity to the human spirit I could not abide," he said.
Prof. Cope was sent to Finland by the American Friends service committee to help with international volunteer work camps organized by the Finnish relief-organization
san as of his whereabouts? The reporter can't concentrate on Western Civilization and the city editor can't figure out how to fill page two.
Less Religious Says Speaker
We live in a nominally Christian world where the "people are becoming less and less religious," said F.L. Thornton, guest speaker at the annual Y.M.C.A. all-nameship banquet held Tuesday.
Mr. Thornton, general secretary of the Y.M.C.A. at the University of Missouri, explained how the Y.M.C.A. is not primarily a religious organization. It has a conservative concern for democratic order as part of the members religious tradition.
There is a radical difference between the Y.M.C.A. and the church, Mr. Thornton pointed out. In the Y.M.C.A., committees provide the only democratic means for getting something accomplished whereas in church groups the main focus is the organizing and makes the decisions.
Prior to Mr. Thornton's talk, M. David Riggs, general secretary of the University Y.M.C.A., gave special recognition to the graduating seniors who have done outstanding work for the organization during the year. Recognition was given to Robert Davis, John Eberhardt, Bill Herwig, Garland Longofe, Harrison Madden, Dwight Oglesbee, Robert Fayne, Elmer Ruscoe, Hardy Scheuerman, Robert Simonton, Loren Simpson, Dale Spiegel, Byron Werges, and Roy Wonder.
Lloyd Houston, chairman of the Y.M.C.A. advisory board, told those attending that the organization should provide opportunities for men to think, learn and straighten out problems of life. Its function is not primarily a religious one, Houston said.
The invocation was given by Donovan Hull, College sophomore, and Heywood Davis, College sophomore, acted as toastmaster. Entertainment following the dinner was provided by four members of the Delta Delta Delta sorority.
Faculty Art Show Includes Seascape
Seascape is one of the pieces of faculty art being displayed during May in the University Museum of Art. It was painted in shades of pink, blue, and light green by Joseph Kellogg, professor of architecture.
Silver pieces being displayed by Carlyle Smith, assistant professor of design, include a bowl and pitcher, a pebble pendant, and an agate pendant. Silver rings with sets, earrings, a pin, and gold rings are also being featured by the jewelry and silversmithing faculty members.
Arvid Jacobson, associate professor of design, is showing a water color of a pond bordered with flowers. A road runs by the pond, and an old house and trees are in the background.
Miami, Fla.—(U.P.)Census takers seemed a little envious as they returned aboard a harbor patrol boat from counting the noses of "squatters" along the spoil banks and undeveloped islands of Biscayne Bay.
Census Takers Envious Of Beachcomber's Life
"A couple work in the city; some just fish, and some don't seem to do anything," Robert L. Bryan, an enumerator, reported. "They spend the life of Rifler."
They found an even dozen of the modern-day beachcombers in this glittering-rich tourist resort:
910 Mass. Wealvers
NOTICE TO PARENTS!
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 1950
Socially Speaking—
Hopkins, AOPi, ADPi Guests
Hopkins Hall Formal Guests
At the formal dance held recently by Hopkins hall, the theme of the dance was carried out by the lawn and porch being decorated like a French sidewalk cafe.
Virginia Barber, Phyllis Coughenour, Peggy Croyle, Marion Keelin, Ann Koch, and Dorothy Wilkerson entertained with a hat parade. Freda Jones played a piano solo, Kathleen McKinney and Sue Naylor sang a duet, and Melva Lutz and Sue Navlor tap danced.
Guests were Evelyn Barncord, Myron Click, Davis Crawford, Leo Grosseclove, Jack Lakey, Eugene Lewis, Hobart Michael, Edwin Mishler, Joseph Morrow, Lillard Parks, George Reed, Charles Schnabel, Robert Shinn, and Everett Sutton.
Out-of-town guests were Roger Annan, Onaga; Howard Bellamy, Kansas City, Kansas; and David Johnson, Ottawa.
Chaperons were Mrs. Johnston Bates, Mrs. Franklin Cole, and Mr. and Mrs. Orry C. Walz.
A. O. P. Gypsy Party
Alpha Omicron Pi recently held its annual gypsy party at the chapter house. Guests were Jack Roberts, John Witt, Jack Witmer, John Travis, Tommy Reynolds, David Johnson, Dwight Oglesbee, Edgar Perkins, George Locke, Robert Swain, Robert Pickrell, Gifford Krhut, Burt Robson, Robert Blank. Donn Willenberg, Ernie Mai, Gene Rinker, Bill Stephens, Paul Gordon, Bill Terthr, Keever Greer, Ronald Kall, Nelson Obey, Leslie Denney, John Kite, James Wymer, Warren Parkurst, Joe Steine, Don Willenberg, Lyle Denist, Dies
Londer, Don Landres and Jerry Kuehnle.
Chaperons were Mrs. Lela Wilson, Mrs. Thomas Clark, Mrs. J. R. Scott and Mrs. P. H. Klinkenberg.
Alpha Delta Pi Guests
Alpha Delta Pi sorority recently held its annual spring formal. Guests included Al Lowrie, Mike McCormick, Neil McNeill, John Wideman, Charles McCarthy, Lance Shogrin, Kenny Swelund, Henry LaLake, Lester Hunter, John Hall, James Schaefer, James Brunson, Dick Altman, Morgan Johnson, Richard Rowe, Clark Akers.
Donald Freely, Bruce Meeker,
Jim Binger, Charles Hawkins, Phil
Hawkins, George Voss, Kenny Ocks,
Edward White, Joe Byers, Tom Wilkinson, Bill Schaben, Steven Rogers.
Terry Neal, James Ascher, John Trantham, Jerry Henry, Warren Nevins, Kenny Sanders, Terry Weigan, Bill Flynn, Bill Turner, Delbert Arkebauer, Doug Lyle, Wade Stinson, Bill Schmidt.
Chaperons were Mrs. Thomas Clark, Mrs. Richard Blume, Mrs. H. P. Ramage, and Mrs. Lela Wilson.
Alpha Kappa Alpha Elects
Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority announces the election of the following officers for the fall semester: Margie Harrison, president; Earlene Greene, secretary; Katherine Kearse, dean of pledges; Blanche Pierson, reporter and treasurer.
Topeka High Alumni Party
The annual alumni reunion party and dance for Topeka high school graduates will be at 9 p.m. Saturday in the high school cafeteria.
Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity held its annual Black and Gold formal May 12. The music was furnished by Clyde Bysom and his band with Diane Brewster, Bernadine Read, and the Varsitones singing.
Phi Kappa Sigma Black And Gold Guests
Guests were; Earnestine Pulliam, Marjorie Carson, Lottie Price, Beverly Robertson, Jean Fitzgerald, Bonnie Eggersengel, Mary Carman, Elaine Greene, Anetta Brenner, Inez Simpson, Patricia Wright, Jacque Cook, Marcia Hail, Doris Wertz, Bettie Shirley.
Nancy German, Mildred Garrison, Jane Klooz, Marjorie Fitzgerald, Lois Etherington, Katherine Nelligan, Mary Lou Ketchum, Cynthia Stephenson, Mintha Jones, Pat Jackson, Elizabeth McCune, Mary Helene Farrell, and Mary Hook.
Barbara Donovan, June Porter, Jo Ann Stone, Veda Russell, Jane Engel, Carol Berry, Delores Nixon, Charlene List, Mary Lou Keepfield, Joan Fink, Rosalie McCray, Jean Talbot, Bonka Schindler, Donna Stiles, Paula Reade, Martha Heck, and Mary Hadley.
Bob Shuker, Ben Foster, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Beck, Mr. and Mrs. William H. McLaughlin, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. McLaughlin, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Faire, Mr. and Mrs. Gene L. Nelson, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Rhoades.
Bob Umholtz, P. K. Worley, Edgar Will, Bob Fuller, Jerry Goodell, Lynden Goodwin, Douglas Harlan, Marvin Parkin, Hobart Michael, Bill Hutchings, G. M. Bliss, Herb Gronemeyer, Luke Henderson, Bill Roehl, Keith DeNio, Jack Stewart, and Dick Stevens.
The chaperons were: Mrs. C. L.
L Veatch, Mrs. P. W. Henry, Mrs. H. P.
Ramage, and Mrs. John A. Scroggs.
The colors of the University in 1890 were blue and yellow.
Applications Now Available For Women's Scholarship
All women interested in applying for the Women's Memorial scholarship should pick up the application blanks in the dean of women's office. The application blanks should be filled out and returned before noon Monday.
The scholarship is made possible through contributions in memory of the University of Kansas women who were unable to continue their education.
Rothenberger Engaged
Mr. and Mrs. Verne Rothenberger of Osborne announce the engagement of their daughter, Jo Ann to Mr. David Sommerville, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Sommerville of Lawrence.
The announcement was made Sunday by Miss Julia Ames Willard, housemother of Watkins hall, who had a corsage of pink carnations. Miss Rotherenberger wore yellow roses. Miss Orcena Michelson and Verla Steffey, who passed chocolates. wore pink carnations.
Miss Rothenberger is a fine arts sophomore. Mr. Sommerville is a graduate student.
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1
WEDNESDAY, MAY 17. 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
University Daily Kansan Presents—
im Morris, Kansan Editor Expresses Views Fearlessly
James S. Morris, editor-in-chief of the University Daily Kansan,
is a man with many ideas and views.
The important thing, however, is that he is not afraid to e these views, no matter who disagrees with them.
Readers of the Kansan during the Morris regime have probably found at least one editorial dealing with a subject that interests them. Jim averages eight editorials a week.
The 6-foot, 2-inch senior gets most of his editorial ideas by keeping up with the news and by talking to persons.
"I like to write editorials which take the problem and analyze it from all points," he said. "Then the reader can draw his own conclusions."
F. A.
—Kansan Photo by Frankie Waiti
James S. Morris
Although he could not be termed a crusading editor, Jim has campaigned vigorously in his editorials for the name "Naismith-Allen" for the new fieldhouse. He once came out editorially in favor of government control of the telephone system.
Jim maintains a strong dislike for the possible establishment of a welfare state. "I believe that a person should be self-sufficient at all times. Most things have to be competitive. Determination is the main thing in life."
In an editorial on the recent All Student Council election, the editor wrote, "because democracy is a tedium 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."
"Jim entered the journalism school in his junior year after two years in the engineering school with a 2.8 grade average.
"I had always been interested in literature and writing. I feel that by writing, I am contributing something of my own. In the engineering school I felt I was just another engineer."
A firm believer in accuracy on a newspaper, he advises beginning reporters to stress accuracy above everything else when they write.
Deploring emphasis on grades, he said, "In most job interviews I've
Pre-Nursing Banquet
Carol J. Prichard, College sophomore, was elected president of the Pre-nursing club at a recent meeting.
Others elected are; Marian Louise Hoecker, vice-president; Alice M. Miligan, secretary; JoAnn Van Petten, treasurer; Margaret Gartner, social chairman; Katherine Pearson, program chairman; and Carolyn Ann Bardnt, publicity chairman.
The club is having a banquet, Friday. May 19 to which students enrolled or interested in pre-nursing are invited.
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had, I've been asked about my extra- curricular activities and not about my grades."
Jim, 25, was born in Tampa, Fla., but received his schooling in New York City, where his parents moved when he was an infant. He was graduated from Mamaroneck, N.Y., high school in 1943 and entered the Army air force in 1944.
Jim wants to get a position with a trade journal after graduation. He hopes that, with his background in engineering and journalism, he will have a chance for such a job.
"Nothing exciting or glamorous happened to me during the war," he laughed. He was stationed at Denver and Salina until his discharge in 1946.
Reflecting on his college career, the future newspaperman said, "Experience has taught me that I need more experience. If one ever stops learning, he's mentally dead. The man who stops thinking stops breathing from the neck up."
Delta Upsilon Wins Two Scholarship Awards
The Kansas chapter of Delta Upsilon fraternity won two scholarship awards for the year 1948-49. One, a bronze plaque given by the DU international headquarters, was for the chapter showing the greatest
improvement in scholarship. The other, a trophy, was awarded by the Kansas City alumni club for the chapter having the highest grade average of 12 Middle Western chapters.
Mathematics club members are scheduled to attend the club's annual picnic at 5 p.m. Thursday near Potter lake. Election of officers will be held then. Students and faculty members wishing to attend should sign up in 205 Strong hall today.
Read the Daily Kansan daily
Math Club Picnic Thursday
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 1950
Playoffs Continue Today With Independent Games
The first round of the intramural softball playoffs ended Tuesday with the Sigma Chi's, Sig Ep's, Phi Gam's, and the Sig Alph's emerging victorious in the fraternity "A" league.
This afternoon—if the diamonds are dry—the independent "A" league gets into swing with most of the teams playing. The Jim Beam's, who played Tuesday, have been beheaded Tuesday and topped the Squirrels. Also the fraternity "B" and the independent "B" will get under way this afternoon.
The Sigma Chi's found their hitting power Tuesday afternoon and this, coupled with the superb pitching of Odd Williams, proved enough to down the Beta's 8 to 3. The first inning proved the big one for the Sigma Chi's when they obtained four off pitcher Al Lowrie.
The big blow as a home run by first baseman Cliff McDonald with two men on and one out. Immediately after McDonald swept the bases, hurler Odd Williams clouted a four bagger to give the Sigma Chi's a 4 to 1 lead at the end of the first. The Beta's were never able to overcome the gap.
The Sig Ep's blasted the DU's 12 to 1 Tuesday behind the one-hit pitching of Fletcher Bell. Bell had complete control of the situation during the entire game and was never in serious trouble. Bell helped win his own game when he homered in the fourth inning with two men on. Lee Garch clusted a circuit blow in the third for the Sig Ep's to start the scoring.
Pitcher Shelby Smith of the Phi Gam's twirled a four hitter to come out ahead of the Alpha Kappa Psi aggregation 6 to 0. Duke Mallon homered for the winners in the sixth and Smith contributed his share with a four bagger in the fifth.
After getting off to a shaky start, ritcher Claude Houchin settled down and hurried the Sig Alph's to a 19 to 9 victory over Triangle. In the initial
frame Bill Funkhouser and Bob Godfrey blasted Houchin for home runs and Larry Hyde got a triple. After this however the Triangle had trouble connecting with Houchin's offerings.
For the winners Houchin and Charley Apt got homers in the third and Bob Thompson connected with one in the fifth. The game was called at the end of the fifth when the S.A.E. nine obtained a 10 run lead.
In Tuesday's games the Sig Ep's and the Sigma Chi's looked especially impressive. Both of these teams have superb pitchers and good hitting. However the Sig Ep's may meet a stumbling block Thursday when they tangle with the Sigma Nu's in a game that will decide that division championship.
Eight teams still remain in the fraternity "A' league playoffs. They are: the Sig Ep's, the Sigma Nu's, the Sigma Chi's, the Phi Gam's, the A.T.O.'s, the Phi Psi's, the Sig Alph's, and the Phi Kap's.
LMHS Coach To McPherson
Lawrence, May 17—(U,P) — Chunky Chalmer Woodard, one of the state's most successful high school coaches, was in college sports today as the athletic director and head football coach at McPherson college.
Woodard will attend the spring meeting of the conference Thursday night at Salina, as the first duty in his new position.
A graduate of Southwestern college, Woodard came here from Dodge City in 1943.
Major League Leaders By UNITED PRESS Leading Batsmen Player and Club National League
Major League Batting
G AB H 36 Pct.
Musial, St. Louis 20 79 16 456
Pafko, Chicago 19 68 26 382
Sisler, Philadelphia 26 92 34 370
Hopp, Pittsburgh 23 82 30 366
Robinson, Brooklyn 22 80 27 338
Glaviano, St. Louis 19 74 25 338
American League
Doby, Cleveland 19 58 24 414
Dropo, Boston 15 54 20 370
Henrich, N.Y. 16 55 20 364
Lehner, Phil. 17 67 24 358
Mapes, New York 19 62 22 358
Home Run
Williams, Red Sox, 11
Gordon, Braves, 8
Rosen, Indians, 8
Kiner, Pirates, 7
Jones, Phillies, 7
Musial, Cards, 36
DiMaggio, Red Sox, 36
Stephens, Red Sox, 36
Jethro, Braves, 35
Sisler, Phillies, 34
Ennis, Phillies, 34
Watkus, Phillies, 34
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Williams, Red Sox, 24
Jones, Phillies, 24
DIMaggio, Red Sox, 24
Pesky, Red Sox, 23
Jethro, Braves, 23
Stenhens, Red Sox, 23
Today's Probable Pitchers (Won-Lost Records In Parentheses)
Prediction:
1001 N.H.
Phone 383
American League
New York (Sanford 1-0) at St.
Louis (Widmar (0-1)
Boston (Kinder 2-3) at Detroit
Washington (Scarborough 2-3) at Chicago (Kuzau 0-2)
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Philadelphia (Fowler 0-1) at Cleveland (Feller 2-2) (night)
National League
Chicago (Voiselle 0-1) at New York (Jones 1-3)
St. Louis (Lanier 2-1) at Brooklyn (Newcombe 1-1) (night)
Pittsburgh (Chambers 3-3) at Boston (Bickford 1-3) (night)
Cincinnati (Wehmeir 1-3) at Philadelphia (Johnson 2-0) (night)
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the
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1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 1950
PAGE SEVEN
Corbin To Try For Third I-M Crown
50
Everything's over but the final tournament now as Tuesday's women's intramural softball games cleared the last season game and last tie play-off from the schedule. Corbin hall, champion in volleyball and basketball, is given a good chance to win its third crown.
Delta Gamma repeated its season defeat of Harmon with a 10 to 2 score, taking the lead in the first inning and slowly building it while holding their opponents. The new division III champions fielded a team that appeared strong in all departments; while the co-op nine, whose playing only seems deceptively inadequate, made just enough errors to let the runs go around.
Dodson and Schindler started for the D.G.'s, but Hendershot took over behind the plate, as Dudley and Hopkins were credited with the loss.
Kappa Kappa Gamma came back after the first inning to score a 28 to 14 victory over Gamma Phi Beta and round out their season schedule by handing the losers their fifth defeat. Allowing Gamma Phi 9 runs in the first while making none themselves, the Kappa's settled down to score 7, 8, and 9 runs in the middle three innings and win the game. Hornaday pailed a homer for the losers and Yancey hit one for the Kappa's.
Yancy and McKelvy registered the victory while Bradshaw and Carpenter finished a fruitless season.
Delta Delta Delta drew Corbin for
their semifinals opponent, leaving Delta Gamma to face the Jayettes. These division champs will meet at 4 p.m. this afternoon in games that will have two interesting features.
The Jayettes, defending champions in the sport, are trying to take the trophy home the second consecutive year. At the same time Corbin, which has on his way to the national champions of this year's Jayette squad, wants to add the softball crown to the basketball and volleyball titles it already holds.
As far as the record books show, such an attempt has never succeeded, although several teams have taken two of the big championships. With all this at stake the games this afternoon should be close, low-scoring contests that will provide the spectators some exciting moments.
Golfers Tie As Net Team Loses At K-State
Kansas State's golf team bounced back from a loss to K.U. five days ago to tie the Jayhawkers, 9 to 9, in a match played Tuesday on the Manhattan links. The Wildcat tennis team repeated an earlier triumph in downing Coach Dick Richards' five, 4 to I, in a rain-abbreviated match. A late afternoon shower halted proceedings with the doubles matches unfinished.
Dave Dennis, newly - crowned champion of the Colorado college intitational, was medalist with a one-over-par 71. It was the fifth time in K.U.'s seven dual matches that Dennis has won or tied for medalist honors. Hard-driving Dave missed one match so his medalist record is actually five out of six.
for K.U. in the front foursome. However, the Wildcat's No. 3 and 4 men were as warm as the weather, and the score was reversed in the back foursome $-\frac{1}{2}$ for K.U. and $8\frac{1}{2}$ for K-State. The Jayhawkers bettered the Cats in medal score, 302 to 304.
Dennis' driving-mate, Dick Ashley, slammed the ball around the 18-hole course in 72 strokes, second-best effort of the day. Ashley and Dennis piled up an $ \frac{8}{12} $ to $ \frac{2}{1} $ margin
Bob Dare, Kansas' No. 3 man, missed the match. Sophomore Bob has been showing steady improvement.
In losing, the Jayhawker tennis team finished its season—except for the conference meet at Lincoln Friday and Saturday—with three victories and six defeats in dual matches.
A break down of the matches shows how close KU.'s matches have been this season. In singles play, the Jayhawker players have won 23 matches and lost 22 and have won 54 sets and lost 44. In doubles, the Kansans have taken 16 sets in winning six matches and have dropped 23 sets and 10 matches.
Jack Ranson won his third singles match in seven starts for the only Jayhawker point against the Wildcats. The lineup used Tuesday is the one that KU, will send into the conference meet—Hervy Macferran, Bob Swartzell, Ranson, Charles Crawford, and John Freiburger in that order.
Results of the golf match are as follows:
Ashley (K-72) defeated Dick Atkinson (75). $ 2^{1 / 2} $ to $ \frac{1}{2} $
Dennis (K-71) defeated Bob Batt (78) 3 to 0
Ashley-Dennis (K) defeated Atkins-Batt. 3 to 0.
Bill Mohoney (KS-77) defeated Gene Rourke (79) 2½ to ¼
Mike Myers (KS-74) defeated Cal Markwell (80), 3 to 0.
Today's Major League Standings
Mohoney - Myers (KS) defeated
Rourke-Markwell, 3 to 0.
Results of the tennis match are as follows:
Singles
Rodger Coad (KS) defeated Macferran 7.5-6.1
Chris Williams (KS) defeated Swartzell, 5-7, 6-3, 6-4.
Ranson (K) defeated Jim Neu-
mann 6-4 5-1.
Don Upson (KS) defeated Craw-
ford. 6-3, 6-1.
Dick Nichols (KS) defeated Frei-
burger, 7-5, 6-2.
By UNITED PRESS National League
Macferran-Swartzell (K) were tied with Coad-Williams. 5-5.
Doubles Were Rained Out
| | W | L | Pet. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Philadelphia | 15 | 9 | .625 | |
| Brooklyn | 13 | 9 | .591 | 1 |
| St. Louis | 13 | 10 | .565 | $1\frac{1}{2}$ |
| Chicago $\textcircled{o}$ | 11 | 9 | .550 | 2 |
| Boston | 13 | 11 | .542 | 2 |
| Pittsburgh | 12 | 13 | .480 | $3\frac{1}{2}$ |
| New York | 6 | 12 | .333 | 6 |
| Cincinnati | 6 | 16 | .273 | 8 |
American League
Upson-Neumann (KS) led Ranson-Crawford, 6-2, 5-5.
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| New York | 15 | 8 | .652 | |
| Detroit | 13 | 7 | .650 | ½ |
| Boston | 18 | 10 | .643 | |
| Washington | 13 | 10 | .565 | 2 |
| Cleveland | 12 | 10 | .545 | 2½ |
| Philadelphia | 8 | 15 | .348 | 7 |
| St. Louis | 5 | 14 | .263 | 8 |
| Chicago | 5 | 15 | .250 | 8 |
Tuesday's Results National League
Tuesday's Results
National League
St. Louis 1, Brooklyn 3
Chicago 4, New York 3
Pittsburgh 4, Boston 3
Cincinnati 0, Philadelphia 1
American League
Boston 1, Detroit 1
American League Boston 6, Detroit 1
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EVERYONE INVITED
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 1950
Bearded Men Meet Opposition
By DICK MARSHALL
Many fine crops of face foliage have developed this semester. The beard has quickly spread over the campus and has come as a shock to coeds who don't appreciate handsome faces hiding behind crops of cookie dusters.
Fifty years ago it was common to see a young man cultivating mutton chops, an imperial Van Dyke, or a Buffalo Bill goatee and handlebars, but today these things are unusual and cause furtive glances from observers.
It is becoming more common to hear someone remark to a fellow behind a hair mattress. "Look out! You'll get lost in that brush heap," or, "Hey boy! Come out of the wilderness." To which the "mattress mushes" usually reply with, "I'm traveling incognito", or, "Careful! You might flash a covey of quail", when someone attempts to give the beard a yank.
The "Brothers of the Brush" are acquiring many nicknames as well as a lot of ribbing, Whiskers, Abe, Fuzzball, Earthquake McGoon, Hairless Joe, Curly, Cactus, and Brush Mush are just a few of them.
Reasons for growing the beards vary greatly. Harry Kirsnher, College junior, says, "I saw some of the other fellows wearing them so I decided to grow one. I first got the idea of growing a beard when I was 12. I saw a picture of my father as a young man wearing a goatie and that was my inspiration."
Harry sports an imperial Van Dyke and mustache. This type beard covers the chin only and is similar to those worn by the Spanish conquistadores of the 16th century.
"Until Easter I told people I was going to be in a Passion Play, but now I don't have an excuse". he said, "A guy with a beard has to be careful. If he gets carless when he's lighting a cigarette he's liable to get a cheap singe." Harry says his girl doesn't mind it and that he intends to keep it indefinitely.
Justin Copple, engineering sophomore, accounts for his red Abe Lincoln beard and mustache as a
Washington, D.C.—(U.P.)—What is so rare as a new chief of state who doesn't inherit budget worries?
Casino And No Income Tax Keep Monaco Worry Free
The tiny principality of Monaco can point to its youthful ruler, the 26-year-old Prince Rainier who has officially succeeded his grandfather, the late Louis II, as sovereign of the land that boasts both the legendary Monte Carlo Casino and no personal income tax for its citizens.
Making ends meet for the 370-acre state sounds like simplicity in a world of complex financial problems. Monaco, the National Geographic society points out, gets virtually all its needed revenues from levies on cigarettes and matches; from fees on seafood; from foreign dealers; and from the concession fee on the gaming tables of the glittering Casino.
The full-fledged beneficiaries of this unusual budget system are comparatively few, however. Only about one-sixth of the principality's 22,000 people are citizens. This low ratio is maintained by rigidly restricting naturalization to those whose families have resided in Monaco for four generations. Once citizenship is achieved, it carries complete freedom not only from income tax but also from military conscription.
Non-citizens and visitors, who do not enjoy tax immunity, may derive some consolation from the fact that budget funds take care of the upkeep for the principality's celebrated Exotic gardens and the world - famous Oceanographic museum, opened 39 years ago by the late Albert I.
20 Attend Lake Retreat
FOR A CAREER ABROAD...
Twenty persons attended the retreat of the K.U. Disciple fellowship at Lone Star lake Sunday.
The American Institute for Foreign
Education and International Education
for international business training.
The students discussed plans for next year in five fields: social, publicity, finance, membership and special projects. A short business meeting was held.
- Principles and Practices of Foreign Trade. Export-import procedures, finance, accounting, marketing, advertising, international economics, industrial relations.
- Area Studies Latin America, Far East, Europe
★ Modern Languages Spanish, Portuguese
Applications now being accepted for September 1950 semester
AMERICAN INSTITUTE
FOR FOREIGN TRADE
William L. Schurz, President Thunderbird Field, Phoenix, Arizona
Journalism School To Sponsor Contest
A newspaper public relations contest to be sponsored by the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information will be discussed before the Inland Press association by Dean Burton W. Marvin in Chicago Monday.
The contest is intended to give recognition to the newspapers in the association which do the best job of explaining newspaper service and in making the public aware of this service. Certificates will be awarded the winning newspapers.
Dean Marvin will leave for Chicago Saturday and will return Tuesday, May 23.
matter of dress. "I'm from Mission but I'm in K.C. so much that I'd feel naked without one. My first ambition was to grow a handlebar mustache, but I decided to grow a beard just to see if I could do it. I surprised me," Coppel said.
Henry VIII is the type beard worn by Irvin Gaston, education junior from Kansas City, Kan. This beard follows the line of his jawbone, and along with his handlebar mustache has earned the nickname Ninja. Orson Wes, Henry VIII, Monty Wooley, and Ulysses S. Grant.
Yours
Forever
Yours
Irvin started to grow his beard Feb. 20, and says he may keep it after the Centennial depending on the amount of discomfort it will cause during hot weather. "My girl doesn't mind my beard, but she wants me to trim my mustache" he said.
to cherish forever . .
to capture that
joyous moment
Your WEDDING PORTRAIT
Jack Meeker, fine arts senior, is striving to grow a Buffalo Bill goatze and handlehairs. "The only reason for growing it," Jack remarked, "outside the Centennial is that I'm too lazy to shave. I started to grow a mustache two years ago but the fellows at the house held me down and shaved it off, but I'm getting away with it this time."
Figuring that the average human hair grows 1-64 of an inch a day, Rip Van Winkle's beard was 9-feet and 9-64 inches long after 20 years. If you're thinking of growing a beard, keep that figure in mind and do your best.
O'Bryon STUDIO
Ph. 526
1024 Mass
SENIORS!
Last chance to order your senior class ring
Man's Ring --- $27.50
Lady's Ring --- $21.50
20% Fed Tax
2% State Tax
Business Office still has a few in stock.
First Come — First Served
If You Have A Tip on Good News
Call KU 251 - 252 - 253 - 254
HOT & BOTHERED about your COOLING SYSTEM?
We'd rather check your car's cooling system at a small cost now-than wait until greater, more costly damage may be done.
Save yourself both the cost and inconvenience of radiator trouble later by letting us-
- Flush your radiator
- Clean and repair radiator
- Check and tighten hose connections
- Advise replacement of worn parts which may cause trouble.
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
Nash Dealer
Boyer Motors
827 Vermont
Call 407
Jantzen
Swim suits are in both one and two-piece styles in a variety of colors. You'll find new, classic Jantzen lines in the Nylosheen satin lastex. Dull or shiny Also, lastex print. Sizes 32-38
$7.95 to $14.95
Campus WEST
Across from Lindley
Railway
Wide on wide time
The four and seven
Terra the Hockpit the ever the polo
Roof hum Dye mus
The upon The hallern severe library room library party space
Cabinet Beacon
For Worth 22 per hour Bu
1
WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE NINE
Bursting At The Seams Puerto Rico Needs Industry
Washington, D.C.—(U.P)—Puerto Rico is busy
This West Indies island, a thousand miles southeast of Miami Florida, has doubled in population since the United States acquired it in 1898 as a result of the Spanish-American war. Its 2,150,000 inhabitants in 3,435 square miles make it the second most densely populated state or territory under the Stars and Stripes. Only Rhode Island has more persons per square mile.
Puerto Rico outranks both Rhode Island and Delaware in area, and tops half of the 48 states in population. In one two-year period since World War II, 63,000 Puerto Ricans migrated to the continental United States. Most of them went to New York City, looking for jobs their island did not offer.
To improve home conditions, the island government, operating under the first elected governor in Puerto Rico's four and a half centuries of civilized existence, has inaugurated "Operation Bootstrap." This is a long-term plan with the primary object of establishing big industry on the island. By its own bootstraps, the island hopes to lift itself up to a vastly improved standard of living
Puerto Rico's vigorous young leaders think industrialization is the answer. The island has been predominantly agricultural, but the population has increased beyond the ability of the land to support it. The good earth can produce only one-half of what the people eat.
Much more industry is needed to keep the fast-growing labor force busy. The government is seeking to attract corporations and investors from the mainland by building a number of dams to provide power. An industrial training program has been set up to handle 3,000 students annually. And there is a major inducement for new enterprises in the fact they will be exempt from U. S. income taxes until May, 1960.
The government also expects a lift for "Operation Bootstrap" from increased tourist trade. The island's location, beauty, and climate offer a combination calculated to appeal to vacationing visitors from the continental United States. Though in the tropics, San Juan has never had a higher temperature reading than 94 degrees Fahrenheit. The average for its warmest month is 76 degrees.
Warm, spring days are aiding a widespread building repair program on Mt. Oread which began two weeks ago and will probably continue well into the summer.
Repairs Program Includes Roofs
New mortar is being forced into the stone and terra cotta facing on four important University buildings and new roofs will be installed on several others.
Old mortar has rotted and deteriorated in the walls of Strong hall, the old section of Watson library, Hoch auditorium, and Watkins hospital, threatening serious damage to the buildings. As workmen cover every foot of the walls they remove the old mortar, and then "tuck" or "point up" the cracks.
In addition to the necessary wall repairs, C. G. Bayles, superintendent of Buildings and Grounds has arranged for the installation of new roofs on the wings of Hoch auditorium, the flat deck on Snow hall, Dyche hall, and Spooner Thayer museum.
The length of time required for the repair work will largely depend upon weather conditions.
The quonset hut behind Strong hall which has been used as a Western Civilization library for the past several years will be remodeled. The library will be moved to the Green room in the new section of Watson library, and the quonset hut will be partitioned off to make additional space for the School of Business.
Cab Driver Goes To Cooler Because Of Warm Butter
Fort Worth, Texas—(U.P.) A Fort Worth taxicab driver told police the 22 pounds of butter in his vehicle had been by a passenger several hours before.
But skeptical police reasoned the water would not be so cold if it had been in the cab several hours. The car driver went to the cooler.
The cab driver went to the cooler.
Moyer Chosen Head Of Chemical Group
Melvin Moyer, graduate student,
was installed as president of Phi
Lambda Upsilon, honorary chemical
fraternity, at a meeting recently.
Other officers installed were Lane Harold, vice-president; Robert Glazier, corresponding secretary; Joseph Sam, recording secretary; Harold Hubbard, treasurer; and Verlin Stephens, alumni secretary.
Retiring president of the chemical fraternity is Luther Hall, graduate student. The new officers will assume their duties next fall.
US Will Furnish Films To British
London.—(U.P.)—Nearly 70 per cent of the feature films to be shown in British movie houses after next Oct. 1 will come from Hollywood.
Both the House of Commons and the House of Lords last night approved a measure, effective Oct. 1, providing that only 30 per cent of the first feature films shown in this country must be British products. The remainder will be foreign, nearly all of them American.
Last year's compulsory quota of British films was 40 per cent. In 1948 it was 45 per cent. Harold Wilson, president of the board of trade, told commons that British companies were not making enough new feature films to meet the old quota.
CARLS
GOOD CLOSETS
PRESENTS the "CAREFREE AGE*"
by Pedigree
...do you belong to the "carefree age"?
That Springtime of Youth when Summer hasn't heard the step of Fall? . . . If you do, these "Carefree Age" hats were specially made for you!
If there is youth in your heart,
a spring in your step, and high
hopes ahead, you will wear
one of these narrow brim,
kick-up in back, holiday
trimmed Summer Straws!
$3.50 $4.50 $6.00
The wide piggaree bands are as interchangeable as the moods of the wearer! . . Be the first in your set to wear a "Carefree Age" Straw
MIDWEST PREMIERE
THE JAYHAWKER THEATER IS PROUD AND HONORED TO BRING TO THE PEOPLE OF LAWRENCE "MESSENGER OF PEACE" THE FIRST SHOWING IN THE ENTIRE MIDWEST
A MOTION PICTURE YOU'LL NEVER FORGET!
WHAT THE RELIGIOUS LEADERS OF LAWRENCE
SAY:
The picture reverently portrays the work of a protestant minister. I recommend it very highly. Rev. H. M. Sippel, First Christian Church.
The picture "Messenger of Peace" is the best audiovisual presentation of spiritual realities which I have seen. It is a setting which will be strange to most of our generation. Yet it is true to the essential facts, and reveals the origin of the best in American Life. I am glad this community will have a chance to see it. Rev. O. E. Allison, First Methodist Church.
I want all Lawrence to see this picture. Rev. Leland H. Young, Evangelical United Brethren Church.
"Messenger of Peace" is not only good entertainment, but is also distinctively Christian. It has a message for life. Every family ought to see this film. Rev. Norman Brandt, Immanuel Lutheran Church.
This picture is the most effective religious film I've ever seen. It has been done in a thoroughly churchly spirit. In addition, it is a good movie, professionally done. Rev. Harold G. Barr, Dean of School of Religion, K.U.
A BEAUTIFUL STORY OF THE LIFE OF PASTOR ARMIN RITTER in the Hills where "God" was only a name.
For a real lift see "Messenger of Peace." This movie furnishes a positive answer to man's basic needs. I endorse it 100%
Rev. R. W. Albert
Trinity Lutheran Church.
ASTOR PICTURES presents
T. A. B.
ASTOR PICTURES presents
"Messenger of Peace"
Starring JOHN BEAL as Pastor Armin Ritter
l personally guarantee "Messenger of Peace" to be one of the finest religious pictures ever produced in the history of motion pictures.
J. Mark Cadle, Manager.
Your Entire Family Should See This Great Film Together
MESSENGER OF PEACE shown at 1:00 - 2:30 - 4:05 - 5:40 - 7:20 - 9:10
Jayhawker
THURSDAYFRIDAY SATURDAY
A PICTURE EVERY CHURCH-GOER SHOULD SEE
PAGE TEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 1950
The Editors Report
ACHESON'S PROBLEM
The first question that Secretary Acheson has had to tackle in his current discussions in Europe is the problem of aid to Indo-China and what we propose to do about it.
Indo-China
That problem is closely tied up to the questions of strength and stability in Western Europe, since the French hold that they cannot sustain the cost and effort of a substantial contribution to European defense while they are obliged to spend $500,000,000 a year to fight off the Communist advance in Southeast Asia.
The Indo-Chinese problem, however, is not simple. It is not an open-and-shut-case, right or wrong, black or white. We cannot approach the French in a take-it-or-leave-it attitude, since we, like they, are on the horns of something of a dilemma. We want to support nationalism and the movement toward independence in Asia. We want the port nationalism in Asia.
We have talked about global strategy and global diplomacy, and here is a swift instance of the indivisibility of the fight for the right to remain free.
We want the French to help us in the defense of threatened peoples against the onslaught of aggressive communism. But we can hardly demand that the French continue to give their lives and half their military budget to preserve a position merely for the sake of abandoning it.
Indo-China occupies a critically strategic position. It borders on Thailand, Burma and South China. It is a gateway to Malaya, as the Japanese demonstrated. It flanks the Philippines. It is a big arch in the bridge to Indonesia. If it falls to the Communist advance the whole of Southeast Asia will be in mortal peril.
We are certainly not prepared to assume all of the French obligations in Southeast Asia, so we are scarcely in a position to dictate all the terms of our assistance.
Indo-China, moreover, is not a political unit. Two great partially autonomous areas, Laos and Cambodia, are under French protection. They are fearful of the Annamese, who are the dominant element in Viet Nam, and wish to preserve their identity. Viet Nam, taking in the areas of Tongking, Annam and Cochin China, has two rival claimants for "nationalist" supremacy.
In the north chiefly, is the Communist-led Viet Minh regime of Ho Chi Minh, recognized by the Soviet Union and its satellites as a republican government. Farther south is the French-sponsored Viet Nam government of Bao Dai, former Emperor of Annam, which has been made partially self-governing but which is still under strong French control. Both regimes are "nationalist."
The Ho Chi Minh group stands for complete independence from the French. How far it can be independent of Moscow is another matter. The Bao Dai group proposes to stay within the French orbit. How far, therefore, it can command profound popular support as truly "nationalist" is also a question.
The United States Government decided that Bao Dai, with his recognized shortcomings, was at least the lesser of two evils and granted recognition to his regime. It was therefore presumed that United States aid would be forthcoming to strengthen that government in its resistance to the Communist attack.
It now appears that the United States wishes some further French commitment in respect to Bao Dai that will enlarge the powers of the regime and enhance the prospects of early independence.
The French are convinced that Indo-China does not have the requisite trained leaders to undertake all the obligations of an independent state at this time and they do not believe that those necessary leaders can be found in the near future. The defense of Indo-China, for example, cannot possibly be conducted at this time by indo-Chinese alone.
Rt is against this background that Secretary Acheson has discussed the Indo-Chinese situation in Paris. It is a situation, obviously, that is not susceptible to any ready-made doctrinaire solution. If Indo-China is to have a chance for eventual freedom, and if Southeast Asia is to be preserved, the Communist threat must be met.
This is not just a choice between "colonialism" and "independence." There will be no free Indo-China in a slave world, and we and the French, with British help, must find the means to prevent that eventuality.—The New York Times.
by Keith Leslie
'Small Things'
BETTER LATE THAN NEVER
Gov. Thomas E. Dewey declared, "The Fair Deal is a faro deal for New York, and the people are getting trimmed every day." Ed. note: Now he tells us!
Somebody, who if he isn't an alumnus, then certainly must have walked up 14th street, has invented a gearshift for shoes that by adjusting them to inclines keeps feet horizontal. Now that quiz files are approved by the administration, we can't see much room for improvement around here unless it would be to dismiss school on May 24.
We've heard of newlyweds being hazy about what they'd done at Niagara Falls, but for a mother of three children to be befuddled as to how she got in the middle of the Niagara river, we're a bit puzzled.
TODAY'S MAIL
Moved
Sir:
I am moved to write this in the behalf of humanitarianism. I attended Thelma Mims recital Sunday in which she certainly did justice to her race (or any race).
I am sick to the core of hearing and reading the utter base insidious remarks about the inequality of races and the utter inability of ever meeting them upon equal grounds.
It is too bad that a few prejudiced people have such a bloated opinion of themselves and their heritage that they are blind to the existence of life, feeling, and talents in all people regardless of race, color, or creed. It is too bad that a few would deny the privilege to develop potential creativeness in some, yet grant it to others.
The world continues to whitewash the feuculence of its society and thus lend perpetuity to excessive intolerance. It's time for smug intellectuals (?) to wake up and realize that the other guy has abilities and feelings too.
It is too bad we cannot be judged on the basis of our heritage. It is good that many see the righteousness in allowing ALL to develop as per his abilities but it would be a more brotherly world if more were equally inclined.
This is not a defense of the negro race in particular but rather a defense of all subjugated humanity in general.
Beverly Freeman Stapaules College junior
Naval Research Unit Begun In Lawrence
Formal activation of a Lawrence unit of the volunteer naval research reserve was conducted Monday by Comdr. R. W. Mayhew of the Chicago division of the office of naval research.
Twenty-one charter members of the Lawrence unit were installed by Commander Mayhew in the Military Science building.
This naval reserve research unit is the second of its kind in Lawrence. The army has had a research and development unit in Lawrence for approximately two years.
ATTENTION!
- Organized Houses
- Fraternities
- Sororities
Summer time is the ideal time to have those worn pieces roupholstered so they will be
Smart as New
they will be—
for those returning students next Fall.
- OUR PRICE IS RIGHT
* OUR WORK SUPERIOR
Stop in or call for
FREE ESTIMATE
Dingman Furniture 1803 Mass. Ph. 1503
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
Editor-in-Cher
Doris Greenbank
Managing Editor
Jones Shriver
Business Mgr.
Asst. Man. Editors...Norma Hunsinger
Kay O'Connor
John Hill
Ralph Hemenway
City Editor...Edward Chapin
Asst. City Editors...Nelson Ober
Marky Marks
Elaine Elvig
Steve Ferro
Feature Editor...Frances Kelley
Photograph Editor...Frankie Walts
Telegraph Editor...Robert Sigman
William Graves
Richard Tenn
Lloyd Holbick
Sports Editor...Richard Dlsaver
Asst. Sports Editors...Bob Leonard
Ray Soldan
Arthur McIntire
Mona Millikin
Society Editor...Faye Wilkinson
Asst. Society Editors...Billie Stover
Editorial Assts...Keith Leslie
Adv. Mgr...Charles Reiner
Cir. Mgr...Yvonose Joserand
Net Adv. Mgr...Forrest Bray
Classified Ad. Mgr...Lee Dyer
Promotion Mgr...John Wiedeman
Zoology Club To Picnic
The annual Snow Zoology cl picnic will be held at 3 p.m. Saturday in Clinton park. Club members and their families are invited to attend. Baseball and other games will be played.
Editing II students in charge of the copy desk for today's Kansan are Stella Gabrielson, journalism senior, and Lloyd Holbeck, journalism junior.
"Oxen of the sea" is the appropriate nickname given by the Spaniards to the big, tasty crabs weighing five pounds and more caught in the Bay of Biscay.
Lookee, Girls
8 oz, Blue Denim
JEANS
with side zipper
sizes 24 to 32
Only $198
Lawrence
Surplus
935 Mass.
HERE IT IS!
a
The sensational "circle" skirt to put sparkle in your summer wardrobe. Screen printed skirts $6.95 to $8.95 Hand-painted skirts $3.98 Tapestry skirts $4.85 TERRILL'S
803 Mass.
---
1950
4
WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 1950
at members at will
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE ELEVEN
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Phone K.U. 376
Classified Advertising Rates
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid on time during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univer-
sity as an American business office. Journalism bldg. at 454 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
REMINGTON portable in excellent condition.
Must sell before going to Colorado.
Sell cheap—$15.00 1332 Louisiana.
Marilyn Ward. 23
THE MAN in your life will appreciate a bilifold, shave kit, or belt of fine quality. LINKS LEATHER SHOP. 820 Mass.-Formerly the Blue Ribbon Leather Shop.
1947 HARLEY Davidson motorcycle. Like
new, 10,000 Miles. Call 721. 19
PLANNING your summer vacation? You'll want to stop in and select sturdy leather handhogge for *FLKLN* LEATHER HANDHOGGE, just formerly the Blue Rubber Leather Shop. 23
FOR GRADUATION give a practical
dress code. Shoes include biltongs, luggage, and leather goods at FILKIN LEATHER SHOP. 820 Mass.
Formerly the Blue Ribbon Leather Shop.
1932 Ford Coupe with 1936 engine, sealed beam lights, gas heater, new brakes, generator, Good tires, Appearance, Blowy Hipes Pipes. $225 309 E. 19th, Back
TRAILER house. 19 ft. U.S. Traveler. Electric refrigerator, butane range, fuel oil heater. Sleeps four. Electric brakes. South Side. South end of Main. Frigged to sell*
PONTIAC. 1940, blue convertible. Good tires, radio and understater heater. Top in very good condition. Must sell. Call 2124- J or see at $474% Indiana. 18
1938 FORDOR DOR. Mechanically perfect
body, and paint. $229.00. See Jobs
online.
FINEST TELEVISION—Best in sets and
sets of 12. Set includes just
arrived, $75.50 and up. See the new-
est Emerson table model set at $195.50
and also on the Electro and Electric
$86 Vermont. Phone 1843
FOR RENT
CLEAN convenient rooms for summer term. One hall is from curtain to 1000
room. Two baths from curtain to 1000
THREE double rooms for summer. $15.00 a month per boy; single beds; phone; bath; shower; private entrance. Fully furnished, can be used for his boys. 243 W 1100 Ohio.
APARTMENT for rent either 3 or 4
rooms; completely furnished; private
bath; private entrance; couple. Across
Bush Park. Inquire Mrs. Pappa
1141 Vt.
ROOM AND BOARD for summer session.
Phone 2535J. 17
RIDING horses for rent by the hour
Bridle paths and trails nearby. For hay-
rack rides, call Mott Stables, Phone 1842,
1700 West 4th. 22
ROOMS for summer students. Also nice cool sleeping porch available at reduced rates. 1005 Indiana. Phone 1160-W. 22 ROOM AND BOARD for summer session
SUMMER SCHOOL rooms for boys.
M. 1234 Oreden. Few vacancies for fail.
ROOMS: Two singles and two doubles for men or couple. Convenient to town and KU. Two baths, one shower. Avail. Wrong door. Fail. 1138 Vermont. Phone: 1497.
LARGE DOUBLE rooms for boys. Twin beds, linen furnished. On second floor. Two blocks from cafe and private room. Two blocks from cafe. $12.50 per room. 1212 Ohio. Phone. Mrs. Rhyll. 2917R.
ROOFS for summer or fall. 3 double and
1 single. Sleeping porch. Single beds.
$10.00 a month per person. 1222 Miss.
Phone 495. 24
TWO LARGE, cool rooms for summer students. Single beds, linens furnished, rooms kept clean, kitchen privileges if you have Phone 212-352 or can be seen evenings.
MAKE BETTER GRADES! Rent a portable or standard typewriter for $3.50 a month or $1.00 a week. All makes and models at Student Union Book Store, tf
BUSINESS SERVICE
TYPING; thesis; notebooks; reports;
Standard rates. Mrs. Hars,
1344W 596 W, Box 123
ATTENTION K. U! Come in now and
we'll help you put on your slip covers and upholstery. We furnish all materials, we guarantee our work- bourers' Upholstery, 837 Vernon, Perry 43.
FORMALS AND DRESSES of all types made to order. Also alterations and remodeling. Call Mrs. Scales. Phone 3060-W, 1414 Term. 22
ATTENTION social chairmen and party managers. See us for table and chair rentals. For information call Mrs. Anderson. Telephone 252. 18
TUTOR, mathematics. Need help? Call
Steve (215) 347-0686 or see at 1230 Oread, Apt. 9.
217
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasure and visit your 'Jayhawk' shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our one-stop pet shop has everything for fur, fur, food, toys, and Pet and GHr Shop. 1218 Conn. St, Ph. 418.
SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students, with good personality for summer work. This is a dignified sales activity representing the importance of most known film in the educational field. Students 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. Marzell, 600 Grand Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Giving qualifications, school and home address, school 2'
THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on
the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co.
and fender repair, auto painting, used
cars. 317 E. 17th. Phone 785 or 1821R.
*TYPING, Theses, Term Papers, Reports,
Reports, Mrs. Shipman, Mrs. Ship-
han, 1028 Vermont. Ph. 1168R.*
TYPING. Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rates. Prompt attention Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601
TRANSPORTATION
FLY AND TAKE Advantage of reduced fare, dovetail connections, good accommodations. Call Miss Gieseman at First National Reservations and info@firstnational.com. Telephone:
WANTED
RIDERS WANTED—leaving for Winchita every Friday at 4 p.m. Returning Summer, at 7:30 p.m., Harry Shultz, Phone 310-1-8, 18 WANT RIDERS or share the drive to summer school. Lease Plaza 7 a.m., recurrently, Je 3178, Kansas City after 6 p.m., TF
TEN OR FIFTEEN Graduation Announcements or fewer if you have them. Write Walter Diehl, 1104 High Avenue, Topeka Kansas. 19
SELL ALL your used books to the Student Union Book Store Monday, May 19. We will have up to 31. We will pay top cash prices for all current books, and the Wilcox and Follette representative will buy all obsolete untimed titles. Obsolete Union Book Store.
LOST
WOULD person who took the car-puller design report from Room 210. Marvin, please return it. I'd hate to stay here another semester. 18
The name of the English royal house was changed from Hanover to Windsor by a proclamation July 17, 1917.
MAN'S diamond ring. Believed to have been lost at Jayhawk Golf Driving Range. Finder please call 2220-W. Reward. 19
Hurry! Last time tonite!
Dan Duryea
Dorothy Lomour
"MANHANDLED"
Shown 8:17, 10:17
Thursday and FRI.
TEMPTRESS:
White
SAVAGE
Maria MONTEZ
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Alpha Phi Omega Elects Officers, Announces Winners Of Kite Contest
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The new officers are: Melvine Rice, president; Don Stonger, vice president; Loren Simpson, treasurer; Richard Sellers, corresponding and alumni secretary; Charles Shrewsbury, recording secretary; and Garry Buehler, historian. Dr. Jacob Kleinber, chapter advisor, swore in the new officers.
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Winners in the Boy Scout kite flying contest which was held recently were announced last night. The contest was divided into four divisions. The winners were: Don Glasco, first division; Jerry Weeks, second division; Don Lahman, third division; Don Pressure, fourth division.
'Battered Teachers Receive Legacy
Alpha Phi Omega, professional service fraternity, held its weekly meeting Tuesday night. Elections for the coming semester were held.
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Prizes and refreshments for the contest were furnished by local merchants. Colored movies were taken by members of Alpha Phi Omega.
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Fort Worth, Tex., —(U.P.)—A 77-year-old retired California school teacher, found dead in a tourist court here on her birthday, willed all her possessions to "battered up old teachers" authorities said.
Mrs. Rosa Blandon Gibbs was found Monday after checking in during a heavy rain April 15. An inquest verdict said death was due to natural causes, presumably from a heart attack.
Between $700 and $800 was found in her possession, and papers indicated she owned property in San Gabriel, Calif.
In a "last will and testament" dated Dec. 6, 1947, Mrs. Biggs willed her possessions to the California State Teachers Retirement system "... I leave it (property) all to battered up old teachers," she wrote.
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Delta Sigma Pi Initiates Nine
Nine men were initiated into Delta Sigma Pi, professional business fraternity, recently at the Hotel Eldridge.
The new initiates are Harry Newby, William Pierson and Eugene Westergren, College sophomores; William Beilharz, Glenn Starmer, Don Stickrod, Lee Sturgeon, Edgar Jarvis and James Weimer, business juniors.
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PAGE TWELVE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 1950
W
I BUMA SIG
Kansan photo by Ed Chapin
I BUMA SIG fraternity hangs its "shingle" above the front porch of its residence at 1005 Indiana street. William Fquua, engineering junior, holds the sign as Bill Kneisely, engineering sophomore, hammers in the last nail. The men's ties have pictures of burning cigarets on them to carry out the theme of their fraternity.
I Buma Sig fraternity takes its shortcomings seriously. Members have a large red, white, and blue sign hanging under the eaves of their front porch at 1005 Indiana street to prove it.
12 Men Live Up To Name; Hang Sign To Prove It
The "S" in "Sig" should be a "C", but the members want to use the Greek letters Iota Beta Sigma. Now I Buma Sigma and Iota Beta Sigma are seen all over cars, ties, suitcases, mirrors, and even T-shirts. Several of the men have ties with burning cigarettes painted on them, to wear when they go somewhere in a group. The T-shirts were painted by one member's mother. They have the group's shield painted on in the three color
One thing that is not often done by the 12 members is leaving an open pack of cigarettes where someone might find them. The group tries to live up to its name by being a bunch of moochers.
"Everytime I open a pack of weeds guys are standing around waiting for a smoke." Bill Fquua, College junior said. "I finally switched to a pipe and boy are the fellows sore," he added.
They have a social chairman who calls up organized women's houses to get dates for the bashful ones. The Buma Sigs feel that Hopkins hall, next door to them, is an annex. The reason is that nearly all their dates are from Hopkins hall. Corbin hall is called sometimes, but it would be difficult to try to date all the girls in Corbin hall when there are only 12 men.
I Buma Sig was founded in the spring of 1949. Bill Kneisely designed the crest and his brother drew the coat of arms. The original shield is now hanging in one of the dormitories at Iowa State college, Ames, Iowa. It was taken by some Iowa Staters when they played K.U. in football this past fall.
The new sign has been hung much
higher and it is hoped it will stay much longer. The shield has the Jay-hawk at the top and a burning cigarette cutting diagonally through the field. A "W" is in the upper right hand corner because the landlady's name is Wedekind. At the bottom is the name of the fraternity.
Tappa Kega Beer probably occupies a place of doubtful distinction in the annals of humorous organizations at K.U. Its letters are on a small beer keg hanging on the front porch at 1134 Mississippi street. They have the Greek letters for Tau Kappa Beta on their belongings.
The Tappa Kega men don't go in for activities as strenuously as do the Buma Sigs. Their president, Frank Walter, engineering junior, said that the house was quieter than the beer keg would seem to indicate. They had a Christmas dance and are planning their annual spring beer bust. With finals so near some doubt if the bust will come about.
The Tri-G's have no social functions, but they maintain a ritual and an elected representative whom they call the Grand Mufti. Because of the rules of the organization, the name of the Mufti must remain secret.
Groede's Goofy Guys, the only Roman house on the Hill, is located at 1230 Oread street. It has a mascot and a peculiar way of answering the phone. When someone calls, the answer is "Tri-Girl", the only Roman house on the Hill. To whom, with which do you wish to speak? This usually floors the caller and a message is usually out of the question.
Westminister To Hold Annual Retreat For Old And New Cabinet Members
The annual retreat for old and new cabinet members of Westminster fellowship, Presbyterian student group, will be held from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday in the Clinton Presbyterian church, Clinton, Kan.
"Leadership Ability" will be discussed by Dr. John Patton, professor of religion and Presbyterian student pastor, at the morning meeting "Principles of Organization" will be given by Mrs. Patton in the spring semester, plans for the coming year and functions of each cabinet officer.
The new cabinet includes: Delben Robb, moderator; Marvin Reed, vice-midder; Shirley Thomson, stated clerk; Leon Stromire, treasurer; Kathryn Conrad and Mary Gilles. Student Religious council representatives; Donald Kerle, public relations; Kathryn Conrad, social chairman; Frank Thorn, profession luncheons; John B. Roberts, stewardship; James Glass, Bible study groups; Helena Boote, historian; Paul Staley, librarian; Katharine Nelligan, student scholarship; Aleta Brown, stewardship cards; Rita Roney, Sunday evening chairman; Edward Perkins, Sunday evening vice-chairman; Donald Stewart, devotions; Mary Fischer and Gene Rinker, hospitality; Marvin Small, host; Charles Tice, rooms and Kay Peters, personal calling and attendance.
KU Will Play K-State Today
Baseball coach Bill "Red" Hoagan has announced that the game between KU and Kansas State will be played this afternoon as scheduled.
Game time is 3 p.m. Herman Philipp or Guy Mabry is expected to start on the mound for the Jay-hawkers, with Jim Iverson a likely bet for K-State.
Food Poisoning Hits Phi Gams
The general discomfort of the men involved is suspected to have resulted from some food eaten at the evening meal Tuesday. Two of the victims, reported to be table waiters with easy access to double portions, went to Watkins Memorial hospital early morning for relief.
About 45 men in the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house at 1540 Louisiana street were seized with cases of food poisoning this morning.
The state of confusion continued until about 9 am. A member of the fraternity reported that Dr. R. W. McClure, Jr. of Watkins Memorial hospital "set up temporary quarters in the house" to treat men still ailing.
Their conditions is reported to be improving.
The effects of this type of poisoning are only temporary, said Dr Maurice Gross of Watkins hospital and the situation is not a serious one He said that a routine investigation was being made.
$100 Scholarship To Harold Benjamin
Harold Benjamin, journalism junior, was awarded a $100 scholarship Tuesday by the Kansas City Press club, professional chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, national journalism fraternity.
The club will make these awards annually to juniors at the University of Missouri, Kansas State college and the University.
An exhibit of the latest designs in modern furniture is now on display on third floor Marvin hall by the architecture department of the School of Engineering and Architecture.
The photographic reproductions cepit designs of home furniture for the modern kitchen, living room, and dining room. The designers have given explanation of some of the pieces beside the photographs. The designers are George Nelson, Charles Eames, architects; Isamu Noguchi, sculptor; and Paul Laszlo, professional designer.
Architecture Department Displays Furniture Designs
The first member to be named to the newly-formed I.S.A. faculty advisory board is Miss Winnie Lowrance, assistant professor of Latin. It is the first such board to be organized by the local I.S.A.-organization and will assume its duties during the coming school year.
Chairmen for I.S.A. orientation week activities have been appointed. In charge of the barn dance will be Norma Hawkins, education junior; Robert Dunwell, education junior; will plan Coke parties; "Apple Polly" party will be arranged; Marese Ball, College freshman; and Joan Shuler, fine arts freshman, is chairman of the "First Nighter" dance.
Winnie Lowrance Named To SAID advisory Board
College Daze
Writer Needed
Any student interested in being script writer for the 1950-51 College Daze production should apply for the position at the Student Union activities office by Saturday. May 26.
Included in the application must be a synopsis of the proposed plot for the show plus ideas for the lyrics.
Greenbank, Hill Are Elected To Kansan Executive Jobs
Doris Greenbank, journalism senior, was elected editor-in-chief of the University Daily Kansan at a meeting of the Kansan board Monday. John Hill and Forrest Bellus, journalism juniors, were elected managing editor and business manager, respectively.
Assistant managing editors with Faye Wilkinson, College junior; and Emily Stewart, Lloyd Holbeck and William Stratton, journalism juniors.
All of the newly elected staff members will take office next fall for the first eight week term.
Miss Greenbank has previously served as assistant city editor, assistant managing editor and managing editor of the Kansan. Hill has
served as assistant city editor and assistant managing editor. Bellus was national advertising manager for the past eight weeks and has also been classified advertising manager.
Chairman of the Kansan board for the next school year will be Francis Kelley. Edward Chapin was elected secretary. Both are journalism juniors.
Taft Answers For GOP
Sen. Robert A. Taft (R-Ohio), chairman of the senate GOP policy committee, answered for the Republicans in a nation-wide address Tuesday night.
He accused the president of "political immorality" and said Mr. Truman is trying to elect a "rubber stamp congress" which would spend the nation into "a false boom and a depression."
Mr. Taft, himself a candidate for re-election, urged the voters to elect a GOP congress which would back up an anti-Communist foreign policy, reduce taxes and spending, rid the government of Communists, and "return to the principles of thrift and sound fiscal policy on which this nation was constructed."
New Rains Lash Winnipeg
Winnipie, Man., May 17 —(U.P.)
New rains lashed the flood-strained
driest of Winnipie today while 50-
000 soldiers and 50,000 soldiers
kept anxious watch.
W. D. Hurst, city engineer, said the Glenwood Cressent dike, one of the largest of the 20 miles of walls protecting the city, had slipped eight inches in 24 hours.
The west coast labor leader was to appear in person before a special CIO committee hearing charges that
Washington, May 17—(U.P.)-Harry Bridges, recently convicted of lying about his Communist party connections, leads a fight today to prevent the CIO from outstaging his International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's union.
Bridges Fights For Union
-
Chairman Andrew Jacobs, (D. Ind.), said he would set another date reasonably soon for the United Nations chief of relief work, likely and, reply to the charge,
Lewis Declines Invitation
the union deserted CIO policy to follow the Moscow party line. Louis Goldblatt, ILWU secretary-treasurer. also was expected to testify.
Washington, May 17 — (U.P.)—A house labor subcommittee today gave John L. Lewis "another chance" to answer under oath a charge that he secretly ordered his miners to ignore a federal court's back-to-work order during last winter's coal strike.
Mr. Lewis turned down the subcommittee's invitation to be present last night. He advised the group that the charge was false but he did not care to testify publicly "at this time."
A $750 scholarship recently established at the University by the Socony-Vacuum Oil company will be awarded to a student in civil engineering who has completed all work for senior standing.
The purpose of the grant is to promote the interest of promising undergraduates in petroleum production activities. George Bradshaw, professor of civil engineering, said the scholar for the 1950-51 school year would be named in the near future.
Oil Firm To Give $750 Scholarship
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University Daily Kansan THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1950 STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Expert On Southern Asia To Address Convocation
The current situation in southern Asia, considering the Communist victory in China, will be discussed by Phillips Talbot, one of the nation's outstanding experts on southern Asia, at 10 a.m. Friday in Fraser theater.
Mr. Talbot will address a joint convocation of the William Allen
Public Information, the department of political science, and the department of history. He will be introduced by Chancellor Deane W Malott. The public is invited.
As a member of the Chicago Daily News foreign service, Mr. Talbot has spent most of the time since 1938 in Asia. He recently returned to the United States after spending several months covering developments in Pakistan, India, Southeast Asia and the Far East.
[Name]
At present, Mr. Talbot is a senior associate of the Institute of Current Affairs assisting assistant professor of political science at the University of Chicago.
Phillips Talbot
Beach Memorial Trophy Awarded To 'Bud' French
Clarence "Bud" French, a four-letter half-back on the University football team received the first annual Ormand Beach memorial trophy Wednesday. Mrs. Beach gave the trophy to the University in the spring of 1949 in memory of her husband, one of K.U.'s all time great backs, who was killed in an accident in 1939.
Head football coach J. V. Sikes said the presentation is based on sportsmanship, leadership, and ability.
French's trophy is a replica of a permanent trophy given to the University of Kansas Athletic association by Mrs. Beach. Each recipient's name will be inscribed on the association's trophy.
Beach, rated by Mike Getto, assistant coach, as the greatest defensive pack he has ever seen, was captain of K.U.'s team of '33 which played Notre Dame to a scoreless deadlock. After that game Knute Rockne raised him as the greatest back he had ever seen.
A product of Pawhuska, Okla.
High school, Beach enrolled at the University after getting a look at the school while competing in the relays of that year. He competed in a special 16-pound shot-nut event.
E. H. "Red" Lupton, '16, was so impressed with Beach's performance that he gave him a watch inscribed with Beach's name and the event.
her her husband's death, Mrs.
gave the watch to Mr. Lup-
ton. The watch, along with the K.U. Notre Dame game football is now in the Phi Gamma Delta house, Beach's fraternity.
After his graduation, Beach worked for the Sarnia Imperial Oil company of Canada. Beach maintained his football reputation in Canada where he was rated as one of Canada's best in their brand of football by officials and coaches there. Beach was killed while inspecting a new installation of storage tanks when one of the tanks exploded.
Graduates Head Medical Society
Dr. Charles L. White of Great Bend, who graduated from the University School of Medicine in 1936, was today named head of the general practitioners' section of the Kansas Medical society, the United Press reported. The group met at Wichita.
Dr. Albert C. Harms of Kansas City, who graduated from the School of Medicine in 1938, was named vice-president of the society.
1952
Newly elected vice-president of the eye, ear, nose and throat specialists of the society is Dr. Will D. Pitman of Pratt, who graduated from the School of Medicine in 1925.
—Kansan Photo by Ed Chapin
CHARLES "BUD" FRENCH receives the Ormand Beach memorial trophy from Mrs. Mike Getto. The award was established in 1949 by Mrs. Beach in memory of her husband, one of K.U.'s all time football greats. From left to right: E. C. "Ernie" Quigley, retiring K.U. athletic director, Bud French, Mrs. Getto, and head football coach J. V. Sikes.
Activities Group To Meet Tonight
A meeting of students interested in working for Student Union Activities on special projects durethe 1950-51 school year will be held at 7:2) p.m. today in the Palm room of the Union.
The reorganization of the activities organization and its special projects will be explained.
Any student who wishes to apply for chairman of one of the four committees — announcements, K-Union, secretarial, and entertainment—may do so at the meeting.
Scientists Win Research Prizes
For development of a unique microscope using ultra-violet rays to determine the amount of nucleic acids in cells, Gordon Wiseman, University graduate student, received $500 in the second annual contest of the Kansas division of the American Cancer society Tuesday, May 16.
Awards were made at Kansas State college in Manhattan where Sigma Xi, national scientific honorary society, was host. Second and third prizes in the contest awarded predoctoral students and two prizes given men with doctor of philosophy degrees went to University graduates and faculty.
Leon Berube, freshman in medicine, received the second pre-doctoral prize of $300. Third prize of $100 went to Robert C. Hiltibran, graduate student in bio-chemistry. The three winners were chosen from nine contestants.
Dr. Hisaku Yokoyama and Dr. William M. Harsha, both of the K.U. Medical center in Kansas City, were selected for the post-doctoral awards. Candidates must have received Ph.D degrees within the last five years. Research must have been done in Kansas by all contestants.
The "microspectrophotometer" completed, in 1949 by Wisman, is the first developed of its kind. Only two similar instruments, which measure nucleic acid amounts by the manner of light absorption in cells, exist. Wisman said. One is in Stockholm, Sweden, while another is nearing completion at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, he explained. His microscope is being used in cell research in the Department of Oncology at the K.U. Medical center.
Berube, working under the $500 Barney Goodman scholarship for the project, plotted isodose curves. Used by radiologists in x-ray treatment of cancer, the charted curves determine the total dosage of x-ray to cancer tissues at any point below skin surface.
The study of cancer in bone in relation to radium deposited there was the basis of Hiltibran's research. Working under the Navy Research program, set up in February, 1847 with Hiltibran in Hiltibran's radium deposition in rats given kickets and metabolism of radium in bone.
Dr. Yokoyama's winning paper was "The Evaluation of Histochemical Techniques of Alkaline Phosphase". Dr. Harsha presented "The Evaluation of Quantitative Determination of Sulphybryl Groups in Cancerous and Non-Cancerous Serum."
KANSAS—Partly cloudy today, occasional thundershowers beginning late today and ending Friday noon. High today 85; low tonight 65; high Friday 75 to 80.
The American Cancer society aims to stimulate research through presentation of such awards.
THE WEATHER
Ellis Stouffer To Retire As Dean
Ellis B. Stouffer will retire as dean of the University Friday, June 30, Chancellor Deane W. Malott announced today. However, he will continue teaching courses in mathematics for five years.
—Kansan Photo By Hixon
Ellis B. Stouffer
Six Alumni To Get Citations
Six alumni of the University will receive the Alumni association's award for distinguished service, it was announced today by Henry A. Bubb of Topeka, president of the association.
The awards will be given at the University's annual commencement supper Sunday, June 4. Those present to receive awards will participate in a discussion of "the place of the University in the future" at the alumni meeting the same day.
Those chosen by a secret committee for the 1550 awards are:
Jerome Beatty, 1900, top free lance writer for magazine feature articles once a reporter on newspapers and publicity director for two film companies.
Frank L. Carson. '13, civic leader and chairman of the board of the First National bank of Wichita, native of Ashland, and a trustee of the Endowment association.
Paul J. Neff, '06, graduate degree in engineering in 1914, since 1946 president and chief executive officer for the Missouri Pacific railroad, St. Louis, Mo., and organizer of Missouri Pacific trailways.
Edward W. Tanner, '16, first graduate of the University department of architecture, and in part responsible for the Southwest residential district and the Plaza shopping center in Kansas City, Mo.
Justice Walter G. Thiele, '10, member of the Kansas Supreme court since 1933, previous Alumni association president and director, and president of the Kansas Judicial council.
Justice Hugo T. Wedell, '15 law
'20, president of the World War II
Memorial association and member of
the Supreme court for the past 14 years.
This year's election brings the citation number to 87 awarded since the plan was started in 1941.
Dr. Roy G. Hoskins, '05, will be present to receive the citation voted him several years ago. Posthumous presentations of the citation have been made to relatives of Solon E. Summerfield, Raymond Clapper, Theodore O. Alford, John M. Brentlinger, and Fredrick WoodK
No successor to Dean Stouffer has been named. Chancellor Malott pointed out that when Dean Stouffer was appointed in 1946, the post of dean of the University was being created for the emergency peak years "without necessarily implying that the office will be continued.
"In the retirement of Dean Stouffer as dean of the University I am suffering a loss in my own office organization which is a matter of serious regret to me personally," said Chancellor Malott. "His unfailing loyalty, his careful and judicial appraisal of every problem of administration, and his vast knowledge of the complex details of the University have made him an extremely valuable member of the administrative staff."
"In returning to the field of teaching and research in mathematics, however, he goes to an area of work in which he has long been distinguished in which he has kept up tirelessly through his administrative years."
Dean Stouffer came to the University in 1914 as an assistant professor of mathematics. He has been chairman of the budget committee since 1923 excepting a period in 1926-27 when he did research work in mathematics in Italy on a Guggenheim Memorial Foundation fellowship. He became chairman when E. H. Lindley, late chancellor of the University, appointed him assistant to the chancellor.
From 1922 until his appointment as dean of the University, Dean Stouffer was dean of the Graduate school. He served as chairman of the mathematics department for five years starting in 1941.
He has done research papers on "Projective Differential Geometry," and "The Determinant Theory of Invariants." Dean Stoufler received his bachelor of science, master of science, and doctor of law degrees from the University of Illinois. Dr. Doctor of philosophy degree from the University of Illinois. Urbana.
A 16th century Shrovetide play by Hans Sachs and Scottish dances done in native costume were given at the annual German club picnic recently at Potter lake. Forty persons attended the picnic.
Dean Stouffer belongs to Sigma Xi, national honorary scientific research fraternity; Phi Beta Kappa, honorary scholastic fraternity; and Gamma Alpha, graduate science fraternity.
Shrovetide Play Given At Picnic
Those participating in the play were: Esther Storer, College freshman; James Lovett, College sophomore; and Richard B'Collins, College junior. Collins and Sam F. Anderson, instructor in German, performed the highland fling and the Scottish sword dance in kilts.
Miss Marlies Kornfeld, assistant instructor in German, and Eugene Azure, education senior, led the group in square dances and German waltzes. Dr. John Newfield, director of the University of Kansas City Playhouse, and Mrs. Newfield, were guests of the club.
Veterans Asked To Wear Uniforms
All veterans and reservists are urged to wear their uniforms Saturday, Armed Forces day, Capt. W. R. Terrell, commanding officer of the University Naval R.O.T. unit, said today. Captain Terrell is project officer for Armed Forces day in this area.
FAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1
Official Bulletin
Veterans' requisition books for equipment and supplies will not be honored after Saturday, May 20.
Thursday, May 18
Mathematics club picnic, 5 p.m. today, Potter lake. Election of officers.
I. V.C.F. missionary meeting, noon Friday, Danforth chapel.
German club, 5 p.m. today, 402 Fraser hall. Last meeting of semester.
N. S.A., 7:30 tonight, 37 Strong hall.
Delta Sigma Pi election of officers, 7:30 tonight, west end of ballroom, in Union.
I.V.C.F. picnic, 6 p.m. Friday,
Potter lake. Rev. David Hause,
speaker. No meeting tonight.
Tryouts for major and minor Quack, 7 tonight. Robinson gym. Quack members only.
Annual Quack club picnic, 8 a.m. Sunday, Clinton park. All members attend; bring $1 dues.
Christian Science Organization regular meeting. 7:30 tonight, Danforth chapel. Business meeting and
election of officers following regular meeting.
Society of American Military Engineers election of officers, 1 p.m Saturday, Military Science building. New members welcome. Last meeting of semester; all members required to attend.
Home Economics club dessert party in honor of seniors, 7:15 tonight, Union terrace. In case of rain party will be held in Pine room in the Union.
Lutheran Student association picnic, Lone Star lake, Sunday meet at 2 p.m. Trinity Lutheran church, Recreation, supper and evening worship service.
Spring semester parking permits expire noon, June 10. Applications for summer session permits now received 200 Old Fowler shops. All parking regulations will be enforced during finals and during the commencement period.
Mathematical colloquium, 5 p.m.
Monday, 203 Strong hall. Prof. W. R.
Scott. "Probability and Number
Theory."
Snow Zoology club picnic, 3 p.m.
Saturday, Clinton park.
Papa Whooping Crane Waits For First Egg To Hatch
Austwell, Tex., — (UP) —A proud whooping crane named Crip peered impatiently today at an oversized egg that should produce the first little whooper ever hatched in captivity.
Like any expectant father, he ap- parently was wondering why his offspring was taking so much time in arriving.
Julian A. Howard, manager of the reserve, said the blessed event already was overdue.
The egg was laid by Crip's mate, Josephine, about April 22 in her marshy pen at the Arkansas national wildlife refuge, maintained by the U. S. department of interior near Austwell.
When he discovered the egg shortly after it had been laid by Josephine, the only female of her rare species in captivity, he estimated it would hatch in 22 days.
He admitted last night he had miscalculated, having never watched whoopers mate before, but thought the little fellow would peck his way out of the shell within 10 days.
Mr. Howard said Crap, so-called because he injured a wing last October and could not migrate northward with other whoppers, is so impatient he takes turns with Josephine in squatting on the egg.
Josephine handled three shirts, tardy and Crip worked as a sitter four times, Mr. Howard said, Crip, Josephine and another male whooper who keeps his distance, remain on the reservation because wing injuries prevent them from flying.
The whooping crane is the tallest bird in the world and now is almost extinct. The four-and-one-half-foot crane thrived in the United States in the 19th century but migrated to Canada when hunters became too numerous.
Mr. Howard said only 37 whoopers are known to exist today, including the trio on his reservation.
Police To Change Greeting
Cambridge, Mass.—(U.P.)—"Where do you think you're going—to a fire?" No longer will that traditional salutation greet speeders in Cambridge. New instructions issued to rookie traffic officers warn that: "If you are angry, excited or nervous, give yourself a cooling-off period before you approach the violator."
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Kansas Regents Will Consider KU's Budget
The Kansas Board of Regents will pass on the proposed University budget for the 1950-51 fiscal year during its Thursday and Friday meetings in Topeka.
The proposed budget will cover salaries of all University personnel, departmental funds, upkeep for buildings and grounds, operating expenses for dormitories and Watkins Memorial hospital, and state services at the University such as the Geological survey and research bureaus.
The 1850 fiscal year at the University ends Friday, June 30. The new budget, if approved, will go into effect Saturday, July 1. E. B. Stouffer, chairman of the University budget committee said the board has copies of the proposed budget for approximately two weeks.
University Daily Kansan
Mall subscription: $2 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.
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Postman Runs Behind Schedule
Parkersburg, W. Va.-(U.P.) The postman knocked at the home of Mrs. Pauline Owens but nine years too late. She received a letter that was mailed May 7, 1941 at Watertown, N.Y., by Ellsworth Lightner, who was corporal in the Fourth Armored Division at Pine Camp, N.Y.
Raleigh, N. C.—(U.P.) Too prisoners walking down the road get water just keep on walking, to North Carolina highway commission said. So it abolished the post water boy with road gangs. The commission noted statistics showing that 40 to 50 per cent of all escape are water carriers.
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THURSDAY, MAY 18. 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
o race
king, t
mississippi
post
The show
escape
acks
wide
erms
mer
Pinnings And Engagements Announced For Six
-Photo by Hank Brown
SANDY GORDON AND JIM GORDON
Brown-Hayman
Gamma Phi Pinning
Gamma Phi Beta sorority announces the pinning of Miss Lavon Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Francis H. Brown of Kansas City, Mo., to Mr. C. M. Hayman, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Hayman, Sr., of Overland Park.
Miss Brown wore a white orchid corsage and her attendants, Misses Cheri Montgomery, Marianne Asbell, Jean Taylor, and Jean Embree, wore corsages of peach gladioli. Mrs. Ralph Park and Mrs. Andrew McKay, houseothers, wore white rose corsages.
Miss Brown is a fine arts freshman. Mr. Hayman is a College freshman and a member of Sigma Nu fraternity.
Garten Engagement
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Garten announce the engagement of their daughter, Marjorie, to Mr. Donald Blakeslee, son of Mr. and Mrs. George A. Blakeslee of Muscotah, Kan. A wedding date has not been set.
Miss Garten and her fiance are both graduates of the University. She is teaching at Onaga, Kan, and he has a teaching position at Rawlins, Wyo.
Templin To Have Hayride
Picnics, Dances Star In Weekend Party Plans
Templin hall will have a picnic and hayrack ride from 6:30-10:30 p.m. Saturday.
Sherwood Announces
Chaperones will be Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hogan, Mr. and Mrs. John Weatherwax, and Dr. R. W. McClure.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Zepp, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Kassinger, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Russell Wiley will chaperone.
Pharmacy School Dance
The Inter- fraternity Council spring dance will be held from 8-12 p.m. Friday at the Lawrence Country club.
IVCF Picnic at Potter Lake
The Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship will have a picnic at Potter lake from 6 to 9:30 p.m. Friday.
Band and Orchestra Picnic
IFC Has Dance Friday
Formal Dinner at Castle
The Junior class of the School of Pharmacy and Kappa Psi will hold a dinner dance from 6:30-12 Friday at the Skyline club.
The K.U. Band and Orchestra will picnic at Lone Star lake from 4 to 8 p.m. today.
Mrs. H. P. Ramage, Mrs. J. A. Scroggs, Mr. Charles Wentworth, and Mrs. P. H. Klinkenburg will chaperone.
Chaperones will be Dean and Mrs. J. Allen Recee, Mr. J. H. Burckhalter, and Mr. W. G. Wenzel.
Chaperones will be: Miss Ann Marshall, Miss Emmalou Michaelson, and Mrs. Vivian Christian, housemother.
Sig Ep Dessert Dance Sigma Phi Epsilon will have a dessert dance from 7 to 8 p.m. today.
Alpha Omicron Pi will have a formal dinner dance from 7:30 to midnight Friday at the Castle Tea Room.
Sigma Kappa sorority announces the pinning of Miss Sally Sherwood, daughter of Mrs. Laura Sherwood of Wichita, to John William Brimer, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Brimer of Wichita.
Chaperones will be Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Poland, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Grotheaus, and Mr. Werner Winter.
Busch-Wood Pinning
Miss Sherwood is a fine arts senior, Mr. Erimer, a 1949 graduate of the University, attended Stanford university in 1945 and 1946, where he was allied with Kappa Sigma fraternity. He is now attending the Municipal University of Wichita.
The wedding will be in the latter part of June in Wichita.
Kappa Kappa Gamma announces the pinning of Miss Joan Bagby, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Julian Bagby of Minneapolis, Minn., to Mr. Guy Mabry, son of Mr. and Mrs. G.F. Mabry of Rock Island. UU
Delta Upsilon announces the pinning of Miss Mary Jo Busch, daughter of Mrs. F. X. Busch of Wichita, to Mr. Richard J. Wood, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Wood, also of Wichita.
Miss Busch is an education sophomore at the University of Wichita and is a member of Sorosis sorority. Mr. Wood is an engineering junior and vice-president of Delta Upsilon fraternity.
The announcement was made during dinner at the fraternity spring formal dinner-dance. Mr. John Brown, president of the chapter, read the announcement.
Bagbv-Mabrv Pinning
Bauer-Burch Pinning
Miss Bagby is a College senior. Mr.Mabry is a business senior and a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.
Phi Kappa fraternity announces the pinning of Miss Donna Bauer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard C. Bauer of Wichita, to Mr. Bill Burch, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Burch of Wichita.
Miss Bauer resides in Wichit
Mr. Burch is a College freshman an
a member of Phi Kappa fraternity.
Sigma Kappa Has Election
Tolene Dudley will be president of Sigma Kappa sorority for the 1950 fall semester. Other officers elected were Marilyn Gaw, first vice-president; Elda Lou Phillips, second vice - president; Theima Sprout, house manager; Nita Brewster, recording secretary.
Gay Bonne, corresponding secretary; Anneliese Schnierle, registrar; Jane Sullivan, junior member to senior council; Harriet Flood, scholarship chairman; Ann Murphy, social chairman.
A. H.
—Photo by Estes Studio
Miss Sherwood
Pat Davison Is Phi Tau Dream Girl
Pat Davison, fine arts senior, was named the Dream Girl of the Beta Theta chapter of Phi Kappa Tau fraternity at the annual Dream Girl formal, May 12, in the Hotel Eldridge. Her escort was Gail Stout, College senior. The music was provided by Harlan Livengood and his orchestra.
Guests were; Pat Gay, Margaret Lawrence, Pat Harris, Jeanne Packerson, Shirley Rothberger, Joyce Payne, Sue Swanty, Winifred Miller, Virginia LaRue, Joan Randazzo, Evon Spauldig, Marian Keelin, Ruth Williams, Esther Williams, Cynthia McKee.
Rosemary Hall, Jeanne Peck,
Jeane Lake, Althea Clinton, Elizabeth Stafford, Gwen Gibby, Mary Anna Ward, Louis Kennedy, Juanita Gooch, Lenore Carlson, Carolyn Nardet, Betty Jo Lipscomb.
Mary Lee Haury, Jean McGinnis, Billie Stover, Karin Stack, Liz McKie, Dana Richmond, Lida Stark, Peggy Moore, Katherine Mulky, and Millie Roach.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Fink, Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Ottinger, Mr. and Mrs.
I. N. Herstein, Mr. Eugene Jennings,
Pete North, Maj. and Mrs. A. F.
Gallup, Mr. and Mrs. Carlyle Smith,
and Mr. Paul DeCora.
Chaperons were Mrs. Eugene Alford, Mrs. Thomas A. Clark, Mrs. Richard Blume, and Mrs. Fred Fultz.
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Paris—(U,R)—Gertrude (Gorgeous Gussie) Moran said today she is putting away forever the lace panties she wore on the Wimbledon Tennis courts last year.
Pierre Balmain designed the new apparel, and goggle-eyed newsmen watched her being measured for it. The new dress will be white accordian pleated silk chiffon with cotton backing, made into a sleeveless sheath with V-neck, midthigh length.
Underneath will be matching bloomers, caught tight with two silk bands around the top of the leg.
Need Relaxation?
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1950
Wildcats Down Jayhawkers 7 To 5
By BOB NELSON
Kansas State pushed across five runs in a big third inning to defeat Kansas, 7 to 5, in a baseball game played on the Varsity diamond Wednesday afternoon. Kansas, trailing 6 to 0 after three innings, rallied for five runs in the late innings but failed to overtake the Wildcats, and lost its second of three games played between the two schools this year. The two teams play again today at 3 p.m.
A three-run rally in the ninth fell two runs short of tieing the score for the Jayhawkers. After left fielder Carl Ellis had singled and scored on an error and first baseman Lou DeLuna's single to right, big Bill Mace cloued a long homer to left-center field to put Coach Bill Hogan's club back in the game.
After center fielder Darrel Houk walked to keep the rally alive, Kansas State's pitcher, Jim Iverson, got Jim Cavonaugh to fly out to right field to end the game.
Carl Sandefur, the Jayhawkers' big sophomore righthander, will hurl for Kansas in the series final day. He won the second game of the two-game series with the Wildcats the past weekend at Manhattan, 7 to 3, to chalk up his sixth win of the season. He has lost only one game this year.
K K
DICK JOHNSON KEITH THAYER
Kansas needs the win today to stay ahead of the fifth place Wildcats, who trail by only .007 percentage points. Perk Reitmeier, sophomore righthand ace, is expected to draw the mound assignment for the Wildcats. He has a record of three wins in five games and Reitmeier downed the Jayhawkers at Manhattan, 9 to 7, although hit hard in the late innings.
Sandefur, who ranks as the top sophomore hurler in the Big Seven, has allowed only 12 hits and three earned runs during his last 19 1-3 innings on the mound. Today's game should be a pitcher's duel with two of the conference's top first-year men onenous each other.
Dick Johnson, the Wildcats' hard-hitting center fielder, continued to pound the ball hard against Kansas pitching. He collected three for four to give him 10 hits in 13 times at bat against Jayhawk pitcher. This is a .769 batting average against KU, which has raised his Big Seven average from .145 to .350 in his last three games.
Keith Thayer, Kansas State catcher, drove in three Kansas State runs with a two-run triple in the third inning and a home run in three official trips to the plate.
Kansas State picked up an unearned run in the first inning as shortstop Hank Specht reached first base on interference by the catcher. After stealing second and third,
Specht scored the game's first run on left fielder Dick Hilt's one-base blow.
After pitching two fairly effective innings, the roof fell in on KU starter, Herman Philipp, in the third inning as the Wildcats sent 11 batters to the plate to push across five big runs.
In the third, after second baseman Tim Scannell grounded out, Specht singled, Hilts walked, and center fielder Johnson singled to left scoring Specht. After right fielder Ray Elliott forced Johnson at second, catcher Thayer tripled to left-center scoring Hilts and Elliott. Thayer scored on the play when a bad relay throw to third went into the crowd.
First baseman Dave Bremner followed with a single to left and Iverson walked sending Philipp to the showers. Phillip's replacement, Curtis Harris, making his first mound
K-State-Kansas Box Score:
K-STATE (7) AB R H PO A E
R. Bremner, 3b 4 0 0 2 0 0
Scannell, 2b 3 0 0 2 5 1
Specht, ss 4 2 2 0 5 2
Hilt, lf 4 1 1 0 0 0
Johnson, cf 4 1 3 2 0 0
Elliott, rf 5 1 0 2 0 0
Thayer, c 3 1 2 6 1 0
D. Bremner, 1b 5 1 2 10 2 0
Iverson, p 4 0 0 3 1 0
Totals 36 7 10 27 14 3
KANSAS (5) AB R H 19 24 F
Cavonaugh, 2b 4 1 1 2 2 0
Koenig, ss 4 1 1 1 3 2
Temple, 3b 4 0 1 1 3 0
Ellis, lf 4 1 1 3 0 0
Hicks, rf 4 0 0 4 1 0
Mabry, cf-p 4 0 1 2 1 0
DeLuna, 1b 4 1 2 8 2 0
Mace, c 4 1 1 5 0 0
Philipp, p 0 0 0 0 0 0
Harris, p 0 0 0 0 0 0
Sandefur, p 1 0 1 0 0 0
Houk, cw 2 0 0 1 0 0
Totals 35 5 9 27 11 3
Specht reached first on catcher's interference in 1st.
Kansas State 105.000.001
Kansas
000 002 003-5
RBI: Scannell, Hilts, Johnson.
Thayer 2, Koenig 2, DeLuna, Mace 2.
SB: Specht, Thayer. HR: Koenig,
Mace. SB: Specht 3, Hilts, Johnson,
Ellott, Temple, Mabry, SH: Scannell.
DP: Specht to Scannell to D.
Bromner; Temple to DeLuna to Koenig.
LOB: Kansas State 12, Kansas 5.
Hills; Temple, Mabry, SH: Philipp 3,
Harris 2, Sandefur 1,
Mabry 2, SO: Iverson 5, Sandefur 2,
Mabry 3, Hits and runs off: Philipp 6
and in 2 2-3 innings, Harris 0 and in 0 innings (walked two batters), Sandefur 1 and in 0 in 1 1-3 innings, Mabry 3
and in 1 innings. Earned runs off:
Iverson 2, Philipp 5, Mabry 1, Losing pitcher; Philipp. Umpires: Edwards and Michaels. Time: 2:15. Att. 425 (est.)
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Mabry pitched fine relief ball in the sixth, seventh, and eighth innings allowing no runs and one hit during this time.
With the bases loaded, Sandefur,
Kansas' big workhorse, entered the
game to end the rally by getting
Specht to ground out, second to first.
appearance this year, walked Bob Bremner, third baseman, and Scannell and that was all for him.
Sandefur pitched the fourth inning allowing no runs and one hit before giving way to Guy Mabry in the fifth. Mabry retired the side in order in the fifth while K.U, picked up two runs on Cavonaugh's walk and shortstop Frank Koenig's long homer down the left field foul line.
in the ninth, the Wildcats picked up a single tally as Johnson opened with his third hit of the game; a single to right field and moved to second on an error. Thayer singled to left scoring Johnson to give the Wildcats a 7 to 2 lead.
Kansas' three run rally, featured by Mace's long home run, the longest hit ball of the day, fell short in the ninth and K.U. suffered its seventh defeat in 13 conference games. The win was Kansas State's fifth win in 11 league games.
GAME NOTES: The field was in surprisingly good shape following Tuesday night's hard rain. Coach Hogan worked hard getting the diamond in shape and only a small spot inside first base showed signs of being a bit muddy.
Wednesday's crowd was the largest and noisiest of the year. They attempted to upset Iverson's pitching late in the game by clapping and doing a bit of razing; quite tame in comparison to that given the Jayhawkers the past weekend at Manhattan.
In Mabry's five innings of relief pitching, he showed his best form thus far this year. . He allowed only one run in giving up three hits, two coming in the ninth along with the run.
In the second inning, Mabry almost misjudged a long fly in center field off the bat of Bob Brenner. The ball was hard hit and Mabry almost lost flight of the ball when running back for a rather difficult catch.
Koenig's line-drive almost tore the glove off Iverson's hand in the eighth and robbed him of a base hit. It was one of Iverson's fast balls that got away from him and "beamed" Koenig in the series at Manhattan, knocking the hustling K.U. short-stop unconscious. . . It looked like Koenig was trying to get even for the beating.
Following today's game, K.U. will close its season playing the Oklahoma Sooners, the Big Seven's pace setters, a two-game series here next Monday and Tuesday.
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4
URSDAY, MAY 18, 1950
PAGE FIVE
.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
SPOTLIGHT ON SPORTS
By RICHARD DILSAVER
Were you consistently the best
liter in the Big Seven since the Iron
Irse, Glenn Cunningham, himself
id the cinders almost two decades
o, then ran two of the best races
your life and only finished second
each, how would you feel? Dis-
urged?
Mr. Robert D. Karnes, captain of the Kansas track squad, did just that on a Saturday. Brilliant Bill was deated in the amazing 4:10.7 mile at sourii by Tiger Bill McGuire. Karnes just did 4:10.9. And he was cond to teammate and All-American Pat Bowers in a 1:52.3. 880-rd run. Bobby only ran 1:54.
stest mile and half-mile of his career and didn't win, either but if you think that will affect him come the weekend and the Seven meet at Lincoln, read next day's Daily Kansan and see how Bob Karnes won his third consecutive conference outdoor title in the league and set a new league record in ring it.
What are the chances for Kansas playing the outdoor title to the in- or crown it gained by staging the uprise of the conference season it winter? Well, let's put it this way: If the Jayhawkers do it, it will nearly as surprising as their in- or triumph. Coach Bill Easton'sew should outscore all opponents the track. But in the field events In other words, Easton's squads balance.
Ordinarily the Jayhawkers' best fit to score field points would be velin thrower Bob Drumm. But at ace sper tosser has such a sore arm at present that Coach Easton won't even sure if he'll make the trip. Looking over the other field pants, Jayhawkter hopes don't pick a too much. It's doubtful if any anasas points will come in the shot at and pole vault. There may be
on the high jump, broad jump,
focus throw. But Jayhawkers
are will have to exceed anything
yeve done this season to give
ston's men on the track enough
distance to gain the crown.
And why, one might ask, doesn't Cassas have someone who can put a shot over 45 feet or throw the focus 140 feet if it has a bevy ofavyweights on its football roster? Her all, a major factor in a good right man is that he be beefy. It's question not easy to answer with getting some pretty daggerseries from the football office in Robson gym. But the answer definitely isn't that Coach Easton wouldn't come any young grid giant com-out for track, particularly toow the shot and discus.
Major League Standings
By UNITED PRESS National League
W L Pct. GB
jadelphia 16 9 .640
looklyn 14 9 .609 1
Louis 13 11 .542 3
icago 11 10 .524 3
ston 13 12 .520 3
tsburgh 13 13 .500 3¹²
York 7 12 .368 6
mati 6 17 .261 9
American League
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| New York | 16 | 8 | .667 | |
| Detroit | 14 | 7 | .667 | $_{1/2}$ |
| Boston | 18 | 11 | .621 | $_{1/2}$ |
| Washington | 14 | 10 | .583 | 2 |
| Cleveland | 12 | 11 | .522 | $_{3/2}$ |
| Philadelphia | 12 | 11 | .375 | 7 |
| Louis | 5 | 15 | .250 | 9 |
| Chicago | 5 | 16 | .238 | $_{9/2}$ |
Tuesday's Results
National League
cagio 1, New York 4
sburch 4, Boston 1
Louis 2, Brooklyn 6
cinnah 5, Philadelphia 5
American League
shington 2, Chicago 0
ton 3, Detroit 6
adelphia 7, Cleveland 6
york 11, St. Louis 9
the Jayhawkers' opening football
ment in 1950, the Texas Chris-
sum university Horned Frogs, will
t three other non-conference
opens. They are Oklahoma A.
Texas Tech, and Mississippi.
Jayhawkers Eye Distance Marks At Lincoln
By RICHARD DILSAVER Kansans will be in the midst of a wholesale assault against the record books by Big Seven stars at the conference outdoor track and field meet in Lincoln Friday and Saturday. As usual, Coach Bill Easton's distance brigade carries the bulk of his hopes.
All-American Pat Bowers, Capt. Bob Karnes, and sophomore Herb Semper are rated the Jayhawkers most likely to come home with new league marks to their credit. In all, no less than 10 of the 15 records are in danger. Nine of the standards have been bettered during the season.
Bowers' time of 1.523 in the 880-yard run in a dual meet at Missouri a week ago is a bare one-tenth of a second off the record hung up by Jayhawker immortal Glenn Cunan wouldn't be wise to bet that the Chicago senior won't better the mark this week end.
Karnes will almost have to set a record to win the mile as he hooks up in what should be a great race with ace Misourian Bill McGuire. At the Missouri dual, it was McGuire by a step in the sensational time of
4:10.7. The record, a 1532 mark by Cunningham, is 4:14.3. Karnes has won the event in the past-two conference meets.
Thus, should the two marks fall, the great name of Cunningham would be wiped from the books.
Semper also may have trouble with McGuire, but whoever wins it is virtually assured a new record. The mark is 19:29.9. Semper, who is holder of the conference indoor record at 19:26.8, has a best time of 19:20.2 for the season. McGuire ran a stirring 19:16.7, top mark in the nation this year, in a blizzard at the Drake Relays. But whether the Missourian can do this after Karnes is through with him is doubtful.
Events in which marks may well all are the 440-yard dash, mile reay, shot put, discus, high jump, broad iump, and pole vault.
Oklahoma sophomore Charles Coleman has twice been timed in 4:7.7 in the quarter-mile while running raley legs. If he can do as well in the open event Saturday he'll have a new record for the mark is 48. His chief competition will be teammate Jerry Meader, Nebraskan Loyal Hurlbert, and Jayhawker Emil Schutzel.
With Coleman and Meader teaming with Carroll Swickey and Ken Biggins, Oklahoma has run the relay in 3:15.8. The record stands at 3:17.6. But Missouri could well have something to say about the race. For three years now the Tigers have won the event. And their topfight quartet of Elmer Klein, Gil Phillips, Bob Schuster, and Randy Vanet could do it again—and in record time.
Kansas State's veteran weightman, Rollin Prater, has bettered both the shot and disc marks. The big man's 53 foot $ \frac{5}{1} $ inch heave at the Kansas Relays exceeded his own $ \frac{5}{1} $ inch $ \frac{5}{1} $ inches also at the Relays, he threw the discs 164 feet $ \frac{9}{2} $ inches, as compared to the record of 160- $ \frac{5}{4} $ .
Two other Kansas State aces could get new marks in the high jump and broad jump. Johnny-come-lately Virgil Severs has gone 6 feet 814 inches in the high jump. Jayhawker Tom Scofield's 1947 record is 6-75%. Wildcat Herb Hoskins has passed the league broad jump mark of 24 feet 8 inches on two occasions. His best leap was 25-23% in a dual meet against Kansas.
Big Seven Records
Track Events
100-yard dash ... 99.4, Hubert Meier, Iowa State, 1930.
220-yard dash ...21.3, George Koeffel,
Oklahoma, 1940.
440-yard dash—148.0, Bill Lyda,
Oklahoma, 1942.
tel, Oklahoma, 1940.
440-yard dash--148.0, Bill Lyda.
Oklahoma, 1942.
880-yard run—1:52.2, Glenn Cunningham, Kansas, 1933.
Mile Run—4:14.3, Glenn Cunningham,
Kansas, 1932.
Two-mile run 9:29.9, Charles Mitchell, Kansas State, 1938, and 1946.
120-yard high hurdles :14.2, Madill Gartiser, Missouri, 1948.
220-yard low hurdles :23.3, Dick Ault, Missouri, 1948.
Mile relay—317.6, Kansas State (Myron Rooks, Lloyd Eberhart, Robert Dill, and Bruce Nixon), 1936.
Field Events
Phi Gam's, Dix Club And Phi Psi's Advance In Playoffs
Pole vault—14 feet 1 inch. Bill Carroll, Oklahoma, 1949
High jump—6 feet 75% inches. Tom Scofield, Kansas, 1947.
Shot put—53 feet 27' inches, Rollin Prather, Kansas State, 1948. Discus—160 feet 51' inches, Edsel Wibbels, Nebraska, 1940.
Dix Club scored an easy 13 to a victory over Deuces Wild in an independent "A" game Wednesday, Bob Warner, Dix Club pitcher, hurled a fine game, exhibiting fine control and sufficient speed.
Carl Engwall played a fine defensive game for the Dix Club. Lewton led his Deuces Wild team with the kind of hustle that made them
Neither team had a particularly potent offense but the Dix Club kept pecking away at the offerings of Carl Lewton, Deuces Wild pitcher, and gradually built up their lead to its final total. Most of their runs were scored via errors, walks, and sincles.
potentially dangerous.
potentially 'dangerous.'
the Phi Kappa Psi B" team ran themselves breathless in a one-team fight over Sigma Chi in a playoff game Wednesday. An eight run first inning for the Phi Psi's gave them a lead which steadily increased to its outlandish proportions. Mahlon Ball, Sigma Chi pitcher, soon discovered that the safest thing to do was to "throw it and duck" as the Phi Psi's boomed sharp hits to every field.
Phi Psi pitcher Dick Mason found his load considerably lightened since he never had to worry about protecting a lead. The winner's left
fielder, Marty Pankratz, made several beautiful catches, not to mention two home runs and a single a bat.
Phi Gamma Delta won its first round "B" playoff with a 14-6 victory over Phi Delta Theta in Wednesday's games. The Phi Gams took advantage of Phi Delt startig
The Sigma Chi team did as well as could be expected in stopping the powerful Phi Psi onslaught. But they were helpless against the blows which seemed as if they would never stop. John Keller, Sigma Chi second baseman, did his best to keep up with the pace by driving out a round-tripper and two singles.
pitcher Bill Root's wildness to score four runs in the first inning and were never headed after that. Root walked numerous men and, coupled with several errors, the Phi Gams found themselves the recipients of several unearned runs.
Buzz Hargis, Phi Gam pitcher, kept the opponent's bats in check with a surprising amount of speed and control. Jim Potts blasted out a home run for the winners. The Phil Deltas kept up a parade of pitchers in their futile attempt to keep the Fiji attack in check. Root was succeeded by Marv Wilhite who in turn gave way to Art Brewster but none could turn the tide.
Corbin, DG Vie For Title
Corbin and Delta Gamma came through Wednesday's semi- final games and will meet as finalists for the second time this year when they play for the softball title next week in the last of the "Big 3" in Women's intramural events. The D.G.'s are out to revenge the loss of the volleyball title to Corbin earlier in the season, while Corbin desires the triple crown for basketball, softball, and volleyball.
-
Corbin's iron "tournament nerves" pulled them to a 14 to 8 victory over Delta Delta Delta and gave them their chance at the three-way title. Handicapped by their understandable fear of Corbin's reputation, the Tri-Deltas went scoreless the first two innings while allowing Corbin 7 runs, most of them on equally unnecessary errors.
When they realized they had a chance the Tri-Delts settled to their normal game and outscored Corbin 8 to 7 in the last three innings, but it was too late. S. Hillyer's home-run for Corbin was an added push to the losers' nervousness. Corbin scored 4, 3, 3, 3, and 1 run in the 5 innings while blanking the Tri-Delts the first two, then allowing 5, 2, and 1 run.
Petterson and Mickelson turned in another winning performance to hand Richmond and Brubaker the defeat.
Delta Gamma nosed past the Jay-ettes 6 to 5 in one of the best games of the year to win their chance at the title. Both teams were strong in all departments, but the D.G.'s held a slight pitching edge.
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1
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 18, 19
No Jobs For Preacher Led To Chancellorship
The present school year marks the 60th anniversary of the year Francis Huntington Snow became chancellor of the University.
But if positions for young Massachusetts preachers had been more plentiful when young Snow was graduated from theology school at Williams College, he probably would have never had a part in the University's history. Dr. Snow began the Francis Huntington Snow collection, the world's largest entomological collection, had two buildings at the University named for him, and became the sixth and one of the most influential chancellors of K.U.
Dr. Snow accepted an offer to teach natural sciences at K.U. at the age of 26, and became one of the original three faculty members of the University when it opened in 1866 with an enrollment of 55 students.
Most of his training was in preaching and ancient languages, but he was employed to teach sciences and mathematics at the new University. Almost immediately Snow began his entomological collection, which included 40,000 specimens by 1877. He stimulated a great interest in entomology and originated the summer collecting trips that are still an annual custom in the entomology department.
Nearly all the insects are classified and labeled. The collection is still growing and is added to by field trips made by faculty members and student collectors.
He was largely responsible for the legislature's grant of $50,000 to build the Natural Science building. Old Snow hall was condemned for use after 1930 and finally completely disappeared from the campus in 1986. The natural science building was erected, it too was named for Chancellor Snow.
Dr. Snow was Cancellor of the University from 1890 until 1901, a great period of expansion and organization for K.U.
In his book called "Across the Years on M. Oread," Robert Taft writes that Snow headed an outstanding faculty group during the time he was chancellor, and that his administration stimulated growth in the University.
Chancellor Snow was also noted for the human side of his personality. He was most famous for his habit of riding a bicycle. After serving as chancellor for 11 years, he decided to resign. He death and the age died of his sin in a west coast drowned led to his resignation.
Chancellor Snow died three years later, in 1911. But his name is still repeated daily by students in speaking of the building named in his honor, of his famous collection, or of his part in the growth of the University.
Oklahoma Outranks In Tornado Rating
Washington, — (U.P.) — Oklahoma beat Kansas 58 to 56 for the 1949 tornado championship, the weather bureau said recently.
Missouri was third with 23 and Texas fourth with 22.
For 1915-49, however, Kansas still leads with an average of 16 a year. Iowa is second with 15, Texas third with 12, and Oklahoma fourth with 10.
Study shows that tornadoes usually move northeastward along a straight line. Usually, that is. Sometimes they make a complete circle.
Usually tornado paths are less than 10 miles long. But a storm in April, 1947, swept 221 miles from Texas, through northwestern Oklahoma into Kansas.
Twisters usually are less than 440 yards wide—but some have cut a swath more than two miles wide.
Holstein Sets Butterfat Record
Mt. Angel, Ore.,—(U.P.)-A fiveyear-old Holstein cow, owned by C. J. Berning of Mt. Angel, has set world's record for butterfat production.
The cow produced 27.546 pounds of milk, containing 1172.6 pounds of butterfat in 365 days. Average butterfat content of the milk was 4.26 per cent.
More than 50 dairymen and neighbors of Mr. Berning witnessed the year's final milking. Mr. Berning said the cow, officially named Nugget Walker Korndyke, was not milked more than twice a day during the 365-day period.
The record is official.
At the Flicks By Bill Stratton
"Christopher Columbus" Granada Theater
Armed with dazzling costumes, a cast of "almost a thousand," and a story as well known as the alphabet, J. Arthur Rank puts up "Christopher Columbus" as his match for similar movies by Cecil B. DeMille. However, Rank's production lacks the action and "guess what's going to happen next" treatment that is usually given by DeMille.
Wasting his talents as Christopher Columbus is Fredric March, winner of two academy awards. Playing Queen Isabella is Florence Eldridge, March's wife in real life.
As you know, Christopher seeks royal backing from the Spanish court for an expedition to prove his theory that the world is round and India can be reached by sailing west. But we at the University have had some history and know enough not to worry.
King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella, who, of course, is beautiful, appoint a royal commission to study the matter, and poor Christopher spends six years waiting. At court, he befriends noblewoman Juana de Torres, a lovely widow, and Diego de Arana, a notary. To work villainy into the movie, Rank has Christopher make an enemy of royal advisor Francisco de Bobadillo.
The project finally approved, our hero sets sail, with Diego as his lieutenant. The remainder of the film deals with his voyage to discover the new world, his return to Spain as a hero, and his being thrown into chains under the charge of misrule.
Wedding Picture Is 50 Years Late
Long Beach, Cal., (U.P.)-Mrs. Arthena Bella, 68, has finally received a wedding picture that was first mailed in January, 1900.
It was a picture of her cousin, Mrs. John Spaid, formerly of Lebanon, Kan. Mrs. Ball hadn't heard from Mrs. Spaid in 25 years and would like to learn her whereabouts to thank her for the 50-year-old picture.
On Jan. 7, 1900, Mrs. Spaid wrote Mrs. Ball telling of her marriage in Lebanon and she enclosed a wedding picture. Mrs. Ball was then Miss Arthea Mason, of Avon, Ark. The letter reached Avon Feb. 1, 1900, but by that time she had left there.
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I
THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
18, 19
em
ssifieds
Bulletin In Library Ends In European Trip
R. C. Broadstone, fine arts sophomore, has been awarded a summer trip to France by the Student International Travel association. The award was made for his high scholastic average, home community work, and the fact that he has never been out of the United States.
A telegram congratulating Broadstone arrived May 10. Since the winners were to have been notified by May 11, Broadstone said, "It was about the biggest shock I have ever had."
"My reaction? I was too dazed to have any. I still can't believe it's true."
The past December, Broadstone sent his transcript and letters from businessmen at his home town in Dighton to the Travel association after having read of the competition on a bulletin in Watson library.
Each year the association awards three scholarships to a deserving American college graduate, high
school student, and a college student. Tours to Mexico or Europe are given to the winners.
Broadstone said he didn't think he had a chance in a million to win the scholarship, but figured it wouldn't cost him anything to trv.
About 20 persons will meet in Canada to make the tour accompanied by a professor of French from an American university. Other students making the trip will pay their own expenses.
The group will sail from Quebec June 20 for Le Havre, France, and will return Sept. 9, according to the tentative schedule.
From the French coast the group will travel by train to Paris. The remainder of the trip will be made on bicycle, with the exception of a trip through the French Alps to Geneva, Switzerland.
"We've supposed to have a car for that." Broadstone said relievedly.
While in France, the group will stay in small hotels, pensions, and private homes. They will learn something of the customs, culture and personalities of the French.
Broadstone became interested in France while studying French here at the University. He hopes to study in France after receiving his degree. He is majoring in theory and composition of music.
Now a French II student, he wants to do a concentrated study of the language before he arrives in France.
Nationalists Retreat To Keelung
Keelung, Formosa, May 18—(U.P.) Thousands of Nationalist soldiers arrived on this island of no retreat today from the abandoned Chusan islands. They vowed revenge for the Communist victory.
The crowded troopship Tien Hsing was given a welcome which resembled a victory celebration more t h a n a Dunkerque evacuation. Crowds cheered and bands blared "Swanee River." But other evacuation ships arrived unheralded and unloaded without fanfare.
Madame Chiang Kai-Shek, wife of the generalissimo, and the wives of other government dignitaries, led the celebration passing out sand-wiches and congratulating the troops.
The enthusiastic reception covered up the fact that the troops had been ordered out of the Chusans, some 80 miles south of Shanghai, without a fight and now were making their last possible retreat.
Overcast skies failed to dampen the celebration in this land-locked harbor as the rusting, black-hulled, 4,000-ton Tien Hsing tied up at the dock with the first 7,000 evacuates.
The Tien Hsing had been at sea for two days and two nights, but morale aboard still was high. The khaki and green cotton uniforms were clean, and the troops all carried full equipment, including rifles, grenades and mortars.
"We welcome you back and realize your disappointments," she said. "This is the last bastion against Communism and we hope you fight bravely in its defense."
The soldiers answered her with cheers vowing revenge or death.
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Farther along the quay an American-built LST quiet disembarked its share of the more than 100,000 Chusan evacuees. For her, there were no tootling bands, waving flags or other festivities.
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KIRKPATRICK'S
Carr Attends Big 7 Meeting At Lincoln
Ph. 1018
T. DeWitt Carr, Big Seven representative for the University, is attending a conference of the directors of athletics and faculty representatives of the Big Seven in Lincoln today through Saturday.
Two Libraries Will Be Open On Saturday Nights
715 Mass.
Sport Shop
Troops quietly walked ashore as soon as the steel gangplank was aboard the Tien Hsing. Toting rifles, knapsacks and bedrolls, they shuffled into the railway yard and squatted amidst their belongings awaiting a troop train.
Mrs. W. J. Sloan, wife of a retired army major, heard her daughter Suzanne babble the news of her marriage to Justin W. Dart, A., a polio victim, while she slept.
Dart, a student at La Sierra college, Arlington, Calif., is the son of the former Ruth Walgreen of the Walgreens Drug family and Justin W. Dart, president of the Liggett and Owl drug store chains.
Watson library will be open Saturday nights, May 20 and 27, and Lindley hall library will be open Saturday, May 20, from 1 p. m. to 5 p. m., C. M. Baker, director of libraries, announced. This is to allow students to do extra studying for final examinations.
New York—(U.P.)-The secret of the nine-month-old marriage of a 19-year-old drug store heir to a 17-year-old blonde was out because the bride talks in her sleep.
This conference is a quarterly meeting of the directors and representatives. Once a year these officials meet in Lincoln in conjunction with the annual Big Seven outdoor track meet. The meet will be held Friday and Saturday.
Blonde's Babbling Reveals Marriage
Among the places the group will visit are Paris, Versailles, Bourges, Monte Carlo, Marseilles, Toulouse, Bordeaux, and Brest.
At the present, Broadstone is somewhat worried about the preliminaries of the trip such as inculcations, vaccinations, passport, and photographs. "By the time all that and finals are over," he said, "I wonder if I'll be able to make it at all."
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Broadstone has a grade average of 2.65 but claims that he has not done much studying since he received the telegram.
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"I guess I'll be pretty busy this summer," he admitted. "In 24 hours I was given the names of 15 persons to look up."
Phone
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Press Picnic Will Be Friday
Each family or individual should bring one main dish, dessert and sandwiches. A charge of 50 cents will be made to those who are unable to do so. All utensils will be furnished. Reservations must be made by 5 p.m. Thursday.
The annual University Press picnic will be held 5 p. m. Friday at Holcom's grove. All Press employees, journalism students and faculty members are invited.
There will be entertainment for everyone with softball, volleyball, horseshoes, croquet and dancing.
Engineers' Family Picnic
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1950
The Editors Report一
PAY AS YOU DRIVE
Toll Highways
by James Page
Post war road building is being welcomed by a public that has waited patiently for better highways. After the long war years when scarcity of men, materials, and funds, had allowed the highways to deteriorate alarmingly, the present attempt to ameliorate road conditions is very gratifying.
The fact remains however, that the state and federal program to build roads, despite honest and sincere efforts of legislatures and contractors, is moving too slowly to stay ahead of the deteriorating factors that tear down the highways, and is not keeping up with the demand for good roads.
The tremendous increase of freight hauling, not to mention the skyrocketing numbers of owners of private automobiles in this post war period, have increased the need for more and better highways. State funds are simply not sufficient to answer the increasing necessity of new highways.
We think this situation might be answered by reversing the present trend of government helping private business. Why not allow corporations, or some such unit of private enterprise, to take over the ownership, construction, and maintenance of new highways? In these times, that sounds pretty radical, but under certain conditions, we believe that the results would benefit everyone.
For example, a federal-state board might be set up. This board would pass on the desirability of the proposed roads, and would plan their routes. Then bids would be accepted from anyone wishing to undertake construction. Contractors would probably be financed by large investment banks and insurance companies, looking for an investment.
As to the incentive for the investment, the federal-state board should establish a toll system to be managed by the construction firm. The board should have the power to set the maximum toll charge.
Also, this board should establish a maximum on investment return. After the investment and a fair rate of profit, say 8 to 10 per cent, had been achieved, the highways would then be taken over by the state, reverting to public ownership, and the toll charges would be removed.
Certain points in this plan would have to be ironed out, such as the entrance of side roads and charging tolls for short distances, but we do not believe that these problems would be insurmountable.
Another factor in favor of its adoption, would be that the cost of highways would be paid for, to a great extent, by the portion of the public which puts the system to the greatest use.
Justify Means?
DOES THE END
The Supreme Court has upheld the constitutionality of the non-Communist oath provided for in the Taft-Hartley Act. How difficult are the problems involved is reflected by the justices' divisions on the decision and diversities in opinion. It is a ruling, also, which reveals a greater concern with the urgencies of today than with the more far-reaching implications for tomorrow.
There is little doubt that the Communists long ago set out deliberately to gain control, in particular, of unions which could make trouble in event of war. Nobody knows this better than the American unionist, and nobody has more vigorously and effectively fought them.
That Congress has power under the Constitution to counter such labor sabotage has been little disputed, even by the unions bringing the test suits. The fact that Congress gives special protection to the right to organize and to bargain collectively reinforces its right to establish eligibility for those protections.
The real point at issue has been method, not Congress' objectives nor its authority. And the unions which have spearheaded the fight against the non-Communist affidavit have been unions under little or no Communist cloud.
Five of the six justices voting upheld the right of Congress to bar, by the affidavit test, Communists as such from holding office in unions whose bargaining status is recognized by law. But only three of the six held that it is constitutional to go a step further (as the law does) and require these officials to declare their beliefs (that they do not believe in the overthrow of the government by unconstitutional means).
This is a doubt we share. However repulsive the belief, intrusion by law beyond overt acts enters into the realm of thought control. In fact, the whole non-Communist oath device is as dubious here as elsewhere.
The real Communist does not blink at swearing he is not one. The oath unjustly imputes a measure of guilt to most of those singled out to take it.
The problem might be met more forthrightly, at least, by extending the special protections of the law only to unions whose constitutions bar Communists from office—a safeguard which one union after another is setting up on its own anyway—The Christian Science Monitor.
A song has been composed in honor of President Truman. We can hardly wait until it comes out on a Dizzy Gillespie recording.
TODAY'S MAIL
In a letter appearing in yesterday's paper, a sentence in Miss Stapaules' letter was inadvertently made to read "It is too bad we cannot be judged on the basis of our heritage."
Oops!
This sentence should have been: "It is too bad we cannot be judged on the basis of our abilities rather than on the grounds of our heritage."
One of the leading copper producing areas of the world is the Katanga district of the Belgian Congo and its extension into northern Rhodesia.
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 Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service,420 Madison Ave., New York City.
James Morris Editor-in-Chief
Editor-in-Chief
Doris Greenbank
Managing Editor
Asst. Man. Editors ... Norma Hunsinger
Kay O'Connor
John Hill
Ralph Hemenway
City Editor ... Edward Chapin
Asst. City Editors ... Nelson Ober
Maryton Martins
Elaine Elving
Steve Ferro
Feature Editor ... Francis Kelley
Photograph Editor ... Frankie Waits
Telegraph Editor ... Robert Sigman
William Graves
Richard Tatum
Lloyd Hollow
Sports Editor ... Richard Dlsaver
Asst. Sports Editors ... Bob Leonard
Ray Solidan
Arthur McIntire
Mona Millikin
Society Editor ... Faye Wilkinson
Asst. Society Editors ... Billie Stover
Emily Stewart
Editorial Asssts. ... Keith Leslie
Adv. Mgr. ... Charles Reiner
Cir. Mgr. ... Yvonne Josserman
Tak. Adj. Mgr. ... Forrest McIntire
Classified Ad. Mgr. ... Lee Dyer
Promotion Mgr. ... John Wiedeman
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Anderson Will Address One Graduate
Phone 954 712 E.9th
Dr. Kenneth Anderson, assistant professor of education, will give a commencement address to one person on Friday. Francis Rothmier is the only 1950 graduate of Huron high school in Huron, Kan.
Rothmier will deliver the valedictory. C. Eberber, principal, will present the graduate and George Welch, school director, will hand Rothmier his diploma.
This Player Is Plu-Perfect
Alanson, Mich.—(U.P.)—Most cribbage players consider themselves lucky to hold one perfect cribbage hand. Ray Essex can boast of two in a row, which he held in a tournament here.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE NINE
THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1950
Good Futures In Chemistry
Job opportunities for persons with graduate training in chemistry are expected to be good, Arthur W. Davidson, professor of chemistry, said in a recent interview.
Dr. Davidson stated that the new graduate with only a bachelor's degree will face stiff competition for jobs in the next few years, but that the department of chemistry has been able to provide any student who wants to do graduate work with a subsidy or aid.
Since the war there has been a shortage of chemists, particularly those with advanced degrees. This shortage has been due chiefly to increased demand brought about by the backlog of research projects postponed during the war. In industrial laboratories, where chemists represent nearly 40 per cent of the total number of scientists and research engineers employed, opportunities have been good for those with advanced degrees or specialized experience, he said.
Chemists with graduate training particularly those with doctorates should continue to have good prospects in the next few years. However, the number of advanced degrees granted has been increasing rapidly. Dr. Davidson said.
In the long run, there will be expanding opportunities in the profession. Many industrial concerns have plans for further expansion of research facilities. Total expenditures for research and development by private industry and government increased tremendously during the war and are expected to remain high indefinitely. Dr. Davidson said.
Total employment in the chemical manufacturing industries is also expected to remain well above prewar levels. There will continue to be a considerable number of openings in teaching, particularly for those qualified to teach at the graduate level. In all fields there will be roughly 1,000 openings each year owing to deaths and retirements.
In the lull between two class periods, the members of his Editing I class were trying to explain the mystic rite of "pinning" to Emil L. Telfel, assistant professor of journalism.
"But how many times does a girl get pinned during her college career?" asked the naive instructor.
Two-Year-Old Has A Pinning Record
"Only once, of course," replied Pat Jansen, journalism junior and an idealist.
"Well, that all depends on the girl," hedged Elaine Elvig, also a journalism junior. "Some girls don't find the right man the first time. Then they have to get unpinned again."
Frank A. Russell, professor of engineering drawing, will receive the George Warren Fuller award for 1950 at a meeting of the American Waterworks association in Philadelphia tonight. The award is for outstanding work in waterworks administration and practical application.
Russell To Get Fuller Award
"Oh poo," said Francis Kelley. "These sorority girls have nothing of my two-year-old daughter. She's been planned dozens of times."
Professor Metzler said last week that Professor Russell, who has been a member of the Lawrence City council for 15 years, is one of about 25 persons selected from all over the United States to receive the annual honorary awards.
Professor Russell received a free trip to the week-long convention which began Monday. Dwight F. Metzler, chief engineer of the san- cation division of the state board of health, is also attending the convention.
He was selected by a committee from the state board of health from Kansas and the final selection was made by a committee from the National Waterworks association.
Army Takes Legal Steps To Abolish Old Cavalry
Washington—(U.P.)—The army is abolishing the cavalry—some 10 years after it took its horses out of combat.
Several other smaller World War II units were designated as cavalry but they actually were ground reconnaissance troops mounted in light tanks, scout cars and half-tracks.
From a peak of 470,000 horses at the end of World War I, the army now is down to 327 horses in this country and about 400 abroad.
A dozen matched grays are kept at nearby Ft. Myer, Va., for occasions of state and military funerals in adjoining Arlington National cemetery. Another eight are stabled at Ft. Myer for medical research.
The cavalry was abandoned as a combat branch when the army was mechanized in the late '30's, but the name stuck with units converted to infantry or tank outfits.
The only large cavalry unit to see service in World War II was the First Cavalry division which fought "dismounted." It fought in the Philippines, occupied Tokyo after the Japanese surrender and is one of the 10 regular army divisions now active. Its present designation is First Cavalry (infantry).
These 20 are all that are left of the
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The Pentagon now has asked congress for authority to substitute an "armored" branch. That would end the cavalry legally and officially.
Replacement of horses by Jeepes armored cars, self-propelled guns, tanks and other motor vehicles started several years before World War II. No cavalry fought on horses in World War II, but some units used pack horses for transport in the mountains of eastern France, Italy, and Burma.
The house armed services committee, in the first long step, has approved unanimously an army reorganization bill that would accomplish it.
Some of the army's horses in this country are used by an artillery mountain battalion—the single combat unit retaining horses even for transport. Others are used as draft horses as mounts for guards patrolling isolated areas at some army posts.
Cavalry had when it was stationed there.
Both suitable mounts and erac riders became so scarce in its ranks that the army last fall stopped participating in public horse shows.
About 400 horses are used by the mounted constabulary in the U.S. occupation zone of Germany.
Home Ec Club Honors Seniors
The Home Economics club will honor 30 senior members at its annual "Senior Send off," a dessert party at 7:15 p.m. today on the Union terrace.
Kathleen Graff, College junior, assisted by the club social committee and cabinet, is in charge of the program which will have a nautical theme. Rita Roney, Mary Selig, and Jane Hanna, College sophomores, will present a skit, "Tying Knots and Spinning Yarns."
the senior women who will be honored by the club are: Barbara Ackerman, Barbara Altis, Martha Craig, Elaine England, Mardell Dewald, Charlene Farrell, Joan Happy, Shirley Hicks, Denelda King, Lorraine Larson, Anne Long, Jeanette Luhnow, Irene Melas, Mathea Mother, Kathleen McKinney, Jean Moorhouse, Mary Hickcox, Gwendolyn Petersson, Mary Wilderson, Janetelle Pollom, Marianne Rogers, Peggy Salmon, Elinor Scott, Betty Tice, Betty Slagle, Betty Hatche, Alita Cooper, Janice Herwig, Patricia Conroy, and Martha Lovell.
Staff Members To TeachThisSummer
Dr. R. Barker, chairman of the psychology department, will teach at Stanford university, Calif.
Four professors and two graduate students of psychology will teach away from the University campus his summer.
Douglas, Wyo.—(U.P.) A Wyoming cowpunch thought he had latched onto a real flying saucer but learned the object was merely a balloon for measuring cosmic rays.
Dr. H. F. Wright, professor of psychology, will teach at Duke university, N. C. Dr. M. Scheerer, professor of psychology, will go to Harvard, and Dr. A. Smith, assistant professor of psychology, assisted by graduate students Jack Jaffe and Donald Livingston, will attend the National Training Laboratory in group dynamics at Bethel, Maine.
Cowboy Sees More Than Just Cows
Ranch - hand Everett Fletcher sighted the object in the skies 32 miles north of here and followed it to the ground.
Stamped on a nameplate was "this scientific apparatus is the joint property of the U.S. navy and the University of Minnesota."
"It scared me," he said. "I thought it was an honest-iniun saucer."
"Don't open it," a navy officer warned. "Don't fool with the thing Ship it here immediately."
A telephone call to Minneapolis identified the ball as a navy instrument apparently used for measuring cosmic rays.
The air force and other defense agencies have said repeatedly their investigations have found no evidence on the existence of so-called "flying saucers."
Tides reach up the Hudson river to the very head of navigation at Troy, a distance of more than 150 miles.
Distinctive Graduation Gifts Gustafson
Graduation Gifts
Gustafson
Ph.911
Joe Frosh Is Restless After Western Civ Final
THE COLLEGE JEWELER
809 Mass.
"Say, I hear the Western Civ test grades will be out in a few days," remarked Joe Frosh, with more anxiety than anticipation.
"That so?" said his companion, Sidney Soph.
"Yeah, and I'm afraid to look"
confessed Frosh. "My proctor and I were total strangers, and my mind went blank when I took the exam."
"That's nothing," bragged Soph. "Until a week before the final, I didn't know the units went past ten."
"You mean there were as many as ten units?" gasped Frosh, his chin dropping.
"Yes," revealed Sidney. "But I didn't get past three, myself."
"You mean you actually read the material?" fumed Frosh. In disbelief, his receding chin fell still farther.
"Certainly," asserted Soph, as he blew on his fingernails and rubbed them to a high polish. "What's more, comminate read all fourteen units."
"You're--you're joking," frosted Frost, utterly confounded. His chin was no longer visible.
"How do you think I passed the final?" sneered Sid, with conceit.
"What do I care how you passed
"Ah, it seems like only yesterday," reminisced Soph, "that Eldon Fields, the chairman of the Reading Selection committee, was giving us that lecture in Hoch auditorium."
it?" raved the freshman, "I'm still wondering what even possessed me to take the blasted final!" he seemed at or near the breaking point.
"That's true," observed Frosh, brightening. A weak smile passed over his pale features.
"There, there," soothed Sidney,
"Just think what a long, tough grind
it was, and be thankful it's over."
"Yeah," agreed Frosh, a fond tear trickling down his nose. "What was it he said?"
He Just Can't Get Away From Lamar Avenue
"Wait a minute!" he cried, with a horrible look on his face. "How do I know I passed?"
"He was telling us about the wise guys who thought they could pass the course without doing the reading," chuckled Soph. "He was warning them that the jokers who thought they could get through on somebody else's notes."
He laughed hysterically at the thought, convulsed with the humor of it all, then stopped as suddenly as if someone had clapped a hand over his mouth.
Memphis, Tenn.—(U,P)—J. H. K. Lomav, a druggist, is in a rut. He's been on the same street for more than 30 years.
He got his first job as a delivery boy at 14 in a store on Lamar avenue. Later he became a soda jerker and clerk on the same street.
He retired for two months but then went back to work, also on the same street.
When he came back from World War I, he opened his own store and remained in business for 27 years and 12 days on the same street.
Finally, he decided to open another store of his own, on the same street!
Peace Officers To Train At KU
The techniques of law enforcement and traffic safety constitute the main portion of the program for the fourth annual Peace Officers Training school June 26-30 at the University of Kansas.
Cooperating with the bureau of government research and University Extension in presenting the school will be the Federal and Kansas Bureau of Investigation, the Kansas Highway patrol, Kansas Peace Officers association, Kansas Safety department, Kansas state fire marshal and the attorney general.
- Fried Chicken
REGULAR DINNERS
- Short Orders
- Steaks
REGULAR PRICES
- RAY'S CAFE -
Open Sundays
709 Mass.
CHECK!
CHECK!
Your Car For That Drive Home
BE SURE YOUR CAR
IS SAFE TO DRIVE
- Whenever you drive your car,you are in danger of an accident.
Don't let a mechanical failure cause you an unnecessary accident.
DEPENDABLE REPAIRS FOR OVER 25 YEARS
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922 Mass.
Phone 12
PAGE TEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY RANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1950
Rapid Development Has Marked The KU School Of Education
Py GLADYS HARRISON
note: This is the fifth in a series of articles about the various schools in the University).
More than 2,000 elementary school teachers and 5,000 secondary school teachers have been trained at the University in the past 41 years. Graduates are in teaching and administrative positions in every state in the union and in many foreign countries.
The school was formed in 1909 under the direction of Prof. Arvin S. Olin and Charles H. Johnston, first dean of the school, with the purpose of giving professional training to prospective high school teachers and administrators.
Today the school includes in addition to these training for elementary school work, graduate study, and special service units for the state and surrounding areas.
The School of Education had its beginning in a department of pedagogy in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Today after 41 years as a separate unit of the University, it can boast of a school which has an enrollment of 530 students, with 101 graduating this spring.
In addition to the large number of high school teachers and administrators, more than 2,000 elementary school teachers have taken correspondence work from the school within the past 10 years.
In the past 5 years more than 2,000 students, mostly elementary school teachers in service, have been enrolled in the University extension courses.
More than 35 full-time instructors are assigned to the various programs within the school. One of the significant developments in recent years which has proved to be of extreme help to the state and surrounding areas has been the establishment of service units whose dual purpose is training on the campus and service to and in the public schools of the state. The units include such services as the bureau of educational research, curriculum laboratory, reading laboratory, and teacher's appointment bureau.
In the earlier years, there were only four high schools in Kansas whose work was regarded as satisfactory by the University. This number has grown tremendously in recent years, due to the work of the
however, has done yeoman service in the history of education in Kansas.
Aside from the school's business proper, his work includes state committee activities, high school and college visitation, membership and activities connected with national associations of education, student advertisement, and program planning.
Recent work done by the school has been under the leadership of George B. Smith, the present dean of the school. He was dean of the school from 1941 to 1942, after which time he went on active duty with the army.
At present, the school is planning on bringing the various service units and programs together. When the new science hall is completed, several University buildings will be reassigned. The School of Education will move to Bailey Chemical laboratories, giving the school an adequate home for the first time.
Although the school has been preparing large numbers of elementary school teachers for many years for service in the schools of Kansas, it has never emphasized a large four-year undergraduate program for such training.
During his time in the army, 1942 to 1946, the school was under the leadership of J. W. Twente. Upon returning to the University, Smith was again named dean of the School.
The new requirements of the State Board of Education prescribe that a training program for teaching in the elementary schools be available to undergraduate students who wish to be certified for professional service in that field. The School of Education is cooperating with them by including such a program in its plans.
The school already includes in its undergraduate program a major's training for teaching in academic
1960
—Kansan Photo By Frankie Waits
STUDYING in the curriculum laboratory in Fraser are left to right: John Lanham, graduate student; Carol Jean Terrill and Jack Ernst, both education seniors.
A. M. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
—Kansan Photo By Frankle Walts
CHECKING THE FILES for possible candidates for an Ottawa teaching position are, left to right: George B. Smith, dean; H. E. Chandler, associate professor of education and director of the teachers' appointment bureau; and Henry Parker, superintendent of schools at Ottawa.
ADVISING STUDENTS is a full time job for F.O. Russell, associate professor of education and counsellor for undergraduate students. He is shown helping Mary Jo Israel, College sophomore.
V. G. MALTON
high school subjects, physical education, home economics education, business education, music education, and art education.
Students meeting all requirements receive a bachelor of science in education, or a bachelor of music education and bachelor of art education degrees, and are certified by the state board of education for teaching in the schools of the state.
—Kansan Photo By Frankie Waits
Students are registered in the College or the School of Fine Arts for the first two years and in the School of Education for the last two. Physical education majors register in the School of Education for all four years.
In the Graduate school the department's programs lead to the master of science in education, master of education, specialist in education, doctor of education, and doctor of philosophy degrees.
School of Education in providing adequate leadership for high schools.
After three years of experimentation with teacher training in the actual school systems, the results have been so good that the school has decided to close the University High school on Friday, June 30. They wish never again to confine the teacher training to a single campus unit. The University High school.
Evidence of such leadership was the establishment of University High school as a place for experimentation, demonstration, and as a practice teaching unit.
In recent years seniors in the School of Education have done practice teaching in public schools with the cooperation of the school boards and staffs in nine communities surrounding Lawrence. The students who are doing practice work are in the schools all day, each day of the week, for six weeks. This pattern is believed to be far superior to the former plan of "one hour a day" practice at the University High school.
"The most chucklesome comedy of the season"
"A very funny film"
"Best laughs of this or any year"
Here's what the critics say about this one...
These programs are planned to train superintendents of schools, high school and grade school principles, counsellors and guidance workers, master teachers, college and university teachers, evaluation specialists, curriculum consultants, and many other types of educational specialists.
The funniest picture that ever crossed the "Big Drink!"
WHO WILL THE PICTURE THEREVER CROSSED THE 'BIG DRINK'?
J. ARTHUR RANK presents
TIGHT
starring
BASIL RADFORD
JOAN GREENWOOD
LITTLE ISLAND'
A WRIGHTAL UNIVERNATIONAL RELEASE
---
The new training programs for speech corrections and teachers of the deaf illustrate the continuing variations in their programs. These programs represent cooperative ventures with many departments of the University and the University School of Medicine.
STARTS SUNDAY
(Prevue Sat. Owl 11:15)
Dean Smith feels that "the School of Education has many responsibilities, not the least of which are those to the undergraduate students, the University as a whole, the profession of education, and the schools of the state."
Patee
PHONE 121
"Every effort will be made by the school to train the best possible teachers and specialists for services to the children of Kansas. Service to the schools, schoolmen, and women through graduate training programs, especially through our various service units, will be expanded and adjusted continuously to meet ever changing needs."
Read the Want Ads Daily.
Revere 'Voice' Calls People To Church Each Sunday
Woodstock, Vt.—(U.P.)-The "voice" of Paul Revere still calls folks together in this Green mountain town.
Mr. Revere is best remembered for the midnight ride he made from Boston to Lexington, Mass., calling the Minute Men together to fight a British task force during the American revolution.
He also was noted, however, as a silversmith and maker of balls, four of which in the Congregational, Christian, Universalist and Episcopal churches here ring out each Sunday morning.
STARTS TODAY
3 Disney Days
More Fun Than A
Three Ring Circus!
DUMBO
IT'S
DELIGHTFUL!
IN TECHNICOLOR
ANYWAY YOU SAY IT - IT'S TERRIFIC!
WALT DISNEY'S
'Saludos
Amigos'
"GREETINGS
FRIENDS!"
IN AMAZING TECHNICOLOR!
Added Fun A Disney 27 min. Academy Award Short "Seal Island"
Policy
SPECIAL BENEFIT
LAWRENCE PTA
Adults 50c
Children 25c
...
Continuous Shows open 12:45
Patee PHONE 321
LOOKS AREN'T EVERYTHING
They sure mean a lot to your car Right now we are featuring
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soil blown away as well.
THURSDAY, MAY 18.1950
4
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE ELEVEN
Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone K.U.376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid by the telephone during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univer-
sity's library business office. Journalism bldg, not later than 45 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One
day Three
days Five
days
25 words or less ... 35c 65c 99c
Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
FOR SALE
SLICK 38 Ford convertible. New Top.
BROOKLYN Radio, Heater. $285, 28
Rhode Island
ESPECIALLY for the baby's trip-bottle warmer for the car, car seats, car bed. Western Auto Associate Store, 944 Mass. 24
BLACK dress shoes. Size 81*. B. Excellent for tux wear. Call Tom Shannon at 1160- or see at 1005 Indiana. 22
FOUR door Model A; 3 good tires; good body, engine. Call Tom J. John Griffin 22
Ward. Call Tom J. John Griffin 22
Dust must sell before going to Colorado. Sell cheap—$15.00 1332 Louisiana.
Marilyn Ward. 23
THE MAN in your life will appreciate a billfold, shave kit, or belt of fine qual-
tude. LINKS LEATHER SHOP. 820 Mass.-Formerly the Blue
Ribbon Leather Shop.
1947 HARLEY Davidson motorcycle. Like now
10,000 Miles Call 721 198
PLANNING your summer vacation? Then you'll want to stop in and select sturdy FILKIN LEATHER SHOP, 820 Mass. Formerly the Blue Ribbon Leather Shop. 23
FOR GRADUATION we give a practical
biltfolds, luggage, and leather goods at
FILKINS LEATHER SHOP. 820 Mass.
Formerly the Blue Ribbon Leather Shop
1932 Ford Coupe with 1936 engine, sealed beam lights, gas heater, new brakes, battery, generator, Good tires, Appearance, Bloye Pipes. $225 309 E. 19th.
TRAILER house, 19 ft. U.S. Traveler Electric refrigerator, butane range, fuel oil heater. Sleeps four. Electric brakes. South side. South end of Man. Epiped to se!
PONTIAC. 1940, blue convertible. Good tires, radio and underseat heater. Top in very good condition. Must call. Call 2124-J or see at 5471½ Indiana. 18
FINEST TELEVISION—Best in sets and
just arrived. $75.10 and up. See the new
est Emerson table model set at $19.50.
Est. $12.99 and Electric. Est.
$86 Vermont. Phone 138.
FOR RENT
NICE cool rooms for boys attending summer school. Also sleeping porch. Adjoining campus. 1631 Illinois. Phone 2675-J. After 4 P.M. 24
LARGE Single and double rooms for men. Comfortably furnished, conveniently located. Singles $12. doubles $10. rooms available June 1. 1247 Ohio, Pho- 3513
SLEEPING room, twin beds. With breakfast. Private home, nice neighborhood, respectable, quiet. Good transportation all of city. Wonderful future home H planning to work in Kansas City. Office location in section. Mrs. F. E. Wells, 500 East 36th St. Kansas City 3, Missouri, Valentine 5670. 24
NICE cool basement rooms for summer students. 1359 Ohio. Phone 2089. 24
FOR men. Nice accommodation for 4 or 6
for summer and fall. 4 bedrooms, private
living room, kitchenette and bath. 637
Indiana. Phone 1782. 24
3 NICELY furnished sleeping rooms.
Available June 1. Twin beds and large cedar lined clothes closet. On bus line.
892 Miss. Phone 1822.
FURNISHED apartments for rent. See au
I339 Ohio. Phone 2089. 24
SUMMER SCHOOL AND FALL rooms
are furnished with computers and singles nicely furnished with single beds, linens provided, and rooms cleaned.
Two private baths and telephone. Excess location two blocks from campus, house on North Side.
1116 Louisiana St. 5:30 to 8 p.m. 24
THREE double rooms for summer. $15.00 a month per boy; single beds; phone; bath; shower; private entrances. Fully furnished; for use of boys. 24- W 1100 Ohio.
APARTMENT for rent either 3 or 4 rooms; completely furnished; private bath; private entrance, couple. Across North Park. Inquire Mrs. Pappa. 1141 Vt.
CLEAN convenient room for summer
parties. Register by calling or
per month, 1218 Mississippi. Tel. 3540
ROOM for summer and fall. Quit house for studious Christian young men. Close to campus. Call Mrs. Hoffman 1244 La. Ph. 1752. 23
RIDING horses for rent by the hour
Bridle paths and trails nearby. For hay-
rack rides, call Mott Stables, Phone 1842.
1700 West 4th. 22
ROOFS for summer students. Also nice cool sleeping porch available at reduced prices. NICELY FURNISHED sleeping room. Also, for summer session only, another very desirable sleeping room to man study in sleeping or drinking. Phone 127 after 5 p.m.
SUMMER SCHOOL rooms for boys.
STIM, 1234 Orend. Few vacancies for
fellow students.
LARGE DOUBLE rooms for boys. Twin beds, liln furnished. On second floor room with ample space and blocks from campus. $12.30 per month. 1211 Ohio. Phone: Mrs. Rylle. 2017R. 19
BOOMS for summer or fall. 3 double and
1 single. Sleeping porch. Single beds.
$10.00 a month per person. 1222 Miss.
Phone 49. 245
TWO LARGE, cool rooms for summer students. Single beds, linens furnished, rooms kept clean, kitchen privileges if you have Phone 2523J or can be seen evenings. 19
MAKE BETTER GRADES! Rent a portable or standard typewriter for $3.50 a month or $1.00 a week. All makes and models at Student Union Book Store. tf
BUSINESS SERVICE
TYINGP: Thesis. Term Papers. Reports.
Tenn. Phi. Tennis. Mrs. Wilde. 18-24
Tenn. Phone. 3028-M.
TYPING; thesis; notebooks; reports;
Standard rates. Mrs. Hall,
1344W 506 W
ATTENTION K. U! Come in now and
let us help you. Drapes, drapes,
slip covers and upholstery.
All materials, we guarantee our work
and ensure Upholstery, 837 Vermont
Phone 143.
ATTENTION social chairmen and party managers. See us for table and chair rentals. For information call Mrs. Anderson. Telephone 252. 18
FORMALS AND DRESSES of all types made to order. Also alterations and modeling. Call Mrs. Scales. Phone 3060- W. 1414 Tenn. 22
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a piesan shirt and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our one-room classroom is waiting for fur, feathers and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Conn. St. Ph. 418.
SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a digested text that represents the oldest, largest, and best known firm in the educational field. Applicants accepted will work by appointment on leads we furnish. Earnings $75.00 to and more per week on an advanced cradock, Jr., 1006 Grand Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Giving qualifications, school and home address. 24
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 Hadl Bros. Motor Car Depot, for repair, painting, and fender repair, motor painting, used cars 317 E.17. Phone 785 or 1821R.
G. Thesses, Term Papers, Reports Notes, Mrs. Sheshan, Mrs. Shushan, 1028 Vermont. Ph. 1168R.
*TYPING*. Term papers, notebooks, letter writing, regular rates,报刊 stipulation.
DRIVING to Los Angeles after finals.
Call 2. Call Korber after 5:30 p.m.
at 2081.
TRANSPORTATION
FLY AND TAKE Advantage of reduced fare, dovetail connections, good accommodation at Fir National Bank for reservations and Information Telephone No. 30.
DIDERS WANTED -leaving for Wichita every Friday at 4 p.m. Returning Sunday evening. Please call between 7-9 p.m. n. Harry Shultz. Phone 3101-1J.
WANT RIDERS or share the driving to summer school. Leave Plaza 7 a.m., return 11 a.m. JE 3178, Kansas City, Mo., after 6 p.m.
TF
TEN OR FIFTEEN Graduation Announcements or fewer if you have them. Write Walter Diehl, 1104 High Avenue, Topeka, Kansas.
19
WANTED
SELL ALL your used books to the Student Union Book Store Monday, May 29. Buy a set of 10 hardcover books or 31. We will pay top cash prices for all current books, and the Wilcox and Follette reports we will buy all obsessed titles. Student Union Book Store.
LOST
WOULD person who took the car-puller design report from Room 210. Marvin, please return it. I'd hate to stay here another semester. 18
MAN'S diamond ring. Believed to have been lost at Jayhawk Golf Driving Range. Finder please call 2320-W. Rewind. 19.
The first moving picture house west of the Mississippi was established in Lawrence in 1903 by Claire Patee.
PARKS
A BEAUTIFUL STORY OF THE LIFE OF PASTOR ARMIN RITTER
In the Hills where "God" was only a name.
AN INTENSELY HUMAN AND WARMLY DRAMATIC STORY OF HARDSHIPS, PRIVATION, SIMPLE HAPPINESS AND ULTIMATE TRIUMPH!
MESSENGER OF PEACE
Starring
JOHN BEAL
A warm sincerity that follows the career of a pastor through a life time of inspired and unselfish devotion.
I personally guarantee "Messenger of Peace" to be one of the finest Religious Pictures ever produced in the history of Motion Pictures.
J. Mark Cadle, Manager.
Jayhawker
TODAY THRU
SATURDAY
Air Crash Kills 16 In Azores
A Picture Every Church-Goer Should See
MESSENGER OF PEACE SHOWN AT
1:00, 2:30, 4:05, 5:40, 7:20 and 9:20
Shreveport, La., May 18—(U.P.)—A B-29 from Barksdale air force base crashed in the Azores islands Wednesday night killing all 16 persons aboard, the air force reported today.
The report received here from the Lagens air base in the Azores said the plane had developed engine trouble on a flight to England and crashed during an attempted landing.
Eleven crewmen and five passengers, all military personnel, were aboard the bomber when it left here Tuesday morning, Capt. Salvatore Pelle, Barksdale public information officer, said.
Pelle said he had been unable to learn all the details of the crash because of communication difficulties. It veered off its course to try an emergency landing at the Azores base.
VARSITY
Phone 132 for Sho Time
Phone 132 for Sho Time 12c 39c
Ends Tonite "THE HASTY HEART" "CANON CITY"
FRIDAY - SATURDAY "CRY MURDER"
plus
starring Carole Mathews
"Girl from San Lorenzo"
Chapter 8 Bruce Gentry
TONITE AND FRI.
Love rules the jungle!
PRIMITIVE PASSIONS!
White
SAVAGE
IN GLORIOUS TECHNICOLOR
Maria MONTEZ
Jon HALL
SABU
Shown 8:37 - 10:33
Added • 'Bad Luck Blackie'
- 'Quack A Doodle Do'
World News
Open 7:00 — Phone 260
Lawrence DRIVE-IN
Theatre
Why Be 'Cash Out' When You Can 'Cash In' With KANSAN Classifieds?
N - O - W!
Ends Saturday
GREATEST ADVENTURE A MAN EVER LIVED!
THE GREATEST ADVENTURE OF THEM ALL!
J. Arthur RANK presents FREDRIC MARCH in Christopher Columbus FRANCIS L. SULLIVAN LINDEN TRAVERS COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR! co-starring Florence ELDRIDGE
Also Latest Movietone News
STARTS SAT. OWL 11:15 SUNDAY
Renegade Outriders
and a Red-headed
Beauty!
BLAZING A TRAIL
THROUGH THE
WILDERNESS!
The
OUTRIDERS
Color by TECHNICOLOR
M-O-M PICTURE
starring JOEL McCREA with ARLENE DAHL BARRY SULLIVAN CLAUDE JARMAN, JR.
Continuous Shows — Open 12:45
SOON - ON THE WAY
BLAZING A TRAIL
THROUGH THE
WILDERNESS!
The
OUTRIDERS
Color by TECHNICOLOR
M-O-M PICTURE
SOON - ON THE WAY
"Reformer and Redhead"
"Francis") "Wabash Avenue"
Granada
PAGE TWELVE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANS $ ^{4 5}$
THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1950
A
—Courtesey Lawrence Journal-World
THIS IS HOW THE NEW FIELDHOUSE will look when it is completed. The new building will have a seating capacity of 16,000, as compared with the 4,200 capacity of Hoch auditorium. Construction of the fieldhouse is expected to begin in September, according to J. J. Wilson, business manager, and will take a year to complete.
The fieldhouse will contain a portable basketball floor, which may be moved aside for indoor track events.
The exterior of the huge building will be made of either cottonwood limestone or silverdale limestone, and will resemble the new Fowler shops. Plans are being made now for adequate parking facilities near the fieldhouse. The building will have doors on all four sides, but only the east and north sides will be used for entrances.
Newswomen Of'51ToKnow Food,Cothing
Establishment of a home economics-journalism sequence of courses designed to prepare young women for journalistic work where home economics training is desirable or required was announced today by Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
The sequence, worked out in cooperation with the staff of the department of home economics, will go into effect next fall. It will lead to a Bachelor of Science degree in Journalism. Opportunities for women taking this sequence are in women's departments of newspapers, women's magazines, industrial publications and house organs, radio and public relations.
The journalism requirements in the sequence are courses 11, Communications in Society; 21, Design in Advertising; 40, Reporting I; 50, Reporting II; 60, Editing I; 64, News Photography; 74, Radio Copy Techniques; 151, Editing II; 160, Feature Writing; 162, Magazine Writing; 180, Elements of Advertising; 193, History of Journalism; and 194, Law of the Press.
The woman desiring to take this sequence of courses will spend her first two years in the College, just as other pre-journalism students do. During these two years she will take required work in English, the foreign languages, sciences and other basic courses. She also will take home economics courses during this period.
Admission to the School of Journalism will come in the junior year and during the last two years the student will take journalism and home economics courses and electives of her own choosing in general liberal arts work.
The home economics requirements are Courses 2, Home Decoration; 3, Elementary Nutrition; 4, Foods I; 8, Clothing I; 9, Textiles I; 80a, Home Management; 83, Child Development I. Nine hours additional must be taken in a home economics area of specialization chosen by the student; for example, the student might decide to specialize in foods and nutrition and would then be required to
- take nine hours of advanced work in foods and home management.
The present form, a four- issue magazine, of the Jayhawk annual was inaugurated in 1'34. It was patterned after the fashionable style of the New Yorker.
AWS Memorial Award Available
Women students interested in the Associated Womens Students' Memorial scholarship should apply immediately at the Dean of Women's office, 220 Strong hall. The scholarship is given in memory of those women who were unable to complete their education.
Dinner Talks Contest Today
The entertaining or after-dinner speaking division of the Intramural Speech contest will be held at 7:30 a.m. today in Green hall.
The speeches will have as their primary aim entertainment or humor. The men's contest will be held in 105 Green and the women's in 106 Green.
Judges will be: William Conboy, Gene Courtney, and Dan Palmquist, instructors in speech; Fred Six, College junior; Beatrice Buehler, College sophomore; and Mary Lou Lane, education junior.
Tonight's contest is the last of three rounds sponsored by the Forensic league and the department of speech and drama. The demonstration division was held May 5 and the informative on May 12.
Following the contest tonight, two trophies, one for men and one for women, will be presented to the organized houses amassing the greatest number of points. Smaller trophies will be given the first place winners in the after-dinner division. All awards will be presented by Mr. Conboy.
Alpha Omicron Pi sorority and Phi Delta Theta fraternity lead in the number of sweepstake points won during the first two divisions. Sigma Kappa sorority and Phi Kappa fraternity are second.
Dr. Sarvadaman Chowla of India, one of the world's foremost authorities on the theory of numbers, has been reappointed visiting professor of mathematics for 1950-51, Chancellor Dean W. Malott announced today.
Dr. Chowla has been at the University this year, and will be at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, N.J., this summer. He was a member of the mathematics group at the institute before coming to Kansas.
Chowla Renamed Visiting Professor
Mrs. Chowla and daughter, Paromita, a College freshman, will also remain here.
A citation for distinguished service, the highest award given an alumnus of the University, has been presented to Juan F. Nakpil, engineer, architect and consultant of Manila, P.I.
Juan Nakpil Gets Citation
The award was presented in Manila by Dr. Milton S. Cummings, Fullbright professor at the University of the Philippines, who said that "citations for distinguished service are based upon lifetime careers of servicemen who follow man rather than any momentary heroic or spectacular action."
In a citation written by Chancellor Deane W. Malott, Mr. Nakpil was described as being "a fellow graduate who has contributed greatly to the building of his home, city, and country through the practice of architecture of hospitals, theaters, sports facilities, and religious, residential, and office buildings."
World Wide News
Mr. Nakpil was organizer and first president of the Philippine Institute of Architects and served on the board of examiners of architects in the Philippine Islands. He was a faculty member of Mapua Institute of
West To Unite Armies
London, May 18—(U.P.)Atlantic Pact foreign ministers called a final public session today of their four-day conference to disclose details of an unprecedented 12-nation fighting force to halt aggression.
Kelley Chosen City Editor
Forrest Bellus, newly elected business manager, has made the following appointments: Gerald Moseley, advertising manager; Richard Hale, circulation manager; Robert Jornyavaz, national advertising manager; Charlotte Gesey, classified advertising manager; Sam Eitel, promotion manager. All are journalism juniors.
Francis Kelley, journalism junior, has been appointed city editor of the University Daily Kansan for the first eight weeks of the fall semester by John Hill, newly-elected managing editor. Kelley has served as feature editor for the past eight weeks.
Assistants in the various departments are as follows: John Corporon, Emlin North, Dewayne Oglesbee and Charles Price, city desk; Patricia Jansen and Nate Ogan, society desk; Don Netan Ogan, society sports desk; William Delay, Elaine Elvig and Marilyn Marks, telegraph desk.
Other appointments announced are Edward Chapin, photography editor; Billie Stover, society editor; Raymond Soldan, sports editor; and Dale Fields, telegraph editor. All are journalism majors.
Technology and Santo Thomas university. When the Philippines were invaded Mr. Nakpi was called to duty as chief of the engineering division.
In his speech of acceptance, Mr. Nakip declared that "my two years stay in that magnificent university made a real man out of me despite the odds that I encountered. Neither have I dreamed or ever thought of being one of the recipients of this award."
The University does not bestow honorary degrees. In 1941 the Alumni association began making awards for distinguished service to deserving graduates and former students. Since that time 80 citations have been voted.
Mr. Nakipil join a group that includes the late William Allen White, Lt. Gen. Ennis C. Whitehead, the late Raymond Clapper, and Ben Hibbs, editor of the Saturday Evening Post.
- In the first such move in world history, the foreign ministers have agreed to abandon national armies for the purpose of common defense in favor of a single fighting force capable of meeting a possible Soviet attack and stopping it at the frontier of western Europe.
The continental nations of western Europe, headed by France, will supply the 30 divisions needed to fight a war on the ground. Britain will supply jet fighters and light bombers to protect this ground army and the enemy.
The United States will supply the long-range strategic bombing force and atomic weapons to devastate the enemy's war potential in his homeland. The U.S. also is expected to supply battleships and aircraft carriers for the navy.
RR Switchmen Mav Strike
Chicago, May 18—(U.P.)—The American Federation of Labor switchmen's union issued a strike call against 10 western and midwestern railroads for next Tuesday but it appeared likely today that government officials could avert the work stoppage.
Union President Arthur J. Glover said the strike would enforce demands for a 40-hour week with pay held to the same level paid for the current 48-hour week. He said 6,000 switchmen would strike against the Chicago and Great Western railroad; the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific; Davenport, Rock Island and Northwestern; Denver and Rio Grande; Great Northern; Minneapolis and St. Louis; Northern Pacific Terminal company; St. Paul Union Depot company; Sioux City Terminal Railway company; and Western Pacific.
Navy To Have A-Bomb Planes
Washington, May 18—(U.P.)-Two atomic bomb - carrying squadrons have been organized quietly and trained intensively by the navy for carrier-based operations.
The navy believes these crack outfits can hit most any important target in the world with atomic bombs—at least any the navy would be assigned to hit under unified strategic plans.
The two units have about 32 airplanes. Navy says reporters say about half are the rugged new North American AJ-1 attack bombers. The others are Lockheed P2V-3C Neptune patrol bombers specially modified. Eventually all will be AJ's because they were designed for shipboard operations while the heavier P2V's were not.
Summer Enrollment To Be June 9,10; College Classes Begin June 12
Registration and enrollment for the 1950 summer session will be Friday, June 9 and Saturday, June 10. Orientation for all new undergraduate students will be Thursday, June 8. and Friday, June 9, and classes will begin Monday, June 12.
New students will register at the time specified on their registration permits issued by the office of the registrar. Former students will register and enroll in the order of the first several letters of their last names in accordance with the following schedule:
June 9. Friday
A-At 8:00- 8:15
Au-Bec 8:15- 8:30
Bed-Bol 8:30- 8:45
Bom-Brot 8:45- 9:00
Brou-Bur 9:00- 9:15
Bus-Che 9:15- 9:35
Chf-Coo 9:30- 9:45
Cop-Dau 9:45-10:00
Dav-Dt 10:00-10:15
Du-Evd 10:15-10:30
Eve-Frd 10:30-10:45
Fre-Glh 10:45-11:00
Gli-Hag 11:00-11:15
Hah-Hax 11:15-11:30
Hay-Holk 11:30-11:45
Saturday, June 5, Friday
Holl-Iz
J-Kam
1:15-1:30
1:30-1:45
Kan-Kn 1:45-2:00
Lk-Ho 2:00-2:15
Li-Mak 2:15-2:30
Mal-MeE 2:30-2:45
McF-Milm 2:45-3:00
Miln-Mur 3:00-3:15
Mus-Ol 3:15-3:30
Om-Per 3:30-3:30
June 10. Saturday
Pes-Prt 8:00 - 8:15
Pru-Rid 8:15 - 8:30
Rie-Kz 8:30 - 8:45
S-Seo 8:45 - 9:00
Sep-Smh 9:00 - 9:15
Smil-Steq 9:15 - 9:30
Ster-Td 9:30 - 9:45
Te-Us 9:45 - 10:00
Ut-Was 10:00 - 10:15
Wat-Wil 10:15 - 10:30
Wim-Z 10:30 - 10:45
All students registering for the summer session will enter the center door of Strong hall. Fees will be collected as part of the registration process. Veterans of World War II who
expect to have their fees paid by the Veterans' Administration should make sure that their certificates of eligibility and entitlement are filed with the V.A. training service, Strong hall annex C. A fee of $2.50 will be collected for enrollment after the beginning of classes.
Enrollment will immediately follow registration. Enrollment hours are 8:30 a.m. to noon and 1:15 p.m. to 5 p.m. Friday, June 9, and 8:30 a.m. to noon Saturday, June 10. Undergraduate students enrolling in the University for the first time are required to attend the new student orientation.
Graduate students, former students, and new students not enrolled in the present semester may write to the University for admission application blanks. Graduate students may write the Graduate school and all other students should write to the office of the registrar.
Law students will register and pay fees at 122 Strong hall from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday, June 6. Classes will begin in the School of Law the same morning.
L pleal po the "s an ap to m th the "b of the tu "g da wa ru the "sh ful ?
University Daily Kansan
47th Year No. 151
Friday, May 19, 1950
Lawrence. Kansas
STUDENT NEWS PAPER
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
-Kansan Photo by Frankie Waits
THE CELLO TRIO
A FAMILY REUNION TAKES place every time the three Stewarts, Robert, Margaret, and Donald meet to practice in the University orchestra. Robert, education junior, plays the cello; sister Marg, College freshman, and brother Don, College sophomore, play violins. The Stewarts will be in the University Orchestra's concert Monday, May 22.
Annual Spring Concert To Feature Piano Solo
Beethoven, Bach, Schumann, and von Weber will be represented on the program of the University Symphony orchestra at its spring concert at 8 p.m. Monday in Hoch auditorium.
One of the two major works of the evening, the "Concerto in A Minor" by Robert Schumann, will feature Eugene Jennings, graduate student, as the pianist.
Jennings has done much concertizing in the Middle West and will be an instructor in piano at Ohio university in September. He will receive his master of music degree at the end of the present semester
Schumann's concerto is described by Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra, as the "most challenging accompaniment the orchestra has had, and one of the most brilliant solos of that type ever used."
The other major work will be the "Sixth Symphony (Pastorale)" by Ludwig van Beethoven. The symphony has been named the "Pastorale" because of the notes the composer wrote in the manuscript about the setting of the work.
The first movement consists of "serene impressions awakened by arrival in the country." The peaceful approach of dawn as nature comes to life can be visualized in this movement.
A contemplative mood is set in the second movement which is noted "by the brook." Beethoven did much of his composing out of doors even though he was nearly deaf by the time he was 35.
The third movement depicts a "gathering of country folk" as they dance and sing at a rustic party. Toward the end of the movement, the rumbling of a storm can be heard in the background, setting the mood for the violent fourth movement.
The fifth movement is called the "shepherd's song," and is a peaceful, melodic finish to the symphony. The program will open with the
overture to Carl Maria von Weber's opera, "Oberon." The opera was the last piece of music that von Weber wrote and is considered one of his best works. The libretto is unusual in that it is written in English.
The Bach number to be performed is entitled "Sheep May Safety Graze," an orchestral tone poem.
For a majority of men students in the summer session who rely upon local employment for date money, eating money and rental money, the present outlook is dark. According to Douglas Paddock, men's employment counselor, "Job prospects for this summer are fewer than they have been for the last several years."
Men's Summer Jobs Scarce This Year
Geology Students To Visit Missouri University
Twenty-five University of Kansas geology students will travel to the University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. Saturday where they will be guests of geology students there. Missouri students visited the University campus the past year.
Some jobs that are open now one yard work, housework, waiting tables, farm work, packing vegetables and general labor. Paddock said that there may be more available after June 1.
A trip to locations of geological interest near Columbia will be made atday with a picnic supper in the evening, University students will return to Lawrence Sunday.
Cornerstone To Be Laid For Campanile
The cornerstone laying of the University's World War II Memorial campanile will be one of the highlights of Commencement week activities, Fred Ellsworth, Alumni association secretary, announced today.
The ceremony will be at 11 a.m.
Sunday, June 4.
Chancellor Deane W. Malott, members of the executive committee of the University Memorial association, and the architects of the structure will be among those attending the brief ceremony at which a box 12-inches square and 5-inches deep will be sealed into the stone.
In the box will be several issues of the University Daily Kansan and "other things that will indicate current thoughts" said Mr. Ellsworth
Casting of the 50-bell carillon is expected to be finished within a year. The work is being done by the John Taylor and company, Loughborough, England.
Workmen have finished pouring the cement for the tower and the outside stone veneer will be laid as soon as steel reinforcement beams are placed inside the structure.
Most of the bells have been contributed by family members of K.U. students and alumni killed in World War II, although some of the bells will be inscribed in the memory of persons not connected with the war. The largest gift to the Memorial fund was $25,000 contributed by the University Endowment association. This is to be used to buy the largest bell in the carillon. It will be inscribed in memory of the late Olin Templel, one of the founders of the Endowment association. Mr. and Mrs., J.R. Pearson, Corsicana, Texas, have given $18,000.
The bells range in size from approximately 7 tons to 12 pounds. The largest bell is 7-feet 2-inches wide and 5-feet 9-inches high.
John McKinley, education junior was elected captain of Company G. Fourth Regiment of Scabbard and Blade.
New Officers Are Chosen By Scabbard and Blade
Others elected are Leonard Shinn, first year law, first sergeant Wayne Love, business junior reporting sergeant; Robert Bowersock, first lieutenant, and Elton Noble, second lieutenant, education juniors; and William Dybvad, education sophomores, mess sergeant.
Asia Moves Slowly Expert Declares
Twenty years from now, Asia must not be a mirror of America, but a group of independent countries playing a big role in the world, thinks Philipps Talbot, Chicago Daily News foreign correspondent.
Mr. Talbot spoke at a combined convocation of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, and the departments of political science and history.
Summer Rooms Now Available
--red tongues of fire, which lives briefly and, slowly, dies"
Apartments, private rooms, dormitories, and fraternity houses will be open for this year's summer session. Two dormitories for men, Battenfeld and Oread, will be available for men students. Miller, Watkins, Templin, and Carruth halls will be open for women.
Nearly 100 apartments are now listed in the housing office, second floor of Strong hall, as available for students beginning this summer and continuing throughout the next year. However, very few apartments are furnished, and practically none of the more inexpensive ones will take families with children.
Students who live in Oread and Battenfeld will be charged $30 for the eight week period. Room and board at Templin and Carruth is $104. At Miller and Watkins, room fees are $30 without meals. All accommodations for women students in the dormitories are double and triple rooms.
Several fraternity houses will be open this summer, and are listed in the housing office, Strong hall. Any-one desiring information concerning rooms may see Mrs. Ruth Nash there.
Waits To Be Editor Of Summer Kansan
Frankie Waits, journalism senior has been selected managing editor of the Summer Session Kansan. Miss Waits has served as Kansan picture editor for the past eight weeks.
Edward Chapin, journalism junior,
will be city editor, and Robert Honnold,
journalism senior, will be business
manager.
The summer session Kansan will be published each Tuesday and Friday.
"Even though we are in the eleventh hour in Asia and there are chaos and pressure from the Communist north, we must take the long range view," Mr. Talbot said. "Investment and technical advice cannot work overnight."
By means of the Point Four program, Mr. Talbot believes that we will be participating in a tremendous social revolution." The old order in Asia is broken down," he said, "and the new order is moving haltingly forward."
The size and complexity of Asia has slowed progress there, Mr. Talbot believes. Although it is an area which is becoming exceedingly important to America, it is impossible for anyone to have a comprehensive knowledge of its situation.
Mr. Talbot cited Indo-China as a country in which America faces typical problems. "While many people believe that it is here that Communism can be stopped," Mr. Talbot said, "the trouble is that too many Americans believe that if we want to, we can convince anybody in the world of the best thing to do."
"We are committed to help Indo China, but we should not try to uphold an unpopular form of government."
The Communistic victory in China was probably inevitable, Mr. Talbot told the group. "As the government of Chiang Kai-shek grew weaker, the people wanted a stronger government." he said. "I believe that any strong government could have won the allegiance of the Chinese people."
Mr. Talbot reviewed the political and economic situations in various countries of Southeastern Asia. He believes that in most cases the freedom that the countries have achieved is not too well liked by the people. Mr. Talbot thinks that they would prefer a strong, healthy government.
"Asia has passed thru a political revolution such as we have never seen in our generation," Mr. Talbot continued. "In most cases, it has come into a period of political freedom to which the people have not yet become accustomed."
Vivid Dances Characterize 'Exemoco'
By MONA MILLIKAN
"Exemoco," annual spring recital of Tau Sigma, dance fraternity, was well received by the near-capacity audience in Fraser theater Thursday. Based on interpretation of color by physical expression, the nine numbers were enhanced by the use of colored costumes, lights, and mood music. Audience understanding was also aided by descriptions on the program.
Clarity and sharpness of feels were best expressed in the group dances for pink, purple, and chartreuse and the solo numbers for purple, green and a "boogie woogie" interpretation. Uncertainty and confusion of movement characterized the interpretations of red, blue, and yellow and destroyed much of the feeling. The black and white, although rather well executed, were not very impressive and gave a weaker conclusion to the program than it might have. The solo portion of these two dances, however, were very well done and added strength to the number.
The dance for Red represented "a glowing ember, fanned into a high
Motions for Blue suggested a pooof of living liquid moving across the stage in a mood of sophistication and languid ease, "reflecting the sky's pale serenity."
Little children were typified in the yellow interpretation as they played tag, hopscotch, and flitted in the "shimmering yellow of the sun."
Equal in popularity was the interpretation of Green by Tau Sigma's sponsor, Miss Georgia Lee Westmoreland. It was easy to feel the agony and strain of the struggle going on within the dancer as she fought against the "jealousy that jabs its fingers into my soul."
A very popular and well-executed number was the "boogie woogie" solo in which the dancer's whole body depicted the stimulating "bebop" of the music. Literally reveling in the cestasy of interpretation, she almost spoke with her movements.
The outstanding group number for Purple depicted the alluring, enticing enchantment of physical evil.
The Chartreuse dancers depicted "jagged lines; jagged forms; jagged edges of color that vibrate on a splash of yellow-green."
Closing the program, the solo dancer, Death, beat out its terror and sorrow on the "yawning abyss of nothingness; behind, the tangled dreams of emptiness" as part of the Black characterization. The "purity viril" wink" eclipsed the "blackness of Evil" who drove it from the stage; then knelt in grief for passengers and thanks to Heaven. A solo in institution of the "Lord's Prayer," sung by Irma Lutz, climaxed the White dance.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1950
Official Bulletin
Friday, May 19
Veterans' requisition books for equipment and supplies will not be honored after Saturday.
Spring semester parking permits expire noon Saturday, June 10. Applications for summer session permits now received 200 old Fowler. All parking regulations will be enforced during finals and during the commencement period.
I. V.C.F. picnic, 6 p.m. today, Potter lake. Dav, David House, speaker. Snow Zoology club picnic, 3 p.m. Saturday, Clinton park.
Society of American Military Engineers election of officers, 1 p.m. Saturday, Military Science building. New members welcome. Last meeting of semester; all members required to attend.
Annual Quack club picnic, 8 a.m.
Sunday, Clinton park. All members
attend; bring $1 dues.
Lutheran Student association picnic,
Lone Star lake, Sunday. Meet at 2 p.m. Trinity Lutheran church.
Recreation, supper and evening worship service.
Mathematical colloquium, 5 p.m.
Monday. 203 Strong. Prof. W. R.
Scott. "Probability and Number
Theory."
The following are notified to appear before Student Court, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Green hall basement: William H. Petrich, Lewis L. Sandidge, Edward Balda, Richard A. Moore, Richard A. Zlotsky, Richard Griffin Stutz, Alfred Sim.
Snow White And Buddies To Star In Saturday Show
A bit of whimsicality will invade Strong auditorium at 3 p.m. Saturday, when sugar plum fairies, barnyard animals, and Snow White and the dwarfs frolic on a miniature sized stage.
And they won't be all.
All their friends from "The Nutcracker Suite," "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs," "A Wild Western," and "Early Life in Lawrence" will play with them.
The small actors and actresses will not be temperamental nor will they have to worry about smear make-up or unsuitable costumes; they've been ready for this performance for several days.
None of the 28 characters need worry about forgetting lines or mixing their cues, either, for they won't be speaking. All they'll be doing is responding to a pull on a string caress by a teacher whose teachers students in Miss Maud Ellsworth's Methods of Teaching Art class.
Students have been making these puppets, designing their clothes, building sets and a stage, and preparing scripts all semester for Saturday's performance. An annual event, the puppet plays are presented so that students can have actual experience in creating and performing shows for children of grade school age.
Each student, in addition to designing and making his own puppet, speaks his puppet's lines and works its strings, so it may walk, dance,
jump up and down, or perform any motions that a live actor or actress would. The puppets were made to look as the students think they should look. Dwarf puppets, for example, do not look like Walt Disney's dwarfs, but are characters originated by the students.
Cost of the puppets ranged from nothing to $10 apiece. Cheaper ones were fashioned out of old socks, stockings, or material scraps, while the more expensive puppets boast theatrical hair and doll's clothes. Bodies for the puppets were carved from wood, while their heads were modeled from balsa wood, plastic wood, or papier mache.
The finishing touches were added to the puppets with the application of make-up painted on as carefully for any Broadway or Hollywood star.
Admission to the puppet show is free and the public is invited to attend the tiny actor's and actresses' matinee performance.
Bridge Tournament Places Students
Earl Watson, first year law student,
and Mrs. E. E. Hazlett, a resident of
Lawrence, won first place in the
Four-No Bridge club's monthly master
point duplicate tournament
Wednesday evening.
Second place was won by Terryl Francis, College junior, and James Feitz, business senior.
Lawrence Church Schedule
PLYMOUTH CONGEGATIONAL 925 Vermont
Dale E. Turner, minister
Mike E. Turner, minister
College age Sunday school class,
10 a.m.
Morning service, 11 a.m. Sermon:
"What Are You Living For?"
SOCIETY OF FRIENDS- GREAD MEETING
Oscar E. Allison, minister Sunday school 9:30 a.m
FIRST METHODIST
946 Vermont
Regular unprogrammed, non-pastoral meeting for worship, 9:30 a.m. Southeast room, first floor of Congregational church.
Morning worship, 10:50 a.m. Sermon: "The Supreme Christian Privilege." Soprano solo: "I have Not Seen" from the "Holy City" by Gaul, sung by Verla Steffey, education junior. Wesleyan choir anthem: "Psalm 150" by Frank. Junior choir will sing "Thanks Be to God" by Dickson.
Wesley foundation, 5:30 p.m. Special meeting for seniors to be led by Lois Timken, fine arts senior.
FREE METHODIST 12th and Kentucky
-ester Hamilton, passoir
- Sunday School, Clarence
-Grothaus, superintendent.
Morning service, 11 a.m.
Young People's Missionary society, 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting, 7:45 p.m.
Evening service, 7:45 p.m.
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 BAPTIST 8th and Kentucky
George C. Fletcher, hamilton
Church school, 9:45 a.m. University class taught by the Rev. Charles W. Thomas
Morning worship, 11 a.m. Sermon:
"The Conquest of Fear."
Anthem: "Like as a Father" by Scott. Solo: "O Divine Redeemer"
(Gouned) by Mrs. R. M. Price."
Senior Youth fellowship, 5:30 p.m. Out door meeting at home of Betty Slagle. College junior, 800 Maine.
THE REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS 1201 Vermont G. R. Norris, pastor Church school, 9:45 a.m. Morning worship, 11 a.m.
WEST SIDE PRESBYTERIAN
605 Maine
Young People's fellowship, 7 p.m.
Question and answer discussion on
the seventh chapter of Mark.
Evening service. 8 p.m. Singspiration led by Paul Christian. Second sermon on "The Model Church."
Morning worship, 11 a.m. Sermon on "The Model Church."
Bible school, 9:45 a.m. University class taught by the Rev. Mr. Ford.
Daniel Knox Ford, minister
COMFORTABLY AIR CONDITIONED
CHATEAU DRIVE-IN MASSAT 18217
Sure!
Our Car-hops are on the job and ready to serve you tempting sandwiches and drinks anytime after 4 p.m.
Restaurant open 11 a.m.
TRINITY EPISCOPAL
1011 Vermont
R. C. Swift, rector
1011 Vermont
R. C. Swift, rector
Louis Basso, Jr., associate rector
Holy communion, 8 a.m.
Church school, 9:30 a.m.
Morning service, 11 a.m. Choral
Eucharist and sermon.
Courtbury club, 4 p.m. Picnic.
FIRST CHRISTIAN
1000 Kentucky
H. M. Sippel, minister
K.U. Disciple fellowship, 5:30 p.m.
Picnic at Potter lake.
H. M. Sippel, minister
Morning worship, 10:45 a.m. Sermon: "Doing Your Best."
TRINITY LUTHERAN
1245 New Hampshire R. W. Albert, minister
Student Bible class, 9:45 a.m.
Woodscree School, Masonville, Georgia
Worship service, 11 a.m. Sermon:
"Our Christian Task."
Lutheran Student association, 6 p.m.
University Daily Kansan
Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University registration must be Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
Campus Streets To Be Resurfaced
The resurfacing of campus streets at the University will start Monday, May 22, J. J. Wilson, University business manager, announced.
The first application of hot bituminous mat to the present pavement will be at the corner of 13th and
Mississippi streets. Work will be continued up Mississippi street across Jayhawk drive and down the south approach to the power plant. Campus police will be stationed to handle traffic around the blocked areas.
LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth
Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices
Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices
Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed . . . 75c
Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed . . 79c
CASH AND CARRY ONLY
It's Picnic Time...
And Your Picnic Will Be the Best Yet with
WEINER BUNS POTATO CHIPS CAKES COOKIES
from
DRAKE'S
Phone 61
907 Mass.
IT'S OUR PLEASURE To Serve You
DINE IN AND DINNER OUT
Here is another "Every-Day Special"
Special Cut Pork Chops
French Fries
Combination Salad
A Vegetable
Coffee or Iced Tea
75c
GEMMELL'S CAFE ALWAYS READY TO SERVE 717 Mass.
4 Parties - Picnics Home Use
We rent ice chests for your parties & picnics.
ICE CUBES - CRUSHED ICE
American Service Company
616 Vermont St.
Phone 48
n a n e n t e r i s t i c
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
4
FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Announcements Made Of Pinnings, Engagements
JOHN AND JUDY
Cantrell-Cawby
Cantrell-Cawbv
Alpha Phi sorority announces the pinning of Miss Melba Cantrell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Cantrell of Kansas City, Mo., to Mr. Bob Cawby, son of Mr. and Mrs. R.T. Cawby of the same city.
the pinning had a "shotgun" theme, with Misses Carol Squire and Jean McGinnis taking the parts of sheriff's deputies and bringing Mr. Cawbay in, wrists handcuffed, at the point of a gun.
Mrs. Richard Blume, housemother, read the accusation that Mr. Cawby had asked Miss Cantrell to wear his pin. He pleaded guilty and Miss Cantrell was given a corsage of yellow orchids. Mrs. Blume received a corsage of red roses.
Miss Cantrell is a fine arts sophomore. Mr. Crawby is an engineering junior and a member of Triangle fraternity.
Frizell-Brown
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority announces the pinning of Miss Marilyn Frizzell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Frizzell of Larned, to Mr. Robert B. Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs. Guy B. Brown of Kansas City, Kan.
The announcement was made by means of clues found in capsules placed in the desserts of Josephine Helen Kittle, and Marilyn Kendall.
PETER S. GARRETT
Miss Frizell
Parties Planned As Last Stand Against Finals
Miss Frizie wore a brown orchid.
Her attendants received corsages of yellow roses and Mrs. John Skle and Mr. Gorrie, with their somethers, received potted plants.
Sigma Nu Dinner Dance
Miss Frizell is a fine arts senior. Mr. Brown is an education junior and a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity.
Sigma Nu Dinner Dance Sigma Nu fraternity will have a Dinner dance from 6 p.m. to midnight, Saturday, at the chapter house.
Chaperons will be Mrs. Andrew McKay, Mrs. B.A. Weber, and Mrs J.H. Kraemer.
Acacia Havride, Dance
SAE To Hold Dance
Acacia Hayride, Dance
Acacia fraternity will have a hay-rack ride and a dance at Potter lake from 7 p.m. to midnight. Saturday.
The chaperons will be Mrs. Grace Collier, Mrs. C.L. Veatch, and Mr. John Frink.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity will entertain with a formal dance at the chapter house from 9 p.m. to midnight. Saturday.
Chaperons will be Mrs. Ralph Park, Mrs. P.W. Henry, and Mrs. R.H. Wilson.
Tekes To Give Tea Dance
Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity will entertain with a tea dance at the chapter house from 2 to 4 p.m., Saturday.
Mrs. R.L Blume and Mrs. H.P Ramage will be the chaperons.
Corbin Party Today
Corbin hall's spring formal will be from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. May flowers will be the party theme. Mrs. J.R. Scott, Mrs. Althea B. Galloway, Mrs. Treva Brown, and Mrs. Isandre Winget will be chaperones.
Corbin Party Today
Kappa Sigs Entertain
Kappa Sigma fraternity held its annual Mother's day open house Sunday at the chapter house. Following dinner, the Kappa Sigma quartet entertained the group.
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Chi Chi Chi Dinner-Dance
Chi Chi Chi fraternity will entertain with a dinner dance from 6:60 p.m. to midnight Saturday in the Kansas room of the Union.
Chaperons will be Mrs. O.M. Bruchmiller, Dr. and Mrs. George Anderson, and Dr. and Mrs. Raymond Beamer.
Phi Psi Formal Dance
Mrs. W.S. Shaw, Mrs. F.R. Mac-
Creary, Mrs. John Skie, Mrs. Eugene
Alford, and Mrs. Arthur Little will
be the chaperons.
Phi Kappa Psi fraternity will entertain with a formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight, Saturday, at the Military Science building.
EYE
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Alpha Omicron Pi sorority announces the pinning of Miss Margaret Hoopes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C.E. Hoopes, of Anthony, to Mr. Jerry H. Kuehle, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin F. Kuehle of Washington, D.C.
The announcement was made at dinner by Miss Joann Barr, president, who received a corsage of yellow roses. Miss Hoopes wore a brown orchid. Her attendants were Misses Beverly Emerson, College senior and Betty Tice, education senior. They wore corsages of yellow roses.
Miss Hoopes is an education senior. Mr. Kuehnle, an engineering senior, is a member of Triangle fraternity.
South-Cooper
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry L. South, of Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Olive Colleen, to Mr. Edward L. Cooper, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Cooper of Newton.
Miss South and Mr. Cooper are fine arts seniors at the University and will be graduated in June. A fall wedding is planned.
Fox-Meverson
The ceremony will take place at 2 p.m., Sunday, June 11, in Danforth chapel.
Miss Fox was graduated from the University in 1947, where she was a member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority. Dr. Meyerson is assistant professor of psychology at the University.
Mr. and Mrs. James E. Fox, of Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Beverly June, to Dr. Lee Meyerson, son of Mr. and Mrs. David Meyerson, of Easton, Pa.
Templin Entertains Eleven
Templin hall entertained faculty members at a dinner May 12.
Guests were: Dr. and Mrs. R. Q.
Brewster, Mrs. Dorothy Baird, Miss
Agnes Brady, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton
Fowler, Mr. Chalmers Herman,
Miss Loda Newcomb, Mr. James
Webb, and Mr. and Mrs. Irwin
Youngberg.
Coe's Drug 1347 Mass.
Drugs - Drug Sundries
Drinks - Sandwiches
Pyramid Club Elects
The Pyramid club of Delta Sigma Theta sorority announces the election to the Lenta Leta Baker, vice-president; Shirley Young, secretary; Gwendolene Morrison, treasurer; Bobbie West, chapain and sergeant-at-arms. They will serve during the fall semester.
Socially Speaking
Pyramid Club Elects
We Deliver 10 To 10
Phone 234
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1947
JUNE 1866 AUGUST 1953
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Business Office still has a few in stock.
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Wilkerson, Russell Pledge Alpha Omicron Pi sorority announces the pledging of Dorothy Wilkerson, from Topeka, and Veda Russell, from St. John. Both are College sophomores.
Joyce Brown Honored
Joyce Brown, College sophomore, was chosen the "Sweetheart of Sigma Chi" at the fraternity's annual Sweetheart formal party May 13. She is a member of Chi Omega sorority.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1950
Sandefur, Hicks, Temple Star As Jayhawkers Win 3 To 1
With big Carl Sandefur, ace Jayhawker righthander, hurling near perfect 2-hit ball for his seventh win of the year, and Walter Hick's timely hitting, the Jayhawkers downed the Kansas State Wildcats, 3 to 1, on the Varsity diamond Thursday afternoon. Floyd Temple, hustling K.U. third baseman, made several fielding gems to help the Kansas cause along.
Hicks was the hero for K.U. by driving in the winning two runs in the eighth with a triple to break up a 1-all game. He also drove in the other Jayhawker run in first inning with a single.
SANDEEUR
SANDEFUR
Sandefur, who won his sixth conference game in seven start s, pitched his best game of the year by completely handcuffing t he Wildcats except for a single by Dave Bremner in the fifth and a single by Dick Johnson in the ninth.
The Jayhawkers open a two-game series with the league lead Oklahoma Sooners here Monday with Sandefur scheduled to hurl against the Sooner's ace righthander, Jack Shirley. The teams will play again Tuesday with the games starting at 3 p.m. each day.
Kansas took a 1 to 0 lead in the first inning as Jim Cavonha opened with a single to left field. With two away, Carl Ellis singled to right and Hicks followed with a single to left field scoring Cavonha. The Jay-
nawkers' other hits came in the seventh on Sandefur's single and Hicks' winning three-bagger in the eighth.
The Wildcats tied the score at 1-1 in the seventh with an unearned run without a base-hit. Sandefur hit Dick Hilts to open the inning. He stole second base and advanced to third on the overthrow on the play. Hilts scored from third on Cliff Schumacher's fly to left field.
BIG SEVEN STANDINGS
BIG SEVEN STANDING
Oklahoma 6 2 .750
Nebraska 7 3 .700
Missouri 7 5 .583
KANSAS 7 7 .500
Kansas State 5 7 .417
Colorado 2 3 .400
Iowa State 2 9 .183
Wednesday and Thursday's Results Kansas State 7-1, KANAS 5-3
This Week's Schedule Today and Saturday
Oklahoma at Missouri Colorado at Nebraska
Next Week's Schedule
Monday and Tuesday
Oklahoma at KANSAS
Nebraska at Kansas State
Colorado at Iowa State
Sig Ep's Favored In Softball
Bv JOHN McMILLION
The Sig Ep's labeled themselves as the team to beat in the fraternity "A" league of the intramural softball playoffs as they downed the Sigma Nu's 9 to 6 Thursday afternoon. Also victorious were the Sigma Chi's, the Phi Gam's, the Sig Alph's, and the Jim Beams.
The Sig Ep-Sigma Nu was another duel between pitchers Fletcher Bell and Harry Koons with both me turning in top performances. Bell, however, was definitely the sharper of the two and emerged the victor. Sloppy fielding and weak hitting by the Sigma Nu nine also hurt Koon's performance. The Sig Ep's played outstanding ball in the field but were not too potent at the plate.
The Sig Alph's earned a semifinal berth by topping the Phi Psi team 6 to 4 behind the pitching of Claude Houchin. The Sig Alph's scored twice in the second inning when Houchin got on base on an error and then advanced to third on a single by John Biggs. Both men crossed the plate when Charley Apt smashed a double into center field.
The Sigma Chi's and the Phi Kap's engaged in a wild error—studded ball game that found the Sigma Chi's emerging victorious to the tune of 15 to 10. Neither squad played the ball they are capable of and the game was ragged. The winning pitcher was Odd Williams and the loser was Kenny Dieker.
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In the other fraternity "A" game the A.T.O.'s were topped by the Phi Gam's 6 to 4. The game was a pitcher's duel between Shelby Smith of the Phi Gam's and Dick Nash of the A.T.O.'s.
After Thursday's games the Sig Ep'p loom above the rest as the favorites for the Hill championship. They have a well rounded ball club and their only weakness is with the bat. However with a pitcher like Bell they don't need a great number of runs to win.
Saturday the Sig Alph's meet the Sig Ep's and this should be the end of the trail for the former. The superior infield and outfield of the Sig Ep's and the hurling of Bell should be adequate to down Houchin and company.
In the other game that will be played Saturday, the Sigma Chi's and the Phi Gam's will tangle. This should be a well-matched game but the Sigma Chi's, 1949 champions, have power at the plate and look like the favorite.
After pitching effective four-hit ball for seven innings, Perk Reitemeier, Kansas State's hardluck pitcher, blew up in the eighth to allow Kansas to push across the game winning tallies.
winning taines:
With one away, Reitemier walked Temple and Ellis to the stage for Hicks' winning 340 - foot triple to right-center. This blow carried to the foot of the fence atop the right field embankment. The winning blow sent Reitemier to the showers.
His replacement, Duane Holder, pitched effective relief ball in retiring the side without further damage.
Although the K.U. defense was charged with six errors, it came through with two double plays and hustled behind Sandefur all the way. Temple's play at third base was spectacular on several occasions robbing Wildcat hitters of several infield singles.
Sandefur, who has won more conference games than any other pitcher, has allowed only 14 hits and
KANSAS STATE (1) ab r h po a e
R. Bremner, 3b 4 0 0 2 1 0
Scannell, 2b 4 0 0 3 4 0
Specht, ss 3 0 0 3 4 0
Hilts, lf 3 1 0 0 0 0
Johnson, cf 3 0 1 3 0 0
Schumacher, c 2 0 0 7 0 0
Iverson 0 0 0 0 0 0
Elliott, rf 3 0 0 0 0 0
Arnold 1 0 0 0 0 0
D. Bromner, 1b 3 0 1 6 0 0
Reitemier, p 3 0 0 1 0 0
Holder, p 0 0 0 0 0 0
29.1 1.24 10.0
KANSAS (3) ab r h po a e
Cavonaugh, 2b 3 1 1 0 3 1
Koenig, ss 3 0 0 1 4 0
Temple, 3b 3 1 0 3 5 0
Ellis, If 3 1 1 2 0 0
Hicks, rf 4 0 2 2 0 0
Mabry, cf 3 0 0 1 0 0
DeLuna, 1b 2 0 0 14 1 1
Mace, c 4 0 0 4 0 4
Sandefur, p 2 0 1 0 2 0
Totals 27 3 5 27 15 6
Iverson ran for Schumacher in 9th. Arnold struck out for Elliott in 9th.
Kansas State 000 000 100-1
Kansas 100 000 02x-3
RBI—Schumacher, Hicks 3. 3B—Hicks, BH-Silts, SH-Specht, DeLuna, DP—Sandefur to Koenig to DeLaune, Tempa to DeLaune to Temple, LOB—Kansas State 6, Kansas 8. Pitching summary: BB—Reitmeier 5, Holder 1, Sandefur 3. SO—Reitmeier 4, Sandefur 4. Hits and Runs off—Reitmeier 5 and 3 and 3 1-7 innings, Holder 0 and 2 in 2-innings. HBP—Reitmeier (Sandefur), Sandefur (Hilts). WP—Holder 1, Sandefur 2. Earned runs off—Reitmeier 3, Sandefur (none). Losing pitcher—Reitmeier, Umpires-Michaels and Birt. Time: 2:10 Att. 425 (est.)
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three earned runs in the last 28 1-3 innings on the mound. His record to date ranks him as one of the finest sophomores to pitch in the Big Seven in recent years.
GAME NOTES: Following the game, Sandefur had his teammates autograph the winning ball and he gave it to Walter Hicks for his game winning efforts for driving in the deciding tails in the eighth. . .
Bill Mace, K.U. catcher, called time in the seventh and picked up a nickle
he spotted behind the plate about the time Sandefur was ready to deliver a pitch. . . He was proudly showing off his "lucky" coin in the clubhouse to teammates following the game. . .
There was plenty of noise and singing in the K.U. quarters after the game. The boys hurried to get dressed as several players and Coach Bill Hogan made plans to see the Kansas City Blues and New York Yankees play Thursday night at Kansas City.
JAYHAWK PLUNGE
Opening 1:00 p.m. Saturday May 20
FEDERAL AIR FORCE SWIMMING
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You'll like our newly-reconditioned pool.
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M tr to a ha th tih the tic un re K ha we m
50
4
FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Records Should Fall At Big Seven Meet
By RICHARD DILSAVER
Added attraction is a great duel in the mile run between Kansas' own Bob Karnes and red-hot Bill McGuire of Missouri.
Only decent weather will be needed to make the 1950 Big Seven outdoor track and field meet at Lincoln today and Saturday the best in the history of the conference. Spectators at the 22nd annual league meet will probably see the biggest scramble ever for the championship, the finest field of athletes in years, and record making at every turn
Kansas, surprise winner of the league indoor title the past winter, is in the running for the championship
with defending champion Missouri Nebraska, and Kansas State. The big question as to the Jayhawkers winning game at Colorado Easton's ace fleet of distance runners get enough points to offset a glaring lack of strength in the field?
K. U. hopes dimmed Thursday when Coach Easton and a 17-man squad left for the meet without senior javelin thrower Bob Drumm, considered a sure point getter. Drumm was left behind because of a sore throwing arm.
All-around strength should tell the winner with the scoring based on a 10-8-6-4-2-1 basis for six places in each event. And that seems to be the prime qualification of the Missouri Tigers.
Coach Tom Botts' Mizzou team is after its fourth consecutive title. The balance his team possesses makes it the No. 1 choice to win this year.
Nebraska and Kansas State fall into the roles of darkhorses. The Huskers are like Missouri, balanced but don't have quite as much power. Kansas State will base its hopes on a Class AAA list of field men who could sweep every event in the field but the pole vault, along with added strength in hurdles Earl Elliott and Ji Faubion and dashman Lod Trolio.
Colorado and Oklahoma are expected to score well but lack enough strength to best any of the title contenders. Iowa State appears destined to bring up the rear.
The mile duel between Karnes and McGuire has all the makings of a true thriller. In 11 meetings previous to their get-together in a dual meet a week ago, the Jayhawker captain had topped McGuire 10 times. Then the Missouriian held off Karnes in a tingling sprint over the backstretch the past Saturday to win in 4:10.7—the fastest collegiate mile in the nation during 1950. The winner Saturday should be forced into a new record. The present mark, set by Kansas' immortal Glenn Cunningham in 1932, is 4:14.3. Karnes has won the race the past two league meets.
The Jayhawkers' Fat Bowers, AllAmerican, is virtually conceded the
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880-yard run, and he rates a good chance to go below Cunningham's record of 1.52.2. Bowers was just one-tenth of a second off that a week ago at Missouri.
Two sophomores are included in Kansas hopes for individual victories. Herb Semper will be out to win the two-mile run, despite the fact McGuire is favored because of a great 19:16 in a blizzard at the Drake Relays. The Missourian's time is the best recorded in the nation for the distance this year, but Semper isn't far back at 19:20. Whoever wins should get a new record, the present mark being 19:29. Karnes, winner of the event the past three years, will not defend his title. He will, however, run the half-mile in addition to the mile.
Making his first start in a Big Seven outdoor meet along with Semper is Jayhawker Bob Devinney who rates an even chance to win the 220-yard dash.
Final Jayhawker hope for an individual win is hurder Jack Greenwood. Although his best chance seems to be in the lows, the 1949 second-place winner could also annex the high-stick title.
Emil Schutzel and John Sites,
880-yard run, Cliff Abel, Pat-Row.
Kansas Entries
100-yard dash: Bob Devinney.
220-yard dash: Devinney.
240-yard dash: Devinney.
ers, Dave Breidenthal, Dinsmore. Dave Fisher, Capt. Bob Karnes, and Herb Semper.
Karnes, and Herb Semper.
Mile run: Abel, Bowers, Breiden.
thal, Fisher and Karnes.
Two-male run: Abeh Roul Adjusted
Two-mile run: Abel, Paul Aylwar,
Breidenthal, and Semper.
topper.
120-yard high hurdles: Jack Green-
wood.
220-yard low hurdles: Al Bouchard and Greenwood.
Mile relay: Schutzel, Stites, Dinsmore, and Devinney.
High jump: Delvin Norris and Bill Richardson.
Broad jump: Bouchard and De-
xinney.
Pole vault: Jim Floya.
Shot put: No entry.
Discuss: Bob Broady.
Javelin: Potts.
Quigley Attends Directors Meet
E. C. Quigley, K.U.'s director of athletics, left early Thursday morning to attend the annual Big Seven meeting of athletic directors and faculty representatives held at the University of Nebraska. Conveniently scheduled to coincide with the Big Seven conference track meet at Lincoln Friday and Saturday, the group meets yearly to discuss pertinent events in the year's athletic program.
Schedules will be made out for next year's baseball program as well as for certain minor sports such as swimming and tennis. Any needed changes in the Big Seven plans will be discussed and each school will present its views on events of the past year. Mr. Quigley will return after the track meet Saturday.
Parking Rules Hold During Exam Week
All rules and regulations regarding campus parking will be in force throughout the final examination period, as well as the period between the close of the spring and start of the summer sessions. Don Alderson, head of the traffic and parking committee, has announced.
Application for summer session permits may now be made at the traffic office, 200 Fowler shops.
Why not spend that free hour playing Snooker on the best tables available amidst a pleasant atmosphere;
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1950
Little Man On Campus
By Bibler
HIGH VOLTAGE
10,0
"Worthal says to keep our eye on Professor Snarf—He says he has his chair wired for an electric shock."
The Editors Report —
McCARTHYISM EQUALS
False Alarms
The McCarthy method of catching Communists has been compared with that of the fellow who helps the fire department by ringing false alarms all over the city. Senator Flanders has a plan for correcting this abuse.
He has proposed a resolution which would considerably cramp misuse of the fire alarm system. It would require future charges of disloyalty to be heard by the Tydings investigating committee in private.
This is in line with the repeated urgings of Senator Lodge, a member of the committee, to "take this show off the road." Senators Flanders, Vermont Republican, who has been dissatisfied with much of the State Department's policy in China, is convinced, however, that further bandying about of charges can do no good and is damaging not only America's position abroad but the morale of "able and conscientious public servants."
His resolution may not pass. But there is reason to hope that the inquiry will not follow the Flanders plan.
Senator Tydings may now recognize that public hearings simply hand the fire alarm system over to McCarthyism. For he now declares that, except for one or two persons publicly accused by Mr. McCarthy who should be permitted to answer publicly, he hopes to conduct the hearings in private.
This course should prove simpler in the atmosphere that has developed in the last week. One after another McCarthy charge has been deflated. He has at times shifted to the defensive. He was put on the grill on the Senate floor regarding the repeated watering down of his charges. Later trying to justify his character-lynching, he pleaded that he was forced to use "brass knuckles."
Finally, following the release of the State Department files on his 81 cases, he has retreated onto a very precarious limb. This is his demand that all government files must be opened, including those of the Central Intelligence Agency.
He did not mention the Atomic Energy Commission, but its secrets would hardly be more valuable to an enemy. Apparently he wants the files to be made public, since he has repeatedly implied that no government official nor even the senators on the subcommittee can be trusted.
This is another example of the amazing McCarthy squirming technique when pinned down. But it is unlikely he will stay long with this proposal to open up all the files. For anyone can see what a help that would be to the Kremlin.
We have always felt that even when honestly motivated, the McCarthy method, by increasing suspicion and jitters among Americans, was assisting the Kremlin's psychological war immensely. We have felt that it fostered tyranny in an attempt to defend freedom. Now it would betray secrets in the name of maintaining secrecy.
Isn't it time to put our trust in genuine investigation along the lines of the Flanders' resolution?—The Christian Science Monitor.
Copyreading Book To Be Published By Journalism Instructors In 1951
What its authors say will be "the first casebook used in the Journalism school" has been scheduled for publication in the spring of 1951 by Rinehart and company.
The book is a copyreading manual tentatively entitled "A Day on the Copydesk." The authors are Emil L. Telelf, assistant professor of journalism, and Charles G. Pearson, instructor. The book is now being used, in mimeographed form, by Editing I classes in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
We call it the first casebook because all the copy used in it has been chosen with care to illustrate the problems that might be encountered by a copyreader," Mr. Telfel said. "All the copy is actual copy used by one of four newspapers."
Editing II students in charge of the copy desk for today's Kansan are Marilyn Marks and Raymond Soldan, journalism juniors.
Daily Hansan
University
News Room K.U.251
Adv. Room K.U.376
K. U.376
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn. National Editorial Assn., Inland Dally Press Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service,420 Madison Ave., New York City.
James Morris
Editor-in-Chief
Editor-in-Chief
Doris Greenbank James Shiver
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
Macmillan Music
Elaine Elvig
Steve Ferro
Feature Editor Francis Kelley
Photograph Editor Frankie Walts
Telegraph Editor Robert Sigman
William Graves
Richard Trench
Lloyd Holbeck
Sports Editor Richard Dilsaver
Asst. Sports Editors Bob Leonard
Ray Solidan
Arthur McInttle
Mona Millikin
Society Editor Faye Wilkinson
Asst. Society Editors Billie Stover
Emily Steward
Editorial Assts. Keith Leslie
Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner
Gr. Mgr. Yvonne Joserander
Nat. Avg. Mgr. Forrest Wearl
Classified Ad. Mgr. Lee Dyer
Promotion Mgr. John Wiedeman
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- Tennis Rackets
Send Them To Us -
Golf Clubs
- Rods & Reels
Guns
KIRKPATRICK'S
Sport Shop
715 Mass.
1018
The new workbook will have two innovations to help the student, Mr. Telfel said. One will be a section that will show the copy as it was edited and headlined by the professional, and the other will be a directory of names and addresses which the student can use to check the accuracy of the reporters' copy.
"Our workbook will be the first to simulate actual working conditions." Mr. Pearson commented. "The directory, for example, will
YOUR
Wedding Candids
YOUR
Wedding Candids
To supplement the formal
photographs of your joyous day
of days. We're well equipped
to make both for you.
O'Bryon
STUDIO
To supplement the formal photographs of your joyous day of days. We're well equipped to make both for you.
O'Bryon
STUDIO
O'Bryon STUDIO
]
train students in habits of accuracy, and that's one of the biggest problems in teaching journalism."
The copy in the workbook has been taken from the Leavenworth Times, of which Mr. Pearson used to be telegraph editor; the Akron (Ohio) Beacon-Journal, the New Orleans Times-Picayune, and the New Orleans States.
Carter's
Did You Know That-
- You could leave your winter clothes in Lawrence this summer?
- Independent will store those clothes for you safely?
We have a new, large and beautifully-boxed selection of the very latest Eaton Fashion Letter Papers. The prices are modest but the quality proud...Eaton's famous Fashion Papers are special in design, special in quality, certain of a special welcome as gifts for any one at anytime.
- The storage vaults are refrigerated to insure against entry of cloth-eating bugs?
- Your clothes will be fully insured?
a
good gift
for
any one
at
anytime
EATON'S
1893
FINE LETTER PAPERS
IF YOU DIDN'T KNOW JUST CALL
Independent Laundry
AND DRY CLEANERS
ft
e
ERS
utli-
ery
ers.
the
de-
of
ny
4
FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
The University Daily 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 at 10 a.m. during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univer- tational Kansan Business office. Journalism bldg. 7125; 45 p.m. the day before publication date.
One Three Five
day days five
25 words or less ... 35c 65c 90c
Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
FOR SALE
ESPECIALLY for the baby's trip—bottle warmer for the car, car seats, car bed. Western Auto Associate Store, 944 Mass.
SLICK 38 $Ford convertible. New Top
Rockland, Radio, Heater. $255. $28
Rhodon Island.
BLACK dress dresses. Size 81/4 B. Excelent
*60-W' or see at 100 Indiana 22
*60-W' or see at 100 Indiana 22
FOUR door Model A; 3 good tires; good body, engine Call 3458 John Griffin 22
Sation. Must sell before going to Colorado.
Sell cheap - $15.00 1332 Louisiana.
Sell cheap - $24.00 1332 Louisiana.
THE MAN in your life will appreciate a billfold, shake kit, or belt of fine quality. Leather from -GOLKINS LEATHER
Bibbon Leather, Shop 23
1947 HARLEY Davidson motorcycle. Like
10,000 Miles. Call 721.
PLANNING your summer vacation? Then you'll want to stop in and select sturdy luggage. @ ILKINS LEATHER SHOP, 245 West Formerly the Blue Rubber Leather Shop.
FOR GRADUATION give a practical gift. Choose from a large assortment of merchandise from our FILKINS LEATHER SHOP - 820 Mass. Formerly the Blue Ribbon Leather Shop.
TRAILER house, 19 ft. U.S. Traveler. Electric refrigerator, butane range, fuel oil heater. Sleeps four. Electric brakes. Priced. South end of Max. 22 Priced to sell.
1932 Ford Coupe with 1936 engine, sealed beam lights, gas heater, new brakes, battery, generator. Good tires. Appear in Bloopy Pipes. $225 309 E. 19th, Back.
FINEST TELEVISION-Best in sets and
in cases.
Just arrived $87.50 and up. See the new
estimator table model set at $19.50
and $26.50 and Electric or
826 Vermont. Phone 138.
WANTED
FELL your used books at Rowlands Book Store at 1401 Ohio St., Monday and Tuesday, May 22 and 23rd. A buyer from the College Book Co., Columbus, Ohio, will purchase your used books. TEN BIRR FIETEN Green amendments or fewer if you have them. Write Walter Diehl, 1104 High Avenue, Topeka, Kansas.
SELL ALL your used books to the Student Union Book Store Monday, May 29. For more information call 31. We will pay top cash prices for all current books, and the Wilcox and Follette representative will buy all obsessed limited titles. Student union Book Store.
JAYHAWKER
Phone 10 for Sho Time
Prevue Sat. 11:15
SUN thru WED
LADD HAS A SCORE
TO SETTLE...
at gunpoint!
ALAN LADD
CAPT.
CAREY,U.S.A.
ALAN
LADD
CAPT.
CAREV.U.S.A.
with WANDA HENDRIX
A PARAIDOUS
VIDEOS
LATE NEWS EVENTS
Color Cartoon
"RUNCHY DE LEON!"
FOR RENT
SIAEMES kittens for pets or breeding
for rearing. *eclarectione pets* 13,23
Temu. Tennio 1956.
MAGIC Chief range. General Electric
Refrigerator. Chrome. Dinette. Studio.
Willing to consider all but Boutts sell.
May 31. Evenings and weekends. 738 Ill.
LARGE single room comfortably fur-
furbish in summer. Close to camp 231
camp 3683-3
COOL, half basement for 2 or 3 boys,
Private bath, cooking privileges, $20
each. 1818 Illinois. Phone 3014-R after
6 P.M.
24
NICE cool rooms for boys attending summer school. Also sleeping porch. Adjoining campus. 1631 Illinois. Phone 2674-J. After 4 P.M. 24
LARGE Single and double rooms for men. Comfortably furnished, convenient-located. Singles $12, doubles $10. Rooms available June 1, 1247 Ohio. Pho 3513
SLEEPING room, twin beds. With breakfast. Private home, nice neighborhood, respectable, quiet. Good transportation all parts of city. Wonderful future home if planning to work in Kansas City. Appliance/communication spec. Mrs. F. E. Wells. 600 East 36th St. Kansas City 3, Missouri. Valentine 5670. 24
FOR men. Nice accommodation for 4 or 6
for summer and fall, 4 bedrooms, private
living room, kitchenette and bath. 637
Indiana. Phone 1782. 24
NICE cool basement rooms for summer students. 1339 Ohio Phone 2089. 24
3 NICELY furnished sleeping rooms.
Available June 1. Twin beds and large cedar lined clothes closet. On bus line.
839 Miss. Phone 1832. 24
FURNISHED apartments for rent. See
1339 Ohio. Phone 2089. 24
SUMMER SCHOOL AND FALL rooms for boys at reduced rates. Large doubles beds, linen provided, and rooms cleaned. Two private baths and telephone. Excursion to town and bus route. Inquire. 1116 Louisiana St. 5:30 to 8 p.m. 24
THREE double rooms for summer. $15.00 a month per boy; single beds; phone; private entrance. Fitted equipped kitchen for use of boys. 2475 W 1100 Ohio
CLEAN convenient; rooms for summer term. One half block from campus. $10.90 per month. 1218 Mississippi. Tel. 3540
APARTMENT for rent either 3 or 4 rooms; completely furnished; private bath; private entrance; couple. Across South Park. Inquire Mrs. Pappa 1141 VI.
ROOM for summer and fall. Quit house for studious Christian young men. Close to campus. Call Mrs. Hoffman 1244 La. Ph. 1752. 23
RIDING horses for rent by the hour.
Bridle paths and trails nearby. For hay-rack rides, call Mott Stables, Phone 1842,
1700 West 4th. 22
ROOFS for summer students. Also nice cool sleeping porch available at teppi 22
655430872. (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14) (15) (16) (17) (18) (19) (20) (21) (22) (23) (24) (25) (26) (27) (28) (29) (30) (31) (32) (33) (34) (35) (36) (37) (38) (39) (40) (41) (42) (43) (44) (45) (46) (47) (48) (49) (50) (51) (52) (53) (54) (55) (56) (57) (58) (59) (60) (61) (62) (63) (64) (65) (66) (67) (68) (69) (70) (71) (72) (73) (74) (75) (76) (77) (78) (79) (80) (81) (82) (83) (84) (85) (86) (87) (88) (89) (90) (91) (92) (93) (94) (95) (96) (97) (98) (99) (100)
NICELY FURNISHED sleeping room.
Also, for summer session only, another
sleeping room to man student.
No smoking or drinking. Phonol
127 after 5 p.m.
SUMMER SCHOOL rooms for boys
2917M, 1234 Oread. Few vacancies for
school staff.
LARGE DOUBLE rooms for boys Twin beds, linen furnished. On second floor with bath and private kitchenette. Two blocks from campus. $12.50 per month. 6 phone Mrs. Ryll, 291R/19 ROOMS and commons room on 1 single. Sleeping porch. Single beds. $10.00 a month per person. 1222 Miss Phone 485. $2'
TWO LARGE, cool rooms for summer students. Single beds, linens furnished, rooms kept clean, kitchen privileges. Phone 23223 or can be seen evenings.
MAKE BETTER GRADES! Rent a portable or standard typewriter for $3.50 a month or $1.00 a week. All makes and models at Student Union Book Store. tf
TRANSPORTATION
DRIVING to Los Angeles after finals
10 july. 2 Call Korber after 5:30 p.m.
at 09:29.
WANT RIDERS or share the driving to summer school. Leave Plaza 7 a.m., return 11 a.m. JE 3178 Kansas City, Mo. after 6 p.m.
TF
LOST
MAN'S diamond ring. Believed to have been lost at Jayhawk Golf Driving Range. Finder please call 2320-W. Reward. 19
Last Times Tonite
Jon Hall — Maria Montez
WHITE SAVAGE
2 COLOR CARTOONS & NEWS
Shown
8:37
10:33
DON'T MISS IT!
SATURDAY ONLY!
It's Star-riffic At Their Big-Time Best!
Mirth and Melody Galore!
A Laugh Riot From the Word Go!
Also—"Flying with
Shown 8:57 - 10:15
Music" - "Catnip Gang"
OWL SHOW
at 11:40—Come as late as 10:06 and see our Sat. show, then see the owl show free!
16 Great Stars in a Fun-Studded Musical!
Make Mine Laughs
Starring
16 Great Stars in a Fun-Studded Musical!
Make Mine Laughs
Starring
Joan
Davis · Dennis Day · Leon Erral
Anne Shirley
Frances Langford
Ray Bolger · Jack Haley
Frankie Carle · Froddy Fisher
and His
Orchestra
Shchickenfritz Band
AND MANY OTHERS
I WILL do typing at my home. Term papers, theses, etc. If interested can contact:
BUSINESS SERVICE
TYFING: Thesis. Term Papers, Reports.
Terms: Mrs. Wilde 112, 124
Term. Phone 3028-M.
TYPING. Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rates. Prompt attention Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601
For a perfect evening of entertainment drive out to the Drive-In—You'll love it!
SYLVIA SIDNEY HENRY FONDA FRED Mac MURRAY in The TRAIL of the LONESOME PINE
ATTENTION K. U.! Come in now and
use the ladder, slip covers and upholstery. We furnish all materials, we guarantee our work.
Book 43. Upholster. 887 Vernon Phon.
43.
THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadi Bros. Motor Co.
of Chicago and fender repair, auto painting, used cars 317 E. 17th. Phone 785 or 1821R.
SUNDAY--MONDAY Brought Back By Popular Demand
ADDED • "Hector's Hectic Life"
• "The Fall Guy"
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-shop is full of supplies and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Conn. St. Ph. 418. tf
One-half Mile West of Lawrence
on Hiway 59 — Phone 260
Lawrence
SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a digispace of our largest, oldest, largest, and best known firm in the educational field. Applicants accepted will work by appointment on leads we furnish. Earnings $75.00 to and more per week on an varanted team writer at K. Cradlock Jr., 1006 Grand Ave., Kansas City. Mo. Giving qualifications, school and home address. 24
DRIVE - IN
Shown 8:21
Theatre
The largest single career field open to University School of Business graduates will be in the management and operation of business firms, according to a study by the bureau of labor statistics of the U.S. department of labor.
The business graduate faces a lot of competition, as 38,000 persons were graduated from business schools in 1948, and 60,000 the past year. The graduating classes are expected to be larger this year.
Management Field Open To Grads
10:17
TVIPING, thesis; notesbooks; reports;
MARINA 504 rate. rates. Mrs. Hail
1344W 506 W. 6
FORMALS and DRESSES of all types made to order. Also alterations and re-
modeling. Call Mrs. Scales. Phone 3060- W, 1414 Tenn. 22
The bureau expects the demand for business trainees to keep expanding, but competition for the better work will be high. The executive, positions will be heavy.
Eventually, the bureau expects most business administration jobs to require college training, but adds that business graduates will have to compete with lawyers, engineers, and other professional workers for executive positions.
TODAY
and SATURDAY
The Greatest Adventure of Them All!
ARTHUR RANK FREDRIC MARCH presents CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS
A
Our Air-Conditioned Plant Ready When Needed
COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR
Also Latest Movietone News
TITANIC TIME
STARTS
RENEGADE OUTRIDERS
AND A RED-HEADED
BEAUTY!!
IT'S THE
WILD
WEST!
THREE
LUSTY
MEN...
A MILLION
DOLLARS...
A RED-
HEADED
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The
OUTRIDERS
Color by TECHNICOLOR
Feature Times
1:27 - 3:26
5:27 - 7:26
and 9:27
Starring
JOEL McCREA
ARLENE DAHL
Barry SULLIVAN • Claude JARMAN, Jr.
Ramon NAVARRO • James WHITMORI
ADDED
Color Cartoon
"Counterfit
Cat"
Latest News
SUNDAY
SATURDAY OWL
SHOW 11:15
OUTRIDERS TECHNICOLOR Feature Times 1:27-3:26 5:27 -
SOON—Watch for Dates
“Francis” - “Wabash Avenue”
“Roseanna McCoy”
Granada
PHONE 946
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1950
AOPi, Phi Kappa Sweep Annual Speech Contest
Phi Kappa fraternity and Alpha Omicron Pi sorority won in the men's and women's divisions of the third annual Intramural Speaking contest that ended Thursday.
Second place went to Phi Delta Theta fraternity and Delta Gamma sorority. Phi Gamma Delta fraternity and Sigma Kappa sorority placed third.
Winning Thursday's round, the entertaining or after-dinner speaking round, was Martha Hendershot, College senior, and Richard Reid, education sophomore. Miss Hendershot told of the problems involved in wearing braces on teeth, while Reid gave his speech in German dialect on the manufacture of Schutuck beer.
Kay Peters, College sophomore came in second in the women's division by relating some of her most embarrassing experiences. Patricia Young, College junior, wend third with her take-off on a day's schedule of radio programs.
Second in the men's division was John Kuckleman, education junior, whose topic was "Bags Girdle Corporation." Thomas Fritzlen, College senior, won third with his talk on "Why People Drink."
Phi Kappa fraternity won this year's contest by placing first in the 2 rounds of the contest—the entertaining, the informative, May 11, and the demonstration, May 4. Thursday they won all three places. Alpha Omicron Pi had one win, two second places, and three third places to win the women's division. The two houses were awarded hies by William Conboy, in-
The two houses were awarded
treasures by the Conboy, instructor
in speech.
The judges at Thursday's contest were: Gene Courtney, Dan Palmquist, instructor in speech; Beatrice Buehler, College sophomore; and Mary Lou Lane, education junior.
Home Ec Faculty To Entertain
The faculty of the home economics department will entertain the 39 senior women who will be graduated from that department at a breakfast 9 am. Sunday in the English room of the Union.
History Professor Will Retire
P. M. H. R.
C. C. Crawford
Armed Forces Parade Saturday
R. O.T.C. units of the army, navy, and air force will recognize Armed Forces day Saturday with a formal parade, presentation of honors to outstanding students of the past year, and an open house.
Distinguished military graduates as designated by air force headquarters, and winners of the American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and Air Force association medals will be announced at the ceremonies. These are awarded to students on the basis of scholarship and service to the unit.
The parade, to be held on the intramural field south of the Military Science building will be held at 2:30 p.m. Music for the parade will be furnished by the University marching band, directed by Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra.
Open house will be held in the Military Science building during the day. Anyone interested is invited to attend the parade and the open house.
Armed Forces day was established by President Truman in the hope that it would be another step in unifying the services into the National Military establishment.
Earlier Classes, Street Dances, Movies To Be Features Of Summer School
Summer school classes will meet at 7 a.m. instead of 8 a.m. starting an hour earlier than during the fall and spring terms of the classes will be out by noon.
A student may carry only eight hours in summer school, but must go to class twice as many hours each week as he receives credit for. Summer school lasts eight weeks and there will be a vacation on July 4.
For recreation there will be a street dance every week and a movie in Fowler grove every Friday night. Besides this, there will be an organized intramural program of soft-ball, tennis, horseshoes, golf, handball, and badminton; and there will be open from 7 until 9:30 p.m. five nights a week for croquet, shuffle board, volleyball and badminton.
The band camp will offer a band concert at 4 p.m. and an orchestra concert at 8 p.m. every Sunday. A series of lectures also is being plan-
Miller, Watkins, Templin, and Carruth halls will be open for women, and McCook hall will be open for men during the summer session. Living accommodations can be arranged in the Dean of Women's office or in the housing office at 220 Strong hall.
Students will enroll with their regular deans on Friday and Saturday, June 9 and 18. Classes will start on Monday, June 12. Final examinations will be given from Thursday, August 3, through Saturday, August 5.
women's closing hours will be the same during the summer as in the winter: 10:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday; 12:30 p.m. Friday; 1 a.m. Saturday; and 11 p.m. Sunday.
Apply Now For Parking Permits
Students who have permits now and whose needs have not changed since the opening of the spring semester may make application for summer session permits by signing their names to the original applications on file at the traffic office, 220 Fowler shops.
Applications for summer session parking permits will be accepted anytime after today, Don Alderson, chairman of the traffic and parking committee, has announced.
Specializing in English legal history, Professor Crawford has taught over 10,000 students at the University. During the past 17 years, he has missed class only twice, both times to attend funerals.
The fee for the summer session permits will be 50 cents for students and others who have not had permits for the fall and spring semesters.
The present parking permits expire the last day of enrollment for the summer session, June 10. The traffic office will be open until 2 p.m. on that date to allow students to pick up their permits. Registration and enrollment fees must be paid before permits will be granted.
Permits will be mailed some time after Thursday, May 25, to faculty and employees who have had fall and spring permits.
C. C. Crawford, professor of history, will retire from teaching at the end of the summer term, after 42 years at the University.
In addition to teaching at the University Professor Crawford has taught in summer schools at the Universities of Minnesota, Chicago, and Colorado. He was also visiting professor at the University of Minnesota in 1930-31.
Professor Crawford was born in Pike County, Illinois, but spent most of his boyhood at La Cygne, Kansas He graduated from the University in 1903 with a Bachelor of Arts degree and received his master's degree here in 1904.
An orientation program for new students will be given on Thursday and Friday, June 8 and 9.
Two Hard Rains Total 2.5 Inches
The overnight rain fall measured 2.5 inches C. J. Posey, Lawrence volunteer weather observer, announced today. Most of the rainfall came in two big downpours occurring at about 8:30 p.m. Thursday and at 1:30 a.m. today.
Living Rosary Ritual Sunday
June Seymour, College sophomore,
will reign as queen at the Living
Rosary to be held on the lawn of
Danforth chapel at 5 p.m. Sunday.
The annual May celebration is
sponsored by the Newman club.
The five attendants to the queen are: Allene Wenke, College senior; Marcia Hail, College junior; Patricia Kennedy, College sophomore; Arlene Hill, education junior; and Patricia Jansen, journalism junior.
The recitation of the Living Rosary each May has become a tradition at the University. An equal number of men and women members, each representing one bead on a rosary, will form in the shape of a rosary and recite the prayer that goes with that bead.
John Bergmann, president of the Newman club, will escort the queen. The attendants will be escorted by: Thomas Fritzlen, College senior; Michael Quinn, College junior; Dieker, education senior, and William Hadel, John Scanlen, engineering seniors.
Kobett To Head A1ChE Other Officers Chosen
Thomas E. Kobett, engineering junior, was elected president of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers Wednesday.
Oner officers are Donald L. Stonger, vice-president; Dean L. Kloepper, secretary; Duane W. Bellinger, treasurer; and Ernest W. Leachy, correspondence secretary.
All are engineering juniors except Leachty who is a senior in the School of Engineering.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Fishing
AND
CAMPING IN THE
Quetico - Superior Wilderness
Complete outfitting service $3.50
a day with Grumman alumni
ances. Food, your
choice...extra.
50-page Canoe Country picture
booklet mailed postpaid
anywhere for $1.00
"BASSWOOD LAKE LODGE"
on Mina-Canadian border. Main
Lodge and 20 log cabins.
Modern bathroom facil-
ities. American Plan
with eight cabins up.
Also house-keeping cabins.
After leaving the University, Professor Crawford taught for one year in the Lawrence high school. In 1906, he received his Doctor of Philosophy degree from the University of Wisconsin.
Professor Crawford is the head of a family of Phi Beta Kappas. He his wife, Elizabeth, and his son Richard, wear the key. His other son, George, was an honor student in the School of Business. Both sons attended the University.
WILDERNESS OUTITTERS One
ELY, MINNESOTA
Professor Crawford has written numerous articles for history journals. He has also reviewed books for magazines such as "Nation" and has published two outlines on history.
Cameras have always held a great deal of attraction for Professor Crawford. He does all of his own picture developing and enlarging and has a complete photographic darkroom in his home.
Whitten, Davis Win Awards
Martha Whitten, fine arts freshman, and Robert L. Davis, first year law, tied for first and second places as the best home-town correspondents of Statewide Activities this semester.
Don Porter, Statewide Activities chairman, announced Thursday that Davis, Sedgewick county correspondent, and Miss Whitten, Marshall county correspondent, each received $25. First prize was $35, and the second prize was $15.
The planning board of Statewid Activities judged the entries am made the awards on the basis of th regularity with which the corre spondent wrote, the manner of writ ing, and the interest in the University created by the column.
Check Caps, Gowns At Robinson Gym
Caps and gowns will be issued from Robinson gymnasium instead of annex A of Strong hall as was previously announced. The check-out time will be from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, June 3, and from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, June 4
If bad weather causes commencement to be held in Hoch auditorium, the caps and gowns will be turned in at Robinson gymnasium. If commencement is held in Memorial stadium, they will be turned in at the west of the stadium.
Seniors To Represent Kansan
Two journalism seniors will represent the University Daily Kansan at the Inland Daily Press convention in Chicago Monday, May 22, and Tuesday. May 23. The are James Shriver, business manager, and Doris Green-bank, managing editor.
World News At Press Time
400 Oregon Students Risk
Eugene, Ore. May 19—U.P.)An estimated 400 University of Oregon students rioted on fraternity row in what police said was a brawl between political factions over the approaching student body president election.
Winnipeg Gets Air Lift
The election campaign warmed up earlier this month when two fraternities broke away from other houses and cast their supporter for a non-fraternity candidate for student president.
Winnipeg, Man., May 19—(U.P.) Army officials stood ready to move the remaining 215,000 residents out of this city as the flooding Red river surged to its highest crest.
All Royal Canadian air force stations equipped with North Star and Dakota planes were placed on a 24-hour alert to form an airlift for the refugees. Trans-Canada and Canadian Pacific airlines planned to add extra planes to the operation.
Russian Ships Off Dover
London, May 19—(U.P.)—Two more Russian ships appeared off the British coast today, bringing to nine the number sighted within 24 hours.
The two trawlers passed through Dover straits early in the afternoon, headed for the open Atlantic.
Seven russian ships appeared 40 miles off the British home fleet base at Portland last night. Naval observers wondered whether it was design or accident that brought the Russians there on the eve of maneuvers of Western European powers.
Cedar Point, Kan., May 18. —(U,P)— Residents of this tiny Central Kansas hamlet survived the damage today after a tornado hit last night and injured two persons.
Tornado Hits Kansas Town
Hardest hit by the twister, which skipped about in the town in seven places, was the Cedar Point grain elevator, about 1/4 mile north.
Most of the residents of this town of 200 were at the Cedar Park school for commencement exercises. A Methodist minister and his wife, identified by state troopers only as the Rev. and Mrs. Longberry of Emporia, were cut by flying glass from a shattered window at the school.
For College Men Planning Selling Careers
Our direct selling proposition sets you up in your own work uniform business without investment on your part. You sell work uniforms to business houses. Write for full particulars at once.
Geo. Master Garment Corp.
Dept. 8, Ligonier, Indiana
Student Pilgrimage to Europe
Treat the June graduate to a pilgrimage 1 ROME (the Holy City), PARIS, FLORENCE and other famous cities
$521 to $572 no ups!
Three 39 day itineraries sailing from New York June 23—$15 to $52. Also three 36 day itineraries sailing August 6—$52 to $52. All expenses. Age limit—16 to 35 years.
Including tour escorts, round trip on S.S. Liguria (formerly S.S. Capt. Marcos), transportation in Europe, hotels (including taxes and tips), meals, sightseeing, entrance fees, etc. Special Papal audience in Rome. Chaplains or moderators accompany tours.
PALACE
Sponsored by
NATIONAL FEDERATION OF CATHOLIC COLLEGE STUDENTS
NEWMAN CLUB FEDERATION
Number of accommodations is limited so write or wire for literature, information and applications
INTERNATIONAL CATHOLIC TRAVEL COMMITTEE
39 West 5th Street, New York 19, N. Y.
All prices quoted are based on room rate.
(All prices quoted above include every expense of the entire trip)
1950
University Daily Kansan
47th Year No. 152
Monday, May 22, 1950
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
"It is no longer necessary to make it obvious to everyone that the architects' work is building a modern house," said Mr. Armstrong. "The important thing is whether it is a good house, good for the spirit as well as for the body, and will it still be there in another 50 years?"
"There was a terrific wind blowing from the north," he said, "and it was near dusk. The bird came in from the south, flying low. I confess, I'm rather vain of my shooting."
THE SWAN IS SHOWN IN THE WETLAND.
A rare whistling swan was presented to the University Friday, May 19 by Frank Hodges, Olathe businessman, who shot the bird inadvertently. Shown in the picture at the presentation in Museum of Natural History are (left to right) E. R. Hall, director of museum; Mrs. Frank Hodges, the diorama with the swan, Mr. Hodges, and Chancellor Deane W. Malott.
A whistling swan, standing in the grasses of a replica of Boicourt lake, is the latest addition to the exhibits of the Museum of Natural History. It was presented May 19 to the University by Frank Hodges, Olathe businessman, at a reception in his honor at the museum.
The speech was sponsored by the student chapter of the American Institute of Architects.
Nearly two years ago Mr. Hodges shot the swan, thinking it was a goose. Asked how it happened that he could make such a mistake, Mr. Hodges describes the shot.
Whistling Swan Is Latest Addition To Museum Exhibits
Speaking before an audience of mostly architectural students of the School of Engineering and Architecture, he said, "that house problems should be approached soberly, and advised."
The American middle - western house should express in its building a "sense of our security as a hope and a desirable thing," Harris Armstrong, St. Louis architect, told students recently.
The exhibit, which is called a "habitat group" by museum officials, was built under the direction of Russell Camp, preparator in paleontology. Sam Dickenson, the museum's artist, George Young, taxidermist, and Mr. Camp did most of the work.
Actually, Mr. Camp said, everybody "had a hand in it."
"I thought it was a goose. It was about 100 yards from me. I shot ten feet ahead, because of the wind, and eight feet high, because of the distance, and the bird fell. That's how you got your goose."
Mr. Hodges gave $1,000 to the University to have the exhibit made up partly as conscience money, and partly to "preserve the spirit of the prairies and the people."
In his short presentation speech, Dr. E. R. Hall, director of the Museum of Natural History, said that a university is as strong as its
Architect Tells Of House Building
friends. He also pointed out that Mr. Hodges had given something to the University that was valuable to teaching, "worth an entire lecture."
KU Has Only Seismograph In Middle West
A seismograph machine for recording earth tremors has been installed in a specially built room in the basement of Lindley hall, Dr. R.M. Dreyer, chairman of the geology department, has announced.
The machine is now in experimental operation, and will begin permanent operation next fall. It will be connected with the United States Coast and Geodetic survey network of recording seismographs.
The seismograph consists of three machines, one recording east-west tremors, another catching north-south shocks and the third recording vertical tremors.
In Lindley hall, the machines rest on the top of a concrete pillar sunk 15 feet into Oread shale. The machine is so sensitive that it records the push of a hand against the pillar.
Dr. Dreyer said that the recorder is the only one located in the Middle West. The nearest seismographs are in St. Louis, Mo., and Reno, Nev.
House Counselors Names Due Soon
Presidents of men's organized houses who have not made their selections for house freshman counselor should do so by Wednesday and turn the names in to the dean of men's office.
1950-'51 Budget Set At $9,073,146
A budget of $9,073,146 was approved by the Kansas Board of Regents for the University of Kansas for the 1950-51 fiscal year at a meeting May 19.
Two University students were injured May 19, in an automobile accident at Lone Star lake, where they had been to a Pershing Rifles picnic. They are Robert Skinner, College freshman; and Burley Vandergriff II, College sophomore.
Wreck Injures Two Students
The two men were taken to Watkins Memorial hospital where a physician said Skinner had suffered internal abdominal injuries, but his condition is fair. Vandergift had suffered a concussion, and his condition is described as good.
Undersheriff Travis E. Glass said six University students were riding in the car along the lakeshore road when it missed a curve and went off the road about a half-mile east of the boathouse.
The car was driven by Kermit M. Beal, College sophomore. The 1941 convertible hit a large boulder and overturned. Undersheriff Glass said the top of the car was down and several of the students were thrown clear of the car. There were no other injuries reported in the wreck. Damage to the car was estimated at several hundred dollars.
Of this total $5,957,641 was granted for the University in Lawrence, and $3,115,505 for the K.U. Medical center in Kansas City, Kan. The first sum represents an increase of $346,-663 over last year's budget while the Medical Center increase is $173,552.
The 1950-51 budget approved for the nine state schools under the jurisdiction of the Board totals $17,-744,573. An increase of $1,067,399 in the salary and maintenance budgets was approved over last year's budget for all schools.
The Board approved the site for the K. U. fieldhouse, it will be built 350 feet west of 16th and Michigan streets. Charles Marshall, state architect, said plans for the structure should be ready by October 1.
New Science Hall Is In The Blueprint Stage
The University Endowment association was authorized to finance construction of a building at the Medical center to be rented to the federal public health service as a research laboratory. The cost would be approximately $30,000 to $50,000.
Hubert Brighton, Board secretary,
pointed out that salary increases for
faculty members, employees, replacement
of faculty members, and new
positions account for $769,244 of the
increase for the nine schools. The
rest of the increase will go for higher
maintenance costs. K.U.'s share of
the faculty salary boost is $123,482.
Plans for a science hall at the University that will cost approximately two million dollars are in the blueprint preparation stage, explained J. J. Wilson, University business manager.
The site for the huge structure is in the area south and slightly west of Robinson gymnasium and Haworth hall. The science hall's north edge will be 150 feet south of the Haworth hall.
It will house the School of Pharmacy and department of chemistry, both now in Bailey chemical laboratories, and the department of physics, which occupies all of Blake hall.
The building will have 184,000 square feet $e$floor space in its basement and five stories. The cubic footage is figured at 2,200,000.
The approximate shape of the building will be an "E" with the three prongs projecting southward. There will be a small addition to the northwest corner for a nuclear physics laboratory.
The axis of the "E" will be 232 feet long. The east and west progs or wings, will be 152 feet long. The east wing will be 62 feet wide, the west wing 50 feet. The center projection will have a width of 75 feet and depth of about 85 feet.
The department of physics will have the entire west wing of the new building—basement and four floors. The entire east wing—basement and five floors and a storage attic—and the basement and first two floors of the center portion will be assigned to chemistry.
The School of Pharmary will have the third, fourth and fifth floors of the center portion of the building. In the center there will be a sixth floor for a science library.
The main entrance will be on the north at the second story level. The physics office will be on the first floor, chemistry office on the second, and pharmacy office on the third.
Wilson could make no estimate of the time required for preparation of plans.
MEMORIAL STADIUM CAMPANILE HOCH AUDITORIUM PROPOSED SCIENCE BUILDING MILITARY SCIENCE PROPOSED FIELDSHOUSE INTRAMURAL FIELDS INTRAMURAL FIELDS
—Photo by Gagliardo-Clarkson—Courtesy of K. U. Alumni Association
TWO ADDITIONS to the campus are shown in their approximate locations in the above aerial photograph. A proposed science building will stand south of Haworth hall and east of the military science building. The new field house is shown southwest of the present campus. Farther up and overlooking the stadium is the Memorial Companile now being constructed. The building for basic sciences, chemistry, physics and the School of Pharmacy, was provided by the 1949 legislature which granted $1,972,000 for the plant. It will provide long needed facilities for those important studies. It has been announced that the present Bailey Chemical laboratories building will be given over to the School of Education.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY,MAY 22,1950
At The Movies By Bill Stratton
"Tight Little Island" Pattee Theater
Completely devoid of our native forms of comicality, "Tight Little Island," an English production, provides a type of humor which Hollywood has consistently failed to recognize. The movie boasts neither a big name cast nor a million dollar expenditure. It does provide amusing entertainment, which is more than the rich relative producers in California can say.
It is the story of what happens when a small Scottish island runs out of whisky, and of the hilarious consequences when a ship carrying 50 thousand cases of spirits is wrecked withwing distance of the island. The results, though predictable, are enjoyable for the ingratiating sort of humor which seems to be the singular product of the British.
Dispensing with saloon brawls and "fast on the draw" gunfights that are so common to horse operas, M-G-M brings us an above-average Western called "The Outriders." Phlegmatic Joel McCrea climbs back in the saddle to play the lead role, while some of Utah's travelogue country provides the background scenery.
"The Outriders" Granada Theater
Contederate soldiers Joel McCree, Barry Sollivan, and James Whitmore escape from a Yankee prison camp in Missouri. They join Quantrill's raiders and ride off to Santa Fe to guide a gold bearing wagon train into a bushwhackers' ambush.
Alan Ladd, the unimaginative man's sequel to Paul Bunyan, manages to dispatch only a few people in this one, and we can scarcely urge you to bother with it.
"Captain Carey, U.S.A. Jayhawker Theater
This has to do with a Captain Carey, an ex-OSS officer, who returns to Italy to find the man who betrayed him and his underground workers, including Miss Wanda Hendrix, to the Germans. According to the advance publicity releases, Ladd turns in a "blistering portrayal that for dramatic impact matches anything he has ever done." If this seems to you a recommendation, you have three more days.
Not a bad movie, really, except for the recurring presence of A. Ladd.
Official Bulletin
Spring semester parking permits expire noon, June 10. Applications for summer session permits now received 200 Old Fowler. All parking regulations will be enforced during finals and during the commencement period.
Mav 22.1950
Mathematical colloquium, 5 today, 203 Strong. Prof. W. R. Scott, "Probability and Number Theory."
Maybray for Governor club, 7 tonight, 106 Strong, Speaker.
The following are notified to appear before Student Court, 7:30 p. m. Tuesday, Green hall basement: William H. Petrich, Lewis L. Sandidge, Edward Balda, Richard A. Moore, Richard A. Zlotsky, Richard Griffin Stutz, Alfred Sim.
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 examination and examination entered as second Section, Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
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MONDAY, MAY 22, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Fraternities, Sorority Give Formals
Delta Chi Holds Dance
Delta Chi fraternity held its spring formal at the chapter house May 12. Music was furnished by Jimmy Sellards' band.
Chaperoning the party were Mrs. R. G. Roach, Mrs. John Skie, Mrs. E. R. Hooper, and Mrs. H. J. Overholser. Out of town guests were Mr. and Mrs. Otto Schnellbacher,Mr. and Mrs. Lee Davis, Ensign Ronald Paris, Miss Delores Duncan, Jim Marshall, and John Wuest.
Other guests were Jo Anna Sargent, Jane Cunningham, Virginia McCrea, Evelyn Breitweiser, Katherine Pearson, Kathe Englund, Connie Wegley, Marilyn Reed, Evelyn Knapp, Beverly McKinley, Rita Becker, Patsy Landis, Betty Lewis, Lorraine Parni, Arianne Hadley.
Corinne Temple, Marilyn Barr,
Nancy Lawrence, Peggy Shay, Jo
Ann Ogg, Kay Lambert, Nancy
Gross, Mary Agnes Leach, Marian
Miller, Molly Smith, Doris Jo Willi
iams, Grace Gwinner, Beverly
Coulter, Marlene Nickel, Ruth
Abercrombie, Paula Reade, Deleo
Wunsch, Virlee Reardan, Marie
Materi, Barbara Nesch.
Phi Kappa Spring Dance
Phi Kappa fraternity held its spring fraternity daze recently at the chapter house, Chaperons were Mrs. John Skie, Sr., Mrs H. J. Overholser, Mrs. R. G. Roche, and Mrs E. R. Hooper.
Guests were June Seymour, Betty Murray, Helen Cavannah, Adele Heim, Mary Flynn, Mary Conroy, Regina Supple. Patricia Jansen, Donna Bauer, Patty Soden, Shirley Stoll, Marjorie Clark, Delores Rabuse, Mary Kay Lambert, Marian Miller, Jerry Hesse, Dorothy Swim, Therese Bartoll.
Jane Schindling, Arlene Hill, Jane Rengel, Mary Jo Murray, Camille Clark, Joan Clark, Carolene Burcher, Judy Hadel, Patty Straub, Katy O'Niel, Barbara Ryan, Rosemary Kennedy, Helen Persson, Virginia Brown, Charlene Breitenbach, Claudia Anderson, Mary James, Jo Ann Macy, Pat Short, Helen Smith, Virginia LaRue.
Marion Keelin, Dorothy Perkins,
Naola Criswell, Helen Whitehead,
Dean Connor, Mary Helen Hense,
Ann Tomlinson, Marjorie Jorie,
Jane King, Del Strong, Betty May,
Kay Roy, Shirley West, Mary Jones,
June Lamb, Nancy Hale, Delores
Bell, Ellen Semrad, Kate Marmick,
Ellen Kearns, Mary Lou Waldman.
Tom Conroy, Ben Foster, Charles Heying, Bill Borst, John Regan, Charles Hall, Ralph Collins, Joseph Shriner, Jim Yoder, Anthony Hoffman, Edward Daly, Joseph Hein, Jack Rückiemi, Kevin Biersmith, Bob Rientjes, Dolores Gergick, Bonnie Egensperger, William Karth, and Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Rossillon.
Delta Gamma Dance
Delta Gamma sorority entertained recently with its annual spring formal at the chapter house.
Chaperons were Mrs. J.A. Hooke Mrs. Arthur H. Little, Mrs. Charles Wentworth, and Mrs. W.S. Shaw.
Guests were: Robert Christensen, Donald Muir, Quin Atchley, Stanley Englund, Alvin Moddelmog, James Kelley, Howard Gard, James Fishback, Robert Darling, Robert Howerton, Robert Petitt, James Hastings, Jack Greenwood, Tony Bontz, Robert Wells.
Robert Pechin, Warren Ralston, James Van Antwerp, Dean Frisbie, George Learned, Tony Merz, Dan Seavens, Kenneth Miller, William House, William MacGregor, John Wurst, Dale Romig, Charles Philbrick, Jack Stewart, David Burwell, James Hershberger, William Schaake, Dick Engle, Ben Foster, Fred Stainy, Dale Corder, McKeen
LAWRENCE
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John Brown, Robert Revelette, Gene Hatfield, James Thompson, Donald Ochs, James Martin, Henry Alberg, Donald Steinmeyer.
Edward Weltner, Gene Shumay,
Mark Moore, Kenneth Evens, William Fierson, Elmer Dougherty, Edwin Hirleman, Robbie Joe Wood, Mr.
and Mrs. James Roark, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Veatch.
Hillcrest Guests
Hillcrest House recently entertained with a spring formal dance. Guests were Carl Stenstrom, Jim Zajic, Preston Hunter, Gene Azure, J. R. Majors, Graham Frevert, Carroll Seib, Ernest Neidermann, Charles Schnabel, Harry Kirschner, Russell Annis, Colleen Gamble, Sue Duffy, Wanda Purdy, John Suptic, Jack Fellman, Robert Bingham, and Mr. and Mrs. James Feffferkorn.
Chaperons were Dr. and Mrs. J. A. Burzle, Miss Marjorie Austin, and Mrs. John Oliver.
Delta Delta Delta sorority announces the pledging recently of Ruth Ellen Crow, College freshman from Horton, and Shirley Anne Geyer, fine arts sophomore from Topeka.
The third floor of Strong hall is covered with one foot squares of inlaid tile.
Two Pledge Tri Delta
S. H.
HELEN MARIE STRINGHAM
Stringham To Marry
Mr. and Mrs. R.P. Stringham of Lawrence, announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Helen Marie, to Mr. Arthur Erick Fridblom of Madison, Wis. The wedding will be June 10 in Danforth chapel. The couple will live in Madison where Mr. Fridblom will attend the University of Wisconsin. Miss Stringham is a graduating senior in the College.
The value of the materials in the human body has risen from the old value of 98 cents to $31.94.
PAT READ
Indian Trader "Across from the Courthouse"
GIFTS For The Graduates
'Bud' Hill Is Named 1950 DU Honor Man
Otis "Bud" Hill, Jr., was named Delta Upsilon "honor man of this year" by John S. Brown, president, at the fraternity's annual formal dinner-dance recently.
The D. U. honor is awarded for service, achievements, honors, and ideals in University and fraternity life. An honor plaque, engraved with the names of men receiving the award, is kept by the chapter.
Hill has been rush chairman and a member of the D. U. senior council. He has served as president of Student Union Activities, general chairman of State-wide Activities, president of Forensic League, and general chairman of freshman counsellors.
Phi Mu Alpha Officers
Phi Mu Alpha, sinfonia, professional music fraternity, recently elected Bob Ausherman president. Other new officers are Danny Orton, vice-president; Raymond Rathert, secretary-treasurer; Robert Kipp, assistant to the secretary-treasurer; Joel Fitzgerald, alumni secretary; Sam Eitel, historian and Lyle Wollom, warden.
Need Relaxation?
Why not spend that free hour playing Snooker on the best tables available amidst a pleasant atmosphere?
- Snooker
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CASH FOR BOOKS At The STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE
MONDAY MAY 29
TUESDAY MAY 30
WEDNESDAY MAY 31
The Student Union Book Store Will Pay Top Prices For All Current Used Books
A Wilcox & Follett Representative Will Be Here To Buy All Obsolete And Discontinued Titles.
KU STUDENT Union Book Store
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
MCNDAY, MAY 22, 1950
Hogan's Club Will Meet Sooners Today
Coach Bill Hogan's Jayhawker baseball team opens an important two game series with the Oklahoma Sooners at 3 p.m. today on the Varsity baseball diamond. Kansas, by winning both games from the third place Sooners, would finish in third place with O.U. taking a probable fourth place berth in the final standings. Kansas' ace hurler Carl Sandefur, will oppose Oklahoma's ace, Jack Shirley, in today's game in quest of his seventh conference win of the year
Oklahoma's championship hopes received a real rallt at Columbia over the weekend when the Missouri Tigers all but eliminated the Sooners from the title race. The Tigers won a pair of games, 9 to 8, and 6 to 0, to push the Sooners from first to third place in the standings.
Nebraska won a pair of seven inning games with Colorado, 7 to 4, and 3 to 1, at Lincoln Saturday morning to all but wrap up the Big Seven 1950 baseball championship. The Cornhuskers can win the title outright by taking its remaining two-game series with Kansas State at Manhattan today and Tuesday or by merely splitting the series.
In order for the Sooners to win the title, Nebraska would have to drop two games while the Sooners were winning two contests from Coach Hozan's club.
Missouri could tie for the championship with Nebraska if the Cornhuskers lose two to the Wildcats while K.U. gets at least a split with the Sooners.
Tuesday's game between KU, and the Sooners will find the Jayhawkers' slender righthander, Guy Mabry, hurling against one of conference's top hurriers, Jim Kirk, a 6 foot 3 inch 210-pound righthander, who has a 4-1 conference record.
Kansas, with a Big Seven record
BIG SEVEN STANDINGS
W. L. Pct.
Nebraska 9 3 .750
Missouri 9 5 .643
Oklahoma 6 4 .600
KANSAS 7 7 .500
Kansas State 5 7 .417
Colorado 2 5 .286
Iowa State 2 9 .182
Last Week's Results Kansas State 7-1, KANSAS 5-3 Oklahoma 8-0, Missouri 9-6 Colorado 4-1, Nebraska 7-1
This Week's Schedule Today and Tuesday Oklahoma at KANSAS Nebraska at Kansas State Colorado at Iowa State
Remaining Grants May 29-30—Kansas State at Colorado
of seven wins and seven defeats, will attempt to finish above the .500 mark by taking both games with the Sooners. The Jayhawkers, with a 9-7 season record, can finish no worse than .500 for the year even if they should topple twice before Coach Jack Baer's mighty Sooners.
ALAHOMI
JACK SHIRLEY, eye Oklahoma righthander, will face big Carl Sandefur, the conference's top sophomore hurler, in today's opener. Shirley, a 6 foot 1 inch 190-pound junior, pitched the Sooners to a 6 to 3 win over Oklahoma A. and M., May 17, in his last mound assignment. Shirley beat the 1949 NCAA baseball champions, the Texas Longhorns, 7 to 5, earlier this year at Austin.
Coach Hogan is expected to start the same Kansas lineup today that defeated Kansas State the past week. 3 to 1. The following batting order will be used: Jim Cavonaugh, 2b; Frank Koenig, ss; Floy Temple, 3b; Carl Ellis, if; Walter Hicks, rf; Marry, cf; Lou DeLuna, 1b; Bill Mace or Ken Morrow, c, and Sandefur, p.
Coach Baer's veteran Sooner club, with a season record of 13 wins and seven defeats, has relied heavily on good pitching, better than average defense, and hitting that has been spotty but which has shown improvement as the season progressed.
Sandefur, one of the Big Seven's finest sophomore hurlers in recent years, will receive the acid test of the year today when he faces some of the conference's best hitters. Sandefur has pitched great ball through the last 28 1-3 inning in allowing only 14 hits and only three earned runs.
Kansas, with a team batting average of 238, has shown more extrabase hard hitting in recent games and should give the Sooners plenty of competition in their hitting game.
Oklahoma recently closed its home season by taking a two-games series with Colorado, 14 to 13, and 7 to 2. to hang up a home season record of nine wins in 10 games.
The Sooners have played 10 road games so far this season winning four and dropping six. In Big Seven road games, they have faired poorly winning only one and dropping three contests.
While on an early four-game spring training tour into Texas, Oklahoma accomplished a feat that stands as the highlight of the present season. The Sooners split even in a two-game series with the 1949 N.C.A.A. baseball champions, the Texas Longhorns, at Austin.
Shirley, today's Sooner hurler, pitched Coach Baer's club to a 7 to 5 win over Texas giving up no earned runs to a team that hadn't been beaten on their home diamond in 52 games.
Another highlight on this year's Sooner schedule is the fact that O.U. downed its state rivals, the Oklahoma A. and M. Aggies, in three out of four games. In a game the past week, Shirley beat the Aggies 6 to 3 for his fourth victory over the Cowpokes in the past two years.
The Sooners are expected to use the following batting order with each man's seasonal averages included for the Sooners first 17 games.
HAHONG
JIM KIRK, 6 foot 3 inch 210pounder, will hurl for Oklahoma in Tuesday's game. This big junior righthander is one of the Big Seven's leading pitchers. His conference record is four wins and one defeat.
Ray Morgosh, 3b (236), Travis Wiginton, 2b (238), Bob Stephenson, ss (317), Hauk Jones, 1b (394), Charles Puksgley, cf (303), John Reddell, c (321), Russell Hill, rf (167), and Phil McKee, if (226). Pitchers Shirley and Kirk are hitting 411 and 250 respectively.
The two-game series between K.U. and O.U. will wind up the season for both clubs. Here is the Sooners season record to date:
Oklahoma's 1950 Season Record:
Oklahoma 3, Texas Christian U. 1
Oklahoma 5, Texas A. and M. 12
Oklahoma 0-7, Texas 5-5
Oklahoma 5-9, Minnesota 4-3
*Oklahoma 5-9, Iowa State 1-5
*Oklahoma 2-7, Kansas State 5-5
*Oklahoma 9, Oklahoma A. and M.
11
*Oklahoma 4-8, Nebraska 14-3
Oklaima 11-12, Oklahoma A and
M. 5-5
M. 5- 1
*Oklahoma 14-7, Colorado 13-2
Oklahoma 9, Oklahoma A. and M.
3
*Oklahoma 8-0, Missouri 9-6
* Big Seven games
Big Seven games Won 13. Lost 7
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Jayhawkers Win Big Seven Golf Crown
By a whisker, or to be exact, one stroke, Kansas captured its first conference golf championship in 11 years the past weekend over the Lincoln Hillcrest Country club in Lincoln, Nebr.
By RAY SOLDAN
Just as was the case 11-years ago, it was the Oklahoma Sooners that the Jayhawkers nicked for the crown. Kansas' foursome swept over the 5,096 yard course for a 36-hole total of 604. Oklahoma posted 605, Nebraska 610, Missouri's defending champions 619, Colorado 629, Iowa State 630 and Kansas State 634.
Instead of the strong one-two punch of Dick Ashley and Dave Dennis that Kansas was expected to make or break on, the Jayhawkers won on a well-balanced team attack.
Kansas' five men—only the top four men on a team count in the final scoring—all finished in the top 15 in a field of 35. Besides Rourke, who was fourth with his 149, were Dave Dennis, tied for ninth at 151; Dick Ashley and Bob Dare, tied for 11th with scores of 152; and Howard Logan, in a tie for 15th with a $15^{th}$
The Jayhawkers held a four-stroke lead at the 18-hole, half-way mark. However, they turned in a poor showing on the third nine to fall behind Nebraska and within striking distance of Oklahoma. A par-equalling last nine gave the meet to Kansas.
Sophomore Gene Rourke tallied a five-over-par 149 to lead the Kansans. Rourke was fourth to Joe Gifford of Nebraska for individual honors in the meet. The Nebraskan succeeded Jayhawker Dick Ashley as individual conference champion.
meet by winning three and tieing one of six dual matches, and capturing the individual title of the Colorado college invitational golf meet. Kansas didn't have its full strength in either of its losses or its ties.
three years as coach. In 1948, Kansas finished fifth. The Jayhawkers were a strong fourth in 1949 and produced the individual conference champ in Dick Ashley. This season they warmed up for the conference
Coach Dick Richards' tennis team beat out Nebraska and Iowa State to finish fifth in the Big Seven tennis meet in Lincoln, Neb. the past weekend. The Jayhawkers were only one-point out of third place.
The powerful Oklahoma beat won the meet with an 18-point total. Colorado, boasting the individual champion in Pete Arendrup, a former junior division Davis cup player, placed second with 11 points. Then came Missouri and Kansas State with six points, the Jayhawkers with five, and Nebraska and Iowa State with one each.
Kansas Team Places Fifth In Big Seven Tennis Meet
Kansas points were won by Bob Swartzell, Charles Crawford, and John Freiburger with first round victories in singles play; Jack Ranson with a first round bye in the singles; and the doubles team of Ranson and Crawford with a first round victory.
Hervy Macferran, playing the No. 1 position for Kansas, was dropped by Oklahoma's Guy Ewton in the opening round, 7-9, 6-3, 6-1. The Jayhawkers' top doubles team—Macferran and Swartzell—also lost a first round match.
The summary for Kansas:
First Round
Swartzell defeated Boyce Meyer (Mo), 3-6, 8-6, 6-4.
Guy Ewton (Okla) defeated Macfee
ferau 7-9, 8-3, 6-1, 1
Crawford defeated Andy Bunton (Nebr). 9-7, 8-6.
Pete Arendrup-Anil Yagnik (Colo) defeated Macferran-Swartzell 6-2, 3-6, 6-1.
Freiburger defeated Dick Nichols (K-St), 8-6, 6-2.
Ranson-Crawford defeated Sneider-McDonald (It-St), 5-7, 6-3, 6-2.
Semi-finals
Charles Cunningham (Okla) defeated Swartzell. 3-6, 8-6, 6-4.
Scott Smith (Colo) defeated Ran-
son 6-4, 3-6, 6-4
Glen Land (Okla) defeated Craw-
ford. 8-4, 8-6.
Dick Land (Okla) defeated Frei-
burger. 6-4, 6-0.
Land-Land (Okla) defeated Ranson-Crawford, 6-3, 6-3.
THANK YOU And GOOD LUCK To The CLASS OF'50!
To the seniors, we say good luck and to the under-graduates, we wish to express our desire to serve you further during the remainder of your college days.
Yes, we wish to express our appreciation for the business you have given us during the years you have been in Lawrence.
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4
MONDAY, MAY 22.1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Karnes, Semper Break Records At Big 7 Meet
By RICHARD DILSAVER
Oklahoma's Jerry Meader lost his baton 15 yards from the finish of the mile relay to cost the Kansas Jayhawkers second place in the soggy Big Seven track and field championships at Lincoln Friday and Saturday. Rain fell throughout the meet.
In addition to bringing home third place in team totals, the Jay-hawkers returned with four victories in individual events—two of them record performances. KU distance greats, Capt. Bob Karnes and sophomore Herb Semper, got the records in the mile and two-mile. Other Kansas triumphs were by Jack Greenwood in the low hurdles and the surprising mile relay team of Capt-elect Emil Schutzel, John Sites, Jim "Red" Dinsmore, and Bob Devinney.
Had Meader kept his grasp on the bamboo and not lost the Sooners' second place in the relay behind the Kansans, Colorado wouldn't have scored but six points to K.U.'s 10. But the disqualification of O.U. gave the Golden Buffaloes eight points instead and dropped Kansas to third in the totals, $ \frac{1}{4} $ points behind.
Team standings were as follows:
Nebraska, 105 3-4; Colorado, $84\frac{1}{2}$;
Kansas, $83\frac{1}{4}$; Kansas State $74\frac{1}{2}$;
Missouri, 57 3-4; Oklahoma, 53\%; and Iowa State, 5 3-4.
Karnes settled a week-old score with Bill McGuire of Missouri in his record 4:12.6 mile for his third straight title in the event. The Missourian had barely beaten the Jayhawker captain in 4:10.7 in a dunel meet a week previous. Saturday Karnes finished fully 15 yards in front of a badly beaten McGuire, and earned himself the accolade of outstanding star of the meet for second consecutive year.
Semper had a wetter track and a heavier rain to hamper him, but he scampered through to his two-mile record of 9:21. And he wasn't pushed to the new mark. The second-place runner, Bob Fox of Missouri, trailed by 25 yards.
McGuire had been considered a threat to Semper, too. But he had already had too much Karnes earlier in the day and lost out in a stretch duel for sixth place with Don Furlough of Kansas State.
Greenwood was an incensed runner in winning the low hurdles. The Jayhawker thought he had won the high hurdles earlier in a close finish, but he was awarded only fourth place. In the lows, he made sure of victory by five vards.
The previously little - publicized mile relay team was the biggest
Jayhawker surprise. Game little Schutzel took over the lead on the backstretch of the initial leg, and Sites and Dinsmore held it through the next two laps, Devinney getting a yard advantage for the anchor leg.
Devinney and Meader went stride for stride the entire distance, and the K.U. sophomore flash still had his yard to the good at the finish line. Another surprise was the failure of Jayhawker All - American Pat Bowers to win the 880-yard run. He lost to Bill Jacobs of Oklahoma by about six yards, his first defeat of the year.
Friday in the preliminaries Bowers was just one-tenth of a second off Glenn Cunningham's conference record of 1:52.2.
The All-American offered no excuses for his defeat, saying only, "At least, I couldn't have lost to a nicer guy." But Coach Bill Eason said Bowers had spent himself in the runie earlier.
Other Kansas point winners were as follows:
Schutzel, third in the 440: Devinney, fourth in the broad jump and second in the 220-yard dash: Del Norris, tied for fifth in the high jump, and Jim Floyd, tied for fifth in the role vault.
Nebraska won the meet by getting more men into the preliminaries
than any other team, and by scoring in every event but the two-mile run.
By meet time Saturday the consensus was the Huskers would triumph if dashman Harry Meginnis held up. The speedy Nebraskan had been bothered earlier in the season by a pulled leg muscle. But he came through with wins in the 100 and 220 to insure the title for N.U.
A factor in the Cornhuskers' win, however, was big Jim McConnell, winner of the decathlon at the Kansas Relays. The Nebraskan was second in the javelin throw, fifth in the shot put and broad jump, and sixth in the discus throw, compiling a total of 13 points.
One other record was broken in the course of the meet. Colorado's Jim Allen tossed the shot 53 feet $10\frac{1}{4}$ inches on his final trial in Friday preliminaries to eclipse the 52-2 7-8 record of Kansas State's Rollin Prather. The mark stood up Saturday as Prather could do no better than 51-9 for second place.
Missouri was the most disappointing team. Winners of the meet the three previous years, the Tigers had been given chance to do it
again. But they were lucky to finish fifth. They would have dropped into sixth place had not Oklahoma lost those eight points in the relay.
Defending champions who returned had a rough time of it. Those who failed were Gil Phillips of Missouri in the 440-yard dash, Bowers in the 880, Earl Elliott of Kansas State in the high hurdles, Missouri in the mile relay, Joe Gold of Colorado in the high jump, and Prather in the shot put.
Successful in regaining their championships were Karnes in the mile run (he didn't defend his two-mile title), Bill Carroll of Oklahoma in the pole vault, Herb Hoskins of Kansas State in the broad jump, and Prather in the discus throw.
Six Jayhawkers earned a trip to Dallas June 3 for the annual Big Seven-Southwest conference Dual of champions. They are Bowers, Devinney, Greenwood, Karnes, Schutzel, and Semper.
Big 7 Conference Meet Summary
This week end part of the Varsity squad and the freshman team will compete in the Missouri Valley A.A. U. meet at Wyandotte stadium, Kansas City, Kan. The meet is scheduled for Saturday night.
Shot put—Won by Jim Allen, Colo. 53-10½; 2. Rollin Prather, K St., 51-9; 3. Wally Tanner, Colo., 49-9½; 4. Charles Toogood, Nebr., 84-10½; 5. Jim McConnell, Nebr., 47-11¼; 6. Ron Middleton, Mo., 47-63-4. New meet record. Old record of 53-27-8 by Prather in 1948.
Mile run—Won by Bob Karnes, Kan; 2, Bill McQuire, Mo.; 3, Pat Bowers, Kan; 4, Lee Moore, Nebr.; 5, Jim Wilkinson, Okla.; 6, Chester Franz, Mo. 4:12.6. New meet record and record of 4:14.3 by Glenn Cun- Kingham, Kan., 1932.
Javelin—Won by George Holley,
Colo., 204-2; 2, Jim McConnell,
Nebr. 198-114/3; 5, Warren Monson,
Nebr. 189-3; 4, Les Gardner, Colo.
187-10; 5, Ray Magsamen, Nebr.
186-2; 6, Don Frasier, K. St. 184-2%.
440-yard dash—Won by Charles Coleman, Okla.; 2, Charles Temple, Colo.; 3, Emil Schutzel, Kan.; 4, Elmer Klein, Mo.; 5, Loyal Hurlbert, Nebr.; 6, Jerry Meader, Akla. ; 488.
100-yard dash —Won by Harry
Meginnis, Nebr.; 2, Lod Troilo, K.
St.; 3, Byron Clark, Mo.; 4, Herb
Hoskins, K. St.; 5, Bob Burke, Colo;
6, Bill Baker, Nebr.: 10.3.
120-yard high hurdles—Won by Bob Berkshire, Nebr; 2, Earl Elliott, K; St.; 3, Wendell Cole, Nebr.; 4, Jack Greenwood, Kan.; 5, Mac Verner, Ia. St.; 6, Bruce Brown. Colo. 15.0.
Broad jump—Won by Herb Hoskins, K. St., 24-23-4; 2, Jim Danielson, K. St., 22-10 3-4; 3, Laddle Stovall, Mo., 22-13-4; 4, Bob Devinney, Kan., 22-1; 5, Jim McConnell, Nebr., 22-1⁄4; 6, Elmer Creviston, K. St., 21-1⁴; 8
880-yard run- Won by Bill Jacobs, Okla.; 2, Pat Bowers, Kan; 3, Bob Karnes, Kan.; 4, Harold Kopf, Nebr.; 5, Don Crabtree, Okla.; 6, Jean Madden, Mo. 1:52.8.
Discus throw —Won by Rollin Prather, K. St., 153-2; 2, Jim Allen, Colo., 150-614; 3, D. B. Campbell, Colo., 139-1-1-16; 4, Kelly Pelts, Mo., 138-0-3-8; 5, Wayne Sees, Nebr., 138-10-3-8; 5, Wayne Sees, Nebr., 134-4-3-8.
220-yard dash — Won by Harry Meginnis, Nebr; 2, Bob Devinney, Kan; 3, Bob Burke, Colo; 4, Lod Troilo, K. St.; 5, Ray Shaffer, Colo; 6, Jim Whitacre, Mo. 21.9.
Two - mile run—Won by Herb
Semper, Kan.; 2, Bob Fox, Mo.; 3,
George Fitzmorris, Colo.; 4, R. C.
Slocum, Okla.; 5, Gene Shaver, Ia.
St.; 6, Don Thurlow, K. St. 9:21.0
New meet record. Old record of
9:29.9 by Charles Mitchell, K. St.
1938, and Ray Harris, Kan., 1939.
High jump—Won by Bob Gordon,
Mo, 6-16-8-1; Virgil Severs, K
M, 6-47-8-3; Dick Jones, Okla.
6-4; Dick Meissner, Nebr, 6-2/4-1;
Deltin Norris, Kan, Bob Sand,
Nebr, John Dickinson, Ia, St. 6-14-
220-yard low hurdles — Won by Jack Greenwood, Kan.; 2, Jim Finley, Okla.; 3, Bob Berkshire, Nebr.; 4, Wendell Cole, Nebr.; 5, Bruce Brown, Colo.; 6, Earl Elliott, K. St.; 23.9.
Pole vault—Won by Bill Carroll,
Okla, 13-8; 2, Don Cooper, Neb., 13-
4; 3, tie, Clare Gregg, Colo., and
Leon Keflah, Keb., 12-6; 5, tie, Jim
Floyd, Kan., Dean Nunn, K. St.
Dick Moore and Gene Furnish, Mo,
Bill Hannum, Colo., and Jerry Lemon,
Okla, 12-0.
Mile relay—Won by Kansas (Emil Schutzel, John Stites, Jim Dinsmore, and Bob Devinney); 2, Colorado; 3, Missouri; 4, Nebraska; 5, Kansas State; 6, Iowa State. 3:19.9.
Eighteen Jayhawker Athletes Get Jobs
By JOHN McMILLION
Eighteen men from the largest class in the history of the department of physical education have their immediate futures assured Fourteen of these men will coach in high schools and junior colleges in Iowa, Kansas, and Missouri. Two men will teach and the other two, Dick Tomlinson and Forrest Griffith, plan to play pro football next year.
Bob Karnes, captain of this year's back squad and one of the outstanding distance men in the Midwest, has been hired as head track coach at the Sedalia (Missouri) High school. Karnes has lettered the past three years in track and has been the most outstanding distance man that Kansas has produced since Glen Cunningham controlled the cinders.
Bud French, who has been a thorn in the sides of K.U.'s football opponents the past three seasons, will go to Kansas City, Mo., where he will be an assistant coach at Central High school.
Roland Ellerts, first string center for the Jayhawker eleven the past year is the only man to get a junior college berth. Ellerts will be assistant coach at the Garden City Junior college.
all Big-Seven guard Dick Tomlin-
enters a career in professional
football next fall when he will play
An outstanding basketball player in 1946 and 1947, Jack Eskridge, will go north to Shenandoah, Iowa, where he will assume duty as head basketball coach in the high school there.
Another former football player, end Bryan Sperry, will assume duties next fall as head football coach at Hiawata High school. Sperry lettered in 1948 but was ineligible the past year.
The other co-captain of the Jayhawkers the past year, fullback Forrest Griffith, is still undecided as to whether he will enter pro football or become a coach. He may take a whack at the pro ranks first and then go into coaching.
Floyd Temple, letterman at fullback in 1949 and first string third baseman for the past two years on Coach "Red" Hogan's baseball nine, has been appointed assistant football and basketball coach at Paola. The head coach at Paola is Hoyt Baker, fullback on the 1946 Orange Bowl team.
for the Pittsburgh Steelers Tomlinson was a standout for the K.U. eleven during the past three seasons and was co-captain of the 1949 team.
Ralph Brown, center on the 1946,
'47, and '48 football squads, has received the head coaching job at Sublette. Brown has been hampered by a back injury and was unable to play this year.
The head coach of football at Medicine Lodge next year will be Howard Fischer, who played center on the football team in 1946 '47, and '48. He lettered in '47 and '48.
Dale Corder, of Denison, has been hired as a teacher at Russell and Bill Cornwell, from Lawrence, has been hired to coach and teach in Lincoln. Cornwell will be head basketball coach.
Ken Morrow, who is the first string catcher for this year's baseball team, will coach and teach at Peabody. Morrow also played football in '47, '48, and '49.
Alfred Moore becomes a physical education instructor at the Kansas City, Kansas, School for the Blind.
Two more basketball coaches will be Richard Fletcher and Bob Timmons to Sydney, Iowa, and Timmons has been hired by Caldwell high school.
The other seniors who have obtained jobs are Luther Gilliam, Edway Hodgson, Ray Dewell, and Eugene Stack. Gilliam will coach and teach at Circleville, Hodgson will teach at the elementary school in Washington, Dewell will do all the coaching at Lincolnville and Stack will be an elementary physical education man in Kansas City, Mo.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 22, 1950
Little Man On Campus
By Bibler
"Did I get an 'A' outa this course?—Did I get a 'B'?—a 'C'?
a 'D'?—flunked it, huh?"
Bilber
14-05
The Editors Report —
1950's Football
Once again the great game of whistle-stopping and stump speaking has begun. Political parties are gathering themselves together with an eye toward next November 7 and the 82nd congress.
BI-PARTISANSHIP
by Kay O'Connor
In this traditional American game each party picks one or two major issues to kick around as much as possible. And this year possibly the best issue which can be chosen is the present lack of a bi-partisan foreign policy and the accompanying accusations of communism in the state department.
There are two sides to blame for the present lack of such a foreign policy. The administration has shifted since the start of the Chinese situation from a policy of bi-partisanship built up through Roosevelt's administration to a policy of leaving out the minority in congress.
Responsibility for the loss of bi-partisanship should also be placed on the congressional minority. The constant jawing of such senators as McCarthy, Wherry, and Taft shows the world too clearly that there is no unity in the international decisions made by the United States. The long illness of Senator Vandenburg and the withdrawal of John Foster Dulles into New York state politics removed two of the leaders of the co-operative policy and left it fairly free for the buzzards to pick over.
In their absence no minority leaders were picked by Truman as consultants. The minority program toward our foreign policy seems to be to pick on everything and praise nothing.
It is vitally important today that there be a bi-partisan formulation of United States foreign policy. It is equally necessary that the foreign policy not be used in the coming political football game. The most important reason for preserving bi-partisanship is the effect that it has on American prestige in the rest of the world.
When the United States presents a divided front to other countries on any issue of foreign relations, it hurts the influence of that issue. The western countries worry whether the U.S. will make good the word backed by only half of its political parties. Russia and her satellites merely sit back and smirk.
The main responsibility lies in the hands of the president and the state department. But the major issues should be presented to party leaders in congress for discussion.
Another reason for preserving bi-partisanship is its effect on our domestic affairs. With every further split in congressional opinion of state department actions the American people will lose more faith in them. With a bi-partisan formulation of policy there would be less reason for minority objection and therefore less reaction among the American public.
If both sides of congress had the chance to present their ideas to the state department the faults of foreign policy would become more obvious and could be corrected. This does not mean that all matters of foreign policy should be discussed by the congress; obviously that would take too much time.
Our foreign policy is not a plaything. Both sides of congress are responsible for the present failure of bi-partisanship. Both sides should work to improve it. And both sides should keep it out of politics.
NOTICE
Our sports desk has asked us to remind you that K.U. will open a two-game series with Oklahoma this afternoon. It will be an opportunity for students to see one of the best college teams—aside from K.U.'in the country play.
Attendance at baseball games this spring has been fair but there is still space available, the sports desk says. They suggest that those unable to gain seats in the bleachers might bring along blankets in case the ground is wet.
But whether you get a seat in the bleachers, have to bring a blanket, or must stand, come anyway. The Oklahoma series will be two games worth seeing.
Editing II students in charge of the Daily Kansan copy desk today are Steve Ferro, College senior, and Arthur McIntyre, journalism junior.
Daily Kansas
University
News Room Adv. Room
K.U. 251 K.U.378
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assm.
Press Assn., and the Associated College
Press Assn., and the Associated College
Press. Represented by the National Ad-
vocacy Service,420 Madison Ave, New
New York City.
James Morris
Editor-in-Chief
1.2
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 Noel Jones
Martlyn Marks Elaine Elvig
Steve Ferro
Feature Editor Francis Kelley
Photograph Editor Frankie Waits
Telegraph Editor Robert Sigman
William Graves Richard Teich Lloyd Holbick
Sports Editor Richard Dilsaver
Asst. Sports Editors Bob Leonard Ray Soldan Arthur McIntire Mona Millikin
Society Editor Faye Wilkinson
Asst. Society Editors Billie Stover Emily Stewart
Editorial Assts. Keith Leslie
Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner
Cr. Mgr. Yvonne Josserand
Nt. Adv. Mgr. Forrest McIntire
Classified Ad. Mgr. Lee Dyer
Promotion Mgr. John Wiedeman
EYE
They Can 'Nag' This Director
Miami, Fla.—(U.P.)-Arturo de Filippo, director of Miami's Opera guild, said he would just as soon be a horse; they are better off than opera singers. Filippo complained that horses get more newspaper space than opera singers and that more money is spent on horse races than grand opera.
Eye
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any tens or prescription duplicated.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
Lawrence Optical Co.
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
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SENIORS!
1947 THE CITY OF RAVENA 1856-1922
Last chance to order your Senior class rings.
MAN'S RING $27.50 LADY'S RING $21.50 Plus 20% Federal, 2% State tax
Business Office still has a few in stock.
FIRST COME-FIRST SERVE
Why Be 'Cash Out' When You Can 'Cash In' With KANSAN Classifieds?
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Good grooming goes a long way in getting a job, seniors. Make sure your clothes have been given the attention they deserve.Call us today.
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MONDAY, MAY 22, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Elusive Swander Captured By Kansan Reporter
By DICK HUNTER
Orval Swander has been found! After a six day search by a weary but determined Kansan reporter. Orval was found reclining on the sun porch of the Sigma Nu house.
Orval explained that he had not dodged the reporter intentionally, but had merely been busy with school activities, "What activities?" asked the reporter. "As well as carrying the maximum number of hours, I am also a member of the International Relations club, Student Union activities, and will be initiated into the Owl society and Delta Sigma Rhо, honorary debate fraternities, this week."
"You do all this and play badminton, too?" the reporter asked. Swander chuckled politely at this and said, "I think you will find students at the University who are in quite a few more activities than I am, but I find that studies take practically all my time."
1982
... ELUSIVE
"I believe it's done me quite a lot of good. I have been on the dean's honor roll for the past four semesters." The dumbfounded reporter said to himself, "The dean's honor roll! But he seems so normal."
"You a debater?" the reporter asked. "Yes, I've been in a number of debate tournaments at different schools." The reporter sighed and said, "Well, I don't see much of a story in this, but I've got to hand something in to the city editor. Hasn't anything exciting ever happened to you?"
you come to K.U.N.
"Because Professor Buehler and his debate team are here," Swander answered.
"Why did you come to K.U.?"
Swander thought, and then said, "I was mistaken for a train robber once. When I was in high school, at Topeka, we were to have a debate tournament at K.U. I was in charge of getting the squad to Lawrence.
So, I told them all to be at the Santa Fe station by 6:40 on the morning of the debate. At seven that morning, the phone rang and a member of the debate team asked me why I wasn't at the station yet.
"I said, "Oh my gosh," grabbed my suitcase, and drove hurriedly to the station. Upon arriving I saw a train pointed towards Lawrence starting to proceed in that direction. I ran after it, grabbed a railing on the last car, a mail car, and climbed aboard.
"Has all this studying done you any good?" the reporter asked.
"Inside the mail car, a postal clerk drew his gun on me, and asked what I thought I was doing. Finally, I convinced him of my plight, and he let me ride free on into Lawrence. That's about all."
The reporter stood up, shook Orval's hand, and said "Thanks. Orval. I don't think this story will hit the front page, but you might check the space somewhere between the classifieds and the bus advertisement."
University Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
FOR SALE
MAN'S double breasted, white, Palm Beach suit. Size 36 or 48 long. In good condition. Also lady's light blue rain-coat, size 16, like new. Call 2885. 24 1948 Model Montgomery Ward refrigerator; 71 Cubic foot. Excellent condition. As sell. See at 1231 Delaware, evening ads only. SLICK 38 Ford convertible. New Tort Rebuilt Motor. Radio, Heater $285. 835 Rhode Island.
ESPECIALLY for the baby's trip—bottle warmer for the car, car seats, car bed. Western Auto Associate Store, 944 Mass.
BLACK dress shoes. Size $81\frac{3}{4}$ B. Excellent for tux wear. Call Tom Shannon a 1160-W or see at 1005 Indiana. 25
body, engine. Call 3458. John Griffin 22
REMINGTON portable in excellent condition.
Must sell before going to Colo-
rion. Sale price=$15.00 1332 Louisiana
Marsard Ward.
ANNING your summer vacation? Then you'll want to stop in and select sturdy LEATHER SHOP, 820 Mass. Formerly the Blue Ribbon Leather Shop. $27
THE MAN in your life will appreciate a bilifoid, shave kit, or belt of fine quali-
tude. LIKINS LEATHER SHOP 820 Mass-formerly the Blue Ribbon Leather Shop.
FOR GRADUATION give a practical
demonstration from a large assortment of
bilfellow books.
FILKINS LEATHER SHOP. $20 Mass.
Formally the Blue Ribbon Leather Shop.
TRAILER house, 19 ft. U.S. Traveler Electric refrigerator, butane range, fire oil heater Sleepes four. Electric brakes Power Supply. South end of Man Priced to sell.
WANTED
FINEST TELEVISION—Best in sets and
just arrived. $87.50 and up. See the new-
est Emerson table model set at $159.50
and Electric or Vernor. Phone 1381.
826 Vermont. Phone 1381.
SELL your used books at Rowlands Book Store at 1401 Ohio St. Monday and Friday from 8:30 to 12:00, or the College Book Co., Columbus, Ohio will be there to buy your books. 22
SELL ALL your used books to the Student's Bookstore on Monday, May 29 Tuesday, May 30 Wednesday and Thursday. 31. We will pay top cash prices for all current books, and the Wilcox and Folio representative will buy all obsolete representative titles. Student Union Book Store.
FOR RENT
ROOM apartment furnished, electric
regulator. Closet and storage space.
Kitchen. Bedroom. Bathroom.寝室 rent to couple or men. 3 rooms for
students. Single beds. All large comfort
suburbs. Residence to K. U. Bus. bldg.
Special rates. for summer. 115
Ohio. Phone 1671-R. 24
LARGE single room comfortably fur-
nished in summer. Close to campus.
Call 3685-J
COOL. half basement for 2 or 3 boys.
Private bath, cooking privileges, $20
each. 1818 Illinois. Phone 3014-R after 6
P.M. 24
SIMAMEE kittens for pets or breeding
SIMAMEE rejection pets 18,23
Term. Tenn. 1956 1856
NICE cool rooms for boys attending summer school. Also sleeps porch. Adjoining campus. 1631 Illinois. Phone 2674-J.
After 4 P.M. 24
LARGE Single and double rooms for men. Comfortably furnished, convenient- located. Singles $12, doubles $10. Rooms available June 1. I 1247 Ohio. Phone 3513
SLEEPING PING room, twin beds. With breakfast. Private home, nice neighborhood, respectable, quiet. Good transportation all parts of city. Wonderful future home planning to work in Kansas City. Roadside restaurant. To be offered on projection. Mrs. F. F. E. Wells. 800 East 36th St. Kansas City 3, Missouri, Valentine 24
NICE cool basement rooms for summer students. 1359 Ohio. Phone 2089. 24
FOR men. Nice accommodation for 4 or 6
for summer and fall, 4 bedrooms, private
living room, kitchenette and bath. 637
Indiana. Phone 1782. 2
3 NICELY furnished sleeping rooms.
Available June 1. Twin beds and large
cedar clad clothes closet. On bus line.
839 Miss. Phone 1832. 24
FURNISHED apartments for rent. See a
1339 Ohio. Phone 2089.
2
SUMMER SCHOOL AND FALL rooms for boys at reduced rates. Large doubles beds, linens provided and rooms cleaned. Two private baths and telephone. Excursion to campus, close to town and bus route. 1116 Louisiana St. 5:30 to 8 p.m. 24
IHREE double rooms for summer. $15.00 a month per boy; single beds; phone; computer; private entrance. Fully equipped kitchen for use of boys. 24x24 W 1100 Ohio.
APARTMENT for rent either 3 or 4 rooms; completely furnished; private bath; private entrance; couple. Across South Park. Inquire Mrs. Pappa. 114 Vt.
CLEAR, convenient rooms for summer
holiday travel. Send 10% of
per month. 1218 Michigan, Tel. 3340
ROOM for summer and fall. Quaint house for studious Christian young men. Close to campus. Call Mrs. Hoffman 1244 La. Ph. 1752.
RIDING horses for rent by the hour.
Bridle paths and trails nearby. For hay-
rack rides, call Mott Stables, Phone 1842,
700 West 4th. 22
ROOMS for summer students. Also nice cool sleeping porch available at reduced rates. 1005 Indiana. Phone 1160-W. 22 SUMMER SCHOOL rooms for boys. 2917M. 1234 Oread. Few vacancies for fall. tf
ROOMS for summer or fall. 3 double and
1 single. Sleeping porch. Single beds.
$10.00 a month per person. 1222 Miss.
Phone 495. 34
MAKE BETTER GRADES! Rent a porta-
ble or standard typewriter for $3.50
a month or $1.00 a week. All makes and
models at Student Book Store. tf
MISCELLANEOUS
ATTENTION! Payment for all Daily Kansas Classifieds is due May 24. 24
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TRANSPORTATION
WANTED:-Ride to New York City vicinity. Will help drive and share expenses with the driver. May day, May 31. Call Bob Shaw at 565. 24 RIDE need after June 1 to Santa Fe. or City vicinity. Share driving and expenses with Kenneth King-1653 Indiana or Phone 322. 24 DRIVING to Los Angeles after finals. take 2. Call Korber after 5:30 p.m. on Saturday.
WANT RIDERS or share the driving to summer school. Leave Plaza 7 a.m., return 11 a.m. JE 3178, Kansas City, Mo., after 6 p.m. TF
BUSINESS SERVICE
I WILL do typing at my home. Term papers, theses, etc. If interested contact me.
TYPHING: Thesis. Tenn. Paperings, Reports.
Telephone: Mrs. Wilde MH.
Tenn. Phone: 3082-M. I24
TYPING. Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rates. Prompt attention Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601
ATTENTION K. U! Come in now and
we'll help you.
slip covers and upholstery. We furnish
all materials, we guarantee our work.
Upholstery. 837 Vermont.
Phon. 143.
SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a digisized, modern, highest, largest, 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 ad-venture or co-op. Dr. Craddock, Jr., 1006 Grand Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Giving qualifications, school and home address. 24
TYPING; thesis; notebooks; reports;
Standard rates. Mrs. Ha, Jan.
4434W 506 W, 8196F 207 W
ENDS TONITE
"Trail of the Lonesome Pine"
Shown 8:21 - 10:17
TUESDAY
NITES
Fortune Seekers
Lusting for Diamonds
BURT LANCASTER
"ROPEofSAND"
THE SURPRISE OF THE LORD.
PAUL
HENREID
CORINNE
CALVET
CLAUDE BAINS
PETER LOREN
A MAMANDAN PICTURE
Shown 8:21 - 10:17
Open 7:00 - Phone 260
Lawrence DRIVE-IN Theatre
THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. Complete overhaul, engine tune-up, body repair, auto painting, used cars. BUYER SELECTS. 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-room shop has everything for fur, fern, and feathers. Grant Gift and Pet Shop. 1218 Conn. St. Ph. 418.
FORMALS AND DRESSES of all types made to order. Also alterations and remodeling. Call Mrs. Scales. Phone 3060-9, 1414 Tenn. 22
LOST
LOST a pair of shell-rimmed glasses
Thursday evening, somewhere around
Watson library. If found please call Joe
Mendenhall, 2917-M. 24
Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers
NOW! ENDS WED.
Renegade Outriders and a Red-Headed Beauty!
The OUTRIDERS
Color by TECHNICOLOR
Stars:
JOEL McCREA
ARLENE DAHL
A METRO GOLDWYN MAXXER PICTURE
The OUTRIDERS
Color by TECHNICOLOR
Starring JOEL McCREA
ARLENE DAHL
A METRO-GOLDWITH-MAYER PICTURE
Cartoon—News
Starts Thursday The Gripping Story of the Hatfield-McCoy Feud . !
STORY OF THE GREAT AMERICAN FEED!
Roseanna McCoy
NOMAD FACTOR
FARLEY GRANGER + JOAN EVANS
Starts SUNDAY
Betty Grable
VICTOR PHIL
MATURE HARRIS
WABASH AVENUE
Technicolor
20
Granada
PHONE 946
N-O-W ENDS WED
IT'S LIGH!!
IT'S BRIGHT!!
IT'S 100 PROOF!!
J. ARTHUR RANK
DISTRICT
TIGHT
LITTLE ISLAND'
serving
RADFORD
The funniest picture
that ever crossed
in Drink!"
Feature Times 1:37-3:37-5:37-7:37 and 9:37
Continuous Shows open 12:45
Color Cartoon Late World News
Added Laughs RED INGLE IS BACK with his Natural 7
Patee
PRONE 121
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Special OWL Show Saturday 11:30 p.m.
On the Stage CHAN LOO AND CO. present "HORRORS OF THE ORIENT" Direct from Hollywood
EXTRA... in person "THE WOLF MAN"
TOMORROW'S CHILDREN
The WOLF MAN"
On the Screen "FRANKENSTEIN MEETS WOLF MAN"
Tickets Now on Sale
All Seats 60c incl. tax
ONLY CAPACITY SOLD
Granada PHONE 946
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 22, 1950
Jerre Mueller Chosen Queen Of IFC Ball
Jerre Mueller, College freshman, was named "All-Fraternity Sweetheart" at the Inter-Fraternity Council "Mid-Century Ball" May 19.
THE STAR SPORTS CHAMPION
MISS JERRE MUELLER
KU Geologists To Colorado
The University campus will extend to Colorado this summer when more than 70 geology students travel to the K. U. permanent geology field camp north of Canon City. The five-week field course is required of all undergraduate students majoring in geology.
This summer's group will be the largest ever to attend the camp and two five-week sessions will be held. Dr. R. M. Dreyer, professor of geology, will be in charge of the first session and Blakemore E. Thomas, assistant professor of geology, will supervise the second session.
The field camp consists of several dormitories, a staff cabin, a study and recreation hall, as well as a shower. The camp will have electric lighting for the first time this summer.
- Miss Mueller, a member of Delta Gamma sorority, was selected by Ronald Reagan, movie actor. Eacon sorority at the University entered a candidate.
A gold cup and three dozen roses were presented to Miss Mueller by Joseph Wimsatt, social chairman of the council, and Dale Helmers, retiring president of the council. The cup will be kept by Delta Gamma sorority until next spring and then will be returned to the I. F. C. to be awarded to the new queen. A small replica of this cup will be the permanent possession of the queen each year.
Other winners were Anne Jackson, Chi Omega, second; Frances Hoyt, Sigma Kappa, third; and Dana Richmond, Abiba Phi, fourth.
This is the first year that an "All Fraternity Sweetheart" has been selected. The dance was held at the Lawrence Country club and Clyde Bysom's orchestra played. An acrobatic dance number was given during intermission.
Five men from each fraternity were invited to the dance. Chaperons were Dr. R. W. McClure, Miss Mary Anne Wolf, Mr. and Mrs. William Hogan, and Mr. and Mrs. John Weatherwax.
Students Fined For Stealing Signs
Three University students were fined $25 each in police court at 8:30 a.m. today on charges of destroying city property. The three are Charles Benscheidt, engineering sophomore; Doerr M. Casebier, College freshman; and Robert L. Pechin, College freshman, police reported.
The three men, all members of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, were arrested at 10:47 p.m., May 20. At the time of the arrest, they were carrying a stop sign which they had broken off the supporting post. They had also torn down a one-way sign. John Ingalls, captain of the Lawrence police, said.
World Wide News
Jury Indicts KC Attorney
Kansas City, Mo., May 22 (U.P.)-Samuel C. Hayden, discharged a month ago as an assistant Jackson county prosecutor, and Thomas (Tano) Lococo, gambling partner of slain Charles Binaggio, were indicted today on charges of income tax evasion by a federal grand jury investigating underworld activities here.
Mr. Hayden has been a practicing attorney here for 16 years. He served in the state legislature from 1937 to 1941 and formerly was a justice of the peace. The grand jury charged he was "one of 15 partners in the largest gambling place in Kansas City."
Prosecuting attorney Henry H. Fox, FJ, fired Mr. Hayden when the grand jury recently listed him as a partner in the gambling enterprise. He said then he served as counsel and not as partner. He was indicted on one court, Lococo on five. Bond for Mr. Lococo was set at $5,000 and for Mr. Hayden at $1,500. They will be arraigned Friday morning.
50 Killed In Peru Quake
Cuzco, Peru, May 22—(U.P.)—This ancient Inca capital two miles up in the Andes was 20 per cent destroyed and at least 50 persons were killed by a violent earthquake Sunday that toppled entire districts in six seconds of destruction, government officials reported today.
Work crews labored throughout the night filling wide cracks in the Cuzco airport so that a relief airlift of doctors, nurses, medicines and milk could begin flights from Lima. 350 miles west northwest.
The earthquake, most violent in this city's history, struck at 1:35 p.m. Sunday.
Russian Trip Causes Arrest
An army spokesman said a lieutenant and a sergeant of the Soviet mission were arrested when they returned from an unauthorized trip "outside the limitations prescribed for members of the Russian mission."
Frankfurt, Germany, May 22—(U.P)
-At least two and possibly four Russians were arrested by U. S. military police today for violating restrictions on members of the Soviet military mission here.
Germans working near the mission compound on the outskirts of Frankfurt said two other Russians also were arrested—a major and a civilian. They said all four, plus another Soviet civilian, were returned later to the compound under military police escort.
"Orders later were given for their release, and presumably they either will be or have been released," a spokesman said.
U. S. army headquarters said the Russians were taken to a military police station for questioning.
South Amboy, N. J., May 22—(U.P)
-The indicated death toll in Friday's munications explosion rose to 28 today when a stevedoring firm added two more names to the list of persons missing.
Explosion Death Toll 28
The Healing Company, whose crews were working on the docks at the time of the blast, said John Kinretsky, Jersey City, and Walter Sullivan, 36, Hoboken, had been missing since the disaster. The company's announcement boosted the number of missing to 24, there were four known dead.
Spring Concert To Be Tonight
Beethoven, Bach, Schumann, and von Weber will be represented on the program of the University Symphony orchestra at its spring concert at 8 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium.
Eugene Jennings, fine arts graduate student, will be featured on the piano in one of the major works of the evening, the "Concerto in A Minor" by Robert Schumann.
Osheim Is Head Of Delta Sigma Pi
Loyd Osheim, business junior,
was elected headmaster of Delta
Sigma Pi, professional business
fraternity. Thursday.
Others elected are William Blanchard, Treasurer; Cecil Nystrom, senior warden; Theodore Otta, chancellor; Melyin Rice, junior warden; Rovert Rudruff, scribe; and Glenn Starmer, historion.
F. T. Stockton, dean of University Extension, was re-elected faculty advisor. Robert Morrison and Don Plantz, instructors in economics, are assistant faculty advisors.
English Head Named To Replace Prof Clubb
James L. Wortham, today was named by Chancellor Deane W. Malott, as professor of English and chairman of that department at the University, effective July 1.
Professor Wortham, now assistant professor at the University of California at Los Angeles, will succeed Prof. M. D. Clubb, who asked relief from his administrative duties but will continue teaching.
For the past four years Professor Wortham has been in charge of the freshman English courses at U.C.L.A. His revamping of the instructional methods and instituting of teacher-training for those courses were considered most successful, explained Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Now 38 years old, professor Wortham has lived most of his life in Washington and California. He received the A.B. degree from U.C.L.A. in 1933 and the M.A. degree from the University of California at Berkeley in 1934. He earned the Ph.D. degree in 1939 from Princeton university. For the next three yeas he was an instructor at Occidental college in Los Angeles. There he also taught journalism and was adviser for the student paper that received an All-American rating.
In 1943 he entered the navy and studied Japanese at the Navy language school, Boulder, Colo. He did translation and acted as an interpreter both in the United States and in Japan after the war. He was released as a lieutenant (J.g.) in March of 1946 and joined the U.C.L.A. faculty.
Professor Wortham's field in research is Elizabethan English. He is married to the former Miss Mary Harper, once a resident of Kansas City. They have children aged 6, 4 and 1.
FROSH
CONTINENTAL AIRLINES
With the quarter almost over,
and the birdies on the wing,
El Studentes yearn for summer,
And the last few flings of Spring.
With the quarter almost over,
and the birdies on the wing,
El Studentes yearn for summer,
And the last few flings of Spring.
If you value your time at all
Continental you certainly will call
You'll be home in 1/2 the time
And in a pleasant frame of mind.
For Reservations or information call
your travel agent or NOrclay 3700,
Kansas City, Ticket Office Phillips
Hotel. Or Topeka, 3-2307, Ticket Of-
fice Municipal Airport.
!!!!!
For Reservations or Information call your travel agent or NOrclay 3700, Kansas City, Ticket Office Phillips Hotel. Or Topeka, 3-2307, Ticket Office Municipal Airport.
TO SEATTLE
TO SAN FRANCISCO
TO CALIFORNIA
LOS ANGELES
COLA FRANCISCO
PUERLO
Rancho San Diego
San Jose
Santa Fe
BUQUERQUE
Tacoma
Los Grapes
EL PASO
LA PACIFICA
TO CAPE MAY FALLS
DENVER
Garden City
La Jolla
Dodge City
Burleson
TULSA
DELA CITY
Phoenix
Fashion Institute of Technology
WICHITA
MINICHEIA
TO LONE LAKE
MASSACHUSETTS NEW YORK
TO CHICAGO
CHICAGO INSTITUTE OF ART
KANSAS CITY
TO OAK HILLS
WASHINGTON NEW YORK
TO ORLANDO
MIDWAY
TO PHILLIPS
LOSE AMONGES
TO DENVER
TRUTH OR CONQUESTION
TO BUQUERQUE
Tacoma
Los Grapes
EL PASO
LA PACIFICA
TO OLD MEXICO
TO SAN ANTONIO
CONNECTIONS TO CITIES EVERYWHERE
TO BOSTON
MISSISSippi
NEW OREARLAND
For Reservations or Information call your travel agent or NOrclay 3700, Kansas City, Ticket Office Phillips Hotel. Or Topeka, 3-2307, Ticket Office Municipal Airport.
If you value your time at all
Continental you certainly will call
You'll be home in ½ the time
And in a pleasant frame of mind.
CONTINENTAL AIR LINES
CONNECTIONS TO CITY EVERYWHERE
BE THERE instead of en route
fice MUNICIPALITY
TO SPAFTER
TO CAPPER
SOUTENAL FALLS
DENVER
TO MINECAPLE
CHICAGO
RESTORE
TO OLNE
WASHINGTON
NEW YORK
TO SAN FRANCISCO
TO BOCA DORE
TO OAKLAND
TO LOS ANGELES
TO COLOMBIO
PUELLO
Garden City
Topeka
BOUNDARY
Wichita
Dodge City
WICHITA
TUISA
TO BORRERVILLE
TAMPA
TO TULSA
TO NEW ORLEANS
MEETING AREA
PROPHESIUM
TUCSON
Traffic of Conquestures
SEABROOK
OUQUÉRIQUE
Ft. Siil
London
WICHITA FALLS
PROPHESSIUM
Los Gate
Cumberland
Rawell
BOOK
Midland
Big Spring
Odessa
San Angelo
TO OLD MEADOW
SAN ANTONIO
CONNECTIONS
FO CITIES
EVERYWHERE
TO AUSTIN
HISTORY
THE OREGON
CONTINENTAL
AIR LINES
CONTINENTAL AIR LINES
2, 1950
Topeka, KS.
e W,
nt at
ers he l coli he also adviser received
University Daily Kansan
Miss
nt of
children
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
STUDENT NEWSPAPER
Lawrence, Kansas
New K-State Head Named By Regents
Topeka, Kan., May 23—(U.P.)-Dr. James A. McCain, 42, president of Montana State University at Missoula, today was named president of Kansas State college in Manhattan.
Dr. McCain, whose appointment to the $13,500 a year job was announced by the Kansas board of regents, will succeed Dr. Milton S. Eisenhower July 1. President Eisenhower is going to Pennsylvania State college after seven years at the Kansas school.
The new, young K-State head has been Montana State president since 1945 when he was released from active navy duty as a lieutenant commander. Before entering the service in 1942, he had been on the staff of Colorado A. and M. college, Fort Collins.
Dr. Cain said he was deeply honored to be selected Kansas State president.
"I shall work untimely to merit the confidence shown by the board of regents," he told Hubert Brighton, board secretary. "The reputation of Kansas State college as one of the nation's greatest land-grant institutions is well known to me, as is President Eisenhower's record of magnificent leadership.
"I shall endeavor, with assistance from the faculty, students and people of Kansas to carry on in this splendid tradition."
Dr. McCain is a native of Spartanburg, S. C., where he received his bachelor's degree at Wofford College. Dr. Eisenhower described President McCain's selection as "great news for all Kansans and all friends of K-State. He is an educator and administrator of proved merit. He has a land-grant college background, is young, vigorous, and progressive. I am immensely pleased that I shall be able to turn my duties to him."
John Maxon, director of the University Museum of Art, said K.U. will be one of the few universities in the Mid-West to have a museum organ. Maxon plans to have organ retails twice a month in Spooner-Thayer next fall or early winter. The organ is now being tuned, and space will be provided for it in the museum.
The organ was purchased from St. John's Episcopal church in Abilene, Kan., the church Chancellor Malott once attended. The museum has been looking for an organ for many years.
An ardent football fan, according to Mr. Brighton, Dr. McCain came to Kansas yesterday and met the last two members of the board of regents he had not previously been introduced to.
Spooner-Thayer museum has acquired a pipe organ which will be used to give organ recitals for the public next fall.
It was in 1929 that he went to Colorado A. and M, the year he received a master's degree from Duke university.
The new K-State president is a member of the National Council of Boy Scouts of America, member of Rotary International, the American Psychological association, Pi Delta Epsilon, journalism honorary; Iota Lambda Sigma, industrial educationation honorary; and Sigma Upsilon, literary honorary. He is author of many articles for educational, farm and industrial journals.
Mrs. McCain is the former Janet Henry of Fort Collins, The McCains have one daughter, Sheila, 5. They are members of the Methodist church.
Art Museum Buys Organ
Summer Rush Rules Listed
University sororities must do all their summer rushing between midnight, July 14, and midnight, Aug. 15, according to rules announced today by the Panhellenic council.
Only 14 persons, including rushees, actives, alumnae, and their escorts, may be present at the average party. The only food served may be a dessert and drink. Each rushee will be allowed to attend one large party given by each sorority. An entire meal may be served at these parties, but the occasion may not be more than eight hours long.
During the periods from the close of school until July 15 and from Aug. 15 until the beginning of rush week, Sept. 8, there may be positively no contact between rushes and sorority women or alumnae.
At no time during the summer may sororites send gifts or give favors to rushees. The only communication with rushees besides letters is through invitations. Letters may be written to out-of-state girls, however.
Kansas City rushees may be ente-
chiority during the rpush period.
Violations of the rush rules may result in loss of social privileges by the sorority or special punishment prescribed by the Panhellenic council.
If bad weather causes commencement to be held in Hoch auditorium, caps and gowns will be turned in at Robinson gymnastium. If commencement is held in Memorial stadium, they will be turned in at the west end of the stadium.
Caps and Gowns Available June 3,4
Caps and gowns will be issued at Robinson gymnasium from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, June 3. and from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, June 4.
Lie Advocates UN Peace Plan Big Four Meet
London, May 23 (U.P.)—Trygve Lie, United National secretary general, confers today with British leaders on a 10-point, 20-year peace program calling for an early Big Four meeting, diplomatic sources said today.
Lie arrived early today from Paris, where he conferred with Premier Georges Bidault and Robert Schuman, French foreign minister, after spending 90 minutes with Premier Josef Stalin in Moscow in the past week.
Later in the day he will hold meetings here with Prime Minister Clement Attlee, British Prime Minister, and Ernest Bevin, foreign secretary. Wednesday night he will fly to the United States to see President Truman and Dean Acheson, U.S. secretary of state.
Diplomatic sources said Lie laid his 10-point plan before all Big Four leaders on his first meeting with each and now is seeking the West's reaction to Stalin's ideas.
United Nations sources said one of Lie's main points calls for an early meeting among President Truman, a fellow member of the United Nations, and framework of the United Nations.
He also was understood to have proposed calling a "peace session" of the United Nations security council at Geneva this summer and admission of the Chinese Communist regime to the U.N.
Shortly thereafter he was received in the Kremlin by Stalin for a visit lasting an hour and a half. Lie said that he was appalled with Stalin's reception
These were among the proposals Lie presented to Andrei Vishinsky, Sir Stephen minister, when he arrived in London, a conclusion of his first round of visits.
Reports from France indicated that Lie may have received more encouragement from the Soviet leader than he indicated. Robert Schuman, French foreign minister, commented that he had found Lie "has become an optimist again" as a result of his Moscow visit.
In his talks for peace, Lie was understood to have pressed hardest for his plan to hold a special "peace ses-sion" on January 21st in the Security council in Europe this summer.
Prime requisite for such a session is a solution of the question of Chinese Communist recognition. Agreement must be found on a method of face save before Russia can end her 18-week boycott of the U.N.
Extension Prepares Summer Programs
Johnson Plans Art Workshop
Nineteen schools, conferences, institutes, and workshops are planned by University Extension to make the summer months both interesting and profitable.
A summer art workshop will be conducted June 1 through the month of July. R. E. Johnson, assistant professor in architecture, said today.
In addition to individual projects the workshop will hold periodic seminars in which the group will discuss the history, theory, and commercial aspects of art. Local professional artists will be invited to participate in these discussions.
Included in the workshop will be the following divisions and their related subjects:
Painting division —medium, oil, watercolor, pastel, landscape, still life, figure, abstract, surrealist, mural design, and placement. Drawing —medium, pencil, pen and ink, charcoal, conte, still life, landscape, figure, fundamentals of perspective, layout, composition, and problems of visualization.
Sculpture—medium, clay, plaster wood, metal, plastic, abstract form, figure or portrait, relief ornament and mural, problems of sculpture in architecture, problems of sculpture in interior design, sculpture of crafts, and plaster casting. Display booth and commercial interiors—formal problems of display advertising developed in models and the problem of art related to sales in commercial interior worked out in model form.
Interior design - model contraction and plans, circulation, three dimensional organization, color, and pattern.
Landscape-model studies in outdoor space organization, building and landscape relation, outsideinside relation, mass shrubbery, and relating masses to building mass and topography.
Discusses Spanish Author
Herbert Ragsdale, graduate student, spoke on "Frias," the Mexican novelist, Thursday, at the last meeting this year of Sigma Delta Pi honorary Spanish fraternity.
Most KU Women Plan Careers
Out of 11 women interviewed nine plan to go into professional work, according to a spot check made recently on the campus. Only one admitted that she 'came to school in the first semester' and interviewers agreed that the choice of seeking a career or marriage was up to the individual woman.
Jenny-Lea McGowan, fine arts junior, said, "I want to go into medical art. I didn't come to school to get married, but I feel a woman should plan for a career as well as marriage. In case of the death of her husband a woman has to be able to take over."
Claribel Markeson, College sophomore, "hopes not to go into professional work." She said, "I didn't come to the University to get married—necessarily. I think a woman should do whatever she's suited for."
"Yes, I'm going into professional work when I receive my degree and I'm not here to get married," said Elaine Blaylock, College sophomore. "I don't see how you could make a
Emma Strain, graduate student, said she plans to go into professional work, and that she didn't come here to get married. "A woman should do whichever she wants, as far as choosing a career or marriage."
generalized statement as to whether a woman should seek a career or marriage. It depends on the circumstances and the person."
Molly Kelly, College junior, plans to go into teaching. "I came to school to get an education for teaching," she said. "Whether a woman seeks a career or marriage depends on the woman. Some are happier married, some are happier in a career, and some can combine the two."
"Yes, I do plan to go into professional work." Mary Ruthene Baker, pharmacy sophomore, said. "I didn't come to school to get married, but probably the most important. However, if a woman wants a career, she should not get married because she two don't mix."
Barbara Sells, College sophomore,
doesn't plan to go into professional work and didn't come to school to get married. "It depends entirely on the woman as to whether she should seek a career or marriage," she said. "The question cannot be answered yes or no because it depends on the individual."
Louise Sanborn, education junior, is "going to college to become a school teacher." She said, "I didn't come to school to get married, but I would certainly like to. I think a woman should get married, but I believe she should have a career to go into if she doesn't."
"I plan to be a medical technician," said Ruth Williams, College junior. She said, "I came to school to get an education and to get a man. A woman should seek a career in marriage."
Nursing will be the profession of Doris Kendall, College sophomore. She did not come to school to get married. Deciding between marriage or a career "depends on the individual person."
The schedule at the Lawrence center of the University Extension includes: June 6 to 8, bank management clinic; June 6 to 17, silver-silver workshop; June 8 to 9, P.T.A. conference; June 7 to 17, A.C.E. workshop; June 11 to 18, Girls State; June 17 to 18, Girls State alumnae; June 12 to 13, school administrators and life adjustment conferences; June 13 to 15, fire casualty, and marine insurance school.
June 14 to 16, water and sewage school; June 19 to 30, health education conference; June 26 to 30, peace officers training school; June 26 to 30, court reporters school; June 30 to July 1, physical education conference.
July 10 to 15, steelworkers institute; July 12 to 14, civil aeronautics conference; July 17 to 22, credit bureau institute; July 24 to 26, L. P. gas service school; July 31 to Aug. 5, life insurance marketing school; Aug. 1 to 3, restaurant managers school.
These activities are planned in cooperation with the University summer session. E. A. McFarland, manager of institutes and conferences for the University Extension, handles all applications and registrations for these summer courses. He also makes arrangements for housing accommodations for those who attend them.
After throwing the tar on the staircase, the powder coated feathers on the tack coatings
A large scale reproduction of a slide rule was fastened around Uncle Jimmy's feet with a chain and four padlocks.
A new angle in the age-old campus feud was discovered when "Uncle Jimmy" Green got a coat of tar and feathers sometime early this morning. It replaced the usual paint that decorates the statue from time to time.
Jimmy' Gets Feathered
Four of the University's painters were busy this morning with the difficult task of cleaning the asphalt floor, the law school's famed landmark.
The editors and business managers for next year's K-Book, Student Directory, and K.U. Calendar were chosen today by the publications committee of the All Student Council.
Campus Editors Announced Today
It is rumored that one group of persons lured the campus police to another part of the campus while companions worked on Uncle Jimmy.
Bill Buechel, college junior, was chosen as editor of the Student Directory and John Griffin, college so-called, invested the business manager position.
The editor of next year's K-Book will be Jerome Lysaught, College sophomore. Don Ellis, College freshman, will be business manager. Floyd Grimes, College junior, and James Gurley, College sophomore, will be editor and business manager respectively of the K.U. Calendar.
THE WEATHER
KANSAS—Partly cloudy tonight and Wednesday, somewhat warmer extreme west tonight, turning cooler northwest and extreme north Wednesday afternoon.
AGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1950
FREIDA SAHN
Alpha Phi—Wichita
PAT LANDIS Alpha Chi Omega—Wichita
NANCY JANE LINDSEY
Pi Beta Phi—Lawrence
1958
JOANNE MANNON
Locksley—Tulsa, Oklahoma
KAY SHELTON
Kappa Kappa Gamma, Wichita
1950
DONNA McCOSH Chi Omega—Salina
Bon voyage for the summer!
But when the ships come sailing home in the fall, it's
Get ABOARD the COLLEGE BOARD
Again, at Weaver's! A ship shape idea to breeze thru college shopping as quick as the tide can carry you to Weaver's! It's a wise sailor who waits to check home port with ten saucy shipmates before buying fall togs - So, set your sights on just right College Board fashions that point straight as a compass to K.U.
- At Weavers
- Second Floor - Ready to Wear
- September 12 to 16
- From 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
12483
DONNA HICKS Corbin Hall—Norton
STATEN ISLAND
JONELL ASHCRAFT
Gamma Phi—Ashland
Mary Ellen
MARTHA CARPENTER
Delta Gamma - Lawrence
GRACE ENDACOTT Delta Delta Delta—Lawrence
}
TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
0
Little Man On Campus
by Bibler
A
PUB ER
P.B. "39"
500 word theme: "The Private Life of William Shakespeare." Shakespeare was born in—Dear Louise.
How are things going on the farm? I'm writing this letter in class while Professor Snarf raves on—
Gadget-Conscious Natives Like US Super Can Opener
Washington, May 23—(U.P.)—Before many weeks, there will be more can openers than there are white folks in the thriving little town of Usumbura in the Belgian Congo.
It's like this.
Not long ago the United Press cabled a piece to the dark continent about a new American invention—a can opener that not only opens cans but has a magnet attached which holds onto the top so it won't get into the pea juice.
The story told all about man's struggles across the years to perfect something that would open a can the way a can should be opened. It mentioned that inventors by the hundreds have flooded the U.S. patient office in an effort legally to get into the can-oneming business.
The magnetic opener described was a super-duper number patented by the Rival Manufacturing company of Kansas City, Mo. It was called a can-o-mat. It opened the can and caught the top on a magnet at the same time. Not only that, it pioneered in easier cleaning of openers. All the little woman has to do is to flick her finger to release a small bar, which holds the cutter in place. From there on, it's easy to rinse the cutter and get the sardine grease off it.
First can opener on record was developed in 1858 by one Ezra J. Warner. The housewife operated the thing by holding it upright over the can with one hand and whacking it with the palm of the other until either the can or the hand was punctured.
Lange Elected AIERE Chairman
Edward H. Lange, engineering senior, was elected chairman of the American Institute of Electrical and Radio Engineers at a recent meeting.
Other officers elected are Lyle J Chapman, engineering senior, vicepresident; Charles W. Stephens, engineering sophomore, IRE secretary; James S. Heaton, engineering junior, AIEE secretary; Earl W. Petty, engineering freshman, treasurer.
Earl C. Windisch, engineering junior, senior representative; Forrest K. Bland, engineering sophomore, junior representative; Kenneth E. King, engineering junior, intramural manager.
Well, the good ladies of Usumurb took a fancy to the story and apparently got together and mailed an order.
That posed a problem for the Rival people.
No money came with the order and it'll have to go collect. The openers sell in this country from $4.98 to $7.95. (That information is part of the story and not a free ad.)
But in order to deliver the goods, the company is going to have to get about $15 to $22 apiece for the things, including shipping charges.
Anyhow, the things are on the way.
And they'll get to the Congo like this:
Then they go by slow train across that country to a lake on its western border where the railroad runs into a dead end. From there they go a couple of hundred miles up the lake to their destination.
Official Bulletin
Christian Science organization regular meeting, 7.30 p.m. Thursday Danforth chapel.
The shipping companies have no idea how long all this will take and hope that the women of Usumbura have some other way to open their canned stuff in the meantime. The town ordered 216 openers.
First they will travel aboard a steamer from New York to a port on the east coast of Tanganyika.
The following are notified to appear before Student Court, 7:30 p.m. today Green hall basement; William P. Petrich, Lewis L. Sandige, Edward Balda, Richard A. Moore, Richard A. Zlotsky, Richard Griffin Stutz, Alzert Sim.
Tuesday, May 23
Jobs Plentiful For Pharmacists
Spring semester parking permits expire at noon, June 10. Applications for summer session permits are now being received at 200 Old Fowler shops. All parking regulations will be enforced during finals and during the commencement period.
Read, the Daily Kansan daily.
Graduating seniors in the School of Pharmacy have had tentative jobs for over a month, said J. Allen Reese, dean of the School of Pharmacy, in a recent interview.
There is such a great demand for pharmacists, explained Dean Reese, that many positions which were offered to graduating seniors will not be filled. He gave one example of a manufacturer who was looking for eight graduating pharmacists and got one.
The outlook for the entire pharmaceutical profession is dominated by the prospects in retail drug stores. About 90,000 registered pharmacists were employed in the nation's 50,000 drug stores in 1949, representing about 90 percent of all those in the profession.
There is however, a possibility of overcrowding in the long run if enrollments in pharmacy colleges continue at the present high levels. In view of the trend toward increasing drug sales and toward shorter working hours in the profession, it seems probable that many drug stores will have to take on additional pharmacists. It is also expected that there will be an increase in the number of drug stores in the country.
There will also be increased opportunities in manufacturing and wholesaling, which employed about 6,500 members of the profession in 1949; in the armed forces and the police; and as teachers, law-enforcement officials, and writers for pharmaceutical publications.
In addition, it is roughly estimated that around 3,000 pharmacists will be needed yearly in the next few years to replace those who die, retire or transfer to other fields of work. The relatively high replacement needs of this profession result from the fact that a high proportion of the nation's active pharmacists are over 60 years of age.
Mary Ann Campbell, College; freshman, was elected treasurer of the Negro Student association and William Ferguson, College junior, was elected program chairman Thursday.
Campbell Elected NSA Treasurer
Members of the program committee are Albert Grayson, engineering sophomore, and Suzanne Thompson. College freshman.
After the meeting, a program was given by Otis Simmons, fine arts junior, and Virginia Ferguson and Jeroy Brimsey, College sophomores, under the direction of Jannith Lewis, College freshman.
The 1949-50 senior class over the country totals nearly 6,000 establishing an all-time record. Nevertheless, there will probably continue to be a moderate shortage of trained personnel at least until 1951. After that, overcrowding in some areas, particularly big cities, if enrollments continue at the 1949-50 level, the Deon said.
Lee Meyerson, assistant professor of psychology, has been invited to participate in a symposium on the psychological aspects of the physically disabled at the annual meeting of the American Psychological association. The group will meet at Pennsylvania State college in September.
Professor Meyerson will discuss his research findings on the social psychology of the physically handicapped.
Meyerson Invited To Symposium
Wonder If Story Was Rocky
Worland. Wyo.—(U.P.)—Twelve-year-old Buck Kubiak didn't let the lack of a gun stop him when he spotted a large bobcat. He used rocks to make the kill and is displaying the hide to prove his story.
Summer Kansan Starts June 9
The final issue of the University Daily Kansan for this semester will be published Wednesday. The first issue of the Summer Session Kansan will appear Friday, June 9. It will be published each Tuesday and Friday.
Grinstead To Hold Writer's Clinic
Miss Frances Grinstead, assistant professor of journalism at the University, will again conduct a Writing clinic for the Missouri Women's Press club, June 2 to 4 at Maryville, Mo.
This informal institute is conducted by the Missouri Women's Press club as a service to Missouri and Kansas women who may wish instruction in the writing of news, features and editors under a teacher or journalist. A portion of the news-paperwoman. A portion of the session will be spent in showing the newspaperwomen how they may direct material to magazine sale.
This year the Writing clinic will also be open to non-members. Those attending will be dormitory guests of Northwest Missouri State college, and will pay a nominal fee, probably $5, for meals and expense. Non-members pay an additional tuition fee of $5 for the three days.
The first session opens at 2 o'clock Friday, June 2. There will be a concentrated Saturday session, with the Writing clinic over after Sunday and Tuesday. Miss Grinstead says the program will combine fun with information.
Advance registrations may be sent to: North South Buchanan street, Mavilleville.
Those attending the clinic are also being allowed to submit manuscripts at a slight additional fee, since the clinic itself does not include this service. However, Miss Grinstead will receive only manuscripts from those planning to attend the Writing clinic.
The major source of uranium in the United States is carnotite, a canary-yellow, earthy-looking material found chiefly in Colorado.
Telfel Joins Topek Capital
For Summer As Conv Editor
In the summer of 1948 Mr. Telelf worked as night news editor of radio station WHAM in Rochester, N.Y., on a radio internship sponsored by the Council on Radio Journalism.
Emil L. Telfel, assistant professor of journalism, has been added to the staff of the Topeka Daily Capital for the summer as a copy editor. He will start work at the end of the present semester.
ISA Sets Up Ward Council
Eight men were chosen by the I.S.A. Executive council to serve on the Inter-Ward council for the first six weeks of the 1950-51 school year, Richard Krimminger, president, announced.
New Inter-Ward council members are: Allyn Browne, Donald Giffin, and Samuel Boyer, College juniors; John David Nieder, College sophomore; Donald Schick and Edwin Stene, College freshmen; and James Lee Bennett and Raymond Stevenson, education juniors.
The I.W.C. members will be presidents of six new wards to be set up in September 1950. After six weeks each ward will hold elections for its own officers. Browne, I.W.C. chairman and Giffin, I.W.C. representative to I.S.A. council will serve the entire year. The Inter-Ward council set up by I.S.A. is to organize and plan for new wards.
The Inter-Ward council will consist of one representative from each of the six wards and one member of I.S.A. Officers will be president, vice-president, secretary, social chairman, and business manager. Business manager is appointed by the I.S.A. officers are elected by the I.W.C. The chairman of the I.W.C. is to be a permanent member of the I.S.A.
A system of joint membership between the wards and I.S.A. will exist. Only I.S.A. members living in unorganized houses, may become ward members of the district in which they live. This is effective as of September, 1950.
Must Solve Problems, Pastor Tells IVCF
Jesus Christ has the solution to the problems of the world. Rev. David Hause, pastor of the Chelsea Baptist church, Kansas City, Kan., told 50 members of Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship at a picnic and meeting May 19 at Potter lake.
We are living close together in "one world" that is growing smaller day by day. Rev. House said. One word means that we have "world problems."
"We are concerned with world pro-
tective supply, and world trade," he said.
A solution must be found for these world problems and the solution must be world wide, he stated.
University Daily Kansan
Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University except Saturdays and Sundays. University Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1950
Congratulations
Mary M. Crawford
7
CLASS of 1950
Members of the Class of 1950 are indeed uniquely distinguished by the grace of Father Time himself. . For they will graduate into the world of adult affairs just in time to take part in the launching of the second half of the fabulous 20th Century. . . To them our best wishes for a happy and successful career.
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TUESDAY, MAY 23.1950
6285
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
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Helen Pete Maduros Has Been A Leader Since Grade School
Helen Pete Maduros, YWCA president, began her extra-curricular activities in the sixth grade as a class commissioner. In high school at Junction City she was president of an organization similar to Y.W.C.A.
When Pete came to the University, she was soon recognized as a leader. Last year she was president of the freshman class at Corbin hall.
Pete's brothers and sister went to Kansas State college. The reason she came to K.U. was "to see if everything up here was as terrible as they said. I expected to see everyone, wearing numbers on their backs." Apparently Pete likes her choice because she is campaigning for K.U. as chairman of Geary county Statewide Activities. She also talked one brother into coming to the University.
Before Pete became president of Y.M.C.A. she was membership chairman.
Pete was elected representative of District 1 in the All Student Council election. As for her opinion of campus politics, she said "we can only end and see what happens next year." If this doesn't work, vote. If a student doesn't vote now he won't vote when he gets out of school."
She is a member of the A.W.S. President's council and Jay Janes. With such a list of activities Pete hasn't had time to choose a major. In her leisure time she likes to swim and play classical music.
Pete hopes to go to Europe this summer with a Y.M.C.A. group. If they go to Greece she could act as interpreter, as she speaks and writes Greek.
Gray Is 'Dream Girl'
Phyllis Gray, fine arts freshman was selected as the "Dream Girl of Pi Kappa Alpha" at the fraternity annual formal held recently at the Lawrence Country club.
Attendents to the "Dream Girl" were Dorothy Glamann, College junior, and Carol Squire, education junior. Miss Gray is a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Miss Glamann is a member of Sigma Kappa sorority, and Miss Squire is a member of Alpha Phi sorority.
The guests were: Carmen Novak, Dorothy Poindexter, Mildred Roach, Roberta Elder, Dorothy Vickery, Donna Karr, Nancy Taggart, Phyllis Gray, Dorothy Dudley, Carol Squire, Elizabeth Dillon, Dorothy Glamann, Bonita Clark, Avanelle Allen, Donna Hill.
June McCleenny, Jane Dunnire
Shirley Rothberger, Edna Symns.
Nita Brewster, Jean McGinnis, Patricia Jansen, Carol Martin, Thelma Sprout, Donna Rubieck, Scott Scott, Betty Lewis, Lucinda Stevens, Gay Bonney, Marilyn Lind.
Alice Ann Sellers, Suzan Armentrout, Mary Lou Ketchum, Neville Stephan, Betty Bull, Josephine, White, Elaine Elvig, Helen Johnson, Lujean Hubbell, Jim Conell, Bob Brock, and Lee Turner.
Betty Rich, Delores Dyer, Marilyn Ferguson, Mary Maple, Rosalie Montaleone, Donna Van Zandt, Arlene Ehnsau, Jerre Ann Johnston, Ellen Corbett, and Jackie Smith, all of Kansas City. Betty Hanson, Caldwell, Lois Cramer, Coffeville; Juanita Wurm, Belpre; Pattye Allison and Colery Fole, Topeka
Chaperons for the dance were Mrs. R. H. Wilson, Mrs. B. A. Weber, Mrs. Andrew G. McKay, and Mrs. Clark Mandigo.
McCrea Engagement
The engagement of Miss Virginia McCrea, daughter of Mr. and Mrs Harry B. McCrea of Topeka, to Mr. Donald R. Hyten, son of Mr. and Mrs.Harley H. Hyten of Wellington, was announced recently at the spring formal dance of Delta Chi fraternity.
The wedding will be in Danforth Chapel on September 7. A reception at the Delta Chi chapter house will follow.
Miss McCrea is a College sophomore. Hr. Hyten is a senior in the School of Business and will enter the School of Law in September. He is also a member of Alpha Kappa Psi, commerce fraternity, and Beta Gamma Sigma, business fraternity.
BARRY M. BROOKS
HELEN PETE MADUROS
Sig Alph Formal
Guests at the spring formal of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity May 20 were: Peggy Circle, Anne Jordan, Mary Jo Wilhite, Gerre Mahan, Virginia Osborne, Joan Bagby, Georgia Harrington, Virginia Yancy, Sidney Ashton, Bonnie Strickler, Anne Cordray, Donna Davis, Heila Graves, Priscilla Richmond, Jan Hunter, Joan Bigham.
Elinor Rice, Vineta Mowrey, Betsy Dillon, Mitzi Angwin, Virginia Orthwein, Jeanne Bowman, Anne Lambert, Betty Menzie, Mary Lou Martin, Helen Miller, Matilda Mack, Janice Horn, Marlene Nickel, Letitia Engel.
Karen Hall, Ann Wagner, Denise Coleman, Donna Schmaus, Susan McKee, Betsy Bowers, Jeannine Kahn, Janet Baker, Anne Lehman, Dona Umberger, Joanna Schrag, Shirley Grounds, Sue Ihinger, Shirley Siefkin.
Georgiine Earlywine, Mary Ann
Hooch, Marian Hoecker, Louise
Brunner, Peres Stubbs, Marylin
Brown, Bardelle Agnes Husband,
Ann Ackernay.
Chaperons were Mrs. Ralph Parks, Mrs. R.H. Wilson, Mrs. P.W. Henry, and Mrs. Glenn Porter.
Emlin North was elected president of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity for the school year of 1950-51 recently. Dick Tatum was chosen as vice-president.
Pi Kappa Alpha Officers
Other officers are Jack Waller,
treasurer; Ted Barbera, historian;
Frank McSpadden, pledge trainer;
Roy Wilbur, social chairman; Dick
Harper, secretary; Joe Brown,
housemanager; Charles Kirkpatrick,
rush captain.
Newman Club Gives Living Rosary
Roger Tuttle, sergeant-at-arms;
tary; Norman Scott, intramural
chairman; Bill Howard, alumni secre-
tary; Jim Grey, song leader; Bill
Schmidt, activities chairman; Lester
Davis, scholarship chairman, and
Bob Miller, parliamentarian.
The traditional Living Rosary was recited Sunday by members of the Newman club, Roman Catholic student group, on the lawn of Danforth chapel.
The May queen, June Seymour,
College sophomore, placed a crown
of white flowers on the head of a
statue of Mary. Attendants in the
queen's court were: Allene Wenke,
College senior; Marcia Hail, College
junior; Patricia Kennedy, College
sophomore; Arlene Hill, education
junior; and Patricia Jansen, journalism
junior.
The procession beginning at the Union building moved south to Danforth chapel. It was led by a color guard composed of Michael Quinn, College junior; Thomas Carr, engineering sophomore; Richard Vaughn, college engineering freshman; and Lawrence Helmstetter, pharmacy freshman.
The color-bearers were William Hadel, engineering sophomore, and Robert J. Miller, third year law. Leo Conner, engineering junior, was cross-bearer.
The queen was escorted by John Bergmann, College junior. The escorts for the queen's attendants were: Kenneth Dieker, business senior; Thomas Fritzlen and Frank Scanlan, engineering senior; and George Williams, engineering sophomore.
Smith-Ackerman
Corbin hall announces the engagement of Miss Nancy Deane Smith, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. C. Herbert Smith of Pittsburg, to Mr. Thomas J. Ackerman, son of Mrs Henry C. Ackerman of Kansas City, Kan.
B. G.
MISS SMITH
The engagement was announced in a house meeting by Mrs. Treva Brown, housemother, and Miss Mary Lou Conrod. The wedding will be July 1 at the First Methodist church, Pittsburg.
Johnson's Car Plate
Miss Smith is a journalism senior, Mr. Ackerman is a graduate of the School of Engineering and Architecture and a member of Triangle fraternity.
Triangle Mother's Day Tea
The Kansas chapter of Triangle fraternity held their annual Mother's Day tea at the chapter house May M. Finnin in the park, Miss Mary Brown, Marion Mills and Doris Miller of Alpha Phi and Miss Margaret Hoops of Alpha Omicron Pi poured.
Triangle Mother's Day Tea
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Pinnings And Engagements Announced
Barber-Michel
Corbin hall announces the engagement of Miss Catherine Barber, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ward Barber of Abilene, to Mr. Cloudy Michel, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Michel of Signouree, Iowa.
The announcement was made at dinner recently by Mrs. Treva Brown, housemother, who wore a corsage of white Japanese iris. Miss Barber wore a purple orchid.
Miss Barber is a College senior. Mr. Michel is a senior in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
Hudson-Ditmer
The pinning of Miss Dottie Hudson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hudson, El Dorado, to Mr. Jim Ditter, son of Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Ditmer of Tulsa, Oklahoma, is announced by Chi Omega sorority.
Miss Hudson received a corsage of orchids. Her attendants, Miss Joan Bigham, Miss Virginia Osborne, and Miss Helen Graves, wore corsages of gardenias and carnations.
Miss Hudson is a junior in fine arts. Mr. Ditner, an engineering senior at Tulsa university, is a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity.
Follett-Arthurs
Chi Omega sorority announces the pinning of Miss Kathleen Follett to Mr. David Arthurs recently.
Miss Follett, who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W.C. F. Collett, Arkansas City, received a corsage of red orchids. Mr. Arthurs is the son of Mr. and Mrs. David Mize, Atchison.
Miss Tish Engel and Miss Priscilla Barron were her attendants and they received corsages of red and yellow carnations.
Miss Follett is an education sophomore. Mr. Arhurs, a College sophomore, is a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity.
Schutz-Ratner
Dr. and Mrs. Carl Bryant Schutz of Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Adelaide, to Mr. Payne H. Ratner, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Ratner of Wichita.
Miss Schutz is a College freshman, and a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Mr. Ratner will be graduated this June from the law school at the University. He belongs to Beta Theta P flaternity.
Allen-Halferty
Miller hall announces the engagement of Miss Betty Gayle Allen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Phil Allen of Wichita, to Mr. Donald Halferty, son of Mrs. B.L. Halferty of Wichita. The announcement was made by Mrs. R.G. Roche, housemother.
Misses Yvonne Morrow and Erma Handke passed chocolates. Miss Allen's corsage was of red rose-buds that illies of the valley. Her mother, Miss Ailis, and the attendants wore corsages of mixed spring flowers.
Miss Allen is a College freshman. Mr. Halferty is employed in Wichita. The wedding has been set for Sept. 3
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1950
KANSAS
WINNER AND STILL CHAMPION—Some folks thought Bob Karnes, Jayhawker track captain, would have trouble at the Big Seven track and field meet at Lincoln the past Saturday. A week previous Karnes was beaten in the mile run by Missouri's Bill McGuire. The Daily Kansan put it this way two days before the meet:
“. . . read next Monday's Daily Kansan and see how Bob Karnes won his third consecutive conference outdoor title in the mile and set a new league record in doing it.”
And Karnes came through, winning in the record-breaking time of 4 minutes 12.6 seconds. McGuire trailed by 15 yards.
Bowers Sacrifices Possible Record To Give KU 14 Points Instead Of 10
Bv RICHARD DILSAVER
If you should happen to be wondering why Pat Bowers lost the 880-yard run at the Big Seven track and field championships Saturday, here is the answer: Pat Bowers is a team man.
The K.U. All-American was willing to sacrifice his chances for victory in his specialty, the 880, and a record as well just so he could score more points for his team.
Pat's conqueror, Bill Jacobs of Oklahoma, didn't run the mile. He stayed out so he could better his chances for beating the Jayhawker ace in the half-mile.
Bowers, too, could have seratched from the mite entries and gone into the 830 fresh, for he well realized Jacobs was a serious threat. Instead, Patrick, displayed some of the finest team spirit you'll ever see.
He ran the mile and scored six points, turning in a good time of 41:17. Some 30 minutes later though, he didn't have enough left to win the 880. But he did score eight points. That's 14 points. Had he run the half-mile alone, he'd have gotten 10 at best.
There's your answer: Pat Bowers is a team man.
TRACK NOTES
A look-see at the scoring chart of the meet gives added emphasis to a point we made the past Thursday: K.U. should have had some young plants who were out for spring footwear. They could easily be stead. They could easily have given the Jayhawkers the conference championship.
You can get just so many points out of a certain number of men. In compiling 78 points on the track, eight Kansans outdid an equal number of Nebraskans by 17 points But Nebraska had 10 men to gain 44 3-4 points in the field as compared to three Kansans giving 514. And
This is a good place to take time out to congratulate Emil Schutzel for being named captain of the 1851 track squad.
not a single one of those Jayhawkers was a weight man.
First to offer the little man congratulations in "ceremonies" during the evening meal stop at Nebraska City (it's become tradition to make the choice there) on the return trip from Lincoln was the 1959 captain,
Phi Gams, Jim Beam Take IM Titles
Phi Gamma Delta swept the "A" and "B" fraternity softball championship Monday. Jim Beams Dream Team copped the independent "A" championship, while Phi Chi became independent "B" champ with a close 6 to 5 win over the Physics department.
The Phi Gam "A" team upset the dope bucket by defeating seeded Sigma Phi Epsilon 8 to 6, while their "B"队 routed Kipha Kappa 17 to 1, Jim Beam edged out Alpha Chi Sigma 10 to 7 for their championship.
The Fhi Gam "A" team was held scoreless for the first two innings but scored in every inning after that except the sixth. Obviously a bit nervous at game time, the Fijis suddenly came to life in the third inning with three runs that put them ahead by a 3-1 count.
The Sig Eps came back in their half of the third to tie the score but that was the closest they ever came. Three successive bunts, two of them safe, put runners on second and third with one out. The next two Sig Ep batters hit and the base runners came home on fielders' choices.
The Fhi Gams scored one in the fourth, one in the fifth, were held scoreless in the sixth, and came to
bat in the first half of the seventh inning with a 5-4 lead. They scored three runs in this frame, two on Phi Gam first baseman Dale Mallon's long homer to left field with one on.
Shelby Smith turned in a masterful pitching performance for the Phi Gams. He helped his own cause, with two singles. Jack Shields, third baseman, and Bill Porter, second baseman, each had three singles for the Phi Gams, who collectively blasted out fourteen hits off Fletcher Bell, Sig Ep hurler.
Jim Beam scored four runs in each of the third and sixth innings to give them the margin of victory. AXE tied the score at 6-6 with a three run rally in the fourth inning but Jim Beam's big sixth inning was too much for them. Hobart Woody, AXE pitcher, hit a two-run triple in the third and later came in himself on an error.
O. J. Kaufman pitched for the winners. Jack Tenenbaum, Jim Beam shortstop, made some beautiful stops from his position and contributed a two-run triple and a single to the winners attack.
Phi Chi overcame an early deficit with a three-run fourth inning that
game them a 4-2 lead. The last innings saw the lead see-saw back and north until Phi Chi sewed things up with a two-run splurge in the sixth. The Physics Department hacked away at Royal Barker, Phi Chi pitcher for single runs that kept them in close range. But they were never able to get more than two counters in one inning.
The elusive wind-up of Ed Jahr, who pitched for the physicists, had no effect on the Phi Chi batters, they touched Jahr for solid lins drives, including Marvin Dunn's two-run line single in the big third inning.
The Phi Gam "F" team had little trouble in gaining its 17-1 victory over the Phi Pis. A seven run third inning spelled defeat for the Phi Pis. Dick Mason, Phi Psi pitcher, was helpless against the booming Fiji bats that collected numerous extra base hits. Buzz Hargis, the winning pitcher, and Jim Potts each hit home runs for the winners.
Hargis pitched what was perhaps his best game of the season in setting down the Phi Psis, noted for their hitting, with a single run in the fifth inning. He had complete control all the way.
Beta Golfers Win I-M Championship
Led by Ham Lynch's sparkling, two-under par 66, Beta Theta Pi captured the intramural spring golf championship the past weekend. The Beta three-man team had a total nine-hole score of 223. On the Beta team besides Lynch were Bob Dunne and John White. Alpha Tau Omega was second with 231. Other entries and their scores were Phi Delta Theta 235, Delta Tau Delta 241, Sigma Alpha Epsilon 252, Phi Kappa 257, Phi Gamma Delta 259, and Sigma Phi Epsilon 264. Tau Kappa Epsilon scratched.
Karl Estes, A.T.O., and Jordan Haines, Phi Delt posted scores of 72, second to Lynch's 66.
Major League Standings By UNITED PRESS National League
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Brooklyn | 18 | 10 | .643 | |
| Philadelphia | 17 | 11 | .607 | 1 |
| St. Louis | 15 | 13 | .536 | 3 |
| Boston | 15 | 13 | .536 | 3 |
| Pittsburgh | 15 | 15 | .500 | 4 |
| Chicago | 12 | 13 | .480 | 4½ |
New York | 10 | 14 | .417 | 4 |
Cincinnati | 7 | 20 | .259 | 10½ |
American League
New York 12 8 724
Detroit 17 9 654 $^{2 \frac{1}{2}}$
Boston 20 15 571 4
Washington 16 12 571 $^{4}$
Cleveland 15 14 517 6
Philadelphia 10 19 345 11
St. Louis 7 16 304 11
Chicago 7 20 259 13
National League
Cincinnati 1. Brooklyn 5
American League
Curb service after 4 p.m.
Washington 1, Detroit 5
New York 7, Cleveland 2
Boston 9, Chicago 10 (10 innings)
Bob Karnes, Said Karnes, "Now Emil,
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man, so his teammates got a good
laugh out of that.
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Delta Gamma Edges Corbin For Women's Softball Title
Delta Gamma nosed past Corbin 7 to 6 Monday afternoon to win the women's softball championship. The outcome brought the D.G.'s "sweet revenge" for their upset loss to Corbin of the volleyball title earlier in the year, and blasted Corbin's hopes for a triple crown.
Corbin lived up to expectations in the first half of the game as they pushed over 6 runs in their first three trips to bat, while allowing four runs. The belted out two homeruns, one on an error, and a three-baser, among other long hits, to score two runs an inning. Delta Gamma's lone run came on Dodson's sneak home from third in the second inning while Corbin players "talked it up" after catching an infield fly.
But the second half of the contest saw the teams trade positions as Corbin slipped and Delta Gamma came roaring back into the game with a three-run rally in their half of the third. With suddenly improved hitting and capitalizing on Corbin errors in the field, they duplicated the feat in the fourth frame to take over the lead. Their pitcher then blanked Corbin the last two innings to protect her margin.
Dodson pitched an 11-hit game for the D.G.'s fanning four and walking three. Backing up the plate was Schindler, a substitute catcher.
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TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1950
PAGE SEVEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Spotlight On Sports
By BOB NELSON
Daily Kansan Sports Writer
Coach J. V. Sikes and his fine coaching staff recently completed one of the most successful spring football practice sessions in the school's history.
Kansas gridiron prospects look rosy for the future, especially with an improved schedule to start in 1952. In that year, K.U. will open a four-year home and home series with Southern Methodist university, playing in Dallas the first year.
It is hoped that Kansas can add a Big Ten school to its schedule by 1952 to go along with Oklahoma A. and M. and Texas Christian university, usually two of the Midwest's annual grid powers.
From the looks of things, the 1950 K.U. football team will overshadow the over-all athletic program unless some key changes are made at Memorial stadium, and made at an EARLY date.
Here are a few of the improvements needed to keep our athletic program on par with the caliber of football that can be expected in the future from Coach Sikes' gridiron machine.
No. 1, Coach Sikes' footballers are confronted with playing on the worst turf in the Big Seven conference, yet K.U. owns as fine a stadium as any member school except possibly Oklahoma. The Sooners recently spent considerable money in remodeling their
medium and resodding the playing field to help give their fans the best in football.
Things are pretty bad when even the players talk about having to play on the most inferior turf in the conference. We've heard several complaints from players concerning the poor footing and holes, to say nothing of the lack of sod that the Jayhawkers are forced to play on in Memorial stadium.
With K.U. football drawing several capacity or near capacity crowds during the past few years, is there any good reason why the Memorial stadium field hasn't been resodded and put in A-1 condition?
Thurlo E. McCrady, Kansas State director of athletics, recently announced that Kansas State's stadium playing field was being resold to be in A-1 condition for the 1950 season. Is K.U. to be outdone by our neighboring cousins up the Kaw?
Kansas' 1950 opener with Texas Christian university, Sept. 23, is still over four months away. We see no reason why K.U. can not field its football team this fall on as good a playing turf as any other conference member, but some definite action will have to be taken, and right away.
Attractive 1950 home football schedule calls for Texas Christian university, Colorado, Oklahoma A. and M., Nebraska (homecoming), and Oklahoma to invade Memorial stadium to tangle with Coach Sikes' up-and-coming Jayhawkers.
The Oklahoma and Nebraska games will probably draw upwards to 40,000 fans with the T.C.U. game attracting about 35,000. Certainly crowds like these would help defray expenses incurred in completely adding the playing field.
No. 2 improvement would probably repay for itself in a few years. Although efficiently handled by one of the conference's best sports publicity directors, Don Pierce, the working press at KU, football games is housed in one of the worst press boxes in the Big Seven.
Recently a strong wind blew the loof off one of the radio broadcasting booths atop the permanent press box. Maybe it would have been better had the wind blown all of the temporary booths away and made the radio broadcasters happy to have either an improvement of facilities or no booths at all.
The press box, in its present location, occupies potentially about 1,000 choice $3 seats between the 40-yard lines. By raising the press box 15 to 20 feet and projecting it slightly over the side of the stadium top, it should add about $3,000 additional revenue a game.
Last year Oklahoma rebuilt its press box to include every convenience conceivable to help sports writers cover the Sooner's home games. The working press is now served free hot meals, has the use of the latest individual silent-type intercom telephone service, and an elevator that runs from the ground level to the three-decked press box.
In its present condition, newspaper men and radio broadcasters probably detest receiving assignments to cover K.U. football games at Memorial stadium. Is it right that they should encounter inferior working conditions when they help make Kaunas football what it is?
When nationally known sports figures like Red Barber and Harry Wismer broadcast the Jayhawkers' games coast-to-coast, we should be able to offer them first-class accommodations and not merely put a roof over their heads, as it now the case.
No. 3 improvement, and an important one, has to do with improving the dressing and equipment room facilities for the football team under the East stadium. Several not too expensive improvements would do wonders to improve the sanitary conditions for K.U. football players and coaches.
No. 4 improvement needed is a modern up-to-date electric clock and scoreboard. The present scoreboard, if operating properly, gives only the time, quarter, and score.
The majority of Big Ten and Southwest conference schools have the most modern scoreboards and clocks available. Just how many $3 admissions out of a near 40,000 capacity crowd would it take to purchase a modern first-class scoreboard for Memorial stadium? Certainly our record breaking attendances the past four years should have provided for this much needed scoreboard.
After four profitable post-war years, we see little reason why the four mentioned deficiencies at Memorial stadium can not be improved upon at an EARLY date.
By making these improvements, K.U.'s athletic program will be keeping pace with the splendid efforts of Coach Sikes and his coaching staff to give Kansas one of the top football programs in the Midst.
Ken "Red" Morrow's single to leftfield in the eighth inning scored Walter Hicks with the Jayhawkers' winning run as K.U. edged past the Oklahoma Sooners, 8 to 7, in a thriller played Monday afternoon on the Varsity diamond. The two clubs meet again at 3 p.m. today with Guy Mabry slated to hurl for Kansas and big Jim Kirk the mound choice for Coach Jack Baer's club. Today's game winds up the 1950 baseball season for both teams.
Morrow's Hit Beats Sooners, 8 To 7
With Carl Sandeuf pitching masterful no-hit, no-run ball through the last four innings, the Jayhawkers rallied to overcome a 7 to 1 Sooner lead with five runs in the seventh and two more in the eighth to win their eight Big Seven game in 15 contests.
Oklahoma, who got off to an early unearned 3 to 0 lead in the first inning, lost its fourth conference road game in five starts. The loss was the third straight league game for the Sooners who must beat K.U. today to finish in third place. A K.U. victory will assure the Jay-hawkers of a third place berth in the final standing.
Nebraska, by defeating Kansas State, 8 to 1, Monday at Manhattan won the 1950 Big Seven baseball championship. The Missouri Tigers
BIG SEVEN STANDINGS
Monday's Results
Oklahoma 7, KANSAS 8
Nebraska 6, Kansas State 1
Colorado 3, Iowa State 12
W. L. Pct
Nebraska 16 3 .761
Missouri 9 5 .643
Oklahoma 6 5 .545
KANSAS 8 7 .533
Kansas State 5 8 .385
Colorado 2 6 .250
Iowa State 3 9 .257
Today's Games
Oklaahoma at KANSAS
Nebraska at Kansas State
Colorado at Iowa State
with a 9-5 record, finished second and the winner of today's K.U.-O.U. game will finish in the third spot.
In the last three years, the Nebraska Cornhuskers have gone from first to last and back to first in the Big Seven baseball championship picture.
Sandefur, the Big Seven's top pitcher, finished the 1350 season in a blaze of glory. By beating the hard-hitting Sooners, he won his seventh conference game against a single defeat. Sandefur walked off with all the honors in the conference as a sophomore. His only defeat was a 3 to 4 loss to Nebraska's championship club. He started and completed seven conference games.
in allowing the Sooners only two earned runs, Sandefur gave up only 23 hits and five earned runs in his last 37 1-3 innings on the mound for Coach Bill Hogan's hustling club.
Monday's game was marked by erratic fielding with K.U. committing nine errors to the Sooners' four. Faulty support kept Santafur and Jack Shirley, O. U. starter, in trouble much of the way.
In the seventh inning, Kansas sent 10 men to the plate in scoring five runs on five hits with two errors helping the cause. Doubles by Jim Sunye and Walter Hicks and singles by Carl Ellis and Mabry accounted for four runs.
Oklahoma-Kansas Box Score
Oklahoma (7) AB R H PO A %
Morgosch, 3b 4 1 1 2 1
Wiginton, 2b 5 1 0 3 2 1
Stephenson, ss 4 1 1 0 3 2
Jones, 1b 5 1 2 11 0 0
Puglesy, cf 4 0 0 1 1 0
Reddell, c 3 0 1 4 0 1
Hill, rf 4 1 1 1 1 0
Mckee, lf 3 2 2 1 0 0
Shirley, p 3 0 1 1 2 0
Waldrip, p 1 0 0 0 1 0
Totals ... 36 7 9 24 13 4
Kansas (8) AB R H P O A E
Cavonaugh, 2b ... 4 0 2 1 0 1 1
Koenig, ss ... 5 0 1 2 2 3 1
Temple, 3b ... 3 0 0 1 2 2 0
Sumie, 1f ... 2 1 1 1 2 0 0
Ellis, 3f ... 3 2 2 2 0 0 0
Hicks, rf ... 3 2 2 3 1 0 0
Mabry, cf ... 4 1 2 3 0 0 0
DeLuna, 1b ... 5 1 1 7 0 2 0
Morrow, c ... 5 1 1 7 3 1 0
Sandefur, p ... 4 0 2 0 1 0 1
Totals 38 8 14 27 11 9
Oklahoma 310 111 000 — 7
Kansas 000 100 52 — 8
REI—Wiginton, Reddell, McKee,
Cavonaugh, Ellis, Marbry 2, Morrow,
Sandefur, 2B—Hill, Cavonaugh,
Sunye, Hicks, DeLuna, SB—Mee-
Kee, Mabry, Morrow, SH—Morgosh,
Hicks, Mabry, LOB-Oklahoma
6, Kansas 13. Pitching summary; BB—
Shirley 4, Waldrip 0, Sandefur 2
SO—Shirley 4, Waldrip 0, Sandefur 7
Hits and Runs off—Shirley 12 and
in 6 1-3 innings, Walprip 2 and 2
in 12-3 innings, BHP—Shirley (Ellis),
Sandefur (Reddell). WP—Sandefur.
PB—Reddell. Earned runs off—
Shirley 4, Waldrip 0, Sandefur 2
Losing pitcher — Waldrip, Umpires
Edwards and Michaels. Time—2:12.
Att. 375 (est.).
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MAY 23
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1950
KU Alumni To Visit Campus For Commencement Reunions
Green and white parasols, red scarves, and silver bells will distinguish alumni attending their class reunions from students during Commencement activities.
Appearance of the umbrellas on the University campus will indicate that members of the class of 1900 have returned to renew acquaintances and enjoy themselves at the 50th anniversary of their Commencement day.
Members of the class of 1925 will wear scarlet scarves and silver bells lettered MCMXXV.
According to Roy Dietrich, chairman of reunion activities for the class of 1910, 40th anniversary celebrators will be conspicuous by the "amount of fun we're having. We are going to never won't be alive for our 50th anniversary; we are going to go all out this time," Mr. Dietrich quipped.
Members of the Gold Medal club, alumni who were graduated more than 50 years ago, will meet at 12:30 p.m. Sunday, June 4, in the West dining room of the Union, President
of the club is Irving Hill, '96.
Mrs. Anna More Fruin, who was graduated 69-years ago, will journey more than 1200 miles from her home in Gloe, Arizona because she wants to attend one more Commencement.
The class of 1940 will commemorate their 10th anniversary with a dinner at the Hotel Eldridge. Harry also earlier, Hays, is president of the class.
Mr. Ellsworth pointed out that it was the 1925 graduates that first wanted a campanile at the University. "They left their class funds for the erection of what they called "chines". Mr. Ellsworth said. The group is now collecting money with which to buy shrubs and other plants for landscaping the Memorial drive.
Ingenuity Helped KU Union Solve Its Problems In 30's
PATRICIA JANSEN
When the student looked up at the blue canopy hanging from the ceiling of the Union ballroom and saw that it was peppered with tiny holes, he shook his head helplessly. All the sacrifice that had gone into the purchasing of yards and yards of material to hide the bare beams and bricks in the unfinished ballroom had been wasted.
"It's ruined! It's ruined!" he be-maoned.
Then one imaginative student suggested: "Why not leave it. We will call it a blue sky with stars shining through. Now doesn't that sound romantic?"
Back in the money-pinching days of the thirties when this incident happened, the struggling students did not lose the collegiate spirit of humor. It was during these trying days that the Union building became so important in the lives of those attending the University.
Today when students pass through the spacious lounge or attend a banquet in the sedate Kansas room, they do not realize that once students did not enjoy the comfortable surrounding that the Union now offers.
During the early years of the depression only the shell of the building was complete. The lounge was scantily furnished, as were the cafeteria and the recreation rooms. On the second and third floors many of the rooms were just as the builder had left them. In some places the walls had not been plastered and the brick exterior of the building was left exposed. The only stairway above the main floor was a rickety wooden one.
But despite the unattractiveness of the Union, the building meant much to the students. Each Wednesday night the Mid-week Varsities, sponsored by the Union, were held in the ballroom. Here several hundred students would come each week to dance to the music of a Hill band. Through the 10 cent admission fines that were paid by the stags, just enough money was raised each
The success of the Mid-week Varsities was threatened one day by a law student. He went to the dance stag, paid his 10 cent fine, and then decided to sue the Union for damages. He claimed that his membership in the Student Union entitled him to come to the dance free whether or not he brought a date.
week to pay for the orchestra.
The suit against the University and the Union created quite a stir on the campus. For several days the University Daily Kansan carried stories on the latest developments in the case. Finally the Union decided to remove the 10 cent fine and the suit was dropped. The Varsities continued to be the most important social function on the Hill during the depression.
In other ways the Union was important to the students. Many ran their budget so close that they could not afford the wholesome meals necessary to maintain their health. The Union operating board decided that the Union sponsor 10 cent lunches, skillfully planned by a dietician. Some of the Union workers volunteered their time to make these lunches a success.
Another problem on the campus was that of housing. Here again the Union played its part. An unfinished corner on the top floor became the home of two struggling students, an architect and a medic. For nearly two years they made their home in the garret-like corner that is now known as the English room.
Throughout the depression years the Union maintained its policy of being a real home for all the students.
'Uke' Craze Sweeps Campus
If you have been kept awake at night by aspiring ukulele players, it's no wonder, for there are about 150 ukuleles on the Hill. Almost every house can boast a 'ukie' mansion houses have about four or five, and leading ukulele fans seem to be the Delta Gammas. They have eleven.
One-hundred instruments may not sound impressive, but when you consider that five or six persons use each ukulele, it means that we have almost 1000 ukulele players at KU. Some fraternities are even considering organizing Ukulele clubs.
The most popular song is “Has Anybody Seen My Girl”. Another favorite it is “Maybe”, which could be because it is one of the first songs in the instruction book. One song, with a rather unusual title, “We Had
This isn't the first time for the "uke" craze at KU. Back in the twenties when they were first popular, Bell Music Co. was known as the "Uke a Day Store." They averaged about one ukulele sale a day. In the thirties the ukulele bowed out to the banjo craze. Today, again, Bell's could be called the "Uke a Day Store" because they are supply-ing a demand of more than one "uke" a day to students.
a Little Party in Shreveport", is gaining in popularity.
The "uke" is everywhere, on picnics and parties. What causes a fat like this? In the words of Will Rogers. "The ukulele had this advantage; not even a trained musician could tell if you were playing it or just monkeying with it."
Gamblers Work In Cartel Form
Washington, May 23—(U.R.)- U. S. News and World Report said today the $10 billion a-year gambling racket is controlled by many separate but allied syndicates which maintain "friendly relations" to avoid bloody gang wars.
It asserted that most, if not all, of the syndicates have strong ties with political machines which provide "protection" in return for cam-police operations, vard-heeler support and sometimes "direct pay offs" to police.
In a copyrighted report, prepared for its May 26 issue, the weekly news magazine said organized gambling is not controlled by any "single" game, but by an entire arrangement under which "each ring has its own territory to work."
U. S. News and World Report said the most powerful gambling combines are centered in New York, Chicago and Cleveland. Each controls book-making, the numbers lottery, and has a big stake in slot machines, it said. All three also are reported to have important interests around Miami, Fla.
Quack Club Elects Wolfe President
Mary M. Wolfe journalism junior, was elected president of Quock club at the annual picnic breakfast Sunday, Jane Koelzer, education junior, is the swimming club's new secretary-treasurer.
Patricia Perkins, fine arts junior, was named the first Major Quack, which is the highest honor of the organization, since 1845. To gain this title a woman must be able to execute nine dives, four specified and five optional, as well as be able to complete endurance and half-mile swims, and pass the senior life-saving and speed tests.
The meeting was delayed by an accident to one of its members. Martha Hendershot, College senior, stepped on a rusty nail and had to be taken to the hospital.
Initiated as Minor Quacks, or full members, were Peggy Chambers, fine arts junior; June Porter, College freshman; and Patricia Glennon and Anne Lambert, fine arts freshmen. Those who had been pledged during the year received their formal pledging.
Colonial Governor Was No Strait-laced Puritan
Boston — (U.P.) — No strait-laced Puritan was Colonial Gov. Richard Bellingham of the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
Soon after his first wife's death, Bellingham married another man's fiancee, performing the wedding ceremony himself.
When prosecuted for this breach of law and decorum, he insisted on sitting as judge in his own case. He acquitted himself.
Dillwyn, Va- (U,P)—Thieves who broke into a state liquor store here were men of discriminating taste. They cleaned the store of the most expensive brand and left the remainder untouched.
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Scientific Approach Solves Dice's Roll, Student Says
Phone 234
Madison, Wis., (U.P.) - A high school senior hoped that his knack with the dice would pay off with a college education.
Fred Brown, 18, who has been "potting around with dice" since he was 10, said he has solved the vexing, age-old problem of how to make the cubes come up his way.
It's a scientific approach, the student said.
The paper, entitled "The Human Mind and Mathematical Probability," won him honorable mention in competition with more than 13,500 other high school students. It also won him one definite offer of a college scholarship and tentative offers of several others.
Instead, he threw his own pair over and over again. He concentrated on the numbers, and jotted down the results. Gradually, a pattern emerged, he said, and the right spots turned up three per cent more often than they would without the accompanying brain work.
He wrote a learned paper on the subject for the Westinghouse national talent search contest.
He said his interest in dice is strictly scientific. He does not shoot craps, he said, and has no dream of piling up a college nestegy by cleaning out a lush gambling casino.
Brown claimed this system has unlimited possibilities. He has tried it out on a slot machine—the non-profit variety—and a roulette wheel He found the results far more gratifying than if he had trusted to mere luck, he said.
Volunteers contributed 1,424 hours of their time last February to patients in the VA hospital in Springfield, Missouri.
When young Brown started trying to make the flying dominoes behave, he didn't take the easy way out and get a pair of loaded cubes.
American To Be In Passion Play
Oberammergaut, Germany —U.F.) Johnny MacMahon, 6, will be the first American to take part in the historic passion play this mountain village has been staging for the past 300 years.
When the religious spectacle opens Sunday, May 21, the red-haired son of Maj. John A. MacMahon, of Boise, Idaho, will appear with a throng of children in the palm Sunday see.
Johnny, who was born in Salt Lake City, studies at a German school and speaks German as fluently as English. His father is executive officer of the military police division at the U. S. Army's European intelligence school here. "All the kids in school are in the play so Johnny got himself a part too," MacMahon, said. "He's really excited about it."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE NINE
knack since ow to
(U.R) be the in the untain e past
opens
did sop
Boise
annoy
screech
Lake
school
tally as
a few
of-
visi-
vision
in an
lud
the way
so
too,"
y ex-
SDAY, MAY 23, 1950
tle Man On Campus
By Bibler
SNARF
A-02
Well, we've simply got to flunk someone! Get me a list of the students who are taking this course as an elective."
students Picnic In Back Yard
many American families take to patios and outdoor fireplaces soon as the weather is warm, and women of Miller and Watkins are no exceptions to this cus-
fordmen recently finished the native limestone fireplaces each have been set on concrete stones in back of each house, fireplace at Miller hall was in May 19 when one of the stenchers in the house invited us for a barbecue sunner.
men house is divided into seven
women with seven women to a
men. Only one kitchen at a time
probably use the fireplaces as
flagstone area is not large
ugh for 50 persons.
the idea for the fireplaces origi-
ged within the houses. Almost
years ago, Mrs. R. G. Roche,
remoter at Miller, suggested to
women that it would be nice to
yard the picnics in their own
yard rather than having to find
The women agreed and took the idea to Keith Lawton, director of dormitories. About a year ago, the Watkins hall女人们 decided they would like to have a fireplace and told Lawton about it.
Three weeks ago, workmen began pouring concrete and laying stones for the patios and the fireplaces. They also built 18-inch retaining walls between each house and its patio so that dirt might not wash down onto the flagstones. Since the ground behind the halls slopes, it had to be leveled off before the stones could be laid.
transportation out to Lone Star or even over to Potter lake picnic area.
Originally the women in both houses wanted to bring stones from their hometowns so that the fireplaces would be a composite of the stones found in parts of Kansas and other states. However this was found to be impractical due to the size of the stones.
enic Potter Lake Doubles As Bathtub or Pledge Trainers, Women Pranksters
Potter lake, long a scenic spot on the University campus, has some a bathtub for many.
wet, slimy, and chilly is the way those many people who unfully go swimming in the lake describe it. For some reason, the of a pre-season dip in the University lake seems to be relished many. The lake has received numerous bodies hurled in its waters.
his spot has become the melted water for all types of University years. Last year during stagg, the lake was used as a catcher or "stags" who spoke to girls on campus. This year, it was the of the tug-of-war between eners and lawyers.
several of the men's organized ones have traditions concerning make. One house throws all members on their birthdays whether make is covered with a sheet of or filled with slimy moss. An-er house makes a practice of lying the pledge-trainer into the hat close of the spring sem-
the most frequent occupants of or lake are University women ents. This may seem strange to who live at the far ends of campus, but to those who live is the street from the lake, it is non knowledge. There is one entity which makes a practice unking all women who enter house to steal trophies, serve or play other types of jokes.
William Schwarz, president of the German club, entertained at the German club picnic with a Scottish sword dance and the highland fling May 19.
An article about the picnic which appeared in the May 18 University Daily Kansan omitted Schwarz's name.
Club President Entertains
Faculty Art To Be Shown
Three faculty members from the University art department will have their paintings displayed in the Kansas Painters exhibition at Pittsburg. Kan., on Thursday, June 1.
Robert Sudlow, instructor of drawing and painting, will display "Houses Near Holton." A landscape of Wakarusa valley will be exhibited by Dwight Burnham, instructor of drawing and painting. A view from River View park in Pittsburgh, Pa., is to be submitted by Robert Green, assistant professor of drawing and painting.
They will have their works displayed with 59 other paintings by 45 artists in the library at Pittsburgh State Teachers college. The paintings were chosen from more than 200 students from 14 states, Eugene Larkin, chairman of the exhibition committee, said today.
The exhibition, which was held the past year for the first time, and which attracted wide attention throughout the state, is being sponsored by the college to recognize Kansas painters and to encourage an interest in painting in the state. Mr. Larkin said.
The paintings will also be exhibited at Southwestern college, Winfield, during November, in the Nelson art galley, Kansas City, Mo., during December, in Topeka by the Topeka Art guild next January, and the City Art museum, Wichita.
Awards will be made to artists designated by a special jury.
Students Receive Architect Awards
Seven students of the School of Engineering were presented with awards at the annual architects' banquet May 18. The awards were made for outstanding work in architecture.
Prof. George M. Beal, chairman of the architecture department, presented James R. Page, engineering senior, with the American Institute of Architects' medal. Other presentations were made by Joseph M. Kellog, professor of architectural design.
Claude A. Van Doren, engineering senior, was awarded the Alpha Rho chi medal; William M. Conrad, engineering senior, Thayer medal and cash prize; Gerald L. Imming, engineering sophomore, Gertrude Goldsmith prize; Danny E. Davis, engineering sophomore, Lorenz Schmidt cash prize; William B. Hayward, and John B. Hipp, engineering juniors, first and second Scarab prize, respectively.
Kumpe Back From 21-Day Inspection
The units, which he inspected for appearance, parades, and training, include: University of North Dakota, Grank Forks; University of South Dakota, Vermillion; Agriculture college, Fargo, N. D., and Agriculture college, Brookings, S.D.
Colonel Edward R. Kumpe, professor of military science, has returned from a 21-day inspection tour of R.O.T.C. units in the northern part of the country.
Colonel Kumpe will be guest speaker at Fort Scott National cemetery at Fort Scott on Declaration day, May 30.
A good-sized oak tree with 700-000 leaves gives off an estimated 120 tons of water a season, notes the National Geographic Society. An acre of grass gives off as much as six tons in a single day .
REGULAR DINNERS
Steaks
REGULAR PRICES
- Fried Chicken
- Short Orders
- RAY'S CAFE -
Open Sundays
709 Mass.
Good Job Opportunities For Nurses
The need for professionally trained nurses, which became critical during World War II, continues according to the U. S. Department of Labor's women's bureau. Employment possibilities for K. U. graduating nurses are especially good at this time.
The increased demand for nurses in this country is caused by the combination of several factors: the building of new hospitals, an increase in the number of hospital patients, the popularity of hospitalization insurance plans, the growth of the population, and the increase in the number of aged in the country.
Registered nurses obtain their licenses by passing an examination given by a state board or agency, following graduation from one of the existing schools of nursing in the United States. The basic course in these schools usually covers three years of combined study and supervised practice in hospitals. According to the Department of Labor, educational preparation beyond the
minimum required for licensing may lead to well-paid teaching or administrative posts.
Man Disposes Of Estate In Testamentary Rhyme
Philadelphia—(U.P.)—When the will of Joseph F. X. Fasy was filed for probate, it showed that he was not a lover of technical legal prose.
Fasy disposed of his $500 estate with this verse:
Of all the earthly goods I have in store
I leave to my dear wife forever more
FLYING?
See
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
TRAVEL AGENCY
Freely do I give, no limit do I fix;
This is my will and she is the
executrix.
Does Your Appetite Need a Spring Change?
Try these tempting spring salad dishes —
RUSSIAN SALAD BOWL
Cured ham
—Shredded head lettuce
Green peppers
—Celery hearts, cheese
—Tomatoes, eggs
—French dressing
—80c
SHRIMP SALAD BOWL
—Diced head lettuce
—Green peppers
Green peppers
Hard boiled eggs
—Hard boiled eggs
—Topped with shrimp
—80c
DUCK'S TAVERN
Congratulations Grads...
It's been swell serving you and remember—we're always glad to serve you when you're back in town...
Congratulations Under-Grads...
You've made it through another year. We're hoping to see you again next semester..
To All
Let us give your car that last minute check-up before you start that drive home.
MOTOR IN
Call 607
827 Vermont
PAGE TEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 2
Little Man On Campus
by Bibler
PHD COMMITT'S SUICIDE!
DEATH NOTE
REVEALS THAT
DISCOURAGED
OVER NOT
FINDING A JOB.
SEE PAGE 6X.
“... Sure wish I was graduating. This going to school gets rough..."
The Editors Report —
GET THE BOYS IN
Out Of The Cold
by Bob Nelson
Many of the K.U. fieldhouse plans are still in the "proposed" stage. Many details aren't worked out and probably won't be for some time. The $750,000 appropriated by the 1949 legislature is just a good start and the future of the fieldhouse hinges heavily on what takes place in the next session.
Kansas, with a larger enrollment than Kansas State, certainly is entitled to such a structure as the Wildcats will have to play basketball in this next winter. The Aggies' fieldhouse construction started in March 1949 and will be entirely finished in March 1951, although they will use the mammoth hanger-like building this December, just 21 months after ground breaking ceremonies.
"Construction is ahead of schedule and we feel fortunate to be able to play our 1950-51 basketball schedule in the fieldhouse." Thurlo E. McCrady, Kansas State athletic director, recently said.
"We hope to soon announce our dedication game opponent and an attractive 1950-51 home schedule which will include Long Island university, Indiana, and Wisconsin," he added.
Kansas State received about every break possible on construction with an "open winter" the past year and is ahead of schedule. If it takes Kansas State some 21 months to build a smaller fieldhouse than proposed for K.U.-with ideal help from the weather, labor, and what have you—how long will it take Kansas to build an even bigger one?
Coach F. C. "Phog" Allen's 1950 co-championship team probably contained the greatest group of sophomores ever assembled in his 33 years of coaching on Mt. Oread. Certainly sophomores Bill Lienhard, Bob Kenney, Clyde Loveillette, Bill Houghland, Dean Wells, and others will have a good year in 1951 and the 1952 team could be the greatest in the history of K.U. basketball.
In order to have even the slightest chance of getting these 1952 greats-to-be into a K.U. fieldhouse before they complete their basketball eligibility in March 1952, students, alumni, and friends of the University will have to push the fieldhouse building program along at a rapid pace.
When K.U. students return to Mt. Oread next fall, Kansas will be the only Big Seven school without a fieldhouse. Our Jayhawker teams can hardly be expected to compete on equal terms with conference schools well equipped with fine indoor facilities. During bad weather, K.U. athletes will continue to either have no practice at all or attempt to practice outside in the bitter-cold, snow, sleet, and rain.
While you are home this summer, if you live in Kansas, try to see the members of the state legislature from your district and tell them how much we need a place to house our basketball team and our track, baseball, and football programs during the cold winter months.
Four hundred University of Oregon students are reported to have rioted over who to elect president of the student body. How different a few miles make in the political activity of colleges! Here at K.U. we're lucky if that many students get out and vote in a student election.
--by Keith I
Electrical Labor More Efficient
Labor time required to produce selected types of electrical equipment and supplies was reduced 17 percent from 1939 to 1947, the Bureau of U. S. Labor Statistics has announced.
According to the bureau, the increased volume of output during the war and post war years provided an incentive for rapid introduction of improved equipment and working techniques.
The gains in manufacturing efficiency, resulting from technological improvements, more than offset manufacturing difficulties arising from scarcity of materials, inexperienced labor, and heavy production schedules.
Average efficiency in electrical industries increased 21 percent, during the eight year period.
Editing II students in charge of the Daily Kansan copy desk today are Robert Enright, and Keith Leslie, journalism seniors.
Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers
University Daily Hansan
News Room Adv. Room
K.U. 251 K.U.378
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Asm,
National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily
Press Asm., and the Associated College
Press, Represented by the National Ad-
vertising Service.420 Madison Ave., New
York City.
James Morris
Editor-in-Chief
Editor-in-Chief
Doots Greenbank James Shriver
Managing Editor Business Mgr.
Asst. Man. Editors Norma Hessinger
Kay O'Connell Kay O'Connell
John Hill
Ralph Hemean
City Editor Edward Chapin
Asst. City Editors Nelson Ober
Mike Murray Mike Murray
Elaine Eviig
Steve Ferro
Feature Editor Francis Kelley
Photograph Editor Frankie Walts
Telegraph Editor Robert Signam
William Graves
Richard Tatum
Lloyd Holbeck
Sports Editor Richard DeLawson
Asst. Sports Editors Bob Lee
Ray Solidan
Arthur McIntire
Mona Millikin
Society Editor Faye Wilkinson
Asst. Society Editors Rale Stower
Emily Stewart
Editorial Assts.
Keith Leslie
Adv. Mgr. Charles Beiner
Cir. Mgr. Yvonne Jonesen
Nat. Adv. Mgr. Forrest Bellus
Classified Ad. Mgr. Lee Dyer
Promotion Mgr. John Wiedeman
'Small Things'
Don't let this get around, as we'd hate to let certain ser get hold of this, but if you know the right people, you can a look at a copy of the Worker in the Journalism building.
We note that a whistling swan has been added to the museum collection. A more appropriate place for it to repose, we believe would be on the steps of the law barn.
Ava's Spanish bullfighter has composed a long, rhapsod poem about the beauties of her hair, teeth, etc. It seems that addition to fighting the bull, he is also expert in composing
NOTICE
Our sports desk tells us that K.U. won the first of the two game series with Oklahoma Monday. The score was 8-7. K. sluggers, the sports desk told us in high glee, knocked the b pitcher in the Big Seven league off the mound.
You can get further details on pages six and seven. All will add here is the fact that K.U. will end up in third place the season.
Don't forget to drop down to the field this afternoon a see the second game in the Oklahoma series. It's going good and the players will be glad to have your support. Today game will be the last for both teams.
the Bus-(Adv.)
-By B.
THE RADIO TRANSIT COMPANY
"Can we go two-for-a-token? He's so little."
YOU WILL NEVER FORGET ME.
from Ward's Flower Shop for the Graduate
Beautiful roses Exotic orchids Glamorous gardenias Lovely mixed bouquets
PHONE 820 910 MASS.
Place your order at Ward's now for best selection.
MAY 2
4
UESDAY, MAY 23, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE ELEVEN
eith I
muse beli
ansan Classified Advertising
hapsoo is that losing
he tw 7. K. the b
Phone K.U.376
Classified Advertising Rates
ornis: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be sent by mail during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University office. Journalism bldg, not later than 45 p.m. the day before publication date.
FOR SALE
One Three Five day Days Five
5 words or less ... 35c 65c 90c
additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
MAMESE kittens for pets or breeding
equationate pets. 1523
emp. phone, 1958.
SE THE PIX B4 you shoot: Argoflex
image 47.5, redicase, Alkar flask. Excient for amateur. First reasonable off-
er. Baker, Phone 927. 24
36 CHEVROLET: 2 door sedan. Will ve
cheap transport. Call after 4
m. daily, 3513, 1247 Ohio, Mr. Goodman.
24
OT, 1949 Elar trailer. Toilet and
bathroom equipment. Applied to
equipment. Call 2797 for information.
24
AGIC CHIEF range. General Electric
van and matching chair. Bed springs.
Will consider all offers. Must sell by
31. Evenings and weekends. 724
LAN'S double breasted, white, Palm
seach suit. Size 36 or 38 long. In good
condition. Also lady's light blue rain-
boot size 16 like new. Call 2885. 24
948 Model. Montgomery Ward refrigerator, 71% Cubic foot. Excellent condition. priced to sell. See at 1231 Delaware, evenings after five. 24
SPECIALLY for the baby's trip-bottle
armorer for the car, car seats, car bed.
estern Auto Associate Store, 944 Mass.
24
EMINGTON portable in excellent condition. Must sell before going to Colorado. Sell cheap—$15.00 1332 Louisiana. Warranty. Ward. 23
FOR GRADUATION give a practical
dose of choice from a large inventory
of leather shoes at WELLS LEATHER SHOP. 820 Mass.
ply the Blue Ribbon Leather Shop
LANNING your summer vacation? Then you'll want to stop in and select sturdy FILKEN LEATHER SHOP, 820 Mass. Formerly the blue Ribbon Leather Shop. 23
WANTED
NORST TELEVISION-Best in sets and
carries. New arrival, $75.00 and up. See the new-
est Emerson table model set at $19.50.
Bermondsey table and Electric
89 Vermont. table 138.
IDE TO New Jersey. Help drive and
carry you to Whitefish. Whiteside
cook@cook.com or phone 210-3687.
IDERS WANTED: Leaving for Wichita every Friday at 4 p.m. Returning Sunday evening. Please call between 7-9 and Harry Shultz. Ph. 3101J. 24
IDE TO and from Topeka during sum-
mary school. Call LA WA at Topeka
8027
IDERS, or share driving for summer
travels. Lawrence, Williams,
E. 6th, Tonka,
CELL ALL your used books to the Student Union Book Store Monday, May 29. We will pay top cash prices for all prent books, and the Wilcox and Follette reviews we will buy all obsessed discontinued titles. Teachers nibn Book Store. **tf**
FOR RENT
**FREE SINGLE rooms for boys for**
**summer. 1600 Tenn. Phone 2589W.**
**DOUBLE ROOMS: bunk beds, insulated**
**boathouses. Phone 1600 Tenn.**
**Iowa. Phone 1160R after 6 p.m.**
MIMER ROOMS for boys, doubles, twin
linen furnished. Bath and kitchen-
two blocks from campus. $12.50 each
style. 1213 Ohio. 16
DEPARTMENT. furnished, 3 rooms and bath. Also rooms for summer and fall, angle beds. Close to campus, for quiet adjuad men. 1244 La. Ph. 1752. 24
VARSITY
Phone 132 for Sho Time
ends tonite
"BEWARE OF BLONDIE"
"Million Dollar Kids"
ends tonite
Wed. - Thurs.
Errol Flynn "MONTANA"
Erol Flynn "MONTANA" - and - Joe Palooka "The Big Fight" - plus - "Video Hounds"
"Video Hounds"
2 ROOM apartment furnished, electric refrigerator. Closet and storage space. 1 ROOM apartment rent to couple on men students. Single beds. All large comodable rooms.匙去 K. U. Bus by summer. 124 Ohio. Phone 1671-R.
LARGE SLEEPING room for summer with use of kichenette for student couple. Small child accepted. $25. month. Mrs. Ryle. 1213 Ohio. 16
LARGE single room comfortably fur-
nished in summer. Close to campus 321.
Call 36833-4
COOL, half basement for 2 or 3 boys.
Private bath, cooking privileges, $20
each. 1818 Illinois. Phone 3014-R after 6
P.M. 24
NICE cool rooms for boys attending summer school. Also sleeping porch. Adjoining campus. 1631 Illinois. Phone 2674-J. After 4 P.M. 24
LARGE Single and double rooms for men. Comfortably furnished, convenient-located. Singles $12. doubles $18. rooms available June 1. 1247 Ohio. Phone 2513.
Rooms very reasonable. Open for inspection. Mrs. F. E. Wells. 500 East 36th St., Kansas City 3, Missouri, Valentine 24
NICE cool basement rooms for summer students. 1339 Ohio, Phone. 2898. 24
Moderns. 1359 Ohio. Phone 2067. 24
FOR men. Nice accommodation for 4 or 6
rooms, 8 bedrooms, private
living room, kitchenette and bath. 837
Indiana. Phone 1782.
3 NICELY furnished sleeping rooms
Available June 1. Twin beds and large
cedar lined clothes closet. On bus line.
839 Miss. Phone 1832. 24
FURNISHED apartments for rent. See a
1339 Ohio. Phone 2089. 2
SUMMER SCHOOL AND FALL rooms for boys at reduced rates. Large doubles beds, reclining beds, linens provided, and rooms cleaned. Two private baths and telephone. Excellent location two blocks from campus, close to town and bus route. Inquire at SUMMER SCHOOL.
THREE double rooms for summer. $15.00 a month per boy; single beds; phone; private entrance. Fully equipped kitchen for use of boys. 2475 W 1100 Ohio.
APARTMENT for rent either 3 or 4 rooms; completely furnished; private bath; private entrance; couple. Across South Park. Inquire Mrs. Pappa. 1141 Vt.
CLEAN convenient rooms for summer term. One half block from campus. $10.00 per month. 1218 Mississippi. Tel. 3540 ...
ROOM for summer and fall. Quit house for studious Christian young men. Close to campus. Call Mrs. Hoffman 1244 La. Ph. 1752. 23
ROOMS for summer or fall 3 double and
1 single. Sleeping porch. Single beds.
$10.00 a month per person. 1222 Miss.
Phone 495. 24
SUMMER SCHOOL rooms for boys.
M. 1234 Oread. Few vacancies for
fall.
MAKE BETTER GRADES! Rent a portable or standard typewriter for $3.50 a month or $1.00 a week. All makes and models at Student Union Book Store, tf
MISCELLANEOUS
TRANSPORTATION
ATTENTION! Payment for all Dall Kansan Classifieds js due May 24!
RIDE TO San Antonio, Texas wanted.
After June 5. Phone 980. 24
JAMES BOMME 806-254-3000
WANT RIDERS who drive the driving
summer school. Leave Plaza 7 a.m.
return 11 a.m. JE 3178, Kansas City, Mo.
after 6 p.m. TF
TYINGP: Theses, term papers, letters, etc.
Regular rates. Prompt accurate work.
Mrs. Schear; Apt. R-36, 1810 La. phone
3273R. 24
BUSINESS SERVICE
I WILL do typing at my home. Term-
theses, etc. If interested can
1954e-J.
TYPING: Thesis. Term Papers. Reports.
Tpnn, Mrs. Wilde. 124
Tgnp, Tennp. 3838-M.
Tpnn, Tennp. 3838-M.
ATTENTION K. U.! Come in now and
ask to leave. We provide slip covers and upholstery. We furnish all materials, we guarantee our work.
Upholstery. B37 Vermont Phone 143. Upholstery. B37 Vermont Phone 143.
TYPING. Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rules. Prompt attention Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601
SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a dignified sales activity representing the educational field. The educational field. Applicants accepted will work by appointment on leads we furnish. Earnings $7.50 to $12.50 and more per week on an advanced percentage basis. Write Mr. K. Smith and Gillie A. Knewskis City, Mo. Giving qualifications, school and home address. 24
TYPING; thesis; notebooks; reports:
Standard rates. Mrs. Hara
1442W, 566 W.
THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. Complete overhaul, engine tune-up, body work, tire replacement. 317 E. 17th. Phone 785 or 1821R 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-stop shop is perfect for feeding and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop 1218 Cm. St. Ph. 418 tf
LOST
NAVY flannel hip length jacket in Eldred
ridge hotel lobby Friday night May 12.
Finde please call K.U. 376 and after 7
10.1534J.Reward. 24
LOST a pair of shell-rimmed glasses
Thursday evening, somewhere around
Watson library. If found please call Joe
Mendhenall. 2917-M. 24
Rats in the United States eat or destroy as much food each year as 265,000 farmers produce in the same period.
N-O-W Patee Ends Wed. PHONE
N-O-W
Ends Wed.
Patee
PHONE 321
Continued
Shows Daily
Open 12:45
IT'S A SPREE
OF GLEE!
TIGHT
LITTLE
ISLAND'
Starring
BASIL RADFORD • JOAN GREENWOOD
UNIVERSAL INTERNATIONAL RELEASE
Feature Times 1:37-3:37-5:37-7:37 and 9:37
Color Cartoon Latest World News
STARTS THURS.—3 DAYS ONLY
ADDED LAUGHS
Red Inole and His Natural 7
Special Note
We were sorry "Cheaper by the Dozen" played at the Granada while you were on your Easter vacation . . . However, we have made special arrangements with the film company for a return engagement for those of you who haven't had the opportunity to see it. . . .
It will roll you in the aisles!!
CHEAPER BY THE DOZEN
HE'S THE "NEW"
FATHER OF
HIS COUNTRY!
CHEAPER BY
THE DOZEN
CLITTON WEBB
MYRNA LOY
JEANNE CRAIN
COLOR BY
TECHNICOLOR
'Pick Pocket' Mama Calls The Music
Dallas, Texas—(U.P.) - A subdued husband gave police this account of how he happened to have a bullet wound in his thigh:
He had been to a tavern for a few late beers and, returning home, "decided to show his wife who was boss."
He took a pistol from a dresser and ordered his wife to "dance." He fired three shots near her feet to make her obey.
Later, his wife slipped the pistol from his pocket and said, "Now we'll see who's boss around here."
While her husband hopped around, she also began firing at his feet.
Unfortunately, the woman's aim wasn't as good as her husband's.
Student To Attend Swiss University
Nancee Bell, education junior, will attend summer school at the University of Zurich, Switzerland, for a seminar in political science. She will sail from Quebec, Canada, Monday, June 26, and will return to New York Friday, Sept. 15.
A member of Delta Gamma, Miss Dell is president of W.A.A. and vice-president of the A. W. S. house of representatives.
Orchids Are Cheaper
Boston—(U.P.)—The trailing arbutus or mayflower, is the official state flower in Massachusetts. But don't try to pick one. There's a $50 fine for anyone who does.
JAYHAWKER
Phone 10 for Sho Time
NOW thru WED
ALAN LADD CAPT.CAREY.U.SA.
—plus—
Late News Events
color cartoon
"Punchy De Leon"
STARTS Shown
TONITE! 8:21
10:17
Fortune Seekers
Lusting for Diamonds!
BURT LANCASTER
"ROPE of SAND"
with PAUL HENREID
A PARALOOM PICTURE
BURT LANCASTER
"ROPE OF SAND"
with PAUL HENREID
A PARAGON PICTURE
Added:
---
- Fighting Athletes
- Box Office Open 7:00
- Cartoon—Kit for Kat
Just Drive In—You'll Love
It—Phone 260
Lawrence
DRIVE-IN
Theatre
Ends Wednesdav
N-O-W
Also Color Cartoon - Latest News
ROARING. OUT OF THE LUSTY WEST... IS THIS STORY THE POWER SCREENED FRIENDLY!
The OUTRIDERS
color by Technicolor
Written by JOL M.CREA
DRAX BARRY SULLIVAN
WEDNESDAY NITE AT 8:32 ONLY An Extra Surprise
SNEAK PREVIEW
IT'S FAST—IT'S FUNNY—IT'S FULL OF SURPRISES!
It's An Advance Showing of A Major Studio Picture that will be shown at this theatre at a later date this season!
(The Producers Request the Title Withheld)
BUT IT'LL BE ONE OF THESE 1950 TOP HITS!
- 'Ma and Pa Kettle * 'A Ticket to Go to Town' Tomahawk'
- 'The Reformer & • 'Wagonmaster'
The Redhead' • 'The Big Lift'
- 'Wabash Avenue' * 'Cinderella'
- 'Francis'
Plus Regular Feature Before and After Preview (No Extra Admission Charge)
Come Early——See Two Shows for Price of One.
STARTS THURSDAY—3 BIG DAYS
The Hatfield-McCoy Feud ..!
He Found Himself Playing with Fire!
Roseanna McCoy
starring
Farley GRANGER
Charles BICKFORD
and introducing
Joan EVANS
AM 800-BADIO PICTURE
A
- Starts Sunday -
Betty Grable
"WABASH AVENUE"
Continuous Shows
Open 12:45
Granada
PHONE 940
PAGE TWELVE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 23, 19
Orchestra Presents Unified Performance
By FAYE WILKINSON
With its listening ear tuned closely, an audience pared to pre-final week proportion heard the University Symphony orchestra Monday. The program was remarkably cohesive, considering that the orchestra had had only three weeks to prepare it after presenting the Verdi "Requiem."
The tone of the evening was set by a refreshing performance of the overture to "Oberon" by von Weber, who is called the founder of German romantic opera. "Oberon" tells the story of the king of Elfland and his subjects, the spirits of air, land and water.
Eugene Jennings, pianist, showe a great deal of talent and musicianship in the challenging Schumann "A Minor concerto" Schumann was typical of the period in which personal expression in music meant more than attention to classical form. The soloist's interpretation of the style of the 19th century composer was excellent, and his technique was clean and sparkling, especially in the cadenza at the end of the first movement. The orchestra might have given him better support, however. Mr. Jennings, a graduate student, will be instructor in piano at Ohio university next fall.
For the Bach admirers, the orchestra played a transcription of "Sheep May Safely Graze," an organ number from the生日 cantata. Flowing easily from section to section, the theme began quietly, broadened to include the full-toned celli, and ended as peacefully as it had begun.
Beethoven's "Symphony No. 6 in F" (Fastorale) received the most penetrating, and perhaps the best reading of the concert. One of the most widely known works in musical literature, the symphony is rich in tone color and sensuous beauty. One can almost see, as well as hear, the brook, the country folk and the thunder storm. The work of the woodwind and cello sections here was outstanding.
The audience rewarded the orchestra and its director, Russell L. Wiley, with four curtain calls at the end of the program.
Dr.L.D.Mabie,'97 Dies In Kansas City
Dr. L. D. Mabile, who received his medical degree from the University of Kansas in 1897, died Monday at Bethany hospital in Kansas City, Kan.
The 84-year-old physician had served as Wyandotte county health officer and physician from 1943 to Jan. 1, 1949.
Dr. Mabie was a member of the Wyandotte County Medical society, the Kansas Medical society, and the American Medical association. He was on the staffs of St. Margaret's and Bethany hospitals. He was also a fellow of the American College of Physicians and Surgeons.
Champion Made Head Of Revue
Bill Champion, business junior, was recently named producer of the 1950-51 Rockchalk Revue. Five other men have also been appointed to help Champion make arrangements for the second annual production.
Francis Norris, College freshman, is assistant to the producer. Jay Bundy, College junior, is publicity director and Robert Peterson, engineering sophomore, will assist him. Business manager will be Joe Wolfe, College freshman, and Bill Van Allman, College freshman, is assistant business manager.
Organized houses are urged to begin their scripts this summer for the next production.
Economics Award Goes To Pfister
Richard L. Pfister, a graduate student and economics instructor at the University of Kansas, has received a scholarship to attend the Harvard Salzburg Seminar in American Studies as assistant to Dr. John Ise.
Pfister, who received an A.B. degree from K.U. two years ago and will get an M.A. in economics next month, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Pfister, Route 4, Hiawatha
Dates for the seminar are July 12 through August 23, but Pfister will report in Austria July 5. Although he will not receive a salary, his travel and living expenses will be paid from his departure from the United States until his return. He will fly across the Atlantic.
Union Committee Heads Are Appointed By Board
The chairman of the four standing committees of Student Union Activities for the 1950-51 school year were appointed recently by the S. U. A. board of directors.
The new chairmen are: Ray Beery, announcements; John Moll, entertainment; Jerome Lysaught, K-Union; and Ruth Abercrombie, secretarial.
P. A. B. H.
DR. HENRY C. TRACY
Dr. H.C.Tracy Will Go Abroad
Dr. Henry C. Tracy, professor of anatomy, who will retire at the end of the present school year, will remain in Lawrence for a time after his retirement, but he plans to take a pleasure trip abroad within two years.
Thirty of Dr. Tracy's teaching years were spent at the University where he was head of the anatomy department until 1945. He retired from that position when he was 65.
Dr. Tracy's fundamental work during these years was research on the toadfish, a highly specialized teleost. After his retirement, he hopes to continue his work at the Marine Biological laboratory, Woods Hole, Mass, where he has done research in the past.
His articles on the toadfish were published in the Journal of Comparative Neurology in 1926 and 1933. And for six summers he was in charge of a biological survey at Frenchman's Bay on the coast of Maine where work was done with the toadfish project.
Dr. Tracy has traveled extensively during his years at the University. He has been in Canada, England, France, and Germany, and he doesn't anticipate anything new or different on his pleasure trip.
During his teaching years, Dr Tracy says he is proud to have taught approximately 4,000 students who have gone on to receive their M.D. degrees.
The anatomy department, according to Dr. Tracy, has had a hectic career since its beginning in 1899. It was at first housed in the present Journalism building, and has been moved from building to building since that time. In 1943, when the old cafeteria in front of Watson library burned, the anatomists had to move into Snow hall.
Now, primarily through Dr. Tracy's work, the department has more than 500 charts, and about 30 films on anatomical material for visual aid.
Miss Laird To Retire After 38 Years At KU
After 38 years of teaching English at the University, Miss San Laird, associate professor of English, will retire on July 1.
Throughout the years, her greatest interest has been teaching English, particularly advanced composition, narration, description essay writing, theories of poetry, and history of English literature. She has taught both graduate and undergraduate courses.
World News At Press Time
30. 000 Homeless At Cuzco
Cuzco, Peru. May 23—(U.P.)-Three fourths of Cuzco's 50,000 residents have been made homeless by damage to their houses in Sunday's earthquake, government officials reported today.
Officials have counted 56 dead and 137 injured. Between 30,000 and 40,-000 persons spent the night out in the open for the second time Monday night, camping under tents of sacks and what other protection they could find in the biting cold of this two-mile-high city.
The chief of police estimated that only 10 per cent of the city's 4,800 homes remained in habitable condition after the violent six-second earth shock.
Winnipeg Flood Level Down
Winnipeg, Man., May 23 —(U.P.)- The surging Red River dropped lower than at any time in the past 10 days. The river level inched downward to 11.5 feet above minnow beds. The water will have to drop another five feet before the danger is over, flood control headquarters said.
With 17 per cent of this prairie capital still under water, flood control chief R. E. A. Morton renewed a plea for flooded-out families to keep out of their homes. An estimated 112,000 of the city's 320,000 residents have been routed by the month-long flooding.
Protest German 'Police'
Paris, May 23—(U.P.)The United States, France, and Great Britain protested to Russia today against formation of military units in the Soviet zone of Germany. The French note was delivered in Moscow. The text was made public here. The United States and Great Britain sent similar notes.
The note charged that organization of "formations of a military character" disguised as police units violated agreements among the four occupation powers.
It said the east German police corps was reported to be made up of 50 thousand men comprising "instruction battalions" and "intervention units." The units' functions were described as more extensive than those of a "normal" police force.
- Miss Laired, who has been chai man of the English majors since 197 has made several trips abroad leaves of absence. In 1921, she too a half year off to study in England and Scotland. In 1928-29, she studied and traveled throughout Scottish Germany, France, Italy, and England. During the tour, she study original manuscripts in preparati for her course in Theories of Poetry.
Although Miss Laird has never had time to "write articles or books" she had reviewed books over the years. In her free time, she works in her garden and collects antiques.
The 70-year-old English professus was born Jan. 25, 1880, in Jefferson Ohio. She attended high school Ashtabula, Ohio, and in 1904 received her bachelor of arts degree fro Oberlin college, Oberlin, Ohio. Mr. Laired received her master of arts degree from Columbia university, New York, in 1912. She also attended t University of Edinburgh in Scotland.
Miss Laired is a member of the College English association, the American Association of College professors, the Faculty Women's club and the University Women's club. This year, she has been in charge the displays in Fraser hall.
Medical Group Elects Officers
Kappa Upsilon chapter of Phi C medical fraternity elected officer for the fall semester of 1950, on M 14. The presiding senior will be Marvin I. Dunn, College senioi the presiding junior will be Keneth E. Hederick, freshman in medicine.
Other officers elected were Dona E. Becker, secretary and Raynor A. Christy, Jr., treasurer, both College seniors; Stanton L. Rosenber assistant treasurer, College junic Donald E. Ray, Judge Advocat freshman in medicine; Norval K. A. frey, house steward, College junic Donald E. Wise, social chairma graduate student; Thomas V. Batt rush captain, graduate student medicine; R. Jack Warren, dini room monitor, College junior.
Members of the senior council a John F. Bailey, graduate student Edward M. Burell, freshman medicine; and Fount K. Harty freshman in medicine. Sergeant-arms will be Robert N. Hoope freshman in medicine.
There are 66 steps from the base ment to third floor of Strong hall.
80 Awards Presented To ROTC Students On Armed Forces Day
A colorful parade by army, navy, and air force R.O.T.C. students marked the celebration of Armed Forces day May 20. Held on the intramural field south of the Military Science building, the parade and presentation of awards to outstanding students was witnessed by 200 persons.
Chancellor Deane W. Malott, presented the 80 awards to the students as more than 500 troops stood at attention. When all the awards had been given out, the troops, in charge of their cadet commanders, paraded in review, honoring the outstanding students.
The American Legion medal given to the outstanding second year advanced ground forces student went to Max F. Pachil, cadet lieutenant colonel. The Professor of Military Science and Tactics medal for second year infantry went to Harlan L. Ochs, business senior.
The P.M.S. and T, medal for second year advanced engineers was awarded to William E. Adams, engineering senior. The P.M.S.and T, medal for first year advanced infantry went to John M. McKinley, engineering junior.
First year advanced engineers P.M.S. and T. medal went to Elton B.Noble, engineering junior. The outstanding second year basic P.M.S. and T. medal was awarded to James E.Irby, College sophomore.
Richard L. Bradley, engineering sophomore, received the P.M.S. and I. medal for second year basic engineer.
The Veterans of Foreign Wars medal for outstanding first year basic student went to Charles L. Shrewsbury, College freshman.
Marksmanship and rifle team medals were awarded to Christian J. Mann, engineering freshman, Arnold H. Winkelman, engineering sophomore, Olaf C. Anderson, College sophomore, Joseph W. Boyd, III, College senior, William H. Garlock, engineering sophomore,
The distinguished military students named from first year advanced R.O.T.C. were McKinley, Marvin E. Humphrey, engineering freshman, John N. Ivie, engineering sophomore, Charles E. Gates, pharmacy junior, Edwin F. O'Brien, education junior, Jimmy R. Smith, engineering sophomore, Noble, George T. Weiser, engineering junior, and William B. Wilhelm.
Ernest C. Friesen, College senior, and commander of the parade, was awarded the Veterans of Foreign Wars medal for outstanding qualities of leadership. James I. McArthur, business junior, was named the distinguished naval science student, third year navigation. The distinguished naval science student, second year naval weapons, was Duane E. Dunwoood, engineering sophomore.
The Kansas City branch of the Naval Academy Alumni association awarded a watch to Richard A. Traskowski, College senior, as the outstanding naval science student.
Mahlon M. Ball, engineering freshman, was named distinguished naval science student, first year naval orientation. Fourth year naval supply distinguished student was James R. Pratt, business senior. Third year marine corps distinguished naval science student was Harold J. Keeling, engineering junior.
Edward K. Maxwell, College senior, was named fourth year marine corps distinguished naval science student.
Recognized for their work on the rifle and pistol teams were Jack E. Gove, business senior; Kenneth A. Harris, engineering junior; Eddie R. Maag, engineering sophomore; James P. Gillett, engineering sophomore; John R. Esther, College freshman; George A. Youngstrom, College sophomore; Robert B. Newton, College junior; Denneth E. Merrill, engineering sophomore.
The air force association medal was awarded to Arthur C. Ford, Jr., College senior. Paul R. Dring, College sophomore, received the air force American legion medal. The
The Professor of air science at tactics medal for outstanding second year advanced administration went to Joseph H. Mendenhall, Colley junior. The same award for an armlent student went to Billy H. Hanilton, graduate student. The P.A.S. and T. medal for first year advance administration was awarded to Arthur O. Kaaz, Jr., engineering sophomore.
Veterans of Foreign Wars med went to Robert A. Kipp, engineeri sophomore.
The P.A.S. and T. medal for an advanced armament, first year, we to Robert E. Perdue, engineer sophomore. Outstanding second ye basic medal went to Richard Roshong, College sophomore.
Outstanding first year basic student was Riley D. Woodson, engineering freshman. Marksman's medals were awarded to Richard Kummer, engineering junior; E Awdry S. Aile, College junior; E Butts, fine arts junior; Wilk Waggener, Jr., engineering fresher; and George E. Prochaska, College sophomore.
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Lawrence, Kansas
21 Promotions Announced For Faculty Members
Promotions in academic rank for 21 faculty members were announced today by Chancellor Deane W. Manglott. The list is only for the Lawrence campus. School of medicine promotions will be made public later.
The promotion list shows recognition of veteran teachers and outstanding newcomers. The latter have come to K.U. since the end of the war.
The eight promoted to full professor rank are Joseph Buckchalter, pharmaceutical chemistry; J. A. Burzle, German; Frank E. Hoecker, physics; Shelby A. Miller, chemical engineering; Reinhold Schmidt, voice; C. S. Wilson, engineering; Donald G. Wilson, electrical engineering; Laurence C. Woodruff, biology, entomology and dean of men.
Eight associate professors gain the rank of full professor. Eight will come associate professors and five instructors become assistant professors.
The eight assistant professors elevated to associate professor rank are Kenneth E. Anderson, education; Ellis L. Anders, Jr., petroleum engineering; Miss Agnes Marie Brady, romance languages; Gerald M. Carney, music education; Dwight J. Mulford, biochemistry; Thomas D. Schocken, architecture; Raymond Stuhl, cello and ensemble; Emil L. Telfel, journalism.
The annual board and business meeting of the School of Religion will be at 4 p.m. Friday in Myers hall.
Raised to assistant professorships from the rank of instructor are; Charles Baer, engineering drawing; John T. Cannon, marketing; Katherine Mulky, music theory; Ray Ottinger, design; Chalmers Herman, Spanish.
School of Religion Board Meeting At 4 p.m. Friday
Court Reverses Parking Tickets
The student court reversed three parking tickets and cancelled two Tuesday. It ruled no jurisdiction for appeal on tickets issued to Richard Stutz, engineering junior. Bill Petrich, pharmacy junior, and Lewis Sandidge, graduate student, defaulted on their appeals by not appearing.
Laird Campbell, chief justice of the court, acting according to sections of the constitution of the All Student Council, appointed John MacGregor, third year law student, as sheriff of the court, and George Lewey, graduate student, as coroner. Lewey is a licensed Kansas mortician.
Because "he was not his brother's keeper", two tickets issued to Edward Balda, engineering senior, were received. The tickets the tickets were charged to him, but were issued to his brother who is no longer in school.
"We want to be prepared for any instance of gangsterism on the campus." Chief Justice Campbell said.
In the case of Richard Moore, engineering junior, and Richard Zlotky, engineering senior, tickets were concealed since they were driving under University authorization while preparing for the recent Engineering exposition.
Alfred Sim, College sophomore had one ticket for parking in an illegal zone reversed. Sim had parked on the tract south of Lindley hall where the new fieldhouse is to be built while on a geology field trip.
Speakers Named For Commencement
Dr. L. B. Spake, member of the Board of Regents, Gov. Frank L. Carlson, and Chancellor Deane W. Malott will give greetings to the class of 1950, at the 78th annual commencement exercises, at 7:30 p.m. Monday, June 5.
Speaker at Baccalaureate at 7:30 p.m., Sunday, June 4, will be Hazen G. Werner, resident bishop of the Ohio area of the Methodist church.
Both events will be held in Memorial stadium. In case of rain they will be held in Hoch auditorium.
Select Senior As Missionary
KU Engineer Appointed To Chairmanship
Raymond Sauder, College senior, has been selected as one of 50 college graduates who will participate in a missionary program in South America.
The L.A. 3's, which is the name of the program, will go to Latin America for three years to do missionary work. Sauder will spend his three years at a Methodist mission in Peru where he will teach in a high school or do work with the public health administration. The name of the project is derived from Latin America and three years.
The program is sponsored by the Methodist Board of Missions but is open to other denominations. The group, consisting of 25 men and 25 women, will be sent to 10 different countries in Latin America. They are expected to make their placement if there is an opening for their particular type of work. Similar groups have previously been sent to India, Korea, and Japan.
He will begin a six weeks training period at the Kennedy Missionary school in Hartford, Conn. beginning on June 24. During this period he will be trained in the language and culture of the South Pacific country and will also receive Bible training. He will sail from New York in the latter part of August following a short vacation.
Students chosen for this work must be college graduates having an above average academic record and specified personal characteristics. They must also be approved by a joint committee of missionary personnel.
Warren Snyder, '43, will become chairman of the mechanical engineering department Sept. 1, Chancellor Deane W. Malott announced today.
Professor Snyder, assistant to the head of mechanical engineering at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, the past two years, will
(1)
A native of Hutchinson Professor Snyder was a Summerfield scholar at K.U. and was named honor man of the class of 1943. He spent a year in the naval research laboratory, Washington, D.C., after graduation, and in 1944 was transferred to Minneapolis as associate engineer in an aircraft precipitation static research group.
WARREN SNYDER
After the war he became an instructor in mechanical engineering at the University of Minnesota, and in 1948 was made assistant to the department chairman. He received his master of science degree in 1950. He is the University of Missouri. He will receive his doctor of philosophy degree this summer from there.
succeed Harry L. Daasch who has resigned to become a private engineering consultant at the end of the summer session. Professor Snyder is 28 years old.
A reception will be held in the Union lounge from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. June 5, in honor of the class of 1950. In receiving line will be Chancellor and Mrs. Deane W. Malott, Gov. and Mrs. Frank Carlson, and Dr. and Mrs. Laverne B. Spake. Dr. Spake is a member of the board of regents.
Faculty members in charge of the reception are Prof. and Mrs. Russell Mills, senior chairmen, and Prof. and Mrs. M. D. Clubb, junior chairmen. Senior class committee members are Bernadine Read, chairman, Marilyn Barnum, Murray Davis, James Hawes, and Kitty Walter.
Peace Pipe To Be Smoked At Senior Breakfast
Mrs. Snyder, '43, is the former Mary Gene Hull of Wichita. They have a son Billy, aged 5.
Sally Pegues is general chairman of the breakfast, Richard Heiny is president of the class history, and Craig Hampton is in charge of the unrheochy
The senior class breakfast will be held at 8:30 a.m., Monday, June 5, in the Union ballroom. Seniors are asked to wear caps and gowns. The history and the prophecy of the class of 1950 will be read, and the breakfast will close with the smoking of the peace pipe. Each senior will be given a miniature corn cob pipe to smoke.
J. Paul Lysaught, College sophomore, won a $75 second prize in the Hattie Elizabeth Lewis Memorial essay contest. Lysaught's paper, "Condemn Us Not," was judged the best paper submitted by a University student on the application of the teachings of Jesus to present day problems.
Essay Wins $75 For Paul Lysaught
No first prize was given this year. Third prize of $50 was awarded to Albert Roland, graduate student, for his essay on "The Political Responsibility of a Christian in a Disordered World."
Contestants may have their manuscripts by calling at 115 Strong hall
Ohio Music Director To Succeed Swarthout
Thomas Gorton, director of the School of Music at Ohio university. Athens, Ohio, has been named dean of the School of Fine Arts at the University, effective July 1.
The announcement of Dr. Gorton's appointment to succeed Donald M. Swarthout was made by Chancellor Deane W. Malott today.
Must Pay Debts To Get Degree
As a reminder to all students, but especially to graduating seniors, James K. Hitt, registrar, said Tuesday that "a student will not be recommended for a degree if he owes the University money."
Unpaid hospital bills and parking and library fines can keep a senior from graduating. University rules provide that no student shall graduate owing the University.
Students who are not graduating are required to clear up all University fines or bills against them before they can register for the summer session, fall semester, or have their transcripts sent to other schools.
Mr. Hitt urged that these debts be taken care of before Saturday "to avoid possible last-minute embarrassment or complications."
Any student who thinks that he may owe the hospital, library, or parking fines should check at the main desk at Watkins hospital; the traffic office, 200 Old Flower shops; and the circulation desk, third floor Watson Library.
The $12 commencement fee for graduating seniors is now due and payable at the business office, 121 Strong hall.
Students planning to return to the University for the summer session or fall semester must sign a former students' card in the registrar's office, 122 Strong hall, before the end of the semester if they have not already done so.
Fall Rush Schedule Is Announced
The sorority rush week schedule for the 1950 fall term has been announced by Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women.
Beginning the rush week events will be a picnic and required meeting of all actives at noon Thursday, Sept. 7, at Potter lake. The next day a meeting of all rushees will be held in Strong auditorium followed by an informal open house at all the sorority houses. On Saturday, Sept. 9, invitational Coke parties will be held at the various houses.
In the past these first two dates have always been more formal occasions, but next fall the rushees and actives will dress informally in skirts, blouses or sweaters, and anklets. At the buffet supper on Sunday, Sept. 10, which will be followed by a dessert party, all women will wear date dresses, hose, and heels. On Monday, Sept. 11, the final day of rush week, the rushees may attend three coffee dates. That afternoon pledging ceremonies will be held at each sorority house and will be followed by formal pledge
Final Jayhawker Of Year
To Go On Sale Friday
The final issue of the Jayhawker magazine will be available Friday afternoon at the Jayhawker office in the Union. The office will also be open Monday, May 29, through Friday, June 2.
Dean Swarthout, who is retiring after 27 years as dean of the School of Fine Arts, will continue teaching at the University as a professor of piano for five more years.
Dr. Gorton, 39 years old, has been director of the School of Music at Ohio for the past three years. During the war he was a lieutenant in the navy and served as navigator and executive officer of the U.S.S. Antares, a supply ship in the Pacific theater.
Chancellor Malott described Dr. Gorton as "a man of exceptional training and administrative ability, 'He will carry forward the School of Fine Arts, already brought to pre-eminence by the long and untiring devotion of Dean Swarthout," the chancellor said.
Dr. Gorton was described by Dean Swarthout as "a man who has respect and admiration of all who have known him. He is a man whose record up to now gives promise of being an outstanding one and national in scope. He will have the support of the retiring fine art's officer and the extire fine art's faculty as well."
Dr. Gorton received his bachelor of music degree in 1932, his master of music degree in 1935, and his doctor of philosophy degree in 1948, all from the Eastman School of Music at the University of Rochester, Rochester, N.Y. As an undergraduate, his major was piano, while his graduate majors were in composition.
Dr. Gordon's first teaching assignment was to a fellowship while doing graduate work at the Eastman School of Music. From 1935 to 1937 he taught at Riverside Junior college, Riverside, Calif. In 1937 he being piano department of the Memphis College and a year later organized and became head of the piano department at the University of Texas.
Dr. Gorton's music compositions have been performed by the Rochester Civic, the Houston, the San Bernardino and the University of Texas symphony orchestras. "Variations and Fugue on a Welsh Tune," his latest composition for a symphonic band, was played for the first time this spring at the University of Ohio.
In 1943 he requested leave of absence to enter the navy. Before going on active duty he was a civilian marshal, finding navigation to aviation cadets.
As a piano soloist he has appeared with symphonies in St. Louis and Houston and with the Rochester Civic orchestra. He has given piano recitals throughout the country and has been a member of chamber music groups. He taught. He has been conductor of the 180 voice University of Ohio chorus.
Mrs. Gorton is also a graduate of the Eastman School of Music. The Gorton's have one daughter, 10 years old.
University High To Be Faculty Club
Plans are being made to convert the University high school into a faculty club for the University staff. Chancellor Deane W. Malott announced. The preliminary plans for the club are being drafted in the office of the University building program.
An organizing committee which will determine the needs of the club will be appointed in the near future. The club will provide a place for the faculty members to go to read, relax, and dine in privacy.
MCH
FAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 24,1950
Record Breaking Number Of Seniors To Walk Down Hill.
A new all-time record is expected to be established when seniors walk down Mount Oread for commencement exercises Monday, June 5. The program will include almost 2,400 names. Below is a list arranged by schools of the seniors who are expected to be graduated.
WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM AND PUBLIC INFORMATION
Bachelor of Science in Journalism
Anna Marie Albright, Jainice Auer, Natalie Mary Bolton, Carol Marie Buhler, Joan Marie Bushey, Robert Elmer Carlin, Virginia Lee Daniels, Robert James Day, Lee Weyl Dyer, Marian Katherine Dyer
Robert Joseph Enright, Dale Wilber Ferguson, Virginia Frances Frost, Stella Wallace, Daniel Dean Heltier, Ralph W. Henneyam, Dorothy Beile Hogan, Richard Adams Hunter, Douglas K. Jennings, Douglas Tom Fields Jones, Vynne Camille Josserand, Ruth
Russell J. Oleson, Robert B. Overton,
Charles F. Reiner, John Warren Roberts,
Rosemary Near Rosap, Charles Robert
Roter, Waven Francis Saas, Louis Victor
Warner, Wood Food Seymour, James
Warner Siriver, Robert L. Simonton,
Nancy Denee Smith.
Robert DeGoyer Leonard, Keith E Leslie, Harrison Eugene Madden, Clifford Fords, Richard A. Dale Murley, Robert Vincent Morey, James S. Morris, Bonnie Gimlet Nelson, Alix Virginia Neville, Robert Martin Newman, Darell Forest Norris, Nelson
Charles Harold Steeper, Jessima Shider Strange, Iola Elizabeth Webb, John A. Wiedemann, Sally Sue Woodward, James Edward Younts.
SCHOOL OF LAW
Bachelor of Laws: Joe Bailley. J. O Biggs. Robert Haynes. Bingham艾尔. Jeffrey Ames.
Alfred L. Burgert Lakai S. Campbell J. Glenn Hahn, Dale Robert Hanes, Kenneth Harmon, Darrell Havener Charles Roger Hudson
Nheemian Y. Kronenberg-Kittil, Lyle David Lutton, J. John W. MacGregor Wilbur Payton McCool, Robert Henry Myer; Arthur Norl Nystrom, Mildred E. Murray; Pauley Warren, Lawrence Robert Feiningham, Payne Harry Rutner, Jr. Terry E. Bellhan
COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES
James Milton Rhine, Robert Henry Henry and John A. Stuckman, Frederick Stuckeman, Carl Victor Sundborg, Jacob Harness Torbert, William Jeffries Turpin, Jess Winfield Van Wagner, Wagner, James Dixon Waugh, Albert Williams, Forrest Arthur Wilson.
Bachelor of Arts: Edmund G. Ahrens, Barbara Jelinean, Barbara Barbara Jelinea Autis, Schrab Amine Sydneiderson, Richard A. Ankerholz, Isadora Frank Joseph JoArmato, Alice Alsen Armstrong, Jaow Howard Armstrong, Vernon John Griffin Alchester, John Babby
Floyd Wilmer Baker, Porta Baldwin Baldwin, Mickey Williams, Barber, Bacier, Marilyn June Barium, Jamsg Robert Barr, Angelo Battaglia, Donald Barr, Kyle Gillespie, Robert Samuel Bell, Ruth Ann Bell, Margaret Adalh Beltz, Frank Thomas Benkocik, Kevin Eugene Bennett, Joan Gregg
Robert Feederick Bennett, Harry Elsey, Michael Boese, Jeanne Zoe Bolei, William Connell Bolin, Daniel Carrington Bonne, Robert Fitzgerald Boulska, Robert Raymond Bower, Robert Calvin Boyd, Joan Morris Bradford, Theodore Raymond Brock, Joseph Ryall Brook
Lauraine Brooker, Schuyler H. Brooke-Brown, William Robert Brown, Wiland Robert Brown, Warren Birch Browning, Harry Truman Budke, John Burke, Burns Claude O. Burnade Jr., William Hunter Burtse, Pansy Darlene Burton, John Payton Dowling Calvary, John Payton Campbell
Richard Huntley Cappus, Jeanne Antoinette Burroughs, Robert C. Cassidy, Billie Ann Carter, Robert C. Cassidy, Betty Rattull Catherine, Robert Francis Cebulla, Wendy Christy, Jean, Da Mae Claiborne, Phil Gene Clark Barbara Anne Cleaves Roger Dean Geneigi Elta Mac Moore, Dean Geneigi Elta Elta Mac Moore
Clair C. Conard, Carolyn Campbell Joseph Connell, Jr., Mar. Carmen James Joseph Connell, Jr., Mar. Carmen Thomas trecia Jordan Conroy, Robert Willis Cook, Charles H. Corvey, Charles Copeland, Charles H. Corvey, Jr., Mary Genet Couvey, LeRoy Ernest Cox, Mariane Gershon George Carnozar Al-Gene Dagel*
David Thomas Dailey, Diane Daniely, Dr. Richard Griggs, J.D., Robert Louise Davis, Murtha Elizabeth Dawes, Henry James Dick, J.R., Robert Lester Davis, Carole Dresoe, Robert Miller Dilab, Carol Ardis Dawn, Marvin Irvin Dunn, John Lawrence Bumbartard, Jéon Ewart, Lawrence Bumbartard, Jéon Ewart
Donald Keith Edmondson, Jo Ann Edwards, Frank Dekker, Joanne Ebbitt, Elliott, Beverly Jano Emerson, Calvin J. Emerson, William Emerson, Daniel Stanley Fasenfelt, J. Olin Stafford Fearing, Robert Murray Fenton, Edward Kearn, James Robert Fevurley, K威尔 Fewell
Robert Harold Finick, Charles Harvey
Charles Ford, John Foster, Erik
Churches Ford, Lester Lee Foster,
Clare Faireen, Jr. Thomas James Fritz-
lein, Brian Cullen, Michael Gage,
David Carolinian Richard, Brichard
Bryant Garmand, Harold Dean Garwood,
James Raley, Ruth Vally Gibbs,
William D. Giller
Barbara Jean Givin, Edwin Moore Glasscoe, Richard Warper Wanda Wanda
Govan, Marian Helen Graham, James Marjorie E. Grunder, Ann Ellen Guyer, Rosemary Hall, Howard Wesley Hall-Jones E. Gruder, Ann Ellen Guyer, Douglas Hardin, Robert Earl Hardin.
Joyce Aline Harkleond, Don Hugh Hughes, Betsy L. Heine, Charles Wilburn Hawkins, Keith George Hay, Mabel Hastings, Betty Lou Hatcher, Charles Wilburn Hawkins, Keith George Hay, Mabel Hastings, Betty Lou Hatcher, Olivia Heins, Deanna Dum Neller, Carol Beth Helmers, Martha Ann Hendler, George Heinley, Thomas Benton Herring
Donald Dee Herrman, Keemneth Wilder Hinson, Charles Earl Holhaus, Wallace Dumont Holderman, Jacqueline Holt, Kevin Hinson, Charles Earl Holhaus, Wallace Dumont Holderman, Jacqueline Holt, Kevin Hinson, Charles Earl Holhaus, Wallace Dumont Holderman, Jacqueline Holt, Kevin Hinson, Charles Earl Holhaus, Wallace Dumont Holdeman, Jacqueline Holt, Kevin Hinson, Charles Earl Holhaus, Wallace Dumont Holdeman, Jacqueline Holt, Kevin Hinson, Charles Earl Holhaus, Wallace Dumont Holdeman, Jacqueline Holt, Kevin Hinson, Charles Earl Holhaus, Wallace Dumont Holdeman, Jacqueline Holt, Kevin Hinson, Charles Earl Holhaus, Wallace Dumont Holdeman, Jacqueline Holt, Kevin H逊,
Edward James Huyeke. Charence Wal-
man. Brian Dawson. Donald Leljo, Wayne Drewow
Jaynes. David Harold Johnson, Jr. Dean
Brown. David Walters. Eugene Jones. Hazel Lucie Jones. Jerome
Edward Jones. Michael Wayne. Justice,
Charles Addison. Doyle Keller.
Charles Addison Keetald
Johann Louise Kendall, Eleanor Maxine
Kerford, George Rsay Kinderman, Jay
Berkum, Daniel Berger, Kim Kurbium,
Phyllis Marie Kraft, Charles
Lawrence Kramer, Walter Kinga Dreek.
William Seth Lacy, Louise Lambert,
Lorraine Gorsky, Barbara Lourauxre-
lorine, Larsam, Barbara Lourauxre-
Jack Sprung Larzellez, Boyd Curtis
Barnes, Jeffrey S. Burke, Jean Leear, Gerald Joseph LeBlanc, Edwina A. Lee, Elizabeth Ann LeSuer, Frank M. Koch, Dennis Lichtenstadter, Charles Selt Lindberg, Robert Dale Lindeman, Shirley Arlyne
Lorraine Mary Coriume Locke, Margaret Laine
Martha Ruth Lovell, Roger Warner Love, Robert N. McNeil, Jill Luff, Patrick Grachey Lynch, Hervery Walker Macferran, J. R. Majors, Dale Euclid, John Sullivan, Sarah Cifford Leonard Malone, Edith Eleanor Malott, Margaret Joan Manners, Rose-Henry Moss, Herbert-Hershel Martin, Nora Maria Mason
Metla Elizabeth Mather, Shirley Mae Cohen, Elizabeth Thomas McCauley, Christine McCauley, Christopher McCauley, Kathleen Louise McKelvy, Adrian Willard McKellery, Todd Metcalf, Otma Metcalf, Orcena Annabelle Michelson. Max Gibby Miller, Thomas Anderson. Moody Joon, Betty Jane Moore
Joseph Warren Morrow, Jr., Jo Ann McKenzie, Barbara Roper, Idel Nelson, Laura Grace Nelson, Leslie Bernard Nelson, Z. James Nevels, Jr., North Curtis Alfred Nystrom, Frank Edward Obenailen, James Michael O'Hara, Richard Stanley O'Neill from Europe, Eugene
Virginia Lee Osborne, Max F. Pachi,
Kevin Bockman, Michael L. Parrott,
William Lewis Mattison, Jr., Barbara
Ann Paul, Lawrence Daniel Penny,
Rachel Houser, Jonathan Pearson,
George Linn Peterson, Jeanne
Marie Peterson, Robert Montgomery Peterson,
Michael G. Piererson, William Richard Piggott
Helen Louise Piller, Robert Arthur Hampton, Robert Porter, Jerre Ann Quinn, Walter Ouilling Quirling, Jr. Mary Barbara Ramsey, Ray Buryham, Paul Celineine Redmond, Ruphray Reed, Eugene Reed, Warren Triplett, Donald Arnold Reilhan, Trig Albert Rice.
Priscilla Cain Richmond, Marian Virginia Rippettee, Walter William Ritt, Jr., James Ellis Roberts, Raphael Ritt, Charles Russell, Arthur Eugene Rudd, Patricia Burnham Rummer, Patricia Ruttle, Robert Kenneth Santford, Raymond Albert Snuder, Eldon Paul Savage, Irvin George Scherer, Verda Scheuerman, Ada Jean Schmidt
Theodora Lillian Schreiber, John Henry Scrivener, William Sharpe, A. vonne, Henry Shaffer, William Emil Sharpe, Emerson Simmons, Helen Marie Skively, Oliver Olivier Simmons, Loren Earl Simpson, Edward Jeans Smith, Evelyn Smith, Betts Jean Smith, E. Marvin Smith.
Phoebe Ann Aurell Stone. George Galler Stuckey. David Walters. Richard Stuckey, Robert Bruce Stuckey, Donald Cummings Studley. Davon Ravnond Swain. Jeffrey M. Wheatley. James Swleger, James Arthur Taylor, Helen C. Telfel, Corinne Avey. Temple, Phyllis Morgan. Thomas Myron, Morgan Thomson.
Camp Edward Smith, Betty Jeanne
Leanne Campbell, Robert J. Spangler,
Spangler, Millard Craig, Scuoser, Dale
Albert Sniegel, Charles E Staley, Russell
Stewart, Jeffrey A. William Stavely,
William Stavely,Jeffrey St塞尔,
Philb L. Stevens, Samuc) Jerome Stewart,
E. Stipe, Lawrence Edward
Stollenwerk
Doris J. Tihen, Donald C. Tinken, Jr.
Brian S. Thieroux, Kevin Tackowiak, Neal黛黛 Truth, John W. Twente, Jr., Theodore Morris Ulschen,
Joseph O'Reilly, David Paulace, Paul Wallace, Robert O. Walter, Marjan June Walters, Royce Clifton Waltz, Shirz Martha Ward, Bettie Waters
Bachelor of Science in Chemistry; then Marine Engg. at Rosenbay Jr., JD, Daniel William Brite, Sylvan Buach, Loren George Heeler, Clinton McFarlane, Eva Helen Rother, Carl Milkard
Mary Joan Waterstrain; Earl Ford Wat-
les; James Hicks; Joseph Wells; Joseph Rye; Lewis Donald Welton, Allene Rue Wenke, Robert Benjamin Edwin White II, William Arthur Whitehead, Herbert Bruce Wilder, James Don Williams, Jeremy Wilson
Thomas Oliver Wilson, Wilfried. Ann
Johnson, David. Robert Perry.
John Edwin Woolcott, Jr., Robert Perry
Bachelor of Science in Geology; Ted Harrison Beaver, Thomas Bigg Bums Richain Dean Daly Alpine, Daunt Key Osborn Jewell, Clinton Joe Kesterson, Marvin Wade Kmysay, Hugh Harrison Kreamer, Rayburn Dale Ocamb, Bill Joe Porter, Carroll Joseph Seib, Ralph E. Johnson, William M. Myron Jevre, William J. Vestal.
Bachelor of Science in Nursing; Aileen Anna Alderson, Margaret M. Burt, Shirley Joan Gordon, Norma Lou Hall, Doris Elaine Laino, Lorena Margaret Schake.
Bachelor of Science in Physics: Marvin
Elden McKinney, Fred Roubon Rollins,
r., Charles F. Schmabel, Jr., Donn B.
Vimmer.
Bachelor of Science in Education: Jean Anne Amery, Abigail Allison Jeanton, Bean Burdick, Abigail Lea Bixby, James Edward Bousser, Richard Curtis, Robert DeMoss, Darlene Brown, Marian Macdon, Dorothy Ann Christensen, Daniel Daryl Clinger, Cindy Corder, Adelbert DeVere Cranger
SCHOOL OF EDUCATION
Gene Edward Davidson, Louis D. DeLuna, ARIan R. Dewell, John Frederick Landis, Rex Ellerits, Carl T. Ellis, Dorothy Englaine England, Jack Eskridge, Howard Albert Fischer, Richard Daniel Fletcher, Doris Clark Garrison, John Martin
Grace Jeanneline Gwinner, Ellen Hanes,
Joan Happy, Edway Byon Godson, Jg.
Margaret Louise Hoopes, Bernard Dale
Hudson, Dobert Dunne Kearns, Jack
King,alph John Ernest Knon, Anne
Laundrith, Matjorie Ann Lane, Anne
Marcelle Long.
Jack Mallory, Ezra Joseph Metz, Marian Mills, Alfred Moore, Jr., Clarice Jeanne Moorehouse, Marilyn Morgan, Kenneth Alan Morrow, Alice Grace Myers, Harley Oberon Obey, Paul Clyde Thomas, Tiffany Peters, Oliver Clyde Phillips, Wavy, Augustine Pipe.
Mary Astrid Pinkney, Jack Bromwell Pringle, Ma-lon LaVon Ratzell, Don罗馨 Schoffeld, Elinor Yost Soot, Toyvowel Sessions, Shirley Jean Shriver, Forrest Brenner, Brian Sperry, Keenuth L. Sperry Carroll G. Sprugel, Elizabeth Louisa Stephenson.
Bachelor of Art Education: Glen Ernest Sandberg, William H. Shaw.
Floyd O. Temple, Carol Jean Terrill, Esther S. Thorne, Elaine Olive Tice, Richard Kent Tomlinson, Ramon Trennephol, Lloyd Charles Wilson, Dorothy Davies, Wood, Norman James Yackle, Edward Davis, Harry James Mitchell, John J. Keller, Smith
**Bachelor of Music Education:** Delbert Cauley, BFA, MEd, PhD. Frank Heckendorn, Milred Ann Hogue, Rosemarie Hurig, Lila Lorene Rosemarie Hurig, Lila Lorene Langel, Raymond Eugene Oucritt, Marybeth Rea, Joan Constance Sanders, RA, Harriet May Weed, IRA, Robert Wirth Wurth.
SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS
Bachelor of Fine Arts: Marlyn Gene Allen, Mary Helen Baker, Catherine Mary Heenan, Betty Lou Bynam, Betty Lou Bynam, Edward Lee Cooper; Jr. James Lowell Cunningham, Richard Harry Dauberman, Mary Patricia Davies, Michael Dawson, Ellin Elsworth, Gwenny Elayne Gupton.
Norma Jean Guthire, Graig William Hampton, James William Hawes, Harley McIntosh, Robert Leroy Hughes, Jane Hyde, Helen M. Indwersem, Dana Franca Johnson, Freda Mary Jones, William Townsend McIlroy, Egene Wright, Thomas McIlroy, Thomson McCory, Jc. Elizabeth Ann McCune, Mary Jane Merriman, Mercedes Muir, Robert William Nagel, Joe Ann Ogg, Nancy Durante Page, Cliff Clemens, Jennie Loue Peteer, Robert Harold Gold
Irma Lou Rick, Charles H. Schafer,
Mary Flo Spillar, Lois Marie Timken,
Jack Elam Tusher, Marian Jean Waters,
Wyngen Wilson, Susan Weller,
Wyngen, Wilton Wilson
Bachelor of Music: Jeanne Marie Aldridge. Pearl Clothier Campbell, Merle Heidrich. Sarah Baldwin hard Milton Gayhart, Billie Iione George. Barbara Elizabeth Glover, Dagmar Zoffie Hassoliva. Betty Jean Hayward, Mary Lynn Lucas, Charlotte Anne Maxey
Jack Richard McCoy. Myron Lester McNowen. Theil Wilkins Mimics. Shirley Murphy. Eileen MacRae. Nudio Jeanette Read. Joyce Rohrer. Donna Fay Rumsey, Gregory. F. Sima Charles Thomas Smith. Jean L. Tillson Kathryn Kearney. Elizabeth Frank Erskine White.
Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy: Sam Browne, James Charles Bauthul, Norris Gore Artman. Everett Glenn Baker. Phyllis M. Lewis. Charles Lloyd Brooks. Lynn Abbott Buell. Rosenary Chamberlin. Arthur Allan Clevenger. Richard Hammond. Robert Cook. Charles Stewart DeWhitney. Richard L. Dietrich. Robert Mathias Dietrich. Howard Harrison Dold. Edward P. Ewart.
Bachelor of Science in Occupational Therapy; Norma Jean Doctor, Mary Elizabeth Graves, Ellen Ida Schafferfer, Certificate of Occupational Therapy (none)
SCHOOL OF PHARMACY
Jack L. Frost, Edward Earl. Galyon,
Lee Frank Garich, Stanley R. Goulding,
Robin L. Hasselman, Eric Hauw,
Jimmie N. . Grimes, Raymond
Chestler Hall. Clarence J. Hamm, Albert
Hobson. Rawwood Lee Hicks, Darrell
Alledge, Hobson Eugene Hubbard,
Walter Chester Hulen.
Donald Dwight Hunter, Wesley RJarecke, Eugene Russell Lallier, Robert Floyd Lindenneyer, Jack Urmston Lewis, Marilyn Robert Lindberg, Robert Mackey, McAulay, Billie G. McCulough, Corwin McIntyre, Robert Eton Nichols.
Gene Mariwole Palmquist, Glenn Elroy Parton, Albert Lesley Pipkin, John Kemp Pistorius, C. Warren Plummer, Ralph Jesse Pool, Alan Probst, Geraldine
R. Probst, John Henry Raines, Lewis
Bertolli, Althea Roer, George
Ebert Simpson, Rick
Rudolph A. Sandberg, Wendell Wayne Schaffert, James Edward Sheehan, Frank Eugene Shrimpill, Daniel Harold Tucker, Daniel Gerrit Stucky, Goner Quentin Stinkesbary, Gerald Eugene Stutz, Theodore Wendel Tober, Harold George Winters.
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
Doctor of Medicine: Robert H. Adams,
Leonard H. Akes, Lars Arden Almquist,
Schrab Amindu Theodore Laverne Mulligan,
Schrab Amindu Laurie Harry
LeRoy Biggs, Jr., Franklin K. Bowser,
Maxine Thornton Brillhard, John Edward
Buess, Byron Hugh Bufful, Paul Russell
Carpenter, Mack A. Carter, David Crawley,
Crumley, Frank Cvetkovich, Francis Alston Davis.
Marion Lois DeVault, Richard L. Dreher, Byron Taylor Eberle, Robert Charles Hunsberger, John Stuart H Frieden, Deryl Donovan Fulter, Tex Elholm Fury, William Bradley Gerach, John Griffin Griffin, John Hogan, Sylly Silt Hoyll, Willard J. Howland, Jr., Glen Curtis Hutchinson, Wesley Arthur Innes, Leda Grace Janke, Frederick Otto Joerris, Chris Furth
Paul A. Kaelson, Jr. John Shaw Kirk, Kenneth Lawrence Knuth, Warren Lee Kump, Milton E Lindley, Edward E Carr, Robert Meyer, McDonald Jr, Stanley Rankin McEwen, John Warren McKay, Alexander Clark Mitchell, Richard Ervin Munsen, Dewey George Nemec, George Erwin Omer, James Owen, LaRue R Wue, Owen Jack Tellin Peterson, Harry Orville Philips, Richard Lotus Pokorny, Charles Byrd Powell, Robert Edgar Hollingsworth, Bartlett Wil- ramsey, Earl L. Redfield, Alexither Bot
John Gordon Roth, Barbara Edmonds Russell, Robert Keith Russell, Sherman Douglas Skimov, Anno Amto Hughes, Eugene Smith, George Clement Steinberger, Grant Melvin Stevens, Niles St. Clott, Stell, Letitauker Tambony, James Holmes, Daniel Kramer, Frederick Udell Timms, Ernst Elwood Tippin, Jr., Richard N. Todder, Fredrick E. Tetten, Charles B. Wheeler, Jr., Katherine Alice Wilson, and Charles Mar
Certificate of Nursing: Margaret M B
Norma Lou Hull, and Betty Frances
M B
Certificate in Physical Therapy; Ren-
titled Physiotherapist, Dorothy Elizabeth Hamilton Etiel,
Stefianes, Mary Helen Heikel, Viola Hei-
ne, Ann Larson, and Jas-Nea Irene Porten.
Certificate of Residency: Dr. Pat A Barelli, Dr Fred N Bioslevac, Dr Charles A Branthaver, Dr Jewell, Dr Philip J. Clark Dr Lloyd H. Coole, Dr Howard M Cohenour, Dr Mary Catherine Coligazler Dr Bruce V Drowns, Dr Stephan Fox Roy R Oyunenko, Dr Hugh Hagge Edward H Haslam, Dr Alan J Roy, Dr Harry Jennifer, Dr Walter S Keifer, Jr., Dr Wallace Merriam, Dr Grover S. Patterson, Dr Evelyn M. Pebley, Dr Robert C. Polson, Dr Dale C Robert M. Storsteen, and Dr Charles E Vilmer
Certificate of Laboratory work: Betty Jane Anderson, Doris Brown, Esther Maria Calvin, Frances Chubb, Joan Jean Marie Calvin, Jacqueline Rush, Louise Louise Kroenert, Patricia Suzanne Matlock, Ruth McCrerery, Ruth Elizabeth Murphy, Carolyn Nigg, Marjorie Oliver, Betty Payne, Frances Regendhart, Kathleen Ray Scott, and Barbara Woolfellk
Certificates of Dietetics: Dymphae Lennon, Lorna E. Little, and Virginia M.
Certificate of X-Ray: Willavieve Brummell, Jean Joan Cayot, and Carolen McNemar
Certificate of Residence in Applied Basic Science: Dr. Philip W. Bernstorf; Dr. Ben H. Buck, Dr. Howard S. Cowley; Dr. Wallace C. Ellerbroek; Dr. Kalpai M. Lockwood; Dr. Jaritaro, Dr. Raymond M. Lockwood, Dr. Perry D. Peterson and Dr. John E. Scott.
Certificate of Internship: Dr. Daniel R.
Baen, Dr. Charles S. Davis, Dr. Robert
Henderson, Dr. Michael C. Reeves,
Bruce C. Jeppson, Dr. Paul T. Luckenbill,
Dr. John H. Hehmert, Dr. John R.
Patterson, Dr. Hampton Shirer, Dr.
Roger Ridei, Dr. Stockdale, and
Dr. Robert P. Stoffer
SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURE
Bachelor of Science in Aeronautical Engineering: Lawrence Stanley Abbott, Earl L. Gadget, Robert W. Cowne, Oliver D. Droege, Earl L. Gadget, John Davis Glenn, John E. Garvey, Michael Hobert, Jc. Isaac Hoever, William Park Horton, Donald Warren McDanel, Byron Dale Miller, Milton E. Rice, Virgil Alvin Sandborn, Richard Griffin Stutz, and Paul
Bachelor of Science in Architectural engineering Burton, William Warren Jorman, John Colby Hanaway, Lesier L. Mullin, John W. Johnson, Mullin, J. Dale Nelson, Robert Plank, John Harold Rath, Robert rov Riley, and Charles Howard
Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering; Arthur John Archung, Richard Wayne Calvert, Stanley Monroe England, Donald Finn, James, Charles Houghton,
Jr. Richard Lloyd Heiny, Jerry Hardin Kuehn, Bruce Hickman, James Hardin, Francis Mercer, John E. Merrigan, Jr. Norman Rodney Miller, James Edward Brumley, Kenneth R. Sibley, Jerome Smith, and Rex Eugene Thomas
Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering: Glenn William Anschutz, Matuyoshi Baker, Richard Brown, Baker, George Austin Brown, Jr., Norman Darrell Bryant, Theodore Edward Buckland, George Ewerton, Dr. Erick Fennett, Erik Drukke, Ernest Fettig, John Philip Hollday, Marshall 'R' Hopper, Robert Grant Hull, James Welcome Hunt, Hermann Thiesey, Mike Tucker, Joseph Rose, Coy Billy Ray McDonald, Thomas E. McMahon, Charles Nuzum Penny, Stanley Dean Penny, Edward Eugene Rose, John August Sandusky, Eugene Burton Shirley, Stanley Monroe Smith, James Gilbert Sintson, Eugene Lee Utter, David Koehler, Joseph K
Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering; Bennett, Barnet, Theoreme Harding, Samuel Barnet, William Carter, Alfred Lewis Case, Bruce R. Chadwick, George A. Clayton, Carl Caird, Richard B. Clark, Colleckill, Diane L. Daring, Charles Thomas Draher, Lahmer Orben Dunn, Finis C. Fountain, David M. Garlock, Paul Fulcher, David M. Garlock, James A. Glison, Donald H. H Gordon, Emmett G. Green, Aaron Lee Hall, Paul Robert Hanaway, William L. Heaid, Jr, George
Dean Leslie Hutchinson, Herman J. Lehman, Herbert D. Lewis, Bob Gene Richard, Marchet B. Williams, Richard Marchet, William Randall Marker, James Lawrence McAdoo, Donald Dean McMurray, Bertram Miller Jr., Moore Robert Gene Murrell, Moore, Robert Gene Murrell, Dale E. Nevius, Donald Foster Payne, Kenneth L. Regenold, Louis Bester Richardson, Ray Richards, Alvin Seamans, Jerome Oak Smith, Jr., Gordon Oliver Swanson, Charles Edward White, Thomas Alvin Wiley, Sanford R. Wilson, and John Stewart Young.
Bachelor of Science in Engineering Physics: Thomas Bruce Daniel, Francis Ware Prosser, Jr., and Robert Blair York. Bachelor of Science in Geological Engineering, Thomas Ray Gaston Ellis, Edwin A. Fritz, and Kenneth Taylor Smith.
Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering: Leon Arnold Abel, Thomas O. Lefkowitz, John H. Dickinson, Beck, Leroy Henry Berge, Francis Slavens Baggott, Raymond S. Bowers, Jr., Frank E. Breedlove, Dean E. Broderson, Patrick F. Garrison, Charles Daniel Cain, John H. Campbell, Eugene L. Combs, Jack R. Delamiaide, Justin W. Clark, Frank Gleen Douthat, William E. Ellis, J.Wilbur Bowen Evans, Robert D. Evlios, Lydian H. Frank, Thomas E. Franke, Michael D. Reagan, nemeyer, Jr., Lewis F. Hanes, Conrad D. Hawley, Leslie Holdman, Jr., John W. Hoover, John F. Hope, Jr., George C. Moore, John Ralph Hull, George H. Kear
Paul Kenneth Klaas, David Lord David Boyd J Marts, Conrad W. McEwen, John Hebert Morgay, John Hobart Hebert Morphy, Edward Nugel, Joseph William Nagle, Roger W. Parland, Delmas Jean Richards, John Edward Robb, Richard G. Rumpf, George Edwari Robb, Philip Foster Warren G. Strahm, Francis Ruile Stuart, James Ted Wade, John F. Weingart, James M. Welsh, Charles R. Wilderson, James M. Welsh, Cletis J. Willis, James Eugene Price Wilson
Bachelor of Science in Mining Engineer:
Thomas George Hassinger, JEP.
Bachelor of Science in Metallurgical Engineering Harold Ronsick, and J. S. Skewart
Bachelor of Science in Mining Engineering, Georgetown University; Bachelor of Science in Petroleum Engineering; Windsor L. Adkison, Jerome Anton Andruske, Fred H. Brinkman, Paul Buehl, Marcus Glover, Marcus Hope, John C. Glover, Marcus son, Randall W. Lovell, William Roy McDonald, La Verne S. McMillan, George Hugh Muret, Kenneth M. Rath, Leonard D. Hunt, Robert J. Thielen, Gareld Ovis Webb, Clide H. Williams, Jr., and Robert J. Wimmers.
Simino Echevaz
Dr. Robert Mariner (Professional Degree)
Robert Roy Meens
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
Bachelor of Science in Business: Jack Warren Adams, Donald Eagle Aiken, John Wright, Virgil Riley Alder Robert, Robert N. Robert, Donald R. Anderson, Robert J. Anderson Alfred Joseph Armand, Donald Kianah Shlock, V Boyd Bainter, Clifford Neil Bannister, Bunker, James Edwin Bannister, Warren Bannon, Merrill Bahring, L Barrett, Keith Bertram Beck
100
Corb S. Bedell, Harold H. Bennett, Robert B. Bergerman, Jerry J. Berkley, Robert E. Coley, Coley Bligh, James William Bluck, John Black, Lawrence W. Blake, Jr. Albert Henry Blake, Robert M. Blincoe, James Llocher, Dean M. Bloyd, Lawrence L. Blocher, Charles Bodeine, Byron John Bohl, Michael J. Joseph O. Bottiger, Lee CoulleBouw
Alfred L. Bowman, Ralph Jerome Bowman, Jr. D. Bradley, Carl Arnold Brandt, Brad D. Braddy, Marjorie Arnold Brandt, man Marjorie Charlotte Brooks, Darrel John John D. Brown, Robert Allen Brown W. Brown E. Buck, Robert M. Bunen, Jr. Lawrence M. Burmaster, Kenneth E. Caldwell, Nile Robert M. Campbell, Robert C. Catterbury, Brian N. Campbell, Robert J. Caskey, Jr. James J. Cavanna
William M. Cole, Robert E. Conley,
Calvin Edwin Cooper, Richard Wayne
Cray, Costello, John M. Couch,
Jack LaVere, Eugene Leroy
Crandall, John W. Cooper, Robert F.
Danneberg, Colleen Claire, Tim
Thompson Davis, Murray H. Davis,
Emmett J. DeHoff, Gillette D. DeMars, David
B. Dennis, James A. DeVeenbey
(Continued on Page 3)
4
PAGE THREE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
III
Hardin,
now-
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Phil.
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house,
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 24,1950
Record Breaking-
( Continued from Page 2)
P. Pick, D. Pick, Richard G. Dickerson,
Kenneth G. Diecker, Eugene L. Dane,
Ivan J. Donaldson, Jr., Harold C. Donley,
Joseph A. Denny, Michael M. Dunne,
Joe A.陈 Allen Dumineg, Edgar M. Eagle,
Maurice Lee Edmonds, Richard L. Ermann,
John A. Emerson, Martin Emmerge,
Michael R. Gore, Maryjorj
Eudaly, Gerald Don Evans, Clyde M.
Farris, J. Joseph B. Faust, Jr.
Warren W. Gress, Wallace F. Grundeman, Roy Elmo Hadley, William F. Halverhout, Richard Lee Hamilton, Charles Francis Eugene Hamm, Merrill F. Lumphin, Thomas Bernard L. Hausharr, Thomas Tucker Hawkins, William Eugene Hawley, Dow L. Helm, Leslie D. Henderson, Mary Hercules, Leonard R. Hersh, William V. Hercules, Leonard R. Herman, Richard Cecil George, John Charles Hoffmann, George Wallace Holden.
James E. Feltz, John Blair Ferguson,
Leon Fish, Edward L. Fitzpatrick, Jr.
Ray C Fleming, Jr., Maurice J Fletcher,
John M Feeney, Robert J Francis,
Francis, Eugene E Gamble, Jr., Jesse
Garcia, Robert F Gauraure, Harry Egery
Gilbert, Dean K Giltchrist, Nelson
Gibson, William J Gospel, Joseph M
Gorman, Jr., Jack Edwin Gove, Howard C,
Graff, Arthur Ronald Green.
Robert Lee Hopkins, Claude Houchin,
Charles Nelson Howard, Lee C. Hutcheson,
George E. Hutton, Jr. Lawrence E.
Walsh, Jonathan W. Lawman, Carl
Inman, Haid Day Jackson, William Carl
Jader, Arthur D. James, Arnold W.
Nennings, Bruce Wayne Johnson, Keet O.
Johnson, Howard Glent Jones, Wesley
Kelly, Christopher B. Walters,
M. Kennedy, Thomas Davis Ketchum.
Guy C. Kidwell, Jr., Nola Faye Killgore, Donald D. Kindler, R. Hawk R. Charles, H. Koslowsky, Jr., William G. Charles, H. Koslowsky, Jr., William G. Laughlin, Robert Souter Leuter Jones, M. LePage, Robert Charles Liem, Howard M. Logan, William H. Love, J. Kenneth W. Lord, Gerald C. Lundgren, William Joseph Lynch, Guy O. Malary, Don Adamdson
Robert Lee Malloy, Gerald B. Maloney,
James Wallace Mann, Calvin E. Markwell,
Dale Rich Marshall, Donald J.
Martin, James L. Masterson, Charles D
Mulligan, Thomas R. McCulloch,
H. McCulloch, James P. McFadden,
Norman K. McReynolds, Howard E. Meyer,
Herbert A. Millier, Richard N. Millikan,
James D. Modeldlmog, Jack B. Mohler,
George Albert Monson, Dresser
Glasberg, Harry W. Morey, Jr., Grant
B Morrell
George Parker Nellans, Gene Richard Nelson, Leland Lelion, Ernest. Edward Dileen, Melissa Hale, Edward D. Nielsen, Martha Eldman Oatman, Harlan Leroy Ochs, Carl Elwin Oatman, JR.,
Earl Minford Peterson, Austin Ray Peyter Payton, Richard Peyter Paytow, John Morrill Powell, Loren Eugene Powell, James Richard Peytor Peytow, Peter Pumphrey, Peter M. Puryd, Roberta C. Purnell, Richard H. Raney, Daniel L. Purnell, Richard H. Richard Joel Reed, Fredrick B. Retner, Jerry
James R. Reynolds, Dean G. Richardson, George H. Richardson, Jr., Robert F. Richter, Evan Davis Roberson, Amos L. Roberts, Jack Ward Robison, Roberts, Roberts, Jack Ward Robison, Burt A. Robson, Norman G. Rousseau, Charles W. Rush, John F. Schmidt, Betty Marie Schrier, Barbara F. Schumaker, James B. Schrier, Frank R. Severs, Thomas R. Seiter.
Claude Eugene Sharp, James V. Shea,
Hubert Ray Sheppard, Alger Yoer Simon,
Clifton L. Smith, David Elliott Smith,
Jerome M. Smith, Kathryn Ann Smith,
James W. Smith, Martha M. Sullivan,
Earl D. Spidel, Morton F. Stearns, Leroy A. Steinke, Thomas H. Stone, Fred C. Stelzer, John R. Stephanain, Lawrence DeWitt Steven, John F. Stites, Delbert
Son To Give Dad Gown
A son will hand his father his cat and gown at commencement, when Robert F. Shreffler, the father, marches down the Hill to receive his diploma.
Charles A. Shreffler, who will be graduated today from Lawrence Memorial High school, will help distribute the caps and gowns for the University commencement exercises. He will select the proper size cap and gown for his father.
Mr. Shreffler was graduated from high school in 1927. He attended junior college at Joliet, Ill. one year, worked for Santa Fe railroad several years, and then spent three years in the army. He enrolled at the University after he got out of the army. He will be awarded a bachelor of science degree in mechanical engineering. Charles, his son, will enroll in the College next fall.
Mrs. Shrefler has been an employee of the University Press while her husband has been in the University.
Set Closing Hours For Women's Houses
Closing hours for all women's houses during final week become effective today. Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, has announced.
Today through Friday, closing hours will be 11 p.m. Closing hours for Saturday will be 1 a.m. Sunday. May 28, through Wednesday. May 31, closing will be at 11 p.m. From Thursday, June 1, until the beginning of the summer session, closing hours will be at midnight.
G. Stone, Dean R. Storbeck.
A. Fred Stratemeyer, Jr., James Robert Stratton, Richard J. Swaglic, William H. Taylor, Richard B. Wiggins, Richard Taylor, Jr., Glenn W. Taylor, Jack W Terrill, Emma Alice Thomas, Gerald L. Thomas, Emma Home, Thomas E. Tinberg, Martin S. Goregue, E. Tinberg, William H. Titus, Austin H. Turney, Jr., Glenn E. Vernon, Donald E. Walden, Charles G. Wassert, Richard H. Waggell
Harold Thomas Walker, Donald Dale Weddle, Marvin Hewing Webkling, Donald B. Wells, Edward B. Weltner, Douglas W.earworth, Byron W.ergers, Norman Dale Wiley, Ruth J. Holmes, Veryl E. Wilch, Fred F. Wilcox, Nancy Patricia Williams, Phillip G. Williams.
James Robert Wilson, Norma E. Wilson,
James A. Wilson, Richard E. Wilson,
max. B. Max W. Binners, Harry F. Wolkamp,
Jr., Roy Lincoln Wonder, Richard Emil
Wonder, Robert Yockey, Marvin R.
Zimmerman
University Daily Kansan
Mail station, Kansan, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans.
every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods are on Saturday, July 19, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
University Daily Kansan
LUGGAGE
Army Surplus LOCKERS
Your
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The annual meeting of the University club will be held today. The program includes election of officers (polls open, 6 to 8 p.m.), covered dish supper at 7 p.m., business meeting, colored movie, "Around South America," and dancing.
Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers
Used—Good ... $3.49
University Club To Elect
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Assorted $1.49
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snapshots are easy
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You just load, aim, and shoot
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and
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So-Long Class of'50
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The More You Tell—The Quicker' You'll Sell—Use Kansan Classifieds.
GOOD LUCK ON YOUR FINAL EXAMS
Thanks for the privilege of serving you. You've been a swell class, and we wish you great success and happiness in your future ventures.
TO THE GRADUATES...THANKS!
TO THE UNDERGRADS-
We'll be looking forward to seeing you next year. Have an enjoyable vacation.
Worry-Free Driving Puts Money In Your Pocket
MORGAN-MACK MOTORS
714 Vt.
Phone 3500
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 24, 1950
Engagements
Miss Emily
Miss Joyce
10
LAUREN
Miss Hogan
Miss Frost
Frost-Ruhl
Sigma Kappa sorority announces the engagement of Miss Virginia Frost, daughter of Mr. A. H. Frost, of Denver, Colo., to Mr. Donald William Ruhl, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. P. Ruhl, of Iiawatha.
The engagement was announced at the sorority house May 21 at the annual senior breakfast. Miss Jamie Estlack made the announcement, Miss Carol Dunn passed favors and Miss Patricia Davis passed chocolates. Miss Frost received a bouquet of roses and presented each of her attendants with a rose. Mrs. Mary Younkman, housemother, wore a corsage of gardenias and red rose-buds.
Hogan-Hollenbeck
Miss Hogan is a journalism senior, and Mr. Hollenbeck is a freshman in the School of Medicine. The wedding will be June 6 in Danforth chapel.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude C. Hogan of Salina announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Dorothy, to Mr. Virgil C. Hollenbeck, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lester C. Hollenbeck of Hope.
Pearson-Bevdler
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Pearson of Lawrence announce the engagement of their daughter, Dorothy, to Mr. William L. Beylden, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Beydler of Ashland. Both Miss Pearson and Mr. Beydler are sophomores in the College.
Bousman Engaged
Mr. and Mrs. William Ball of Kansas City, Kan., announce the engagement of their niece, Miss Joe-ann Bousman, to Mr. David V. Breidenthal, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oren W. Breidenthal of Kansas City, Mo.
Miss Bousman attended the University in 1948 and 1949. Mr. Breidenthal is a junior in the School of Business and a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity.
JULIE KNOPP
MARTHA LENNEDY
Miss Pearson
Miss Bousman
AKL, Sigma Pi Choose Fall Officers
New Sigma Pi Officers
Sigma Pi fraternity installed officers for the fall semester Sunday in the Union. Jay H. Carruth is president; Donald F. Willenburg, vice-president; Ben D. Simpson, secretary; Chester C. Pennock, treasurer, and Robert L. James, historian.
Davis Is AKL President
Robert L, Davis, first year law,
is the newly elected president of
Delta chapter of Alpha Kappa
Lambda fraternity.
Other officers elected for the fall semester are; Bill Adams, vice-president; Gene Campbell, recording secretary; Charles Edwards, corresponding secretary; Bob Evans, treasurer; Dale Theobald, chaplain; Jack Dausman, social chairman; Dick Ethrington, steward; Alvin Benham; sergeant at arms; and Don Spiegel, chapter editor.
Sigma Pi Initiation
Sigma Pi fraternity announces the initiation of William Beydler, College sophomore from Ashland, Sunday in the Union.
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Spring Pledges AO Pi
Alpha Omicron Pi sorority announces the pledging of Jo Ann Spring, College sophomore from Lyndon.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
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A
WEDNESDAY, MAY 24, 1950
PAGE FIVE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
9
Engagements, Pinnings Told
Greenbank-Romig
Mr. and Mrs. James Greenbank of Eldorado anounce the engagement of their daughter, Doris, to Mr. Dale S. Romig, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Romig of Hutchinson.
Miss Greenbank is a journalism senior and a member of Delta Gamma sorority. Mr. Romig, a College junior, belongs to Sigma Nu fraternity.
A. S. A.
ALEXANDRA AND STEVE
Greenbank-Romig
Cottrell-Oglesbee
The announcement was made by Mr. George Gear at the Phi Kappa Psi spring formal Miss Rhodes wore a corsage of yellow baby orchids. Her attendants were Misses Dolores Brown and Mary Marr Evert.
Alpha Chi Omega sorority announces the pinning of Miss Beverly Rhodes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Rhodes of Newton, to Mr. Robert Mullen, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Mullen of Hutchinson.
Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Herwig of Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Janice, to Dr. Bert W. Harned, son of Dr. and Mrs. V. W. Harned, also of Kansas City.
Alpha Omicron Pi sorority announces the engagement of Miss Barbara Cottrell, daughter of Mrs. Alice Cottrell of Irving, to Mr. Dwight C. Oglesbee, son of Mr. and I Mrs. Byrd C. Oglesbee, of Sedan.
Herwig-Harned
The announcement was made recently by Miss Loun Ann Dick.
Miss Herwig is a senior in the College and Dr. Harned is practicing medicine in Kansas City.
Ackerman-Houchin
Rhodes-Mullen
Kappa Alpha Theta sorority announces the pinning of Miss Ann Ackerman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Aekerman, Evanston, Ill., to Mr. Claude Houchin, son of Mr and Mrs. N. M. Houchin of Munice. The announcement was made during dinner by Miss Sally Stepper. Attendants were Misses Agnes Husband, Marcia Race, and Susie Woodward.
Flowers For The Graduate
GRADUATE
Come in or call 998 for fresh-cut bouquets and corsages. We deliver.
THE BLOSSOM SHOP
TEL. 0800 948
Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary music sorority, held initiation for seven persons May 20.
Mu Phi Epsilon Initiates
A luncheon honoring them was held in the Kansas room following the initiation ceremony.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
WEDNESDAY,MAY 24,1950
Kansas Track Season Isn't Over Yet
Although the Big Seven meet is down in the record books, Kansas trackmen haven't yet completed the 1950 season. Four meets are still on their agenda.
Saturday night at Wyndotte stadium in Kansas City, Kan. Varsity and freshmen thinclads combine their talents under the name of the University of Kansas "KC" club at the Missouri Valley A.A.U. championships. The following week a squad of six Jayhawkers will compete in the Big Seven-Southwest conference Dual of Champions at Dallas. June 16 and 17 the same six go to the N.C.A.V. meet at Minneapolis and follow up the next week in Washington at the National A.A.U.
Notably absent from the list of entrants this Saturday will be All-American Pat Bowers who has been sidelined by a pulled Achilles tendon.
A rematch of Capt. Bob Karnes and Bill McGuire of Missouri Saturday isn't yet certain. Missouri has entered its freshman team, but its varsity is as yet doubtful. However, the two ace milers are slated to meet at least three more times—at
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the dallas, Minneapolis, and Washington meets.
Notable among Coach Bill Easton's freshmen who will be making their first 1950 start in actual competition Saturday are javelin thrower Hall Smith, hurdler Don Smith, and the mile relay team of Warren McVey, Art Schaaf, Don Smith, and John Reiderer. Hall Smith has tossed the spear 195 feet 6 inches,
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Don Smith has run the lows in: 2:40,
and the relay squad has run 3:24.7.
The squad which will run at Dallas,
Minneapolis, and Washington is
capt.-elect Emil Schutzel, quarter
mile; Bowers, half-mile; Karnes,
mile; Semper, two-mile; Greenwood,
high and low hurdles; and Bob Devinny, low hurdles and 220-yard dash.
B. W. H.
HARRY W.
COLMERY
Candidate for U. S.
SENATOR
REPUBLICAN
Subject to Primary
Election Aug. 1, 1950
Knows Kansas problems and National problems. . has been school teacher, clerk, section laborer. . now an able lawyer and business leader. . held American Legion's highest office, National Commander. . courageous, dynamic, fearless, tireless. . a man you can be proud of as your U.S. Senator.
Colmery for Senator Committee (POL. ADV.)
Congratulations Seniors
and
Thanks a million to all you fellows who have patronized us so generously
Good Luck
Drop In Sometime When You're Back
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Before That Vacation Have Your
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1950
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 24, 1950
PAGE SEVEN
Spotlight On Sports
By BOB LEONARD
Daily Kansan Sports Editor
This is all of it. Another year of K.U. athletics is behind us. When Coach J. of V. Sikes' young team opens the 1950 football season against T.C.U. here in September, Jayhawker sports fans can well expect even a greater year in Kansas athletics.
It might be well at this time to look back a few months and review some of the highlights of the spring season to see just how well our Jayhawkers have done.
DO YOU REMEMBER; when Harold England was sent into the Missouri game here to stop Bud Heineman who had scored 17 points for the Tigers in the initial period ...how Gene Petersen paced KU. to a second half win over Nebraska ...the Jayhawkers' 79 to 68 rout of the Kansas State Wildcats in Hoch auditorium after the catnapping of the Aggie wildcat, Touchdown IV ...
Coach Bill Easton's trackmen startling the Big Seven with the indoor title at Kansas City...the crowd in the lobby of the Muehle-coach hotel whooping it up in one of the year's most spirited rallies just before the Bradley game...
Coach Allen's honor of being selected "Basketball's Man of the Year" which brought fame both to the dean of American basketball coaches and to K.U...and the look on the good doctor's face as he was presented a new car by the Lawrence Downtown Quarterback club ...
Colossal Clyde Lovellette's torrid scoring pace over a 25-game route that found him erasing about all existing K.U. scoring records in his first year .he scored 545 points in averaging 21.8 points to make about everyone's all-opponent team as well as many national honors... and to think he still has two more years to burn up the nets.
Coach Easton in the center of Memorial stadium bellowing to his track charges, "Run, run, run"... Don Pierce's husky, grating voice announcing the lineups at the baseball games ...
How Coach Bill "Red" Hogan's Jayhawker baseball team completed a successful season winning 10 and losing eight ... Carl Sandefur's great pitching to win eight games while dropping a single contest . . . how big Sandy won seven Big Seven games to rank as the loop's top hurler, in fact, to rate as one of the finest pitchers to hit the circuit in many seasons...
Yes, you will remember these
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things and, perhaps, many more. We have had a great year at Kansas. All of our athletic teams have showed well. Your sports editor has attempted to give you the complete Big Seven picture.
I wish at this time to thank Richard Dilsaver, Ray Soldan, Monn Millikan, Art McIntyre, and especially Bob "Grantland" Nelson, without whose help this job could not have been done. A word of thanks is also due Russel Sehon, scout for the Philadelphia Athletics, who has taught me most of the baseball I now know.
Yes, this is all of it. Have a good summer, think of the University during the "break" and return to Mt. Oread to boost the Jayhawker teams this fall. The prospects for the 1950-51 athletic year are most encouraging and should provide K. U. students with many hours of enjoyment and Jayhawker victories.
Hierophantes was the name of the first K.U. annual. It was published in 1874 by members of the I. C. Sorosis and Beta Theta Pi.
KU Drops Last Game To Oklahoma
The Oklahoma Sooners pushed across two runs in the fifth and three more in the sixth to break a 3-all tie and down the Jayhawkers, 8 to 5. Tuesday, in the final game of the year for both teams played on the Varsity diamond.
After winning Monday's game, 8 to 7, on an eighth inning rally, K.U. found it more difficult to solve the late game slants of the Sooners' big righthand ace, Jim Kirk. After the sixth inning, Kirk shut K.U. out allowing only one hit.
Coach Bill Hogan's club finished the season in fourth place splitting even in 16 Big Seven games. For the entire season, Kansas won 10 and lost eight.
FINAL
BIG SEVEN STANDINGS*
W. L. Pct.
Nebraska 11 3 .786
Missouri 9 5 .643
Oklahoma 7 5 .583
KANSAS 8 8 .500
Kansas State 5 9 .357
Iowa State 4 9 .308
Colorado 2 7 .222
Tuesday's Results
Oklahoma 8, KANSAS 5
Nebraska 11, Kansas State 0
Colorado 2, Iowa State 0
*All games included except Kansas State at Colorado, May 29-30.
REGULAR DINNERS
709 Mass.
fielder Russell Hill, Cavonaugh rounded third and came on in to score K.U.'s final run of the 1950 baseball season.
- Short Orders
Bob Stephenson, Oklahoma shortstop, led off the fifth inning with a 370-foot homer to left-center, to break a 3-all tie and provide the Sooners with a lead they never relinquished. A single by Charles Pugsley and a double by second baseman, Travis Wiginton, gave O. U. a 5 to 3 margin.
In the sixth, two hits and three Kansas errors provided Oklahoma with three more runs to complete the Soodners' scoring. Herman Philipp, K.U.'s ace relief pitcher, entered the game to end the rally by getting left fielder, Phil McKee, to pop up to short.
The Kansas fielding proved costly as the Jawhakers committed seven errors. This faulty support kept K. U. starter, Guy Mabry, in trouble through the early innings. Two of the first three Sooner runs were unearned while Kansas' two runs in the third inning were scored without a base hit.
Kansas picked up its final two runs in the sixth. After Philipp grounded on the ball, Ken Morrow kicked Kirk lost his control and Jim Cavonaugh also walked.
REGULAR PRICES
Score by innings: R. H. F.
Oklahoma 110 123 000 — 8 9 3
Kansas 002 102 000 — 5 6 7
Batteries: Kirk and Sheen; Mabry
(lost), Philipp (6), and Morrow,
Mace (9).
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Frank Koenig, who had three for four including a triple to lead K.U. at the plate, singled sharply to right-field scoring Morrow from second. When the ball got away from right
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 24, 1950
Sleep And Recreation Vital To Finals In Study Rules Given By Reading Lab
A list of suggested rules on how to prepare for examinations has been prepared by the University of Kansas reading laboratory as an aid to students.
The list states the purpose of examinations is to sample students knowledge of important material in courses, determine students progress in courses, and to motivate learning. Students should keep this in mind when preparing for exams.
Physical preparation is vital to successful completion of examinations. Students should get plenty of sleep, eat adequate meals, and get the proper amount of recreation while preparing for exams. Recreation periods help the student to relax and should be planned to obtain the best results. A positive mental attitude is also imperative. The student must feel that he will learn by writing the exam.
When reviewing for exams, students should consider the type of exams given as well as the purpose. Lecture outlines, text outlines, outside reading material, word lists, old tests, class notes, and summaries at the end of chapters should be reviewed. Group review may help weak students, but it is not recommended for strong students.
Tool Engineers Install Officers
Harold Buddenbohm, engineering senior, was installed as chairman of the American Society of Tool Engineers at the annual banquet May 19.
Ralph Adkins, engineering junior, was installed as vice-chairman, and Thomas Fisher, engineering junior, was installed as secretary-treasurer. Orval Mulkey, engineering junior, took office as parliamentarian.
Guest speaker was B. J. George, consulting engineer for the Kansas Power and Light company.
Dberg Is Second In Contest
Lynette Oberg, fine arts junior, was runner-up in the Miss Kansas contest held Tuesday in Kansas City, Mo.
The winner, Anabel Baker of Wichita university, will represent Kansas in the Miss America contest to be held in Atlantic City next September. She was the American Royal Queen in 1948.
Required Grades Lowered For Miller, Watkins Women
The required grade average for acceptance of women in Miller and Watkins halls has been lowered for the coming school year 1950-51.
The new grade average for freshman is 1.5 while upper classmen must have a 1.6 grade average to enter and stay in the scholarship halls. The grade average formerly was 1.6 for freshmen women; 1.7 for juniors; and 1.8 for seniors.
There are 212 new art lockers on third floor of Strong hall.
Summer Work
If you plan to work during summer vacation and are interested in higher than average earnings, we offer you an opportunity with a national organization.
Upon acceptance by our firm, you will be given a 3 day training course that will enable you to earn from $75 per week up.
Reply to Box 1, University Daily Kansan, giving information about yourself—age, any previous employment, and the name of your home town. Also give address where you can now be contacted.
FOR THE GRADUATE
graduation cap
As appealing as Spring 1950, and as stimulating as the look in the Graduate's eyes are the gifts in Ober's fine selection. For a truly pleasing and appropriate graduation gift, come in and have one of our experienced staff help you.
- Shaving Kits
- Lighters
- Luggage
- Jewelry accessories
- Electric Shavers
- Electric Shavers
- Leather Goods
- Sport Shirts
- Leather Goods Cloth Bags
- Tie Racks
- Clothes Brushes
- Suit Hangers
Ober's
Ober's Lawrence's Leading Clothier for Over 50 Years.
Seen Any Glasses?
If So, Call Kendall
Unless someone finds her lost glasses, Johann Kendall, College senior, will be doing her finals "sight upseen."
The glasses have clear plastic rims and were in a red leather case when lost Tuesday afternoon between Bailey chemical laboratories and Watson library, Miss Kendall said.
Anyone who finds them or knows of their whereabouts is asked to contact Miss Kendall at Jolliffe hall. She says she "could use them" during final week.
Summer Planned by IVCF
Guest speakers and panel discussions will be featured in the summer meetings of Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship. The meetings will be at 7 p.m. every Thursday night in 131 Strong hall.
TAKE A FEW MINUTES OFF from hitting the books and drop in to see our extensive line of luggage
---
Foot Lockers Wood or metal
Men's Two-Suiters
Aviator's B-4 Bags
Carry-Alls
Overnight Cases
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Peterson Heads Owl Society
Gerald Peterson, education sophomore, is the new president of the Owl society, honorary junior men's society, for the 1950-51 school year. Other new officers are Donovan Hull, treasurer, and Howard Payne, secretary, College sophomores. The officers were picked by lot.
B
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Think of us this summer and compare our service with what you get when you're away—
We will look forward to having you back with us next September.
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4
EDNESDAY, MAY 24, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE NINE
Annual Alumni Association Meeting Will Be In Strong Hall This Year
A commencement-time tradition will be broken this year, said Fred Ellsworth. Alumni association secretary.
fred Ellsworth, Alumni association secretary. Since 1883 the yearly alumni meeting has been in Fraser hall,"for years the only place that would hold them all," said Mr. Ellsworth. This year the commencement
Announcement of the new Alumni association officers and the intro-
ments program lists "Annual Alum-
l Association Meeting—Strong hall," and in parentheses, "(air condition-1)."
"A lot of old timers aren't going to kee that break in a 67-year-old outine," remarked Mr. Ellsworth, they're going to have a hard time taking that 3-story climb." Announcement of the new Alumni
Students Present Program
Four University students presented an assembly program Wednesday, May 17, at Argentine High school Kansas City, Kan. They were Deane Peck, fine arts senior, cornet; Mary Davidson, fine arts freshman, vocalist; Philip N. McCarty, fine arts sophomore, saxophone; andog Buterts, fine arts junior, pianist. All presented a group of solos. Butts also accompanied the others. Miss Keek was the "mistress of ceremonies."
duction of the distinguished service award winners is expected to please them however.
Presentation of citations to the six men named as outstanding alumni will be made at the Alumni Commencement supper, Sunday, June 4. in the Union.
German Educators Coming To KU
Three specialists in German education will attend the Elementary School workshop from Wednesday, June 7, through Saturday, June 17, at the University of Kansas. They are observers of the U.K.'s policy of education, which is sponsoring their study in this country, George B. Smith, director of the summer session, said today.
The three are Helmut Albels, Johanna Ott and Dorothea Rueckel.
- Details on Request -
There are 22 tennis courts available for University students' use.
ATTENTION!
Phone 3661
- Organized Houses
- Fraternities
Foreign University Tours
- Sororities
Courses offered at Innsbruck, Vienna, Copenhagen, Oxford, Paris, Grenoble, Heidelberg, Lausanne and others. All expense by air from New York, including fees, living transportation, $495 up.
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DRIVE - IN Theatre
LET THE TEMPERATURE SOAR THIS SUMMER
You can relax and even enjoy it by using our service. Leave a load of wash for only 25c. Pick it up later at your convenience.
?
RISK'S
Self-Service Laundry
613 Vermont
Phone An Ad, Then Be Glad, With Kansan Want Ad Results.Call K.U. 376.
THURS.
3 DAYS ONLY
Ends Tonite Tight Little Island
Wholesome and Delightful Entertainment
... Movies Are Better Than Ever!!
He's the "NEW" father of his Country!
PROVING
THE BEST THINGS
IN LIFE ARE CHEAPER
BY THE DOZEN!
CLIFTON WEBB
MYRNA . JEANNE
LOY . CRAIN
COLOR BY
TECHNICOLOR
CHEAPER BY
THE DOZEN
Added Enjoyment
Color Cartoon
"DANGEROUS DAN McFOO"
PROVING THE BEST THING IN LIFE BY THE DOZEN!
CLIFTON WEBB
MYRNA . JEANNE
LOY . CRAIN
COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR
CLIFTON WEBB MYRNA JEANNE LOY CRAIN
DOZEN
THE
Added Enjoyment Color Cartoon "DANGEROUS DAN McFOO" Comedy: "Rescue Squadron"
Feature Times—1:37, 3:37, 5:37, 7:37 and 9:37
STARTS SUNDAY
(PREVUE SAT. OWL 11:15)
For the Whole World to Love!
GREATEST LOVE STORY EVER TOLD!
Walt Disney's
CINDERELLA
COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR
Hear "BIBBIDI-BOBBIDI-BOO" *SO THIS IS LOVE*
"A DREAM IS A WISH YOUR HEART MAKES"
"CINDERELLA" *CINDERELLA WORK SONG* BRADLEY
Box Office Opens 12:45 Daily—Shows Continuous
Patee PHONE 321
PAGE TEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 24, 19
U.S. AIR POWER DECLINES
1947
23,200
1948
21,100
NOW
AIRCRAFT
17,200
For example only 3,300 combat aircraft are now in active inventories, compared to 5,400 in 1947.
The active inventory for this year will be 8,800 aircraft—of which 5,500 will be used for training, liaison transport and administrative activities.
THOUSANDS OF
1947
TOTAL INVENTORY
ACTIVE COMBAT INVENTORY
SOURCE: USAF
PLANES
1947
5,400
1948
4,100
NOW
3,300
ACTIVE COMBAT INVENTORY
The Editors Report -
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS
Need Teachers
The recent survey by the National Commission on Teacher Education and Professional Standards points up the startling imbalance in preparation of teachers for professional duties in the public schools of the country. Of an estimated 100,000 people needed to teach elementary school this year, only 20,000 are expected to be available—whereas there are expected to be 84,730 to fill 30,000 high school openings!
While it is true that a switch in objectives of many of those now planning for a high school teaching career would not fill the quota of elementary teachers needed, it would be one step on the way to giving our school-age children the proper education they need.
It is estimated that the need for elementary school teachers will be at the rate of 100,000 per year for the next ten years.
In this light, it is necessary that schools of education, guidance counselors, and boards of education members work together to encourage more prospective teachers in entering the elementary school field.
In most states the pay standard and professional standard are similar for high school and elementary school teachers and should not stand in the way of applicants for teaching positions applying for the elementary school jobs.-The New York Times.
Seniors Present Winning Paper
Jerome Andruske and Garel Webb, engineering seniors, have been awarded first prize in the student section for a paper presented at a joint meeting of the midcontinent and Oklahoma City sections of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers in Tulsa.
一
The subject of the paper was "Selection of a Computation Procedure for Predicting Future Behavior of Gas Drive Reservoirs." Andruske and Webb illustrated their paper with slides showing data, calculations, production wires, and results of their research. For presenting the first prize paper, the students received a copy of Muskat's "Physical Principles of Oil Production." They also received a five-year subscription to "Petroleum Technology," the official publication of the petroleum branch of AIME.
Ellis L. Anders, Jr., assistant professor of petroleum engineering, supervised the prize-winning paper. This is the first year that the University of Kansas and the Municipal University of Wichita have been invited to the meeting.
University
Daily Hansan
News Room K.U.251
Adv. Room K.U.378
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assm.
National Press Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Ad-
service,420 Madison Ave. New York City.
James Morris
Editor-in-Chief
Editors Morris
Editor-in-Chief
Doris Greenbank
Managing Editor
Asst. Man. Editors ...Norma Hunsinger
Kay O'Connor
John Hill
Ralph Hemenway
City Editor...Edward Chapin
Feature Editor...Francis Kelley
Photograph Editor
Telegraph Editor...Robert Shaw
William Graves
Richard Tatum
Lloyd Holbeck
Sports Editor...Richard Dilsaver
Asst. Sports Editors...Bob Lawn
Ray Soldan
Arthur McIntire
Mona Millikin
Society Editor...Faye Wilkinson
Editorial Assts...Keith Leslie
Adv. Mgr...Charles Reiner
Cr. Mgr...Yvonne Josserand
Nat. Adv. Mgr...Forrest Bellus
Classified Ad. Mgr.
Promotion Mgr...John Wiedeman
Going to Europe?
Carry a STUDYTOUR PASSPORT and enjoy the wonderful feeling of being welcome wherever you go!
P
June to Sept., ISA also operates weekly low-cost student flights open to STUDYTOUR PASSPORT holders traveling for an educational purpose.
STUDYTOUR
PASSPORT
Issued to
You!
INTERNATIONAL STUDYTOUR ALLIANCE INC. 12 EAST 461H STREET NEW YORK 17, N. Y.
PERRY'S CAUGHT EVERYTHING BUT THE BALL SINCE HE STARTED USING VITALIS!
A woman is playing a game of catch with two other women, while three other players stand behind them.
VITALIS
Organic Grape Juice
Citrus Juice
Mineral Diet Drink
Sweetener for Liquids
CITRUS JUICE
WITH SUGAR
100% Natural
Made in USA
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.
A PRODUCT OF BRISTOL-MYERS
1.
"LIVE ACTION" VITALIS and the
"60-Second Workout"
LAST CHANCE LOST & FOUND
Will Be Open During Finals
EACH DAY 12 NOON TO 1 P.M.
Over 100 Books
Almost 200 Articles of Clothing
2 Watches
Many Pens & Pencils
Dozens of Glasses
Numerous Other Items
A Service by Alpha Phi Omega
CHECK WITH US IF YOU HAVE LOST ANYTHING THIS YEAR. WE MAY HAVE IT!
2nd Floor Student Union—Next Door to Ballroom.
- NO CHARGE -
Thanks Friends:
To all of you who graduate, we wish every success in your future.
To you who will return, we shall be glad to have you back again in the Fall.
But to each of you, we express our thanks for the business with which you have favored us while here.
Lawrence, Kansas
The Lawrence National Bank
ATTLE
make
ship to all
Courthouse
Phone:
SUMMER
ORGANIZATION
makes
oldest
thecepte
leads
265,100
add
City,
and H.
THOSE
the Compu-
sions
and
cars.
JAYHY
surpris-
shop in
Their
stop p
and f
1218 6
RIDEN
every day e
pan I
RIDEN
school
111½
RIDEN
at McCook
RIDEN
mer so
3-8027
SELL
dents
Tuesday
Wemen
jets at
Union
Y24,12
4
WEDNESDAY, MAY 24, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE ELEVEN
1
A
Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone K.U.376
rms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted in the understanding that the bill will be sent to you by dropping the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (exact Saturday) or brought to the business office. Journals bldg, not later than 3:45 p.m. the before publication date.
One Three Five day days Five
5 words or less ... 35c 65c 90c
additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
FOR SALE
MUST SELL my two cars by end of
semester, 1935 Ford and 1935 Chevrolet
with rumble seat. Good condition. $25
price. Phone 3277R. J20*
GRADUATION gift suggestions. Pipes, fighters, cigarette and cigar holders, noise tobaccos. Our selection is complete. The Pipe Shop. 272 Mass. 24
NYONE interested in Navy Officer's
building 3143M, 1319 Tern.
comm. ARGUS C-2 camera. Also 2
comms. ARGUS cariler. Excellen
condition. Phone 405281.
GRAFLEX. 4 x 5, 10 in barrel portrait
paint with cut film holder and film pack
chapter. $45. Lens alone worth the price.
R. Raxter. 405 Snow. 24
EICA CAMERA, f3.5 lens, coupled range finder, leather case, sunshade and filters.
Russian make. Bargain $55.00. Dr. Baxter, Room 405, Spray.
SIMASEE kittens for pets or breeding
to domestic cats or breed->
Term. Uhone 1956. 13
23
SEE THE PIX B4 you shoot. Argoxfe camera 14.5, redicase, Karlart flask. Excellent for amateur. First reasonable offer. Baker. Phone 927.
31 FOOT. 1949 Elcar trailer. Toilet and
laundry room. Located. Call 37973 for information. 24
1936 CHEWROLET. 2 door pedal. Wellman
p.m., daily. 1235, 1247 Ohio, Mr. Goodman
MAGIC CHIEF range. General Electric
divide and match furniture. Divide
divide and matching chair. Bed springs.
Will consider all offers. Must sell by
May 31. Evenings and weekends. 728
MAN'S double breasted, white, Palm Beach suit. Size 36 or 38 long. In good condition. Also lady's light blue raincoat. size 16, like new. Call 2885. 24
1948 Model Montgomery Ward refrigerator, 71" Cubic foot. Excellent condition. Need to sell. See at 1231 Delaware, young after five. 24
FECILY for the baby's trip—bottle warmer for the car, car seats, car bed. Western Auto Associate Store, 944 Mass. 24
BUSINESS SERVICE
FINEST TELEVISION--Best in sets and
just arrived. $87.50 and up. See the new-
est Emberson table model set at $19.50,
Radio and Electro.
$26 Vermont. Phone 1-800-323-4255.
TYPING: Theses, term papers, letters, etc.
Regular rates. Prompt accurate work.
Mrs. Schear; Apt. R-36, 1810 La. phone
2373R. 24
TYPING: Thesis, Term Papers, Reports
Tennis, Mrs Wilde, 19
Tenn. Phone 3028-M. 19
TYPING. Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rates. Prompt attention Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601
ATTENTION K. U.! Come in now and make a deposit. Fill the covers and upholstery. We furnish all materials, we guarantee our work. Call us: Upholstery. 837 Vermont Phone 143. Upholstery. 837 Vermont Phone 143.
SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL MATERIAL WORK.
mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a dignified sales activity representing the school in the educational field. Applicants accepted will work by appointment on Tuesday.
cepted will work by appointment on
08.25.00 and more per week on an ad-
charge.
addock, Jr., 1006 Grand Ave., Kansas
cell phone number, qualifications, school
and home address
THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. (Hadl Bros., 240 W. 16th St.) and fender repair, auto painting, used cars. 317 E. 17th. Phone 785 to 18218 rf.
AYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field and there is no other stop pet shop has everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Gift and Gift Shop 1118 Conn. St. Ph. 418. tf
WANTED
RIDERS WANTED: Leaving for Wichita every Friday at 4 p.m. Returning Sunday evening, Please call between 7-9 pm. Harry Shultz. ph. 3101J. 24
RIDERS or share drive for summer school. Epps Lawrence William 924-680-7051
808 Torpey
RIDE TO NEW Jersey Help drive and
Whiteidee Whiteside McCook hall or phone 2010. 24
McCook hall or phone 2010. 24
SELL ALL your used books to the Stu-
fard, Tuesday, May 30, and Wednesday, May
RIDE TO AND from Toptea during sum-
mmer school. Call LA: W. Aithe at Toptea 5
120-786-3422.
We will pay top cash prices for all the furniture the box and the table representative will buy and substitute and discontinued titles. Student Union Book Store. tf
FOR RENT
FURNISHED HOME “on the hill” very close to campus, veranda, lovey back door. Wednesdays and party. June 1st to Sept. 1st. Call 38633. 24 THREE SINGLE rooms for boys for summer. 1600 Tern. Phone 2589W. 24 DOUBLE ROOMS: bunk beds, insulated closet. Wednesdays and party. Men, 10, Indiana. Ph. 11608 after 6 p.m. 24 SUMMER ROOMS for boys, doubles, twin beds, linen furnished. Bath and kitchen, two blends from campus. $12.50 each if Mrs.
APARTMENT, furnished, 3 rooms and bath. Also rooms for summer and fall, single beds. Close to campus, for quiet studious men. 1244 La. Ph. 1752. 24
2 ROOM apartment furnished, electri-
cliqueor. Closet and storage space.
Sunroom. Library. Washroom. Mo-
ment rent to couple or men. 3 rooms for
students. Single beds. All large com-
fortable spaces to K. U. Bus. by
Special rates. Special rates for summer. 115
Ohone. Phone 1671-R.
COOL, half basement for 2 or 3 boys.
Private bath, cooking privileges, $20
each. 1818 Illinois. Phone 3014-R after
P.M. 24
NICE cool rooms for boys attending summer school. Also sleeping porch. Adjoining campus. 1631 Illinois. Phone 2674-J. After 4 P.M. 24
LARGE Single and double rooms for men. Comfortably furnished, conveniently located. Singles $12, doubles $10. Rooms available June 1, 1247 Ohio. Phone 3513.
SLEEPING room, twin beds. With breakfast.
Fast. Private home, nice neighborhood,
respectable, quiet. Good transportation
all parts of city. Wonderful future home
if planning to work in Kansas City.
Home very reasonable. Open for客
form Mrs. F. E. Wills. 500 square feet.
St. Kauken City 3. Missouri, Valentine
5670.
NICE cool basement rooms for summer students. 1339 Ohio. Phone 2089. 24
FOR men. Nice accommodation for 4 or 6
or summer and fall, 4 bedrooms, private
living room, kitchenette and bath. 637
indiana. Phone 1782. 24
N CICELY furnished sleeping rooms.
Available June 1. Twin beds and large cedar lined clothes closet. On bus line.
839 Miss. Phone 1832. 24
URNISHED apartments for rent. See a 359 Ohio. Phone 2089.
SUMMER SCHOOL AND FALL rooms
SUMMER SCHOOL and fall rooms and singles nicely furnished with single beds, linens provided, and rooms cleaned. Two private baths and telephone. Ex-ample from campus to town and from camp close to town and from campus at 1116 Louisiana St. St. 30 to 8 p.m.
24 SUMMER SCHOOL rooms for boys.
2917M. 1234 Oread. Free vacancies for summer students.
MAKE BETTER GRADES! Rent a portable or standard typewriter for $3.50 a model. Students rent 12-hour models at Student Union Book Store. TO LARGE SLEEPING room for summer use. Use of kitchenette for student couple. Use of accommodates. $25 month Mrs. Ryle, 1213 Ohio
ROOMS for summer or fall. 3 double and
1 single. Sleeping porch. Single beds.
$10.00 a month per person. 1222 Miss.
Phone 495. 24
MISCELLANEOUS
TRANSPORTATION
OSHKOSH, WISC. Would like ride there or Madison vicinity on June 7. Call Ted Utschen at 3337J after 9:30 p.m. 24
DAILY TRIP to Topeka and return to Lawrence. 2 girls. Must arrive in Topeka
6:48M, and leave after 5 p.m. 24
*648M*.
ATTENTION! Payment for all Daily Kansan Classifieds is due May 24! 24
RIDE TO San Antonio. Texas wanted.
After June 5. Phone 980. 24
WANT RIDERS or share the driving to summer school. Leave Plaza 7 a.m. after 11 a.m. JE 3178, Kansas City, Mo. after 6 p.m. TF
LOST
NAVY flannel hip length jacket in Eldr-
d hotel lobby Friday night May 12.
Finder please call K.U. 376 and after 7
p.m. 1534J. Reward. 24
LOST a pair of shell-rimmed glasses
Thursday evening, somewhere around
Watson library. If found please call Joe
Mendhenlah. 2917-M. 24
May 24,1950
Official Bulletin
Christian Science Organization regular meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Danforth chapel.
K. U. Dames bridge, 7:30 tonight,
Mrs. R. Roy Peterson, 936 Missouri.
Spring semester parking permits expire noon, June 10. Applications for summer session permits now received 200 Old Fowler. All parking regulations will be enforced during finals and during the commencement period.
I-M Softball Title Contests
To Be Heated Today, Sunday
The battle for the University intramural softball championship between the Phi Gams of the fraternity 'A' division and the Jim Beams of the independent 'A' division will be held at 4:15 p.m. on field I.
The playoff between the winner of the fraternity 'B' and the independent 'B' teams will be held next Sunday. The teams in this playoff are the Phi Gam 'B' squad and the Phi Chis.
Barr Speaks At Graduation
Dr. Harold G. Barr, dean of the School of Religion, will speak at the commencement exercises of the Douglas County Grade schools Saturday at Liberty Memorial High school.
SPECIAL MID-NITE SHOW
Saturday 11:30 p.m. (Doors Open 11:15)
GHASTLY!
WIERD!
ON
THE STAGE!
CHAN' LOQ CO.
HORRORS
OF THE
ORIENT"
DIRECT FROM
HOLLYWOOD
SENSATIONAL!
5 BIG SCENES
WEIRD! THRILLING!
COMEDY! LAUGHS!
GORGEOUS GIRLS!
IGOR
LA HUNCHBACK
IN PERSON
WOLF MAN.
Tickets now on sale at Theatre Box Office All Seats 60c incl. tax . . only capacity sold!
Granada
PHONE 946
On the Screen
"FRANKENSTEIN
MEETS WOLF MAN"
Bring A Date
. . . She'll Love It!
TONITE AT 8:32 ONLY An Extra Surprise
SNEAK PREVIEW
It's An Advance Showing of A Major Studio Picture that will be shown at this theatre at a later date this season! IT'S FAST—IT'S FUNNY—IT'S FULL OF SURPRISES! (The Producers Request the Title Withheld) BUT IT'LL BE ONE OF THESE 1950 TOP HITS!
TOP HITS!
- "MA AND PA KETTLE GO TO TOWN"
- "THE BIG LIFT"
- "THE REFORMER AND THE REDHEAD"
- "CINDERELLA"
- "A TICKET TO TOM-
AHAWK"
- "WAGONMASTER"
- "FRANCIS"
- "WABASH AVENUE"
Plus Regular Feature Before and After Preview (No Extra Admission Charge) Come Early----See Two Shows for Price of One.
LAST TIMES TODAY — ALL PERFORMANCES OF
"OUTRIDERS"
Joel McCrea — Arlene Dahl
Features at: Outriders—1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00-10:02.
Sneak Review—8:32 p.m. only
STARTS THURSDAY 3 Days
It's the Hatfields vs. McCoys!
THE LONGHORN
Added Color Cartoon
Latest News
The Gripping Story of the Great American Feud!
Roseanna McCoy
starring
Farley Granger
Charles Bickford
Raymond Massey
and introducing
Joan Evans
Feature Times: 1:00 - 3:05 - 5:10 - 7:15 - 9:20
STARTS SUNDAY
When Betty Grable Shimmies... the Nation Shakes!
BETTY GRABLE
VICTOR MATURE
WABASH
AVENUE
Color by Technicolor
with PHIL HARRIS
30th Century Fox Picture
Granada PHONE 946
PAGE TWELVE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY. MAY 24,1950
Faculty Members Believe Finals Are More Painful For Students
Final week will be here early tomorrow morning. For some it will be more final than for others. In any case, every student at the University will be affected by this dreaded week.
Students have been so concerned with their own "final" troubles, that they have possibly forgotten another group of persons affected by the tests; the professors and instructors who give them.
Perhaps finals are even worse for the minds of the people who give them. To settle this question the Daily Kansan has taken a poll among several faculty members.
The question asked was; "In your opinion are finals harder on the giver or the taker?" The answers:
Robert Q. Brewster, chemistry professor, "Finals are a necessary thing, so we might as well make the best of them. Either pitch in and take them, or pitch in and grade them." The pitch taker, a student, said, "Why not pitch them out?"
William D. Paden, associate professor of English, "Professors have had a longer time to get used to them, so it's probably harder on the students. I've been giving finals for ever a quarter of a century."
George W. Bradshaw, civil engineering professor, "I believe students go through much more torment than we do." "Amen." said the poll taker. Twenty other professors and instructors echoed the sentiments of these men.
Read the Want Ads Daily.
SENIORS!
SENIORS!
Last chance to order
your senior class ring
Man's Ring ---- $27.50
Lady's Ring ---- $21.50
Plus—20% Fed Tax
2% State Tax
Business Office still has a few in stock. First Come — First Served
Conrad Gets AWS Award
Kathryn Conrad, College freshman, is the winner of the Associated Women Students $50 scholarship
The scholarship, which will be awarded each year, is to commemorate the University women whose careers have been cut short by death.
Metewie Heads International Club
Marcello Metewie, education freshman, was elected president, and Baaqer Shirazi, engineering junior, was elected vice-president of the K.U. International club May 17.
Other officers named at the meeting are: Bautista Murillo, business junior, secretary, and Arlene Bender, graduate student, treasurer.
The new officers represent four nations, Metewie is from Bolivia, Shirazi from Indian, Murillo is a resident of Costa Rica, and Miss Bender from Lawrence.
THANK YOU AND GOOD LUCK SENIORS
COME BACK TO LAWRENCE OFTEN
Job At Cannery Filled
KU Fullback Signs With NY Giant Football Team
WINTER CHEVROLET
Forest Griffith, two-time all-Big Seven Kansas fullback, announced Tuesday he had signed a professional football contract with the New York Giants. He will graduate in education at the close of summer school, joining the New Yorkers' training camp around August 1 at Lake Saranac, N.Y. He met
No students will be hired by a Rogers Canning Co. at Milton, Oregon, this summer unless they have already received acceptance card a local representative said today.
W. T. Mara, Giant official Monday Kansas City, to complete negotiations.
Don't Take Your Clothes Home
Leave 'em here in Lawrence!
Our refrigerated storage vaults will solve your transportation and storage difficulties. Your clothes will be safe from handling and moth damages.
Your garments are fully insured at our plant located storage vault.
740 Vermont
Independent Laundry and Dry Cleaners
Phone 433
DON'T FORGET
The Student Union Book Store Will Pay Top Cash For Used Books
MONDAY - MAY 29 TUESDAY-MAY30 WEDNESDAY-MAY31
Bring All Your Used Books. We Will Buy Current Issues & The Wilcox & Follett Representative Will Buy All Obsolete And Discontinued Titles
STUDENT Union Book Store.
1950
Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
University Daily Kansan
and
annel
ros-
mici-
last
ector
engers
gers
third
at
go
dley
now
ment
kett
ing
the
on-
ter
end
dies
and
lan
O F THE U N I V E R S I T Y O F K A N S A S
Monday, May 1, 1950 Lawrence, Kansas
STUDENT NEWSPAPER
900 Hear Spellman Flay Communism
America is not immortal, his Eminence Francis Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York, told 900 persons at the "I Am An American Day" banquet in the Community building Saturday.
Gov. Frank Carlson, Chancellor Deane W. Malotti, Dolph Simons, publisher of the Lawrence Journal World; and Mayor W. J. B. Turner of Lawrence spoke briefly preceding the Cardinal's address.
The Cardinal asserted that "Trait-orous Communists" and Communist sympathizers are using their freedom to destroy our freedoms." We must not be deluded that we can go on forever despite our enemies and despite ourselves, he explained. His Eminence questioned whether America was safer from the threat of Communism than European nations enslaved under the Red menace.
His Eminence pointed out that "We shall ourselves be guilty of contributing to our country's destruction if we do not protect her against the lust-born hates of Communist treacheries sweeping like scythes across the world, marring and despairing even the fair face of free America."
Freedom is ours by "right divine," he added. "We dare not barter liberty for Lunacy," the Cardinal emphasized.
"It is not enough to proclaim 'I Am An American,'" he stressed. To keep freedom we must defend it. He continued that our history is the struggle to maintain democratic ideals and thereby to seek security and personal liberty. We must prove our pride and love for America by daily deeds of loyal living, he explained.
"Therefore, do I pray you all, open wide your hearts to God. Let his love pour in and nourish you as in the fullbloomed glory of His grace you find within yourselves a strength beyond even the strength to die, a strength which is the strength for what we love, to live." He added that America stands before nations and peoples,怨之none and fearing none, asking from other nations cooperation and respect alone in rehabilitating and saving mankind.
Chancellor Malott stressed education as America's "first line of defense." "There is practically no other," he added. The Cancellor believes our own ignorance is more dangerous than the Iron Curtain.
He feels education is essential "To understand subtle forces at work undermining our democratic structure."
Governor Carlson stressed the need for a better conception of the responsibilities of patriotism. We cannot neglect "high ideals of patriotism and love of country," he said.
"Patriotism is more than thrills." Mayor Turner emphasized. It is in his opinion intelligent thought and a birth of unity within the nation.
Harry H. Woodring, former governor of Kansas and United States secretary of war was toastmaster. The Rev. George Towle, pastor of St. John's Catholic church, gave the benediction.
Simon W. Hurwitz, one-time Russian immigrant, received the "I Am An American" citizenship award by an unanimous vote of the Citizens' committee of Lawrence. The Lawrence dairy operator is the first recipient of the award which the committee plans to present annually.
Representatives of civic, fraternal military, labor and school groups marched in the afternoon parade. An estimated crowd of 10,000 persons saw members of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Newman club, Catholic student group; D.A.R., the Lawrence Memorial and Junior High schools bands, boy scouts, the AM VETS junior cavalry, and the American Legion. One float carried students from Haskell institute innovative Indian costumes representing 18 tribes. "Uncle Sam" pointing the way into the future was the theme of the Newman club float.
1896
DEAN L.D. HAVENHILL
Western Forces Ready For May Day Celebration
Dean Havenhill Dies April 29
Prof. L. D. Havenhill, dean emeritus of the School of Pharmacy, died at 6:40 p.m. April 29 in Watkins Memorial hospital.
Born in Newark, Ill., on April 5, 1870, Professor Havenhill attended the University of Michigan and received his Ph.C. and Ph.M. there. He received a B.S. from the University of Kansas in 1903, was made acting dean of the School of Pharmacy in 1925 and dean in 1926. He held that office until 1940, then continued to teach part time until 1945. time until 1945.
Professor Havenhill had been in failing health since January, and was admitted to Watkins hospital April 19.
Chancellor Deane W. Malott said, "the University is saddened by the years led the School of Pharmacy and death of Dean Havenhill, who for 15 gave loyal and devoted service to the University for 46 years."
Berlin, May 1—(U.P.)Anti-Communist western police pelted Soviet sector police with stones today in a flareup in the heart of Berlin after two huge May day demonstrations by more than 750 thousand persons.
He is survived by two sons, Marshall A. Havenhill, K.U.'22, of Kansas City, Mo; and Robert S. Havenhill, K.U.'25, of Pittsburgh, Pa.; and a brother, Mark Havenhill, of California, Mrs. Havenhill died in 1948.
Funeral services will be held at the Rumsey Funeral home at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday. J. Allen Reese, dean of the School of Pharmacy said that there would be no pharmacy classes that afternoon so students and faculty might attend.
Requiem Opens KU Music Week
Few of those who went to hear Verdi's "Requiem" in Hoch auditorium Sunday realized before it started that they would be listening to one of the finest musical events to be presented at the University in recent years.
Although its name, "Requiem," would be hardly apropos for the opening of Music Week, its musical excellence fit the occasion completely. The large participation was hopefully significant of the remaining events scheduled for the special week.
At 3 p.m. today, Rudolph Ganz, nationally known composer, conductor and pianist will present a recital in Strong auditorium. He will also speak at the banquet for the School of Fine Arts at 6:30 p.m. today in the Kansas room of the Union.
D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, who directed the massive University Festival chorus and orchestra of more than 300 persons in the "Requiem" is to be congratulated for his excellent work.
Verdi wrote music for the "Requiem" that was at all times parallel with the content of the mass and Dean Swarthout interpreted it with precision and beauty.
Before the first part, "Introit and Kyrie", was finished, the audience had a chance to hear all the soloists, individually, and collectively. They were Maud Nosler, soprano from Chicago; Irene Peabody, associate professor of voice, mezzop-soprano; Clayton Krehbiel, assistant instructor in education, tenor; Reinhold Schmidt, associate professor of voice, bass.
the second part, "Dies Irae"
which opens with the full power of
chorus and orchestra has all the fascination of Verdi's music coupled with the imploring beauty of the text of the mass.
Notable in the "Dies Irae" was a lovely duet by the soprano and mezzo-soprano, as well as solos by the tenor and bass.
Professor Schmidt, who had sung Mozart's "Requiem" earlier in the day was not sufficiently tired to prevent an excellent performance in the afternoon.
"Sanctus and Benedictus" which is the fourth part of the "Requiem" as Verdi wrote the music, was a brilliantly executed double chorus, almost jubilant in character.
The final "Libera Me"—the part which Verdi originally wrote for the Rossini "Requiem"—is chanted in the Catholic church over a casket and is an appeal to the Lord for deliverance from eternal death.
With the music, "Libera Me" becomes a powerful prayer, in this case with a fine solo by Miss Nosler. Herabsolute clarity and the bell-likequality of her voice were an asset to the chorus.
The orchestra should be mentioned for its close attention to Dean Swarthout which produced a far better orchestra than has been heard here for some time.
The chorus also obeyed every movement of the dean's baton and the long a cappella passages were remarkably done.
Professor Lists Ways Latin Americans See US
Trouble between Latin America and the United States is caused by misunderstanding and stereotyped thinking, Dr. Asher Christensen, professor of political science at the University of Minnesota, told students at the observation of Cervantes Day Saturday.
"Latin Americans see us as north-"
"Latin Americans see us as a vern Europeanans, with the characteristic blond hair and blue eyes," Dr. Christensen said. "Secondly, they see us as a Protestant nation, while they are predominately Catholic. Also, they feel we are not too interested in religion, and it does not play too large a part in our lives.
"They are convinced we think the arts are unimportant, and our manners are atrocious. They do not understand that it is considered all right in this country to inquire into a man's business, health, and other private affairs.
The most threatening of several flurries of roughness occurred in the Potsdamerplatz, where the American, British and Soviet sectors meet. Hundreds of Germans massed in the square taunted the Soviet-controlled police as "swine."
"There are several stereotypes attributed to us by Latin Americans which are good. For instance, in nations where only the upper classes are literate, our system of public education has a tremendous appeal.
East and West sector police joined forces to put down the stone throwing before it got well under way. The demonstrators fled as soon as a show of police force was organized.
Western military commanders armed 8 thousand troops in western Berlin to guard the chief danger spot in Communist May day celebrations throughout Europe. They threatened to meet any Communist invasion of Western Berlin with machine gun fire and artillery.
All available 12 thousand policemen in western Berlin were called out to prevent clashes between the rival demonstrations of the east and west groups. Allied troops were placed on a standby alert, but authorities said they would not be thrown into action unless German police were unable to handle the situation.
for their rally the western Berliners adopted the theme: "For peace in freedom; against unity in chains."
Chiggers, Fleas, Attract1,500
More than 1,500 persons visited the department of entomology's open house in Snow Hall, April 28, Dr. Charles Michener, associate professor of entomology, said today.
An agricultural entomology display showed and described the many insect pests. Various chemicals and methods of combating these destructive insects were exhibited and explained.
"We were very well satisfied with the showing," Dr. Michener said, "Most of the work connected with the open house was done by students who took time off from class work and graduate studies to work on the displays. Many of them were up Thursday night making labels and putting on the finishing touches, and we feel that the time spent in many hours of hard work was well repaid."
Another room showed many benefic
tious items such as honey bees, lace
The entire main floor of Snow hall was filled with almost every interesting insect known and informative guides made the more than an hour-long tour an educational one.
Most of the insect displays were shown under microscopes that gave the visitors an opportunity to see living lice, chiggers, ants, termites, ticks, mites, fleas, and many other insects as they fight for their existence in the insect kingdom.
insect for making shellac, silk worms, insects for fish, and the cochineal insect for making lip stick dye. A large bee colony was displayed in a glass covered container.
Various insects as used in art and advertising displays were shown. The patterns used in wallpapers showed butterflies, scorpions, and other insects.
The medical entomologists displayed many disease-carrying insects. Human body lice were displayed under microscopes feeding on a rabbit. Also displayed in this department was the pesky chigger, bane of picnickers.
A movie entitled, "Beneath Our Feet," showed the dramatic struggles in the insect world that go on around us day after day. A movie on butterflies was also shown.
Named after its founder, Dr. Francis Huntington Snow, chancellor of the University from 1890 to 1901, the museum exhibited as its final display, Dr. Snow's personal accession record for his collection of insects.
The Snow hall entomological museum probably drew as much favorable comment as any other single unit in the exposition. It contains almost three million specimens, the largest university entomological collection in the United States.
Museum tours every half hour by informative guides showed valuable collections of black scarab beetles, tiger beetles, cockroaches, crickets, grasshoppers, moths, and butterflies from all parts of the world.
"They admire our devotion to democratic systems, and are awed by our ability to make it work. We are much admired for our frankness, even though the Latin American frequently finds it disconcerting.
Students May Sign Application Cards
All students now enrolled in the University who plan to return for the summer session or the 1950 fall semester must sign a former student's application card in the registrar's office. 122 Strong hall, before the end of this semester.
This signing does not take the place of registration. 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 V, W, X, Y, Z.
All students who were unable to sign on their scheduled days may sign cards Friday and Saturday, May 12 and 13.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 1, 1950
Engineers List Council Nominees
Eight engineering students were nominated for executive positions on the engineering council at a meeting of the council April 26. The engineering council is the student governing body for the School of Engineering and Architecture.
John M. McKinley, Keith C. Smith, engineering juniors, and Charles W. Stephens (Kansas City, Mo.), engineering seniors, were nominated for council president.
Dwane M. Crowl and Kenneth W.
Philo, engineering juniors, were
nominated for vice-president.
Separate meetings of the junior sophomore, and freshman classes of the engineering school were held April 28. Seven council representatives were nominated at the meetings. The freshman class of fall, 1950, will elect its representative in September.
for secretary-treasurer John L Halstead, Thomas A. Hendricks, and George R. McNeish, engineering juniors, were nominated.
Nominees of each class are as follows:
Juniors: Jack D. Gillum and Richard H. Harris.
Dopomores: George C. Christopher, Edward C. House, and Robert A. Kipp.
Freshman: G. Dean Barrett and Earl W. Petty.
Nominations for council president, vice-president, and secretary-treasurer are now being accepted by the engineering council 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 the students by petitions. The council will accept petitions bearing the name of the nomeneer, position for which he is nominated, and 40 signatures of engineering students of the same class.
Ten departmental representatives to the council will be chosen at
Medical-Advisor' Pelican Inspired By KU Jayhawk
A take-off from K.U.'s Jayhawk is now aiding Louisiana parents to take care of their offspring.
The new creature is "Pierre the Pelican" who carries a message of guidance every month for a year to parents of all first born babies in that state.
It all came about when Mrs. Lela Pyle Rowland, 25, and her husband, Dr. Loyd Rowland, director of the Louisiana Society for Mental Health, wanted a means of sending out monthly directives that would be more thoroughly read by parents.
They remembered the Jayhawk murals in Watkins Memorial hospital and sent for the drawings of them. An artist used the Jayhawk as a model and out of it all came Pierre, who is used by Dr. Rowland as a more interesting means of transmitting medical advice on child care.
Whether to pick up a crying child the effects of spoiling the baby, helping him to learn to talk—all these and many other problems are discussed by "old Dr. Pelican" in such a manner that they are read and reread by knowledge-seeking parents.
The series has attracted national attention with commendations appearing in the publication of the children's bureau of the Federal Security agency, in the American Journal of Public Health, in the
New York Times magazine and elsewhere.
Health bureaus of six other states, including Kansas, have started using the series on a statewide basis. Other states are using Dr. Pelican's releases in lesser quantities.
Love Emerges With Spring
Charles City, Ia. (U.P.)-Residents here don't depend on a premature robin to inform them that spring has arrived. They start dreaming of green grass and flowers whenever Bill Love comes out from behind his whiskers. Love gets his luxurious beard shaved off every year when warm weather arrives. Then he starts growing another crop of whiskers.
University Daily Kansan
Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Units for courses in undergraduate periods. Entered as second class matter. Spring 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
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All petitions and announcements may be turned in to the council through Dean Carr's office, 111 Marvin hall. Monday, May 8, is the deadline for all petitions to be in the possession of the council. Election for the 17 positions of the engineering council will be held Thursday, May 11.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
University Daily Kansan Presents—
IFC President Dale Helmers Solves His Problems Calmly
While campus wheels race around frantically conducting their activities, Dale S. Helmers, president of the Inter-fraternity council, solves his organizational problems calmly and effectively.
Dale, a College junior majoring in political science, has advocated an I.F.C. sing to take the place of serenading, a program for housing foreign students in fraternities to give them an idea of American life, and the substitution of a construe-
Dale Helmers
A. C. H.
tive initiation of pledges for hell week. He has inaugurated a Chapter House Discussions committee to iron out financial, rushing, and rule difficulties of the houses.
Dale believes that fraternities strive to develop scholarship, personality, and teamwork, and that Greek life gives a member a feeling of belonging. "The Greek helps the group and in turn he helps himself by learning how to get along with groups and participating in their activities."
"If there is antagonism between independents and Greeks," remarked Dale, "a Greek should not alienate himself by not seeing the other side. And vice-versa, an Independent should not be interested
Nancee Bell Chosen WAA President
Nancee Bell, education junior, was elected president of the Women's Athletic association April 27.
Other officers are Arlene Hill, secretary; Joyce Herschell, treasurer; Sydney Ashton, business manager; Suzanne Neff, points system manager; and Mona Millikan, publicity chairman. Miss Millikan is an honorary member of W.A.A.
Dwane M. Crowl was elected president of Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, recently. Other officers are Robert A. Kleist, vice-president; Lane W. Harold, recording secretary; John I. Halstead, treasurer; Richard E. Spradil, correspondence secretary; George R. McNeish, historian. All are engineering juniors.
Dale, vice-president of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, social fraternity, lives in Kansas City, Mo. He is a member of A.S.C., was a member of Student Union activities, and is past vice-president of I.F.C. He is a past contributor to the Bitter Bird, was publicity director of the Jayhawker the past year, and was a member of the Froshawks.
solely in his own independence, but should cooperate in activities."
Selected as new members of the various intramural sports were Jane Koelzer, swimming; Frances Pence, hockey; Betty Thomas, softball; Shirley Mickelson, basketball; Mariane Crosby, minor sports; Ada Watson, volleyball; and Kay Shelton, dance.
He is uncertain of his future plans. He says that he hight enroll in the Graduate school go into foreign service in political science, go into the School of Law, or go into radio broadcasting work. He has participated on broadcasts from K.F.-K.U., the University station, on W.D.A.F. and K.M.B.C. in Kansas City, Mo. His interest centers on sports broadcasting.
Sigma Tau Elects Crowl
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Mortar Board Initiates 12 In Ceremony Sundav
Twelve junior women who were chosen for membership in Mortar board were initiated Sunday at the home of Chancellor and Mrs. Deane W. Malott.
Preceeding the initiation, members of the new and active chapters of the honorary society were guests at a dinner given by Mortar board alumnae of Lawrence in the Kansas room of the Union.
Members of Torch chapter for the 1850-51 school year are Marilyn June Brown, Patsy Cameron, Marjorie Crane, Margaret Dickinson,
Margaret Granger, Maxine Holsinger, Diane Johnson, Mary Lou Lane, Natalie Logan, Shirley Rice, Lorraine Ross, and Carolyn Weigand.
Delta Delta Delta Pledges
Delta Delta Delta sorority announces the pledging April 27 of Hannah Mary McDowell, College freshman from Concordia, and Phyllis Joan Griffith, College sophomore from Merriam.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
Powell-Bennett
Mr. and Mrs. C. Glenn Powell of Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Virginia Lee, to Mr. James G. Bennett Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Bennett, also of Kansas City, Mo.
Miss Powell was graduated from the University of Kansas in 1949. She was a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority.
Mr. Bennett, a member of Ph Kappa Alpha fraternity, graduated from the University in February.
The marriage will take place May 26 in Kansas City, Mo.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 1, 1950
PAGE FOUR
Varsity Shows Spirit In 2-Hour Scrimmage
The Varsity football team completed the fifth week of spring practice with a two-hour scrimmage Saturday afternoon.on the practice field east of the stadium. Coach J. V. Sikes expressed his approval as being "fairly well satisfied with the squad's showing considering the muddy condition of the field.
"The boys showed fine spirit, ran hard, and tackled well for the most part. Our running attack is somewhat ahead of our passing as we've only emphasized our passing game the past week," he said.
A Red team backfield composed of quarterback Jerry Bogue, halfbacks Charley Hoag and Hal Clewinger, and fullback Galen Fiss, reeled off considerable yardage as their team was on the offense for the first hour. Hoag, Cleavenger, and Fiss will be sophomores this fall.
Hoag, a standout with his great running all spring, continued to pace his team's ground attack with several runs that went all the way. On several occasions, when fading to pass, he decided to run and threaded his way downfield for nice gains.
Bogue passed to end Lyn Smith for a touchdown and completed several short passes. Hoag also hit Fiss for a t.d. and threw several passes from a new play that found him getting the ball directly from center.
A second backfield for the Reds also reeled off good gains on the ground and completed several passes with quarterback Don Wilson passing. Two of his passes to end Marvin Rengel went for touchdowns. This backfield had Pat Murphy and Clarence Cain at the halfback spots with Bob Brandebury at fullback.
The field was muddy and a mist that turned into a rain made ball batting and passing difficult, although not too many fumbles resulted.
The last half of the practice found the Blues on the offense with the Reds offering a stern defense that limited them to short gains for the most part. This backfield had Chet Strehlow at quarterback, Halde Stinson and Bob Raymer, halfbacks, and Co-capt. John Amberg at full-back.
Several linemen turned in outstanding performances, especially on the Blue team, which was considered the defensive eleven. The
Blue's line contained Orbon Tice and Charles O'Neal, ends; S. P. Garnett and George Mrkonic, tackles; Jack Luschen and George Abel, guards; and Merlin Gish at center.
Mrkonic and Garnett stood out with their vicious tackling and ability to pile up plays directed their way. Leischen and Gish continued to turn in good linebacking performances as did Tice and O'Neal at the terminals in turning end sweeps inside.
Top linemen on the Reds included tackle and Co-capt. Mike McCormack, John Doux, guard; Wint Winter, center; and tackle Bob Talkington.
Coach Sikes will split the squad into two teams today as they start the sixth and final week of spring practice. These teams will practice as units in preparation for Saturday's annual spring intra-squad game.
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Intra-Squad Game Will Be Saturday
The annual intra-squad spring football game will be played at 2 p.m. Saturday, in Memorial stadium, J. V. Sikes, head football coach, announced today.
Originally scheduled for Friday night at Haskell stadium, the game was changed to Memorial stadium because the Haskell field is being reded.
Students will be admitted free upon presenting their identification cards. General admission will be $1 for adults and 50 cents for high school and grade school students.
His Wife Checks Up
Memphis, Tenn.—(U.P.)—The elderly, well-dressed man went into a café and hastily ordered something to eat. He seemer harried and probably had a right to be—his wife was outside in their car, watching his every move through a telescope.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
KU Linemen Vie For Positions
(Editor's note: This is the first in a series of articles about the 1950 Kansas football prospects).
The Jayhawker's forward wall, going into the final week of spring practice, is manned by several players from Kansas' 1949 undefeated freshman team that should give Coach J. V. Sike's 1950 club one of K.U.'s best lines in several years.
Several of these sophomores-to-be linemen will play prominent roles in the annual intra-squad game to be played Saturday afternoon in Memorial stadium.
A recent switch of Art Spratt, 6 foot 2 inch 215-pounder, from tackle to guard, focuses the sophomore spotlight even more sharply on the Kansas interior line problems.
The graduation of Dick Tomlinson, a two-time all-Big Seven selection, and Carl Ellis, leaves both guard open to Spratt, and three more from Jack Luschen, Oliver Spencer, and George Abel. These first year men are bidding stoutly against three returning lettermen, John Idoux, Dolph Simons, and George Kennard.
Coach Sikes, and his line coach, Pop Werner, himself a former all-southern conference guard at Duke university, have hopes that Spratt will help solve some of their guard problems.
"Spratt is an improved blocker and always has been tough defensively," Coach Werner analyzes.
"Art is a fine enough athlete to learn the position, and most important of all, he owns adequate speed." Coach Sikes said when asked about the former fullback pre star at Christian Brothers high school, St. Joseph, Mo.
Two other frost. Luschen and Abel, both all-state high school linemen two years ago, are rated high in the 1950 guard position. Luschen, although a trifle light at 181, is going to be hard to keep out of action as a linebacker. He is fast, analyzes plays well, and hits like a 200-pounder when coming in to make tackles.
Along with Luschen, two more backings, center Merlin Gish and fullback Galen Fiss, should give the Jayhawkers sharp tackling. They should provide adequate and much improved line-backing that the 1949
club missed following the graduation of Dick Monroe and Frank Pattee the year before.
Another freshman, Oliver Spencer, 6 foot 2 inch 215-pound, recently suffered a knee injury to bench him for the remainder of spring drills. He had been outstanding playing guard on defense since being moved into the line from his fullback spot of last fall.
Spencer showed continued improvement from the opening spring drill and can be counted on to see plenty of defensive action next autumn if he can shake off the injury jinx. He is fast, highly inexperienced, but willing, and likes his football rough and tough.
Two more sophomores-to-be who are bidding for playing time are George Mrkonic, 6 foot $2 \frac{1}{2}$ inch 210-pound agile tackle, and Buzz Frazier, 6 foot 180-pound end.
Mrikonic, who is fast and hits hard, should take his place along side veteran co-capt. Mike McCormack, S. P. Gurnett, and Bob Talkington to give the Jayhawkers the best tackle corps in several years. He carries an added asset as a fine punter, having split the kicking chores with Charley Hoag on the past year's frisht club.
Frazier is bucking even stiffer opposition at the terminal position. The ends are two deep in returning regulars with Charles O'Neal and Orbon Tice returning for defense and Aubrey Linville, Bill Schaake, and Lyn Smith for the offense. The latter played both phases the past year and Tice may move up to that status this fall.
this rain.
However, Frazier is quick, a fine competitor, and a hard slashing tackler in breaking up end plays. He's definitely worth a spot in the 1950 K.U. future football book.
KU Golf, Tennis Teams To Meet Strong Foes
K. U. golf and tennis teams play return matches with two strong foes this week. The Washburn Ichabods are in Lawrence for matches today, and on Wednesday the Jayhawkers will meet Missouri in Columbia. Today's matches were to start at 2 p.m.
Coach Dick Richard's team lost to Washburn, 3-1 in Topeka the past week. The Ichabods are uninterested in even matches this year. Retitled in their winning streak are victories over Nebraska, Missouri, and Emporia State.
canceled Missouri defeated the K.U. tennis team, 5 to 2, in a match played April 29 on the courts near Memorial stadium. Kansas wins were in the No. 2 and No. 3 singles.
The undefeated K.U. golfers are after their third win of the season today. Coach Bill Winey's team dropped Washburn, $13\frac{1}{2}$ to $4\frac{1}{2}$, in their first meeting. Their other decision was over Nebraska. A scheduled match with Missouri's defending conference champions on April 29 was cancelled because of rain.
Bob Swartzell, the Jayhawker of No. 2 man, defeated Boyce Meyer, 6-4, 6-3, and Charles Crawford, playing in the No. 3 spot, decisioned Otis Greene, 6-3, 9-7. Swartzell and Crawford each have won three of four singles matches this season.
Hervey Maeferran, the K.U. No. 1 man, gave Bill Miller, the Missouri captain, a tough battle in bowing, 6-4, 3-6, 4-6. Miller was the number two ranking singles player in the Missouri Valley area the past season.
Baseball Today
American League
American League Philadelphia (Brisne 0-2) at Boston (Medermott 1-1)
National League
Brooklyn (Hatten 1-8) at. St.
Louis (Lanier 1-8)-(night)
Mabry Homers As KU Defeats Cyclones 9 to 7
Kansas won two out of three Big Seven games the past week to climb back into the championship picture. The Jayhawkers split even with the Missouri Tigers here and won from the Iowa State Cyclones, 9 to 7, in a Snowstorm Saturday at Ames. Guy Mabry homered for Coach Hogan's club in the Iowa game.
The Big Seven's leading title contenders, Nebraska and Oklahoma with 4-2 records, split a two-game series at Norman over the weekend. The Cornhuskers won Friday's game 14 to 4 behind the effective seven-hit pitching of Lin Vrbkha, sophomore righthander. Vrbkha is the conference's leading pitcher with a 3-0 record and is scheduled to meet Kansas' sophomore righthand ace, Carl Sandefur, this weekend at Lincoln.
Score by innings: R. H. E.
Kansas ... 024 101 010---- 9 12 1
Ia. State ... 110 300 200---- 7 11 2
Batteries: Philipp, Sandefur, and
Morrow, Mace; Burgess, Luhring,
and Delbridge, Stewart.
BIG SEVEN STANDINGS All games through April 29 included
| | W. | L. | Pct. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Colorado | 1 | 0 | 1.000 |
| Oklahoma | 4 | 2 | .667 |
| Nebraska | 4 | 2 | .667 |
| KANSAS | 2 | 2 | .500 |
| Missouri | 3 | 3 | .500 |
| Kansas State | 2 | 2 | .500 |
| Iowa State | 0 | 5 | .000 |
All Games
All Games W. L. Pct.
Colorado 7 3 .700
KANSAS 4 2 .667
Nebraska 4 2 .667
Oklahoma 8 5 .615
Kansas State 4 4 .500
Missouri 4 7 .364
Iowa State 3 33 .66
Last Week's Results Conference Games
MISSOURI 9-3, KANSAS 2-9,
KANSAS 9, IOWA STATE 7
(Second game rained out)
Nebraska 14-3, Oklahoma 4-8
Non-conference Games
Oklahoma 9, Okla. A. and M. 11
Colorado 9, Colorado College 5
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.
TOM'S TREATMENTS
This guy looks smug!
He found out how to save from 11c to 15c on his cleaning!
but why shouldn't he?
How?
By using the liberal cash and carry discount at ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners! Compare the prices on only 2 items!
Reg. Cash-and-carr
Man's Suit 1.00 .85
Plain Dress 1.00 .89
ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners 1111 Mass.
KU Four-Milers Win Triple Crown
Coach Bill Easton's four-mile relay team made Kansas track history over the week end as it ran to victory at the Drake Relays in Des Moines. The Jayhawkers became the first K.U. team to sweep the same relay title at the Texas, Kansas, and Drake Relays.
Those who thought weather at the Kansas Relays a week previous was bad because of brisk winds should have been at the Des Moines carnival. The meet was run off in an atmosphere of gloom as nearfreezing temperatures, bone-chilling wind, rain, sleet, and even snow prevailed.
Another Jayhawkner relay squad, the two-mile team, was out to win, but the Kansans fell victim to misfortune. A dropped baton early in the race put the Jayhawkers too far back to win. A third K.U. entry in the distance-medley relay was scratched by Coach Easton, and the mile relay squad failed to qualify.
Easton's two individual entries in running events, Jack Greenwood in the high hurdles and Bob Devinney in the lows, also had tough luck. Each man hit a hurdle to ruin his chances for victory.
The four-mile team of Cliff Abel, All-American Pat Bowers, Capt. Bob Karnes, and Herb Semper came through easily, with Abel giving the Jayhawkers the lead in the final lap of the initial leg, a lead they never relinquished. The Kansans' time was 17.50, the weather forcing them far above their usual record times 20 to 30 seconds below that. Second was Michigan.
The two-mile team, made up of the same personnel as the four-mile, finished out of the money. But Semper was moving into the lead on the second leg when the baton was jostled out of his grasp in a three-man shake-up.
The Jayhawkers lost 35 years in the mixup, and that was too much. Semper, Karnes, and Bowers each used too much energy trying to regain the yardage. Bowers did move
from eighth place to third in his terrific first lap on the anchor, but he lost out over the homestretch Oklahoma A. and M. won the event.
Greenwood hit the second hurdle on the sloppy track to lose out in the high sticks. William Fleming of Notre Dame, who placed third in the Kansas Relays, was the winner. Iowa's Russ Merkel, K.U. Relays champion, placed second.
white collar zoo
HOME SWEET ZOO
CAMPUS ZOO
They're all here as well as
The Baby
The Frenchman and
Fellow Citizens
and each is $1.00
Come in and see them at
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. Tel-666
SPALDING SPORTS SHOW
MERCER BEASLEY, TENNY STREET, A COACH THAT DEVISED THE MEANS OF IMPARTING HOWITZ AND THE PUPPLES AS THEY PLAY.
THE COACH GIRSON THE WELLING AND POURE ADVICE INTO THEIR EARS VIA WALMIE-TALKIE
MERCER BULLEY
TENNIS FORWARD
TRINING COACH
HAS REUSED
A NOVEL
MEAN OF IMPARTING
WISDOM IN THE
PUPILS AS
THEY PLAY...
STEP INTO IT...
WRIST STIFF...
SHOT CROSS...
COURT... FOLLOW
THROUGH... TAKE
THE NET...
THE COACH GETS ON
THE SIDELINE AND
FOURS ADVICE INTO
THEIR BASIC VIA
WALKIE-TALKIE
THE COACH SIMS ON THE WEBELAND AND POURS ADVICE INTO THEIR EARS VIA WALKIE-TALKIE
COACH WIRED WEALDED ANE OT PARTING WISDOM TEN PUPS AS THEY PLAY.
STEP INTO IT...
WRIST STIFF...
SHOOT CROSS COURT... FOLLOW THROUGH... TAKE THE MET...
THE COACH sits on the sideline and pours advice into their ears via WALKIE-TALKIE
SPALDING AND WRIGHT&ITSON RACKETS ARE TRI-POWERED!
FIBRE-WELDING OR FIBRE-SEALING BRACES THE THROAT"
RAWHIDE REINFORCES THE "SOULDERS"
NEW SUPER-STRONG APHISIVE BINDS THE LAMINATIONS IN THE "BOW"
HERE... GIVE IT A TRY... FOR 20 YEARS OR SO...
AND TIME OUT FOR MEALS?
SPALDING
SETS THE PACE
VALIDATED
IN SPORTS
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 1, 13
OND
The Editors Report一
FOR LACK OF TALENT
A Bird Was Lost
The dean of men and the dean of women have asked the Bitter Bird to discontinue publication. They say their reason is that there is room for only one campus humor magazine.
ye ED
To say the least, this seems a rather odd excuse to ask a publication to stop. Previously, we had been under the impression that educators thought there were too few publications, that the press was becoming too highly concentrated in too few hands.
As journalists, we have long had the charge of "partisan viewpoint" drummed into our ears because the educators felt the trend toward "one-newspaper" towns an evil thing.
There may, of course, be many good reasons for desiring an end of the Bitter Bird. For years past, it has caused the administration considerable woe. Much of the humor magazine has been more than unfunny and more than a trifle risque.
Possibly, it is true that "there is not enough talent to put out more than one humor magazine at the University." If this is true—it is not our opinion—it seems to us that discontinuing the Bitter Bird is a poor way to correct the fact that there is so little talent at the University.
We think we are safe in saying that few writers will deny writing humor definitely requires talent. To develop that particular talent takes much fostering, a great deal of encouragement. To allow talent to burgeon, even if the talent is only humorous writing, as many avenues of expression as possible should be open to aspiring humorists, howsoever little their talent may appear at present.
We had thought it was an educational institution's obligation to train talent, howsoever little there may be. We had supposed that an educational institution would welcome the chance to develop talent in whatever way it could.
Much of what Mark Twain, or Bob Benchley, James Thurber, Bill Vaughan, or any one of the dozens of humorists present and past, wrote was not very good at the start. Each had to develop his talent over a long period. It did not come to life full-blown
And perhaps the same can be said in defense of the Bitter Bird. Granted it is not a very good humor magazine, that the persons who write for it are not very capable just now. It could never become top-notch, nor could aspiring humorists develop, if its career is terminated before it really got started.
No one needs to be addicted to campus humor magazines to concede they have a place in present-day college life. If this were not true, few colleges—instead of the hundred who have them—would support them.
A year or two does not a magazine make. And neither does a semester or two a humorist make. It takes a bit more time than that—unfortunately.
No one is forced to buy an "alleged" humor magazine. He can pass them up as readily as he can this month's True Confessions if he wishes to. Toleration is one of man's best virtues. When it comes to tolerating freedom of the press, that virtue becomes an absolute necessity.
More than likely, the Bitter Bird in its present condition should be changed—but not discontinued. The Publications committee of the All Student Council should consider some alternative to that of flatly discontinuing the Bitter Bird.
What could be done? We can think of several lines of action. First, the supervision of the publication should be improved. Interested faculty advisors should be appointed. There must be at least one member of the faculty who understands the essence of good humor.
Second, the editorial staff positions of the Bitter Bird should be opened up to all interested students. It should not, as so often has been the situation in the past, be handed on from fraternity to fraternity, from one small group to another.
The students at large should be given an opportunity to demonstrate their humorous ability. With a student enrollment as large as the University's, there surely is enough talent to put out a humor magazine as small as the Bitter Bird.
Instead of paying salaries to editors of the publication, the staff members could serve in that capacity for nothing except the experience—as the staff of the University Daily Kansan does. The money saved could then be used to buy material for the Bitter Bird. Payment would only have to be nominal. Yet any payment at all would prove to be a greater incentive than there is now.
When the problem of what the Bitter Bird should be, and how it ought to be run, is thoroughly—and impartially—examined, we feel sure that an alternative to discontinuing it completely can be found. If, by continuing the Bitter Bird, only one top-notch humorist can be found and developed, then the publication will have served its purpose.
They Used To Soy Carrots Were Good For The Eyes
Miami Beach, Fla. (U.P.)—Peruvian beer consumption is lowering the rate of blindness in that country, the Pan American conference on prevention of blindness was told. Dr. Jorge Valdeavellano said the government's program of aid to the blind is financed entirely by a one sol tax (about seven cents) on every case of beer sold.
Milwaukee to Milwaukee
Is Long Way Says Postman
Milwaukee—(U.P)—As a joke, Mrs Connie Frey bought a Swiss post card here, wrote that she was having a fine time in Switzerland, and mailed it to a friend in Milwaukee.
When the post card arrived at the friend's home, it was stamped "Postage due two cents."
"Foreign mail takes three cents," the mailman explained.
TODAY'S MAIL
Sir:
Impressive
In glancing through the April 24 issue of the U.D.K., I noticed Mona Millikan in a letter to the editor mentioned a need of securing independent poll workers through the I.S.A. and A.W.S.
Our organization was notified of this need at 7:30 p.m. Monday preceding the election and took action at that time. Between 7:30 and a 10 o'clock deadline the same evening our hardworking representatives came up with over 25 poll workers, a large majority of whom worked Wednesday.
If we had had better notice our record would doubtless have been more impressive.
However, this incident does point to the fact that our organization can serve the student in many ways, which is the purpose of the I.S.A. Most remarkable is the fact that we haven't been branded political (for furnishing poll workers) YET!
Dick Krimminger President I.S.A.
Student Court Delays Hearing
With only three cases to be heard, the April session of the Student court was postponed from April 27 to sometime late in May.
Cases pending will be continued until then when all remaining cases of this semester will be heard.
University
Daily Kansan
News Room K.U. 251
By Bible
Adv. Room K.U.376
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assm.
National Press Assm.
Press Assm., and the Associated Collegiate
Press. Represented by the National Ad-
力服务, 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
City Ediner Ralph Hemeway
Edward Chapin
Jackson Coon
Martin Marks
Elaine Elvig
Steve Ferro
Feature Editor ... Fletcher Lester
Photograph Editor Frankie Walts
Telegraph Editor Robert Sigman
William Graves
Richard Tatum
Lloyd Healey
Sports Editor Richard Dilsaver
Sports Editors Bob Leenard
Ray Solidan
Arthur McIntire
Mona McIntire
Society Editor Faye Wilkinson
Society Editors Billie Stover
Emily Stewart
Editorial Assts. Keith Leslie
Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner
Gr. Mgr. Yvonne Joserand
Nat. Adv. Mgr. Forrest Bellus
Classified Ad. Mgr.
Promotion Mgr. John Wiedeman
REMEMBER
THEIR
BIRTHDAYS
WITH
Royal Crest
GREETING
CARDS
MOSCER WOLF WOLF
1107 Mass. Tel. 50
Little Man On Campus
Boddie
"Come on. . . come on. It's five minutes to eight. There's no excuse to be late in those pajamas!"
Thwarted
We believe in the fondling of snakes, especially on the K.U. campus. In fact, we can't think of a better place to fondle snakes. There are all sorts of insidious ways of restricting human freedom. From snakes you can go almost anywhere
Sir:
If Mr. Sciortino would restrict a harmless pleasure like this one, what will become of our other lesser joys: drinking beer, smoking cigarettes and reading the Daily Worker.
There is nothing in the Constitution or the Alien and Sedition acts
Okay
Read Dale Fields' editorial on the Union cafeteria. I haven't noticed anything wrong with the hamburgers.
Sir:
John Swigart Engineering senior
to limit our rights to a little this like this. If we want to go on to laying snakes we certainly shall. And the right to do so is something we shall defend to the last.
Dan Gallin, College junior.
Liz LeSuer, College senior
Bill Righter, Graduate student
Albert Roland, Graduate student
J
That's all you have to say. .we pick up your fur coat at your convenience f or summ er storage Don't put off having your fur coat stored. .each warm day weakens your furs. .makes them prey to destructive moths.
"Call For My Fur Coat!"
Call 75 today. .for storage, cleaning, glazing, or repair service for your fur coat.
Make certain your fur coat will be ready for next winter's wear.
New York Cleaners
926 Mass.
resis
nd
ook
MAY 1,19
NDAY, MAY 1, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Bible
Official Bulletin
Monday, May 1, 1950
Engineering Exposition bills must turned in to the Dean's office.
1 Marvin hall or to Dwane Crowl,
02 Louisiana, today.
al on the noticed hambur-
Y.W.C.A. Executive board, 4 p.m.
day, Pine room, Union.
Ward PZ meeting, 6:30 tonight,
6 Fraser hall.
Ward T regular meeting, 6:30 togt; training school at 7:00, Fine com. Union. Miss Martha Peteren. speaker.
senior
I. S.A. council, 1:15 tonight, Pine oom, Union.
Stateswomen club. 7:15 p.m. Tuesday.
East. room. Union.
Principle of Subordination."
le thi on le all. And thing we
Inter Dormitory council, 5 p.m. day, Foster hall. Election of offices.
All Student Council, 7:30 p.m.nesday, Pine room, Union. Old and new members.
Mathematical colloquium, special meetings, 5 p.m. today and Tuesday, 3 strong hall. Prof. W. W. Roger, Oklahoma A. & M., "The
nior.
nior
student
student
Junior Interdorm, 5 p.m. Tuesday,
mulin hall.
Alpha Kappa Psi business meeting. 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, 20 Strong call. Nomination of officers. Professional meeting. 8:15 p.m. Tuesday, english room, Union.
Alpha Phi Omega, 7 p.m. Tuesday, recreation room, Union.
Quack club water ballet, 8 p.m. Tuesday, Robinson pool. Only women invited; admission 50c.
People working on Tau Sigmiposters meet 7 p.m. Wednesday, 33 Strong hall.
Sigma Delta Pi, honorary Spanish society, held its spring initiation Sunday in the English room of the Union.
Sigma Delta Pi Holds Initiation
Umbon.
Those initiated were: William Belt, graduate student; Donna Bower, College junior; Edna Drury, graduate student; Shirley Matson, College junior; Jeanne Mueller, College junior; Herbert Ragsdale, graduate student; Ora Schofield, Education senior; Beatrice Senor, College junior; Richard Sias, College junior; Rita Swearingen, College junior.
Students are elected to Sigma Delta Pi on the basis of high scholastic standing, especially in Spanish, moral character and active Hispanic enthusiasm.
J. Chalmers Herman, Romance language instructor and chapter president, conducted the initiation ceremony.
Holdregle, Neb., —(U.P.)—Guests of a local service club arrived in the hotel dining room late and found club members half through their lunch. Apologizing for being late, the guests sat down, ate heartily, and found out after dessert they were attending the wrong meeting.
That's Okay—Pitch Right In
Drugs Speed Growth Rate
Seattle, Wash., —(U.R.)—Two agriculture scientists have reported that some of the new "wonder drugs" used to fight disease are also able to make animals grow faster.
The scientists, attending the Washington State college annual nutrition conference for feed manufacturers, recently disclosed that feed supplements containing Aureomycin, Streptomycin or Terramycin increased the growth of animals "remarkably."
Previously, vitamin B-12 was the only known important growth factor in the animal kingdom. Dr. E.L.R. Stokstad of Lederle laboratories, Pearl River, N.Y., and Dr. James McGinnis of Washington State college said.
The men said that for maximum results in growth, a ton of animal feed requires no more than a half ounce of Aureomycin.
Terramycin is the newest of the antibiotics, they said. The three antibiotics produced approximately equal results in promotion growth, they said.
YWCA Banquet To Be On Wednesday
Mrs. Eugene Alford, former Y.W. C.A. executive secretary, will speak at a banquet of the Y.W.CA. at 6 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas room of the Union.
The advisory board, cabinet, members and anyone interested in the organization is invited to the banquet. Helen Maduros, president, said. Virginia Walsh, social chairman, is in charge of the plans.
ansan Classified Advertising
Phone K.U.376
Classified Advertising Rates
terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will pass before you arrive in the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (ex-stationary) or brought to the University Kansai office. Journals may be later than 14 p.m. before publication date.
Classified Advertising
One Three Five
days days days
words or less 35c 65c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
FOR SALE
HARLEY DAVIDSON motorcycle, 49
model. First class condition. Call after
600 p.m. Phone 1667-J. 40 W. 6th St.
UMMER "First Nighter" formal. Worn
ace. Size 37, regular coat. $17.50. Size
trousers. $7.50. Phone 2868-1.
MOTHER'S Day say "I Love You"
with a box of assorted cremes and nut
lled chocolates from the DIXIE CARMEL CORN SHOP. Pound box, $25.
Live Pound box, $6.95. Wrapper to
mailing. DIXIE CARAMEL
ORN SHIP, SOL & COP
RESH shrimp served every day at the mission Inn. 45c a plate. 1904 Mass. 3
TOROLAIA TV. Portable. Used only 3 oneths. Unpaid but base only $99.40. I.B.F. Goodrich. Easy terms if desired.
Width x Length Co. 929 Mass.
AILBOAT. Rhodes Bantam. Built by
nasketball star Donald Trump, 1603-R.
1
GOLF Clubs, 7 irons and 3 woods with ag. Good condition and reasonably priced. Front Apartment, $820; Mass. 3. IKE NEW Zenith Trans Oceanic port-
RUMPET for sale. Conn 22B in excellent condition, complete with large lifttone case. Call Jim Sellards. 654 2
9 model, 8 turret
4 antennals. Underwood portable
need to sell quick. Call
636R or see at 1116 Miss. after 6 p.m.
ALVNUT full-sized bed with innerming mattress, year old. Excellent condition. Phone 2683W.
OOK-EASE leaves both hands free for writing or typing, marks any reference section such as vocabulary, etc. Get your day for only 8c at your Studio.
HESES MATERIALS! All weights of thesis quality typing paper, carbon paper, and tpwriter ribbons. Student Union book Store. M4
FINEST TELEVISION-Best in sets and accents at lowest prices. New shipments just arrived $78.50 and up. See the newest Enmersion table model set at $195.90. Easy terms. Bowman Radio and Electric. 26 Vermont. Phone 138. **tf**
BUSINESS SERVICE
*TYPING* – theses, term papers, etc.
*landmark rates*. Phone 1344- W.
FORMALS AND dresses of all types made to order. Also alterations and remodeling. Call Mrs. Scales. Phone 3060-W.1414 Tenn. 5
TYPING: Theses, term papers, letters,
etc. Regular rates, Prompt, accurate
work. Mrs. Schear; Apt. R-36, 1810 Ll.
phone 3273R.
SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a digified sales activity representing the oldest, largest, and most successful 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. Kansas Craddock, Jr. Grand Ave., Kansas and provide 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 onestop pet shop has its everlasting fun for you. Pet and Gift Shop tl 1218 Comp. St., Ph. 418
THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. Complete overhaul, engine tune-up, used cars 1715th. Used trucks, used cars 1719th. Phone 785 or 1821R. tf TYPING. Theses, Term Papers, Reports, Notes, etc. Prompt Service. SheeH. 1028 Vermont. Ph. 1618R. tf* TYPING. Term papers, notebooks, ters. sheets. Records. Verbal check. Rock Rec.ahr rates. Prompt attention Mee Shields. 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601
LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS
Eye
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any医务 or
Lawrence Optical Co.
YOUR EYES
Eye
12 East Eighth
Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed . 75c
Ladies' Plain Dresses, CI. and Pressed . 79c
CASH AND CARRY ONLY
TYPING: Call Hailzer Stanley 286M for prompt experienced service. *820%* Main
TRANSPORTATION
RIDE WANTED. Kansas City, Mo. to Lawrence and return. Preferably daily. Arrive 8 a.m. Contact Frank Orte, phone 1220 or Kansas Office Box No. 6. 1
FOR RENT
SUMMER BARGAINS for boys or girls. Large rooms, twin beds, private baths. $12,50 per month. House new under new management. 1213 Ohio. Phone 2917- R. 1
315 ROOM apartment adjacent to campus. Completely modern. All electric kitchen. New fire proof building. Inquire 1101 Tenn.
BIDING HORSES for rent by the hour.
Bridle paths and trails nearby. For hay-
rack rides, call Mott Stables, phone 1842.
West. 4th. West. 4th. 5
LOST
PEARL BRACELET, Sunday evening
BETTY Betty Brown, phone 3534,
REWARD
JAYHAWKER
NOW thru TUESDAY
Flight Times
1:10, 3:05, 5:00, 6:55, 9:00
HUMPHREY
BOGART
LEAVES YOU
GASPING FOR
BREATH
IN...
CHAIN LIGHTNING
with
ELEANOR PARKER
RAYMOND MASSEY
RICHARD WHOF
Bo
Big Seven Chess Goes On The Air
HUMPHREY
BOGART
LEAVES YOU
GASPING FOR
BREATH
IN...
- PLUS -
The game of chess is becoming modern. The age-old game now has a new "wrinkle." The radio committee of the University of Missouri Student Union plans to arrange $c$ chess tournament by amateur radio to be played among the university students in the Big Seven conference.
Late News Events Color Cartoon "Often An Orphan"
Station WAHW and the Jayhawker Amateur Radio club have promised their full cooperation in the program and will be the University of Kansas entry in the tournament. The play-off to decide the Big Seven radio chess championship will be early in May. Any persons interested in participating should contact John Wiedeman, journalism junior and chairman of the Student Union sports activities committee.
The game of chess may easily be played by amateur radio. Chess players have a simple system for recording the moves of the game that is well adapted for transmission by radio. The players at each end of the circuit have identical chessboards with both sets of chessman. A player moves his pawn and transmits, possibly, P-K4." To the player at the other end, this means that the pawn in front of the king was moved two squares forward. He moves his opponent's pawn ac-
N-O-W!
ENDS TUESDAY
BARBARA
STANWYCK
JAMES
MASON
VAN
HEFLIN
AVA
GARDNER
in M-G-M's
"EAST SIDE WEST SIDE"
CYD CHARISSE
NANCY DAVIS
GALE SONDERGAARD
Also NEWS
EXTRA-
ON OUR SCREEN...
Highlights of
"I Am An American Day"
Parade and Dinner
and
cordingly and then makes the answering move.
The game, players, judges and rules will be arranged by the chess clubs at the various schools. The schedules will be made on eight and four meters.
Granada PHONE 946
VARSITY
TODAY-TUESDAY
Buster Crabbe
"JUNGLE MEN"
Buster Crabbe "JUNGLE SIREN"
Late News - Cartoon
Feature at 8:00-10:00
HURRY . . Last times tonite
MY Friend IRMA
John LUNO Marie WILSON
"Movies Are Better Now Than Ever Before"
TUE. - WED.
A SURE THING for LAFFS!
Bob HOPE
LUCILLE BALL
"SORROWFUL JONES"
with WILLIAM DEMAREST
BRUCE CABOT
A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
ZOO
"Movies Under The Stars"
"BEST FILM IN 30 YEARS"
—Rene Clair in Time and Vogue
De Sica's
Theatre
Lawrence DRIVE-IN
"BICYCLE THIEF"
STARTS THURSDAY Patee SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT PHONE 321
A Great Cast For a BIG Picture!!
NOW ENDS WED
RIPPED FROM REALITY— FORBIDDEN LOVE!
The Red Danube
Stars:
Walter PIDGEON • Ethel BARRYMORE • Peter LAWFORD
Janet LEIGH • Angela LANSBURY
Shown at 1:00, 3:11, 5:22, 7:33 and 9:44
Added Enjoyment Color Cartoon Latest World News
Continuous shows Open 12:45
Patee PHONE 131
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 1. 192
-
[People smiling and facing each other in a group setting, with military uniforms visible].
Capt, and Mrs. Arthur Logiest, Belgium, Major T. Mayalarp, Thialand; Ruth Crow, College freshman; Nehemiah Kronenberg, 3rd year law student, and Miss Virginia Walker, College freshman, are shown at the International club party for 37 foreign officers attending the Command and General Staff school at Ft. Leavenworth. The officers were guests of the club at a dance April 28.
Siamese majors and Belgian captains were among the 37 foreign officers on the University campus April 28 as guests of the International club. Twenty-six of the officers, students at the Command and General Staff school, Ft. Leavenworth, were accompanied by their wives.
Foreign Officers Welcomed To KU By International Club
A full evenings schedule began with a reception at 7 in the Union where members of the club were appointed to act as hosts for each officer. The guests toured the campus following the reception, visiting the museum of Art, Watson library, Strong hall, three organized houses, and the Military Science department where a special reception was held for them.
Donald K. Alderson, faculty adviser to foreign students at the University,
Dean Alderson invited the officers to "come visit K.U. whenever you are in the area."
Following the tour they returned to the Union and were welcomed officially by Nehemiah Kronenberg, international club president, and
A dance from 9 p.m. to midnight followed the reception. Rumbas and sambas appeared on the dance floor along with the dominant fox trots.
Intermission entertainment included songs by Dagmar Hasalova, fine arts senior, and South American and Hawaiian dances forformed by costumed club members.
Romans Had Highest Technology Professor Tells History Group
The culmination of ancient technology came in the Roman world, James E. Seaver, assistant professor of history, told members of the Classical association of Kansas and western Missouri at their 43rd annual meeting April 29 in Fraser hall.
"Technology is the way people do things." Dr. Seaver told his audience. "Probably the greatest contribution of Greek technology was the invention of the art of glass blowing. However their knowledge and advancement in the field of architecture cannot be denied.
Latin students from Liberty Memorial High school provided entertainment at a luncheon in the Castle tea room.
According to Dr. Seaver the Romans borrowed and modified, but seldom invented. However in the field of mechanics their ingenuity and advanced ideas still must be regarded with awe. They had five great inventions which were of extreme importance to mankind. These were the wheel and axle, lever, pulley, wedge, and endless screw. However, their greatest achievements were in the field of surveying and leveling.
"The lack of sufficient amounts of iron to make precision instruments," was stressed by Dr. Seaver as the greatest weakness of the Greeko-Roman classical age.
Among the schools represented were Marymount college, Salina Kansas State Teachers college, Emporia; University High school; Liberty Memorial High school; William Jewell college, Liberty, Mo.; Kingman high school, Kingman; Rockburst college, Kansas City, Mo.; University of Kansas.
Business Group To Hear English Professor Tonight
Karl F. Limbacher, assistant professor of English, will speak on "Business, English, and Engineering" at 8 p.m. today in Streng auditorium. Everyone is invited. His speech is sponsored by the business communications group in the School of Business.
Kenneth Anderson, assistant professor of education will attend the annual spring conference of faculty, students, and patrons at Hutchinson High school, Hutchinson, Wednesday.
Anderson To Advise Panel
At Hutchinson Conference
Problems of the day will be discussed in a panel. The topic for the discussion this year is "Extra Cpricular Activities."
Photo Deadline Is Tuesday Noon
An Inter-fraternity council "allfraternity sweetheart" will be chosen from photographs submitted by campus and sorority houses. Photos must be submitted to Joseph Wimsatt, College sophomores, at the Phi Kappa house by Tuesday noon.
The winner will be awarded a 24-inch bronze trophy with her name and affiliation engraved upon it. The trophy will circulate annually.
The name of the winner will be announced at the Inter-fraternity council spring formal which will be held at the Lawrence Country club Friday, May 19.
More than 500 persons are expected to attend the annual law school day activities and dinner Wednesday, May 10. More than 1,000 alumni of the School of Law have been invited as well as the Supreme Court judges of Kansas and Gov. Frank Carlson.
500 To Attend Law School Day
Judge William L. Vandkventer, of the Missouri Court of Appeals, will be the main speaker at the dinner at 6:30 p.m. in the Union ballroom. The dinner will honor the late William L. Burdick, former dean of the School of Law.
Members of the executive committee who will head committees for the day are: tickets, Robert Green and Robert Pennington; invitations, Robert Meyer; decorations and coffee, Barbara Maxwell; refreshments, Emerson Shields and Douglas Myers; skit, Robert Bingham; music, Earl Brehmer; program, Lee Turner; and treasurer, Willard Burton.
Preceding the address, the Bar Journal and Moot Court certificates will be awarded to outstanding students. Toastmaster for the dinner will be Paul Nye, president of the senior law class.
Abigail Doesn't Live In Snow
The search for "Abigail," a mysterious something somewhere on the campus, is still on. Here's the third clue to her identity. "Abigail" is the prize-winning objective in a treasure hunt sponsored by the Inter-ward council of Wards T and P-Z, social organization for independent men. Any student may join in the search which ends Friday.
The professors in Snow
Know me quite well.
Put don't look for me there
Because there I don't dwell.
Cosmic Cloud Formed Earth, Chemist Says
The earth was formed from a cold cosmic cloud which condense because it was unstable, Wendell L. Latimer, told chemistry pharmacy students, faculty and alumni members April 28.
Dr. Latimer maintained that the earth is of the same composition as the cosmic cloud, but that when it was first molded, its surface was cold, preventing the growth of any vegetation or existence of any water. Silicates of the earth, water and the atmosphere, were formed from heat generated by various radio-active substances located at the core of the earth.
"The cosmic cloud" theory explained Dr. Latimer is a recent acceptance by many scientists that matter is constantly being created and that the universe is expanding in proportion to the production of this matter.
Dr. Latimer, a graduate of the K.U. department of chemistry in 1915 and chairman of the school of chemistry at the University of California, Berkeley, spoke before a group of about 250. His talk, "Astro-Chemical Problems in the formation of the Earth," was part of the Golden Anniversary celebration of 50 years occupancy in Bailey Chemical laboratories.
Dr. Latimer is one of the leading chemical consultants on atomic energy to the national government.
a banquet attended by about 110 persons was held in the Union building. Short talks were given by Mrs. H. P. Cady, wife of the late Professor Cady; Dr. Alexander Silverman, instructor at the University of Pittsburgh; Dr. Ralph Silker from Kansas State college, Manhattan; and J. O. Jones, professor of applied mechanics at the University.
Guests of the department of chemistry and School of Pharmacy toured Bailey Chemical laboratories during the day and observed antiquated laboratory equipment used in earlier years. Also open for inspection were some of the first books acquired for the chemical library by E. H. S. Bailey, after whom the building was named.
Bach Concert Set Tuesday
Phi Mu Alpha, professional music fraternity, will present an all-Bach concert at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Hoch auditorium. The program was originally scheduled for Sunday but was changed to replace the cancellation of Frances Magnes, violinist.
A student-faculty orchestra will present the Bach Brandenburg Concerto No. 5 with solo parts for piano, violin and flute. Raymond Zepp, assistant conductor of the K.U. band, will direct. Professor Jan Chiapusso, piano; Professor Raymond Cerf, violin; and Marcus Hahn of the Music education faculty, flute, will be soloists.
Auto Strike Nearing End
Detroit. May 1—(U.P.) A big company official said today that verbal agreement has been reached o all points to settle the Chrysle strike, but the CIO United Aut Workers declared issues still wer in dispute.
Herman L. Weekler, Chrysler's president and general manager, said only contract "language" was preventing a return to work of the 89,000 strikers. UAW President Walter P. Reuther promptly denied this "There still are unresolved issues the tired union leader declared." The union prefers to work for a solitary of these issues rather than engage in a propaganda war with Mr Weekler."
Weckler's statement that the low and costly strike was nearing an end came after more than 46 hours of grueling "do or die" bargaining and the 97-day strike. The agreement, when in final form, will include $100 a month pensions for the 89,000 striking workers and a hospital-medical insurance program be lieved the best in the automotive in dustry.
The strike, second longest in automotive history, has idled more than 144,000 persons, including the strikers, across the nation. It has constricted production of more than 450,000 cars and trucks.
Representatives of Braniff International Airways and Luzier's job is a cosmetics and perfume concern will be at the University this week to interview women students looking for jobs.
Air Hostess Jobs Are Available
Miss Pamela Archer, representative for Braniff, will be on the campus Thursday to interview Jun graduates who are interested in applying for positions as air hostesses.
Miss Gloria G. Larrabe, district organizer for Luzier's, will be here Friday afternoon to interview undergraduate women and those graduating in June who are interested in selling cosmetics and perfume.
All women who wish to see either of the representatives should make appointments at 214 Strong hall as soon as possible.
Must End National States To Avoid War
By JOHN A. BANNIGAN
Our present system of sovereign national states cannot be preserved if atomic war is to be avoided, Dr. Carlyle S. Smith, assistant professor of sociology and anthropology, told the audience at the last lecture of the "Atomic Energy and Man" series April 27.
"Thinking in the United States' today still rests on the false premise that Western civilization is the hub of the cultural universe," he continued. "The same criticism may be leveled at Russia.
"The rest of the world is ignored in both the United States and the U.S.S.R., and if we are to make the transition into the atomic age with ease, these viewpoints must go."
Dr. Smith traced the cultural development of man from prehistoric times up to the present, pointing out the revolutionary effects of various inventions and discoveries on culture.
"Fire was the first revolution in man's way of life, and the most important discovery or adaptation man made or probably ever will make," he explained. "Man must have feared fire at least for as long a time as he has used it. His reactions to forest fires and volcanic eruptions
Dr. Smith then pointed out the important cultural influences that fire has had on our civilization. He showed how it created the hearth, the symbol of the home, its great socializing force, its use as a weapon, and how it formed the basis for later industrial development.
arms mainly for prestige since they must have approximated contemporary reactions to the atomic bomb."
"When the first firearms appeared they inspired great fear and did little damage until they underwent improvements. The fear of receiving gunshot wounds at that time equalled the fear of exposure to radioactivity today.
"The American Indians used fire-
The inventions of the bow and arrow, the wheel, the sail, and gunpowder were all set forth in their historical significance.
were less effective than the bow and arrow."
Dr. Smith then explained that he was not going into any detail about atomic energy because he felt that it had been adequately discussed in previous lectures. However he did tell how a radioactive isotope of carbon, carbon 14, produced in nature by the cosmic ray bombardment of nitrogen in the atmosphere, is being used to date the remains of past societies.
"The degree of cultural development varies directly as the efficiency of the means with which hard energy is put to work. However, we know that peoples often resolute oppose technological advances with a passionate devotion to the past.
"The carbon 14 method is based on the fact that all living matter contains this radioactive isotope. It is taken in by plants and animals from the atmosphere and becomes incorporated in the organism. Then when the organism dies, no more of this isotope is absorbed. Since the theoretical half-life is known, and since the rate of production equals the rate of disintegration, the age of a specimen can be determined to within 200 years."
The importance of energy and its utilization in a culture was then emphasized by Dr. Smith.
"The record of the past does not tell us what changes the harnessing of atomic energy will bring. It does tell us that there will be profuse changes, and that rational men should turn all their knowledge of society and culture to making the cultural changes as quickly as possible when the need arises.
"The anthropologist prefers evolution to revolution because he finds that every way of life that man has created has some good in it."
In warning Americans of a feeling of superiority, Dr. Smith said, "We cannot expect to force other people to take over our own imperfece culture. In terms of their own culture ours is strange and even idiotic.
"The world should be kept safe for differences in cultures not b mere tolerance, but by understanding."
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ISA To Discuss Future Plans At Retreat
The L.S.A. council and ward officers will hold a joint retreat Saturday at Lone Star lake to plan for the 1950-51 school year activities of the group.
An expected group of 35 will discuss I.S.A. fall Orientation week plans, the social schedule for the coming year, and the National I.S.A convention to be held at the University in 1951.
The tentative schedule for Saturday's activities is: departure for Lone Star lake by University bus from the Union at 10 a.m. discussion of the relation of wards to the Council at 11 a.m., lunch at noon followed by recreation, planning of Orientation week activities and an I.S.A. informative booklet published for incoming students, 1:15 p.m.; an evaluation of the ward system at 2 p.m., and discussion of public relations in I.S.A. at 3 p.m. The group will leave by bus at 4 p.m. and return to the Union.
Accompanying the I.S.A. members will be Miss Margaret Habein and Miss Martha Peterson, dean and assistant dean of women: L. C Woodruff and Donald K. Alderson dean and assistant dean of men; and Miss Marjorie Austin, social director of dormitories.
Allyn Browne, vice-president, is in charge of picnic arrangements.
At the I.S.A. council meeting Monday James Lovett, College sophomore, was named the new business manager. Other appointed offices to be filled will be announced next week.
McEwen Gets Fellowship
William E. McEwen, assistant professor of chemistry has been chosen to receive part of an $80,000 grant recently made by the Research corporation of New York. Mr. McEwen will study in a field of organic chemistry.
The projects supported by the current grants range from studies on the toxic substances of locoweed at the University of Oklahoma to research on the magnetic field of the sun at the University of Chicago.
Since 1912, when the Research corporation was founded, the non-profit organization has distributed more than five million dollars for grants in aid of scientific research, generally in the fields of chemistry, physics, mathematics, and engineering.
Two KU Students In Final Rounds
Every section of the country is represented at the tournament. Shearer and Stolenwerck have added new laurels to their credit not only by being chosen, but by successfully completing the first eight rounds.
The debate team of the University has successfully reached the final rounds at the West Point National Invitational Debate tournament. Edward Stollenwcrerk, College senior, and his partner, Kent Shearer, College junior, represented Kansas in competition with 33 other colleges and universities in the preliminary rounds of the tournament.
Among other colleges reaching the finals were Notre Dame, Northwestern, and Army.
Who Is 'Abigail'? Here's Fourth Clue
Any student may still join the search for "Abigail," the prize-winning objective in a treasure hunt sponsored by the Inter-ward council of Wards T and P-Z, social organization for independent men. Here is the fourth clue to her identity:
My feet have no toes
Who looks at me seldom lingers.
An all-Bach concert will be presented at 8 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium by Phi Mu Alpha, professional music fraternity.
All-Bach Concert Today At 8 p.m.
The concert, which will appear on the Young American Artists series, has been scheduled to replace Frances Magnes, violinist. Miss Magnes notified D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, that a bursitis condition in her left arm will prevent her from keeping the engagement.
The program will be as follows: "Passacaglia and Fugue in C Minor", by Jerald Hamilton, organist at Grace cathedral, Topeka; "Branendburg Concerto No. 5", by a student-faculty orchestra with solos by Jan Chiapusso, pianist; Raymond Cerf, violinist; and Marc Hahn, flute; "The Magnificat" by chorus and orchestra, directed by Clayton Krehbiel, assistant instructor in education.
Chancellor Malott To NASU Meeting
gagment
The program will be as follows:
Chancellor Deane W. Malott left Lawrence Sunday to attend a meeting of the National Association of State Universities being held in Chicago.
The Association is an organization for state university presidents. The three day meeting started Sunday and will end Tuesday.
KANSAS—Cloudy with occasional showers this afternoon and tonight, mostly in east and central portions.
WEATHER
Lattimore Says Ex-Communist Is Paid Informer
He told a senate subcommittee investigating charges of communism in the state department that McCarthy had "criminally libelled" him in his charge that he was Russia's "top espionage agent" in the United States.
Washington, May 2—(U.P.)—Owen Lattimore charged today that excommunist Louis F. Budenz is a "paid informer and unscrupulous finger man" who brought charges against him for personal gain.
Lattimore in a long statement attacked Budenz, former managing editor of the communist Daily Worker. Budenz recently told the committee that he had been informed that Lattimore was a communist and had aided in selling to America the Red line for China.
Lattimore, a far eastern expert,
swore for a second time under oath that charges of communism brought against him by Budenz and Sen.
Joseph R. McCarthy, (R.-Wis.) were lies.
At the same time he charged that Budenz was a man of "unsavory character," who had been arrested, tried and acquitted 21 times. He also handed the committee the transcript of a deportation proceeding in U.S. courts which he said showed Budenz participating in certain personal activities which "to say the least, are offensive to accepted standards of decent and conventional behaviour."
This, Lattimore said, made him believe that Budenz "is dutifully pursuing his profession of paid informer and unscrupulous finger man."
Lattimore said Budenz, since leaving the communist party in 1945, engaged in "commercial exploitation" of his communist past and automatically came up with the new communist charges to fit day to day developments, Budenz now is a teacher at Fordham university.
"It is the easiest thing in the world for his own memory to be convenient and obliging." Lattimore said regarding Budenz.
Students' Opinions Vary On Name For Fieldhouse
Eugene Combs, engineering senior: "I would rather see only the name of Naismith on the fieldhouse, and was the father of basketball."
(Editor's note: This is the second in a weekly series of questions appearing in the University Daily Kansas pertaining to campus problems about which students may desire to express opinions.)
This week's question is: "Do you believe the fieldhouse soon to be built should be named Naismith-Allen fieldhouse?" The following answers were given:
Betty Yohe, education senior:
"Both men have been outstanding in the development of basketball. It is
Joseph Meek, College freshman: "I feel that when and if our new fieldhouse is ever built, it should be named for both Dr. Naismith and 'Phog' Allen. Dr. Naismith's name, naturally enough should appear on the new fieldhouse because he is the man who started the game of basketball and he did coach here. Dr. Allen's name should be included with Dr. Naismith's on the new building. He was recently named basketball's man of the year and he has the best long term record for basketball of any coach in the nation."
only proper that K.U. should honor them. This fieldhouse is largely the result of Dr. Allen's work and should be a lasting memorial to him. Since Dr. Naismith originated the game and was at K.U. several years he, too, should be honored."
Ray Pleasant, engineering junior: "I feel somewhat along the lines of the letter in the Kansan about naming the fieldhouse for persons living. (The letter opposed naming campus buildings for living persons.) I would, however be in favor of naming it for both Naismith and Allen, rather than one over the other. It's an honor that both men deserve. If it were to be named after Allen, I think Naismith should be included."
Frank Kress, fine arts sophomore:
"I think the name Naismith-Allen is appropriate, since Naismith was from the University and originated the game of basketball, and Allen furthered Naismith's efforts for so many years on this campus."
Banquet Honors Dean Swarthout
Ray Glover, education junior: "I would favor the name 'Naismith-Allen' because they are the two greatest names in basketball. Most people, however, don't know who Naismith was or what he was famous for while Allen is famous in this section of the country."
Culminating 27 years of service to the University, D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, was honored at the annual fine arts banquet Monday night in the Kansas room of the Union.
At the close of the entertainment; Dean Swarthout received a gold watch, luggage, a radio-phonograph and a set of long-playing records. The gifts were given by the University band and orchestra, the A Cappella choir, the University chapter of Sigma Alpha Iota, professional music sorority, and the faculty of the School of Fine Arts.
Archie, the fine arts version of Hollywood's Oscar, was given by graduating seniors to the outstanding sophomore in art, Charles Rice. Archie is a black seal and was given to Rice as a seal of approval.
Pi Kappa Lambda awards to the outstanding music students in each class were given to Betty Hayward, senior; Jacquelyn Stoops, junior; Lois Bradfield and Delores Wunsch, sophomores; and Martha Heck, freshman.
Main speaker at the banquet was Rudolph Ganz, president of the Chicago Musical college. Also present were Alexander Tillotson, director of the Melvane Art museum at Washburn Municipal university, Topeka and J. B. Smith, director of the Nelson Art gallery in Kansas City, Mo.
Mr. Ganz praised Dean Swarthout's work at the University highly. Mr. Smith commended the School of Fine Arts for the part it has played in setting patterns as a national leader in art and music fields.
Dean Swarthout, who was master of ceremonies, mentioned the presentation of great choral works, an increased faculty, and the University concert course as some of the programs carried out while he has been dean.
His greatest regret, Dean Swarthout said, was the legislature's failure to appropriate funds for a music building. He expressed confidence that it would eventually be built.
Between the first two courses of the dinner, recordings of two of Dean Swarthout's works, composed while he was a student at Leipzig, were played. They had been recorded by his daughter, Evelyn, a concert pianist.
Decorations in the Kansas room consisted of a mural showing Dean Swarthout directing the University A Cappella choir at one end, and a photo mural of the dean at the piano at the other end of the room. On the mirrors were large replicas of some of Dean Swarthout's musical compositions.
Entertainment was furnished by fine arts faculty members. Waldemar Geltch, professor of violin, led an ensemble in Haydn's "Toy Symphony." Reinhold Schmidt, associate professor of voice, sang "The College Professor's Nightmare," a parody on a Gilbert and Sullivan number.
Raymond Eastwood, professor of drawing and painting, gave a humorous demonstration talk on the "Psychodynamics of Portrait Painting."
Elect Karen Stack To Hall Presidency
Karin Stack, College junior, will be president of Locksley hall for the 1950-51 school year.
Other officers recently elected include: Gwenda Braum, vice-president; Doris Ann Buddeh, secretary; Ann Phern Brown, treasurer; Dana Durfee, house manager; Donna Lee Cromack, social chairman; Sue Swartz, A.W.S. representative; and Georgia Lee Dierking, interdorm representative.
Other appointees are: Frances Bibens, intramural chairman; Jo Anne Blanke, activities chairman; Joeanne Mannon, historian; Betty Eltha Brown, song leader; and Janet Ogan, publicity chairman.
Geologist Will Speak Thursday
Dr. Sherman A. Wenger of the University of New Mexico will lecture at the University Thursday evening May 4, on "Reef Sedimentation in the Majuro Atoll." Dr. Wengerd studied the Majuro atoll for the hydrographic office of the U.S. Navy during the war. His appearance here will be sponsored by the distinguished lecture committee of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists.
He will speak at 8 p.m. in Lindley auditorium.
2.000 Teacher Vacancies Noted
There are a few positions open in Japan, the Panama Canal zone, and Guam for experienced teachers. Under the Fulbright bill, a few persons with experience may teach in several foreign countries.
There is a greater demand for elementary school teachers this year than ever before. The University does not offer courses in elementary teaching but some graduates will be placed in such jobs.
Since notices for 2,000 vacancies have been received, and 1,000 more are expected by late July, all graduates of the School of Education can be placed, H. E. Chandler, associate professor of education, believes.
Commerce, women's physical education, English, and grade school music teachers are also wanted. There will not be enough candidates to fill those jobs, Mr. Chandler said. in science and mathematics, the supply and demand will be about equal. There is a surplus of teachers in social science and men's physical education, he added.
The teachers' placement bureau is not receiving as many calls for college teachers as in previous years, but the high school need is greater, Mr. Chandler said.
Other calls have been received for persons interested in work with the Campfire Girls, Boy Scouts, Y.W.C.A., and Y.M.C.A. Some of these positions are for the summer only, and others for permanent employment.
Chalmers Herman, instructor in Romance Languages was elected president of the Kansas chapter of the American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese at an annual meeting Saturday.
Instructor Elected ASTSP President
Other officers elected were Miss Jacquita Coe, Chanute Junior college, vice-president; Miss Irene Smith, Liberty Memorial High school, Lawrence, secretary-treasurer. The association met in conjunction with K.U.'s Cervantes day celebration.
Despite unfavorable weather the Miquel de Cervantes day luncheon attracted 225 persons, a record for more than 25 years of such celebrations. Students from the University and eight other high schools, junior and senior colleges presented songs, dances, and dramatic sketches in an all-Spanish program for the Cervantes day party in Strong auditorium.
FAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1950
Bailey Chemical Laboratories Have Seen 51 Varied KU Years
The University of Kansas was a seven building campus prior to the erection of Bailey Chemical laboratories in 1899. Previously, chemistry and pharmacy students alike were located in the present journalism building until the state legislature appropriated $55,000 for the building.
The new laboratory was not occupied until the fall of 1960 when the University's enrollment passed the 1,000 mark for the first time. In spite of an enrollment increase to 8,000 both the School of Pharmacy and the department of chemistry are still located in Bailey.
The first dean of the School of Pharmacy, L. E. Sayre, was assisted by four instructors. E. H. S. Bailey, after whom the building was named, was chairman of the department of chemistry. He was aided by four instructors, a senior student instructor, and a storekeeper.
The estimated cost of the building according to the University catalog of 1894-05, was $70,000.
Most of the credit for the development of chemical industry and research in Bailey goes to Robert Kennedy Duncan who came to the University in 1806 as a professor of industrial chemistry. As a result of Professor Duncan's efforts, 12 fellowships were established and numerous offers from industries for research programs followed.
In 1917 Dr. H, P. Cady, professor of chemistry, undertook a program for the army and navy to analyze natural gas in hopes that sources of helium could be found. Dr. Cady voluntarily retired as chairman of the department at the age of 70 but was re-elected and served for three more years. In all he served more than 50 years at K. U.
During these years Prof. Roy Q Brewster, now chairman of the department of chemistry, first begun teaching at K.U.
In 1920 the enrollment rose to more than 4,000 and the need for additional facilities became evident. Cognizant of the space shortage Dr. Cady wrote the budget committee urging an appropriation for a new building. The department was also hampered by a severe shortage of instructors.
Dr. Cady's plea was reduced to eighth place on demands for new buildings. But minor relief came in 1924 when the chemical library was moved into the newly erected Watson library.
The number of buildings on the campus nearly doubled in the 1920's, and the pre-depression years enrollment hit an all-time high of 5,900. In the depression period enrollment fell sharply and students left school in search of jobs. Alleviating the situation somewhat was the establishment of the College Students Employment project which gave part-time employment to some 350 University students. The C.S. E.P. which evolved into the National Youth administration, was effective until World War II.
Bailey chemical laboratories was officially named as such in 1938 after Professor Bailey, who died in 1933 after serving more than 50 years with the school.
In 1935 effects of the depression lessened and enrollment climbed steadily. This, however, augmented the acute shortage of space in the laboratories. Minor relief came with an enlarged physical chemistry laboratory in 1938.
With World War II in progress Bailey was once again subjected to severe handicaps. The staff was decreased measurably and longer hours were imposed upon the staff members to keep the laboratories functioning.
With the war came the navy V-1 and V-12 programs. Many students enrolled in these programs studied chemistry. As more men were called up for service the staff decreased and the work increased further for those remaining.
In 1844 when victory seemed probable, another letter calling attention to the necessity for a new building was sent to Chancellor Maillot. However, no funds were available for the needed building.
The administration, however, appropriated funds for redesigning and refitting the laboratories and new research equipment was furnished.
Snake McCoy-Found, May 2
This year Bailey chemical laboratories is celebrating its golden anniversary with a staff now enlarged to five professors, four associate professors, three assistant professors, and 39 assistant instructors. There also are three stenographers, 14 fellows, four store room men, one glass blower, and one mechanic.
Who is Snake McCoy? The identity of this mystery man will be revealed in the 1950 College Daze production, "West o' Abilene," that will be held at 8 p.m., Tuesday through Friday, in Fraser theater.
From the moment Snake McCoy enters the little town west of Abilene things really begin to happen. There is a shooting, the town is terrorized, the saloon torn up, and four weddings are performed.
Throughout the entire show, staged in a saloon owned by Sycamore (Louise Lambert), everyone is trying to find out whether the little bartender (James Hawes) is the fierce badman. No one who has ever seen the face of Snake McCoy has lived to tell about it.
Supporting players are: Terrel, the town's badman, Dick Hunter; Sally, a dance hall girl, Norma Jean Guthrie; the sheriff, Jack Stewart; Tiny, a dance ball girl, Bernadine Read; deputy, sheriff, Myron Don George; and Terrel's henchmen, Win Koerper and Heywood Davis.
Others in the cast are: Roy Hadley, Jay Bundy, Georgiepe Spears, John Wesley, Hugh Eberle, Wayne Helgerson, Donald Little, Norman Wenger, Dudley Benton, Charles Stephens, Marilyn Barr, Erma Lutz, Emily Stewart, Mike Getto, Sally Sherwood, Kitty Walter, Virginia Brown, Virginia Walsh, Bailey Wagner, William Honan, and John Grisby.
The dialogue and lyrics for the show were written by Craig Hampton, fine arts senior. The 19 songs were composed by Willard Straight, fine arts junior, Eugene Hall, fine arts sophomore, and Robert J. Cooper, College senior.
Tickets are 75 cents each and may be purchased at the Student Union activities office. All seats are reserved.
George Sheldon, pharmacy junior, was elected vice-president of the Methodist movement at the annual spring conference held in Pittsburgh recently.
Methodists Elect Sheldon To Office
All colleges and universities with organized Methodist student groups attended the conference.
Dr. Edwin F. Price, Methodist student minister, accompanied the students to the conference.
Others besides Sheldon who attended the conference from the University were: William Baker, graduate student; Robert Bell, Donna Hull and Molly Kelly, College juniors; Janice Broadword and Isabelle Gaddis, education juniors; Paul Nelson, pharmacy junior; Don Hull, College sophomore, and Glenna Davis, fine arts freshman.
A grizzly bear may attain the length of 9 feet and weigh 1,000 pounds.
1
Highlighting the long history of one of KU's oldest buildings is the news that after all these years and efforts of many men the legislature has consented to grant funds for a new building. The cost will be nearly two million dollars and the building is expected to be completed within the next few years.
University Dally 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 and Sundays. University holidays and annuities. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
Look Who's Complaining
Omaha, Neb.—(U.P.)Paul Green complained to police that he had been robbed of a compressor and a paint spray gun. Officers discovered Green was the person they wanted on a no-account check warrant. They also picked up a tractor and trailer from Green for non-payment of personal taxes.
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Audience Fills Auditorium For Superb Piano Recital
Bv PATRICIA JANSEN
Rudolph Ganz, Swiss-American pianist, literally lived his music Monday in the finest piano recital presented at the University this season. Superb is the only word that can describe his playing.
Extra seats were jammed into Strong auditorium to accommodate the overflow crowd that came to hear the nationally-known musician. Mr. Ganz's selections were carefully chosen to demonstrate his musical skill. He combined exacting technical ability with great expressive feeling in his numbers.
(Khachaturian) was an extremely difficult technical piece. Mr. Ganz played it with great ease. Included in his program were several of his own compositions, among which were the two short pieces, "Little Sphinx" and "Little Elf."
Looking like a marionette, the 73-year-old pianist sat stiffly at the piano while his dexterous fingers flew up and down the keyboard. He effectively contrasted loud with soft volumes and rapid with slow tempos.
One of Mr. Ganz's most popular selections was the collection of Four Preludes (Debussy). The "General Lavine Eccentric" conveys a haunting melody and the "Feux d'Artifice" (Fireworks) exhibited lightning speed.
The 'Toccata in E-flat Minor'
Mr. Ganz also played the familiar "Impromptu in G-major" (Schubert), and selections from Mozart, Haydn, Beethoven, Chopin, Liszt, and Kabalevsky.
'Baseball Scores' On Ballot
Micanopy, Fla.—(U.E.)-Returns in Micanopy's city ballpark looked more like baseball scores than election results. C. D. Hunter defeated J. C. Rowell for the city commission. 21 to 7 John W. Barr piled up a 23 to 11 lead over George L. Franklin. Only 34 voters went to the polls.
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TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
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Socially Speaking
Lambda Chi Formal
A formal dance climaxing the Lambda Chi Alpha Great Plains Conclave was held in the Union Ballroom Saturday from 9 p.m. to midnight. Del Weidner and his orchestra played.
Guests at the dance were Dean and Mrs. L. C. Woodruff, Mr. and Mrs. Donald K. Alderson, Dr. and Mrs. Ethan P. Allen, Mr. and Mrs Phil Dergance, Dr. Houston Karnes, Baton Rue, La. M. Tozier Brown, Denver, Colo., Mr. Cyril Flad, Indianapolis, Ind.; Md., and Mrs. Bill Braum, Emporia; Mr. Thomas McGraw. Newton.
Janet Morrison, Bonnie Marshall,
Carolyn Wells, Pat Rutledge, Anne
Murphy, Kay Conrad, Pauline Simcox,
Joanne Payne, Lynn Wingett,
Jane Gray, Mary Ann Smith, Shirley Grounds, Camateron, Jeannine Willis, Darlene Schindler.
Jean Haussermann, Mary Pretz,
Sally Sue Woodward, Shirley Lindquist,
Janice Monteith, Betty Bull.
Rita Speckin, Jane Hollingsworth,
Shirley Behermery, Nola Herman,
Louise Koppers, Sally Adams, Virginia Reynolds.
Templin hall entertained with its annual spring dance from 9 p.m. to midnight, April 29. The theme of the dance was "April in Paris."
Tolene Dudley, Gloria Johnsmo,
Nancy MacGregor, Elinor Rice,
Donna Hillyer, Helen Overman,
Shirley Hilzer, Virginia Brown,
Kathryn Bauersfeld, Barbara Prew-
Templin Hall Dance
Guests were: Neil Thompson,
William Heald, Lynn Jonson, Wilson
O'Connell, A K. Hall, Roy
Zimmerman, Earl McMichael, Donald
Raedl, Harley Oberhelman, Joe
Jaimes, Phyllis Seacat, Fred Doornbos,
Erwin Cooper, Donald McClure,
Betty Bradstreet.
Thomas Halpin, Joan Deeds,
Richard Pickler, Lou Redmond, Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph D. Comer, Ray
Brewer, Bob Simonton, Rae Francis
Miesser, Bob Richert, and Tom
Tomlinson.
Miss Ann Marshall, Mrs. Louis Stanley, Mrs. Lorraine Gosney, and Mrs. Vivian Christian, housemother, were chaperons.
Thelma Mims Sings Before Church Missionary Group
Thelma Mims, fine arts senior, gave a voice recital April 28 at St. Luke's A.M.E. church. The missionary society of the church sponsored the program.
The numbers sung by Miss Mima,
a student of Meribah Moore, associate
professor of voice, included
"Aria di Polissena" from "Radi-
misto" (Handel-Bibb); Recitative
and Aria from "The Messiah" (Han-
del); "Der Tod und das Madchen"
(Schubert); and "My Journey's
End." (Fav Foster).
Kora Secretary Is Chosen
Frank White, fine arts senior, was the accompanist. He played "Nocturne in C Sharp Minor" (Chopin) and "Reflections on the Water" (Debussy) in piano solos.
Charlene Breitenbach, education junior, was elected alumnae secretary of Kora, at a district meeting of Kappa Phi, in Manhattan April 29 and April 30.
Others who attended from the University were: Marian Walters, College senior; Louise Hamilton, Marian Kysar, and Wilma Shore, education juniors, and Charlene List, fine arts freshman.
The program theme for next year adopted by the 10 chapters from Nebraska, Colorado, Kansas,ahoma, and Texas is "Our Heritage."
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Franklin-Pattison
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Franklin of Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter; Marilyn, to Mr. William L. Pattison, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Pattition of Council Grove.
Miss Franklin was graduated from the University in 1949. She was a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority.
Mr. Pattison, a member of Sigma Nu fraternity, was graduated the past February from the University. The wedding is planned for May.
O'Neil-Ledbetter
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph O'Neil of Leavenworth announce the engagement of their daughter, Margaret, to Lt. William B. Ledbetter, United States army.
Miss O'Neil was graduated from the University of Kansas in 1948 She was a member of Chi Omega sorority.
Phi Kappa Siama Elects
F. Lance Shogrin has been elected president of Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity for the fall term of 1950. Other officers will be William J. Tobler, rush chairman; Gerald W. Gearhart, social chairman; R. Thurston Smith, pledge trainer; Robert L. Sigler, treasurer; L. Stephan Milne, house manager; Francis W. Wangman, recording secretary; Ralph G. Henley, corresponding secretary; Norman R. Harris, athletic manager; Kenneth E. Geier, chairman of house governing committee; John E. Olson, scholarship chairman.
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Alpha Phi's, Theta's Announce Spring Pinnings
Alpha Phi sorority announces the pinning of Miss Carol Squire, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Squire of Coffeyville, to Mr. Bob Cowne, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cowne of Pueblo. Colo.
"Who Is Cinderella?" asked satin streamers on the dinner tables the night of the pinning. Miss Melba Cantrell, at town crier, proclaimed that Cinderella was in the room, and Miss Jean McGinnis brought in a satin pillow with a glass slipper and purple orchid on it.
Mrs. Richard Blume was given a silver wand and announced that Carol was Cinderella. The attendants wore red carnations and the housemother was given white carnions.
Miss Squire is an education junior. Mr. Cowne is an engineering senior and a member of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity.
Buehler-Gillum
Miss Buehler is a College junior. Mr. Gillam is an engineering senior and a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity.
Pi Beta Phi announces the pinning of Miss Beatrice Buehler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Buehler of Lawrence, to Mr. Jack Gillum, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. Z. Gillum of Wichita.
The pinning was announced at dinner recently by Miss Nancy Myer.
Honorary Group Initiates
Honorary memberships were conferred upon Anthony Lohmeyer, Paul Lohmeyer and Donald Kane, instructor in design. The Lohmeyer brothers are executives of the Green jewelry company in Kansas City, Mo. They spoke briefly to the group.
Alpha chapter of Alpha Rho Gamma, national jewelry and silversmithing fraternity, initiated seven new members April 22 at a banquet in their honor. Those initiated were Lois Etherington, Opal Flemming, Morton Yeomans, Sybil McKinley, Barbara Boling, Robert Springer, and John Jacques.
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[Picture of a man and woman posing together, with the man wearing a suit and tie and the woman wearing a dress with floral patterns.]
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Alpha Phi sorority announces the pinning of Miss Doris Miller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bertram Miller of Erie, Pa., to Mr. Elgin Thelen, son of Mrs. Mae Thelen of Kansas City, Kan.
Miss Marian Mills read a poem to announce the pinning. She and Mrs. Richard Blume, housemother, wore red gloves to miss Miss Miller wore yellow rosees.
The wedding will be August 26. Miss Miller is a College sophomore. Mr. Thelen is an engineering senior and a member of Triangle fraternity.
Larson-Ranev
Chi Omega sorority announces the pinning of Miss Kathleen Larson, daughter of Mr. E. F. Larson of Wamego, to Mr. Richard H. Rancy, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Raney of Osborne.
Miss Joan Bigham, president, read a poem announcing the pinning. The attendants were Miss Ann Cowger, Miss Karen York, Miss Maryanne Harwood and Mrs. E. J. Rice. All wore white carnation corsages. Miss Larson received an orchid corsage.
Miss Larson is a College senior and Mr. Raney is a business senior and a member of Phi Gamma Delta.
Libyo, scheduled by United Nations resolution to become independent by Jan. 1, 1952, will be the fourth independent African country. The three already free of ties to colonial empires-Egypt, Ethiopia, and Liberia-comprise only about 1/15 of Africa.
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Miss Nash who wore an orchid, was assisted by Miss Virginia Walsh and Miss Ann Lawrence.
Kappa Alpha Theta sorority announces the pinning of Miss Barbara Nash, daughter of Mrs. Bert A. Nash of Lawrence, to Mr. Steve Mills, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Mills of Russell.
YOUR EYES
The announcement was made during dinner by Miss Carolyn Weigand. Mrs. Christine Alford, Theta housemother, Mrs. Kenneth Whyte, Sigma Chi housemother, and the attendants received corsages of spring flowers.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1950
Four Men Seek KU Fullback Spot
(Editor's note: This is the second in a series of articles about the 1950 Kansas football prospects).
A four-way scrap continues right down to the finish line for the starting fullback spot on Coach J. V. Sikes' varsity football team as the squad continues drills in the final week of spring practice.
Saturday's annual intra- squaq game in Memorial stadium may largely determine the way the fullbacks will rank at the start of fall practice. Probably no other position has been so evenly matched this spring as has been the fullback slot.
The furious battle is throwing Johnny Amberg, the compact co-captain elect, against a field of three sophomores, Galen Fass, 211-pound builder, Bud Laughlin, a 200-pounder, and a well built 5-foot 11-inch 190-pounder, Bob Brandeberry.
At first glance it would seem that Amberg should have a couple of lengths head start over the youngsters. However, all four candidates have been running a near dead heat, after shifting up and down the ladder from starter to No. 4 almost every day.
Amberg, a hard - hitting 178- pounder, will carry the inside track next autumn because of his experience. As a sophomore fullback behind Forrest Griffith in 1948, he gained 138 net vards in 40 carries.
During the 1949 season, he played right half until late in the season when he went back to his old slot at full in what Coach Sikes called his "running backfield." His combined efforts at these two spots accounted for 236 yard inches in 42 carriers. He was particularly effective in K.U.'s 27 to 14 win over Nebraska, spearheading the fourth quarter drive for the clinching touchdown.
Fiss and Laughlin are cut from the old-fashioned workhorse mold.
The oaken-legged Fiss already has laid claim to the first string defensive assignment, which he held last year on Don Fambrough's unbeaten freshman squad.
Tabbed as a slow starter, Fiss has shown noticeable improvement in this department since spring drills started. As a matter of fact, he has been running with enough power to force himself into the offensive picture next fall even though he may carry most of the defensive load.
Laughlin is another player that will be hard to keep out of the offensive picture. He runs with fine speed and mobility in the open as well as with bruising power. He is also a creditable linebacker and will help the Jayhawkers strengthen one of their biggest defensive problems encountered during the 1949 season.
Brandeberry was a squad member the past year but did not see a single minute of varsity action. He carries the quickest start of the four and is high in the coaches' book as a ball carrier. He also can lend a hand with the line-backing duties.
A fifth performer in the picture is junior Gene Cox, a sturdy 175-pounder, who missed the past sea-sea accidently because of an ankle injury.
There isn't another spot in Chif Kimsey's backfield as well fortified as fullback, but competition for the halfback spots is almost as intense. On the left side, Charley
Haag seems to hold a slight edge over Henry Lamping's early spring play and the injury jinxed Dean Wells. Lamping is now playing in the outfield for Coach Bill Hogan's baseball club.
Wells, the slender blond who gained Varsity stature the past year with outstanding defensive play, has looked good in offensive play this spring and is expected to play in both departments this fall. He is one of the top broken-field runners on the team and a tough man to haul down in the secondary.
Wade Stinson, the sharp little veteran with speed to burn, is out in front at the right half position, but is being pushed by sophomores-to-be Clarence Cain and Don Clement. Clement was one of the top runners on the undefeated frosh team in 1949 and Cain showed well before being k.o.ed by a leg injury in the Missouri game.
An even more serious threat is Hal Cleavinger, converted fullback, who scored four times in the Jayhawkers' first intra-squad game this spring. Like Wells, Cleavinger has been trying to stay away from the injury jinx, but it has tagged him a couple of times this spring.
Coach Sikes' club unfold one of the best KU. running attacks shown in recent years when they take the Memorial stadium field in the opener against Texas Christian university. Sept. 23, 1950.
If the Jayhawkers line play continues to improve and the passing shows improvement every opponent on the Kansas schedule will know they've been in "a real ball game."
Plato held that an animal that killed a man should be prosecuted for murder.
Jayhawkers To Meet Wildcats In Dual
A track and field meet that pits the Sunflower state's best on the track against its best in the field is scheduled for Saturday afternoon at Manhattan. The Kansas Jayhawkers, specialists on the cinder paths, will meet the Kansas State Wildcats, a team capable of taking first place in every field event but one come the Big Seven meet May 19 and 20
This unusual confinement of strength to their different specialties by the two teams caused Kansas' Coach Bill Easton to say earlier this season, "If we had Kansas State's field men to go with our runners, we could whip any team in the nation!"
Spearheading the Jayhawk team are Capt. Bob Karnes, All-American Pat Bowers, sophomore sensation Herb Semper, and game Cliff Abel. But the Jayhawks also offer top dashmen in little Emil Schutzel and Bob Devinnein, and a good hurdler in Jack Greenwood.
The Manhattan crew presents a stout field team in weightman Rollin Prather, high jumper Virgil Severns, broad jumper Herb Hoskins, and javelin thrower Don Frazier. They are lacking only in the pole vault.
What the K.U. squad has in field events amounts to little compared to the K-State strength. But high jumpers Del Norris and Bill Richardson are not novices. And Coach Easton will put ace Bob Drumm into the javelin, A Bouchard in the broad jump, Jim Floyd in the pole vault, Ed Lee in the shot put, Bob Broady in the discus, and Jim Potts in the javelin and pole vault.
Kansas State's main threat on the track is Earl Elliott, hurdler. His matches against Greenwood in the highs and against Greenwood and Devinney in the lows should be the day's top races.
Coach Easton may field two new
men on his squad—Jerry Waugh, Phog Allen's court veteran who is working out at the dashes, and Bob Kline, a top prospect in the discus who placed in that event in the past year's Big Seven meet. Kline has just turned out for practices only recently and is just getting in shape.
Elliot and Greenwood are old odes. A year ago at the Kansas Relays, Greenwood won the high sticks with Elliott in third place. But in the Jayhawker-Wildcat dual and the Big Seven outdoor it was a different story. The K-State ace won both. At the Big Seven it was a photo finish.
The Wildcats may be without the services of Hoskins, champion of the 1949 Mt. Oread Olympics. He pulled a muscle in this year's Relays in finishing third and didn't compete at Drake a week ago. He has a top-flight running mate in Jim Danielson.
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Prather has been in better form in 1950 than he has ever displayed in his four-year career at Manhattan. At the Kansas Relays he got off some of the best efforts of his career in putting the shot 53 feet $ \frac{5}{8} $ inches and tossing the discus 164 feet $ \frac{9}{2} $ inches.
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Both of those marks are better than the existing Big Seven standards. But the shot put measure doesn't exceed the K.U.-Kansas State record of 55 feet 11 inches set by Elmer Hackney, the Wildcat "one-man gang," in 1939.
The Bus- (Adv.)
CHEVY
HEAD FRESHMAN COACH DON FAMBROUGH, (holding ball) is giving these sophomore-to-be running aces some instructions as to ways of beating the Whites in the annual intrasquad football game to be played at 2 p.m. Saturday in Memorial stadium.
Playing for the Reds will be (left to right) Don Clement, 180-pound right halfback, left halfback Charley Hoag, 190-pound triple-threater, and Galen Fiss, 205-pound bulldozing fullback.
These frosh backs have been impressive this spring and are expected to log plenty of playing time this fall. Hoag and Fiss are going to be hard to keep out of the starting eleven and both are capable of playing on defense as well as offense.
Hoag, Fiss, and Clement played prominent roles on the undefeated 1949 freshman team that downed Missouri, 12 to 7, and rolled over Kansas State yearlings, 25 to 6, to rank as one of the Jayhawkers' top frost clubs of all time.
Coach Fambrough's freshmen used a high-powered ground attack in rolling up 345 yards on Missouri and 386 via the ground route against Kansas State. Hoag and Clement turned in outstanding ball carrying performances in both games while Fiss ran wild against the Wildcats.
Quack Club Ballet Will Be Tonight
High school girls, who saw a "sneak preview" of the ballet at their play-day Saturday, pronounced it "terrific."
Quack club will swim out the calendar year in their water ballet 8 p.m. today in the Robinson gym pool. Each routine represents a different month and groups of various sizes perform the routines.
Women only are invited. Money earned by the admission price of 50 cents each is to be used for the benefit for club members as a group.
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TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
SPOTLIGHT on SPORTS
---
By BOB LEONARD
In Friday's Kansan, Carl Ellis, Jayhawker leftfielder, voiced his disgust with the attitude of the spectators at the home baseball games. Ellis said: "When we play on our own pasture, students yell for us only when we are ahead and razz us when we are behind."
This is certainly not a fitting tribute to Coach Hogan and his team who have worked so hard this year. The players have been in there fighting the opposition every game. They stayed right with the game at Ames in snow, sleet, and 35-degree temperatures to hand the Cyclones a 9 to 7 setback.
And yet, when this team plays at home, they get a good razzing from their own schoolmates. It is true that professional baseball teams get razzed from the spectators. But these teams are not part of an institution—they play for money and make their living on the diamond. The K.U. baseball team plays for the good of the school and because they like the game—and, remember, there is no "glory" in baseball.
A scout for the Philadelphia Athletics who recently returned from Oklahoma reported that there was no display of bad feeling at the baseball contests played at Norman. "When the Sooners were behind, the spectators either said nothing or left the game," the scout said.
K. U. has six home games left—the first one May 8 against Iowa State. University students will likely attend these games. However, unless you want to go down to the diamond and cheer for the team, win or lose, you better stay home. It would be much better not to have a spectator show up for the remaining contests than to receive letters from the players themselves complaining about poor sportsmanship behind the backstop. K.U. is the Big Seven Champion in the baseball field. Let this razzing of champions stop. Why not turn out for the remaining games and back the team?
Two of Coach Bill Easton's best sophomore track products are hoping their luck will change. At least they want no more of the kind they had at the Drake Relays.
Semper was victim of a threeman jostle when the baton was knocked from his grasp just as he was taking over the lead on his leg of the two-mile relay. In the mixup the baton was knocked from his hand.
Dewinney was leading the field in the 220-yard low hurdle finals coming up to the fifth barrier. Then he hit the hurdle and went rolling into the muddy track. It was his second bad fall within five days. On Tuesday of the past week he humbled after a practice race and came up with injuries that are causing Easton some concern.
Bengals Edge K.U.
4 To 3 At Columbia
The Missouri Tigers broke up a 1-all game in the sixth inning by scoring three runs on three hits to down the Jayhawkers, 4 to 3, in a Big Seven game played Monday at Columbia.
Missouri took a 1 to 0 lead in the second when Bill Redden got on by an error and scored on Ross Boerger's single. K.U. came back to tie the score in the fourth on doubles by Flovd Temple and Carl Ellis.
Mabry, who pitched good ball until the sixth, ran into trouble on an error, a passed pall, a sacrifice, a walk, and three singles to allow the Tigers to take a 4 to 1 lead and the ball game.
A triple by Mabry and Lou DeLuna's long fly gave Kansas a run in the seventh. The Jayhawkers threatened in the ninth as Mabry single scored twice with Kansas' help in feefly Bob Smith, who beat KU, here earlier, 9 to 2, borne down to cut the rally short to give the Bengals the one-run victory.
Score by innings: R. H. E. Kansas ... 000 100 101—3 C 3 Missouri ... 010 003 00x—4 7 I Batteries: Mabbry (lost), Philip (6), and Mace; Smith and Alexander.
By RAY SOLDAN
Tennis, Golf Teams Blank Ichs
The Washburn Ichabods returned to Topeka Monday with nothing but a pair of goose eggs to show for their efforts against the K.U. golf and tennis teams. Coach Dick Richards' tennis team blanked the Ichs, 7 to 0, and Bill Winey's golfers stroked out an 18 to 0 win.
The win by the tennis team avenged an earlier set-back and snapped a Washburn winning streak in dual matches at 15. It was the first loss in two years for Washburn's defending C.I.C. champions. They hold wins over three Big Seven teams this season. The Ichabods edged Kansas, 4 to 3, in Topeka the past week.
K. U. golfers registered their third straight victory of the season in whitewashing Washburn. The Jayhawkers downed Washburn, $13\frac{1}{2}$ to $41\frac{1}{2}$, earlier in the year, and trounced Nebraska by an identical score in their other victories.
Coaches Richards and Winey will take their teams to Columbia Wednesday for matches with the Missouri Tigers. Missouri topped Kansas, 5 to 2, in a tennis match here the past week. It will be the first meeting of the season between the Kansas golfers and Missouri's defending champions. An earlier match scheduled to be played in Lawrence was postponed to a later date because of heavy rains.
Heavy rain
Hervie Macferran, KU's. No. 1
racket-swinger, evened the score with Washburn's Dick Mecham with a 6-4, 4-6, 6-2 victory. Washburn's switch-hitting ace down Macfer-
Bob Swartzell and Charles Crawford, Kansas' No. 2 and No. 3 men, both ran their winning streaks in singles play to four straight by sweeping their matches in straight sets. Swartzell and Crawford were defeated by their Oklahoma opponents in K.U.'s first match of the season, but they have gone undefeated since.
ran in their first meeting. Mecham was the number one ranking singles player in the Missouri Valley area the past year.
KU Conference termed Success
Instruction in various types of games suitable for summer recreation and music useful in singing games were given in the afternoon by Miss Joie Stapleton, associate professor of physical education, Professor Shenk, and Elin Jorgenson, associate professor of music education.
About 25 persons from several towns in Kansas attended the third annual Recreation Leadership conference Monday in Robinson gym.
Jack Ranson, playing the No. 4 spot for the Jayhawkers, brought his season's singles mark to two wins and two losses with Monday's victory, Ranson missed one of Kansas' matches. John Freiburger has played in three matches for the Jayhawkers, winning two and losing one.
In his luncheon address W. D. Wolfe, superintendent of the Lawence public schools, discussed the importance of recreation in the community.
Three K.U. players tied for medalist honors in Monday's golf match. Dick Ashley, Dennis, and Bob Dare all carded 18-hole totals 73. Kansas' fourth man was Cal Markwell who turned in a score of 76, which was the same as made by the leading Washburn man.
"We had fairly good attendance, the best so far," reported chairman Shenk, "and I think the whole conference was a definite success."
The morning schedule was filled with talks and discussions concerning the organization of a summer recreation program, including securing community support, and the making of records and reports for future reference. Reginaid Stani, assistant professor of physical education, Hobb director of the Lawrence Recreation commission; and Mrs. Frank Stockton, secretary of the commission, presided at the sessions.
Putting was hampered by slick, fast greens which kept scores well above the Lawrence Country club
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course par of 68. The team average for its three matches to date is a fraction above 74.
Macferran defeated Mecham, 6-4,
4-6, 6-2.
Results of the Kansas-Washburn tennis match are as follows;
Singles
Swartzell defeated Gene Echols, 6-4, 6-1.
OF THE "I AM AN AMERICAN DAY" Parade and Dinner held Saturday.
Crawford defeated Gene Powell, 6-2, 6-4.
EXCLUSIVE MOTION PICTURES
Ranson defeated Phil Blackburn 6-1, 1-6, 6-0.
Freiburger defeated Clement Shakle, 6-2, 6-1.
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Doubles
Macferran - Swartzell defeated
Meam-Pamov, 6-3, 6-4.
AS THE CAMERA SEES LAWRENCE
Ranson-Crawford defeated Echols-
Shakle, 6-1, 2-6, 6-2.
Results of the golf match are as follows:
These Motion Picture High Lights will be shown on our screen through Saturday
Ashley defeated Clayton Kline, 3 to 0.
Dennis defeated Jim Sallee, 3 to 0.
Ashley-Dennis defeated Kline-
Sallee, 3 to 0.
Dare-Markwell defeated Barter-
Maloney, 3 to 0.
Dare defeated Bill Barter, 3 to 0.
Markwell defeated Bill Maloney, 3 to 0.
Pitching continued to make a great difference in winning and losing ball games in women's intramural softball contests Monday. Two games were played out but Gamma Phi Beta had to forfeit to Miller for its third loss.
Going into the fourth with a 10 to 1 defeat, Pi Beta Phi suddenly handcuffed Watkins batters and came out of the game leading 29 to 12. They slammed out a 24-run rally in a fourth innning home-stretch drive to register their second victory to Watkins' third defeat.
24-Run Rally Defeats Watkins
Baker and Stodder are credited with the victory leaving Harris and Grove to accept the loss for Watkins.
Kappa Alpha Theta blanked Alpha Chi Omega 22 to 0 and knocked out two home runs to add to "their day." The winning pitcher allowed few hits and struck out most of the batters, catching some infield pop-ups herself.
Batteries were McCune and Gage for the winners and Fitzpatrick and Perkins pitching and Horalick catching for the losers.
There are over 100 vocational or hobby skills in the Boy Scouts' Merit Badges field.
The Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce
presents
ON OUR STAGE
At
8 p.m.
ON OUR STAGE
A
8 p.m.
"LADIES BEWARE"
WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY
2 NIGHTS
8 - Big Variety Acts - 8
1
5
3
HASKELL TRIO
"LUCK PIERRE AND HIS 69'ERS"
Bobby Richardson Drums & Marimba
7
PERSHING RIFLES Crack Drill Team
8
6
4
No Matinee Wed. or
Thurs. — Box Office
Opens 5:45 — Show
Starts 6:00—Stage Show
at 8 p.m.
JOHN METTNER
SOLOIST
John Kress-
Stella Carney
ACROBATICS
KAPPA SIG QUARTET
Tickets for Wednesdoy Nite SOLD OUT
BE A BOOSTER!
And Other Comedy Fun
2
MAXINE LINDLEY
DANCE SPECIALS
ADULTS
$1.00 inc. All Tax
ON OUR SCREEN
ON OUR SCREEN
Before and after stage show at no extra admission.
"Treasure of Monte Cristo"
Tickets for Thursday night now on sale at Granada Box Office. Hurry . . . Get Yours Today. . . Support your local talent. This grand stage show is for the promotion of Jaycee's Children's activities!
Granada PHONE 946
Last Times Tonight - 'East Side, West Side'
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1950
The Editors ReportRAIN AND DROUGHTS
Kansan And Catskills
If Mayor O'Dwyer really wants to find someone to make it rain maybe he ought to visit Kansas on his next vacation. Here in New York a water shortage is something for headlines and campaigns. In Kansas periodic droughts have been so long a part of nature that in some years a sprinkle that barely laid the dust was reason for all-out thanksgiving.
There were ten bad droughts between 1860 and 1917 and more since then. When a drought gets bad Kansans have to watch their beloved state flying away in dust storms. No one in upstate New York has as yet reported any flying Catskills.
In a state where rain means not only water to drink but land to live on, it is natural that Kansas history should be full of stories of rain-making and rain-makers. For reasons known perhaps to Kansans, most of that activity centered in the little town of Goodland in the northwest corner of the state. Mayor O'Dwyer might drop in there and see if any of the Goodland rainmakers are still around.
There were plenty of them back in the Nineties when Goodland was the home office of the only rain-making company ever incorporated. Some of its common stock is probably still at the bottom of Kansas bureau drawers.
Two citizens, a chemist and a railroad agent, started the company after working for years at a secret process. When they tried it out a light drizzle fell at once, and there was a rush to buy common stock.
The Mexican government heard of the company and hired it to end a Mexican drought. It took a while to get from Goodland to Mexico. When the rain-makers arrived it was pouring torrents and what the Mexican government needed was flood control. The corporation dried at the roots.
Other Goodland men tried rain-making. A druggist, Dr. Morse, working in his backyard with some tanks of acid, made a final test at 10 o'clock on a bright morning. By 2 in the afternoon the town was afloat and kids were using sidewalk planks for rafts.
Dr. Morse continued at it, with intermittent luck, for the next fifteen years. Even the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad helped with this Goodland hobby and fitted out three cars for rain-making experiments.
But the most spectacular rain-maker in Goodland was one Melbourne, billed as "The Australian Rain-Maker." Some of the officials of the Goodland District Fair found him when they were looking for an attraction that would line up paying guests at the gate and at the same time bring benefit to the parched community.
They announced far and wide that "The Australian Rain-Maker" would positively appear on the fairgrounds as the big attraction. He would be paid $1500 in clinking coin if he could bring forth and down one inch of rain in twenty-four hours.
In any case, he brought forth the customers who poured in at all the gates. They watched Melbourne load up with carboys of acid and zinc and stagger out to the middle of a field under hot sun and cloudless sky.
The crowds saw him pour acid on the zinc. It bubbled and fizzed in the wind. The idea was that the hydrogen thus released would go skyward, unite with oxygen, and return as a gentle shower to the earth beneath.
All day Melbourne poured on the acid. He was still pouring it at twilight as the sun set in a cloudless sky and the stars shone drought-sharp. No rain, no $1500.
Not that the fair officials cared. They weren't even watching him. They were busy answering telephone calls and messages from towns and districts to the northeast and even up in Nebraska.
They had showers in two hours after Melbourne dripped his first acid. All of them said the same thing "Shut off that rainmaker! Up here we're drowning!"—The New York Times.
YE OLDE COBBLESTONES:
Vanishing Americana
by Janice Auer
Now that Lawrence is ironing out its streets to get rid of Ye Olde Cobblestone effect, there is more danger than ever of speeding. Of course, the danger of swerving into another car because you tried to miss a reasonable facsimile of the Grand Canyon is lessened. And your car may have a longer life expectancy.
But those new, beautifully smooth streets can cause trouble too. They are inviting, comfortable, and innocent-looking. You can cruise along so easily at 50 miles an hour that you forget where you are.
They give you the feeling that you are in the wide open spaces without another. . . oww. . . someone else was in the wide open spaces too. Unfortunately, your paths crossed; and where are you? In Watkins, if you're lucky, not in critical condition.
Remember Lawrence has speed limits. Obey them, and look for stop signs. Also give the other fellow the benefit of the doubt. Doubt that he will stop in time—if you see him speeding toward you like Hot Rod Happy.
A rocket developed by an eastern aircraft manufacturer is designed to attain a maximum speed of 5,800 miles per hour. (The moon could be reached in $41\frac{1}{2}$ hours at that speed.)
National Deficit To Climb Higher
Washington—(U.P.)-The government's deficit for this fiscal year is about to take off on a jet-propelled climb.
Right now it amounts to just over two billion dollars. During the next two months, it is expected to soar to five billion, 400 million dollars.
Such a climb in spending over income would be at the rate of about 360 million dollars a week—and it may be even more than that.
The five billion, 400 million dollar deficit estimate for the fiscal year ending June 30 was made by the budget bureau. The bureau has missed deficit figures so far and so often that some persons here would about as soon accept the estimates of the joint congressional committee on internal revenue.
The committee on April 18 estimated U't spending voted by congress la.year and smaller-than-expected tax collections would leave the treasury with a six billion seven hundred million dollar deficit. If that figure, proves to be correct, the weekly average rate will be about 475 million dollars.
Either way it is a lot of money, especially when the treasury doesn't have it.
The bureau and the committee also are far apart on what next year's deficit will be. The bureau estimates 5 billion, 133 million dollars. The committee says it will be seven billion, 300 million dollars. Much will depend on the final spending figure congress approves this year.
These various deficit figures all agree that the government is spending far beyond its income and will continue for some time to do so. They are the center of political dispute and will be major issues in this year's congressional elections.
The congressional committee stands pat on its dismal estimate of a combined fiscal 1950 and 1951 deficit of around 14 billion dollars.
Proud Appointed Department Head
Dr. Gunnar O. Proud has recently been appointed chairman of the department of otorhinolaryngology at the University of Kansas School of Medicine. Otorhinolaryngology is that branch of medicine dealing with diseases of the ear, nose, and throat
Dr. Proud, a 36-year-old physician, will succeed Dr. Sam E. Roberts, chairman of the department since 1928. Dr. Proud's appointment was announced recently by Dr. Franklin D. Murphy, dean of the school.
Daily Hansan
University
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
News Room Adv. Room
K.U. 251 K.U.378
Member of the Kansas Press Assm.
National Editorial Assm., Inland Dally
Press Assm., and the Associated Collegiate
Press. Represented by the National Ad-
vertising Service,420 Madison Ave., New
York City.
James Morris Editor-in-Chief
Editor-in-Chief
Doris Greenbank Jules Shriver
Managing Editor Business Mgr.
Asst. Man. Editors Norma Hunsinger
Kay Hewenman John Hill
Ralph Hemenway
City Editor Edward Chapin
Asst. City Editors Olive John
Mart琳 Marks Elaine Elvig
Steve Ferro
Feature Editor Francis Iceley
Photograph Editor Frank Walz
Telegraph Editor Robert Sigman
William Graves
Richard Tatum
Lloyd Holcke
Sports Editor Richard Daleas
Asst. Sports Editors Bob Leonard
Ray Solidan
Arthur McIntire
Mona Miller
Society Editor Faye Wilkinson
Asst. Society Editors Billie Stover
Emily Stewart
Editorial Assts. Keith Leslie
Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner
Cit. Mgr. Vyonna Josserand
Nat. Adv. Mgr. Forrest Jones
Classified Ad. Mgr. Lee Dyer
Promotion Mgr. John Wiedeman
By Bibler
Little Man On Campus
Little Man On Campus
ICE
Bryce
"They're ready but I think they're wise to our early-morning- duck-hunt——They wanna know if we're takin' guns."
CRIME IS THE MENTAL
Grime On Society
Crime is a nasty business. It always has been. It always will be.
Crime is a big business today. The thugs and penny-ante swindlers are still around to be sure, but they are organized now.
Ye ED
Crime is an organized, orderly business now. True, once in a while it becomes necessary to "eliminate" competition. But that is expected in a business.
What does crime offer that people can't do without? It offers many things . . . the thrill of doing something you shouldn't, a chance of getting something for nothing, escape from the humdrum round of life, the excitement of intrigue, physical glorification. These are the things people shell out their hard-earned dough for.
Crime is one of the most carefully compounded hoaxes. Laws are passed saying that there shall be no crime. And law enforcement officials are elected who never heard of the laws. Citizens are told in vague, generalized terms that crime is not a good thing. But they are never shown what happens when a young adolescent becomes a drug addict. They hear but their eyes are not opened.
Crime serves a nationwide market now. It has plenty of customers . . . the grocer's clerk who has two dollars to bet on a nag, the jaded waitress whose sole daily pleasure is wagering four-bits on a policy ticket.
Crime is like any other business. It must have customers to survive. It must have something those customers want so badly that they can't do without it.
Why does crime exist? It exists because the crime sellers know it pays off. It exists because the crime buyers have never been taught it is a hoax.
Crime will continue until people stop spending 341/2 million dollars a year on hairbrained schemes for making a fast buck and spend the money on educating their children about what makes a good life. A good life is not found in a smoky, foul-smelling back room where feverish-eyed people bend over a rigged roulette wheel, hoping against hope for a little number to bring them fortune.
Washington—(U.P.)-The administration reports it has cut government spending $1 billion this fiscal year but said the savings have been practically wiped out by tax losses. The revised report of the govermor
Government Tax Losses Wipe Out One Billion Dollar Spending Cuts
The revised report of the government's red-ink fiscal picture from the budget bureau as the Red publician-led house economy block lost its first important attempt to cut future government outlays.
In its first revised figures since January, the budget bureau said the 1950 deficit will run $5 and a half billion. This was down $100 million from the January report.
However, it added, savings of some $1 and a half billion in expenditures have been practically all
offset by an anticipated fall of a billion dollars in income tax collections. The bureau said total spending for fiscal 1950 will be approximately $42 billion.
The budget bureau also estimated that the deficit for the 1951 fiscal year starting July 1 will be $2,200 million, despite a billion dollar spending reduction written into the omnibus appropriation bill now before the house.
T
F
O
e.
w.
n
t
f
a
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o
y
告
TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
bler
Fire Damages Henley House
A fire about 1 a.m. April 29 scorched wallpaper and charred woodwork on the first floor of Henley house, a cooperative residence hall for women. Joyce Harkleroad, president of the house, said the fire was thought to have started after ash trays containing burning cigarettes were dumped into a waste-basket.
Miss Harkleroad explained that the wallpaper and woodwork damage was caused when a calendar hanging on the wall was ignited and spread the flames.
The Lawrence fire department was called, but women in Henley house had extinguished the fire before firemen arrived. Paul Ingels, Lawrence fire chief, said the damage was "very slight."
CORE To Refund Meal Ticket Sales
The five restaurant owners who were offered a $500 guarantee in meal tickets if they would eliminate racial discrimination in serving students have refused to accept the proposal, Jane Schmidt, College junior and secretary-treasurer of C.O.R.E., announced recently.
A committee, composed of representatives of various organizations from the University, sent letters to the campus restaurant owners asking if they would consider meeting with the committee to discuss the plan and its possibilities.
The proposal was: "that the restaurant owners accept the sum received from the sale of the meal tickets and the money from further sales, and in turn, grant service to all ticket holders, both negro and white." After a trial period, the committee hoped the owners would see that the plan could work without any loss of business or prestige to the restaurant.
The money, which was collected by selling $1 meal tickets to the students, is being refunded. Those who wish to may obtain a refund by turning in their tickets to Wendell Walker, president of C.O.R.E.
One of the restaurant owners said that he couldn't accept the proposal because of restrictive clauses in his lease. The others refused to consider the proposition.
Semantics Club To Hear Persky
Abraham Persky, instructor in English, will give a report on "General Semantics Bibliography" at the next General Semantics club meeting scheduled for Thursday, May 11. The public is invited.
The bibliography will be published by the International Society for General Semantics.
Nominations for club officers made at a recent meeting include Myrta Anderson, College senior, for president; John Rynerson, graduate student, for vice-president; and Russell Annis, education junior, for secretary-treasurer.
N-O-W Ends Wed. Don't Miss This Big Picture!
Red Danube
Starring
WALTER PIDGEON
ETHEL BARRYMORE
PETER LAWFORD
JANET LEIGH
ANGELA LANSBURY
Feature Times
1:00, 3:11, 5:22, 7:33
and 9:44
ADDED FUN Color Cartoon Latest World News
Shows continuous. Open 12:45
Patee
PHONE 121
Official Bulletin
Tuesday, May 2
Students planning to take Western Civilization examination Saturday, May 13, 1:30 to 5 p.m., must register at Western Civilization office during the period May 3 - 9. Place of examination will be assigned at time of registration. Examination admittance card received at Western Civilization office must be presented at time of examination.
Quack club water ballet, 8 tonight. Robinson pool. Only women invited; admission 50 cents.
Alpha Kappa Psi business meeting, 7:30 tonight, 20 Strong hall. Nomination of officers. Professional meeting, 8:15 tonight, English room. Union.
Alpha Phi Omega, 7 tonight, Recreation room, Union.
Junior Interdorm, 5 today, Templin hall.
All Student Council, 7:30 tonight. Pine room, Union. Old and new members.
Mathematical colloquium, special meeting, 5 today, 203 Strong. Prof. W. W. Rogosinski, Oklahoma A. and M., "The Principle of Subordination."
Jay Janes, 5 p.m. Wednesday,
Pine room, Union.
Stateswomen club, 7:15 tonight,
East room, Union.
Y.W.C.A. annual banquet, 6 p.m.
Wednesday, Kansas room, Union.
People working on Tau Sigma posters meet 7 p.m. Wednesday, 330 Strong.
Quill club, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday,
East room, Memorial Union. Election
of officers: manuscript reading.
Social Work club picnic, 5:30 p.m. Thursday, Potter Lake. Bring 50 cents.
Al Etenyo se reunira el 4 de mayo a las 4:30, 113 Strong. Programa: En busca de "Scavenger" y la quema de Judas.
Delta Sigma Pi professional function and business meeting, 7:30 Thursday, East room, Memorial Union.
N. S.A. meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 9 Strong hall. Plans for 1950-51.
Y. W.C.A. members help redecorate Henley House basement, 3 to 5:30 today, Wednesday, and Thursday, under direction of Betty van der Smissen.
Ku Ku Club To Initiate 30 Pledges On Thursday
Approximately 30 pledges will be initiated by the Ku Ku club on Thursday. Plans for the initiation were made at a meeting April 27.
A cheerleader from the club will also be chosen the night of the initiation ceremonies.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are acceptes, with the understanding that the bill will be accepted by the company. Admits to visit during the payout to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Mall Business office. Journals to be mailed at 454 p.m. the day before publication date.
Phone K.U. 376
Kansan Classified Advertising
One day Three days Five
25 words or less ... 35c 65c 90c
Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
Classified Advertising Rates
FOR SALE
29 'MODEL A coupe with rumble seat
running little Ford. 1941 Ohio or 3195R.
INDEX your vocabulary and language books with the new Superdex cloth tabs. A set from A to Z for just 10e. Student Union Book Store. 8
K. & E. NEPTUNE drawing instrument sets reduced from $23 to $12.50 while our supply lasts. See them at Student Union Book Store. 8
ARCHITECTS! Limited Quantity of Zip-
A-Tone now available at 35c a sheet. A wide range of patterns. Student Union Book Store. 8
GOLFERS! Four handbooks of instructions by Bob MacDonald and Les Bostad illustrations, for 3Sc. Learn fundamental skills! Student Book Store. U 8
WASHING machine, gas stove, refrigerator, kitchen cabinet, kitchen table microwave, dishwasher machine, 20 inch circular mirror, portable non-electric phonograph, small set of shelves and large set of shelves suit-together will hold up to 20 books. Phone 301J1.
74 HARLEY DAVIDSON motorcycle. '49 model. First class condition. Call after 5:00 p.m. Phone 1667-J. 40 W. 6th St. 5 SUMMER "First Nigher" formal. Worn once. Size 37, regular coat. $17.50. Size 31 trousers. $7.50. Phone 2686-J. 3
ON MOTHER'S Day say "I Love You" with a box of assorted cresme and nut filled chocolates from the DIXIE CARAMEL CORN SHOP. Pound box, $1.25 for mailing, Wrapper, $3.00 for mailing, THE DIXIE CARAMEL CORN SHOP, 842 Mass. 3
FRESH shrimp served every day at the Mission Inn. 45c a plate. The restaurant serves only 3 months. Unpaid balance only $99.40. See B.F. Goodrich. Easy terms if desired.
GOLF Clubs, 7 irons and 3 woods with bag. Good condition and reasonably priced. Front Apartment, 820½' Mass. 1 LIKE NEW Zenith Trans Oceanic portable 49 model, 9 tules. Wave Booster Whipcord antenna. Underwood portable typewriter. Need to sell quiet room at 11am-6 p.m. 2 WALNUT full-sized bed with innerspring mattress, year old. Excellent condition. Phone 2683W.
TRUMPET for sale. Conn 22B in excellent condition, complete with large size lifetone case. Call Jim Sellards, 2954. 2
BOOK-EASE leaves both hands free for writing or typing, marks any reference section such as vocabulary, etc. Get your 89e at your Student Union Book Store.
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, plus 25% off. See the newest Emerson table model set at $19.50. Easy steps: Bowman Radio and Electric.
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STARTS THUR.
Patee PHONE 321
BUSINESS SERVICE
TYPING — theses, term papers, etc.
Standard rates. Phone 1344-W. 5
TYFING these, term papers, etc.
RATES rates materials for FORMALS AND dresses of all type made to order. Also alterations and re-
imaging Call Ms. Scales. Phone 3060-W-1414
TVPING: Theses, term papers, letters, etc. Regular rates. Prompt, accurate work. Mrs. Schear; Apt. R-36, 1810 La.; phone 3273R.
SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a dignified sales activity representing the school's best known faculty 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 advanced percentage of the budget. Grand Ave. Kansas City, Mo. Giving qualifications, school and home address. tf
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasan 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. The pet shop has Gift and Gift店 tf 1218 Comm. 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 work, motor service. Cars 317 E.17th. Phone 785 or 1821R. **tf** TYPING, Theses, Term Papers, Reports, Notes, etc. Prompt Service. Mrs. Sheehan, 1028 Vermont. Ph. 1168R. **tf** TYPING. Term papers, booksletings, notebooks, etc. Prompt work. Regular rates. Prompt attention Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601
TYPING: Call Hailz Stanley, 2864M for prompt experienced server. 820% Mass
FOR RENT
MAKE BETTER GRADES! Rent a portable or standard typewriter for $3.50 a month with models at Student Union Book Store. 1½ ROOM apartment adjacent to campus. Completely modern. All electric computer proof building. Inquire 1101 Tenn.
RIDING HORSES for rent by the hour
Bridle paths and trails nearby. For hay-
rack rides, call Mott Stables, phone 1842.
1700 West 4th. 5
LOST
BULOVA pink gold wrist watch at Tepee last Friday lite nite. Leather strap; return to Dick Hegarty, Phone 1689; Reward. 4
PEARL BRACELET, Sunday evening, near stadium. Betty Brownn, phone 3534.
REWARD. 4
WANTED
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. 4
Scheerer Speaks At 4 Today
Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers
Martin Scheerer, professor of psychology, will speak at a speech therapy seminar in Watkins hall on Monday, m. today to "Aspects of Anasia."
Aphasia is the loss or impairment of the power to use or understand speech resulting from a brain injury or emotional disturbance.
VARSITY
Phone 132 for Sho Time
Ends Today
"Jungle Men"
"Jungle Siren"
WED - THURS
Milton Berle "Always Leave Them Laughing"
and Dennis O'Keefe "Raw Deal"
0080004
ON STAGE
Ray KINNEYS
Royal HAWAIIAN
REVUE
WITH
Direct from Hawaii
Direct from Hawaii Starring the New Island Comedy Sensation "Little Boy Menchuni" "The Aloha Maids" "Pokini Serenaders" Genuine Hula Dances Black Light Dance
Stage show 2:30,7:30,9:30
The naughty, nifty story of a dance hall darling . . . and the men who tried to waltz her down Lover's Lane
Lee Bowman
Elyse Knox
Peggy Ryan
There's A Girl
In My Heart"
Hear these song hits "After the Ball," "Bicycle Built for Two," "Any Old Street," "Roller Skating Song."
No increase in Admission Mat. and Nite Adults 60c Children 12c
WED - THURS
2—DAYS ONLY—2
JAYHAWKER
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1950
Water Ballet Given Tonight By Quack Club
Tickets for the program may be purchased at the athletic office in Robinson gymnasium or from members of the Quack club for 50 cents.
The Quack club, with a membership of 30 girls, is sponsored by Miss Ruth Hoover, associate professor of physical education. To become a member of the club an applicant must pass specified swimming and diving tests.
Formation routines of 30 swimmers will portray the symbols for which each month is known in the "Calendar of the Year" water ballet presented by, the Quack club at 8 p.m. tonight in Robinson pool. From two to eight women are cast in each of the ballet routines.
The ballet will be given to show the public what can be done with music and synchronized swimming. The profits from the show will be used to produce bigger shows in the future.
Guests Ernest W. Crates, education senior, and Jerry Jean Jester, education freshman, will give a diving exhibition.
Nine pledges of the Pershing Rifles, honorary military society, began the first portion of their informal initiation Monday.
Armed with brooms, the pledges wore pots and pans while marching to sentries at the Alpha Delta Pi hockey and at the Alpha Chi Omega houses, and Watson library.
Rifles Group Pledges Nine
The pledges are as follows:
The three parts of the informal ini-
tion will end at 5 p.m. Wednesday
when active members will drill the
pledges.
Howard Kisling, College sophomore; John Barker, fine arts sophomore; Alan Coxen, engineering freshman; Gene Carpenter, William Jeffery, Darrell Kellog, Daniel Neff, Newman Shaver, and John Travis, College freshmen.
SRC Trains 50 As Group Leaders
More than 50 persons participated in a Religious Leadership Training conference for the purpose of "training University students from all of the religious groups of the campus to be better leaders in their own groups" Saturday at Westminster house, 1221 Oread. The Student Religious council sponsored activities.
A discussion of the Ecumenical church led by Jerre Ann Quin, College senior, Kathryn Conrad, College freshman, and Harrison Madden, journalism senior opened the conference at 9:30 a.m.
The "Qualities of a Good Leader" were presented by the Rev. Harold G. Barr, dean of the School of Religion.
Six discussion groups were held from 11 a.m. to noon. A worship leadership group was conducted by Mabel Ann Richardson, special student. The Rev. Dale E. Turner, minister of the Lawrence Plymouth Congregational church, headed the Recreation Leadership discussion.
A publicity leadership section was directed by David M. Riggs, secretary of the University Y.M.C.A. The Rev. R. W. Albert, pastor of the Lawrence Trinity Lutheran church presided over the World Service Leadership group.
Finals Schedules Now Available
Schedules for final examinations are now available at the Registrar's office. James K. Hitt, Registrar, announced today.
Student Will Visit Italy To Work In Church Camp
By STEVE FERRO
Italy, the land of sunshine, will become a reality this summer for Mary Elizabeth Kerr, senior in music education. She has been accepted by the World Council of Churches for a work camp in Torino. The interdenominational council sponsors camps in all parts of the world.
Miss Kerr, a blazing red-head, spoke excitedly: "I can't sit still and its not due to the vaccinations I've taken in preparation for the trip. It seems like a dream come true. I always wanted to travel abroad after I got out of school, and this is just made to order."
Eighty students from the United States, and students from Italy, France, and England are going to the camp this summer. Miss Kerr says she is the only one she knows of who has been accepted from this area. She will leave New York on the Queen Elizabeth June 16 and will be in the camp from July 3 to July 28.
Students from the United States Italy, France, and England will rebuild a Christian youth center at Torino. If the youth center is completed by July 28, the students will start on the construction of dormitories.
The purpose of the work camp is to help rebuild devastated church centers and to foster better relations among students of different countries. Miss Kerr will direct recreational and spiritual group singing. Teams of students will visit other youth centers to get acquainted with foreign students.
After finishing her duties at the work camp, Miss Kerr plans to visit Germany, France, Scotland, England, Switzerland, and possibly Austria.
Mary Lynn Lucas, fine arts senor,
went to a work camp in Mainz-Kastel,
Germany, the past summer. She
commented that the camps "give a
program to develop better attitudes
and understanding of international
living."
ASG Tours Kaw Valley
Nearly 50 members of the American Society of Geographers from the northern great plains area spent April 28 and 29 in Lawrence as guests of K.U.'s department of geography.
On April 28 the group examined areas of planned land use including the J.C. Nichols real estate development, and the flood prevention works of the army engineers along the Missouri and Kaw rivers
Army engineers, representatives of the J. C. Nichols company and city area of the Kansas City metropolitan area accompanied the geographers.
On April 29, the group toured the rural area between Lawrence and Kansas City. They observed the loess, a thick windblown deposit, and land coverage along the Missouri river.
Following a luncheon at the Castle tea room, the geographers examined K.U.'s extensive map collection and teaching facilities of the department of geography.
Prof. Charles M. Brett, Oklahoma A. and M. college, was elected president of the Kansas Entomological society at its annual meeting yesterday at the University. Dr. Charles Michener, associate professor of entomology is former president of the organization.
Entomologists Elect President
Approximately 100 members and graduate students attended the meeting, and 38 research papers on ontology were presented during the session. The society draws its membership from many states.
Burton Hodgden, entomologist for the State Board of Health, was elected vice president. Paul B. Lawson, dean of the University, editor of the "Journal" of the society; and Prof. Donald Wilbur of Kansas State college, secretary-treasurer, were reelected to their positions.
World News At Press Time
Chinese Reds Plan Assault
Taipei, Formosa, May 2 - (U.P.)- Chinese Communist forces are concentrating junks and power boats for an assault on the Chusan islands, a nationalist spokesman said today.
In Hong Kong, Formosan reports said more than 30.000 Chinese Nationalist troops have been flown from Hainan island to Washan island to meet an expected Chinese Communist assault.
Soviet Purge Reported
Stockholm, Sweden, May 2—(U.P.)
—The conservative newspaper Svenska Dagbladet said today that the Russians had carried out a widespread purge of officials in Estonia and had similar purge underway in Latvia and Lithuania. All members of the original Estonian government which cooperated with the Russians have been killed or jailed, it said.
Soviets Walk Out Of UN
Lake Success, N. Y., May 2—(U.P.)
-Russia walked out of the United Nations today for the 24th time in its bovocott of the world organization
P. Chernyshev, Soviet delegate,
challenged the right of the Chinese
Nationalists to sit on the committee
on statistical classification. His motion
to oust them was ruled out of
order. Chernyshev challenged the
ruling but lost on a 3-1 vote.
YWCA To Begin Clean Up Today
Members of Y.W.C.A. will begin a clean up campaign today at Henley house. Workers may help from 3 to 5:30 p.m. today, Wednesday, and Thursday.
She received her first taste of magazine editing and writing in Hollywood, Fla., when she published a weekly magazine. She was also associate editor of Tower Town Topics in Chicago and the New York editor of the same magazine. During the war she contributed to Charm, Brides' Magazine, and This Week. Mrs. Woods is author of the book, "Your Wedding, How To Plan and Enjoy It," published in 1942 and revised last year.
Bride she organized a staff for Modern Bride in 1949. The magazine has
In 1947 she was sent on a trip to the Orient to write special articles for the Boston Post and the Indianapolis Star. On this trip she traveled 40,000 air flights.
Western Civ Exam Registration Soon
Newman To Talk To Chemists
Dr. Melvin S. Newman, professor of chemistry at Ohio State university, will give the annual lecture of Phi Lambda Upsilon, honorary chemical society, today at 4 p.m. in Bailey Chemical laboratories. His topic will be "Aspects of Steric Hindrance."
Registration for the Western Civilization examination to be given Saturday, May 13, will be held Wednesday, through Tuesday, May 9.
Dr. Newman is an authority in organic chemistry and has published widely on both synthetic and theoretical topics. In 1949, he was awarded a Guggenheim fellowship which enabled him to present new ideas about the teaching of advanced organic laboratory techniques to chemistry departments throughout the country. Dr. Newman is at present associate editor of the Journal of the American Chemical Society.
The annual lecture will be followed by the initiation of new members and the spring banquet at the Union building. Featured speaker at the banquet will be Dr. J. O. Maloney, professor of chemical engineering and director of the K.U. research foundation. He will speak on "Genesis of Treason."
Magazine Editor Will Speak At Theta Sigma Phi Banquet
Mrs. Woods started her career as shopping column editor of the Washington Daily News after she was graduated from Indiana University and De Pauw university. Ernie Pyle helped her get her first job.
Later she was made special editions editor of the Washington News She has worked as society editor of the Hollywood (Fla.) News, fashion editor of the Indianapolis Times, Sunday columnist of the Indianapolis Star, and feature writer for the Washington Post.
Marjorie Binford Woods, editor-in-chief of Modern Bride magazine, will speak at the formal Theta Sigma Phi Matrix Table banquet at 6 p.m. Friday in the Kansas room of the Union. Mrs. Woods will speak on "You'll Like Having Ink On Your Fingers," a resume of her journalistic career and her work on her magazine.
Students planning to take the exam must register in the Western Civilization office, Strong annex C. The time and place to take the exam will be indicated on the registration card.
She will fly from Chicago to speak at the dinner celebrating the founding of the national honorary and professional fraternity for women in journalism. Epsilon chapter has invited as guests journalists, writers, University faculty members, journalism students, and administrative heads.
nation-wide following among the million and a half brides each year in this country.
Mrs. Woods is a past national officer of Theta Sigma Phi.
'Polka Dots' Win In WAA Play Day
Betty Thomas' "Polka Dots" and Jane Koelzer's "Toppers" tied for first place among the teams at the W.A.A-sponsored high school playday April 29. The "Polka Dots" won the prize by a drawing of lots.
Approximately 110 girls from 12 Kansas high schools took part in the program. Schools represented were Atchison, Haskell, Hoisington, Lawrence, Olathe, Osawatomie, Faola, Rosedale, Russell, Shawnee Mission, Tonganoxie, and Topeka
Frances Pence and Lorraine Ross were co-chairman of the planning committee for play-day. Team captains were Margo Smith and Dorothy Wood, education seniors; Geneva Fleshman, Jane Koehler, Nancy Moore, Beverly Pepper, Elisemarie Randell, Betty Thomas, and Margaret Wellman, education junior;s and Sue Neff, Sally Todd, and Chloe Warner, education sophomores.
The girls were entertained by Gamma Phi Beta, social sorority and Tau Sigma, modern dance fraternity. They also got a "sneak preview" of the water ballet which the Quack club performed.
Economy Same As Hypocrisy To Legislators
Washington, May 2—(U.P.) - Dr. Edwin G. Nourse, former chairman of President Truman's council of economic advisors, said today that in congress, "economy is a word that rhymes with hypocrisy."
"Congress not only has shown no disposition to cut appropriations," he said, "it actually is talking of raising them."
He referred specifically to recent attempts by Sen. Paul H. Douglas, (D.-Ill.) to trim a rivers and harbors bill and to the drive of house Republicans to slash one billion dollars from the twenty-nine billion dollars omnibus appropriations bill.
Dr. Nourse, who has taken President Truman to task for deficit spending, spoke on "the battle of the budget bulge" at a luncheon meeting of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States.
Noting that Senator Douglas introduced 20 amendments to cut the one and a half billion dollar rivers and harbors measure down to 700 million dollars, Dr. Nourse continued:
"Each amendment was greeted with Raucous Laughter. Each was howled down, and some of the loudest shouts were from those Republicans and southern Democrats who moan most about economy between appropriations bills."
He said the G.O.P. economy bloc in the house had to abandon its drive after "party leaders became aware they couldn't even keep their own members in line for the cuts, much less pick up any appreciable number of Democratic votes."
Leonard Warren, Metropolitan Opera baritone, will appear at 8:20 p.m. Wednesday in the final concert on the University Concert series.
Met Baritone To Sing Here
Mr. Warren, who received a business degree from Columbia university is described by Donald M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, as "one of the greatest voices of the present generation."
His first job in the business world ended when Mr. Warren was discharged for singing while at work. With no musical training, he obtained a job singing in a Radio City glee club. At the same time, he began taking music lessons and, at the insistence of his glee club director, auditioned for the Metropolitan Opera company.
Mr. Warren was accepted with only the minimum knowledge of operatic roles and promptly sailed for Italy where he learned seven roles in six months.
Today Mr. Warren lists 22 operas in his repertory.
Students Organize Club For Colmery
A Colmery for Senator club has recently been organized on the campus. Its purpose is to better the chances of Harry Colmery, Wichita, Republican nominee for senator in the fall primary elections. Mr. Colmery will be running against Governor Carlson.
President of the K. U. club is Thomas Schiwann, first year law student. Other officers are Thomas Scovel, vice-president; Wallace B. Foster, secretary-treasurer; and Sue Hinger, membership chairman.
Draft Act Extension Urged
Washington—(U.P.)-Gen. Omar N.
Bradley urged congress today to keep the selective service machinery on a stand-by basis for two more years "to buy time" for mobilization in case of an emergency.
2,1950
Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, May 3, 1950 Lawrence, Kansas
STUDENT NEWSPAPER
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
President of the meet-
merce recent Douglas, har-
house billion bil-
lations is in-
att the drivers to 700 con-
nected was the Re-
precats be-
block its came their
cuts, valuable
itan 18:20
non-concert
usi-
mer M. of test
world dis-
ork.
in-
leean
in-
or,
nan
with of
sed en
By PATRICIA JANSEN
600 See Opening Of 'College Daze'
A rip-roaring, almost burlesque western, best describes "West O Abilene," the 1950 College Daze production which opened Tuesday night.
The audience of approximately 600 persons captured the spirit of a typically collegiate presentation of an all-student musical. The show was crammed with clever songs and dialogue.
talogue.
The mugging facial antics of James Hawes, fine arts senior and the sophisticated style of Louise Lambert, College senior, brought splitting laughter from the audience. Both stars, appearing in their third annual College Daze production, excelled throughout the entire show. Hawes brought enthusiastic approval with his clowning in the novelty number, "Pedro, the Bull Fighter from Mexico." The sultry confessional number, "When I Was in My Prime," sung by Miss Lambert was another stop show.
The story takes place in a tavern owned by Sycamora (Miss Lambert) in a rough cow-town somewhere west of Abilene. The plot centers around the struggle to find Snake McCoy, the famous badman who is rumored to be in town. All indications point to the Little Man Bartender (Hawes) as Snake, but the story contains a clever twist that keeps the audience guessing as to his real identity until the final act. Snake McCoy is perhaps the most bizarre badman ever to appear on stage.
The major romantic interest in the show was provided by the Sheriff Jack Stewart, business junior.) and Sally, dance hall girl (Norma Jean Guthrie, fine arts senior). The blond songstress won the audience's affection with her coquish smile and soakling eyes.
57 Myron Don George, College freshman, as the handsome Deputy won approval with his fine singing of "I'm not the Marrying Kind." Sultry voiced, Emily Stewart, Journalism junior, brought many laughs with her seductive portrayal of Little White Feather. Dick Hunter, College sophomore, made an excellent Terreler, the town's bad man. His two henchmen, played by Win Koeper and Heywood Davis, College sophomores, scored a success with the song, "I've been in the Saddle Too Long." Two dancehall girls, Lillie (Erma Lutz, fine arts freshman) with her gallon size whiskey bottle and Tiny (Bernadine Read, fine arts senior) with her line, "Let's get married" completed the list of principals.
The entire cast of "West of Abilene" exhibited greater acting than singing ability. The production would have been improved by more dialogue with better continuity and fewer songs.
Leonard Warren, Metropolitan Open baritone, will appear in Hoch auditorium at 8:20 p.m. today to present the final concert in the University Concert series.
The lyrics for the show were excellent and some of the music superb. The chorus numbers, "West of Abilene" and "The Right Day for a Wedding" reached the heights of a professional musical.
Mr. Warren, who has had roles in 22 operas, will sing selections from Handel, Monteverdi, Caccini, Donauy, Verdi and other composers. Willard Sektberg will be Mr. Warren's accompanist.
The book and lyrics for the show were written by Craig Hampton fine arts senior. The music was composed by Willard Straight, fine arts junior; Eugene Hall, fine arts sophomore, and Robert Cooper, College senior.
Warren To Sing At 8:20 Tonight
Marine Class Has Vacancies
Several vacancies still exist in the Marine Corps platoon leaders class, Capt. W. R. Terrell, professor of naval science, said today.
The program, open only to students in colleges, consists of two six-week summer vacation training periods at Quantico, Va. Former servicemen with one year of active service or more may be excused from the first vacation period. Candidates receive a commission of second lieutenant in the marine corps inactive reserve upon completion of the program. Selected candidates are offered commissions in the regular marine corps but are not required to accept them.
During the first six weeks, candidates receive pay of a marine corporal, about $125. During the second course they receive the pay of a sergeant, about $150. Candidates also receive transportation to and from Quantico.
Mrs. Alford To Speak At YWCA Banquet
Mrs. Eugene Alford, former executive secretary of the Y.W.C.A. will discuss the value of Y.W.C.A. training in a girl's life at a banquet of the organization at 6 p.m. today in the Kansas room of the Union.
Ronald Reagan Will Select First IFC Sweetheart
Ronald Reagan, Hollywood movie star, will select K.U. first "All Fraternity Sweetheart" to be announced at the annual spring party of the Inter-Fraternity council on May 19. She will be chosen from pictures of 13 women representing each of the sororites on the campus.
Pictures of the following have been submitted to Mr. Reagan as candidates for the title:
Carolyn Isern, Pi Beta Phil; Lorraine Mather, Alpha Omicron Pi; Frances Hoyt, Sigma Kappa; Joan Bushey, Alpha Chi Omega; Barbara Zimmerman, Delta Delta Delta; Jerre Mueller, Delta Gamma; Joyce Nickell, Gamma Pi Beta; Nancy Neighbor, Kappa Alpha The t e t; Marty Waddell, Kappa K a p a Gamma; Bonnie Egenesperger, Theta Phi Alpha; Dana Richmond, Alpha Phi; Dolores Maussof, Alpha Delta Chi; and Ann Jackson, Chi Omega.
The annual party is given for five representatives from each of the 25 fraternities in the council. The party will be held at the Lawrence Country club. Clyde Bysom's orchestra will play.
A 29-inch bronze challenge cup will be presented to the "All Flair Fraternity Sweetheart." It will be reawarded each year at the annual council party. A replica of the large cup, smaller in size, will go to the winner for permanent possession.
Mr. Reagan accepted an invitation to select the "Sweetheart" after motion picture star Gene Kelly declined. Arrangements for selection of the queen are being made by Joseph Wimtsm, social chairman of the Inter-Fraternity council.
Chaperones for the I.F.C. party will be Mr. and Mrs. William Hogan, Mr. and Mrs. John T. Weatherax, and Dr. R. W. McClure, Jr.
Old ASC Alters Poll Opening Time
An amendment to the All Student Council bill on elections, introduced by Hal Edmondson, elections committee chairman, changing the time of the opening of the polls on election day from 7:30 a.m. to 8 a.m. was approved by the 1949-1950 All Student Council Tuesday.
KU Geologists Receive Awards
Three outstanding University alumni were presented the Erasmus Haworth Distinguished Alumni awards in geology at the annual K. U. geology alumni luncheon at the Stevens hotel in Chicago on April 26.
More than 50 members of the K. U. geology faculty, students, and alumni attended the meeting.
They are Wallace E. Pratt, '07, a former vice president in charge of explorations for Standard Oil company of New Jersey; A. F. Rogers, '99, professor emeritus of geology at Stanford university; and Barnum Brown, '07, curator emeritus of paleontology of the American Museum of Natural History.
The Erasmus Haworth awards were inaugurated this year in honor of Dr. Haworth, a pioneer in the geology department at the University. He was head of the department from 1892 to 1920 and served 21 years as state geologist.
The Haworth awards are subdivided into three groups. One award is presented to the outstanding senior each semester, a second award to the outstanding graduate student each semester, and the third set will be presented each year to three outstanding alumni.
Poll Reveals Opinions Split On Files
By BUD RODGERS and DEWAYNE OGLESBEE
Most University students favor departmental quiz files, it was found in a poll taken recently. They believe that while the system of house files is valuable for reference work, departmental files would be more effective.
The charge that students living in organized houses with access to quiz files have an advantage over students living in private homes has been disputed at the University for years.
Suggestions have recently been made to overcome the reputed unfairness of the present situation by establishing departmental quiz files. These files would be available to all students and faculty members.
The poll, which was taken among students in both organized and rooming houses, pointed out advantages and faults of the present and suggested systems.
and suggest.
Barbara Cottrell, fine arts sophomore and a member of Alpha Omicron Pi, said, "I know of a girl who didn't crack a book and received two 100's in hour quizzes. I think quiz files are a good deal. They give good reviews and if a student can answer all the questions on the quizzes in the files, he can answer the questions on the quiz. However, I would be in favor of departmental quiz files because they would be more fair."
William Bishop, business junior, and a member of Phi Gamma Delta, said, "Most of our quiz files are so disorganized and incomplete that the time and effort does not reward you enough for the time you could have spent ni studying. Our files date back to 1940, and are complete in most required courses. I use them
occasionally when cramped for time, particularly for English or theme assignments." Bishop believes that departmental files "would be of greater advantage to more students."
Raymond Soldan, journalism junior, and an independent student, maintained that "organized house files would be better than central quiz files, insofar as they would still have term papers and notes.
Carol Forbes, College freshman and a member of Kappa Alpha Theta said, "Although I have never felt a need to use files, I know of some students that depend upon them too much. I do not believe that students living in private houses are at any great disadvantage, because files are not used extensively in many houses. Our files are not complete enough to merit spending much time studying them."
Rita Hartwell, fine arts junior and a member of Delta Gamma, said, "We have files in the house, but to my knowledge there are only a few girls who use them. In my opinion, files are not good for anything other than reference work in major courses. I think that those students who do not use files are better off, and furthermore believe that these
He said, "I would, however, be in favor of departmental quiz files. It is a step in the right direction toward evening things up.
students obtain information about tests through other methods."
Carol Shobe, College junior and an independent student, said. "I don't like quiz files because independent students cannot have access to them. If, living in private homes, we had access to quiz files, we might know what to study for, providing a professor gives the same tests every semester. Otherwise, quiz files would be of no use to anyone. I am in favor of departmental quiz files, because they would be more fair to everyone. I have known students who keep copies of quizzes for their personal files. I feel that students rob themselves if they depend upon quiz files too much."
Robert Ausherman, education junior, and a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon, said, "I have never known of an organized house requiring a student to acquire an examination, but I believe that there are individuals who have done this of their own accord. Our files date from the end of the war, and I believe they are used effectively. I have heard of students passing courses completely through the use of previous students' notes. I believe it is not a good idea to have departmental quiz files, because the faculty would take unfair advantage of the new system."
Joan Bigham, College junior and president of Chi Omega said. "What files we have are recent. The students use them until they find out that they are inaccurate. We have found that talking over the quiz with other students is more valuable than using quiz files and believe that students are better off without files. Students rely too on old quizzes which are too often changed."
The new Council, elected April 19, was sworn in following a regular meeting of the outgoing Council. Ernest Friesen, retiring president, swore in Melvin Clingan, the new president, who then swore in the new Council and called a meeting.
At the first meeting the old Council set aside $500 for a scholarship to be used in sponsoring a student in the Junior Year Abroad plan recently set up by the College faculty. The plan enables University juniors to study in a foreign country for one year and still receive University credit, provided they meet the necessary requirements.
J. A. Burzle, chairman of the German department, appeared before the Council and arranged for the scholarship.
Paul Nye, third year law student asked the Council for $155.40 to be used by the School of Law in an all-law-school promotional day. His request was granted. The money, he said, would be used in part to encourage students to enter K.U. Law School.
After hearing a report from Tom White, business junior, the Council moved to adopt an official key which members may obtain at their own expense. The Council will pay only for the die of the key which costs $28. Only one die purchase will be necessary.
The Council went on record as favoring Naismith-Allen as the name for the new fieldhouse.
The new Council held an election of officers as its first official act. Jack Howard, business junior, was elected vice president, and Marcia Horn, College freshman, was elected secretary. Joseph Wimsatt, College sophomore was elected treasurer by acclamation.
Robert Bennett, chairman of committee on committees, announced the appointments of new committee chairmen and committee members.
The new Council voted to pay one half of the Jayhawk Nibble, a party given for freshmen during the first week of school, provided an A.S.C. member attended all planning meetings.
Ocean Bottom Has Many Big Canyons
Canyons rivalling the Grand Canyon in size may be found at the bottom of the ocean, Dr. P. H. Kuenen, professor of geology at the University of Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands, told approximately 200 geology students Monday.
Specializing in the study of marine geology, Dr. Kuenen has done much research in the East Indies to discover what may have caused the canvons.
riie believes that turbidity currents, currents generated by the flow of mud solutions along the ocean bottom, have eroded the ocean bottom creating the huge submarine canvons.
Dr. Kuenan was enroute to California where he will study at the Scripps Institute of Oceanography,
WEATHER
KANSAS — Partly cloudy in southwest, with occasional thundershowers in east and light showers in northwest tonight and Thursday, beginning in north this afternoon. Colder tonight except in extreme southwest. Colder east and south Thursday. Low tonight 40-45 degrees north, 50-55 degrees south; high Thursday 45-55 degrees north, 60-70 degrees south.
FAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1950
'Ladies Beware' To Have KU Students In Five Acts
University students will present five variety acts at the "Ladies Beware" stage show tonight and Thursday night at the Granada theater. The show is sponsored by the Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce and all proceeds will go to the Youth Activity Fund benefit.
Tonight's performance is sold out, but tickets can be obtained at the theater box office for Thursday night's show, Eugene Doane, business senior, president of the local Jaycees reported.
The Kappa Sigma quartet, winners of this year's K.U. barbershop quartet contest, will present several numbers. The following are members of the group:
Allen Edward Green, Jr., and Harold A. Vagtborg, engineering seniors; Woode D. Killer, College senior; James A. Jackson, College sophomore.
The Pershing Rifles, crack drill team, will put on a uniformed display of parade drills. One of the other acts will feature Stella F. Carney, fine arts freshman, and John Cress, graduate student. They will perform acrobatic stunts and balancing acts.
John R. Mettner, College junior,
will be a featured vocalist in one
of the variety acts. Roy L. Wonder,
business senior, will present a skit
called "Luck Pierre and his 69'ers."
This skit was featured at the "Rock
Chalk Revue."
Class Day Sales To End Thursday
Seniors must purchase tickets to the Class Day barbecue by noon Thursday. The price is 85 cents, and tickets may be purchased from seniors in all organized houses or from Peggy Baker.
The barbecue will be at 6 p.m.
Tuesday, May 9 at Potter lake,
after a tug of war between the
engineers and the lawyers. The
committee promises genuine hickory smoked barbecued ribs.
All graduating seniors and their dates are invited as a part of the Class Day celebration.
Petersen Leads ISA Wards In Leadership Discussions
Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women, stressed the importance of conducting business meetings properly and developing qualities of leadership before representatives of I.S.A. Wards T and PZ Monday night.
Quack Club Demonstrates Rhythm In 'Calendar Year' Water Ballet
By JEAN EMBREE
Expert rhythmic swimming was demonstrated last night at the water ballet given by the 27 Quack club members. "The Calc Year" program contained 12 ballets, one for each month of the y
"January", an exhibition of diving and swimming by 20 members, was the opening number on the program. The swimmers in the second ballet, "February", wore red hearts on black suits to symbolize St. Valentine's day.
Other decorations worn by the swimmers suggested important holidays during the months which they represented. Carnations tucked into bathing caps signified Easter bonnets for the month of April and black Halloween masks with black suits were worn by those representing October.
Good timing and rhythmic swimming strokes were demonstrated throughout the entire evening in the numbers. All ballets were accompanied by music suitable for each specific month.
Guest divers Ernest W. Crates, education senior, and Jerry Jester, education freshman, gave an exhibition of dives ranging from jackknives to running front dives with a somersault and half twist.
For the closing number, "December," the lights were turned out and eight girls with flashlights swam to "White Christmas." At the close of the number a large Christmas tree was formed by the girls with their flashlights.
Quack club is sponsored by Miss Ruth Hoover, associate professor of physical education.
Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers
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 on Saturdays and Sundays, University holiday periodates. Entered as second classmate number 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
University Daily Kansan
Kansan Calendar of Coming Events
TODAY
Leonard Warren, Metropolitan opera baritone, concert, 8:20 p.m. in Hoch auditorium.
"West O'Abilene," 8-p.m. in Fraser theater.
THURSDAY, MAY 4
THURSDAY
E. Power Biggs, concert organist,
concert, 8:20 p.m. in Hoch auditorium.
The story of the Methodist church in continental Europe was presented at a meeting of Kappa Phi, Methodist women's organization, recently.
"West O'Abilene," 8 p.m. in Fraser theater.
Dr. Sherman A. Wenger, assistant professor of geology, University of Missouri, speaks on "Reef Sedimentation in the Majo Atoll." 8 p.m. in 426 Lindley.
"West O'Abilene," 8 p.m. in Fraser theater.
FRIDAY, MAY 5
The annual award banquet of the Society for the Advancement of Management will be held at 6:30 p.m. today at the Skyline club. S.A.M. awards a scroll to the business man who has made an outstanding contribution to industry and management during the past year.
Women Discuss Church In Europe
Tickets to the banquet are $1.35 each. Reservations may be made with Dave Smith, secretary of the organization, at 1230 Oread, or phone 2988.
Management Society Plans Annual Award Banquet
The Red Sea was important in Egyptian seaborne commerce as early as 2,000 B. C.
The Methodist church in Germany was covered by Donna McCosh, College sophomore. Discussing the church in Scandinavia was Patricia Ann Woolloh, College and nursing freshman. Bulgaria, Hungary, Austria, the Balkans, Yugoslavia and the Methodist church was given by Constance Hyre, College freshman. Other countries in relation to the church presented included: Belgium and Switzerland by Edris McCarty, education junior; Czechoslovakia and Poland by Helener Currier, assistant director of Wesley foundation and Spain and Italy by Shirley Sondker, College senior.
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Other members of the organization participating on the program included: Jerry Tillotson, who gave the call to worship; Joy Hutherson, who spoke about the unity of the church; Rebecca Ann Mahuron, prayer; Georgie Story, song leader; Billie George, piano accompanist; and Peggy Scott who presided over the meeting in the absence of Marian Kysar, president.
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1950
WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Lawrence Women Journalists Honored By Theta Sigma Phi
Fifteen women writers from Lawrence, 10 of them faculty members of the University, were honored at a tea given by Theta Sigma Phi, national honorary and professional fraternity for women in journalism, in Kansas City, Mo., Sunday.
The tea honored women authors or collaborators on books already published or accepted for publication. Approximately 60 women from the Kansas City area attended. The list included:
Miss Nellie Barnes, assistant professor of English, author of two books on the poetry of American Indians; Miss Agnes Marie Brady, assistant professor of Romance languages, who has written a number of Spanish tests; Miss Mary Amelia Grant, associate professor of Latin, who has written several books.
Miss Frances Grinstead, assistant professor of journalism, who has written a novel, "The High Road" published in 1945; Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes, assistant professor emeritus of English, who has written a book of poetry; Miss Margaret Lynn, professor emeritus of English, who has written three novels and edited a collection of eighteenth century verse.
Miss Anna McCracken, instructor of correspondence study, co-author of a book on logic; Miss Cassandra Ritter, from the State Health department, who has written one book on bacteriology; Miss Lalia V. Walling, assistant professor emeritus of physiology, who is the author of a laboratory manual for physiology; Miss Bessie Wilder, document librarian, who has written a book on the government agencies of Kansas.
Women authors from Lawrence who attended were:
Miss Mary Patterson Clarke, 514 Ohio street, who has written a history of the Methodist Episcopal church of Lawrence and a study of the American colonies; Hilda Mauck (Mrs. C. B. Holmes) 741 Tennessee street, who wrote "Wings of Hope," a novel published in 1932
Miss Lucille T. Kohler, 1200 Tennessee street, author of a monograph in sociology; Miss Florence L. Snow, 711 West 12th street, who has written six books, primarily for children.
Miss Grinstead would like to know of any other women authors living in the Lawrence area. She may be contacted at the journalism building on the campus.
Nations disagree on the precise length of a nautical mile. According to U. S. calculations, it is 6,080.20 feet. Britain uses 6,079.98 feet; France and Germany, 6,076.10 feet, while Iceland makes it 6,085.95 feet.
Socially Speaking
Phi Gam Parents' Day
Pi Deuteron chapter of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity served luncheon to about 80 parents at its annual Parents' day Sunday. Guests came from Wichita, the metropolitan area of Kansas City, Topeka, Abilene, Troy, Atchison, Barnard, Pittsburg, Holton, Olathe, and St. Joseph, Mo.
Sigma Kappa Entertains
Sigma Kappa Sorority entertained with a party April 28 at the chapter house.
Guests were: Howard Washburn, George William Swift, Thomas Mahan, Harvey Jetmore, Joseph Brown, Robert Bell, William Cunningham, Les Main, Robert Cooper, John Griffin, William Howard, Robert Brandeberry, Victor Pirnie, Gene Allen, Herbert Rettig, Gail Stout, Jerry Hannah.
Rex Garden, Leo Wilden, Jim Murray, Ralph Dicker, Merle Zirkle, Robert Nash, Frank Clinesmith, Carl Stallard, Kenneth Hillier, Richard Randall, Dale Breit, Channing Hiebert, Harry Morey, Robert Hughes, Gravdon Luthey.
Richard Kummer, Robert Hazlett,
Whitfield Anderson, Glenn Vareniorst,
Gene Puckett, John Welch,
and Ken Stevenson.
Watkins Hall Elects
Norma Hawkins has been elected president of Watkins hall for the coming year. Other officers elected include Mary Lou Auchard, vicepresident; Evelyn Million, secretary; Yvonne Settle, treasurer; Allie Kathryn Grove social chairman; and Sally Davidson, freshman counselor
Holmes, Ober Pinned
Monchusia hall announces the recent pinning of Miss Barbara Holmes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Holmes of Crystal Lake, Ill. to Mr. Nelson Ober, son of Dr. and Mrs. R. H. Ober of Beloit.
Miss Holmes is a College freshman and a member of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. Mr. Ober is a journalism senior and a member of Alpha KappaLambda fraternity.
Blue Jeans For Both Guys And Gals
Cowboy
Tight legged Levis for the fellows
Pictured above are Miss Beatrice Buehler and Mr. Jack Gillum whose pinning was recently announced. Miss Buehler is a College junior and a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority. Mr. Gillum is an engineering sophomore and a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity.
$3.45
University Women To Meet Thursday
Photo by Hank Brown.
8 ounce denim jeans for the girls
$2.98
The last meeting of the year for the University Women's club will be at 3 p.m. Thursday in Myers hall. The annual business meeting will be held preceding a tea.
A talk on housing for women at the University will be made by Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women, said Mrs. Albert Palmerlee, general chairman of the tea.
Hostesses will be Mrs. Don Haines,
Mrs. L. C. Heiberg, Mrs. Charles
Baer, Mrs. Guy Keeler, and Mrs.
Gilbert Ulmer. Mrs. DeWitt Carr
and Mrs. Kenneth Rose will have
charge of decorations. Miss Florence
Black, chairman of the food committee,
will be assisted by Miss Agnes Brady, Miss Jeannette Cass,
Miss Mattie Crumrine, Miss Kathleen Doering, and Miss Barbara Craig.
The Palace
Pi Phi Pinning
SUNDAY, JULY 25TH, 1943
A salmon's scales show growth rings somewhat like those of tree rings.
843 Massachusetts
"LET'S GIVE MOTHER A PORTRAIT FOR MOTHER'S DAY"
A portrait of her youngest is the nicest gift idea for the nicest person you know... and, here in our studio, we will do everything in our power to see that you get a portrait that will please both you and her.
Please both you and her.
O'Bryon STUDIO
Male Attire To Be Featured In Topeka Fashion Show
Men in the Middle West are now having special attention given to their clothes. A style show will be given Sunday, May 14 at the roof garden of the Jayhawk hotel, Topeka, to present the latest in men's styles.
Ray Beers, Topeka clothier, sponsors the Heart of America style council. It started with the problem of Middle West styles. The choices of the conservative East and the radical West are not suited for men here.
Ph. 526
1024 Mass
Members of the council are fraternity members from the University, Washburn college and Kansas State. college. Each fraternity is represented by six men, one freshman, sophomore, junior and senior member, the fraternity's social chairman and president. Each year the class representative progress and a new freshman is elected.
When the manufacturers and designers have new style plans they send pictures to council members. The designs which are not accepted by the council are discarded out by the manufacturers.
campus, date, and evening wear. The styles will then be voted upon by th. Council.
Professional models will show
The highest price ever paid for a horse in America was $500,000, which a syndicate headed by Leslie Combs II gave to Louis B. Mayer for the stallion Alibhai.
EARN WHILE YOU LEARN
Looking for extra spending money while going to school? Here is an exceptional opportunity to make your hours after classes profitable. You'll be doing work you'll enjoy . . . selling smart shoes to coeds all over the campus.
For information, write SCHOOL SHOE COMPANY
511 Withers Street St. Louis 7, Missouri
Campus West
MADISON'S
Jon McCauley's two-piece square dancer...sweetly feminine rosebud print dimity blouse...a flirt of a dust-ruffled skirt in contrasting cotton...to swing wide as you honor your partner and circle all around! Mint green, blue or orange, with blending rosebud print. Sizes 9 to 15. Exclusively here
10. 95
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1950
W
Sikes Will Stress Passing
(Editor's note: This is the third in a series of articles about the 1950 Kansas Football prospects).
For the first time in three years, Kansas' spring running attack has outstripped development of the Javhawk passing.
When Coach J. V. Sikes and his coaching staff checked their scoring charts following the first three intra-squad games, they found only three aerial touchdowns had been scored in the first half of the spring drills. The two weeks following Easter vacation have found the backs throwing and completing more passes, but still far below par for the past two years.
In the annual intra-squad game to be played Saturday afternoon in Memorial stadium, the air is likely to be filled with passes as the aerial game it is hoped will catch up with the fine ground attack displayed this spring.
Three touchdowns were scored via the aerial route in the first intra-squad spring game won by the Blues, 42 to 6. Two weeks later, when both teams turned in good over-all performances, they hit a combined total of only three passes in 19 attempts. Two were intercepted.
This is scarcely a fashionable pace for the past year's Big Seven passing champions who cut the airplanes for 1533 yards in 10 games. In his two years at Kansas, Coach Sikes' clubs have averaged 120 yards passing a game in scoring 30 touchdowns by the overhead route.
This aerial attack was the stinger that made the Jayhawkers a respected and dangerous team in every game the past two years. In 1949, U.C. side-tracked an early season shot with two T-quarterbacks, Dick Gilman and Jerry Bogue, passing out of the same backfield.
This ever dangerous air power resulted in Kansas' winning four of their last five games in 1949, missing
a clean-sweep by a lone touchdown setback to the Missouri Tigers, 28 to 34, in the final game of the season.
Sikes would like to mount a similar two-pronged passing threat next fall and has been working overtime to develop that means during the past two weeks. Bogue, who was a full-fledged regular the final half of the 1949 season as a sophomore, is returning at the quarterback slot.
The second player of the passing duo, if there is to be one, will be halfbacks Charlie Hoag or Dean Wells, both of whom play on the left side. Both have shown somewhat better than average promise.
Hoag, one of the best sophomore running prospects to play for Kansas in recent years, is going to be at his best on the run or pass options that Gilman used the past year from his fullback spot. Hoag is noted for his terrific down field running ability and is capable of going all the way on any quick opening play.
Whether either the Chicago running wizard, or Wells can throw under Big Seven pressure remains to be seen. Bogue finished sixth in the conference's individual passing show the past year, completing 29 out of 69 tosses for 521 yards. Two
of the five who topped him, Gilman, and Kansas State's Dana Atkins, are gone.
Bogue has not been throwing as well this spring, however, as he did in 1949. In the meantime, none of the other signal callers is receiving rave notices as passers. Most improved is Archie Unruh, 160-pound sophomore, who is pressing Don Wilson for the No. 2 quarterback spot behind Bogue.
Wilson, a nifty ball handler and play technician, has shown recent improvement in his passing. The past Saturday's scrimmage session found him completing two passes to end Marvin Rengel for touchdowns.
All three of the past year's top KU, receivers are returning. End Lyn Smith finished third, behind Jim Doran of Iowa State, and Missouri's Gene Ackerman, with 358 yards on 20 completions. Bill Schaake and Aubrey Linville, a pair of sophomore ends, ranked fourth at 344 and sixth at 276 yards respectively.
The Jayhawkers' ground maneuvers are encouraging, chiefly because of improved blocking downfield and in the line. There is solid power and ability blooming all-along the backline.
Hoag is expected to be a first class running threat from the outset. Wade Stinson, the veteran little right half, is enjoying his best spring. Sophomores Galen Fiss, Bud Laughlin, and Bob Brandeberry, are pushing co-capt. Amberg for the starting fullback spot.
Wells, and sophomore right halfback Hal Clewinger, are also expected to help the running attack, but have been handicapped through most of the spring drills with ankle injuries.
Carl Sandefur's 5-Hitter Handcuffs Tigers,2 To1
Kansas defeated Missouri, 2 to 1, Tuesday at Columbia, behind the effective five-hit pitching of the Jayhawkers' big sophomore righthander, Carl Sandefur. The win gave Kansas a split in the two-game series as the Tigers won Monday's game, 4 to 3.
Sandefur, who earlier beat Missouri here, 9 to 3, hooked up in a pitcher's duel with the Tigers' ace righthander, Roger Englert, to chalk up his second Big Seven win against no setbacks. He also won the Kansas opener beating Rockhurst college 10 to 2.
At the mid-way point on the 20- game schedule, Kansas owns a season record of five wins and three losses including a split in six conference games.
BIG SEVEN STANDINGS
W. L. Pct.
Colorado 1 0 1.000
Oklahoma 4 2 .667
Nebraska 4 2 .667
KANSAS 3 3 .500
Kansas State 3 3 .500
Missouri 4 4 .500
Iowa State 1 6 .143
Monday and Tuesday Results
KANSAS 3-2, MOISUROI 4-1
Kansas State 1-6, Iowa State 2-3
Schedule
Friday and Saturday
KANSAS at NEBRASKA
Missouri at Kansas State
Kansas scored in the first inning as
Jim Cavonaugh led-off with a walk and stole second. After Koen Kingo struck out and Floyd Temple grounded out, Carl Ellis doubled down the leftfield foul-line to score Cavonaugh.
The Jayhawkers scored again in the fifth for what turned out to be the winning run. Lou DeLuna reached first on a walk and moved to second on Ken Morrow's sacrifice hit. Sandefur helped his own cause along by poking a Texas-leaguer into center field moving DeLuna to third base.
Sandefur's bid for a shut-out was ruined in the eighth inning as Bob Harting walked to start the inning. Bob Davis singled to right-center advancing Harting to third. Jack Frier grounded out short to second with Harting racing home with Missouri's lone run.
Coach Bill Hogan followed by hanging out the squeeze play signal to Cavonaugh. He followed with a near perfect bunt along the third base four-line score DeLuna from third with the Jayhawker's second and final run.
Kansas meets Nebraska at Lincoln
Change now to
Permalube Motor Oil No Better Oil Made 40c Qt.
Batteries: Sandefur and Morrow; Englert and Murrey.
Campus Improvements Include
Trees, Two New Gravel Walks
The University's land west of the parking lot to West campus road and south to Oread street has been leveled and numerous improvements have been made to rid the campus of this unsightly spot.
Friday and Saturday, with wins a near must if Coach Hogan's club is to remain in the conference title race. Kansas plays Iowa State here on Monday and Tuesday, May 8 and 9.
**Score by innings:** R. H. E. Kansas 100 010 000—2 4 0 Missouri 000 000 010—1 5 2 Sandefur and Morrow
The land has been sowed to grass and two gravel walks put in to replace students' short cuts to their classes.
Several varieties of trees have been planted along the northern part of University drive the past few weeks.
Dye's Standard Service 23rd and Louisiana
More Books Out Of Boston
New Boston, N. H. (U.P.)—Roger W. Babson, economist, may not harness the power of gravity, but his experimental station here already is making New England history. Some 200-000 books are being removed to Babson's property, site of his Gravity Research Foundation. They will give New Boston the second largest library in New Hampshire and Vermont.
Oldster Remembers Wars
Sydney, Australia—(U.P.) -Patrick O'Leary, 109, must be one of the oldest men in Australia and the only one to have fought in the American Civil war. He's living in a state home now, doesn't talk much as a rule, but once in a while can be drawn into reminiscence. Patrick claims to have been born in Dublin on Aug. 8, 1840. He says he lent a hand in the Zulu war and the Boer war.
0000
ON STAGE
Ray KINNEYS
Royal HAWAIIAN
REVUE
DECCA RECORDING STAR
WITH
Direct from Hawaii Starring the New Island Comedy Sensation "Little Boy Menchuni" "The Aloha Maids" "Pokini Serenaders" Genuine Hula Dances Black Light Dance Stage show 2:30,7:30,9:30
Lee Elyse Peggy Bowman Knox Ryan
The naughty, nifty story of a dance hall darling . . . and the men who tried to waltz her down Lover's Lane
In My Heart"
Hear these song hits "After the Ball," "Bicycle Built for Two," "Any Old Street," "Roller Skating Song."
"There's A Girl
No increase in Admission Mat. and Nite Adults 60c Children 12c
WED - THURS
2—DAYS ONLY—2
Bobbi Kristina Brown
JAYHAWKER
FLOWERS For Mom!
on Mother's Day May 14
Flowers Telegraphed anywhere
Ward's Flowers
910 Mass. Ph 820
3,1950
WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
patrick of the e only american home rule, drawn ms to aug. 8. in the
Major League Baseball Standings
American League
W L Pct. Gb
Detroit 6 3.67
New York 6 4.69 ½
Boston 6 4.579 ½
Washington 5 4.556 1
Cleveland 4 4.500 1
St. Louis 3 5.375 2½
Chicago 2 4.333 2½
Philadelphia 4 8.333 3½
National League
Brooklyn 8 3 .727
Chicago 4 2 .667 $1_{1/2}$
Pittsburgh 7 5 .583 $1_{1/2}$
St. Louis 6 6 .500 $2_{1/2}$
Boston 7 6 .462 3
Philadelphia 6 7 .462 3
Cincinnati 4 6 .400 $3_{1/2}$
New York 1 6 .143 5
Results Yesterday American League Cleveland 1, Boston 6 Detroit at Philadelphia—po rain
Cleveland 1. Boston 6
Detroit at Philadelphia—postponed
rain
Lawrence
DRIVE-IN
Theatre
ENDS TONITE!
Bob Lucille
Hope Ball
"Sorrowful Jones"
THURSDAY-FRIDAY
Shown at 8:25 only
THE PRIVATE LIFE OF
A PUBLIC HERO!
Gary
COOPER
"The Pride of
the Yankees"
THE LIFE STORY OF LOU GEHRIG
with
TERESA WRIGHT
WALTER BRENNAN
BABE RUTH
BILL OICKEY
"The Pride of the Yankees"
THE LIFE STORY OF LOU GEHRIG
with
TERESA WRIGHT
WALTER BRENNAN
BABE RUTH
BILL OICKEY
Added Joy
Pluto Color Cartoon and Selected Shorts
Box office opens 7:00
Just Drive In
You'll Love It!
Chicago at New York—postponed
National League Philadelphia . Chicago 10
Boston 1, Pittsburgh 6
Brooklyn 10, St. Louis 3
You'll Love It!
New York at Cincinnati—postponed rain
Today's Probable Pitchers
(Won-Lost records in parenthesis)
**American League**
Chicago (Kuzava 0-1) at New York (Baschi 1-1)
Cleveland (Feller 2-0) at Boston (Kinder 1-2)
Detroit (Gray 1-1) at Philadelphia (Princeton 0.2) (night)
St. Louis (Starr 1-1) at Washington (Haynes 0-1) (night)
National League
Brooklyn (Podbielan 1-0) at St.
Louis (Munger 1-1)
TALENT
Everybody's Talking About Mario Lanza The screen's newest singing – romantic thrill!
That Midnight Kiss
Starring GRAYSON Kathryn Jose Ethel ITURBI·BARRYMORE
Mario Guzman Mayer Keenan WYNN • MARIO LANZA
Friday – Saturday Granada PHONE 946
COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR
That Midnight Kiss
Starring GRAYSON
Kathryn Ethel
Jose ITURBI • BARRYMORE
Keenan WYNN • MARIO LANZA
HOME
All Seats Tonite SOLD OUT
Granada
PHONE 946
The Lawrence Jr. Chamber of Commerce
presents - on our stage
TONIGHT AND THURSDAY
90 minutes of fun for all!
"LADIES BEWARE 8-Big Variety Acts-8
Doors open today and Thurs. only at 5:45.
Screen show starts at 6:00. Stage at 8 p.m.
AND ON OUR SCREEN "Treasures of Monte Cristo"
Tickets now selling for Thursday nite. . . . on sale at theater box office. . get yours today.
SHOW
ADULTS $1.00 incl. tax.
Granada
PHONE 946
New York (Kennedy 0-0) at Cin-
cinotti (Reflectioneus 0-2)
Tennessee (0-2)
Philadelphia (Battery) 0-0
at Chi-
cageg. (Klipstein) 0-0
Boston (Sain 2-1) at Pittsburgh
(Werle 2-0)
Last Times Tonite
THE SURPRISE PICTURE!!
WALTER PIDGEON ETNEL BARRYMORE
PETER LAWFORD-JANET LEIGH
ANGELA LANSBURY
THE RED DANUBE
LOUIS SALHEAN
Shown: 1:00, 3:11, 5:22,
7:33 and 9:44. • Also
Latest News. Shows conti-
nuous. Open 12:45.
Patee
WALTER PIDOUCE, ETHNIE BARRYMORE
PETER LAWFORD JANET LEIGH
ANGELA LANSBURY
THE RED DANUBE
LOUIS GALERNI
e
21
Patee
PHONE 321
VARSITY
Today - Thursday
Milton Berle
"Always Leave
Them Laughing"
--and--
Dennis O'Keefe
"RAW DEAL"
-plus--
"Country Doctor"
The Daily Kansan Is The Seventh Largest Daily In Kansas
They had to
They had to meet!
It had to be great!
KIRK DOUGLAS LAUREN BACALL DORIS DAY IN "Young man with a Horn"... STARTS HOAGY CARMICHAEL FRIDAY JAYHAWKER
Why Be 'Cash Out' When You Can 'Cash In' With KANSAN Classifieds?
Commonwealth's 19th Annual MANAGER'S WEEK
(A Picture You Have Requested All Year)
The Movie Which Has Acclaimed The Following
SPECIAL ACADEMY AWARD
"BEST FILM IN 30 YEARS'' — Time and Vogue Meg.
BEST MOVIE OF THE YEAR"—National Board of Review
"MOVIE OF THE WEEK" - Life Magazine.
DIRECTOR VITTORIO DE SICA VOTED BEST DIRECTOR OF THE YEAR
Here It Is...
Movies are BETTER than ever!
"BICYCLE THIEF"
THE MOST HONORED MOVIE OF THE YEAR
Added Attraction Color Cartoon "Saturday Evening Puss" COME DY
POLICY
Continuous Shows Daily. REGULAR ADM.
NO RESERVED SEATS.
Box Office Opens 12:45
NO ADVANCE IN PRICES
5 Performances Daily
3:30, 5:30, 7:30, and 9:30
STARTS
THURSDAY
1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, and 9:30
(SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT)
Patee PHONE 321
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1950
The Editors Report GREAT CENTER OF
State Service by Chancellor Deane W. Malott
(Ed. Note: The following editorial is a condensation of an article by Chancellor Malott entitled "Your University." It appears in the May 15 issue of "Your Government," the bulletin of the bureau of government research.)
The University of Kansas has been serving the state and nation since that far-off day in 1866 when it first opened its doors on old North College hill in Lawrence as an academy of higher education.
Early brochures of the University show the rather narrow and unbending concept of the founding fathers, for it was prescribed the "candidates for admission be at least 12 years of age and are expected to present evidence of good moral character. . . ."
But at any rate students were comparatively well off financially, for it was early announced that "by the munificence of the State, tuition in the University has been made free in all departments. No charges are made, except an annual contingent fee of $10.00." And board in private families was available at four dollars a week! But that was in the eighteen-sixties.
Through the years the University has grown in scope, in breadth of service, in its standards and reputation. It has grown and been enriched by its long traditions, and by the desires of the people of Kansas and the mid-west for a modern university to serve all the people.
It is now an institution with nearly eighty-eight hundred students, with a faculty of twelve hundred, a supporting staff of an additional twelve hundred, with more than sixty departments and divisions, offering nearly thirteen hundred courses of instruction, covering the major disciplines of knowledge, except for agriculture.
Today the University is housed in forty major buildings, with a large construction program under way.
It operates on a total budget of around eleven million dollars a year, and is under the jurisdiction of the Kansas State Board of Regents.
No longer is higher education a matter of sheer knowledge imparted in classroom and laboratory. It is a way of life, a continuing process which takes place on the campus twenty-fours hours a day and seven days a week.
It involves the art of gracious living, of living with and among people, of exerting leadership, of exercising the restraints which are basic to every self-disciplined human being.
An important part of education lies in the enduring friendships formed at the University which last through life and develop through the ensuing years. In the student body are men and women from every state in the Union, every territory and possession of the United States, and from nearly fifty foreign countries.
Roughly a fourth of the student body comes from outside of Kansas, a cosmopolitan group from the four corners of the earth, providing a rich opportunity for comradeship and for developing and enriching one's own character and personality.
As an institution of higher education, the University of Kansas has an enviable reputation throughout the nation and the academic world. It has the first chapter of Phi Beta Kappa to be formed west of the Mississippi, the first chapter of Sigma Xi in all the west.
Among its graduates are distinguished starred men of science; it ranks thirteenth in the whole nation in the number of its graduates listed in "Who's Who In Engineering."
Among its faculty are distinguished men and women in many fields of learning engaged, through research, in pushing back the frontiers of knowledge. And the largest library in Kansas, consisting of over four hundred and seventy-eight thousand volumes is available for student use.
A vigorous athletic program is part and parcel of any modern university. The University of Kansas is a member of the "Big Seven" intercollegiate athletic conference.
The University is distinguished throughout the middle west for the size and value of its museum exhibits. The Museum of Natural History is one of the four best collegiate museums in America.
The Snow Museum of Entomology contains millions of examples of insect life and is an important center of insect identification. The University also has a geological museum and a classical museum and a fine observatory.
The Museum of Art, with collections of all kinds of household art and paintings, is valued at more than a third of a million dollars.
A university is more than a pile of brick and mortar amid trees and broad lawns. It is a pervasive spirit—a compound of the life of its faculty and students. It reflects the imprint of successive generations of those who have been a part of its life.
The University of Kansas belongs to Kansas and its people, who have generously supported it for nearly eighty-five years. It belongs to its alumni, for it has in important ways moulded them and determined their destinies.
It belongs to the students who are now in residence and for whom it is currently maintained. But it also belongs to the students of future years for whom we are even now preparing, and whom it will be our obligation and our opportunity to serve.
TODAY'S MAIL Understanding
I guess that Mr. Sciortino knows how four people feel about this snake business, anyway. I refer to the letter to your column from one junior, a senior and two graduate students.
Sir:
I inferred from this that we have some snake fondlers among us. I quote from their letter: "If we want to go on fondling snakes we certainly shall."
Now I want you four people to know that you're right about this thing. You're so right it's pitiful. Dadgum-tootin'.
You may be within the limits of the law. No reason for anyone to get upset about you folks or anyone else who likes to play with a snake. After all not everyone has something better to do than to fraternize with a snake and if you folks get your kicks this way, why I suggest that you continue.
There's nothing so unusual about having a snake for a playmate. Why heck fire, when I was 12 I saw Madame Zita—she handled snakes. I remember thinking at the time that it might be fun.
Yes, I suggest that you folks go right ahead. It might prove rather frustrating to change over and start using your spare time to talk with people and so forth. I betcha a snake's a heck of a lot of fun. Anyway, I believe that after reading your letter everyone on the Hill will try to understand.
Richard L. Gray College freshman
Baptist Foundation Elects Officers
Eight students were elected to cabinet positions in the Roger Williams foundation, Baptist student organization, Sunday.
Those elected are Kenneth Holdaway, president; Annetta Smith, first vice-president; Rita Hudson, second vice-president; Arlene Ulrich, secretary; Howard Stringham, treasurer; and Wilson O'Connell and Dorothy Watson, social chairman. Leland Corey and Wesley Hall were elected Student Religious council representatives.
The installation of officers will be held Sunday at the foundation's annual picnic.
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 Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service,420 Madison Ave., New York City.
James Morris
Editor in Chief
Editor-in-Chief
Doris Greenland James Shriver
Managing Editor Business Mgr.
Asst. Man. Editors Norma Hunsrueg
Kay O'Connon
John Hill
Ralph Hemenway
City Editor Edward Chipin
Asst. City Editors Omni Chipin
Marilyn Marks
Elaine Elig
Steve Ferro
Feature Editor Frank Leite
Photograph Editor Frankie Watts
Telegraph Editor Robert Sigman
William Graves
Richard Tatum
Janki Holloway
Sports Editor Richard Dilsaver
Asst. Sports Editors Bob Leonard
Royal Sandy
Arthur McIntire
Mona Millan
Society Editor Paye Wilkinson
Asst. Society Editors Billie Stover
Emily Stewart
Editorial Assts. Keith Leslie
Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner
Cir. Mgr. Yvonne Rausand
Nat. Adv. Mgr. Lee Dyer
Classified Ad. Mgr. John Forest
Promotion Mgr. Wendian
Little Man On Campus By BIBIER
MOVING
"He's been showing off like that ever since he took a course in Metaphysics,"
'Small Things'
TIS SPRING
A Yarrow, Mo., farmer reports that a fox repeatedly attacked him and absorbed three shots of birdshot and three of buckshot before he was killed. He's not fooling us, though. Just wait until a few days before pheasant season opens and he tries out that one about being attacked by two cocks and a hen.
by Keith Leslie
After reading a Kansan story headlined, "Chiggers, Fleas attract 1,500," Rodney scoffed and said he could have exhibited at least that many once last spring after he was out at Lone Star lake.
Nomination for Kansan sentence of the week: "A student at or above college level will be counted in the census where he resides the greater part of his time." Ed. note-Uh, yes, he probably will.
Nashville, Tenn.—A four-foot cross was set afire in front of a doctor's home near here. Police hurried to the scene and caught the culprits, aged 10 and 12, who admitted they were trying to catch the attention of a 12-year-old miss, the doctor's daughter.
Ed. note-And we know some guys who felt proud because they mastered the ukulele!
We can imagine how frustrated the officials of Mosinee, Wis., were when some real communists showed up the day the mock communists were to take over the town. We once introduced a girl friend to a friend of ours, just for comparison, and darned if she didn't start going with him!
If You Have A Spare Moose Around You Can Make A Fortune In Hollywood
Hollywood—(U.P.)-Got a wild moose running around in your neighborhood? If you have—and you can catch him—you can make a fortune in Hollywood.
There's just one hitch. He's gotta have acting experience and personality. And he has to weigh in at half a ton.
If your moose can qualify he's got a career waiting for him here. Robert Riley Crutcher has just written a movie called "The Big Moose." And—this is a switch—they're going to use a moose for the role.
program.
Mushkig's grunts—or whatever it is mooses do—inspired Crutcher. He sat right down and whipped out a story. He didn't bother to sign Mushkig to a contract at that time. He figured he could always find him around.
"I got the idea," Cruteteher explained, "when I saw a picture of trained bull-moose in a magazine a couple of years ago. His name was Mushkgi. He later starred on a coast to coast radio program."
But no. Mushkig has disappeared. "I've looked all over for the beast," Crutcher says. "My producer, Wayne Griffin, has looked. We even checked the taxidermists all over
New York. But then, that's a big town. You could lose a moose there I guess."
Thes. sent.
They sent out a nationwide call for Muskhig. Or any other moose with Hollywood ambitions. No moose has even offered himself for a screen test.
at 5. by d. 51 ti TU a E q T c s A t e n e t i P O w w l h s -
And some bull somewhere is missing a good bet when you stop to think of it. He could be the first movie star to imprint his antlers in wet cement outside Grauman's Chinese theater.
Crutcher's getting desperate. He'll settle for any moose now, he says, as long as it's got talent.
"A relative of Mushkig's would be fine," he added. "Maybe an uncle or an antler."
Before you grab for your lasso, however, it's only fair to warn you. Bull mooses (or is it meese?) are dangerous beasts. Mushkig's the only one in captivity who won't attack a human being, a pretty good way to tell whether or not you've found Mushkig.
WEDNESDAY MAY 3,1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
73,1950
ibler
Official Bulletin
May 3.1950
Students planning to take Western Civilization examination Saturday, May 13, 1:30 to 5 p.m., must register at Western Civilization office during the period May 3 to 9. Place of examination will be assigned at time of registration. Examination admittance card received at Western Civilization office must be presented at time of examination.
Y. W.C.A. annual banquet, 6 to-night, Kansas Room, Memorial Union.
Persons working on Tau Sigma posters meet 7 tonight, 330 Strong hall.
Jay James, 5 today, Pine room,
Memorial Union.
Quill club, 7:30 p.m. tonight, East room, Memorial Union. Election of officers; manuscripts reading.
K. U. Dames, 8 tonight, Kansas Electric Power company. Demonstration of electrical appliances.
K. U. Collegiate Republican picnic, 5:30 today, Clinton Park. All state and local candidates have been invited.
Square Dance club, 7:30 tonight,
Recreation room, Memorial Union.
Square Dance chio, 1:30 toignht Recreation room, Memorial Union Y.W.C.A. members help redecorate Henley house basement, 3 to 5:30 today and Thursday, directed by Betty van der Smissen.
N. S.A. meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 9 Strong hall. Plans for 1950- 51.
Delta Sigma Pi professional function and business meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, East room, Memorial Union.
Al Etenzo se reunira el 4 de mayo a las 4:30, 113 Strong. Programa: En busca de "Scavenger" y la quema de Judas.
Social Work club picnic, 5:30 p.m. Thursday, Potter Lake. Bring 50 cents.
Der Deutsche verein versammelt sich Donnerstag, 5:00, 402 Fraser Alle, die für deutsche Kultur interressieren, sind freundlich eingeladen.
Inter- Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7-10 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday, 131 strong. Lydia Jantz, missionary from Nigeria, speaker. All invited.
International club, 7:30 p.m. Wes end ballroom, Memorial Union.
Kappa Beta picnic postponed until Saturday, May 13, 12 to 3 p.m. Potter lake.
Opal Goss May Be At A Loss
Macon, Ga.—(U,P)—The state highway patrol never officially revealed whether Opal Goss won her driver's license but pedestrians who saw her ram a bus while an inspector sat beside her doubted it.
New Officers Elected
Patricia Kennedy, College sophomore, was elected president of the Inter-dorm council Monday.
Other new officers are Diane Johnson, College junior, vice-president; Evelyn White, education junior, secretary-treasurer; and Johnnie Lou Shafer, College sophomore, social chairman. The installation service and dinner will be Monday evening, May 15, in the English room.
The Inter-dorm voted for the following. changes in the constitution:
If an officer of Inter-dorm elected in the spring changes her residence or if she remains in the same hall, she shall be a member-at-large of Inter-dorm unless she is elected president or Inter-dorm representative from her dormitory.
The social chairman shall plan for at least one social function per semester for all independent women.
Meetings will be held on alternate Mondavs.
Faculty Members Visit K-State
Five members of the department of chemistry visited Kansas State college, Manhattan, on April 29, for an annual visitation and conference with members of K-State's department of chemistry.
Representing the University were R. Q. Brewster, chairman of the department of chemistry; Robert Taft, professor of chemistry; Jacob Kleinberg, associate professor of chemistry, Paul W. Gilles, assistant professor of chemistry; and Leo Lemmerman, assistant instructor in chemistry.
The professors toured the K-State chemistry building and examined some research projects. They also heard speeches by Professors Perkins and Schrenk, both of the K-State chemistry department, on spectroscopic examinations of soils for elements present in very small amounts and having pronounced effect on the growth of crops.
K.U. Graduate Appointed Law Professor At Michigan
Roy L. Steinheimer, Jr., '37, has been appointed associate professor of law at the University of Michigan.
Steinheimer received an A.B. from the University and completed his law degree at the University of Michigan in 1940. Since that time he has been associated with the firm of Sullivan and Cromwell in New York city.
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INDEX your vocabulary and language books with the new Newerdex cloth tabs A set from A to Z for just 10c. Student Union Book Store. 8
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WASHING machine, gas stove, refrigerator, kitchen cabinet, kitchen table and fine chairs, cabinet with circular mirror, portable non-electric phonograph, small set of shelves and large set of shelves must hold will hold up to 200 books. Phone 301J1.
74 HARLEY DAVIDSON motorcycle. 49 model. First class condition. Call after purchase. FIRST NIGHTER. SUMMER. "First Nighter" formal. Worn once. Size 37, regular coat. 17.50. Size 31 trousers. $7.50. Phone 2686-J. ON MOTHER'S Day say I. Love You. You wear a sweater and filled chocolates from the DIXIE CARMEL CORN SHOP. Pound box. $1.25. Five pound box. $6.85. Wrapped free. Five pound box. $6.85. Caramel CARMEL CORN SHOP. 842 Mass.
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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 Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Comm. St. Ph. 418. **tf**
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE EIGHT
WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1950
Engineers To Honor Retiring Professors
William C. McNown, professor of civil engineering, and Frank A. Russell, professor of engineering drawing, will be honored by civil engineering alumni, staff members, and seniors of the School of Engineering and Architecture at a dinner at 6:30 p.m. Friday in the Union ballroom.
A total of 65 years of service at the University will end when Professors McNown and Russell retire from their teaching positions in June.
Scheduled to speak are Ellis B. Stouffe, dean of the University; T. DeWitt Carr, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture; Fred Ellsworth, University alumni secretary; N. T. Veatch, consultant engineer, Kansas City, Mo.; J. O. Jones, professor of hydraulics; Paul Endacott, vice-president of Phillips Petroleum company, Bartlesville, Okla.; Joe Sciandrone, engineer, Kansas City, Mo.; C. K. Mathews, consultant engineer, Kansas City, Mo.; and George W. Bradshaw, civil engineering department chairman.
More than 100 civil engineering alumni are expected to return to the University to attend the dinner and spend the evening with their former engineering professors.
Six of the nine speakers are K.U. alumni. C.R. Van Orman will act as master of ceremonies.
Professor McNown, chairman emeritus of the civil engineering department, is retiring after 37 years service at the University. He came to Kansas in 1913 as an assistant professor of civil engineering. He became a full professor and chairman of the civil engineering department in 1934. In 1898 he served with General Miles' expedition and the third Wisconsin Volunteer infantry in Puerto Rico. After he was graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1903, he served with the Erie railroad.
Following two years as a civil engineering instructor at Cornell university, Professor McNown spent two years as a professor of civil engineering at Earlham college and four years in private practice in Walla Walla, Wash., before coming to the University.
Professor Russell, chairman emeritus of the department of engineering drawing, will complete his 28th year of service at the University in June. He was graduated from the University with a bachelor of science degree in civil engineering in 1908 and received his professional degree in civil engineering in 1918.
Professor Russell joined the staff of the civil engineering department in 1922 to take charge of courses in railway engineering after having several years of experience on a railroad. He served on the staff until 1936 when he became acting dean of the engineering school. In 1937 he was appointed professor and chairman of the engineering drawing department.
Professors McNown and Russell are members of numerous professional and honorary societies. Both are members of Sigma Xi, Tau Beta Pi, Theta Tau, the American Society of Civil Engineers, the American Society of Engineering Education, the Kansas Engineering Society, and are licensed engineers in Kansas.
Professor McNown is a former president of both the Kansas Engineering society and the Kansas section of A.S.C.E.
Professor Russell is also a member of the American Railway Engineering association, the American Water Works association, and has served as president of the Kansas section of A.S.C.E.
Students Hear Visiting Professor
Dr. W. W. Rosinski, this year a visiting professor of mathematics at Oklahoma A. and M. college, lectured Marilyn, and Tuesday at the University on "The Theory of Subordination."
Dr. Rogosinski has been on the faculty of Kings college of the University of Durham, England, for about 15 years. Prior to becoming a political refugee, heaught at the University of Koenigsburg, East Prussia, now a part of Russia.
Guthrie Wins Pulitzer Prize
New York—(U,P)—The novel, "The Way West," by A. B. Guthrie, Jr., a former newspaper man, won the Pulitzer prize for fiction and two Broadway hit shows, "South Pacific," and "The Consult." won prizes for drama and music.
The St. Louis Post Dispatch and the Chicago Daily News won journalism awards for "the most disinterested and meritorious public service" for their articles exposing the presence of Illinois newspaper men on the state payroll.
The prizes were announced by Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, president of Columbia university. Each carried a cash award of $500 except the journalism public service prize, which is a $500 gold medal.
"South Pacific." starring Mary Martin and Ezio Pinza, was adapted from James A. Michener's Pulitzer prize-winning novel, "Tales of the South Pacific," by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II.
It was only the second time in the 33-year history of the Pulitzer prizes that the award for the best original American play went to a musical. The first was in 1928 when "Of Thee I Sing" was honored.
"The Consul," an opera, was written by the Italian-born composer, Gian-Carlo Meniotti. 38. He had two English language operas produced at the metropolitan opera before writing his first broadway hit, "The Medium."
George Thiem, 52, of the Chicago Daily News, and Roy J. Harris, 49 of the St. Louis Post Dispatch, collaborated on the series of articles which won the journalism public service award.
The first Negro woman ever to capture a Pulitzer award, Miss Brooks has held two Guggenheim fellowships and has been working as a part time secretary to augment her husband's income from an auto repair shop.
The poetry prize went to Gwen-
dolyn Brooks of Chicago, a 32-year-old
housewife, for "Annie Allen"
a ballard of Negro life in the city
"John Quincy Adams and the Foundations of American Foreign Policy" won a second Pulitzer prize for American biography for its author, Samuel F. Bemis. The 49-year-old Yale university professor won his first prize in 1927 for "Pickney's Treaty."
Other winners of the 14 awards included. Edmund Stevens of the Christian Science Monitor for international reporting on Russia. Edwin O. Guthman, 30, of the Seattle Times for national reporting on the basis of articles clearing a university professor charged with Communism. Bill Crouch, 34, photographer of the Oakland, Calif., Tribune for his picture of a near-collusion between a B-29 and a stunt plane.
Oliver Waterman Larkin, 53-year-old Smith college professor, won the American history award for his book "Art and Life in America."
Hunt For Abigail Will End Friday
The treasure hunt for "Abigail," a mysterious something somewhere on the campus, ends Friday. The hunt is sponsored by the by the Inter-ward council of Wards T and P-Z. There are prizes for those who identify "Abigail." This is the fifth clue:
I've something in common with Christmas and Easter
And even Thanksgiving—
The latter not living.
The relation between the speed of chemical reaction and the size and shape of molecules undergoing the reaction was discussed by Dr. Melvin S. Newman Tuesday in a lecture before members of Phi Lambda Upsilon, honorary chemical society.
Dr. Newman is a professor of chemistry at Ohio State university His talk "Some Aspects of Steric Hindrance" was given in Bailey chemical laboratories prior to a banquet in the Kansas room of the Union and initiation ceremonies of 22 men into the honorary society.
Following the initiation ceremonies, J. O. Maloney, professor of chemical engineering, told members how some scientists have become Communists and how people can alert themselves so as not to be "dragged into the net" of a communist organization.
Chemistry Club Hears Newman At Initiation
Susceptibility to the communist doctrine, explained Dr. Maloney, may lead to various types of treason, such as espionage or sedition. Under such conditions the individual commits one of these forms of treason when he thinks he is doing it for the "good of mankind."
new members initiated were Earl Abrahamson, Jack Beal, Dan Buie, Thomas Fritzlen, Robert D. Gibson, Robert Glazier, Fred Hhrskorn, Wallace Holderman, Edwin Hornake, Harold Hubbard, Grannis Johnson, Mark Jones, John Lund, William Nobles, Gene Petersen, Frank Reynolds, Vincent Valeryer, Carl von Waaden, Russell Waters, Duane Wenzel, Robert West, and Paul Wilhelm.
Dr. Newman explained how steric hindrance is a valuable method of predicting reactions in laboratory and research work. Steric hindrance is a geometrical approach to the study of chemical reactions and rates.
Advertising Defeats News
At Journalism Picnic
The advertising majors defeated the news majors 9 to 4 in a softball game Tuesday afternoon at Lone Star lake which renewed the traditional rivalry.
The game was a feature of the annual picnic sponsored by the
Harold Shigley reminds students that they should call at the office in the Union for lost articles. In recent months, many articles have been turned in which have not been called for.
Alpha Phi Omega originated this contest three years ago. The fraternity has also given assistance with other Boy Scout projects since it has been on the hill.
Another Alpha Phi Omega service is the lost and found.
The kites will be judged according to size, originality in design, and flying ability. This year, a new phase has been added to the contest. Scouts will be furnished with the materials needed to build their kites. Each boy will build a kite and then try to fly it. The first scout to get his kite into the air will win.
William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information. More than 100 persons attended. Singing was led by Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism.
Prizes for the contest are being furnished by Lawrence business men. Refreshments will be served at the field for the scouts.
Faculty Art Display In Museum During May
Settlement With Russia Needed, Scientist Declares
Without exception, physical and biological scientists attending the atomic energy conference in New York City, April 26 and 27, believed that it is impossible to solve the problem of atomic energy control except within the framework of a general settlement with Russia
Kites of every type design, color and size will be flown Sunday. A six foot war kite flown with light rope will be the largest model, while a Chinese dragon kite will probably be the most novel. These two kites will not be entered in competition however.
Members of Alpha Phi Omega completed plans Tuesday for the annual Boy Scout kite-flying contest which is to be held at 1 p.m. Sunday at the west intramural field. Election plans for next week were also discussed.
APO Sponsors Scout Contest
"Sands of Time," a fantastic egg tempera painting of suggestive symbols of the past, present, and future, is one of the many pieces of faculty art being displayed during May in the University Museum of Art.
That was the report, given by Dr. Hilden Gibson, professor of political science, who attended the conference with Dr. W. J. Argersinger, associate professor of chemistry. Dr. Gibson and Dr. Argersinger returned Tuesday. The meeting was sponsored by the National Associates organization and was devoted to a discussion of the atomic and hydrogen bombs and other weapons of mass destruction
In the opinion of Dr. Harrison Brown, author of "Must Destruction be Our Destiny?" Russia will never accept the Baruch plan and there is some validity in her refusal to do so. Dr. Gibson continued his interpretation of Dr. Brown's contention by saying: "Beyond the difficulties of obtaining specific agreement on atomic energy, almost all scientists reminded us that by now nuclear fission is only one very effective way of killing people.
This is the second such conference explained Dr. Gibson, and "like the first one held in 1945 when the United States was beginning to wrestle with the problem of the atomic bomb, it was held with the obvious motive of influencing public and foreign policy in regard to atomic energy."
"A number of scientists present believed quite seriously that we are on the threshold of an age of weapons which can accomplish the total annihilation, not only of cities,
but of entire regions of the earth's surface,regions as large as half a continent."
"The most outstanding feature of the conference," said Dr. Gibson, "was the unanimity of attitude of European representatives present." A distinguished French resistance leader, a former president of the Belgian senate, and a Nobel prize winner proclaimed the West European desire for neutrality.
"Reduced to simple terms," said Dr. Gibson, "the European notables wanted to get out of our cold war. As Claude Bourdet, the French resistance leader put it, "For us there is only one question and it is a purely academic one. If war does come will we be atom bombed from the front or from the rear? We will most certainly be overrun and in all likelihood the remainder of our population deported and our scattered remains will rest in a large number of 'well-kept cemetery.'"
"Despite the general atmosphere of gloom at the conference, both Dr. Argersinger and myself felt there were some elements which afford ground for hope. For instance, if one feels with Toynbee that the best hope for the preservation of peace is the emergence of a 'third force' than there are visible evidences that such a third force is emerging."
The names of remote civilizations and calendars of past years are inscribed on a snake's skin which is coiled around a rose bush. Together they symbolize things that have grown out of the past. A blue color scheme creates a dreamy atmosphere, which was the intention of the painter, Robert Green, assistant professor of drawing and painting. Mr. Green, did not paint the picture with a specific idea in mind. He wants everyone who looks at it to read his own meaning into the symbols painted.
Examples of textile designs by William Imel, assistant instructor of design, are on display. One design consists of green, gray, and brown leaves on a white background.
"Still Life," which portrays a table display of a green pepper, beets, a piece of melon, and a pitcher, was painted in water color by Laurence Mailloux, instructor of design.
A picture of a dancer in a cowboy outfit hangs in the north gallery. It is the work of Ray Ottinger, instructor of design.
Dark blue, gray, black, and brown shades were used in Herbert Fink's painting, "Front Beach," which shows the broken ties of a pier that has rotted away with age. Chunks of rock lie scattered on the ground, and a man is walking through the ruins, Mr. Fink is an instructor of drawing and painting.
A portrait of a sun tanned girl, Polly, with blond hair and blue eyes was painted by Gerald Davis, assistant professor of architecture. The girl is dressed in a peasant blouse and a bright blue skirt. The red trimming on the ruffle of the blouse adds color and gaiety to the picture.
Space angles on a dark background were painted by Donald Kane, instructor of design.
"Sea Cliffs" by Robert Sudlow, instructor of drawing and painting, is an oil painting of a huge cliff, marred by a cave in its side. Sea waves are seen rolling in over the rocks.
A portrait of a woman, Lillian, with a lock of hair hanging in her face was painted by Dwight Burnham, instructor of drawing and painting. The woman is clothed in a light blue smock with bright red buttons.
"Seated Figure," the work of Raymond Eastwood, professor of drawing and painting, is a painting of a woman nude to the waist seated on a deep, red cloth. The lower part of her body is covered with a deep, solid green cloth.
"Route 40, West," a water color painting by Clayton Fowler, assistant professor of drawing and painting, is of a highway scene familiar to Lawrence people.
A large, light gray vase with dark irregular designs is being exhibited with other pieces of ceramic by Shelldon Carey, associate professor of design.
A silver pitcher, bowl, rings and earrings are being featured by faculty members in jewelry and silversmithing.
Simons To Speak At SDX Banquet
Dolph Simons, publisher of the Lawrence Journal-World, will be the featured speaker at the initiation banquet of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity, 7 p.m. Thursday at the Hotel Eldridge. Joe Murray, managing editor of the Lawrence newspaper, will also speak. An honored guest will be L. C. Flint, professor emeritus of journalism.
The following men will be initiated into the fraternity; Arlo Bailey, journalism, senior, John Bannianum, Harold Bailey, John Corporon, Arthur McIntire, Emilin North, Demyne Orlesbee, Edward Rodgers, Dolph Simons, Richard Tatum journalism juniors.
7 3,1950
Topeka, Ks.
University Daily Kansan STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
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1950 Schedule For Graduation Given Seniors
Because graduating seniors always have the same problems at this time of year, the following information is set forth to help relieve some of the burden of Commencement dav:
1. Obtain caps and gowns at annex A, Strong hall, between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. Saturday, June 3, or between 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. Sunday, June 4. The receipt for senior dues should be presented.
2. Family tickets for the Commencement exercises should be obtained at the same time. In case of bad weather, Commencement will be held in Hoch auditorium. Admission will be by ticket only. Each senior is limited to two tickets. Holders of these tickets will be given seating priority until 7:50 p.m. The overflow crowd will be seated in a nearby building with a public address system connected with Hoch auditorium.
3. Tickets for the senior breakfast at 8:30 a.m. Monday, June 5 will be issued to all graduating seniors without charge upon presentation of the senior dues receipt, and to other graduating seniors for 75 cents each. They will be available at the dean of men's office Monday, May 29 through Friday, June 2, and at the time the caps and gowns are being issued.
5. For help in obtaining lodging for family members during the Commencement activities, see Mrs. Bert Nash. 220 Strong hall.
4. The diploma fee should be paid by Monday, May 15 at the University business office. Senior dues may be paid at the same time.
Here is a general Commencement program:
Saturday June 2
5 p.m.—Alumni registration open, in Union building.
3:30 p.m.-Meeting of the board of directors, Alumni association, in alumni office.
6:39 p.m.—informal dinner, followee by entertainment which will include Dr. E. R. Elcbel's panorama of K.U. personalities and events.
8. p.m.—Fine Arts Commencement recital. Hoch auditorium.
9 pm—Class of '25 old fashioned
Varsity dance. November 1. June 4
8:30 a.m. — Moriar Board reunion breakfast, Union.
8:30 a.m. - Mo.
breakfast, Union.
9 a.m. - Endowment Association
trustees breakfast, Union.
12:30 p.m.-Class réunion; Chioni
2 p.m.-Mamouni association
3 p.m.-Erasgrat
12:30 p.m.-Class reunions, Union
Arnold Alumni association
meeting fund
5 panel alumni Commencement
superior, Union
7:30 p.m. - Baccalaureate services Memorial stadium. Monday, June 5
8:30 a.m.-Senior breakfast, Union.
2:30 p.m.-Phi Beta Kappa, Kansas room, Union.
7:30 p.m.-Commencement exercises Memorial stadium.
13 Million Checks Mailed To Veterans
Of the 14,500,000 applications for the special dividend on National Service Life insurance, more than 13 million checks, amounting to 2.3 billion dollars, have been mailed to veterans, the Veterans administration said recently.
It is estimated that approximately one million policy holders have not applied for the dividend, however, applications are now being received at the Washington office of the Veterans administration at the rate of 25,000 a week. The dividend payment job is expected to be completed by June 30.
U. S. Zoologist To Speak Friday
Dr. John Field, head of the biology branch of the office of naval research, Washington, D.C., will speak on "Lethal Levels of Heat and Cold for Animals, Including Man" at 4 p.m. Friday in 101 Snow hall.
The lecture, sponsored by the department of zoology, is open to the public.
Seniors Plan 'I Dood It' Day
Who will win the engineer-lawyer tug-of-war at the senior class day celebration Tuesday, May 9?
The festivities of class day start at 3 p.m. at the circle at the west end of Jayhawk drive. Seniors, dressed appropriately for "I Dood It" day in blue jeans and plaid shirts, will parade from the circle to the roof of the Union. All seniors are expected to be on hand to celebrate the nearness of graduation.
At 4:30 p. m. the tug-of-war between the engineers and the lawyers will take place. Any lawyers willing to defend their honor by answering the challenge of the engineers are asked to contact Elmer Doherty or John Burnett.
From 3 p. m. to 4:30 p. m. the seniors will be entertained by student specialty acts on the roof garden. Jack Tusher, fine arts senior, is in charge of the program.
After the tug-of-war, barbecued ribs, with all the trimmings, will be served. Tickets are 85 cents and sales close at noon today. Tickets may be obtained from Peggy Baker, engineering senior.
Betty van der Missen, chairman of the project, said the work will probably continue next week.
There will be entertainment with the barbecue. There will be a shaving contest for lady barbers and singing by a barber shop quartet. Mary Helen Baker, fine art senior, is in charge of the program
YWCA Is Redecorating
Couches and chairs are being recovered for the room, which will be a lounge and meeting room.
Members of Y.W.C.A. are redecorating the basement of Henley house during the afternoon work sessions.
Seniors have been excused from their classes after 3 p.m. by Chancellor Malott. The dress for the entire day is western style, to call attention to the fact that "I Dood I Day" — commencement — is right around the corner.
Eight Students To Be Directors On Union Board
Eight University students have been chosen to form the Student Union activities board of directors for the 1950-51 school year, Margaret Granger, president-elect, announced today.
The new directors are: Paul Arrowwood, Patricia Brown, Beverly Jennings, Win Koeper, James Logan, College sophomores; John Kassebaum, College freshman; Damon Simpson, engineering sophomore; and Mahlon Ball, engineering freshman.
Under the new plan for Student Union activities, the board of directors will be composed of four officers and eight directors. The 12 members will work together to decide all policies of the organization.
Instead of having regular committees, the directors will be appointed to head special projects. They will select assistants on each project from a file containing the names of those interested in working for Student Union activities.
The directors were selected from personal interviews by the four officers of Student Union activities. The officers are Margaret Granger, president; Paul Coker, Jr., vicepresident; Patricia Ames, secretary; and Curtis Coffey, treasurer. Five members of the Union Operating committee also assisted. They are: 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.
List Of Abigail Clues Grows As Hunt Draws To A Close
Initiation Set For Senator Darby
Harry Darby, United States senator from Kansas, will be initiated as an honorary member of two University fraternities Monday, May 8
Senator Darby will be inducted into honorary membership in Pi Tau Sigma, honorary mechanical engineering fraternity, following luncheon in the Palm room of the Union. He will be initiated into Alpha Kappa Fsi, professional business fraternity, at its 30th annual birthday banquet at 6 p.m. in the Kansas room of the Union. Chancellor Deane W. Malott and Gov. Frank Carlson will attend the initiation.
The treasure hunt for Abigail, an unknown something somewhere on the campus, ends Friday.
Abigail's identity is the objective in the hunt sponsored by the Inter-ward council of Wards T and P-Z, social organizations for independent men. The name Abigail was arbitrarily assigned to the unknown object, which might be anything on the campus.
Prizes to be awarded the winners are being displayed in the Union lounge. They include an Emerson potable radio, a photograph album, a coffeemaker, a pin-up lamp, 12 pairs of free passes to the Granada or Patte theaters, and a carton of 100-watt light bulbs.
students have been searching for Abigail since April 27. Clues have been printed every day in the Daily Kansan. For those who haven't seen all of them, the complete list of clues is printed below:
My name is Abigail
You might call me a flapper.
In 1920 I was older than Capper.
The hunt has started You're looking for me I'd be stylish in K.C.
The hunt has started
The professors in Snow
Know me quite well
But don't look for me there
For there I don't dwell.
My feet have no toes
My hands have no fingers
Who looks at me seldom lingers.
I've something in common with Christmas and Easter And even Thanksgiving— The latter not living.
Boston Organist To Play Tonight
Today's clue is:
I can't draw pictures
Or carry a tune.
But I love to chase fish
And bark at the moon.
M. B. HUGHES
E. Power Biggs, nationally known organist, who will play at 8:20 tonight in Hoch auditorium.
Mariner's Club To Hear Doctor
Dr. Glen W. Tuttle, director of a Sona Bata hospital in the Belgian Congo, will speak to the Westminster Fellowship Mariner's club following a dinner at 5:45 p.m. Friday at Westminster house, 1221 Oread. Dr. Tuttle is a representative of the Student Volunteer Movement for Christian Missions and the Christian Medical Council for Overseas Work.
Dr. Tuttle received his M.D. degree from the University of Minnesota. He attended the Northwestern Bible and Training school and the School of Tropical Medicine in Ermusbels, Belgium.
Dr. Tuttle, who lived in Africa more than 26 years, has visited rural dispensaries, a leper colony, and supervised a nursical school. While medical secretary of the Congo Protestant council in the Belgian Congo, Dr. Tuttle was active in establishing and developing a central Intermission Evangelical Medical Training Institute for Africans in the Congo
The hospital director will discuss the contemporary African situation, his public health work, and his hospital experiences.
Education Students Can Get Advice
The School of Education student advisement program emphasizes the individual analysis of each student's total four-year program.
Dr. F. O. Russel, associate professor of education, is available for student conferences. Any student who plans to graduate from the University with secondary or elementary school teaching as a professional objective may obtain a complete picture of such a program.
Any freshman or sophomore, particularly second semester sophomores are invited to make an application with Dr. Russel in 103 Fraser.
Camp Fire Girls To Visit KU
Twenty-five Camp Fire Girls from Kansas City, Mo, will visit the University Friday morning. The University Extension has arranged a tour of the museums and campus and a visit to Hack ill institute.
E. Power Biggs, organist who will appear in a recital at 8:20 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium, has long been associated with the movement to revive the organ as a concert instrument.
Mr. Biggs was born in England, and is a graduate of the Royal Academy of Music in London. He is now an American citizen.
For the past eight years, Mr. Biggs has performed each Sunday over C.B.S. network, playing the organ from the Germanic museum at Harvard university.
In addition to his recital and radio work, Mr. Biggs has appeared with symphony orchestras as soloist in Boston, Cincinnati, and Chicago.
During 1945, he played the complete organ works of Bach on radio broadcasts, and is repeating the feat this year in commemoration of the Bach anniversary.
He is now official organist of the Boston Symphony orchestra.
In the fall of 1949, Mr. Biggs played two dedicatory recitals of the new organ in Symphony hall in Boston, under the direction of Charles Munch. The first was the "Tenth Organ Concertc" by Handel, and the second, a concert for Dr. Albert Schweitzer, included concertos by Haydn, Hindemith, and Poulenc.
Not only is Mr. Biggs an artist on his instrument, but he also prides himself in his knowledge of the mechanics and history of organs and organ music.
The organ at the Germanic museum which Mr. Biggs uses on his Sunday morning broadcasts, is an exact replica of the one which Bach used at Weimar, plus a modern mechanical-electrical console.
Business Club Initiates 10
Ten students were initiated Tuesday into Beta Gamma Sigma, national honorary society in economics and business administration. A banquet followed the ceremonies.
Those initiated were Jeanne A. Dodson, Thomas T. Hawkins, Keet O. Johnson, George A. Monson, Richard J. Reed, Jack Ward Robison, James L. Masterson, business seniors; and J. Eugene Balloun, Lloyd Wayne Davis, Loren E. White, business juniors.
The national charter of Beta Gamma Sigma limits membership to the upper 10 per cent of the graduating seniors in the School of Business and to the upper 3 per cent of the junior class each year.
Wiley S. Mitchell, assistant professor of economics, was elected president for the next school year. Other officers elected were Martin Jones, instructor in economics, vice-president, and Max Fessler, associate professor of economics, secretary-treasurer.
John T. Cannon, instructor in economics, spoke to the group about his hobby of analyzing incidents in the lives of successful businessmen in order to clarify his own business philosophy.
WEATHER
KANSAS—Fair east, cloudy west this afternoon and tonight, with occasional light drizzle in extreme northwest. Cooler northwest this afternoon. Friday partly cloudy with little change in temperatures. High this afternoon near 55 degrees northwest to 95 degrees southeast; low to night 35 degrees northwest to 70 degrees southeast; high Friday 50 degrees northwest to 90-95 degrees southwest.
AGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1950
All Law School Day Wednesday, May 10
Every Pre-Law Student in the University is invited to participate in all activities.
THE DOCKET
8:00 A.M. TO 12:00 NOON
1. Registration of Guests.
2. A mensa et thoro (free coffee and refreshments served by Law Wives)
3. Dress-wilfully and intentionally casual.
4. Fraternity Booths-Phi Alpha Delta, Phi Delta Phi, Delta Theta Phi.
5. Injustice of the Peace (mock J.P.Court local bastille outside Green Hall).
REMAIL 1419
6. Conclusion of "Operation Engineer" (a complete bust).
7. Selection of Law School Sweetheart Miss Res Ipsa Loquitur of 1950 and her 9 attendants.
12:00 NOON
8. Picnic at South Park-food and beverages-guaranteed pauses that refresh.
9. Softball Game-Green Lawyers v. Gray Faculty and Alums.
BANQUET
6:30 P.M. STUDENT UNION BALLROOM PRINCIPAL SPEAKER
a. William L. Vandeventer, Judge of Court of Appeals, Springfield, Missouri, who is a nationally renowned after dinner speaker.
b. Special Dinner Music.
c. Introduction of Guests.
d. Awards by Dean Moreau.
1. Moot Court.
2. Bar Journal Certificate.
3. Order of Coif.
e. Skit by Students.
(Faculty have given unconditional guarantee to students involved that nothing said or done will be held against them.)
f. Crowning of Lawyers' Sweetheart-Miss Res Ipsa Loquitur of 1950.
Tickets Available At Office Of Dean Of Law School
The image provided is too blurry to accurately recognize any text. Therefore, no text can be extracted from this image.
THURSDAY, MAY 4. 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Official Bulletin
Thursday, May 4
Students planning to take Western Civilization examination Saturday, May 13, 1:30 to 5 p.m. must register at Western Civilization office by May 9. The place of examination will be assigned at time of registration. Examination admittance card received at Western Civilization office must be presented at examination.
Der deutsche verein versammelt sich Donnerstag um 5:00, 402 Fraser hall. Alle, die für deutsche Kultur interessieren, sind freunlich eingeladen.
Social Work club picnic. 5:30 p.m.
today, Potter lake. Bring 50c.
El Ateneo se reunira el 4 de mayo a las 4,30,113 Strong hall. Programa: En busca de "Seavenger" y la quema de Judas.
Delta Sigma Pi professional function and business meeting, 7:30 tonight, East room, Union.
N. S.A. meeting, 7:30 tonight, 9 Strong hall, Plans for 1950-51.
Y. W.C.A. members help redecorate Henley house basement, 3 to 5:30 p.m. today, under direction of Betty van the Dsminze.
Christian Science Organization regular meeting, 7:30 tonight, Danforth chapel.
I. V.C.F. missionary meeting, 12 noon Friday, Danforth chapel.
International club. 7:30 tonight.
West end ballroom Union.
Kappa Beta picnic postponed to Saturday, May 13, 12 to 3 p.m., Potter lake.
A. W.S. President's council, 7:15 tonight, Kappa Kappa Gamma house.
Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship, 7:30 to 8:30 tonight. 131 Strong hall. Lyda Jantz, missionary from Nigeria, speaker. All invited.
Lutheran Student Association square dance and box lunch, Friday. Bismarck Grove. Meet 6:15 p.m. at Trinity Lutheran church. Girls bring a box lunch, containing food for two, for auction.
Sanford Elected Sandford Elected
Bob Sandford, College senior will be president of Quill club for the 1950-1951 school year.
Other officers elected Wednesday night are: Albert Roland, vice-president; Lorena Barlow, secretary; Wilson O'Connell, publicity chairman.
Manuscripts were read by Edward Kalpakian, Cornelius Reed, and Jerry Lvsaught.
A picnic was planned for Saturday, May 13.
No Wonder It Didn't Break
Boston — (U.P.) — Ditch diggers working in the public garden lagoon excavated an earthen vase believed to be a rare example of ancient Indian pottery. Conically shaped, the vase is a soft tall and weighs about 15 pounds.
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. Includes examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
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To assure passage write immediately
Find "Abigail"
Join the Inter-Ward Council's Giant Treasure Hunt
Prizes:
1st prize . EMERSON PORTABLE RADIO donated by Bell Music Co.
2nd prize . . RECORD ALBUM donated by Record Rendezvous
3rd prize..PHOTOGRAPH ALBUM donated by Hank Brown
4th prize...COFFEE MAKER donated by Lindiana Cafe
5th prize..LAMP donated by Lindiana Cafe
6th through 17th prizes...FREE passes to Granada or Patee theatre (tax free-tax paid by Inter-Ward Council)
18th prize . . Carton of 100 watt light bulbs donated by L. L. Smith Co.
All Students Eligible
See Prizes in Union Lobby
Old Clues On Cases
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1950
Kappa Kappa Gamma Announces 2 Pinnings
Elvig-Connell
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority announces the pinning April 29 of Miss Elaine Elvig, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Elvig of Lawrence, to Mr. James J. Connell. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Connell, Evaniston, Ill.
Miss Elvig is a journalism junior. Mr. Connell, a College senior, is a member of Sigma Chi fraternity.
Ruthrauff-Hav
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority announces the pinning April 28 of Miss Nancy Ruthrauff, daughter of Mrs. Harold Ruthrauff of Kansas City, Kan., to Mr. Keith Hay, son of Mr. and Mrs Carl A. Hay of Newton.
Tri Delta Formal
Guests were James Roberts, Robert DeNoon, Sam Clemons, Jerry Smith, Ed Todd, Ron Roberts, Bob Rosenfeld, Bob Morey, Rick Miner, Hank Knudsen, Ernie Friesen, Melvin Clingan, Dick Winternote, George Lewey, Dean Johnson.
Miss Ruthraufa is a College junior, Mr. Hay is a College senior and a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity.
Delta Delta Delta sorority held its annual spring formal April 28 at the Lawrence Country Club. The chaperons were Mrs. James A. Hooke, Mrs F. L. MacCreary, Mrs. John Skie, Sr., Miss Julia Ward, and Mrs. Charles Wentworth.
Jim Hops, Ralph Lamb, Eugene Hall, Fred Johnson, Bill Salome, Wally Rouse, Clarence Frieze, Stanley England, Roger Farland, Dick Sime, Alvin Haverty, Dwong Boring Phil Basson, David Thurston, Charles Keilhack
Bill Black, Don Glasco, Karl Estes,
Jack Kennedy, Clifford Hargis, Bill
Larsh, John Wellington, Bill Roy,
Don Patton, Bert Knizle, Bob Brock,
Phil Wilcox, Jack Stonestreet, Bob
Froeto, Don Christian, and Ray
Sauder.
Thomas Schoech will be president of Oliver hall during the 1950 fall semester. Other officers will be Donald Lanning, vice-president; Richard Anderson, secretary; Bill Hampton, treasurer and Inter-Dorm representative; Ronald Sundby, social chairman and song leader; Robert Leib, intramural manager; Robert Longstaff, historian; Allen Long, publicity director; Donald Hortor, I. S. A. representative.
Oliver Hall Names Schoech
Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers
Gift Suggestions for Mother on her day
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THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Up And Coming
Lutheran Students' Picnic
Lutheran Students Clinic
The Lutheran Student association will sponsor a picnic and square dance party from 6:30 p. m. to 11 p. m. Friday at Bismark grove for its members. Miss Marian Jersilid, Mrs. Magda Jensen, and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Heck will be chaperons.
Tekes To Have Formal
Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity will entertain from 9 p. m. to midnight Friday with a formal dance in the chapter house. Chaperons will be Mrs. H. P. Ramage, Mrs. Glenn Porter, Mrs. Richard Blume, and Mrs. D. S. Nite.
Gamma Phi Pledge Party
The pledge class of Gamma Phi Beta sorority will hold a dinner dance from 6:30 p. m. to midnight Friday in the chapter house. Chaperson will be Mrs. Kenneth Whyte, Mrs. Ralph Park, Mrs. Thomas Stuart, and Mrs. H. P. Ramage.
Delta Gamma sorority will hold a spring formal dance from 9 p. m. to midnight Friday in the chapter house. Mrs. C. H. Wentworth, Mrs. W. S. Shaw, Mrs. Arthur H. Little, and Mrs. James A. Hooke will chaperson.
Delta Gamma Formal Dance
Culbreath-Bridwell
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Culbreath of Los Angeles announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Dorothy Culbreath of Kansas City, Mo., to Mr. Russell E. Bridwell. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Roy Bridwell of Tonkea.
Miss Culbreath was graduated from Washburn university. She did graduate work in the field of educational psychology at the University during the 1949 summer session.
Mr. Bridwell attended the University in 1948, where he was a member of Phi Chi medical fraternity. Now a senior medical student at University, Mr. Bridwell jb is the preceptorship with Dr. H. J. Williams of Osage City.
The marriage will take place in the late summer.
Stateswomen Plan Reunion
Newsletters to Girls' State alumnae and letters to the delegates of the 1950 Sunflower Girls' State were addressed Tuesday by members of the Stateswomen club, organization for University alumnae of Girls' State.
Plans were made for a reunion of all Girls' State alumnae during the last two days of the regular session of Girl's State, Saturday and Sunday, June 17 and 18. The alumnae will be guests at the Pi Beta Phi sorority house.
Foster Hall Officers
Barbara Thompson, fine arts freshman, was elected president of Foster hall recently.
Other elected officers are; Claire Grothusen, vice-president; Phyllis Kraft, secretary; Carolyn Smith, treasurer; Anne Southwick, social chairman; Charlotte Shidler, house manager; Allane West, scholarship chairman; Arthea North, A.W.S. representative; and Johnnie Lou Shafer, inter-dorm representative.
LOOKEE GIRLS!
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Lawrence Surplus 935 Mass.
A O Pi Gypsy Party
Alpha Omicron Pi sorority will give a "gypsy party" from 9 p. m.
to midnight Friday in the chapter house, Mrs. J. R. Scott, Mrs. Thomas A. Clark, Mrs. Lela C. Wilson, and Mrs. P. H. Klinkenberg will chaperson.
Locksley Hall Picnic
Locksley hall will entertain with a picnic and party from 7 p. m. to 11 p. m. Friday. Chaperons will be Mrs. Louis Stanley, Mrs. John J. Scollay, and Mrs. Ross Cole.
Miller Hall Hayride
Miller hall has scheduled a hayride from 7:30 p. m. to 11 p. m. Friday. Mrs. Kenneth Sperry, Mrs. Calvin Cooley, and Mr. Wayne Reeve will act as chaperons.
Carlson To Present Pi K A Dream Girl
Gov. Frank Carlson will present the 1950 "Dream Girl" of Pi Kappa Alpha at the fraternity's annual spring formal to be held from 9 p. m. to midnight Friday at the Lawrence Country club.
Three finalists have been selected from entries submitted by members of the fraternity. They are Dorothy Glamann, College junior; Phyllis Gray, fine arts freshman, and Carol Squire, education junior. The winner will be presented a large trophy to keep until the next year.
Chaperons for the "Dream Girl"
formal will be Mrs. Clark Mandigo.
Mrs. R. W. Wilson, and Mrs. Bert A.
Weber.
Kappa Fta Kappa Officers
Kappa Eta Kappa Officers Kappa Eta Kappa, professional electrical engineering fraternity, elected Neil Welter as president for the summer and fall semester of 1950.
Other officers elected were Ralph Morgan, vice-president; Kenneth King, secretary; Norman Bell, treasurer; Edward Lange, rush captain; Robert Watson, corresponding secretary; Charles Abramson, librarian, and Frank Renneisen, sergeant-at-arms.
In the Middle Ages the educational titles doctor, master, and professor were synonymous.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1950
Three Linemen Will Punt For KU
(Editor's note: This is the fourth in a series of articles about the 1950 Kansas football prospects).
The 1950 Kansas football team will have two veteran kickers and two sophomores to provide the Jayhawkers with the strongest punting since pre-war years. Three of this group are linemen, a rather rare feat.
Linemen capable of handling the punting chores have been scarces in Big Seven football circles, but Coach J. V. Sikes will field three this fall as he starts his third year as Jayhawker gridiron technician.
Holdovers from 1949 are lettermen Dolph Simons, senior guard, and Bill Mace, 212-pound senior who has been shifted from backback to guard. The newcomer is George Mrkonic, 207 - pound freshman tackle.
All three, along with Charlie Hoag, a highly-regarded freshman halfback, will see plenty of action
Mace and Simons handled the KU. punting the past year, the former finishing fifth among Big Seven kickers, averaging 38.1 yards on 34 boots. Mrkonic has been kicking long and high all spring and shows much promise.
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when the Jayhawkers collide in the third annual spring intra-sequid game this Saturday in Memorial stadium. Hoag's long and accurate kicks may earn him the club's No. 1 booting chores.
Hoag, who divided punting duties with Mrkonic on the 1949 undefeated frosh club, looks to have the inside track because he owns an "educated toe."
Against Kansas State's frost the past year, Hoag got off one punt that traveled 67 yards from scrimmage before going out of bounds. This spring, his boots have not only been long, but trained into the coffin corner with the accuracy of radar. In one practice game this spring, Hoag punted over fifty yards and out of bounds inside the 5-yard line on two occasions.
If one of the K.U. linemen lano a regular punting berth, he will be the first to carry the load for a Big Seven team since Nebraska's Jack Pesek was booming tremendous spirals for the Cornhuskers three seasons ago. He averaged 41.1 yards on 51 boots that season for one of the nation's top marks.
All four Kansas kicking candidates are still battling for first string berths as the Jayhawkers near the end of their final week of spring drills.
Kansas has had place-kicking linemen such as Tommy McCall, Don Fambrough, both guards, but no punter since the old Big Six was founded had seen regular action until Simons.
Simons, George Kennard, a 200-pound junior, and John Idoux, sturdy senior veteran, are the other lettermen. Most prominent among the sophomores-to-be are Art Spratt, madeover fresh tackle; George Abel, former all-state 192-pounder; and Jack Luschen, 181-pounder who was also an all-state tackle
Two of this, group must come through for Coach Sikes if K.U. is to field guards of starting Big Seven caliber in 1950.
Mace, although released early for baseball, ranks high in the picture. He turned in the club's best single-game job of linebacking in 1940 against the University of Arizona in the season's final game.
In point after touchdown department, junior Bill Rinehard, who booted 25 out of 37 extra points in 1949, will again handle the extra point production with his "educated toe." Fox Cashell, sophomore, will provide added protection.
This Hen Took No Vacation
Memphis, Tenn.—(U.P.)—J. M. Harwood had a hen named Miss America which holds a record for egg production. The hem, now dead, laid 361 eggs in one 365-day period.
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Activities Trophy Will Be Awarded
The Student Union activities sweepstakes trophy will be awarded at the S.U.A. dinner to be held about the middle of May, it was announced at the final meeting of the executive board of Student Union activities recently.
The trophy will be presented to the organized house amassing the largest number of points by participation in functions sponsored by Student Union activities.
The date of the dinner will be announced soon, Craig Hampton, president, said. This is the only function scheduled for S.U.A. for the rest of the school year, other than College Daze musical production, which will be held Tuesday through Friday.
Get-Away Is Stopped Cold
Minneapolis — (U.P.) Two boys were tripped up by a snow bank as they tried to escape from a detention school. Police said the car the youths took to make a get-away stuck in the snowbank, enabling a police squad to catch them.
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Going on a Picnic?
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"Fruit of the Loom"
brand
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11 oz. "Wrangler" brand
Western Jeans
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Government Standard Sun Glasses from $1.49
See our Full Line of Suitcases & Trunks from $1.98
They're Washable!
Tred-Aire
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AWRENCE SURPLU
S
The Original Army and Navy Stores
935 and 740 Mass.
Ph. 558 and 668
Phone An Ad, Then Be Glad, With Kansan Want Ad Results.Call K.U. 376.
Moth-Proofing Bills Are No Worry When LAWRENCE CLEANERS
BILL
HAPPY
Again Moth Proofs Your Wool Clothes Free - of - Charge During the Moth Season
When we clean your clothes we moth-proof them with
U-SANO
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Lawrence Laundry & Dry Cleaners
"Quality Outstanding"
Phone 383
1001 N. H.
Ka Go M
K drop Tiger score decision on The 6 to In trail 311 hole Kim a bi in In Auto ball same the bou com drop the D for strove Hou cou no bee sas Miss here C play Tiger clay the lon In for tor E No fer the M 7-5 H fer G Gr I Fr O Bill S Sw for
950
THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Kansas Drops Golf, Tennis Meets To MU
K. U. golf and tennis teams dropped matches to the Missouri Tigers in Columbia Wednesday. The score of the golf match which was decided by great Missouri shooting on the 17th hole was $12\frac{1}{2}$ to $5\frac{1}{2}$. The Tigers swept the tennis match, 6 to 1.
In the back foursome it was Bill Goggin who opened the door to victory for the Tigers. He drove the ball 20 feet over the pin on that same 17th hole; the ball hit high in the branches of a tree and then bounced back onto the green. To complete things, Scroggin then dropped a mere 40-foot putt and the Tigers were in.
Coach Dick Richards' tennis team played close games in bowing to the Tigers. The match was played on clay courts which were slower than the Jayhawkers were used to. K.U.'s lone win came in the No. 3 singles. In winning that match Jack Crawford posted his fifth straight victory in singles play.
Dave Dennis posted the low score for Kansas with a 75. Bob Dare stroked a 77, Gene Rourke 78, and Howard Logan 81. The Missouri course was in bad shape. There were no level tees and the greens hadn't been cut in about three weeks. Kansas will get another crack at the Missourians in a match to be played here on Thursday, May 18.
In medal play the Kansas golfers trailed the Tigers by just one stroke, 311 to 310. However, on the 17th hole Missouri's No. 1 man, Jim McKinney dropped an 18-inch putt for a birdie to turn the tide to Missouri in the front foursome.
Bob Swartzell was moved to the No. 1 spot replacing Hervey Macferran for Kansas. Swartzoll played the Missouri captain, Bill Miller, a close match before losing 7-9, 6-4.
Tennis summary:
Miller (M) defeated Swartzell,
7-9, 6-4, 6-1.
Boyce Meyer (M) defeated Macferran. 6-4, 8-6.
Crawford (K) defeated Otis Greene, 6-4, 6-0.
Dippold (M) defeated John Freiburger, 6-2, 6-2.
George Stemmler (M) defeated Bill Thompson, 7-5, 6-4.
Miller - Dippol (M) defeated
zwertell-Macferran, 6-4, 4-6, 7-5.
Meyer-Green (M) defeated Craw-
ford-Thompson, 6-4, 2-6, 6-1.
Our Stock Is Growing Like "Little Brother" And speaking of "Little brother" at
There are dozens of toys for you to select from for his birthday, graduation, or just for the heck of it . .
- Toy guns ___35c up
Holster sets
- Hopatong Cassidy
Television ----- $1.95
- Television $1.95
• Telescope $1.25
- Field glasses --- $3.50
Other gifts for the rest of the family
SPORT SHOP
KIRKPATRICK'S
715 Moss. Ph. 1018
The University can be proud not only that its silver anniversary Kansas Relays was one of the finest ever held in Memorial stadium, but also that the Mt. Oread Olympics produced more top performances than any of the three other major spring track carnivals—the Texas, Drake and Penn Relays.
Kansas Relays Are Tops
nivalhs—the Texas, Drake and Penn Relays.
Comparing performances at the four meets in 16 common events, Kansas had seven of the best records and tied for another. The Penn Relays was runner-up with five of the best and a tie. Texas had three of the top performances and Drake none.
The Kansas carnival was April 22 with warm weather prevailing, but the contestants were hampered by winds 15 miles per hour and up. Penn and Drake held their meets April 28 and 29. The easterners had generally good, warm weather, but the Des Moines event set a record for bad weather with 32 to 40 degree temperatures, snow, and sleet barring better times and distances. The Texas Relays March 31 and April 1 was run under the best weather of the four.
Here is how the four meets stack up:
| Kansas | Event | Drake | Penn |
|---|
| Texas | *9.6 | 100-yard Dash | 9.7 | 10.1 |
| 9.6 | *9.5 | High Hurdles | 14.9 | *14.3 |
| 14.6 | 14.5 | Mile Run | _ | *4:14.6 |
| 4:21.2 | 4:16.4 | Shot Put | 52-2½ | 53-4 |
| 52¹/₄ | *53¾ | Javelin | 195-5½ | 200-8 |
| 197·³/₄ | *205-4¾ | Discus | 158-6¹/₂ | 151-8 |
| *165-11 | 165-4 | High Jump | 6-6¹/₂ | 6-5¼ |
| *6·8¼ | 6-6¾ | Broad Jump | 24-11¹/₂ | 24-10¹/₈ |
| 24-10¹/₄ | *25-0 | Pole Vault | 14-1 | 13-8 |
| 14-0 | *14.5 | Relays |
| 41.7 | **41.3 | Quarter-mile | 42.2 | **41.3 |
| 1:26.5 | *1:25.5 | Half-mile | 1:26.7 | 1:27.3 |
| *3:14.65 | 3:15 | Mile | 3:16.32 | *3:13.6 |
| 7:46 | *7:43.9 | Two-mile | 7:51.9 | 7:48.3 |
| *17:20.9 | 17:34.3 | Four-mile | 17:50 | 17:22 |
| 3:25.0 | 3:24.3 | Sprint Medley | 3:28.3 | *3:22.7 |
| 10:21.9 | 10:09.7 | Dist. Medley | 10:14.6 | *10:09 |
- Denotes top performance
* Denotes tie for top performance.
- Denotes top performance
Student Receives Physics Fellowship
A pre-doctoral fellowship in physics has been awarded to Manus R. Foster, graduate student, by the Atomic Energy commission.
I-M Results
Foster, who was graduated in June 1948, with a B. S. in engineering physics, will work with Dr. Max Dresden, associate professor of physics, on problems in statistical mechanics. The work, which will begin next fall, is expected to take two years.
The fellowship is the first to be awarded in physics at the University by- the Atomic Energy commission.
Wednesday
Delta Gamma 13, Harmon 8
Tri Delts 13, ADPi 10
Corbin 10, Chi Omega 4
Tuesday
Temruth 17, ADPi 4
Jollife 12, Locksley 8
Sigma Kappa 16, Kappa Kappa
Gamma 3
Heine's Blend
at
The PIPE SHOP 727 Mass.
TICKETS
AND
RESERVATIONS
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
BIBLER
This summer - - enjoy a "MILLIONAIRE'S VACATION" on a piggy bank budget.
- Holiday in Mexico
Bermuda Honeymoon Smoky Mountains—all expense Happiness land tour.
Bermuda Honeymoon
- Saguenay Cruise—all expense Berry tour.
RESERVATIONS FOR ALL AIRLINES, DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN.
Exclusive Agents for American Airlines.
CITY TICKET OFFICE
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE TRAVEL AGENCY
Miss Rose Gieseman
8th & Mass. Sts.
Telephone 30
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
ON 45's
Leonard Warren
OPERATIC ARIAS and SONGS
ON RCA VICTOR 45 R.P.M. RECORDS
BELL'S
March Winds Can't Roar Bigger, Values Than Those In Kansan Classifieds.
See Our
Large Selection
Arrow Products! . .
Glad to show you
CARL'S
GOOD CLOTHES
FROM BALI AND CAT CAY TO YOU!
Arrow's New "Bali Cay" Sports Shirts
For sailing, golfing, or week-end parties —
Arrow's new Bali Cay sports shirts are terrific!
Colorful island patterns! Long and short
sleeved models. See your Arrow dealer now!
$3.95 . $5.95
$3.95 - $5.95
ARROW SHIRTS & TIES
UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1950
Make Recordings NOW at University Radio!
Recording Studio available. Phone 375. A record made now provides pleasure for years to come.
University Radio At Bell Music Co.
New & Used Parts for All Cars
AUTO PARTS and ACCESSORIES
VOLKSWAGEN
We Buy Old and Wrecked Cars
- Auto Glass
- Mirrors
- Glass Table Tops
AUTO WRECKING AND JUNK CO.
Phone 954 712 E. 9th
Powerful Voiced Warren Shows Dramatic Ability
By DALE ROMIG
Rudolph Bing, the new director of the Metropolitan Opera company, has made some drastic changes in personnel since he assumed that position recently. Had he removed Leonard Warren from the company, he would have made a great mistake.
Not only does Mr. Warren, who sang Wednesday night in Hoch auditorium, have a fine, powerful voice, but he also has dramatic ability which makes him somewhat of a rarity among opera singers.
Mr. Warren sang a large variety of songs ranging from Caccini to Albert Hay Malotte, and five arias, one of which was an encore. Obviously singing for audience appeal, Mr. Warren chose arias which are probably as well-known as any in operatic literature.
The "Credo" from Verdi's "Otello" requires much dramatic voice inflection. It was well enough done that the audience asked, and got, an encore. That was the "Toreador Song" from Bizet's opera "Carmen." The other two arias were the
The other two arias were th
KU Man To Head History Teachers
Dr. George Anderson, head of the department of history, was elected president of the Kansas Association of Teachers of History and Related Fields at their annual meeting in Topeka April 28-29. Dr. Anderson will hold this office for the coming year.
Papers were given at the meeting by Charles B. Realey, instructor in history, and James E. Seaver assistant professor of history. The title of Mr. Realey's paper was "A British Economic Policy for East Africa." Mr. Seaver presented a talk on "Publius Ventitus - Forgotten Roman Military Hero."
Why Be 'Cash Out' When You Can 'Cash In' With KANSAN Classifieds!
expensive "Avant de Quitter ces Lieux" from Gounod's "Faust" and "Largo al Factotum" from the "Barber of Seville" by Rossini. The latter is a boasting, gay aria which Mr. Warren sang with much gusto.
Slacks And Sportshirts Spell
Relax, brother, in the real comfort of easy fitting slacks. . tailored in handsome solid tones. . cut for that true day off feeling—and carry further the comfort theme with a trim but easy going sportshirt or knit T-shirt.
James C. Malin, professor of history, is author of a newly published book "Grassland Historical Studies." This book discusses grassland history in relation to natural resources and is the first in a series of three volumes.
Malin's Book Now On Sale
SLACKS FROM
7.95
SHIRTS FROM
2.00
Professor Malin has written seven other books, the most recent of which are about the land west of the Mississippi river."
An article on "Ecology and History" was printed in the May issue of Scientific Monthly. The article was based on a paper presented by Professor Malin at a symposium of the Ecological Society of America in 1948.
Real Comfort
Ober's
YMCA Opens Drive For New Members
A membership drive sponsored by the Y.M.C.A. is underway in all organized houses and will continue until Saturday, May 13.
The drive is being carried out through personal solicitation by representatives in each house. Climaxing the membership drive will be an all-membership banquet to be held in the Palm room of the Union Tuesday, May 16.
The house enlisting the greatest number of members in proportion to the house membership will be awarded three albums of records. Two albums and one album will be awarded to the second and third place winners respectively.
BASKETBALL
SHOES
Suction soles
only $3.98
Gym Sox ...39c
Gym Trunks ...98c
White boxer type
Sneakers ..$1.49
Army surplus
Tee Shirts ...49c
Navy type
Crepe Sole
Oxfords ..$4.98
Plastic
Rain Coats $1.98
TUXEDO RENTALS
First door South of Patee Theatre
Brown's TOGGERY 830 Mass. St.
If you like good home-cooked meals and a pleasant atmosphere come on out.
Cube Steaks
Pork Chops
Park Tenderloin ----- 75c
Hamburger Steak ---- 65c
FRIDAY
----70c
----75c
CLOSED
and 2—4
and 2----4:30 Sunday
SHAVER'S
1 $ \frac{1}{2} $ miles south U.S. 59
Call 785-K-2
Mother's Day
Send Her Flowers
On May 14
We telegraph flowers anywhere...no matter how far away your mother is,flowers of her choice will be delivered to her on Her Day. Select her favorite . a bouquet,potted plant, or corsage . and phone 998 today to place your order.
Put Pep In The Pocket Book—Put KANSAN Classifieds On The Jo
THE BLOSSOM SHOP
TEL. 212-456-7890
MOTOROLA
Motorola
PORTABLE RADIO
CLOSEOUT ON THIS 1949 MODEL
You'll get superior performance from this radio wherever you take it. A must for outing parties. AC/DC or Batteries. ONLY TWO LEFT - one black, one maroon, each with bronze-gold grille.
Formerly $29.95 NOW $22.95
We also have two of these sets that operate on batteries only.
Were $19.95
NOW $14.95
See them at
BEAMAN'S RADIO & TV
1200 N.Y. Ph.140
RSDAY, MAY 4, 1950
PAGE NINE
AY 4,1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
and a
.. 76
--75c
--65c
5-K-2
? What Is Your Cost Per Mile ?
You can reduce operations cost per mile with an accurate MOTOR TUNE-UP!
GUARANTEED SERVICE
Darnell Electric
15 Mass.
Phone 360
Yes, We Have Refrigerated Produce
your Fresh vegetables are kept Really Fresh until you purchase them in our
New, Refrigerated
Produce Rack
Head Lettuce, crisp ------------2 heads 19c
Radishes, fresh crisp ------------2 bunches 13c
Green Beans, fresh crisp ------------1 lb. 19c
Ready to Use
Shredded Cole Slaw Mix ------------8 oz. pkg. 15c
Tomatoes, Red Ripe ------------14 oz. carton 25c
Celery Hearts, fresh, crisp ------------bunch 25c
A & P Super Market
No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money.
There's nobody like
MOM! 'Specially in a SMART DRESS FROM ADELANE'S
Large selections including Navy Crepe, Bemberg Florals and Cottons. Featured at $8.98 Others at $7.98 to $14.98
Adeleane's
FASHIONS FIRST
823 Mass.
Business Seniors Find Most Jobs Are In Selling
Industrial and technical salesmen are in the greatest demand by companies who have been interviewing graduating seniors in the school of business this spring.
Mr. Frank Pinet, head of the school of business placement bureau, believes that job situation this year is holding up very well, and that there are as many available jobs as last year.
"Fifty to sixty per cent of the graduating class will probably be placed," Mr. Pinet said. Many graduates will go into their family business, making a completely accurate check impossible.
While the greatest demand is for salesmen this year, the lightest demand is for public accountants. Job prospects are holding up in the fields of industrial management, marketing, and industrial accounting.
This year there are 262 graduates in the school of business compared to 200 last year. The placement bureau will have received applications from 169 companies for graduating seniors by this June. Sixty of the applications are from companies who have or will send representatives on the campus for personal interviews. The remaining 100 have contacted the placement bureau by mail.
"More students will be offered jobs in the midwest area than ever before, with Kansas City, St. Louis, and Chicago the main cities offering the best job prospects," Mr. Pinet said "Openings on the East coast are fewer than usual."
Summer experience is an aid, but the number of graduates with real experience is declining because of the smaller number of veterans graduating, Mr. Pinet said.
Smith To Give Paper At Detroit Meeting
Dr. Henry P. Smith, director of the Educational clinic will appear on the program of the Midwestern Psychological association meeting in Detroit Friday and Saturday. He will present a research report comparing types of reading programs designed for college students.
About 350 KU. students annually enroll voluntarily in non-credit courses offered by the Educational clinic. The objective is to improve the reading ability and study habits of students. Dr. Smith prepared his report from results produced by University reading and study methods program.
Broken Bones Run In Family Milwaukee, Wis. (U.P.) - Ralph G. Mance slipped on the ice and broke his arm. His wife, Angeline, bound for the hospital to visit him, also slipped and broke her wrist.
HEINE'S
BLEND
Old and New
Smoking Whiskey
Of course this fellow Smokes mild and mellow...
HEINE'S BLEND Fragrant PIPE TOBACCO
SUTLIFF TOBACCO CO., 45 Fremont, S.F. Calif.
Couple Keeps 50 Year Vow
San Francisco—(U.P.)-Fifty years ago Arthur L. Osborne promised his bride he would return for another honeymoon at San Francisco's Palace hotel. They have just kept the date. Osborne wonderingly admitted, "I didn't believe the promise would be kept myself." Both are 75 years old.
A
目
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
Lawrence Optical Co.
You'll Like This...
Puck
1
California COBBLERS
Straw Blonde White Elk
Only 6.95
Royal College Shop 837-38 Mass.
World's Most Honored Movie!
Just Finished 3 Record Weeks In Kansas City ..
"Special Academy Award Winner"
"BEST FILM OF THE YEAR"- National Board of Review
"BEST FILM IN 30 YEARS" - Time and Vogue Mag.
DE SICA'S
"BICYCLE THIEF"
ADDED Tom and Jerry Cartoon "Saturday Evening Puss" COMEDY
NOTE
STARTS TODAY
SEE IT FROM THE BEGINNING . .
SHOWN at 1:30, 3:30
5:30, 7:30, and 9:30
SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT NO ADVANCE IN PICES Continuous Shows. Open 12:45
Patee
PHONE 321
PAGE TEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY
URS
Little Man On Campus
By Bibler
TOM PRESNELL
"I think my advisor is nuts—how could buck teeth, no make up, and a plain cotton dress make me smarter."
The Editors Report -
A FITTING TRIBUTE
Ye ED
Honoring Merit
The student council has gone on record as favoring the naming of the new fieldhouse Naismith-Allen. This we feel is one of the most intelligent moves the council has ever taken.
For some time past we have felt moved to bring this topic up. Almost total strangers would stop us on the street and say, "Why don't you do something about seeing to it that the new fieldhouse is named after the two men who have done the most for basketball, not only in Kansas, but perhaps in the whole country?"
When these persons slowed down long enough for us to get a word in, we would tell them we would do what we could.
Many persons have also written us letters. Some of these writers have been alumni who have known both men—Dr. Allen and Dr. Naismith. None can find any objection to naming the fieldhouse Naismith-Allen.
Of course, we have heard that there is a standing policy never to name a building after a living person. Whether an exception should be made to this policy in this instance is something we can not decide. That will be up to the official naming committee.
Yet the many voices of approval that have been heard by us on the subject seem to indicate that probably a majority of the people on the Hill and in the state favor the honoring of the two men who have done the most to boost the sport of basketball.
We have attempted to give everyone a chance to air their opinions on this topic. And it has been our observation that everyone interested in the new fieldhouse have been in solid agreement. Name it Naimmith-Allen fieldhouse, they say.
CAME at Naismith-Allen heidhouse, they say.
The A.S.C. action in favoring the name seems to us to register the majority of student-opinion—or at least those students who give a hang about the University. They could not have given Dr. Naismith and Dr. Allen a finer tribute.
WHAT'S GOING ON
In The World
Ye ED
Great Britain again reports high hopes of closing the dollar gap in trade with the U.S. and Canada when Marshall plan aid stops in 1952. The report goes on to say that it is the overall aim of the United Kingdom and British Commonwealth to become "viable and independent of extraordinary outside economic assistance. We want to earn the dollars we require."
The report leads us to feel that if the British keep on handing us so many horse-laughs, they may be well worth keeping on the payroll.
The New Yorker has an odd report from a lady just back from the Belgian Congo and vicinity. She recalls several jungle scenes that remain vividly in her mind—a picnicking Hindu family listening to American cowboy songs on their portable phonograph, and a trio of native boys singing, "Bongo-bongo-bongo, I don't want to leave the Congo!"
Savages, y'know . . .
TODAY'S MAIL
Surely, if students buy the Bitter Bird, one could assume they think it worthy. Let's let the students keep the privilege of buying it or refusing it.
Let's
Sir:
John Dillinger Fine Arts junior
William Penn's father wrote the first code of tactics for the British Navy.
University
Daily Hansan
News Room K.U. 251
Adv. Room K.U.378
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn. National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., and the Associated Collegeg Press, Represented by the National Advertising Service,420 Madison Ave., 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 Connor John Hill
Ralph Hemenway City Editor Edward Chapin
Nelson Ober Marilyn Ober Elaine Elvig Steve Ferro
Feature Editor Francis Colley
Photograph Editor Frank Wren Telegraph editor Robert Sigman William Graves Richard Tatum Lloyd Nixon Sports Editor Richard Dinkweer
Asst. Sports Editor Bob Leonard Ray Soldan Arthur McNeill Mona Millikin Society Editor Faye Wilkinson Asst. Society Editors Billie Stover Emily Stewart Editorial Assts Keith Leslie
Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner Cr. Mgr. Yvonne Jewell Nat. Adv. Mgr. Forrest Bellus Classified Ad. Mgr. Lee Dyer Promotion Mgr. John Wiedeman
Lawrence
DRIVE-IN
Theatre
Lawrence
DRIVE-IN
Theatre
Tonite and Friday
Due to the length of
this great picture it will
be shown only once
nightly at 8:20.
Schol of Millions!
...but only one woman loved and understood him..!
Gary COOPER
in the Life Story of LOU GEMRIG
The Pride of the Yankees"
with TERESA WRIGHT - WALTER BRENNAN
BAKE RUTH
Bill Dickey
Bob Meusel
Bill Stern
Ray Noble and
His Orchestra
Also Pluto Color Cartoon and added shorts!
Box office opens at 7:00.
Show starts at 7:30
See stars under the stars
EXPERT! Leave It To The Experts.
1
Over twenty years of know-how in Lawrence auto repair guarantees our work.
"Make use of our skill and know-how."
HUNSINGER MOTORS
922 Mass.
Phone 12
The More You Tell—The Quicker' You'll Sell—Use Kansan Classifi
LAST TIMES TONIGHT On Our "LADIES Stage BEWARE' IG ACTS-8 HOME Talent SHOW
DON'T YOU
DARE MISS IT!
ON THE SCREEN "Treasure of Monte Cristo"
Stage Show at 8 p.m. Only
SPECIAL NOTE
Good Seats Still Available for Tonite Buy Your Tickets at the Granada Box Office
Only
2 Days
Friday-Saturday
The picture everyone's been waiting for!
YES! YES! There's NEW BLISS
in THAT MIDNIGHT KISS!
COLOR BY
TECHNICOLOR
That
Midnight
Kiss
starring
KATHRYN GRAYSON · JOSE ITURBI · ETHEL BARRYMORE
KEENAN WYNN · MARIO LANZA · JULES MUNSHIN · J. CARROLL NAISH
ALSO Color Cartoon Latest News
Continuous Shows - Open 12:45
Continuous Shows - Open 12345
granada
PHONE 946
Shu
AY, MAY
URSDAY, MAY 4, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE ELEVEN
erts.
he University Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
ears of evidence antees
how."
RS
Phone 12
an Classifi
RE''
HOW
sto"
niteada
ways ly for!
Phone K.U. 376
--terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted on the understanding that the bill will be filled in using the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (exe-
sure Saturday) or brought to the University library bldg, not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five
day days days
words or less 35c 65c 90c
ditional words 1e 2e 3e
FOR SALE
CORDER - Phonograph combination-
corder. Table model. 5-way, record,
free on radio, phonograph, radio and
speaker. $55.00 Julia Fox 1000
.1120M.
NITE dinner coat, 115. Summer tux
and Ant. 124. 37 or 38. Like new, 123.
Ant. 124.
EVROLETS: 1947 Fleetline Aero
1941 Cream Convertible. 1948
Convertible. good owl cars,
diesel. See: OWL Cars.
9th Aho Auction, Phone 223. 5
PLYMOUTH, grey, radio, heater, good. body sound, good transportation. need for quick sale. See to appreciate Wern Schneider Motors, 1010 Mass. 5
A MODEL A couple with rumble seat; every 'e'even and lots of extras. A good nailing little Ford. 1941 Ohio or 3195R.
**REXX** your vocabulary and language books with the new Superdex cloth tabs. Get from A to Z for just 10c. Student book Store. 8
ARCHITECTS! Limited Quantity of Zip-
Pore now available at 35c a sheet. A wide range of patterns. Student Union
Aide Store. 8
& E. NEPTUNE drawing instrument is reduced from $23 to $12.50 while our copy lasts. See them at Student Union book, Store. 8
OLFERS! Four handbooks of instructions by Bob MacDonald and Les Bolad, with illustrations, for 3Sc. Learn fundamental skills! Student Unlock Book 8
WASHING machine, gas stove, refrigerator, kitchen cabinet, kitchen table, dishwasher, kitchen machine, 20 inch circular mirror, portable non-electric phonograph, small set shelves and large set of shelves suit kitchen use will hold up to 24 books. Phone 301JJ.
HARLEY DAVIDSON motorcycle. '49
model. First class condition. Call after
p.m. Phone 1677-J. 406-6236.
ROLA TV Portable. Use only. 30-
day warranty. $99.40. See B.T. Goodrich. Easy terms if desired.
F. Goodrich Co., 929 Mass.
BOOK-EASE leaves both hands free for writing or typing, marks any answers vocabulary, and get your today for only 8c at your Student Union Book Store.
THESES MATERIALS! All. weights of thesis quality typing paper, carbon paper, and typewriter ribbons. Student Union Book Store. M4
FINEST TELEVISION-Best in sets anderials at all locations. Priced $75.00 and up. See the newest Emerson table model set at $159.00, Electric 326 Vermont, Phone 1383,
BUSINESS SERVICE
THE LAWRENCE Women's Club invites the people of Douglas County and surrounding towns to use their clubhouse for business and social meetings and wedding receptions. A small fee to enter is $15. Call resident, hosts. Telephone 209.
NEED HELP? I will type your themes, class notes, term papers, etc. Regular rates. Quick service. Mrs. Chas Malody, 1424 Miss. Phone 1788J. 5
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FORMALS AND alterations of all types
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1414 Tom.
SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a dignified sales activity representing older, hardworking, best known firm in educational 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 of work. 1006 Grand Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Giving qualifications, school and home address. tf
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet
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Should a man take "no" for an answer... (or should he know better)?
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TYFING, Theses. Term Papers. Reports.
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TYPING. Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rules. Prompt attention. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601
FOR RENT
MAKE BETTER GRADES! Rent a portable or standard typewriter for $350 a week. Purchase models at Student Union Book Store or 3½ ROOOM apartment adjacent to campus. Completely modern. All electric units are proof building. Inquire 1101 Tenn.
RIDING HORSES for rent by the hour.
Bridle paths and trails nearby. For hay-
rack rides, call Mott Stables, phone 1842.
700 West 4th. 5
CLASS RING, initials inside, H.G.M. Hector Gomez. Phone 3279. Reward. 8 WILL THE person who borrowed a powder blue dinner jacket from Bob Brown please call the ATO house. Phone 565. PLEASE. 8
LOST
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TRANSPORTATION
WANT RIDERS or share the driving to summer school. Leave Plaza 7 a.m., return 11 a.m. JE 3178, Kansas City, Mo. after 6 p.m. TF
NEED DAILY ride between Kansas City
do. and Lawrence for summer school.
fall 3167 or write to 3839 E. 61st St.,
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FLY, and Take advantage of reduced fares, dovetail connections, good accommodations. Call Miss Giesman at 617-204-9000 or information. Telephone No. 30. 24 and 24
Since the founding of the Boy Scouts of America in 1910, the grand total of boys and leaders enrolled is 16,500,000.
FLYING? See
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- THE FALLEN IDOL •
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Alfred Hitchcock's "STAGE FRIGHT"
JAYHAWKER STARTS TUESDAY
and NOW
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
MONDAY
'You can't put
your lips to a
trumpet and
make music
like this!'
SCREENDOM'S MOST ELECTRIFYING STAR-MATCH! MATCHLESS WA
GREENDOM'S MOST ELECTRIFYING STAR-MATCH! MATCHLESS WARNER EXCITEMENT
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Set to the torrid tempo of the blazing best-seller
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CONTINUOUS
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DAY 1:00 p.m. ON
ENDS
TONITE
JAYHAWKER
Features at
1:00, 3:05, 5:10, 7:20,
and 9:30
Plus
Late News Events
Color Cartoon
"Detouring the Maine"
ON OUR STAGE
ROYAL HAWAIIAN
REVUE
7:15-9:30
ON OUR SCREEN
"THERE'S A GIRL
IN MY HEART"
5:45, 8:05 and 10:30
PAGE TWELVE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1958
Intramural Speech Contest Opens Today
Demonstration speeches will be presented today in the first division of the third annual Intramural Speaking tournament. No preliminaries will be held this afternoon. The finals will be at 7:30 tonight in Green hall.
In the demonstration speaking
In the demonstration speaking contest, five to eight minute speeches will be given on any subject that involves important use of a chart, blackboard, physical equipment, apparatus, or "show-how" technique.
Judges for the contest have been chosen from the ranks of the Forensic league, the speech faculty, and Delta Sigma Rho, honorary debate fraternity. The tentative list of judges for today's contest include the following:
Harold Harvey, Thomas Rea, and Thomas Shay, instructors in speech; Soey Bong, business junior; Ernest Friesen, Charles Hoffhaus, College seniors; Fred Six, College junior; Beatrice Buehler, Patricia Glover, Nancy Lindsey, Donna Mcohs, College sophomores; Patricia Gardenble, College freshman; Mary Lou Lane, education junior; and Robert Bennett, first year law.
The informative speaking division will be held Thursday, May 11 and the entertaining or after-dinner speaking, Thursday, May 18.
William Conboy, instructor in speech, is in charge of the Intra- neural tournament.
Debate Team Rates Second
The University debate team received the second highest team ranking in the West Point Invitational Debate tournament at West Point N. Y., April 27 through April 29
Edward Stollenwerck, College senior, had the second highest individual speaking rating in the tournament. His teammate, Kent Shearer, College junior, helped to win the team's high ranking.
The team went through the preliminary rounds on April 27 and April 28 without a loss, but was defeated in the elimination round on April 29.
At the tournament, the debaters discussed both the affirmative and negative of four subjects: the nationalization of the basic non-agricultural industries, the nationalization of the steel industry, the nationalization for defense, and the control of the business cycle.
E. C. Buehler, professor of speech accompanied the team to the tournament.
Harrison, Burton New NSA Officers
Gladys Harrison, education junior, was elected president of the Negro Student association for the 1950-51 school year recently. Other officers elected were Earl Burton, college jr., vice president; Roscoe Black, college sophomore secretary
Jannith Lewis, college freshman, was elected as representative to the All Student council to succeed Arthur Ford, college senior.
KU Republicans Hear Hagaman
More than 200 persons attended the K.U. Young Republican club's picnic and political rally Wednesday evening.
Present at the gathering were Republican candidates for county, state, and national offices. Candidates who were unable to attend were represented.
Short talks introducing themselves or their candidates were given by Lester Hagaman, lieutenant governor, who is campaigning for the gubernatorial nomination; Roy Riegle, Washburn university student representing Willard Mayberry, also campaigning for governor; and Howard Perry, Washburn university student stumping for Ed Arn as governor.
Ray Pierson. Burlingame attorney, supported Harry Colmery for United States senator. Mr. Pierson said that he wished Mr. Colmery had been on the senate floor at the time "we heard that state of the union address by that Kansas City stooge of Pendergast."
Paul Shanahan, speaker of the state house of representatives, and Harry Weed, a recent college graduate, reiterated their candidacy for local secretary of state nomination.
Douglas county office seekers at the political function were Milton Allen, running for county attorney; Travis Glass, present deputy sheriff campaigning for the sheriffs office; Probate judge Frank Gray, seeking reelection; and Charles Stowe, state representative candidate from Douglas county.
Art Harper, recently elected chairman of the state Collegiate Young Republicans from Washburn attended the meeting. Paul Wolf, chairman of the K.U. Young Democrats club, was also a guest.
Sasnak Picnic Will Be Sunday
Members are asked to meet 3 p.m. Sunday at Robinson gym before going to Holcom's grove. Joan Harris, club president, urged "all who can" to bring cars.
Sasnak, physical education club will have its annual spring picnic Sunday.
Games will be played, including softball and volleyball followed by the picnic supper. Members may attend free of charge but guests are requested to pay 50 cents.
Committee chairmen are Ernest Meis, education junior, entertainment; Vinita Bradshaw, education freshman, food; and Keemth Reid, education freshman, publicity.
WORLD NEWS at Press Time
Chinese Ask For More Aid
Tapci, Formosa, May 4 — U.P.) The Chinese Nationalist government has asked the United States for another 50 million dollars in aid, of which $30 million dollars would be used for currency stabilization, C. K. Yen, finance minister, said today. The request was made last month but no answer has been received, Yen said.
Auto Workers End Strike
Detroit, May 4 — (U.P.)-The CIO United Auto Workers called off their 100-day strike against Chrysler corporation today and agreed to sign a new contract sending 144 thousand idle workers back to their jobs.
Chrysler and the union approved an agreement providing $100 pensions, a hospital-medical program and non-economic contract improvements.
More than 89 thousand strikers in seven states must give routine approval to the pact before formal end of the walkout.
Swedes Find Lifejacket
Stockholm, Sweden, May 4—(U.P.)
—The Swedish coast guard at Vendburg said today that a yellow rubber lifejacket with English lettering was picked up off the Island of Gotland yesterday.
The coast guard said the jacket would be sent to American authorities to determine whether it was from the U.S. navy privateer plane believed to have been shot down by the Russians over the Baltic last month.
135 Birds, Mammals Arrive From Africa
A collection of 100 birds and 35 mammals from Africa was received at the University's Museum of Natural History recently from Dr. Curt von Wedel of Oklahoma City. Dr. von Wedel recently returned from Kenya Colony, Africa, where he obtained the specimens to fill gaps in the University's collection.
Mr. E. Raymond Hall, Museum director, said that the specimens would be used in advanced teaching and research. Exceptional rarities among the birds, he pointed out, were the White-bellied bustard, Buff-crested bustard, Hoopoe, and Golden-winged sun-bird.
Jay Janes Plan To Usher
Volunteers to usher for College Daze, baccalaureate, and graduation were signed at the Jay Jane meeting Wednesday.
Plans were made for a rush tea to be Wednesday, May 10, in the Pine room of the Union and for the reorganization of the Red Peppers next year.
B
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Geology Professor To Speak Today
Dr. Sherman A. Wengerd, assistant professor of geology at the University of New Mexico, will give a lecture at 8 p.m. today in 426 Lindley hall. His topic will be "Reef Sedimentation in the Majuro Atoll."
Dr. Wengerd worked with the hydrographic office of the navy during the war. His report here will be on a subject being sponsored by the lecture committee of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY
Kansas State historical Society Topeka, Ks.
No.141 Friday, May 5, 1950
Lawrence, Kansas
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STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Winners Discuss Math, Music In Tournament
Aided by mint juleps, ukuleles and mathematical figures, students competed Thursday in the demonstration division of the Intramural Speaking tournament.
Judges of the contest were: Don Palmquist, Thomas Rea, instructors in speech; Charles Hoffhaus, College senior; Beatrice Buehler, Nancy Lindsey, Jerome Lysaught, College sophomores; Abigail Bixby, education senior. Hoffhaus was general chairman at the contest.
Dorothy Wood, education senior,
placed first in the women's section
and Robert Kuckelman, engineering
junior, first in the men's. Miss
Wood demonstrated how to play a
ukulele and discussed the merits of
the instrument. Kackelman told of
the inconsistencies in mathematics
while illustrating his speech with
unusual figures and problems.
In the women's division, Kay Peters, College sophomore, won second place with her talk on palmistry. Patricia A. Young, College junior, placed third by acting out a day's schedule of radio programs. Second place in the men's division was won by William Buechel, College junior, who described the values of H2O bombs in playing tricks on your friends. William Williams, engineering sophomore, placed second with his demonstration on how to mix a mint ien.
Those placing first were given trophies and the other winners certificates of award.
The informative speaking division contest will be Thursday, May 11, and the entertaining or after-dinner speaking contest Thursday, May 18. William Conboy, instructor in speech, who is charge of the Intramural tournament, urged those planning to enter the contest to submit their names to him at the speech office, Green hall, by the Tuesday before the date of the contest they are entering.
University women athletes will be host to women from Ottawa and Washburn universities for the third annual softball play-day Saturday. Because Baker university is unable to attend, K.U. will field two teams to permit a round-robin tournament.
Any undergraduate student who is not a member of the Forensic league, Delta Sigma Rho, honorary debate fraternity, or among the top three winners of any previous campus speech contest other than the Intramural tournament are eligible to compete.
Four games will be played before noon. After lunch in the Kansas room of the Union, the teams will play a few final games. KU, hopes to win its third championship with one of its two sounds.
Women's Ball Teams To Play Saturday
11 a.m. KU, "U" vs. Washburn
KIJ "B" vs. Ottawa
1:45 p.m. KU, "A" vs. KU, "B"
Ottawa, vs. Wasbann
10 a.m. K.U. "A" vs. Ottawa, K.U.
"B" vs. Washburn ...
Following is the schedule of games:
THE WEATHER
KANSAS — Partly cloudy, with strong shifting winds. Westerly winds of 60 m.p.h. and over. Cooler east. Partly cloudy tonight and Saturday with dainting winds. Cooler east tonight and Saturday. High this afternoon 30-35 degrees northwest to near 60 degrees southeast. Low tonight near 36 degrees northwest to 40's south-east. High Saturday near 50 degrees north to 60 degrees south.
Positions Open On Publications
Positions are open for editor and business manager of the following publications: the Student Directory, K-Book, and KU Calendar. Anyone interested in these offices should turn in a written application to Jack Howard, 1621 Edgehill road by Friday May 12.
51 Injured In Kansas Storms
Tornadoes and thunderstorms that struck widely separated parts of the nation killed one man and injured at least 88 persons today.
Bv UNITED PRESS
The twister did not strike Great Bend proper but strong winds did disrupt electric service.
A tornado struck a war-time government housing project west of Great Bend just before midnight last night injuring more than 50 persons. none seriously, and damaging barbed wire contained about 100 apartment units.
The hospitalized were; Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bennington and their small daughters, Judy and Jerry; Mrs. Donald Benson and her daughter, Sharon; Mrs. George Brannon; Mrs. Joe Razon; Mrs. T. E. Smith; and Eddie Thorn.
The dinner will be held in the Congregational church parish house and will be followed by the dance at 9 p.m. in the Community building, Members of Phi Delta Phi, and Delta Theta Phi legal fraternities, their wives and dates, faculty members and their wives, and all members and alumni of Phi Alpha Delta are invited to the affair.
Thirty-nine persons were admitted to the St. Rose hospital, but only 10 of them were retained overnight.
Rav Schultz, Red Cross chapter chairman, said emergency headquarters were set up in the Great Bend city auditorium and five persons were treated there for minor injuries. He said several others were treated at the scene by nurses and firemen.
Earlier yesterday, a tornado struck Zook, Kan, and Ray, Kan, southeast of Great Bend. One man was injured at Zook.
A dinner and dance sponsored by Green chapter of Phi Alpha Delta legal fraternity will be held at 6:30 p.m. Saturday,
Robert Morrison, instructor in Economics discussed the "Economics of Slavery" before Delta Sigma Pi, professional business fraternity. Thursday evening.
Willard A. Burton, Jr., justice; Douglas B. Myers, vice-justice; Robert A. Coldsnow, treasurer; Lloyd H. Phillips, clerk; and Charles D. Johnson, marshall. All are second year lai. students but Burton, who is a third year law student.
Mr. Morrison told of the early issues of slavery in Kansas, and the economic value of slaves in the South.
Phi Alpha Delta Will Dine, Dance
Raymond A. Schwegler, former dean of the School of Education, spoke Thursday night at a banquet closing a three-day session of the 103rd reunion of the Scottish Rite masons at Fort Scott, Kan.
Five new officers were recently installed in Phi Alpha Delta. They are:
Gov. and Mrs. Frank Carlson have been invited to attend. He was initiated into the fraternity in 1949 by the University chapter.
Masons Hear Schwegler
Morrison Speaks On Slavery
Trees Fall, Windows Shatter In High Wind
Fire chief, Paul Ingels, reported that limbs have fallen on telephone wires causing short circuits and broken wires. A barn caught fire this morning at 701 New York street but it was controlled by firemen and little damage was suffered. A hood blew off a car on Massachusetts street, according to the Lawrence police.
Fifty-mile-an-hour gusts ripped through Lawrence this morning up-rooting trees, blowing in windows, damaging roofs, and smashing an airplane at Lawrence airport.
The hunt for Abigail, a mysterious something somewhere on the campus ends today.
Abigail's identity is the objective in a treasure hunt sponsored by the Wards Board council of Wards T and P-Zar, social organizations for independent men.
The plane was the property of the McDonnell Aircraft company, Kansas City, and was rented to Dudley Elliott. College junior.
University buildings and grounds had escaped relatively unscathed up to 10:30 a.m., according to C. G. Bayles, superintendent of buildings and grounds. Roof tiles were blown off Snow hall and a tree crashed down by Lindley hall. Five windows were shattered by the wind in Marvin hall at 10:30 a.m. University flags have been taken down to prevent tearing.
Prizes to be awarded are displayed at a booth in the Union Students may turn in their answers after 3 p.m. today at that booth.
Lawrence police report that Kansas City police have issued warnings to persons to stay off the streets Extensive damage to windows and roofs occurred in Kansas City, local police say.
Now you've guessed we're not
elieved.
alive And that our family numbers five, Me, I'm the biggest one. New record for the world's most that
A tree in the yard of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity house, 1425 Tennessee street toppled and demolished a '41 Buick sedan owned by Judd Lanning. College sophomore.
'Abigail Hunt' Ends Today
ow, you've found me, wasn't that fun?
The Y.W.C.A. has pioneered in every field that concerns women and their fuller development, Mrs. Engene Alford told members and guests of Y. M. C. A. at a banquet Wednesday night.
Speaking on the value of training in a girl's life, Mrs. Alford said no other organization can compare with the Y. W. C. A. in helping girls become real persons. The Y. M. C. A has revealed a religion that means more life, more happiness, and more real Christianity than has ever before been disclosed to women in all lands.
"The student Y. M. C. A. aims to create and train leadership of the highest kind not only for college days, but for that much longer and more serious period of life after graduation," she said. "These leaders are not just office holders, but have Christian principals that leave a 'trail of potential leaders after them.'"
YMCA Is Praised By Dinner Speaker
Business School Day Will Be Held May10
Elections, speakers, picnics, and a ball game between faculty members and seniors will highlight the annual Business School day Wednesday, May 10.
The schedule for the day begins with the opening of polls for the election at 8 a.m. They will be open until 1:30 p.m. All students in the School of Business will be excused from classes after 10 a.m. Vernon B Burgett, partner of the Kansas City branch of Peat, Marwick, Mitchell and Co., public accountants, will address the school on "Public Accounting as a Profession" in Fraser theater.
Joseph W. Wick, president and owner of the Jos. W. Wicks organization of Chicago, will address the school on "Work in Public Relations," at 11 a.m.
The softball game between the faculty and the seniors will begin at 2 p.m. on intramural field three.
With Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen calling the balls and strikes, the faculty, which won in 1947 and '48, will attempt to make up for last year's 13 to 4 defeat.
Richard Buskirk, instructor in economics, will probably pitch for the faculty, while Ronald Hurd, instructor in economics, will catch. Joe Schogggen, John Cannon, and Donald Thompson, instructors in economics, will cover the bases, and Martin Jones will play shortstop for the faculty. The outfielders have not been chosen vet.
The seniors have released only
three names as probable starters.
They are Claude Houchin, Harry Koons, and Richard Hamilton, all pitchers.
The picnic, to be held at Potter ake, will begin after the ball game.
Two Commerce and Professional parties have submitted candidates for the election of officers for the Business School council.
Gene Ballon, business junior, has been nominated by the Commerce party for president. Running against him is Eugene Westergren, business junior, nominated by the Professional party.
The Professional party nominated Melvin Rice, business junior, for vice-president; Donald Johnson, business junior, for secretary; and Billy Blanchard, business junior, for treasurer.
For the Commerce party, other nominees are: vice-president, Lewis Jagger, business junior; secretary, Betty J Bloomer, business junior; and treasurer, Charles Hall, business junior.
Other numbers included the emotional "Passacaglia and Fugue in C Minor," and expressive "Sheep May Safely Graze."
The election booths will be located on the second floor of Strong hall, near the Business School office. A Business School Association card and a University identification card will be required for a ballot.
Biggs Verifies Reputation With All-Bach Program
Bv MELVA LUTZ
With appropriate brillance and fire, E. Power Biggs, nationally-known Boston organist, climaxed his program of Bach organ music Thursday night with the famous "Toccata and Fugue in D Minor."
Mr. Biggs began his recital with Bach's arrangement of "Concerto in D Minor" (Vivaldi). The rendition was notable for strong, solid phrasing and a light touch for the gay, tricky melody of the "Allegro Vivace."
Included in the program were the "Schubier Choralie Preludes." The group of chorales was a favorite with Bach, and were named for their publisher. All the numbers were played sympathetically and with great depth of feeling, notably, the prelude, "Abide with us, Lord Jesus Christ," which conveys a quiet evening atmosphere. The other numbers of the groups were "Sleepers awake, a voice is calling" "O whither shall I flee," "If thou but suffer God to guide thee," "My soul doth magnify the Lord," and "Comest Thou now, Jesu, from Heaven above."
Vigorous playing yet meticulous phrasing were consistent throughout Mr. Biggs recital. Very infrequent were signs of rythmic unsteadiness or inconsistent interpretation. His intrepretation especially of the "Fantasia and Fugue in G Minor" was one which might be expected from Bach's own rendition of the number. Conventional registrations were prevalent throughout most of the numbers.
Engineering Professors To Be Honored At Dinner Tonight By 100 Ex-students
More than 100 civil engineering alumni have made reservations to attend a dinner honoring William C. McNown, professor of civil engineering and Frank A. Russell, professor of engineering drawnng, at 6:30 p.m. today in the union ballroom.
One of the largest groups in many years to attend an organ recital at the University was present last night. A large number of out-of-town persons were present because of the meeting of the Kansas Chapter of the American Guild of Organists. Mr. Biggs recital was a climax to their meeting as well as being an outstanding concert during the Music Week observation.
The four-manual organ in Hoch auditorium gave Mr. Biggs a slight bit of trouble, but he made substitutions in registration without hesitation.
Seventeen civil engineering alumni who are now employed with the Phillips Petroleum Oil company, Bartlesville, Okla., will arrive in Lawrence at 4:30 p.m. by plane to meet with their former professors and to attend the banquet. Those flying in from Bartlesville are:
Professors McNown and Russell plan to retire from their teaching positions in June. Both are 70 years old, which is the retiring age for the University.
Nine engineers will speak at the dinner. Six of the nine are University alumni. C. R. Van Orman will act as master of ceremonies.
Bernley M. ASEL, '43; George R. Benz, '25, assistant departmental manager; Robert L. Brothers, '47; Irving L. Coffman, '32; Paul Endacott, '23, vice-president; John F.
Headrick, '39; Charles Herbert '36;
Charles H. Hubbell, '26, chief engineering; Loy R. Hunter, '33; Rex Hunter, '33; Emil F. Kindsvater, '23, engineering department manager; Stanley Learned, '24 vice-president and chairman of operating committee; Howard J. Pankratz, '35; Arthur H. Riney, '11, vice-president in charge of engineering; William L. Ruggles, '45; Howard A. Ryan, '47; Albert P. Will, '42.
Pharmacists To Hear Speech
Norman Taylor, director of Cinchona Products institute will speak to seniors in the School of Pharmacy Monday, May 8, on "Recent Developments in the Cinchona Alkaloids."
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS'
FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1950
Church Schedule
FIRST METHODIST
946 Vermont
new F Allmont minist
Oscar E. Allison, minister
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.
Morning worship, 10:50 a.m. Guest speaker, Dr. M. La Fayette Harris, president of Philander Smith college, Little Rock, Ark. Solely by Boyd Bainter, "Arm Ye Brave" by Handel, Anthem: "Jubilee Deo" with solos by Merton. Anderson, tenor, and Richard Behm, bass.
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST,
SCIENTIST
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.
Morning service, 11 a.m. Subject
"Adam and Fallen Man."
Wednesday meeting, 8 p.m.
FIRST CHRISTIAN
1001 Kentucky
H. M. Sipel, Minister
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m. University class taught by Reginald Strait. Morning worship, 10:45. Sermon: "A Praver for Abounding Love." Anthem solo: "Out of the Depths" by Charles Kassinger. Offerter solo: "The Lord Is My Shepherd" by Rose Marie Stafford.
K U. Disciple fellowship, 5:30 p.m.
Myers hall.
WEST SIDE PRESBYTERIAN 605 Maine
Daniel Knox Ford, minister
Bible school, 9:45 a.m. University class taught by the Rev. Mr. Ford Subject: "Hosea, the Man and His Message."
Morning worship, 11 a.m. Guest speaker, Dr.Reuben A.Torey, Jr., missionary from China.
Evening service, 8 p.m. Congregational hymn sing led by Paul Christian.
TRINITY EPISCOPAL 19th and Vermont
Robert C. Swift, rector Louis Basso, Jr., associate rector Holy communion, 8 a.m. Church school, 9:30 a.m. Morning service, 11 a.m. Chora eucharist, and sermon.
Canterbury club, 5 p.m. Supper and "question box."
FREE METHODIST CHURCH 12th and Connecticut Lester Hamilton, pastor
Lester Hamilton, pastor
Sunday school 10:00 a.m.
Lester Tridham, pastor
Sunday school, 10:00 a.m.
Morning service, 11:00 a.m. Sem-
mon: "Bearing Their Infirmation."
Young Peoples' Missionary society 7 p.m.
Evening services, 7:45 p.m.
Mid Century Youth crusade, 7:30
p.m., at Eighth and Chandler, Topeka. Features: "Time for Action," a new Kodachrome sound film of Y.P.M.S. activities.
ST. JOHN'S CATHOLIC 1229 Vermont
The Rev. George Towle, pastor
10am.
Newman club meeting after the 10'clock mass.
FIRST BAPTIST 8th and Kentucky
George C. Fetter, minister
MORNING SCHOOL 8:00 A.M.
Morning class at 11 a.m. Guest
speaker: Dr. Glenn W. Tuttle, medical
missionary from the Belgian
Congo.
Senior Youth fellowship, 3 p.m.
Outdoor meeting with installation of
officers and a picnic lunch.
CHURCH OF CHRIST 1501 New Hampshire W. T. Carter minister
Bible study, 10 a.m.
Morning service, 11 a.m. Subject
"What It Means to Be in Christ"
Lord's Supper, 11:45 a.m.
Teacher training class, 7 p.m.
Friday, October 8, 2014
Evening service, 8 p.m. Subject The Church as a Family."
Ladies' Bible class, 8 p.m. Wednesday.
Wednesday Bible classes, 8 p.m.
Sigma Delta Chi Initiates 10 Men
Ten men were initiated into Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity, Thursday evening in the Big Six room of the Eldridge hotel. $\Lambda$ buffet supper followed the ceremonies.
The new members are Arlo Bailey, John Bannigan, Harold Benjamin, John Corporon, Arthur McIntire, Emlin North Jr., Dewayne Oglesbee, Edward Rodgers, Dolph Simons, Jr. and Richard Tatum, all journalism juniors.
Joseph Murray, managing editor of the Lawrence Journal-World and a charter member of Beta chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, gave a brief history of the chapter, which was chartered in 1910.
The main speaker was Dolph Simons, publisher of the Lawrence Journal-World, who was introduced by L. N. Flint, professor emeritus of journalism.
University Daily Kansan
Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University hours vary by week. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
IT'S NOT TOO LATE !!
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International Youth Inc.
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Write or phone
Official Bulletin Friday, May 5
To assure passage write immediately
Students planning to take Western Civilization examination Saturday, May 13, 1:30 to 5 p.m., must register at Western Civilization office by May 9. The place of examination will be assigned at time of registration. Examination admitance card received at Western Civilization office must be presented at examination.
Lutheran Student association square dance and box lunch, today. Bismarkar Grove. Meet 6:15 p.m. at Trinity Lutheran church. Girls bring a box lunch, containing food for two, for auction.
Sasnak club picnic, Sunday. Holcomb's grove. Meet at 3 p.m., Robinson gym. Members free. guests 50 cents. Transportation from gymnasmium.
KU. Young Democrats picnic scheduled for today has been postponed.
Mathematical colloquium, 5 p.m.
Monday, 203 Strong hall. Prof. S.
Chowla, "Difference Equations."
Y. W.C.A. members invited by Y.M.C.A. to see movies of Estes "Y" camp, 4 p.m. Tuesday, Union building.
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FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Three Engagements Announced
Farrell-Roberts
Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Farrell of Sterling announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary Charlene, to Mr. James E. Roberts, son of Mrs. Harry L Stevens of Hutchinson. Miss Farrell is a College senior and a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority. Mr. Roberts is also a College senior and a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity.
Mr. and Mrs. Alto Benitz of Wathena announce the engagement of their daughter, Nelita, to Mr. Elmer T. Allen, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Allen of Lawrence.
Benitz-Allen
The announcement was made April 28 by Miss Julia Ames Willard, Watkins hall housemother. Miss Benitz wore an orchid and Misses Virginia Blauvelt and Patricia Lap-
pin, who passed chocolates, wore red roses. Miss Willard ware a gardenia corsage.
Miss Benitz is a College sophomore. Mr. Allen is an engineering freshman.
Jackson-Burnett
Mr. and Mrs. William Beauilieu of Lawrence announce the engagement of their granddaughter, Helen Patricia Jackson to Mr. Ralph L. Burnett, also of Lawrence. Mrs. Jackson received her B.S. degree in education from the University in June, 1949. Mr. Burnett received his A.B. degree in June, 1948, and is now attending the School of Law. The wedding will be in June.
In 1924 a diving tower, a pier,
spring boards, and dressing rooms
for men and women adorned the
shores of Potter's lake.
Acacia Announces Pledge
Acacia fraternity announces the pledging of Robert Whitzel, business junior from Coldwater.
Socially Speaking
Acacia Announces Pledge
Mills Heads Siama Chi
Officers will be installed Monday, May 8.
J. Steve Mills was named president of Sigma Chi fraternity Monday. Other officers will be Samuel Moore, vice-president; John Dressler, secretary; William Hamill - Leonard, assistant William Hallwell, pounding secretary; William McGinty, historian; and William Leake, pledge trainer.
Swain New Kappa Sig Head Robert Swain has been elected grand master of Kappa Sigma fraternity for the coming year. James
Arnold, grand procurator; Robert Hanson, grand treasurer; and Judson Greer, grand master of ceremonies, will also serve during the next year.
Sig Alphs Elect Helmers
Kansas Alpha chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity has elected Dale Helmers president for the coming year. Other officers will be: William Graves, vice president; Norman McAdoo, freshman trainer; Fred Schmitz, recorder; Alvin Modlodgem, scholarship chairman.
John Van Keppel, house manager;
Max Whitson, warden; Robert Talkington, herald; Donn Everett, intramural manager. William Palmer and Hal Titus will assume their duties as rush chairmen after rush week in 1950.
Harkleroad Engaged
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Harkleroad of White Water, announce the engagement of their daughter, Joyce, to Mr. Vernon Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. V. C. Smith of Wichita.
Miss Harkleroad is a College senior and president of Henley co-op. Mr. Smith is a graduate student in economics and a member of Rock Chalk co-op.
The wedding will be June 6.
Color Film To Be Shown
"Beyond Our Own Horizon," a new all-color sound film which describes the world-wide work of the Missouri synod of the Lutheran church, will be shown at 5:30 p.m. and 7:45 p.m. today at Immanuel Lutheran church, 17th and Vermont streets.
A "pot-luck" supper at the church will be held between 6:30 p.m. and 7:45 p.m. for students and members of the congregation.
Expert Watch REPAIR
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Honkins Hall Spring Dance
Hopkins Hall Spring Dance Hopkins hall will hold a spring formal for the midnight Saturday at the hall. Chapereons will be Mr. and Mrs. Orry C. Walz, Mrs. Ross Franklin Cole, and Mrs. Johnston Bates.
Picnic At Lone Star Lake
Harmon co-op will entertain with a picnic from 4 to 8 p.m. Saturday at Lone Star lake. Chaperons will be the Misses Jean Guthrie, Velma Hess, and Betty Hensley.
Picnic At Lone Star Lake
Don't Throw away Your Favorite Pipe!
Bring it to The Pipe Shop for major or minor repairs. Our modern pipe repair shop will make your pipe like new.
- We have the largest and most complete selections of pipes and tobacco in Lawrence.
The PIPE SHOP
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Our Service Is Sure To Please
SWISS STEAK ON WEDNESDAY
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DU Dinner Dance
A formal dinner dance will be given by Delta Upsilon fraternity at the Eldridge hotel from 7 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Chaperons will be Mrs. James Hooke, Mrs. R. H. Wilson, Mrs. C. H. Wentworth, Mrs. Charles Mandigo, and Mrs. B. A. Weber.
ATO To Hold Dance
Alpha Tau Omega fraternity will give its spring formal from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house. The chaperons are Mrs. John Skie, Mrs. H. H. Overholser, Mrs. F. L. MacCreary, and Mrs. C. J. Thomas.
AD Pi Spring Formal
Alpha Delta Pi sorority will hold its spring formal from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house.
To Hold Joint Formal
Chaperons will be Mrs. Richard Blume, Mrs. H. P. Ramage, Mrs. Lela Wilson, and Mrs. Thomas Clark.
Chaperons will be Mrs. Ora Lee, Mrs. Alberta Frye and Mrs. Lee Pitts.
Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority and Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity will entertain students to join spring formal in the 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday in the Union ballroom.
University Club Has Dance
The University club will hold a juke box dance at 8:30 p.m. Saturday in the club rooms.
Hosts will be Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Jochim and Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Metzler.
Sig Ep Spring Formal
The spring formal of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house, Mrs. Virginia Brammer, Mrs. Abby Henry, Mrs. W. S. Shaw, and Mrs. Ralph Park are the chaperons.
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SEA FOODS
a SPECIALTY at Duck's Tavern
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Mother likes gifts of lasting charm. We have a most complete stock from which to choose—and at any price you wish to pay.
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ACROSS FROM THE GRANADA
Ph.933
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1950
At the Flicks By Bill Stratton
Editor's note: Because attending movie theaters seems to be a popular form of entertainment for most University students, the U.D.K. will begin printing a critic's column. It is hoped that such a feature will be useful to you as readers and movie-goers.
"The Bicycle Thief" Patee Theater
One of the few movies to exceed its publicity, De Sica's "The Bicycle Thief" is a tense adventure of hope and despair.
To bring the film closer to the people, Vittorio De Sica cast inexperienced players in the lead roles of this Italian production. Taking place in post-war Rome, the plot tells of unemployed worker named Antonio, who is offered a job as bill poster. He must have a bicycle for the job. Maria, his wife, pawns their bed sheets to get Antonio's old bicycle out of hock. As he puts up his first poster, the bicycle is stolen. Knowing that he can not make a living without it, Antonio and his son, Bruno, spend the following day searching for the bicycle. Their hunt takes them through street markets, a charity mission, and a brothel.
Though it is filmed in battered and poverty stricken Rome, "The Bicycle Thief" displays a realism seldom found in moving pictures.
"Young Man With A Horn' Javhawker Theater
For those who would like to hear a good trumpet and see Kirk Douglas repeat his emotional explosion from "Champion," "Young Man With A Horn" will provide them with an hour and a half of entertainment. However, if anyone is looking for a movie with a sensible plot, this one is not recommended. The rather inane story begins with Rick Martin (Kirk Douglas) as a boy ardently desiring to become a musician. He meets a trumpetman Art Hazzard (Juano Hernandez) and takes a liking to the horn. Rick Martin studies under Art, and in time becomes a better player than his teacher. Ignoring Art's advice to settle down to a businessman's life, Rick takes a job with a "soft music" dance band in New York. There he meets singer Jo Jordan (Doris Day) and pianist Smoke Willoughby (Hoagy Carmichael).
When he elects to play music as he "feels" it, he is fired. Smoke leaves with him. Following a tour of the honky-tonks, music-loving Rick meets Jo Jordan again. She introduces him to moody, magnetic Amy North (Lauren Bacall). Amy and Rick marry. Their strange life causes Rick to neglect his friends and his music until Art Hazzard dies. To top Rick's ill fortune, his marriage is broken. The movie reaches its supposed climax when Martin tries to play a note on his horn that "nobody has ever hit before." He fails, and the following scene is a replica of "Champion," with Rick screwing his face into pitiful expressions, bursting into tears, and finally stamping on his trusty trumpet. From then on, he hits the skids and so does the movie.
"That Midnight Kiss"
Granada Theater
A comprehensive musical score distinguishes "That Midnight Kiss," an M-G-M Technicolor release, starring Kathryn Grayson, Jose Iturbi, and Ethel Barrymore, and introducing Mario Lanza.
Abigail Barrett (Ethel Barrymore) launches the musical career of her granddaughter, Prudence (Kathryn Grayson), by founding an opera company with the help of Jose Iturbi. While tolerating the unwanted attentions of the opera's star, Signo Betelli (Thomas Gomez). Prudence falls in love with truck driver Johnny Donnetti (Mario Lanza). By an odd coincidence, Johnny turns out to be another Caruso and obtains a part in the opera with the help of Prudence. At this point, the plot becomes annoyingly complicated. Betelli quits the company. Prudence scorns Johnny upon discovering he's engaged. Johnny finds he's not in love with his fiancee, but feels honor-bound to marry her. Meanwhile Iturbi tries to obtain a replacement.
J. W. E.
REV. REUBEN TORREY
Dr. Reuben A. Torrey, Jr., field administrator of the restoration fund of the Presbyterian church in China, will speak to Westminster fellowship Presbyterian student group following supper at 5:30 p. m. Sunday in Westminster house, 1221 Oread.
In 1813 Dr. Torrey first went to China where he conducted evangelistic services and directed and taught classes of volunteer lay leaders. He served as secretary of the Presbyterian board of Foreign Missions Home Base department in St. Louis from 1927 to 1929. He and his family then returned to China.
After the Pearl Harbor attack, Dr. Torrey, his wife, and youngest son were Japanese war prisoners until their repatriation in 1942. Dr. Torrey then served in the Furlough fellowship of the service until 1944.
Dr. Torrey was invited by the Chinese government to return to China to serve as one of a small group of special officers representing the Chinese government with the American forces. He was appointed the chief American liaison officer of the War Area Service corps, which assisted American forces in China.
The Chinese government awarded Dr. Torrey the Cloud and Banner, the second highest military decoration offered.
Middle West Offers Best Chances
The Middle West offers the best possibilities for seniors graduating from the School of Fine Arts, Ray Ottinger, instructor in design, said recently.
"At the present, the backbone of the advertising business is in the midwest because of the shortage of jobs in the East," said MZ. Ottinger
The biggest demand at the present for commercial artists is for figure illustrators and fashion illustrators with layout men and good letterers close behind. In February there were seven potential employers looking for applicants and of these, three were searching for figure illustrators, he said.
During the fall semester there were three graduates in commercial art. Two of these are employed and the third hasn't been contacted. This spring there will be the largest graduating class in the history of the school. For some of the graduates the outlook is not so favorable. Advertising jobs do not open up as readily in the summer as they do in the fall and winter.
"The best openings in the advertising field for commercial artists are in display studios." Ottinger said. Retail advertising also offers good chances especially for women. The main branch of this field where graduates are finding employment is in display work in department stores. The possibilities in agencies for beginners are not too good.
The commercial art field is not overcrowded and an able artist can be reasonably sure of obtaining a job. There are several people in commercial art but the competition
Historical Geology Class Will Take Field Trip
Dr. C. G. Laliker, professor of geology, and 70 students enrolled in his historical geology class will leave today on a three-day field trip to the St. Francis mountains in southeastern Missouri.
The group will travel by chartered bus and will return Sunday. Sedimentary strata and fossils will be studied.
-
in the field keeps employers on the lookout for better men all the time, Ottinger said. This competition is so tough, however, that the beginner must plan on working sixteen hours a day where other people are only working eight.
Although the job possibilities in the East are slim, the employers there seem to prefer midwesterners to fill any vacancies. They seem to feel that people from the midwest are more inclined to have their feet on the ground and are coming back there just to work.
In the fall semester, K.U. conducted a survey of the job possibilities in this region. They sent out questionnaires to art departments, studios, and agencies in eight states. They found that the average salary for beginners ran from $45 to $50 a week. They also found that these employers were willing to take beginners without experience. If the beginners showed promise the employer would give them substantive praise within one fine. In Kansas City starts employees at $50 a week but promises they will be earning $100 a week within a year.
In a 1949 national survey, it was found that the ripest field for commercial artists was in Seattle with Dallas and Houston close behind. In these places there always seems to be a demand for artists.
Kitchen Appliances Shown To KU Dames
A demonstration of electrical appliances was given for the K.U.Dames Wednesday night. Mrs. Julia M. Springer, customer service representative for the Kansas Power and Light company, showed a stove, dishwasher, automatic washing machine and other kitchen appliances to about 25 members of the club.
The club will have a bridge party on Wednesday, May 10, and will elect officers at a meeting Wednesday, May 17.
The 200-bed hospital at Poplar Bluff, Missouri, will be finished in July.
The biggest complaint of prospective employers is that students don't seem to know how to write a letter of application. The employers seem to feel that if a man or woman can't write a letter of application that they will be unable to write good copy.
Our Stock Is Growing Like "Little Brother"
And speaking of "Little brother" at
There are dozens of toys for you to select from for his birthday, graduation, or just for the heck of it. .
- Toy guns ___ 35c up Holster sets
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Television ... $1.95
- Other gifts for the rest of the family
- Field glasses --- $3.50
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FRIDAY, MAY 5.1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
KU, K-State Meet On Track Saturday At Manhattan
Always bitter, rivals no matter what the sport, Kansas and Kansas State meet in a dual track meet at Manhattan Saturday. And with good weather, the two teams could set a record for setting new records.
At least nine meet marks are in jeopardy should the weatherman smile, but current forecasts for Saturday are for cool windy weather.
Kansas is favored to win the meet because of more all-around strength and a 73 1-3 to 57 2-3 victory over Kansas State a year ago. While K-State is scheduled to win every field event but the pole vault, Kansas will be after its points and records on the track.
The full list of K.U. entries is as follows:
100-yard dash—Dewinney, Fletcher,
Schutzel, and Waugh.
440 - yard run — Jim Dinsmore
Dave Fisher, and John Stites.
220-yard dash—Devinney, Schutzel,
and Waugh.
880 - yard run — Bowers and Karnes.
Mile run—Paul Aylward, Bowers,
Karnes.
Two-mile run—Cliff Abel, Dave Breidenthal, Semper.
High hurdles—Devinney and and Greenwood.
and Greenwood.
Low hurdles—Al Bouchard, Devinney, Greenwood, and Delvin Norris.
Discus—Broadly and Kline.
Shot put—Ed Lee and Norris.
High jump—Norris and Bill Richardson.
Broad jump—Bouchard and Devinnev.
Pole vault—Jim Floyd and Jim Potts.
Javelin—Bob Drumm and Potts.
Easton will not know the personnel of his mile relay team until Saturday, but top candidates for positions are Devinney, Dinsmore, Fisher, Greenwood, Schutzel, and Sites.
Dual meet records for K.U. and K.-State up to Saturday's meet are as follows:
TODAY!
EXCITEMENT UNMATCHED WITH THE YEAR'S MOST EXCITING STAR-MATCH!
THRU MONDAY
KIRK DOUGLAS
AND
THE GIRL WHO CARRIED A TORCH THAT TURNED TO ICE-
LAUREN BACALL
AND
THE BLONDE WHO SANG A LOVE SONG HE DIDN'T HEAR-
DORIS DAY
SET TO
THE
TORRID
TEMPO
OF A GREAT
BEST-SELLER--
BY WARNER BROS.
"Young man with a horn"
440-yard dash. :48.9, Sam Johnson, Kansas State, 1941.
880-yard run. 1:55.4, Pat Bowers, Kansas, 1949.
220-yard dash. 21,4. Darrell Matnes, Kansas, 1940.
"young man with a horn"
WB WITH
HOAGY CARMICHAEL JUANO HERNANDEZ
FEATURES AT
1:00, 3:05, 5:10, 7:20, 9:30
100-yard dash, :99.6, Lyle Foy,
Kansas, 1939.
Mile run, 4:17.4, Glenn Cunningham, Kansas, 1933.
horn"
THESE SONGS- and more too! Moanin' Low' 'With A Song In My Heart' 'Too Marvelous For Words' 'Love For Sale'
Note: "Young Man With a Horn," will be shown on the Saturday nite prevue. . . Come as late as 11:00 p.m. and see a complete show.
Two-mile run, 9:39.1. Don Landon, Kansas State, 1934.
120-yard high hurdles, :14.9.
Dick Hotchkiss, Kansas State,
1939.
JAYHAWKER
220-yard low hurdles; 223, Harry Hinkley, 1931; Ed Darden, 1940; and Earl Elliott, 1949 (all to Kansas State).
Discus throw, 152-6. Rollin Prather, Kansas State, 1949.
Javelin throw, 198-3%, Milo Farnett, Kansas, 1942.
VARSITY
Phone 132 For Sho Time 12c 39c
TONITE and SATURDAY
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Extra: Popeye Cosi
Extra: Popeye Cartoon
Shot put, 55-11, Elmer Hackney, Kansas State, 1939.
High jump. 6-6, Norman Sanne-
neman, Kansas, 1941.
Broad jump, 24-334. Herb Hoskins, Kansas State, 1949.
Pole vault, 13-3, Don Bird, Kansas, 1939.
Mile relay, 3:22.2. Kansas, Bob Schroeder, Theno Graves, Ed Hall. Glenn Cunningham, 1934.
of
1950
Basketball Highlights
FLASH! SPECIAL
SEE
THE TOP GAMES across the nation of this past season.
Sat. Owl Show 11:15
Sunday thru Wed.
Granada
PHONE 940
- Saturday -
LAST TIMES Gary Cooper Shown Once
—TONITE— Teresa Wright Only at 8:20
"THE PRIDE OF THE YANKEES"
JOHNNY WEISSMULLER JUNGLE JIM in HIS MIGHTIEST ADVENTURE! THE LOST TRIBE A COLLAR A PICTURE
SHOWN AT 7;30 - 10;35
TERE AUTRY
The STRAWBERRY ROAR
in CINECOLOR
SHOWN AT 9:09
Note OWL SHOW TONITE Come as late as 9:09, see a complete show then stay for our owl show at 11:40 FREE!
SUNDAY AND MONDAY
A picture noted by the Kansas City Star as one of the best in the last 50 years . . .
A New Adventure of the Old West
WALTER WANGER'S
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JOHN WAYNE • CLAIRE TREVOR
D. C. PARKER
PETER MARSHAL
Shown 8:25----10:19
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MOVIES ARE BETTER THAN EVER!
Drive out and See Stars under the Stars
- Box office opens 7:00 Every Evening
MOVIES ARE ★★★★★
Lawrence
DRIVE - IN
Theatre
$ _{1/2} $ -mile west on Highway 59
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1950
The Editors Report —
DANGERS OF HASTE:
Tariff Situation
For some years this newspaper has been committed to the proposition that if this country expects to sell abroad, it must also buy abroad; that foreign trade could not be a one way affair.
So it is as proponents of that proposition that we fear what appears to be a disposition to clothe it with the fervor of a sort of moral crusade; to tell the American people that they somehow have a duty to the world which requires them consciously to select and pay money for foreign goods.
It has long seemed to us silly to refuse to buy foreign goods where such purchases were to the advantage of the consumer. It seems to us equally silly to propose to buy foreign goods just because they are foreign. The only good reason for buying them is the self-interest of the purchaser.
Yet we are being told that when American financial grants to Europe cease, as they are scheduled to do in 1952, Europe will still need dollars, that the way for it to get dollars is to sell goods here and that the American consumer therefore must perform his duty. The real situation is that the Europeans must find ways to sell goods here by making them attractive to Americans.
At this point-if not before-someone suggests that Europeans can be assisted by making American tariffs and American customs practices less rigorous.
Already Congress is hearing from manufacturers and their organized employees who say that their industries are being injured by foreign competition. In light of that we think it would be well to proceed cautiously.
Let enough industries and their workers carry that plea to Congress and there arises the basis for a combination of sectional and local interests which will not only stop any further opening of American doors to foreign goods but will go much further and close those which have been opened.
Mr. Herbert Hoover once said that he could conceive of a demobilization of the American tariff structure but that hasty and ill-considered action to that end would cause "grass to grow in the streets" of some American cities. No man was ever more misrepresented and pilloried for saying something altogether wise.
The idea that America must import if it is to export is not one which can be jammed down the throats of people even though it is sweetened by lectures on morality. To attempt to carry out the idea faster than the country is willing to accept it on the basis of self-interest is to postpone any acceptance whatever.—The Wall Street Journal.
Editor's note: Seems to us we have heard this same economic question advocated by a certain so-called "radical" economist here on the Hill.
WHAT'S GOING ON In The World
Minnesota state conservation officials are trying to convince Congress that the answer to full-scale continuance of the nation's iron ore output lies in the peat bogs of Minnesota.
John, John, get back to the mines!
After years of experimenting, the Swedes have finally developed powdered butter. This is just what everyone has been waiting for to round out a breakfast of shredded wheat, powdered milk, powdered eggs, ersatz bacon, sawdust coffee, and paper linen.
Head of the Soviet Institute of Philosophy, Georgi Alexandrov, has been told to eliminate "faults" in the institute's work or face the possibility of being fired from the job.
Either the manpower situation in Russia has become critical or the Iron Curtain is beginning to fray. This is the first time we ever heard of a fellow over there having "possibilities."
We found it . . . Hilton's Shangri-La.
There is only one drawback to this perfect state. Swat is allied to Pakistan. If Pakistan went to war, Swat would too, for as one native put it, "We would have to help our friends."
It's a happy little valley called Swat, tucked away in the hills north of Pakistan. There are no income taxes; exports exceed imports; education is free up to the tenth grade; there are only 500,000 people in 4,000 square miles; everybody has enough to eat; bubbling streams abound in mahseer, a handsome firm-fleshed fish.
Marshall Tito assures us there will be no war in the foreseeable future.
General Kenny says he can name the day the next war will begin.
Rodney Nipnap says one or the other must be right.
Senator Tobey reportedly became indignant when a publisher of a horse racing newspaper described a defendant who had served a year and a day for defrauding the U.S. government as a man "of very high reputation."
He really shouldn't have flown off the handle, though. Maybe the horses like him fine.
Daily Hansan
University
News Room Adv. Room
K.U. 251 K.U.378
Student Newspaper of the
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Spanish Club Burns Judas As Part Of Celebration
The Spanish club, following a Latin - American custom, burned Judas in effigy at a meeting held at the Potter lake picnic grounds Thursday.
It is a tradition of Latin-American countries to burn Judas in effigy during the Easter celebration.
Following the demonstration, the club held a scavenger hunt.
Read:
SEX ON THE CAMPUS?
MAY Coronet
fishing AND CAMPING IN THE
FISHING
AND
CAMPING IN THE
Quetico - Superior Wilderness
Complete outfitting service $3.50
a day with Grumman alumi-
nium canoes. Food, your
choice - extra.
50-page Game Country picture
booklet mailed postpaid
anywhere for $1.00
"BASSWOOD LAKE LODGE"
on Mini.-Canadian border. Main
Lodge and 20 log cabins.
Modern bathroom facili-
ities. American Plan
rates $8.00 and
up. Also house-
keeping cabins.
Hoskins Receives Top KU Citation
WILDERNESS OUTFITTERS, Inc.
FLY, WINNESCO
Coe's Drug 1347 Mass.
Drugs - Drug Sundries
Drinks - Sandwiches
We Deliver 10 To 10
Dr. Roy Hoskins, professor of endocrinology at Harvard university, will receive the Distinguished Service award, the highest honor given by the University.
Phone 234
The citation, traditionally presented during Commencement activities, was awarded Dr. Hoskins several years ago, but he has been unable to visit the University until this time, said Fred Ellsworth, Alumni association secretary.
Forty-five thousand business firms are training 58,000 disabled veterans.
KANSAN Classified Ads
never go out on strike. Benefit daily by their use. Cot K.U.376
Eye
YOUR EYES
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should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any tenses or prescription duplicated.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
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STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE
AY 5,1950
FRIDAY, MAY 5. 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
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Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be delivered during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univer-
sity library office. Journalism bldg, not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five day days days 25 words or less ... 35c 65c 90c Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
FOR SALE
ON MOTHER'S DAY say " I Love You "
with a box of assorted creme and nut
nulled chocolates from the DIXIE CAR-
MEL CORN SHOP. Pound box, $1.25
mailbox box, $6.95. Wrapped free
mailing. The Dixie Caramel Corn Shop,
14 M
17 PLYMOUTH two-door sedan, 24,000 miles, excellent condition. Reasonable. Call H. Lonsen, K.U. 409 or 1625-J. SIZE 11 white pique sunback dress with gingham trim. Never worn. Also navy wool all season suit. Phone 9
WHITE dinner coat, $15. Summer tux
pants $8. Size 37 or 38. Like new. 120l
women's size 37 or 38. Like new.
RECORDER - Phonograph combination.
Disc type. Table model. 5-way, record,
voice or radio, phonograph, radio and
audio. Cassette. $35.00 Julia Fox. 100
Oilman. U120M.
HEVROETLES: 1947 Flelinee Aero
sadam: 1941 Cream Convertible. *1948
Sesame: 1948 A good clean cars.
obviously bumpy. See License.
West 9th Auto Sales, Phone 3225. 5
327 PLYMOUTH, grey, radio, heater, good tires, body sound, good transportation. Priced for quick sale. See to appreciate Vern Schneider Motors, 1010 Mass. 5
FINEST TELEVISION--Best in sets and
just arrived. $87.50 and up. See the new-
est Emerson table model set at $19.50.
$85 Vermont. Phone 138.
$95 Vermont. Phone 138.
24 POOT NATIONAL house trailer. Completely furnished. See after p. 131. m. 114
INDEX your vocabulary and language books with the new Superdex cloth tabs.
A set from A to Z for just 10c. Student Union Book Store. 8
ARCHTECTS! Limited Quantity of Zip-
A-Tone now available at 35c a sheet. A wide range of patterns. Student Union Book Store. 8
K. & E. NEPTUNE drawing instrument sets reduced from $23 to $12.50 while our supply lasts. See them at Student Union Book Store. 8
GOLFERS! Four handbooks of instructions by Bob MacDonald and Les Bolstad. Illustrations, for 35c. Learn fundamental skills! Student Univ Book Store.
74 HARLEY DAVIDSON motorcycle, '49 model. First class condition. Call after 5:00 p.m. Phone 1677-J. 406 W. 6th St. 6 MOTORO TALKTV Portable. Used only 3 MOTORO TV Portable on $99.40. See B.F. Goodrich, Exhibit C, desired B.F. Goodrich Co. $29 Mass.
BOOK-EASE leaves both hands free for writing or typing, marks any reference section such as vocabulary, etc. Get yours at 89c at your Student Union Book Store.
BUSINESS SERVICE
TYPING: Theses, term papers, letters etc. Regular rates, Prompt, accurate work. Mrs. Schear; Apt. R-36 1810 La. phone 3273-R.
THE LAWRENCE Women's Club invites the people of Douglas County and surrounding towns to use their clubhouse for business and social meetings and reception. A small fee to cover utilities. Call resident hostess. Tel 10 phone 209.
NEED HELP? I will type your themes, class notes, term papers, etc. Regular rates. Quick service. Mrs. Chas. Malody. 942 Miss. Phone 1788J. 5
TYPING — theses, term papers, etc
Standard rates. Phone 1344-W.
FORMALS and dresses of all types made to order. Also alterations and remodeling. Call Mrs. Scales. Phone 3060-W. 1414 Tenn. 5
SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a digity program in the oldest, largest, 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 ad- placement percentage of 100% Grand Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Giving qualifications, school and home address. ff
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 shopping for feeding for pets and feathers, Grant's Pet and Gift Shop tf 1218 Conn. St. Ph. 418.
THROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. and engin eagle engine, and fender repair, painting, used cars. 37 E.17 Ith. Phone 785 or 1821R. f
TYPING, Theses. Tern Papers, Reports.
Mrs. Susan Hain 1028 Vermont. Ph. 1168R.
TYPING. Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rates. Prompt attention Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601
FOR RENT
MAKE BETTER GRADES! Rent a portable or standard typewriter for $3.50 a month or $1.00 a week. All makes and models at Student Union Book Store. tf
$31\frac{1}{2}$ ROOM apartment adjacent to campus. Completely modern. All electric kitchen. New fire proof building. Inquire 1101 Temn.
RIDING HORSES for rent by the hour.
Bridle paths and trails nearby. For hay-
rade rides, call Mott Stables, phone 1842.
1700 West 4th. 5
LOST
WRIST WATCH Thursday morning between Haworth Hall and Library. Alarm clock on 7am. CLASS RING, initials inside, H.G.M. Hector Gomez. Phone 3279. Reward. 8
N-O-W
NOTHING CUT!—Not one foot has been deleted-presented exactly as shown in New York!
"BEST FILM IN 30 YEARS"
—RENE CLAIR in Time & Vogue
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Bicycle
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summer. Phone 619-748. II
SET NAVAL Officers Tropical Worsted Uniform, Size 38. Phone 3816 J after 5. 8 WANTED: PAGE 26 of May Sour Owl; Teller of Wilson, Tornil Kallos or Ronnie Phillips.
TRANSPORTATION
WANT RIDERS or share the driving to summer school. Leave Plaza 7 a.m., return 11 a.m. JE 3178 Kansas City, Mo., after 6 p.m. TF
Private rooms and dormitories will be provided for the hundreds of out of town guests who will be present at the commencement exercises for the class of 1550.
NEED DAILY ride between Kansas City,
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Housing Will Be Provided For Guests
Mrs. Ruth Nash, housing secretary emphasized the fact that there will be plenty of rooms available for anyone who wants them for their family or friends. Arrangements for rooms can be made with Mrs. Nash at the housing office on the second floor of Strong hall.
Last year Battenfeld and Jolliffe halls were used as additional housing for visitors and returning alumni. Similar plans have been made for this year, however, the dormitories to be used have not been determined.
In 1921 six students were reported to have drowned in Potters lake.
TONIGHT and SATURDAY
A GRAND MUSICAL in Technicolor
That Midnight Kiss
LOVE,
LAUGHTER,
SONG and
SPECTACLE.
starring
Kathyn
GRAYSON
JOSE
STEINEL
KEENAN
Color by TECHNICOLOR
ITURBI - BARRYMORE - WYNN
Also Color Cartoon
Latest News
STARTS SAT.OWL 11:15 SUNDAY
RAVES FROM A PRIVATE SCREENING HELD WEDNESDAY
1946
"A simply sparkling and most entertaining Picture"
"So True To Life"
"ONE OF THE CUTEST COMEDIES I'VE EVER SEEN————NEVER A DULL MOMENT."
Oh-h-h-h-
MOTHER!
WHAT DO
I DO NOW!
The Picture
With All The
Hilarious
Answers ...
Mother
DIDN'T
TELL ME
DOROTHY
McGUIRE
WILLIAM
LUNDIGAN
with JUNE HAVOC
Oh-h-h-h-
MOTHER!
WHAT DO
I DO NOW!
DIDN'T TELL ME
EXTRA SPECIAL In the Fox Movietone News... LAWRENCE"I Am An American Day" Celebration.
ALSO Basketball Headliners CARTOON
Continuous Shows Daily——Box Office Opens 12:45
Granada PHONE 946
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 5. 1934
SPOTLIGHT on SPORTS
Bv BOB NELSON
If you like your football along the old-fashioned, tough, rough, sock'em variety we highly recommend you attend the third annual spring intra-squad game Saturday afternoon at Memorial stadium. We encourage all of the quality of scoring and all the thrills that go along with a highly spirited football game.
This year's spring practice sessions have been highlighted by plenty of competition at all positions and have provided extra hustle, spirit, and desire to make the fall roster. . . In fact, the competition for starting positions has been so keen that it has often changed from day to day. . . and don't be too surprised if K.U.'s traveling squad of 35 players contains as many as 20 sopho-rores in 1950. . .
In Charlie Hoag, Kansas' sophomore-to-be running wizard, the Jay Hawkers probably have as good a running prospect as the Big Seven has seen in many a moon. . .
The 1950 Jayhawker football team will be manned by sophomores at several key positions. . Like the 1950 basketball team, this young, but willing club should show steady improvement all along the way and be mighty tough by the time they collide with the Missouri Tigers in the season's final game at Columbia, Nov. 23. . .
In fact, we think it is quite possible that our Jayhawkers will be far enough along to give the Oklahoma Sooners a mighty busy afternoon when the teams meet here, Nov. 11. Who knows, maybe the Sooners' win streak will still be intact and Coach Sikes' club will have the opportunity of trying to break the long streak, which now numbers 21 games. . .
Regardless, you'd better try to see Saturday's game and get a glimpse of what we think will be a mighty cassy grid machine. . . .
Coach Bill Hogan's baseball team joins a two-game series with Nebraska at Lincoln this afternoon. Kansas, with a 3-3 record in conference play, needs both games or at least a split to stay in the thick of the title race, as it still has the tough part of its schedule ahead of them.
Kansas opens a two-game series here against Iowa, State, Monday, May 8. Considering the adverse weather conditions that confronted K.U. this spring, we think Coach Hogan and his players have done a fine job.
FOOTBALL
CHARLIE HOAG, t r i p l e threat sophomore left halfback, is expected to pace the Reds' offense in Saturday's intra-squad game. He is rated as K.U.'s No. 2 passer and is at his best on the run or pass options that made Ray Evans, former all-American, so famous. Hoag also ranks high as a punter and will do the kicking for the Reds.
Sikes Will Display '50 Talent In Intra-Squad Game Saturday
Probable Starters
| Reds | | Whites |
|---|
| 81 | Lyn Smith | 183 LE 185 | Buss Frasier 80 |
| 75 | Bob Talkington | 218 LT 212 | S. P. Garnett 70 |
| 68 | Art Spratt | 208 LG 181 | Jack Luschen 66 |
| 53 | Wint Winter | 190 C 194 | Merlin Gish 50 |
| 74 | Dolph Simons | 191 RG 192 | George Abel 61 |
| 73 | Mike McCormack | 228 RT 207 | George Mrkonic 79 |
| 87 | Bill Schaake | 197 RE 180 | Charles O'Neal 84 |
| 12 | Jerry Bogue | 178 QB 195 | Chet Strechlow 14 |
| 21 | Charlie Hoag | 185 LH 167 | Dean Wells 23 |
| 43 | Hal Cleavinger | 183 RH 179 | Wade Stinson 22 |
| 37 | Galen Fiss | 205 FE 185 | John Amberg 61 |
C
By BOB NELSON
Jayhawker football fans will get a pre-view of Coach J. V. Sikes' 1950 football team at 2 p.m. Saturday at Memorial stadium where the Reds and Whites will clash in the third annual spring intra-squad game. The game should help to indicate the role Kansas will play in the 1950 Big Seven conference race.
Sophomores Key To 1950 Success
J. V. SIKES, HEAD FOOTBALL COACH, is giving the Jayhawkers' 1950 co-captains, Mike McCormack (left), and John Amberg, last minute instructions concerning the third annual intra-squad spring football game to be played Saturday. McCormack, a hard charging 228-pound tackle, will play for the Reds. Amberg, a versatile back, will add offensive strength to the Whites' attack with his pile driving tactics from his fullback spot.
Eleven freshmen will be in the starting line-ups and are expected to play prominent roles in the game. The Reds will have five first year men including two linemen and three backs while the Blues will start six freshmen, including five linemen.
If the Jayhawkers are to be 1950 title contenders, several key positions must be capably manned by sophomores this fall. Out of 67 players listed for Saturday's game, 41 have never played a minute of college ball.
Co-capain, Mike McCormack and Bob Talkington will start at the tackle spots Opening at right guard by Leoph Sims, one of K.U.'s side allies, or on the other side will be sophomore Art Spratt a 208-pound converted tackle.
In the Reds' starting line will be five lettermen and two sophomores, Lynn Smith and Bill Schaake, ends, who will probably gain first team offensive births this year, will start for the Reds.
For the Reds, the starting backfield will have three players that helped K.U.'s undefeated 1949 frsh club to one of its best years in the history of the school.
Charlie Hoag, triple threat left half, is expected to pace the Reds' attack with his fine running and better than average passing. Right half Hal Cleveringer and fullback Galen Fiss round out the Reds' backfield.
Students will be admitted free to the intra-squad game upon presenting their identification cards. General admission will be $1 for adults and 50 cents for high school and grade school students.
Directing the play of the Red team will be Jerry Bogue, quarterback, and the Jayhawkers' No. 1 passer. His passing has been below par this spring, but his running off the T has shown improvement.
At center, Kansas' chief problem, Wint Winter will open for the Reds. Graduated from K.U.S. 1949 team are centers Roland Ellis, Bob Drumm, and Howard Teacher. In fact, there
Students will be admitted free
The Whites' line is expected to give the offensive minded Red club a severe test. Ends Buzz Frasier and Charles O'Neal provide good defense at the terminals. The tackle spots are in the capable hands of two players who like their football rough and tough. S. P. Garnett, 212-pound senior, is a tireless defender and has been an improved blocker during spring drills.
is not a single center with a minute of varsity experience to replace them.
The Whites will start six sophomores with all but one in the front line. Chet Strelow, a 195-pound sophomore, will call the plays. Dean Wells and Wade Stinson, a pair of niffy runners and good defenders, will get the call at the halfback spots. Co-capt. John Amberg will start at full.
George Mrkonic, who doubles as a punter, shows much promise and is big, fast, and owns a quick start. The guards are two sophomores, Jack Luschen and George Albe all, state high school selections in 1948. Luschen, a 181-pounder, is one of the best Jayhawkers' linebackers, despite his size.
Merlin Gish, one of four sophomores battling for the KU, pivot spot, is regarded as one of the team's best linebackers and may play most of the defense. The play of Gish, Luschen, and Fiss will definitely improve the linebacking department that hurt Kansas so often in 1949.
Carl Sandefur, lettered tackle-end; Bill Macle, lettered fullback converted to guard; and Henry Lamping, lettered halfback, are playing on the Varsity baseball team.
1950 Jayhawker Football Schedule
Kansas will play a 10-game football schedule in 1950 opening at home against the Texas Christian university Horned Frogs, Sept. 23. The Jayhawkers will play five games at home and five away from home.
Two new opponents have been added to the schedule. They are the University of Utah, and Denver university, both games away from place George Washington university and the University of Arizona.
In the oenener, Coach J. V. Sikes' club will be seeking victory No. 1 against T.C.U. In six previous meetings, the Horned Frogs have won five and two ended in scoreless ties.
Here is the 1950 schedule:
Sept. 23 — Texas Christian at LAWRENCE
Sept. 29 — Denver at Denver (night)
Oct. 7—Colorado at LAWRENCE*
Oct. 14—Iowa State at Ames*
Oct. 21—Oklahoma A. and M. at LAWRENCE
Oct. 28—Nebraska at LAWRENCE (Homecomence)*
Nov. 4-Utah at Salt Lake City
Nov. 11-Oklahoma at LAWRENCE*
Nov. 18—Kansas State at Manhattan*
Nov. 23—Missouri at Columbia*
*Big Seven conference games
Red Reserves
Jersey
No. Wt. Pos
10 Don Wilson 170 QB
11 Archie Unruh 161 QB
24 Pat Murphy 177 HB
30 Bill Rinehard 175 FB
31 Bob Brandeberry 187 FB
40 Clarence Cain 176 HB
45 Don Clement 176 HB
52 Harold Stroud 210 C
53 Allen Ditzen 172 C
54 Doug Wall 193 C
60 Bob Zahner 196 G
62 George Kennard 201 G
64 John Idoux 197 G
65 Ron Hammel 181 G
76 Frank Austin 190 T
77 Phil Massey 200 T
78 Jasper Mirabile 233 T
79 Bill Schaben 196 T
80 Don Jesse 180 E
84 Bob Mayer 190 E
86 Ray Pierson 190 E
89 Duane Unruh 173 E
Coaches
Pop Werner and Wayne Replogle
White Reserves
Jersey No. Wt. Pos
11 Fox Cashell 170 QB
15 Jack Rodgers 175 QB
24 Dave Wilson 173 HB
31 Gene Cox 180 FB
34 Bud Laugblin 200 FB
34 Bud Laugblin 200 FB
44 Bob Raymer 165 HB
44 Bob McMullen 175 HB
48 Norman Steanson 160 HB
51 Clay Roberts 190 C
53 Ray Sifers 210 C
60 Dick Rossman 188 G
62 Ralph Correll 205 G
63 Tom Overman 197 G
64 Don Beyer 190 G
65 Ron White 185 G
71 Bernard Jones 190 T
72 Tom Nelson 210 T
73 Jack Allen 203 T
76 Virgil Wenger 204 T
81 John Huber 165 E
82 Aubrey Linville 180 E
86 Marvin Rengel 183 E
Cliff Kimsey and Don Fambrough
Orbon Tice, lettered end. Jim Griffith and Ron Mercer, returning squadmen at tackle, will miss the game because of a field trip Saturday.
Oliver Spencer, 218-pound freshman guard, will miss the game because of a knee injury. Spencer shows promise and should help the defense.
23
GEORGE MRKONIC. hardcharging 207 pound tackle, is one of five sophomore linemen expected to start for the Whites.
Sikes Loses 16 Lettermen
Coach J. V. Sikes faces major problems in rebuilding the 1950 grid machine due to the loss of 16 lettermen.
Loss of key linemen offers the greatest concern. Both starting guards, Dick Tomlinson and Carl Ellis, are missing. Center is hardest hit having lost Bob Drumm, Roland Eilerts, and Howard Fischer. No experienced centers are available.
The loss of Dick Gilman, ace passer, will leave Kansas with an air threat from far out. Ken Morrow, quarterback, is also missing.
In the backfield, halfbacks Bud French, Forrest Griffith, Cliff McDonald, Willie Modricn, and fullback Floyd Temple, will be graduated.
Other losses include ends Darell and Delvin Norris, tackle Wally Rouse, and guard Kent Thomas.
DON FAMBROUGH, head freshman coach, and Cliff Kimsey, backfield coach, will coach the Whites. Fambrough, who cocaptained K.U.'s 1948 Orange bowl team, was one of the Big Seven's top lineemen earning all-conference honors as a guard in 1946 and 1947. In 1949, his first year as freshman coach, his team rolled over Kansas State 25 to 6 and Missouri 12 to 7 to rank as one of the best troop clubs in K.U.'s history.
Nassau Beach hockey club, 12345
Topeka, Ks.
18 Winners Discover Abigail Is A Walrus
"Abigail," the objective of a treasure hunt which started 11 days ago, was found in Dyche Museum by Peggy Chambers, fine arts junior. Abigail is a huge stuffed walrus.
Miss Chambers was awarded at portable radio, first prize, by the Inter-ward council of Wards T and P-Z, who sponsored the hunt for everyone on the campus.
Donald Strike, College freshman,
was awarded a record album, second
prize; John S. Schmidt, education
senior, a picture album, third prize;
Edwin A. Stene, College freshman,
a coffee maker, fourth prize; Darrell
Brown, business senior, a lamp, fifth
prize; and Barbara Altis, College
senior, a carton of light bulbs, 18th
prize.
The following received two free passes to the Granada and Pattee theaters for prizes six through 17: Thomas R. Oglevie, College senior; James Burton, education senior; Jeanne Chambers, and Betty Schoewe, fine arts seniors; George Laubur, Gerald Oglevie, and John Sambol, College juniors; Charles Rice, fine arts junior; Richard Hetschel, College sophomore; John Perdew, education sophomore; Donna Dudley, College freshman; and Russell Short, education freshman.
The hunt ended May 5 after the University Daily Kansan was distributed on the campus. The Kansan contained the last clue. About 550 students scrambled to the booth in the Union lounge where the prizes were being displayed to turn in their answares. Four hundred students turned in the answer, "seal." Other guesses were the clock in Bailey, the clock in the Union lobby,
JEFFREY C. HANKS
ISA Plans Activities For 1950-51 Calendar
A Bum's ball, watermelon feed, Faculty follies, President's dinner and winter and spring formals will be included on the Independent Students' association social calendar for the 1950-51 school year
Activities for the coming year were planned at a joint retreat of the I.S.A. council and ward officers May 6 at Lone Star lake.
and the "Pioneer." The first 18 students to turn in the right name of the mysterious something won the prizes.
Keith Kelson, research associate, admires Abigail, the prize-winning walrus of the Interward council treasure hunt.
LSA. cohabit:
An evaluation report on the ward system was made at the Retreat by Ralph Weicham, College freshman. Social events sponsored by the wards to date include a dinner dance, Lakeview School House party, semi-formal dance, hour dances, and the treasure hunt for "Abigail". More than 300 entries were received within an hour and a half after the last clue was given.
Donald Giffin, College junior, reported on the Leadership Training program sponsored for wards T and PZ. Planning social engagements wes discussed by Marie Schumacher, education junior.
Winners of the first five prizes and of the carton of light bulbs may get their awards at the display case in the Union lobby any time. The movie passes will be mailed to the winners.
Fall orientation week will open with an LSA. coke party, a Barn dance, and Apple Polishin' parties. A new booklet for prospective association members to be completed in June or July will furnish information on dormitories, social life, LSA. and wards, and pictures of special events at the University. The booklet will be sent to incoming students. Subscriptions to Smoke Signal, the national magazine of Independent students, will be encouraged.
The completion of the wards' constitution was reported and the document put up for ratification Monday in the I.S.A. council meeting. The constitution provides for an Inter-Ward council consisting of one representative from each of five wards to be set up and one member from the I.S.A. Officers are to be a president, vice-president, secretary, social chairman, and business manager. The business manager is appointed by the I.S.A. council while other officers are elected by the I.W.C. The chairman of the I.W.C. is to be a permanent member of the I.S.A. council.
German Club Will Hold Picnic
The German club will hold its annual picnic at 6:30 p.m. Friday, May 12, at Potter lake, William Schwartz, president of the club, announced Thursday.
Be Neighborly, Torrey Urges US
American convictions, faith and program must match those of the Communist if subtle, insidious Communistic propaganda is to be combated in the United States, Dr. Reuben A. Torrey, Jr., field administrator of the Presbyterian church in China told Westminster fellowship Sunday.
"Communist propaganda is being brought to bear on educational institutions in this country" he pointed out. Dr. Torrey, who has lived and worked more than 30 years in China, recalled that "advance agents" enrolled in schools there as regular students. These well-trained, clever agents organized Chinese students who believed they were the instigators of a worthy student movement. Dr. Torrey continued.
Seniors 'Dudish' Tomorrow
What happens in China vitally affects each one of us, the missionary pointed out. "We are more than neighbors, we are brothers," Dr. Torrey explained.
"We doe it," meaning "we're in the last lap now," or "it's all over but the shouting," will be the theme of the day.
Classes will be officially suspended at 3 p.m. Tuesday for graduating seniors to begin to celebrate Senior Class day.
Senior "duedes" will wear plaid shirts, blue jeans, and boy cowboys to the celebration's events. A parade of the "duedes" will begin at 3 p.m. at the west end of Jayhawk drive (the circle) and end on the terrace of the Union building. Student specialty acts will be given from then until 4:30 p.m. Jack Tusher, fine arts senior, is in charge of the program.
Following the entertainment, the seniors will go to Potter lake to see
whether the lawyers or the engineers carry the most weight at the University. From opposite sides of the lake, 3000 pounds of lawyers will wage a tug-of-war against 3000 pounds of engineers.
The dunking will be followed by an old-fashioned barbecue on the west side of the lake. While the seniors eat, they will be entertained by a contest in which lady barbers will shave the faces of senior men. Spoons will be substituted for razors. A barbershop quartet will provide background music for the contest.
UNIVERSITY DAILY
47th Year
No.142
James Hawes, fine arts senior, will present an original skit, and Heywood Davis and Win Kooper. College sophomores, will sing and play for guitar and accordion arrangements of western ballads. Mary Helen Baker, fine arts senior, is in charge of the program.
The combined Men's and Women's Glee clubs will sing a concert at 8 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium.
The Galway Piper" (arranged by Fletcher), "Sea Birds" (Blanchoard), "O Lovely May" (German), "Music, When Soft Voices Die" (Joseph Clokey), and "Row, Row, Row Your Boat" (arranged by Harry Wilson) by the Women's Glee club.
Monday, May 8, 1950
The 100-voice chorus is directed by Gerald Carney, assistant professor of music education, and Miss Irene Feabody, associate professor of voice.
Lawrence, Kansas
"The Erie Canal" (Scott), "Visions" (Sjoberg-Balog-Himboni), and "Dry Bones" (Gearhart), by the Men's Glee club.
The program: "Onward, Spirit of Kansas," (Laffer); and "We Are Brave Matadors," from "La Traviata" (Verdi) by the Combined Glee clubs.
hansan
by the World.
"Country Style" (James Van Heusen), and "Crimson and the Blue," by the combined Glee clubs.
Members of the Class Day committee are: Mary Helen Baker, fine arts senior, chairman; Marian Rippeau, Edith Malott, V. Hardy Scheuerman, and Charles Hoffhaus, College seniors; Stan England, Peggy Baker, and Elmer Dougherty, engineering seniors; Grace Gwinner, education senior; and Jack Tusher, fine arts senior.
"Somber Woods" (Lully-Howorth), and "Nymphs and Fawns" (Bemberg-Matthews), by the Women's Glee club.
Both clubs have appeared at Winter veterans hospital in Topeka, as well as at convocation and vesper services.
"Forever Free" (Lefebre), "How Happy Must He Be" (Bach), "Let M Wander Not Unseen" (Handel-Howorth), by the Men's Glee club
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Western Civ Final To Be Saturday
Glee Clubs Will Sing Tonight
The final exam in Western Civilization will be given Saturday, May 13, at 1:30 p.m. All students will take the exam at this time.
Place of the examination will be assigned to the students when they register at the Western Civilization office. Registration will end Tuesday.
Lawson Says Department Files Is Test Solution
Parade Planned For Armed Forces Day
At 2:30 p.m. the three branches of the National Military establishment which are represented at the University by the R.O.T.C. units, will hold a parade at which honor students will be presented awards.
Armed Forces day Saturday, May 20 will be observed at the University with a full dress parade, presentation of honors and a military science open house.
Lawrence civic clubs and individual merchants have advised Capt. William R. Terrell, professor of naval science, that they will serve on the Armed Forces day committee which will plan week-long activities.
From 1:15 p.m. to 5:30 p.m., the military science department will hold open house in the Military Science building. Exhibits there will include navy armament and electronic displays, and air force displays.
A file of past examinations set up in each department and available to all students was proposed today by Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College, as a solution to the present testing system at the University.
The parade, which will be held on field five of the intramural grounds south of Robinson annex, is expected to be viewed by Gov. Frank Carlson and the Board of Regents.
Kelly Appointed Chairman Of NSA Membership Group
Charles Kelly, engineering junior, was appointed chairman of the membership committee of the Negro Student association recently.
The N.S.A. is planning a membership drive for the 1950-51 school year. Chairmen of other committees are: Jesse Milan, social committee, and Earl Burton, program committee.
Original Costumes Made For Musical
For the 1950 "College Daze" more than 150 yards of theatrical fabrics was purchased for the women's costumes alone. The dance hall dresses were made from many different materials including satin, marquisette, jewel cloth, net, and velvet, as well as trimmings of artificial flowers, sequins, feathers, and pompons.
Designing and making 25 costumes for "West of Abilene," the all student musical, was exciting work, said Barbara Boling, costume director.
This is how Miss Boling went to work on the costuming. Seated with a large catalog of theatrical materials before her, she figured out how to purchase the best fabrics for the least money. Costuming for the
show ran somewhat over $150, she said.
Miss Boling carefully planned what each dance hall girl would wear only to find that when the materials arrived they often didn't look well with a girl's hair or complexion.
"A big disaster came when I ordered a beautiful turquoise blue marquisette and got the most insipid green I have ever seen," she exclaimed.
The costume director had many a headache before she finally found
A simple basic pattern consisting of a strapless balerina length formal with a full skirt was used for all the dance hall dresses. Emauol Watkins, fine arts sophomore, designed the dance hall dresses to give each a distinctive appearance. James Hawes, the male lead, designed all his own costumes.
Each night at rehearsal the women in the cast were seen sewing seams or tacking flowers on their costumes. When opening night arrived for "West of Abilene" May 2, 25 different costumes added color to the musical.
attractive trimming to make the strange shade blend well with the other costumes.
Under the present system, students living in organized houses have at their disposal files on past examinations given in different departments and schools of the University. Independent students do not have access to such files and the students living in organized houses have a definite advantage where tests are concerned.
Recently at a joint meeting of the faculty and student-councils at Kansas State college a committee was organized to study methods of setting up a file on past examinations. This file will be for the use of any student who wishes to review for exams.
Some students and faculty believe such a system would prevent instructors from using the same tests year after year and would be fairer to students who do not already have access to such files.
Commenting on a similar situation at K.U., Dean Lawson said "It's easy to say something ought to be done, but to be faced with the task of doing it is something entirely different." The problem has been placed before meetings of the faculty many times but no definite action has been taken.
Concerning the matters of instructors using the same tests repeatedly, Dean Lawson said many complaints have been registered about such incidents but no definite proof has been offered. "You can't fix trouble in general," he said. "You have to fix trouble where trouble is. Unless we know exactly where these incidents occur, we cannot do anything to remedy the situation."
Dean Lawson believes a central file is not the answer, but, instead, a file kept in the faculty office of each department where any student who wished to do so could review the exams. If a central file was set up it would be necessary to hire a librarian to check the exams out to students, otherwise the file would soon disappear.
The dean firmly believes it is a mark of laziness on the part of the instructor not to make up a new test each time, and such things lower the prestige of the University. "I hear many rumors that such things are being done." Dean Lawson said, "but I have no proof and I've never known a professor who would admit using the same test over again."
Some departments of the College say they have such files but report the number of students who use them are relatively few and the majority of them want to use the file during the two or three weeks prior to the final examination.
THE WEATHER
KANSAS—Cloudy, thundershowers with severe local windstorms this afternoon and tonight except in extreme northwest.
12
FAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 8, 1950
Official Bulletin
Monday, May 8.
Students planning to take Western Civilization examination Saturday, May 13, 1:30 to 5 p.m., must register at Western Civilization office by Tuesday. The place of examination will be assigned at time of registration. Examination admittance card received at Western Civilization office must be presented at examination.
Mathematical colloquium. 5 p.m. today. 203 Strong hall. Professor S Chowla. "Difference Equations."
Y. W.C.A. members invited by Y.M.C.A. to see movies of Estes "Y" camp, 4 p.m. Tuesday, Union.
Important Red Pepper meeting,
7.30 p.m. Thursday, 103 Strong hall.
Le Cercle Francais, 5 p.m. jeudi
11 mai, moins le quart chez made-
moiselle Crumineur, 920 Missouri.
Programme et pique-nique; cotisation,
vingt "cents" américains.
Spanish movie, "Los Heroes del Barrio," sponsored by department of romance languages and literatures, 2 p.m. and 4 p.M., Friday, Fraser theater. English sub-titles. Public invited.
Ward P and Z meeting, 6:30 to night, 206 Fraser hall.
Quill club, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
East room, Union.
Pre-Nursing club elections, 4 p.m.
Tuesday, Dining room, Fraser hall.
KU Alumni Will Elect
More than 30,000 ballots for the election of new Alumni association officers were sent out by the Alumni association office Thursday. Ballots will be received by University alumni in all states and many foreign nations.
Nominees for Alumni offices are:
Crimson ticket; Kenneth Spencer;
"26, Kansas City, Kan, president; Dr.
Charles H. Green, vice-president;
Mrs. Joe R. Campbell, Mrs. John R.
Lauterbach, 22, Pratt, and August
Lawterbach, 23, Colby, directors.
Blue ticket; Dolph Simons, '25,
Lawrence president; Paul J. Adam,
'33, Kansas City, vice-president; Mrs.
Ralph T. O'Neill, Topeka, and Henry
Bubb, Topeka '28, directors.
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.
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Gift Shop Displays Native Ceramics
Displays of ceramics made of native Kansas clays by two University graduates are now being shown at the Eldridge Gift shop.
The graduates are Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Bowman of Topeka who both taught at K.U. for one year after they graduated. Mr. Bowman received his degree in metallurgy in '49 and Mrs. Bowman in fine arts in '48.
The Bowmans have their own ceramics plant in Topeka and have had as many as eight persons working for them. They have developed their glaze and clay body formula. They use their own production ideas. Representatives of the company are in merchandise marts in
Chicago, New York, San Francisco,
Dalas, and Kansas, City, Mo.
In the display are pipe smoker's sets, vases, a set of Jayhawks, salt and pepper shakers, a buffet style serving set, vitreous oven ware, and canvas claws.
The ceramics were put on the market around Christmas.
Mrs. Bowman was an instructor in design after her graduation at K. U. and Mr. Bowman after his graduation was an assistant in mining engineering and a research assistant part of the time.
Bailey Chemical laboratories was the eighth building on the campus. It cost about $7,000 to build.
Seminar To Be Held In June
The School of Business faculty has been invited to conduct a seminar on June 8 at Fort Leavenworth, Kan. The seminar will be for students at the army staff college. University faculty members hold the seminar annually.
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COLLEGE OF STUDENTS
Major Nathan Adams, Auburn'40 Personnel Manager, U.S. Air Force
U.S.
FILM NO. 3897 THE TWO PIECE FUNNY FILMS BY MAYBELLE CATHERINE BECKHAM AND JIM RICHARDSON
A top scholar and ROTC Honor Graduate,
Cadet L. Col. Nathan Adams enjoyed
his final military ball in 1940, soon left
for Fort Sill's Field Artillery School.
08
Following a three month course, Lt. Adams decided the Air Force was the place for him. He applied for pilot training, was accepted, proceeded to Maxwell Field.
AIRCRAFT
TOWARDS THE STATION.
He won his wings and reported to the 36th Fighter Group in Puerto Rico. The group soon returned to the States, giving Adams a chance to marry his college sweetheart.
Within months Adams was overseas, flying "rhubars" (missions against enemy transport). He flew 63 P-47 missions within seven months, returned to the States late in 1944 for rest and recuperation.
SAMUEL BROADWAY
V-J Day came, and Adams decided to make the service a career. He choose personnel work as his career field, was assistant principal of the school at Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia.
A. A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
Now a regular Air Force Major, he heads a 32-man section at Bolling Air Force Base. He advises his Commanding Officer on selection, assignment and promotion of all officers and airmen in the command.
AIRLINE MARKETING
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.
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werden
MONDAY, MAY 8, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
1. What is the primary function of a filter?
2. How does the filter operate?
3. Why is it important to have filters in a system?
4. What are some common types of filters used in audio systems?
University Daily Kansan Presents—
There She Is As Big As Life- Bernie Read On Television
That's who it is all right. There she is as big as life. It's Bernadine Read, fine arts senior, who regularly appears on the WDAF television screen with a program one-half her own.
The other half belongs to Don Price, former student, whose call for a "good girl vocalist" was answered by the pert blond soprano. The program, called "Let's Rehearse," is scheduled for 9 to 9:30 p.m. each Friday.
Singing on television thus adds one more activity to capable Bernie Read's list of accomplishments during her four years at the University. Take her word for it, every day has been crammed full. One afternoon not long ago, she re-
I
Bernadine Read
heared for her senior recital, went to Kansas City for her TV program, and flew back to the campus to sing at a dance with Clyde Bysom's band.
band.
Strangely enough, Bernie didn't start out to be a singer. She had taken piano lessons since she was five, had won prizes at contests, and played for every event that came along. She didn't begin to study voice, until her senior year at Baxter Springs high school. That year, ironically, she won first rating in voice at a district music contest, and a No. 2 award in piano.
Still convinced that the piano was her "first love," Bernie enrolled as a piano major at the University in 1947. After two years, she changed her major to voice. Now she seems to be closer to her ambition of doing permanent radio and television work.
At the University her teachers have been Mrs. Marie Wilkins, instructor in voice, and Reinhold Schmidt, associate professor of voice. In the regular course of study, students learn Italian and old English repertoire the first year, German the second, French the third, and their choice of those numbers for the fourth year.
In a way, Bernie's evolution might also be termed from "shouting to singing." She was a cheerleader in high school and a University cheerleader for two years. Her memories of the 1948 Orange Bowl game are as vivid as if they had happened yesterday; "Gee, I'm still tired from running two and a half miles in the New Year's Eve parade". She remembers how the cheerleaders pooled their money, rented a car, and drove around Miami stirring up KU. spirit... there was a friendly, colorful crowd at the game... a photographer took a picture of her and Norval Osborn, another cheerleader, which was used in advertisements in several national magazines.
and singing in College Daze have also helped to keep her occupied.
With her senior recital out of the way and graduation "fairly certain," Bernie says she may have time for her favorite diversion, playing bridge.
also helped to keep her occupant. Bernie recalled an incident which occurred in 1948, when she sang the role of "Peep-bo" in the K.U.Light Opera guild's production of "The Mikado." As a joke, she wore Peep-bo's black wig to dinner at the Tri Delt house. To her surprise, no one recognized her. They wondered whose guest she was—until she took off her wig.
The name of the little gal with the charming smile and the "way about her" has been on many a campus roster. She was secretary of the junior class, president of Sigma Alpha Iota, honorary music sorority, and is a member of Mortar board. Being a member of A Cappella choir, Union activities, song leader of her sorority, Delta Delta Delta,
Acacia Dance Guests
In 1830, the first locomotive built in the United States to pull passengers puffed 13 miles over the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. It weighed six tons and was called the Tom Thumb.
Acacia fraternity recently held its annual spring formal. Guests included Ia Beile Babodie, Clara Ethel Childers, Elda Lou Phillips, Elose Shenk, Pat Hinde, Ruth Allen, Lois Etherington, Laura Belle Overley, Hanna McDowell, Jean McGinnis, Barbara Marunga, Barbara Lameauxre, Mildred Rodgers, Dorris Jo Williams, Dorothy Watson.
Nancy Mitchell, Mary Newton,
Barbara Donovan, Eloise Diabal,
Marilyn Wisdom, Jane Sullivan,
Lura Stouder, Barbara Sells, Jamie
Estlack, Shirley Nelson, Barbara
Burnham, Marilyn Craig, Betty Jean
Waters, Louise Cornelison, Dorothy
Jones.
Helen Poston, Jean Quisenberry, Emma Jean Sands, Ellen Osborn, Joyce Jones, Mary Hercules, Frieda Sahm, Dorothy Twente, Rosalee R. Jones, Virginia Kenney, Mona Bush, Harriet Flood, Harriet Graves, Doris Young, Beverly Hexum
Marlene Earp, Jacque Cook, Betty Byam, Lo Ree Waterson, Ann Carinder, Sally Sherwood, Mary Anne Forman.
Fouhman.
Chaperons were Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Haysinger, Mr. and Mrs. Max
Fessler, and Mrs. T. L. Collier.
High Cost Of Pepper Not To Be Sneezed At Wartime Casualty Still On Shortage List
The high cost of pepper—the world's most popular spice—is not to be sneezed at. Recently quoted in U.S. wholesale markets at $1.45 a pound, compared with a 1939 low of between three and four cents a pound, this wartime casualty of seasoning is still short on import lists.
The Netherlands Indies (now the Republic of Indonesia) accounted for about 90 per cent of the total pepper supply before World War II, notes the National Geographic society. Most of the pepper vines were concentrated on the hot, steaming isles of Sumatra, Java, and Bangka, the latter making a speciality of white pepper.
gle for independence continued to delay the pepper industry's revival. And even in peace, reestablishment of the traffic is expected to take time, since new plants require two to three years for the first yield of berries, and seven and eight years for full bearing.
The East Indies producers were cut off from usual markets when the Japanese overran this territory in 1942, substituted other crops for pepper, and allowed the jungle to reclaim many of the vines. After the war, Indonesia's strug-
Meantime, southern India has moved up to first place as the world's pepper bin, although its supply, plus that of neighboring tropical areas, is still below demand. The U.S. market alone normally consumes some 30 to 40 million pounds annually.
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Organized Houses Choose Officers, Pledges
A D Pi Pledges
Pledging of Joanne Stone of Cedar Vale and Barbara Findley of Osawatomy has been announced by Alpha Delta Pi sorority.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Oread Hall Election
Ed Perkins has been elected president of Oread hall for the fall semester. Other officers will be: David Heilman, vice-president; Warren Murray, secretary; and Keaton Duckworth, treasurer.
SCHREIBER
Currently featured with the VARSITY CREW ORCHESTRA of Clyde Bysom and Jim McCaig are the VARSITONES.
Pictured from left to right are: Bob Cooper, Bernie Read, Ben Kamprath, and Todd Seymour.
The group recently completed a successful WDAF television date, combining danceable music with the accent on swing.
For information about the VARSITY CREW ORCHES TRA call Leonard Beck 3021.
901 Mass.
Weaver
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 8, 1950
Broady Saves Close Meet For Kansas
With discus thrower B o b Broady saving the day, Kansas edged out Kansas State 66 to 65 in a dual track meet at Manhattan Saturday. In a near replica of the K.U.-Nebraska dual earlier this season, the Jayhawkers came from behind when they'd apparently lost the meet.
Faubion was the surprise of the day, breaking up the heralded duel between Wildcat Earl Elliott and Jayhawker Jack Greenwood. Elliott finished second and Greenwood third. However, the Kansas ace came through in the low hurdles to top both of the K-State runners.
Marking up new records for the Wildcats were Prather in the disc, Herb Hoskins in the broad jump, and Hi Faubion in the high hurdles.
Final event to be completed was the discus throw. With Rollin Prather of K-State holding down first in the event and Bob Kline of Kansas—making his first start this season—in second place, the winner of third place would decide the meet in favor of his team. Broady came through on his third and last throw for the winning point.
With good weather helping out, the thinladders romped to six new meet records and one new K.U. school record. Kansas distance aces All-American Pat Bowers, Capt Bob Karnes, and sophomore sensation Herb Semper got new marks in their respective specialties in the 880-yard, mile, and two-mile runs. Semper, for the second time this year, toppled the school mark in the two-mile.
Quite surprisingly the Ward Haylett-coached Kansas State team won nine of the 15 first places to indicate they may be a real threat to win the Big Seven title come May 20. K.J. preserved the victory with plenty of second and third places, sweeping the 880 and mile.
Saturday the Jayhawkers meet the ever-powerful Missouri Tigers, early
favorites to repeat as conference champions this season.
The Summary:
The Summary.
Kansas 66, Kansas State 65
Kansas 66, Kansas State 65.
Mile run: Won by Bob Karnes, KU
2, Pat Bowers, KU; 3, Dave Breidenham,
KU. KU: 4.16.5. New meet record, Old
record of 4:17.4 by Glenn Cunningham,
KU, in 1933.
440-yard dash: Won by Don Thomas, KSC; 2, Jim Dinsmore, KU; 3, John Quam, KSC. :50.2.
100-yard dash: Won by Lod Trollo, KSC; 2, Bob Devinney, KU; 3, Rod McClay, KSC. :9.8.
High hurdles: Won by Hi Faibion, KSC; 2, Earl Elliott, KSC; 3, Jack Greenwood, KU. :14.6. New meet record. Old record of :14.9 by Dick Hotchkiss, KSU. :1539.
880-yard run: Won by Bowers, KU;
2, Karnes, KU; 3, Dave Fisher, KU;
1:55.2. New meet record. Old record of 1:55.4 by Bowers in 1949.
220-yard dash: Won by Devinney,
KU; 2, Troilo, KSC; 3, Emil Schutzel,
KU.; 22.0.
Two mile run; Won by Herb Semper, KU; 2, Cliff Abel, KU; 3, Don Thurlow, KSC. 9:21.3. New meet and school records, Old meet records of 9:39.1 by Don Landon, KSC, in 1934. Old school record of 9:23.4 by Semper in 1950.
Low hurdles: Won by Greenwood, KU; 2, Faubion, KC; 3, Elliott, KSC. 24.6.
High jump: Won by Virgil Severnus, KSC, 6-3%; 2; Bill Richardson, KU, 6-1%; 3; Ted Maupin, KSC, 6-3%.
Pole vault: Won by Dean Nunn,
KSC, 12-4; 2, Jim Floyd, KU, 12-0;
3, McClay, KSC, 11-6.
Javelin throw: Won by Don Frazier, KSC, 189-0; 2, Bob Drumm, KU, 186-7; 3, Jim Potts, KU, 174-6%.
Shot put: Won by Rollin Prather, KSC, 49-9½¹; 2. Ed Lee, KU, 44-11¼¹; 3. Dave Berry, KVC, 42-5¼¹.
Disus throw: Won by Prather,
KSC, 158-4$^{3}$; 2. Bock Kline, KU, 133-
10$^{1}$; 3. Bob Broady, KU, 131-9. New
Chemistry Professors Win
By JOHN McMILLION
The test tube wizards from the chemistry department blasted the Shakespearean authorities from the department of English Saturday afternoon 11 to 5 in a star-studded softball game. Jim "Home Run" Rogers was the big gun for the filter paper commandos as he blazed two homers and a single out in three trips to have a perfect day at the plate.
Bert Reynolds and John Patton combined their talents to limit the English profs to eight well spaced bingles. Reynolds went four innings and gave up five hits while Patton
allowed only three in the three frames that he pitched.
Surprisingly enough, there were only four errors in the ball game. Although the outfielders gave an exhibition of the Spanish Fandango on every飞球, they always managed to get their glove between it and the ground.
For the losers little Herb Wilner went all the way. He stopped the acid eaters cold in the first but was touched for two runs in the second one in the third, three in the fourth, and five in the sixth.
AMAZING THING! By Cooper
SENSATIONAL NEW TING FOR FOOT ITCH
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COPRD. 1948 PHARMA GRATT CORR
meet record. Old record of 152-6 by Prather in 1949.
Broad jump: Won by Herb Hoskins, KSC, 25-23g; 2, Jim Danielson, KSC, 24-0; 3, Maupin, KSC, 21-9. New meet record. Old record of 24-34 by Hoskins in 1949.
Mile relay: Won by Kansas (Schutzel, John Stites, Dinsmore, and Devinney). 3:25.
Make your own air reservations NOW for returning home at end of school. ALL LINES - ALL TIMES Of course, no charge for our services. It's not too late for a European Tour. Vacation Tours Everywhere. Book Now.
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"My cigarette?
Camels,
of course!"
BLOUSE BY DESDA'S - JEWELRY BY BEE NORTO#1
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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 invitation due to smoking Camels!
Not one single case of throat irritation due to smoking Camels!
The fourth plays in the spring day after
the quarter Lyn S.
Both J. V. strong club for other's overshrew each time of 13 once he touched and 45 seconds later runs.
Coach provailed spring the best great to me. "It's hard to lack." The Werner rites first to a 28 looke set v. As display sophie sophie
M
中图社信息产业局
中图社信息产业局
MONDAY, MAY 8, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Three Touchdowns In 12 Plays Stun Whites, 34 To 28
By BOB NELSON
The Reds exploded for three fourth quarter touchdowns in 12 plays to defeat the Whites, 34 to 28, in the third annual intra-squad spring football game played Saturday afternoon at Memorial stadium. The winning touchdown came late in the fourth quarter on a pass from quarterback Jerry Bogue to end Lyn Smith that covered 52 yards.
Both teams showed Head Coach J. V. Sikes and some 4,500 fans a strong offensive display with each club finding it difficult to stop the other's ground attack. The running overshadowed the passing with each team completing only four out of 13 passes. Each eleven scored once by the aerial route.
The Reds first two fourth quarter touchdowns came on drives of 69 and 44 yards on three and five plays respectively. Halffall Hal Cleavier completed each drive with td. runs of 44 and 24 yards.
Coach Sikes expressed his approval of the game as being "highly pleased" and for the six-weeks of spring practice in general. He said the boys had worked hard this spring and that they showed a great competitive spirit and desire to make a fine showing this fall. "It's a young team, but they'll try hard to be great, even though they lack experience," he said.
The Red team, coached by Pop Werner and Wayne Replogle, entered the game as top heavy favorites but trailed throughout the first three quarters. The Whites held a 28 to 13 margin at halftime and looked well on their way to an upset victory over the Red eleven.
As expected, much of the offensive display was shown by freshman, or sophomores-to-be this fall. Four sophomore halfbacks on the Red
team accounted for 260 yards on 27 running plays, or an average of 9.7 yards a carry. Another sophomore, backlash Bob Brandeberry, picked up another 19 yards for the Reds on two carries.
The leading ground gainer for the game was halfback Charlie Hoag who gained 127 yards on 14 plays. Halfback Cleavinger scored two touchdowns and picked up 78 yards on six rushing plays for an average carry of 13 yards. The other Red halfbacks, Pat Murphy and Clarence Cain, reeled off 34 and 21 yards on four and three carries respectively.
Hoag scored the Reds' first t.d. on
The Statistics
| | R | W |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Total first downs | 12 | 18 |
| Rushing | 10 | 16 |
| Passing | 2 | 0 |
| Penalties | 0 | 2 |
| Net yds, rushing | 314 | 261 |
| Net yds, passing | 107 | 37 |
| Net total offense | 421 | 298 |
| Passes attempted | 13 | 13 |
| Passes completed | 4 | 4 |
| Passes intercepted by | 1 | 1 |
| Number punts | 1 | 0 |
| Punting average | 26 | 34 |
| Return of punts | 40 | 0 |
| Fumbles | 5 | 2 |
| Ball lost on fumbles | 5 | 2 |
| Number of penalties | 4 | 3 |
| Yards penalized | 25 | 55 |
Score by quarters:
Record 6 7 0 21 — 34
Whites 14 14 0 0 — 28
Reds scoring: Touchdowns—Hoag,
Cain, Clevering 2. and Smith.
Points after touchdown—Rinehart 4
(placements).
Whites scoring: Touchdowns — Linville, Stinson, McMullen, and Cashell. Points after touchdown—Cashell 4 (placements).
a beautiful 24-yard dash that found him running through most of the White team. The Reds' second touchdown came after big George Mrkonic failed to get a punt on a bad pass from center and the ball went to the Reds on the Whites' 45-yard line.
Five plays later Cain scored from the 1-foot line. Murphy picked up 24 and Cain 18 yards to move the ball into scoring position.
The Whites, coached by Cliff Kimsey and Don Fambrough, had three backs that stood out for their running. Fullback John Berg accounted for 85 yards on 15 carries while halfback Wade Stinson picked up 80 yards on the same number of trips. Another sophomore, Bob Raymer, looked impressive in lugging the ball 47 yards on nine carries.
Sophomore quarterbacks, Chet Strehlow and Fox Cashell, helped the White's cause along with good performances. Strehlow handled the ball well and completed one of three passes for a 22-yard touchdown to end Aubrey Linville, the game's first score.
Cashell scored on a 10-yard journey around left end late in the half for the White's fourth and final touchdown and a 27 to 13 lead. He followed by kicking his fourth straight placement to complete his team's scoring. His expert kicking gives K.U. two good place kickers and he is also expected to lend a hand on kicking off with his long boots.
The Whites scored their other two touchdowns from close-in. Touchdown No. 2 came on Stinson's plunge from the 1-foot line to end a 53-yard march. Amberg highlighted this drive with a 30 yard run on a fourth down fake punt.
Early in the second quarter, the Whites' sophomore halfback Bob McMullen crushed over from the 2-yard line for touchdown No. 3 and a 21 to 6 lead. This drive followed the recovery of a Red fumble and covered 41 yards.
Malott To Speak In Missouri
Chancellor Deane W. Maiott will give the commencement address to 200 members of the graduating class at Southwest Missouri State college at Springfield on Tuesday, May 16.
Four Swedish Films To Be Shown Today
Four short films on Sweden will be shown by the German department at 3 p.m. and 5 p.m., today in 15 Fraser.
The films describe how Sweden has dealt with its social and economic problems after World War II, and how Christmas is celebrated in Scandinavia.
You'll have no worries about moths If ...
Mabry To Hurl Against Cyclones Today
GUARANTEED PROTECTION AGAINST 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.
Kansas opens a two-game series with the Iowa State Cyclones at it am, today on the Varsity baseball diamond with righthander Guy Mrbry slated to hurl for the Jayhawkers. The second game will be played Tuesday with Carl Sandefur hurling for Kansas.
Mabry, who has a 0-3 conference record, will attempt to pull Coach Bill Hogan's club above the 500 mark for the season. Kansas has a 5-5 season record and a 3-5 record in Big Seven play. Mabry has lost close 4 to 3 games to Colorado and Missouri.
The Jayhawkers lost a doubleheader to Nebraska at Lincoln, Saturday, 7 to 2 and 4 to 3, to drop into a fifth
Guy MABRY
place tie with Kansas State.
In the 1st game, Kansas' loose ball handling helped Nebraska to a 3 to 2 lead after three innings. Mabry, KU.'s leading hitter with a 357 average, singled and scored on Lou Duna's 360-f o f o t homer for the Jayhawker's o n l y runs in the second inning.
Bob Cerv, Nebraska's hard-hitting outfielder, homered in the sixth with love on. The Cornhuskers added three more in the same inning to help their sophomore ace, Linus Vrbka, the conference's top pitcher, to his fourth win against no defeats. He gave up only three hits while N.U. played errorless ball.
Kansas lost the second game, 4 to 8, with Sandefur pitching a 5-hitter. After Nebraska scored twice in the second, K.U. came back to knot the score at 2-all in the fourth. Singles by Floyd Temple, Carl Ellis, and Mabry provided the runs.
Friday and Saturday:
KANSAS at Kansas State
Colorado at Oklahoma
Nebraska at Iowa State
Nebraska scored once in the fourth and fifth by a 4 to 2 margin. Kansas closed out the scoring in the seventh as George Voss got a pinch-hit triple to right and scored on Jim Cavonaugh's infield hit.
In the sixth, with Temple on base, Ellis hit a 360-foot fly ball that left-fielder Bob Diers made a great catch falling over a short fence after the catch. This feat cost K.U. two runs.
Score by innings: (1st game):
Score by innings: (1) 91 g
R. H. E.
Kausa : 020 000 0 -2 3 1
Nebraska : 102 004 x -7 9 0
Batteries: Hepler (lost), Philipp
(4) and ace, Morrow (4); Vrbka
and Novak.
Score by innings: (2nd game): H
Score by innings: (2nd game)
R. H. E.
Kansas 020 100 0—2 3 1
Nobreska 200 110 x—4 5 1
Batteries: Sandefur and Morrow;
Vrkb, Camp (4)-(won) and Noyak.
BIG SEVEN STATE W. L. Pct.
Colorado 1 0 1.00
Nebraska 6 2 7.55
Oklahoma 4 2 6.67
Missouri 6 4 6.00
KANSAS 3 5 3.75
Kansas State 3 5 3.75
Iowa State 1 6 1.43
BIG SEVEN STANDINGS
Make That Recording Now at University Radio!
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE
Today and Tuesday:
Iowa State at KANSAS
Missouri at Colorado
Iowa
SATURDAY'S RESULTS
KANSAS 2-3, Nebraska 7-4
Missouri 6-3, K.-State 2-1
BENEFICIAL MILELE
Special group rates on recordings made for organizations . . . church groups, bands, fraternity and sorority groups, etc. $1.50 per 10-inch disk.
Recording studio available. Phone 375 for appointment.
UNIVERSITY RADIO
University of Kansas Glee Club
Spring Concert
Chorus of 100 voices
Singing Music Everyone Likes
Monday Eve., May 8 8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
Student ID card admits
Others: 50c tax included
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 8.
The Editors Report -
HOW NOT TO STOP
Gambling
The worthy motive in Washington to shape means to reduce organized gambling is showing a tendency to get off the track in a race around Robin Hood's barn. Wayne Coy, chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, has told a Senate subcommittee that he favors a federal prohibition of the interstate transmission of horse race odds, bets and track prices paid, for any purpose whatever, including publication in newspapers.
Attorney General McGrath has sent to Congress a bill—to which Mr. Coy takes some, but not enough, exceptions—that would bar interstate transmission of gambling information on horse races, football, baseball, basketball or any other sporting event.
It would exempt the reporting of sporting events for publication or broadcasting as news, although curbing to some extent the broadcasting of horse races.
Do these gentlemen think for a minute that censoring horse racing or other sports information out of newspapers will hamper bookmakers? Are we approaching a time when it will be a crime to print the news that it rained, on Derby morning, at Churchill Downs? Or that a Man o' War strained a tendon in a workout? Or that Joe DiMaggio's heel is bothering him (which heaven forbid)?
The time element required for publication rules out the printed word as an essential in the betting operation. The Senate subcommittee already has testimony before it showing that it is the special, non-news communication by telephone, telegraph or radio that is the vital link in the present bookmaking operation.
Newspapers do not make gamblers, and the lack of one never prevented anyone from laying a bet. The reformers are on a muddy track when they approach the gambling problem by way of censorship of the news wires.The New York Times,
TOO LITTLE HISTORY
Poor Citizens
The study of U.S. history still does not find much favor in the colleges and universities of this country. Although more of them now require it than before the war, two-thirds of them still do not insist on the course. But, strangely, an overwhelming majority of the nation's educators hold that a study of the subject is necessary to enable students to become high-type citizens.
Benjamin Fine of the New York Times recently completed a survey of 1301 institutions of higher learning to determine how the subject fared in their curricula—in how many it is a required course.
Comparing his findings with those of a survey made by the Times in 1942, he reports that virtually no change has taken place in the requirement of U.S. history for admission to college. Today 27 per cent of these institutions ask for a year of history, only 2 per cent more than required it eight years ago.
"Some educators," says Mr. Fine, "express concern at the large number of institutions that permit students who are majoring in such subjects as government, political science, education or economics to go through their four years without at least one course in U.S. history.
Of all history, the most instructive for Americans is their own. This was the idea of the old schoolmen, and U.S. history was a required subject on a generous time schedule in the high schools and the colleges. But this idea evidently does not appeal to those who now order affairs in these institutions.
"They point out that future teachers, social scientists or economists will be-handicapped if they are not aware of the forces that helped mold this country into the world's greatest democracy."
Knowledge of the history of this country will give the students a better understanding and appreciation of democratic government-at its best. Lack of such a background leaves young Americans unarmed against subversive ideas, which are pressed with skill by the well-schooled agents of Communism and some so-called "liberals."
The propagandists of totalitarianism know their book thoroughly, and too many Americans lack knowledge of their own historical background to combat foreign ideologies.
The principal concern of Soviet Russia is to prevent the spread of American ideals, based on the dignity and worth of the individual—ideals such as are established in the Bill of Rights. The principles of it embody the hopes of men of good will everywhere. With despotism so strongly on the march, American democracy has come to represent in a very real sense "the last best hope of earth."
But the programs of many schools and colleges make the tenets of Americanism, as developed in our history, a matter of minor importance in education. What greater justification can these institutions have than to train their students for intelligent citizenship?—The Buffalo Evening News.
Looking into organized crime while ignoring its tie to machine politics corresponds to the joker's remark to the Siamese Twin, "Haven't I seen one of you girls some place?"—Buffalo Evening Times.
TODAY'S MAIL Samples
Sir:
Have been most interested in some letters you have been publishing concerning snake-eradication here on our Hill-top. Is the University Daily Kansan offering a bounty on snakes?
Or do you perhaps know of any anti-snake campaigners who are interested enough in getting rid of snakes to make it worth while? We enterprising zoo majors have ample access to snakes.
And just to show I ain't kidding, enclosed is a sample of my work. Be happy to furnish more on request.
Terry Schreiber College senior
Editor's note: The U.D.K. is offering no bounties for snakes nor know of anyone who is...so we are returning Miss Schreiber's sample. It is dead and so not fit for fondling. Please do not send any more samples—especially live ones. Journalists are widely known for their squeamish stomachs. Mangled corpses we can stand...but not live snakes.
University
Daily Hansan
News Room Adv. Room
K.U. 251 K.U.378
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn.
National Press Association,
Press Assn., and the Associated Collegiate
Press. Represented by the National Ad-
mire Service, 420 Madison Ave, New
New York City.
James Morris
Editor-in-Chief
Editor-in-Chief
Douis Greenbank James Shriver
Managing Editor Business Mgr.
Asst. Man. Editors Norma Hunsinger
Kay O'Connor John Hill
Ralph Heinemen
City Editor Edward Chapin
Feature Editor Female Ice
Photograph Editor Frankie Waits
Telegraph Editor Robert Sigman
William Graves
Richard Tatum
Lloyd Hollis
Sports Editor Richard Dilsaver
Society Editor Fave Wilkinson
Asst. Society Editors Billie Stover
Emily Stewart
Editorial Assts. Keith Leslie
Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner
Cir. Mgr. Yvonne Joserwerd
Nat. Adv. Mgr. Forrest Wise
Classified Ad. Mgr. Lee Dyer
Promotion Mgr. John Wiedeman
NDAY,
by Keith Lg
'Small Things'
Camden, N. J.: An elderly lady cited an alleged beating received twenty-nine years ago. She won a recommendation for a divorce after being married fifty years. Ed. note: Everybody has his sore spots.
CALIFORNIA OR BUST!
Philadelphia—A 30-foot trailer fitted out with a cracker barrel and pot-bellied stove left Philadelphia today to arouse public demand for reorganization at the federal government's executive branch.
The trailer depicted an old fashioned country store, a symbol of what its sponsors call the outmoded condition of this country's executive governmental branch.
Ed. note: Why don't they go a little further and include the traditional free candy and cigars?
A headline proclaims, "A College Head Resigns." Over the vociferous protestations of the stomach and liver we'll bet.
You can
Store Them Safely
DRESS
during the hot, summer months ahead at no extra charge to you. We guarantee our
U-SANO
Moth Proofing
on all garments cleaned here during the moth season. Our moth proofing service is guaranteed until the next cleaning.
"Quality Outstanding"
LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS
1001 N.H.
Phone 383
THE FLORIST
FLOWERS For Mom!
on Mother's Day May 14
Flowers Telegraphed anywhere
Ward's Flowers 910 Mass. Ph820
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DEK yo books with set from Union Book CHITTEO wide range Cook Store & E.N. reduces copy last Book Store OLFERSEN with the funda book Store HARLEE model. Fin 9 p. BOOKSTORES U B.F. Go F. Good LAST on action station Union Book TE dits, $5. After, Ahead.
LASTIC
with Mollis
le. Po-
larvin l V
OUR-MUR
ward.
RIRST V
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powder
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with stu
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NDAY. MAY 8. 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
ansan Classified Advertising
Phone K.U. 376
terms: Cash, Phone, orders are accepte
the in understanding that the bill will
be received at the bank by the
hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (ex-
saturday) or brought to the Univer-
dally Kansan Business office, Jour-
ney 2, 460 South 3:45 p.m. the
before publication date.
One Three Five
day days days
words or less ... 35c 65c 90c
literal words ... 1c 2c 3c
Classified Advertising Rates
FOR SALE
o STUDEBAKER Commander Coupe-
ter and holder. 50,000 actual mileage
12
WOTHER'S DAY say "I Love You"
with a box of assorted crepes and nut
dessicles from the DIXIE CREEK
CORN SHOP. Pound box $1.25
pound box $0.95. Wraps for
filling. The Dixie Carmel Corn Shop.
11
2 Mass.
17 PLYMOUTH two-door sedan, 24.000 lbs. Excellent condition. Reasonable price. KU, K 409 or 1625-J. 11
2E 11 white pique sunback dress with
gingham trim. Never worn. Also
u nine navy wool all season suit. Phone
9
**TEST TELEVISION-Best in sets and displays at lowest prices.** See the newt Emerson model set at $19.50 terms. Bowman Brown and Electra stores.
SCOOT NATIONAL house trailer. Completely furnished. See after 5 p.m. 1330 N. 27th St.
DEX your vocabulary and language
with the new Superdex cloth tabs.
set from A to Z for just 10e. Student
Book Store. ___8
B. CHITECTS! Limited Quantity of Zip-
Tone now available at 35c a sheet. A
deal of patterns. Student Union
of Store.
E. NEPTUNE drawing instrument is reduced from $23 to $12.50 while our copy lasts. See them at Student Union Store. 8
OLFERS! Four handbooks of instruction by Bob MacDonald and Les Bolld, with illustrations, for JBC Leuce fundamental skills! Student Union
84 HARLEY DAVIDSON motorcycle 49
Lift. First class condition. Call after
20 p.m. Phone 1677-J 40 W. 6th St.
TOROLDA TV Portable. Use only 5
[0] otsu Unpaid balance only $99.49 See:
B.F. Goodrich balance. Only $4 desired.
Itso $299.29 Mass.
LOST
'TE dinner coat, $15. Summer tux
its, $24. Size 37 or 38. Like new i13
with slider.
PLASTIC rimmed glasses in brown case with Molter Optical company written in black. Possibly near Jayhawker Theater. Logo: Phone 3445. 12
OUR-MONTH-OLD blond cocker pup.
Phone: 3492 or 1996J 12
OUR-MONTH-OLD bloom jacket pocket
Reward. Phone 347 or 1969J.
RIST WATCH Thursday morning between
Haworth Hall and Library, Alert
Park, Phone 730. Reward.
MASS HONEY initials inside, H.G.M.
Gecker Gomez. Phone 3279. Reward.
THE THE person who borrowed an
older blue jacket jacket from Bob
brown please call the ATO house. Phone
PLEASE.
WANTED
UX size 40. Call Chuck Arnold at 888
393M. 10
OBILE HOUSE TRAILER in exchange
studio; study room apartment f1
619-R.
TNALVAI Officers Tropical Worsted
iform. Size 38 Phone 3816 J after 5 8
ENDS TONITE
Lawrence
DRIVE-IN
Theatre
2 WOMEN · 7 MEN!
on a desperate new
kind of adventure
of the old west
WALTER WARNER'S
STAGECOACH
JOHN WAYNE
CLARIE TREVOR
Shown at 8:25--10:19
AND
5 of Your Favorite Cartoons
- Mouse Cleaning
- Barking Dogs Don't Fight
- Mouse Cleaning
BUSINESS SERVICE
- Two Lazy Crowds
- Too For Two Hundred
TYPING; Theses, term papers, letters,
etc. Regular rates, Prompt, accurate
work. Mrs. Schear; Apt. R-36 1810 La.
phone 3273-R.
Tea For Two Hundred
Tea For Two Hundred
Unstanding Sitter
- Upstanding Sitter
THE LAWRENCE Women's Club invites the people of Douglas County and surrounding towns to use their clubhouse for business and social meetings and wedding receptions. A small fee to oversee Call resident hosts. Telephone 209. 10
NEED HELP? I will type your themes,
class notes, term papers, etc. Regular
rates. Quick service. Mrs. Chas. Malody.
94? Miss. Phone 1788J. 9
SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a dignified sales activity representing oldest, largest, and most known firm 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 vanced percentage of sales. W. F. Craig, 608 Grand Ave., Kansas City Mo. Giving qualifications, school and home address. tt
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jawhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. We provide clothing for fur, skin and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. St. Ph. 418. **tt**
THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor, body and arm repair, motor body and fender repair, auto painting, used cars. 317 E. 17th. Phone 785 to 1821R.
TYPING, Theses. Tern Papers, Reports,
1989 Hardcover. 1168R.
TYPES, Theses. Tern Papers, Reports,
1989 Hardcover. 1168R.
TYPRING. Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rates. Prompt attention Mrs. Sblelda, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601
FOR RENT
HONEYMOONERS! Vacationists! For rent in Estes Park area, modern housekeeping cabins. Completely furnished, big stone fireplaces, electricity, bath, gorgeous mountain views. Mrs. O. H. Zumwinkel, 2474 S. Jackson, Denver, Colorado.
ROOMS for summer or fall 3 double and
1 single. Sleeping porch. Single beds.
$10.00 a month per person. 1222 Miss.
Phone 495. 12
TWO LARGE, cool rooms for summer students. Single beds, linens furnished, rooms kept clean, kitchen privileges if desired. Phone 25223 or can be seen 10:30am.
AVAILABLE June 1. Modern. 5 room.
lst floor apartment. Clean, convenient
to KU. See at once at ku.edu.
MAKE BETTE JADES! Rent a port-
land typewriter for $3.50 a month or $1.00 a week. All makes and models at Student Union Book Store. tf
Ends
WANT RIDERS or share the driving to summer school. Leave Plaza 7 a.m.回来11 a.m. JE 3178 Kansas City, Mo., after 6 p.m. TF
TRANSPORTATION
M m m m MOTH
MOTHER DIDNT TELL ME
MOTHER!
SAM Presents Award
It's Much More Fun Learning This Way!
DOROTHY WILLIAM
McGUIRE·LUNDIGAN
with JUNE HAVOC
James H. Hatch, vice-president of the Union Wire Rope company of Kansas City, Mo., received an award from the Society for the Advancement of Management. It was presented for outstanding contributions in the field of industrial relations.
EXTRA
Basketball
Highlights 1950
Top Games of the Year
Also in Fox Movietone News "I Am An American Day" Celebration in Lawrence
Granada
PHONE 946
Utschen will receive his A.B. degree in June. He has been on the dean's honor roll for the past four years, and is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, honorary scholastic society; Phi Alpha Theta, honorary history fraternity; Phi Sigma Alpha honorary biology society; and Omicron Delta Kapa, honorary men's scholastic society. He will enter Harvard in September.
N-O-W!
College Senior Awarded Harvard Law Scholarship
Theodore M. Utschen, College senior, has been awarded an entering scholarship to the Harvard Law school.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
"Movies Are Better Now Than Ever Before"
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER!
De SICA'S
Bicycle Thief
"BEST FILM of the YEAR NATL BOARD OF REVIEW 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 5 SHOWS DAILY 7:30,and 9:30
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NO
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Added
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Phone 10 for Sho Time ENDS TONITE
JAYHAWKER
Kirk Douglas
Lauren Bacall
Doris Day
YOUNG MAN
WITH A HORN
Late News Cartoon
Features at
5:10, 7:20, 9:30
VARSITY
Phone 132 for Sho Time
TODAY - TUESDAY
and
John King
"Arizona
Thoroughbred"
"WITHOUT HONOR"
Laraine Day Dane Clark Franchot Tone
News
Color Cartoon
12c--39c
Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers
LOVE HELD ITS BREATH AS SUDDEN TERROR HELD THE STAGE!
JANE
WYMAN
...There she stood—
the actress in a role
she didn't dare play!
MARLENE
DIETRICH
Footlights, and glamor — then jealousy
...and footfalls and terror!
MICHAEL
WILDING
With a honeyed voice, he did what
he couldn't do with a weapon!
RICHARD
TODD
A stage whisper
"I love you too much!"
brings the curtain down
ALFRED
HITCHCOCK'S
"Stage
Fright!!"
No one will be seated
the last few min
Fright."
W
JANE
WYMAN
MICHAEL
WILDING
With a honeyed voice, he did what
he couldn't do with a weapon.
PETER SCHNEIDER
MARLENE DIETRICH Footlights, and glamour - then jealousy and footals and terror!
RICHARD
TODD
C. F. K.
RICHARD
TODD
A stage whisper
"I love you too much!"
brings the curtain down
1:00, 3:00, 5:05, 7:10, 9:15
handa thaat applaud cone also kill
EIGHT TIMES
FRIGHT TIMES
Stage Fright!!
ht!!
JAYHAWKER
STARTS
TOMORROW
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 8, 195
U
World Wide News
Fire Burns 350 Houses
Chicago, May 8—(U.P.)A series of big fires whipped by strong winds brought tragedy to many persons in the U.S. and Canada over the weekend and caused almost 12 million dollars in property damage.
The worst fire was at Rimouski, Que, where flames destroyed 350 buildings and left 2,000 persons homeless. Damage was estimated at 10 million dollars and scores were injured but no fatalities were confirmed.
Israel To Negotiate Peace
Officials were attempting to stop the flames by dynaming a 200-bed hospital, from which patients had been removed and the courthouse.
At Crockston, Minn., a gas heater explosion killed Mr. and Mrs. Peter Arsneau and blew their son out of their wrecked home Sunday.
Three children suffocated May 6 when fire swept their cabin at Buckeye, Ariz. Their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gil Amabisca, were away at the time. Neighbors saved a fourth child.
Genova, Switzerland, May 8—(U.P.)-Israel has agreed to enter into direct peace negotiations with the Arab states, as proposed by the United Nations Palestine conciliation commission. Israel also agreed to a proposal that the commission turn from conciliation to mediation.
Aboard Truman Train, May 8—(U.P.)-President Truman said today that the next few months will determine whether there will be a third world war. The president told a railroad station crowd at Galesburg, Ill., that if isolationists have their way, there will be another war.
Communism Lose Elections
He said it depends on decisions which the U.S. must make in the next few months in its relations with the rest of the world. If the U.S. reneges on its allies as it did after World War I he said, there will be another world conflict.
Vienna, Austria, May 8 - (U.P.) The Communists lost control of all city and town councils in Sunday's elections in the Russian-occupied province of lower Austria, final official returns showed today.
The rightwing Catholic Peoples party, which based its campaign on an anti-Marxist platform, won majorities of council seats and of other posts while polling 51.9 per cent of the popular vote.
War If US Reneges
Examination Schedule Spring Semester,1950
Thursday, May 25, to Thursday, June 1, inclusive.
March Down Hill Will Be Made By Record Class
French 1
French 2
German 1
German 2
Spanish 1
Spanish 2
(All sections) ... 8:00- 9:50 Saturday, May 27
General Biology
Zoology 2
Physiology 2
(All Sections) ... 8:00- 9:50 Friday, May 26
At the 1949 commencement 2,092 degrees were conferred. The 1950 program may contain as many as 2,400 names, Mr. Hitt said.
Chemistry 2, 2E, 3, 3E, 48 (All Sections) ... 3:30 - 5:20 Monday. May 29
Physics 5 and 6 (All Sections) ... 8:00 - 9:50 Thursday. May 29
Psychology 1 & 1a (All Sections) ... 3:30 - 5:20 Thursday. May 25
Economics 9 & 10 (Acctg. I & II) ... 3:30 - 5:20 Saturday. May 27
A record number of seniors will file down Mt. Oread into Memorial stadium for the 78th annual commencement exercises Monday, June 5. James K. Hitt, registrar, said today.
*5- and 4-hour classes; 3-hour classes meeting Monday, Wednesday and Friday; 2-hour classes meeting Monday and Wednesday, or Monday and Friday, or Wednesday and Friday; 1-hour classes meeting Monday, Wednesday or Friday at the hour indicated.
**2*-3-hour classes meeting Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday; 2-hour classes meeting Tuesday and Thursday or Tuesday and Saturday or Thursday and Saturday; 1-hour classes meeting Tuesday or Thursday or Saturday, at the hour indicated.
Since 1949 exercises, 858 students have already earned degrees, and their names will be in the 1950 program, since the University holds degrees once a year. This is 115 degrees more than at this time a year ago.
****2-hour classes meeting Wednesday and Saturday.
CUT DOWN
Laundry
Bills
RISK'S will
Bring in a load. Wash it for only 25c.
RISK'S SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRY 613 Vermont
The number of degrees actually earned in June will be between 1,400 and 1,600 as compared to 1,349 a year ago. The number of students who can complete requirements during the 1950 summer session and then graduate from Hill in 'cap and gown is estimated at 315 slightly more than in 1949.
The college will graduate the largest number, nearly 500, Mr. Hift estimated that the School of Business would have a graduating class of about 275 and the School of Engineering and Architecture about 250.
K. U.'s 1950 class will be larger than any that can be predicted for the near future, Mr. Hitt said. It represents the large number of veterans who first entered college in the fall of 1946. The University had 3,600 freshmen that year.
Students having bachelor degrees in physics, chemistry, metallurgy, or engineering may apply now for entrance to the school of reactor technology at the Oak Ridge, Tenn. national laboratory, Dr. J. O. Maloney, professor of chemical engineering announced today.
Application blanks are available in 126 Lindley hall and should be filled out and mailed by this evening.
Applicants who are accepted will be trained in the design of nuclear reactors. Salaries will range from $250 to $300 a month. Security clearance will be required of all students.
Oak Ridge School Seeks Trainees
Sauger pike tagged in Norris Lake by the Tennessee Valley Authority have been caught as far away as 19.1 miles from the point where they were put in the water.
47th
Machiavellian Theories Still Used, Professor Says
Machiavelli as a political scientist was discussed by Cortez A. M. Ewing, professor of citizenship and government at the University of Oklahoma, who spoke to the political science department May 5.
Professor Cortez pointed out that Machiavell's ideas and theories are carried out today even more than in his own time. In the recent war, German and Japanese diplomatic principles were directly based upon the theory of progressive movement.
Machieveli used the people as a means to all ends in war and peace. He believed that man is always motivated by self interest and that any populace could be convinced that rewards were to be had for the taking.
In using the conquered nations as a treasury to wage further war, he illustrated how Hitler followed Machiavelli by using the entire population to fill his armies and coffers. In explaining how Machiavelli came to power, Professor Cortez pointed out that Hitler was more interested in personal gains than in the betterment of the people of Germany.
Delta Phi Delta Initiates, Elects
Delta Phi Delta, honorary art fraternity, announces the initiation of eight new members and the pledging of seven students.
The initiates are: Pat Bowers, Dorothy Johnson, Jo Ann Ogg, Mary Helen Baker and Jean Waters, fine arts seniors; Charles Rice, Rosetta Snow, and Vera Johnson, fine arts juniors.
Officers will be: Barbara Peck, fine arts junior, president; Pat Versers, vice-president; Rosetta Snow, recording secretary; Dorothy Johnson, corresponding secretary; Charles Rice, treasurer; and Vera Johnson, historian and editor.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY
47th Year No.143
Tuesday, May 9, 1950
hansan
Lawrence, Kansas
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STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Balloun,Westergren BSA Candidates
Eugene Balloun, business junior, candidate for president on the Commerce party ticket, will oppose Eugene Westergren, College sophomore, candidate on the Professional party slate, in the Business School association's elections Wednesday.
Westergren, who lives in Lawrence, has maintained a straight 2.0 grade average during his two years at the University. He is a member of Delta Sigma Pi, professional business fraternity, and in his spare time, plays saxaphone in Jimmy Sellards' dance band.
Balloun is a 2.5 student, and was recently elected to Beta Gamma Sigma, honorary business fraternity. He has been president of the Statesmen club, chairman in the Union Activities, and served as editor of this year's J-Hawk business news. He is a member of the Forensic League, the debate team and Alpha Kappa Psi, business fraternity.
Lewis Jagger, business junior will be Balloun's running mate. Jagger is a member of the Business School association, and Alpha Kappa Psi. He is also a member of Lambda Delta Sigma, honorary scholarship fraternity.
Running with Westergen on the Professional party ticket will be Melvin Rice, business junior. Rice is vice-president of Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity.
Betty J Bloomer, business junior, the Commerce party's candidate
for secretary, is vice-president of Phi Chi Theta, women's business fraternity, treasurer of her class, and chairman of the Barton County club.
Opposing her will be Donald Johnson, business junior, who is vice-president of Phi Kappa Tau, social fraternity and a member of the Society for the Advancement of Management.
The Professional party has nominated Billy Blanchard, business junior, for treasurer. Blanchard is an accounting major, and has maintained a 2.0 grade average.
Running for treasurer on the Commerce party late will be Charlie Hall, business junior, who is secretary of Phi Delta Theta, social fraternity, and vice-president of the Inter-Fraternity Council. He is also a member of Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business fraternity and has served on the Intramural committee for the past two years.
Folls for the election will be open from 8 a.m. Wednesday until 1:30 p.m. They will be located on the second floor of Strong hall, near the office of the School of Business.
With an eye to the confusion that yearly confronts graduating seniors on Commencement day, the following information is offered to acquaint seniors with the correct procedure for the big day.
1. Wear caps and gowns to the class breakfast and the Baccalat- rate services as well as to the Commencement exercises.
Commencement Will Be In Hoch If Rain Comes
Hicks, Burgett To Speak For Business School Day
2. Be ready for the Baccalaureate and Commencement processions in the east corridor of Strong hall at 7 p.m., Sunday, June 4 and Monday, June 5.
A Chicago public relations consultant who worked on the Topeka Daily Capital while in high school will speak at the annual School of Business convocation at 11 a.m. Wednesday in Fraser theater.
Joseph W. Hicks, president and owner of the Jos. W. Hicks organization, public relations-industrial relations consulting firm, will speak on "Public Relations."
The other speaker for the day will be Vernon B. Burgett, public accountant, and partner of the Feate, Marvick, Mitchell and company, national accounting firm of Kansas City, Mo. "Public Accounting as a Profession" will be his subject.
ing set.
He has served as member of the Board of Governors of the Chicago Federated Advertising club; president of the Headline club, a chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity; and is a former president of the Boys Brotherhood Republic, one of the largest boys clubs in America.
While in college Mr. Hicks was employed by the Post Intelligence en in Seattle, and on the Oklahoma News and the Norman Transcript while attending the University of Oklahoma. He was graduated from the University of Oklahoma in 1923.
He was city editor of the Oklahoma City Times, before going to Chicago as a lecturer at the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern university.
3. In case of stormy weather on either occasion marshals will give instructions for proceeding immediately to Hoch auditorium. If the weather is bad do not wear caps and gowns before reaching the auditorium.
Mr. Hicks is president and principal owner of the newly organized T-V Check, Incorporated, a company which supplies television broadcasters with checks on their broadcasts by making films of the receiving set.
boys clubs in AL. Mr. Burgett is a graduate of the UMU and has been in public accounting since 1929. He is the first graduate of the School of Business to become a partner in a national accounting firm.
accounting firm.
Schedule for the Business School
Day is as follows:
Poll's open for election
Open for election
8 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Convocation for School of Business
10 a.m.
Faculty-senior ball game at baseball field
1:15 p.m.
most speaker is Dr. A. E. Remick, a member of the department of chemistry at Wayne university, Detroit Mich. Dr. Remick will talk on oxidation-reduction mechanisms at 8 p.m. to members of the chemistry department, graduate and undergraduate students.
K. U. will be the host to members of the Kansas City section of the American Chemical society Wednesday in Bailey Chemical laboratories following a dinner at 6:15 p. m. in the Kansas room of the Union.
PETER P. LINCOLN
Chemical Society To Be KU's Guest
JOSEPH W. HICKS
torium.
4. Caps and gowns will be checked in at Memorial stadium if Commencement exercises are held there as planned. As soon as the program is over descend to the track, walk west and south around it until the lighted area beneath the press box is reached. Enter the ramp marked with an initial corresponding with that of your last name and proceed under the west stadium. It is not permissable to enter the checking in lines from outside the stadium.
Picnic; Potter lake ... 4:30 p.m.
Tickets to the picnic may be purchased from any member of the Business School Council at the ball game, or at the picnic. Tickets are 35 cents for members of the Business School association, and 50 cents for non-members.
i ntes from
5. Present cap and gown receipts
and signed diploma ticket to the
registrar's representative standing
near the check stand and receive
your diploma. If the exercises are
held in Hoch auditorium, check in
caps and gowns at Streng annex A
and get diplomas in the rotunda of
Strong hall.
A penalty of 50 cents a day, up to a maximum of $2.50, will be assessed if the cap and gown is not turned in by noon Tuesday, June 6.
6. Do not store diplomas in cedar chests because the aromatic oils will soften the ink and result in serious damage.
Journalist's Career Varies, Editor Says
A journalistic career may lead to "Washington Wandering" or "be-wildered brides" said Mrs. Marjorie Binford Woods, editor of Modern Bride magazine, at the annual Matrix table dinner of Theta Sigma Fhi, honorary professional fraternity for women in journalism, May 5.
The young journalist cannot predict what his specialty may be, she pointed out. Mrs. Woods believes "It just happens."
With the help of Ernie Pyle, Mrs Woods joined the one-year old Scripps-Howard Washington Daily News as shopping column editor. "On Friday the 13th within 13 minutes" Mrs. Woods had the job. Her first column of "Washington Wanderings" included 13 feature articles. Thirteen months elapsed before Mrs Woods left the paper to marry.
"You'll like having ink on your fingers" Mrs. Woods asserted at the dinner celebrating the 41st anniversary of the fraternity's founding.
Woods Mr. the teacher.
Mrs. Woods recommends that the student preparing for a job interview have pertinent information about himself, clippings, recommendations and a folio of his work.
Mrs. Woods started a bridal bureau for the William H. Block company, Indianapolis department store. After 7,000 weddings in three years she wrote "Your Wedding, How to Plan and Enjoy It." In 1949 she organized a staff for Modern Bride magazine for Ziff-Davis Publishing company, Chicago. A "complete book" for "bewildered brides" Mrs. Woods calls her Modern Bride magazine.
ROSSI AND JOHN BURDICK, OF RUTLAND, ARE WORKING WITH THE FEDERAL COMMITTEE ON HOME INDUSTRY.
—Kansan Photo by Frankie Waits
SENATOR HARRY DARBY was initiated into Pi Tau Sigma, engineering fraternity, and Alpha Kappa Psi, business fraternity, Monday evening at services held in the Union.
Guy Kidwell, business senior and president of Alpha Kappa Psi, left, and George Hopkins, engineering senior and president of Pi Tau Sigma, right, are shown presenting the senator with certificates of initiation.
Senator Darby Backs McCarthy's Charges
Topeka, KS.
Sen. Joseph McCarthy may have exaggerated, but if he finds just one Communist in the state department, he will have done a good job, Sen. Harry Darby told members of Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business fraternity, at its birthday banquet Monday.
Alpha Kappa Psi observed the 30th anniversary of the founding of the Psi chapter at the University, and the 45th anniversary of the founding of the fraternity.
the fraternity.
After being initiated into Alpha Kappa Psi as its first honorary member, Senator Darby said, "This is the
"I believe that the people of the United States have a right to expect the government to be clean," Senator Darby said, "but government officials should be considered clean until they are proven guilty."
first time in my life I have been the number one man."
The former Republican national committeeman was appointed senator by Gov. Frank Carlson on December 2, 1949, to fill the unexpired term of the late Sen. Clyde Reed.
Senator Darby was initiated as an honorary member into Pi Tau Sigma, honorary mechanical engineering fraternity, in ceremonies held Monday afternoon.
The candidates for queen nominated by organized houses are: Yvonne Josserand, Jeanne Steiner, Shirley Geyner, Dona Dudley,
Kansas State Historical Society
"We want to give the queen and her court really royal treatment it the banquet to show K.U. coeds that law students can do something besides sit on the Green hall steps and whistle." Nye said.
Banquet, Awards, Queen To Highlight Big Law Day
More activities are slated on the docket for Law School day than ever before in the history of the occasion, Paul W. Nye, president of the school's senior class and chairman of the event, announced.
The annual Burdick banquet, honoring the late Dean W. L. Burdick, will climax the program at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Union ballroom. The principal speaker will be William L. Vandeventer of Springfield, Mo., judge of the Missouri court of appeals, who will speak on "Lawyers and Doctors."
About 500 alumni, faculty, students and wives will attend the banquet in the Union building. At the banquet Dean F. J. Moreau will present School of Law awards for outstanding work during the year. These include moot court prizes, certificates for work on the University section of the Kansas Bar Journal, and announcement of elections to Order of the Colf, honorary law fraternity.
orary law trade. Highlights of the banquet will be the announcement of the judges' selection of the first law school queen Miss Res Ipsa Loquitur of 1950 and her nine attendants. A committee composed of three law students; Jess Van Ert, 3rd year law; Joseph S. Davis, Jr., 2nd year law; Harold Lee Turner, 1st year law; and two faculty members, William R. Scott and M. Carl Slough, associate professors of law, will select the queen from the 22 contestants. The judges will pick the top 10 contestants at 11 a.m. and they will be invited to the banquet.
Barbara Pack, Sue Naylor, Nona Prettyman, Judy Hall, Marian Cox, Pauline Reade, Barbara O'Neal, Jacquelyn Leedy, Carol Squire, Mary Flo Spillman, Barbara Burdick, Barbara Hagan, Melba Mather, Anne Murphy, Loujean Hubbell, Pat Ames, and Beverly Coulter.
More than 1,000 alumni have been invited to attend as well as members of the Douglas county bar association, justices of the state supreme court, Gov. Frank Carlson, and Chancellor Deane W. Malott.
During the morning an "injus-tice of the peace" court will be conducted in Green hall. The local jail will be set up on the Green hall steps.
Members of the executive committee for the event are: Robert M. Green and Lawrence R. Pennington, tickets; Robert H. Meyer, invitations; Barbara J. Maxwell, decorations and coffee; Emerson Shields and Douglas B. Myers, refreshments; Robert B. Bingham, skit; Earle E. Brehmer, music for the banquet; Harold Lee Turner, program; Joseph M. Strycker, court of injustice; and Willard A. Burton, Jr., treasurer.
AAUP Will Meet At 5:30 Today
The American Association of University Professors will meet at 5:30 p. m. today in the Kansas room of the Union. After the dinner the members will hold an election.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY-DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1950
TU
Official Bulletin
Tuesday. May 9
Students planning to take Western Civilization examination Saturday, May 13, 1:30 to 5 p.m., must register at Western Civilization office today. The place of examination will be assigned at time of registration. Examination admitance card received at Western Civilization office must be presented at examination.
Alpha Phi Omega, 7 tonight, 200 Strong, Nomination of officers.
Y.W.C.A. members invited by Y.
M.C.A. to see movies of Estes "Y"
camp, 4 today Memorial Union.
Quill club, 7:30 tonight, East room Memorial Union.
Pre-Nursing club elections, 4 to day,
Dining room, Fraser hall.
A.S.C.E., 7:30 p.m. Wednesday,
101 Snow. Elections. "Engineering Education in Switzerland," Rolf Vollenweider.
Jay James Rush tea, 3 to 4:30 p.m Wednesday. Pine room, Memorial Union. Wear uniforms.
Sociology club. 4 p.m. Wednesday,
110 Strong, Lars Manner, "Life
Student, Professor Discover Specimens Of Jumping Mice
The discovery of a jumping mouse new to science was reported today by two researchers of the Museum of Natural History.
Nine specimens were collected from three acres of original prairie remaining on the Robinson farm, seven miles from Lawrence in the
Important Red Pepper meeting,
7:30 p.m. Thursday, 103 Strong.
Spanish movie, "Los Heroes del Barrio," sponsored by department of romance languages and literatures, 2 p.m. and 4 p.m., Friday, Fraser the theater. English sub-titles. Public invited.
Le Cercle Francais jeudi 11 mai
5 p.m. moins le quart chez made-
moiselle Crumrine, 920 Missouri.
Program et pique-nique; cotisation,
vinут "cents" américains.
in Sweden." All invited.
Jefferson County students, 7:30 pm. Wednesday, Miller hall. Work on decorations for alumni dinner to be started.
most northeastern section of Douglas county. E. Lendell Cockrum, graduate student in zoology, and Dr. Rollin H. Baker, assistant professor of zoology, caught the mice.
Physical Therapy club. 7:30 to night. Watkins hospital class room.
The small animals live at the margin of the virgin prairie where it joins the timber, according to Cockrum and Dr. Baker. They suppose the mice formerly lived throughout the eastern Great Plains region and that the rarity of the animals today is explained by the cultivation of nearly all their original prairie habitat.
University Daily Kansan
Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University of Kansas expiration days, except Sunday and examination periods Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
SENIORS!
1947
1948
1949
Last chance to order your Senior class rings.
MAN'S RING $27.50 LADY'S RING $21.50
Plus 20% Federal, 2% State tax
Business Office still has a few in stock. FIRST COME-FIRST SERVE
DON'T FORGET
Sell Your Books May 29-30-31
We'll Pay Top Prices For All Books Used Here.
WILCOX and FOLLETT will buy all discontinued and obsolete books. Student Union Book Store
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APPEARING IN
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MAGARETTES
TUESDAY, MAY ? 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
RI
PAUL COCKER
Self-portrait of Paul Coker, K.U. Cartoonist
Coker Wants His Cartoons, Not His Face In The Kansan
Paul Coker doesn't like the idea of being featured in the Daily Kansan. This fine arts junior believes that nobody but his mother would be interested in his many activities.
Paul's cartoons are familiar to almost everyone on the Hill. His Joe College caricatures have appeared in the Bitter Bird, Jayhawker, Sour Owl and on the cover of the student directory. Aside from this work, he has also illustrated some restaurant menu covers.
The 21-year-old drawing and painting major can't remember when he first started drawing, "I guess I just picked up a pencil and began," he said. Paul has lived in Lawrence all his life and was graduated from Liberty Memorial High school in 1947. After being graduated from KU., he would like to
do work in either commercial art or cartooning.
A member of Phi Gamma Delta social fraternity, Paul's other activities are varied. He is an editor of the Jayhawker and Bitter Bird, social vice-president of Student Union activities and president of the Owl society.
A cheerleader for two years, he says that he is the one who always gets there late. Besides his other work, he wrote the script and designed the sets for the Phi Gamma Delta skit which won second place in the Rockchalk Revue.
HERE'S "MISS FASHION PLATE OF 1950" FOR THE ENTIRE UNITED STATES
THE QUEEN OF FIRE
BETTY ANNE BUCHANAN Southern Methodist University
Here's the lucky girl, selected by a panel of beauty authorities from campus beauties in nearly 100 colleges and universities as Revlon's "Miss Fashion Plate of 1950". The grand prize? A glamorous Pan American Clipper trip to Bermuda and an expense-free week at"Castle Harbour".
Revlon, acclaimed by the world's smartest women as the foremost creators of fashion colors, congratulates the many local winners in the "Miss Fashion Plate Contest of 1950"...and thanks all the colleges and universities for their cooperation.
Socially Speaking
Hawkwatch Society Dinner
The Hawkwatch Society of the University N.R.O.T.C. will entertain with a dinner at the Skyline club from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. today.
Chaperons will be Captain and Mrs. W. R. Terrell, Commander and Mrs. J. C. McGoughran, and Commander and Mrs. W. M. Dickey.
AD Pi Founders' Day
LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned andPressed . . . 75c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed. .79c CASH AND CARRY ONLY
Tau chapter of Alpha Delta Pi sorority celebrated the 98th anniversary of its founding with a program at the chapter house Sunday. Honor initiate Diane Wade was presented with a ring, and a skit was given by the active chapter: Alpha Delta Pi was founded May 15, 1851, at Macon, Ga.
Professor E. H. S. Bailey, after whom Bailey Chemical laboratories was named, served 50 years with the University.
Bernadine Read was presented with the Sigma Alpha Iota honor certificate, given annually by each chapter to the active senior member with the highest scholastic average.
Seniors who were honored are Bernadine Read, Kitty Walter; Helen Shively, Lynn Lucas, Rosemarie Hurtig, Betty Lou Richards and Martha Weed.
Marilyn Barr, president of Sigma Alpha Iota, entertained May 7 with a breakfast honoring the S.A.I. seniors. Sigma Alpha Iota is a national honorary music fraternity.
According to Paul, his secret ambition is to have one of his cartoons printed in the Daily Kansan. "With apologies to Dick Bibler, of course," he added.
SAI Seniors Honored
Have Dinner at DUCK'S Tonight-
SEA FOOD Is Our Specialty
But also try our tempting -
Steaks
French Fried Onion Rings
Crisp Salads
at
Duck's Tavern 824 Vermont
Phone An Ad, Then Be Glad, With Kansan Want Ad Results.Call K.U. 376.
REMEMBER MOM
THE FASHION WEEK
with her most appreciated
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From
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ALLISON
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Flowers by wire
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1950
TUES
Kansas Blasts Three Home Runs To Down Cyclones.7 To 6
Guy Mabry, slender right-hander, combined his pitching and hitting efforts to give the Jayhawkers a 7 to 6 win over Iowa State Monday on the Varsity baseball diamond. He clouted a home run—one of three hit by K.U. men—in the sixth with two on and hurled steady eight-hit ball to win his first game of the year.
With the Jayhawkers leading 7 to 3 going into the ninth, the Cyclones rallied for three runs and had the tieing run on second when Mabry struck out centerfielder Irving Stone to end the game.
BROOKLYN
The victory was the second of the year over Iowa State for Coach Bill Hogan's crew and their fourth Big Seven win in nine starts. By winning, K.U. moved into fifth place in the standings, one-half game ahead of Kansas State.
SANDEFUR
The second game
The second game of the series will be played at 3 p.m. today with the Jayhawkers' righthanded ace, Carl Sandefur, facing the Cyclones' mound ace, Don Burgess.
Iowa State opened the scoring in the first inning with an unearned run. Catcher Ray Stewart reached second
Iowa State-Kansas Box Score:
Iowa State (6) AB R H R O A E
Slewart, c 4 3 0 3 1 0
Henley, ss 3 0 1 1 4 0
Stone, cf 4 0 2 1 0
McLuen, 1b 4 0 0 11 0
Johnson, lf 4 0 0 3 0
Guernsey, 3b 4 1 1 2 2 1
Snempald, 4b 4 1 2 1 2 1
Fprd, rf 3 0 1 2 0 0
Shingle, p 3 0 0 0 4 0
Hackbarth, p 1 0 0 0 0 0
Delbridge 1 1 1 0 0 0
Totals ... 35 6 8 24 13 2
Kansas (7) ... AB R H PO A F
Cavanaugh, 2b ... 3 0 1 4 4 0
Koenig, ss ... 4 1 3 2 4 2
Temple, 3b ... 3 0 0 2 2 0
Ellis, lf ... 3 2 1 1 1 1
Hicks, rf ... 4 1 0 0 0
Mabry, rf ... 4 1 1 1 4 1
Deluna, 1b ... 4 2 11 2 0
Lamping, c ... 4 0 1 3 0 0
Morrow, cf ... 3 0 0 2 1 0
Delbure hit a home run for Ford in the 9th with one on.
Iowa State ... 110 000 013 — 6
Kansas ... 010 004 01x — 7
Totals ... 32 7 8 27 16 4
Kansas 010 014 01x — 7
RBI—Henely, Stone, Ford, Dell-
bridge 2, Ellis, Mabry 3, DeLuna,
Lamping, 2B—Henely, Stone, Koenig,
HR—Delbridge, Ellis, Mabry,
DeLuna S, SB—Henley, Ford, Lamping,
SH—Temple, DP—Koenig to
Cavonaugh to DeLuna, LOB—Iowa
State K, Kansas 5. Pitching summary
—BB—Singley 2, Hackbard, Mabry
4. SO—Singley 2, Hackbard, Mabry
2. Runs and Hits off—Singley 6
and 7 in 7 innings, Hackbard 1 and 1 in
innered. Earned runs off—Singley
4. Mabry 5. FB—Morrow. Losing
pitcher — Singley. Umpires — Michaels and Edwards (plate). Time—
1:55. Att. 350 (est.).
CITY OF NEW YORK
YOUR EYES
should be examined today. Call
for appointment. Any tens or
prescription duplicated.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
Lawrence Optical Co.
on a two-base error and scored on Stone's single to left.
Eye
The Cyclones added another run in the second and would have had a pair except for some lax base running by left fielder Ken Johnson. Johnson drove out what would have been a home run, but he missed touching first base thus nullifying the run. With two away, second baseman Bob Senewald dropped a Texas leaguer into right center. He moved to second on a passed ball and scored when rightfielder Wayne Ford drilled a single to right.
Carl Ellis, Kansas left fielder, led off the last of the second with a 375-foot home! just inside the left field foul-line to give K.U. its first run. The Jayhawks tied the score at 2-1 in the fifth when first baseman LeuDela blasted a 390-foot home *ur* to straight away center field.
Expert Watch
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Kansas exploded for four runs, to move ahead 6 to 2, in the sixth innning. Frank Koenig's single, a sacrifice, Ellis' walk, and a two-base error gave Koenig a run and left runners on eighth or ninth base, leading hitter, then stepped up to slash a three-run home run to center field.
Each team picked up a run in the eighth inning. With one away, Stewart walked, moved to second on an error, and scored on Stone's second hit, a double to right.
Students Get Census Jobs
With two out in the eighth, Kansas pushed across an uneared run that
Hackbarth reached first on a miscue to keep the rally alive. Stewart forced Hackbarth, third to second, for the second out. Capt. Bob Henley scored Stewart with a long double to left field. Mabry then bore down to strike out Stone to end the threat.
Third baseman, John Guernsey,
singled to start the inning. After
Senewalle popped up to third baseman
Floyd Temple, pinch-hitter Jack
Delridge hit a long homer to lef-
center to cut the K.U. lead to 7 to 5.
The Cyclones came to life in the ninth as they sent seven men to the plate to push across three big runs, and almost overtake Coach Hogan's crew.
proved to be the margin of victory. De Luna reached second on an overthrow at first. Center fielder Henry Lamping drove in De Luna with a blooper single to left, his run was off the slants of Iowa State's sophomore righthander, Gene Harkebarth, who replaced Singley in the eighth.
Eugene Azure, education senior,
and Claude Moore, College junior,
have been accepted for work as
staff member of the United States
bureau of census.
Both Moore and Azure received their jobs as part of a jointly sponsored Y.M.C.A.-Y.W.C.A. Washington citizenship seminar. The seminar will be held in Washington, D.C. during July and August.
905
Mass. St.
CARL'S
Good Clothes
Phone
905
presents the new
South Seas
BELTS
New Hickok inspirations
in tropical accessories
Samoa Belt, $2.50
Waikiki Weave Belt, $1.50
HICKOK
Let's Go Golfing!
Let's Go
Golfing!
9 Holes
3106 Yards
Only -
40c on weekdays
55c on Sundays
and Holidays.
A FULL LINE
OF
GOLF EQUIPMENT
Hillview Golf Club
1 Mile South on Hiway No.59
Phone
752N3
Students Urged To Suggest Films
University students are urged to suggest films for next year's movie series, according to Allen Crafton, professor of speech. Students
should address their suggestions to Raymond Nichols, who is chairman of the committee for selecting the pictures.
Mr. Nichols, executive secretary for the unive.sity, is out of town. Students should leave their lists in his office, 223 Frank Strong.
WHY NOT STUDY THIS SUMMER IN EUROPE?
NUCLEUS STUDY TOURS
UNIVERSITY OF BORDEAUX ... $485 OXFORD SUMMER INSTITUTE ... $495
UNIVERSITY OF PARIS ... 545 UNIVERSITY OF COPENHAGEN ... 575
UNIVERSITY OF ZURICH ... 625 UNIVERSITY OF HEIDELBERG ... 590
ALL EXPENSE PRICES INCLUDE:
ROUND TRIP AIR TRANSPORTATION TO EUROPE
TUITION ROOM, AND BOARD AT UNIVERSITY
RAIL TRANSPORTATION TO UNIVERSITY, WITH RETURN TO PARIS
STUDENT TOURS—24 TO 70 DAYS—$645 TO $1195—ALL EXPENSES
STUDENT TRAVEL SERVICE LTD.
1540 E. 57TH ST.
GHICAGO 37. ILL.
Tempting
Short
Orders
Tempting Short Orders
By quick, congenial waiters
BAR MAN
3 Minute Short Order Service
The JAYHAWK Cafe At The Bottom of The 14th Street Hill
The Bus- (Adv.)
-By Bibler
THE RAPID TRANSIT CO.
SPECIAL
"I'll admit you had me guessing about a ladder, Reginald, Honey."
Ur walk with play reco face
TUESDAY, MAY 9. 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
KU Women Win Play Day Title
By MONA MILLIKAN University women athletes walked off the diamonds May 6 with their third straight softball play day championship on the records and sunburns on their faces and arms.
KU's "A" team won the title with two victories and one tie. A close second with two victories and a loss was Ottawa. Washburn took third position with a win, a loss, and a draw while the University "B" squad filling out the roster in place of absent Baker, fell to the bottom of the list with three defeats.
Home runs were made for the University by Betty van der Smissen, Frances Pence, Sydney Ashton, Joyce Herschell, and Suzanne Neff. It was Herschell's home in the bottom of the last inning of the K. U.-Washburn contest that tied the game and saved the championship for K.U.
To bring turns on the mound for the University "A" team were Elizabeth McCune and Constance Peterson, while Anne Gage, Ann Hendershot, and Shirley Mickelson took turns behind the plate. For the "B" squad Lorraine Godding, Joyce Horschell, and Miss Petterson performed pitching stints, while Joyce Jones was relieved behind the plate by Misses Gage, Horschell, and Hendershot.
Low scores attest the fine performance of the teams, particularly their pitching. Batting also was consistently fair for all squads, but it was chiefly errors in the field that decided the contests. Spirits were high and the women enjoyed the games.
and Hendershot.
Scores for the games were: K.U.
"A" 13, Ottawa 4; K.U. "A" 4, Washburn 4; K.U. "A" 10, K.U. "B" 3;
K.U. "B" 3, Washburn 8; K.U. "B" 5,
Ottawa 6; and Ottawa 5, Washburn 2,
in a surprising upset.
Women Near Softball Titles
Three-way play-offs for division championship were virtually assured for divisions I and III by results of Monday's games in women's intramural softball play.
Watkins forfeited to the Jayettes and threw division I into a tie between the Jayettes and Jolliffe, both with records of three victories and one loss. If, as is almost certain, Pi Beta Phi wins its last game Wednesday, it will give them a 3-1 record and make it a three-way deadlock.
Sigma Kappa upset Delta Gamma, 15 to 9, to close its schedule with a 4-1 record best in division III so far. However, both Delta Gamma and Harmon will pit their present 3-1 standings against weaker opponents during this week. A victory for both would make this, too, a three-way play-off.
Corbin smothered Alpha Phi, 25 to 4, and took the championship of division II with a perfect record of four victories against no defeats.
10
The winner in division IV will be determined Thursday but Delta Delta Delta with a 3-0 record is a firm favorite to win.
1 A.D.Pi vs. A.O.Pi, 4 p.m.
2 Harmon vs. Gamma Phi Beta.
3 4 p.m.
Today's games are: Field
3 p.m.
3 Kanza vs. Temrhur, 5 p.m.
Results are as follows: Pi Beta
Phi 5, Jolliffe 6; Kappa Alpha Theta
27, Alpa Phi 8; Alpha Delta Pi 15,
Kanza 2.
Dairy Queen
A Perfect Snack When You're Hungry
Starters on the University "A" squad were pitcher, Constance Peterson, catcher, Ann Hendershot; first base, Suzanne Neff, second, Betty Thomas; third, Frances Pence; shortstop, Sydney Ashton; right field, Nancy Moore (capt). center field, Ann Gage; and left field, Betty van der Smissen. Elizabeth McCune, Shirley Mickelson, Jerre Mueller, and Joyce Herschchell substituted.
Misses Gage, Hendershot, Mueller,
and Petterson substituted.
“B” team starters were pitcher, Joyce Herschell; catcher Joyce Jones; first, Mary Verschoyle; second, Mary Lou Conrod; third, Martor Jarie Rausch; shortstop, Grace Endecott (capt.). right field, Virginia Daugherty; center field, Chloe Warner; and left field, Darlene Schindler. Lorraine Godding and
All classes were represented on the University teams which included women from the College, the School of Education, and the School of Fine Arts.
Coaches were K.U.'s Miss Ruth Hoover; Mrs. Gage and Miss Evelyn Kinney from Ottawa; and Miss Mattie Ross of Washburn.
40 Attend Lutheran Picnic
Forty persons attended a picnic of the Lutheran Student association May 5 at Bismarck grove. Square dancing followed the box lunch.
lunch.
Chaperones were Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Heck, Mrs. Magda Jensen,
and Miss Marian Jersild.
VISIT ISRAEL THIS SUMMER
Two months in Israel One week in Paris Intercollegiate Zionist Federation of America Write: 131 West 14th Street New York, 11, N. Y.
Mother's Day Gift Suggestions
Sheer Nylon Hose Lace Trimmed Nylon Slips
Let us help you select a gift for Your Mother
Johnson's
835 Mass. Phone 771
Forget Those Moths
Independent Laundry AND DRY CLEANERS
Send your Furs and other Fine Clothes to us for safekeeping. Our refrigerated storage vaults insure you of protection.
I love you
Phone 432
740 Vermont
BREMER INSURANCE AGENCY
21 W. 9th Call 95
DRASTIC REDUCTIONS IN AUTO INSURANCE RATES Now you can have 80-20 collision coverage at the usual $50 deductible rates.
CHATEAU DRIVE-IN
MAIL AT 1820T.
"The best part of every date is dinner or a late snack at the Chateau."
TASTY LUNCHES DELICIOUS DINNERS FOUNTAIN SPECIALS
Open Daily 11 a.m. Curb Service after 4 p.m.
Put Pep In The Pocket Book—Put KANSAN Classifieds On The Job.
For
Mother's Day, May 14 Van Raalte "Because She Loves Nice Things"
String gloves -
$2.00
Nylon gloves -
$3.50
Both in white or sand.
Glove
other suggestions
Nylon petticoats ... $5 and 5.95
Cotton petticoats ... 3.00
Nylon slips ... 8.95
Cotton slips ... 3.50
Cotton blouses ... 3.00 to 7.95
Also, the more extravagant,but much appreciated gift:
Cashmere Cardigans----16.95 and 18.95 In white and many colors to wear over cottons.
Pendleton 49'er jackets ___14.95 In white, pastels, checks.
Campus WEST
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1950
TUES
The Editors Report — WHY NOT ELIMINATE
Russia From The U.N.? by Lew Sciortino
Herbert Hoover's suggestion that the United Nations be reorganized and that Russia be excluded is perhaps one of the best suggestions toward world peace yet to be given. It follows along the same pattern advanced by Clarence Strait in Union Now.
True enough, there might be a strong argument against Hoover's proposal. But in the long run it looks like a workable plan. It is a plan which could be put into operation at a time when feasible plans are sorely needed.
One thing is certain, the U.N. as it now stands is not performing the function for which it was intended. The machinery is there—but something is fouling it up. It is Russia.
Why shouldn't the U.N. be reorganized and Russia eliminated? Why should one country be permitted to block virtually all others? Why should Russia be allowed to bog down world proceedings simply because she doesn't like them?
Russian diplomats are acting no differently than those of prewar Italy, Germany, and Japan. When things go their way, the Russian "diplomats" stay and vote. When things go contrary to the Kremlin's whims, the Russians simply stomp out of the meeting. The whole show stops.
Even if the change does not alter Russia's antagnostic attitude there will be at least a new U.N. that can work together. And a new U.N. working together will tend to cement friendships of the countries of the world.
Perhaps to some this suggestion by Hoover sounds drastic. It is. Yet now is the time to make a few drastic moves—moves that might curb Russia's aggressive motives to more peaceful actions.
LOGICAL FOLLOW-UP
Student Swapping
by Billie Stover
Since the University was one of the first Middlewestern schools to have foreign students on the campus, the $500 grant by the All student council for a University student to study abroad seems a logical follow-up.
Certainly the appropriation will be as well invested as one of $500 for a class dance. Especially since the student receiving the scholarship will spend his junior year in the foreign country and his senior year back on the Hill.
We hope that the new council will see fit to pass a bill setting aside money for a permanent program of this kind rather than to rely on a year-to-year appropriation.
SAM TAKES JOE AND JOHN
by Janice Auer.
Out To Lunch
Joe, Sam and John sat down in their usual places at the cafe. The waiter came for their orders.
John said, "I'm still on my diet, you know. So I just think I'll have the fish timbale and filet mignon, with caviar, and of course, my tea."
"Sam, what will you have?" the waiter asked.
"How about the businessman's special?" suggested the waiter.
"Fine," replied Sam. Joe what will you have?"
"What do you have that's quick, inexpensive and easy to digest? I've got ulcers, you know."
"I'll have two porterhouse steaks mit ever'ting." Joe looked apologetically at John and Sam. "Is hard vork being policeman!" The waiter left.
Why did Joe always order so much, John thought while they waited for their orders. Someday he would push Sam too far. Then who would take them out to lunch? And that awful habit Joe had of taking home leftovers. ... embarrassing! John's face was distorted as he thought of Joe's atrocious manners.
Sam was looking at John and saw his face all screwed up, "What's wrong, John?" he asked gently. "Have a pain?"
"Oh, no, dear friend," said John. "I was just thinking of what a nice place they have here. By the way, Sam old boy, how are your ulcers?"
Sam tried to answer John but their orders had come. He gave up trying to shout above the noise of Joe drinking his vodka. They ate in silence. When they had finished, Joe picked up the leftover rolls and wrapped them in his napkin. John cringed visibly.
Time went by and Joe twiddled with his big brother medal. John polished his nails on his well-tailored tweeds. Sam nervously wrote H-bomb formulae on the table cloth—until as usual he could wait no longer and guiltily picked up the check.
by Keith Leslie
'Small Things'
If you would be lovelier and look like a fashion model appearing in current style ads,you might:
1. Cut your own hair with a pair of dull sheep shears
Tote a 50 lb. weight to round your shoulders,
4. Starve and go without sleep for about a week before your picture is taken.
3. Sharpen your hipbones,
You might also check with a good undertaker to strive for that "natural" look.
The German department has received an anonymous donation of $1,000 for use as a scholarship fund for students in their junior year who are majoring in German, Dr. J. A. Burzle, chairman of the department, announced Thursday.
Department Gets Donation
The scholarship will be given during the next scholastic year, he said.
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-
vocacy Service,420 Madison Ave. New
New York City.
James Morris
Editor-in-Chief
Editor-in-Chief
Doris Greenbank James Shevler
Managing Editor Business Mgr.
Asst. Man. Editors Norman Hunsinger
Kay O'Connor John HILL
Ralph Hemway
City Editor Edward Chapin
Nelson Johnson
Maryl Marks Elaine Elvig
Steve Ferro
Feature Editor Francis Kelley
Photograph Editor Fiona Walt
Telegraph Editor Robert Sigman
William Graves
Richard Tatum Lloyd Killen
Sports Editor Richard Dilsaver
Asst. Sports Editors Bob Leonard
Roy Sandal Arlene McKenna
Mona Millikin
Society Editor Faye Wilkinson
Asst. Society Editors Billie Stover
Emily Stewart
Editorial Assts. Keith Leslie
Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner
Gav. Mgr. Yvonne Joserwerd
Nat. Adv. Mgr. Forrest Red
Classified Ad. Mgr. Lee Dyer
Promotion Mgr. John Wiedeman
Coe's Drug 1347 Mass.
Drugs - Drug Sundries
Drinks - Sandwiches
The
Book
Aook
1021 AMES.
PHONE 666
We Deliver 10 To 10
Phone 234
Fiction Poetry Drama Non-Fiction Children's Books and Rental Library
CAFE
Give Her a Book On Mother's Day
We have a fine variety from which to choose:
New novels, biographies, poetry, music and art, books on antiques, interior decoration, gardening, cook books, books on sewing and needlecraft. Fine Bibles and Religious books.
Religious books.
Come in and see them—We gladly wrap for mailing.
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.
Why Be 'Cash Out' When You Can 'Cash In' With KANSAN Classifieds?
STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE
"See-Safe" Storage and Travel Bags!
"See-Safe," the new transparent plastic storage bag, is the new . . . better . . . inexpensive way to protect your garments. Ideal for storage and traveling. . Keeps pressing to a minimum. Airtight with full visibility so you can see your garments from the outside.
4 Sizes
Men's and Ladies' Suit Size ...52'' ...59c
Dress and Coat Size ...60'' ...69c
Formal Wear Size ...72'' ...79c
Blanket and Sweaters ...49c
ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners 1111 Mass.
25 weeks Addition
1939 Zenith heater Every median 1839 heater mechan and WHITE pants Oread 60 520 750 ON with filled MEL Five mail 842 SIZE brown size 1048 FINISH just get Easy 826 24 Fpletto Ky. MOON of B. BOO writetoday Uni WH pan Oread
PLA with side Ma FORE Rev WR two berries
NEPT nisery Lo 5 po HO in cable fire moon Jas RO I SH Ph TV state rodeve AT Is to M at m m
TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
The University Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone K.U. 376
Terms: Cash, Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill is promptly delivered in advance and will be called in during Saturday or Sunday at 5 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Business office. Journalism bldg, not another 3 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
FOR SALE
One Three Five day days days
25 words or less ... 35c 65c 90c
Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
1938 LINCOLN with Mercury motor,
Zenith 8 tube radio and south wind
heater. Clean and in excellent condition.
Everything works. Price to sell in-
mentor code 443
1063
1831 BUCK, 5 passenger coupe, radio,
good, good tires, clean, good condition
mechanically. $250. 1234 Tenn. Ateroom
and evenings. ___ 11
WHITE dinner cup, $15. Summer tux pants, $3 size 37 or 38. Like new, 15w.
1940 STDEBEAKER Commander Coupe
Ester and Heller. 50,000 actual mile
120
17822716001010000000000
ON MOTHER'S DAY SAY "I Love You"
with a box of assorted cremes and nut
filled chocolates from the DIXIE CO
MEL CORN SHOP Box $1.25
Five pound box, $6.95. Wrapped free for
the Dixie Carnel Corn Shop,
Mass. 11
SIZE 11 white pique sunback dress with brown gingham trim. Never worn. Also size 10 navy wool all season suit. Phone 1048-AL 9
FINEST TELEVISION-Best in sets and
merials at lowest prices. Newport
Emmerson table model set at $19.50.
Easy terms. Bowman Radio and Electric.
24 FOOT NATIONAL house trailer. Completely furnished. See after p. 5. m-135.
Ky.
MOTOROLA TV Portable. Used only 3
months. Unpaid balance only $99.40. See
at B.F. Motorola. Easy terms if desired.
Microsoft, Gecko C, 929 Mass.
BOOK-EASE leaves both hands free for
writing or typing, marks any reference
section such as vocabulary, etc. Get your
younger of age 89 at your Student's
library.
LOST
WHITE dinner coat, 115. Summer tuxedo,
30 or 38. Like 38. Like new. 125.
Gread. Apt. 4. 4
PLASTIC rimmed glasses in brown case with Möller Optical company written inside. Possibly near Jayhawker Theater. Lindsay Lindsey. Phone 3445. 12
WRIST WATCH Thursday morning between
the Library and Park, phone 730. REWARD, 9
FOUR-MONTH-OLD blond eocker pup.
Poward. Phone 34973 or 1996J. 12
NEW four-room house, completely furnished, garage, automatic washers, fern and comfortable. June 1 to September 30. KU. KU 517 before or 3791 J after 5 p.m. 15
FHONEYMOONERS! Vacationers! For rent in Estes Park area, modern housekeeping cabins. Completely furnished, big stone fireplaces, electricity, bath gargoyles mountain view. And Zumwinkel only. Call 800-Zumwinkel. 2474 S. Denver, Colorado. 12
ROOMS for summer or fall. 3 double and
single. Sleeping porch. Single beds.
$10.00 a month per person. 1222 Miss.
Phone 495. 24
TWO LARGE, cool rooms for summer students. Single beds, linens furnished rooms kept clean, kitchen privileges if desired. Phone 25232 or can be seen in 19
AVAILABLE June 1. Modern. 5 room.
1st floor apartment. Clean, convenient.
to K.U. See at once at 1700 Tenn.
MAKE BETTER GRATES! A portable or
student book for $3.50 or
$1.00 a week. All makes and
students at Student Union Book Store. tf
WANTED
EXPERIENCED stenographer qualified to take dictation Permanent wizard right前, Russell Wiley. Band Dept., Phone KU 385.15 ARE you leaving K.U. for the summer? Graduate student, wife and child care for your student in exchange for use 11 Phone 2573.
TUX. size 40. Call Chuck Arnold at 868
pt. 00MNJ.
MOBILE HOUSE TRAILER in exchange
from apartment 417
summer. Phone 619-81.
TRANSPORTATION
WANTED: Someone to drive car to western New York in early June. Call 1620-W
WANT RIDERS or share the driving to summer school. Leave Plaza 7 a.m., return 11 a.m. JE 3178, Kansas City, Mo. after 6 p.m. TF
BUSINESS SERVICE
FORMALS AND DRESSES of all types made to order. Also alterations and re-modeling. Call Mrs. Scales. Phone 3060-W.
1414 Teen. 15
TYPING; Theses, term papers, letters,
etc. Regular rates. Prompt, accurate
work. Mrs. Schear; Apt. R-36 1810 Ll;
phone 2737-R.
TYPING: Thesis. Term Papers, Reports,
etc. Pump. Mrs. Wilde Milder.
3068M. 15
3068M. 15
THE LAWRENCE Women's Club invite the people of Douglas County and surrounding towns to use their clubhouse for business and social wedding receptions. A small fee to cover Call resident hostess. Telephone 209. 10
NEED HELP? I will type your themes, class notes, term papers, etc. Regular tests. Quick service. Mrs. Chas. Malody, 93. Miss Phone. 1788J. 9
942 MILE
SOCIAL WORK. INTERNATIONAL
ORGANIZATION will employ several
alerts, mature students with good
personality for summer work. This is a digi-
nified sales activity responsible for
oldest, largest school known firm in
the international field. Applicants
accepted will work by appointment on
leads we furnish. Earnings $75.00 on
$125.00 and more per period.
advanced percentage of time. Write Mr. W. W.
Kansas City, Mo. Giving qualifications, school
and home address.
Twenty-four men were blindfolded, doused with fish oil, sawdust and syrup and duck-walked up 14th street hill in the traditional initiation ceremonies of the KuKu club.
24 Men Undergo KuKu Initiation
club.
Demonstrating some of the enthusiasm they are expected to show at football games next fall, the initiates were led over the campus giving K. U. songs and yells. They were soaked with water tossed from the Kappa Kappa Gamma, Kappa Alpha Theta, and Pi Beta Phi sorority houses.
houses. The men initiated were Alan Armstrong, Paul Arrowood, Dwight Boring, Donald Christian, Dean Cole, Maurice Murphy, Howard Dunnington, Vincent Coffman, Tom Foster, Phillip Godwin, Robert Hanson, Clayton Comfort, Don Kane, William Griffith, Eugene Kennedy.
Kennedy
Robert Nash, Glenn Pierce, Louis Powers, Robert Sigler, Charles Steele, George Tappan, William Thorne, Onon Vandergriff, Dwight Woods.
Disabled veterans desiring outpatient medical services should contact their local VA office.
Gibbs Clothing Co.
Ph. 459
811 Mass.
VAN HEUSEN PRODUCTS Sold Exclusively in Lawrence
HURRY LAST 2 DAYS ENDS WED.!
at
SPECIAL ACADEMY AWARD WINNER DESICA'S BicycleThief
FEATURE TIMES 1:41,3:38,5:35,7:32,929
- Fun - Latest world news
- Added color cartoon
Patee PHONE 321
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, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Comm. St. Ph. 418. **tf**
Shows continuous. Open 12:45
TOMORROW
and Thursday
LIMITED
ENGAGEMENT
All Seats 75c
Special Student Price 50c
"HUNGRY HILL"
the story that flamed
for 40 years!
A
'HUNGRY HILL'
J ARTHUR RANK presents
MARGARET LOCKWOOD
in DAPHNE DU MAURIER'S
'HUNGRY HILL'
CECIL WITH
SEAN BARRASA
PARKER · SIMMONS WARING
DENNIE ARTHUR
PRICE SINCLAIR
(1)
A thrilling story by the author of "Bracca" and Frenchman's
Creek. . .
ENDS TONITE
"Without Honor"
"Arizona"
Thoroughbred"
VARSITY
THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Had Bros. Nurses, and easy on a body and fender repair, auto painting, used cars 317 E. 17th. Phone 785 or 1821R
TYPING, Theses, Term Papers, Reports.
Lawrence DRIVE-IN Theatre TONITE and WED.
RIOTOUS,
ROMANTIC
ESCAPADES!
Robert
YOUNG
Shirley
TEMPLE
ADVENTURE IN BALTIMORE
Notes. etc. Prompt Service. Mrs. Sheehan
1028 Vermont. Ph. 1168R. tf*
*
John Josephine AGAR·HUTCHINSON
ALBERT SNARPE
JOHNNY SANDS
CAROL BRENNAN
ephine
WHINSON
tf
Plus:
- Bugs Bunny Cartoon
* Artie Shaw & Orch.
* Do Re Meow cartoon
Open 7:00 Show
starts 7:30 Phone 260
Drive out early and relax!
TYBING. Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rules. Prompt attention. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601
NOW ENDS WEDNESDAY
The Picture with all the Hilarious Answers!
Ohhh.MOTHER.
WHAT
DO I
DO NOW!
MOTHER
DIDN'T TELL ME
DOROTHY WILLIAM
MCGUIRE + LUNDIGAN
with
JUNE HAVOC
EXTRA Basketball Headliners of 1950
Lawrence in the Fox Movietone News.
STARTS THURSDAY YOU'LL LOVE "LIL"!
George Montgomery · In Cinecolor
DAKOTALIL
Continuous Shows. Open 12:45
Granada
PHONE 946
JANE MARLENE MICHAEL RICHARD WYMAN DIETRICH WILDING TODD
LOVE HELD ITS BREATH AS SUDDEN TERROR HELD THE STAGE!
STAGE!
No one will be seated during the last few minutes of "Stage Fright." . . The final scenes bring a staggering surprise we want you to enjoy.
ALFRED
HITCHCOCK
GIVES YOU
"Stage
Fright!"
FRIGHT TIMES
ALFRED
HITCHCOCK
JAYHAWKER
"Stage Fright!
FRIGHT TIMES
1:00,3:00,5:05,7:10,9:15
TODAY
TODAY
THRU SATURDAY
(42.2) (41.1) 8.1 (41.1)
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1950
TROPHY
—Kansan Photo by Frankle Waits
ADMIRING THEIR TROPHIES won at the annual air-meet held May 5 and 6 at Stephens college in Columbia, Mo., are, left to right: Miss Nancy Corrigan, chief pilot of the Jayhawk flying club; Ike Hoover, who won the trophy for precision flying; Jim Pierce, who won the trophy for bombing; and Dudley Elliott, College junior. Hoover and Pierce are engineering seniors.
KU Fliers Win Trophies At National Air Meet
The men flew the Fairchild P.T.-19, number 38, shown behind the group in its Lawrence Municipal airport hanger.
Eight University fliers returned Sunday afternoon from a successful trip to the National Inter-collegiate air meet at Stephens college, Columbia, Mo. Two third place trophies—one in the bomb dropping event, and one in the precision flight event—were won by the group in the three-day meet.
Jimmie Pierce, engineering senior, won the bomb dropping trophy. Dudley Elliott, College junior, served as Pierce's pilot during the contest.
Isaac "Ike" Hoover, engineering senior, won the third place trophy in precision flight. This competition included taxi procedure, take off procedure, flying pattern around the field, and spot wheel landing. Both trophies will be kept in the aeronautical engineering building.
Miss Nancy Corrigan, chief pilot of the Jayhawk Flying club, said
Officials were forced to cut entries from five to one for each school in all four classes because of the winds, and all but eight of the University students who planned to go to the meet were forced to drop out.
Miss Corrigan said a large crowd attended the meet despite the bad weather.
Engineers Honor Emeriti Heads
More than 260 civil engineering alumni, faculty and students of the School of Engineering and Architecture, and friends honored two chairmen emeritus of engineering departments at a reunion banquet May 5.
The honored guests, William C. McKnown, professor of civil engineering, and Frank A. Russell, professor of railway engineering and engineering drawing, will retire in June. Professor McKnown, former chairman of the civil engineering department, is completing his 37th year at the University and Professor Russell, former chairman of the engineering drawing department, is completing his 28th year. Both have served in teaching and administrative capacity.
The two professors were presented with tea silver serving sets by CK Mathews, Kansas City, Mo, half of the civil engineering alumni.
Nine speakers including Ellis B. Stouffer, dean of the University; T. DeWitt Carr, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture; Fred Ellsworth, University alumni secretary; and George W. Bradshaw, chairman of the civil engineering department, spoke at the occasion
The Jay Janes will hold a rush tea from 3 to 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Pine room of the Union. All women living in houses which have vacancies in Jay Janes are invited to attend the tea.
Civil engineers attended from points as far away as California and New York. Seventeen alumni, now employed by the Phillips Petroleum company, arrived in two company planes from Bartlesville, Okla., to attend the banquet.
Jay Janes Tea Will Be Wednesday
Those organizations having vacancies are Sigma Kappa, Monchonsia, Kappa Alpha Theta, Jolliffe hall, Hopkins hall, Pi Beta Phi, Templin hall, Delta Delta Delta, Gamma Phi Beta, N.S.A., Corbin hall, and Miller hall.
Spirited Concert Given By Combined Glee Clubs
By PATRICIA JANSEN
A spirited, entertaining concert was presented by the 100-voice Men's and Women's Glee clubs in Hoch a
An audience of approximately 300 persons heard a varied program including peppy folk songs, dreamy numbers, and classical songs.
A humorous touch was added by the men, who clanged triangles, cow bells, and other percussion instruments found in a toy band to denote the connecting and disconnecting of the dry bones. The song brought many smiles and an enthusiastic applause from the audience.
The women looked like Southern belles in pastel evening dresses with full skirts. The men wore grey corduroy coats and red and blue ties.
An early American work song, "The Erie Canal" (Scott) was another popular number. A clear
One of the cleverest arrangements of the evening was the popular "Dry Bones" (Gearhart) sung by the Men's Glee club under the direction of Gerald Carney, assistant professor of music education.
baritone solo on the number was sung by Jay Nixon, fine arts senior, accompanied by the steady rhythm of the Glee club.
The Women's Glee club directed by Miss Irene Peabody, associate professor of voice, sang more conventional arrangements. One of the loveliest and most difficult was "Sea Birds" (Blanchard). In "In The Galway Piper" (arr. Fletcher) a faint humming gave an interesting background to the Irish air. The group also sang the familiar round "Row, Row, Row Your Boat" (arr. Harry Wilson).
The combined groups delighted the audience with a refreshing version of "Country Style" (James Van Heusen). With clapping of hands and stomping of feet, the singers changed the atmosphere to a real cow town square dance.
'Competition Is Sharp, But Lawyers Will Find Jobs,' Moreau Says
Two cities, two oil companies, and three insurance firms have filed requests with the School of Law, for young men and women with legal training, Dean F. J. Moreau announced Wednesday.
"Two large cities in Missouri have written us recently, requesting young men to go on their legal staffs," he said. "The oil companies want graduates to do title work, and the insurance companies want adjustors."
We don't worry about locating our men," Dean Morean said commenting on opportunities for graduating seniors. "It's amazing how quickly they get located."
Competition for the law graduate is sharp. Eastern schools send representatives all over the country to put pressure on alumni to hire graduates from their own Universities. "However we are constantly placing people," he said.
"The contacts we make today may bear fruit a year or two years from now.
"The higher ranking men will be
able to find positions in larger law offices in larger cities. Others may go through the state and visit several communities and decide for themselves where to hang their shingles. The sky is the limit for the young lawyer who goes into business for himself."
"There are many opportunities in all types of business for a law graduate even if he fails to pass the bar examination, but we never worry about that," he said. "We haven't lost a man in three years."
Spanish Film Shown Friday
The department of Romance languages is sponsoring a Spanish film, "Los Heroes del Barrio," from 2 to 4 p. m. Friday in Fraser theater. The film has English subtitles. There will be two showings.
Senior Day,1950,Is Sharp Contrast To Seniors' Fight Of 1891
Bv LEW SCIORTINO
Senior Day, 1950, brings a flashback of the grand-daddy of all Senior days at K.U. A day a long time ago—a May day in 1891.
As students lumbered up the Hill for 8 am. classes that day an incongruous object caught their attention. A flag pole 75 feet high was in front of the Main building, now Fraser hall. On top of the pole was a high flag with "92" scrawled on it. At the base of the pole was a junior with a club in his hand. No one knew the significance of the pole, the flag, or the junior with the club and since time was short students just gawked and went on to class.
But when the junior grapevine started working it became known that the "flag of the juniors would fly this day for all to see and honor and woe unto him who dare molest the sacred insignia."
In those days chapel services were held between 8:50 a. m. and 9:10 a. m. As the students went from class to chapel all conversations concerned the flag. The juniors though had taken precautions for the protection of their flag. Additional guards were posted in various vantage points in Fraser and a signal arranged. The signal: a long whistle. When it was sounded a man posted near the push button of the call system, used at that time would begin a series of long and short rings. At the sound of this danger warning every able bodied junior was to report to the flagpole, prepared for battle.
Scarcely had the 9 a. m. classes convened when 20 sophomores surrounded the flag pole. The guard posted at the push button gave the warning and the juniors rushed from class. By the time they reached their "class colors" they found their
guard tied, the pole getting the final touches of the axe and crashing to the ground.
Case jumped hedges, ducked in and out of buildings, and finally made it to his fraternity house, dashed in, slammed the door, and locked it. About the time he got his breath, however, one of his "brothers" who also happened to be a junior, unlocked the door and let in the pursuers. Case pitched the flag to another sophomore and a free-for-all started. The outcome, the flag was shredded, the house damaged, a few shiners were had when the fight broke up.
Fists flew and several heads felt the thud of clubs as the juniors and sophomores tangled. Then the seniors decided to give the sophomores a hand. The freshmen, seeing things getting a little lopsided, decided to even things by joining the juniors. About this time a sophomore named Case get free, stripped the flag from the fallen pole, and took off across the campus. A junior spotted him, yelled and started after Case. The brawl then took on a cross-county aspect with the juniors and freshmen chasing Case and the seniors and sophomore running interference.
-Kansan Photo by Frankie Waits
In those days the stairway entrance to the south tower was
But things were not over. The juniors and freshmen pooled their resources, bought more cloth, and in less than an hour a freshman was hoisted by a new junior flag was hoisted at the south tower of Fraser.
SCHLOSS
LOOK OUT LAWYERS! The engineers think they'll win the annual tug-o'-war at 4:30 p.m. today across Potter lake. The men have been measuring their 3,000 pounds of strength by pulling railroad cars along tracks at a Lawrence railroad station.
Captain John Burnett, extreme right, yells orders to his team of engineers as the following men tug, right to left: Charles Walker, Neil E. Welter, T. C. Bunard, R. G. Murrell, R. L. Lundberg, W. A. Peters, David Webber, Donald McMurray, L. C. Bruni, Richard Rumpf, Richard Heiny, George Hopkins, Ernest Leachy, Charles Sturgeon, James Hayward, Frank Reynolds, James MeAdoo, Donald Gordon, Rickards Leonard, John Young, Elmer Dougherty, and Stanley Englund.
boarded. So, the freshmen and juniors posted a heavy guard on the roof and the entrance of the north tower. Nothing happened for a few hours. Suddenly an alarm was raised and a rush for the south tower was made by the guards on the roof.
Two sophomores, Jack Weaver and A. W. Reno, had persuaded "Old Nate", an elderly janitor, to show them how to get to the flags. Nate showed them a ladder which led to a trap door in the hall ceiling of the third floor of the south wing. Weaver and Reno climbed the ladder, pulled it up the trap door and then climbed through another opening leading onto the roof. Another shift of the ladder put them onto the south tower and down came the flags.
Weaver, however, was captured and held as hostage. Then Weaver remembered an incident which had happened during chapel services a few years before. Some unsung hero had suspended a skeleton through the ventilator opening of the chapel ceiling.
He waited around until his captors were off guard then made a dive for the ventilator. But things just weren't for Weaver that day. After the skeleton incident someone had the ventilator bricked up and this is what Weaver ran head on into in the dark. There he was found and dragged back to the roof.
However, Weaver had friends. As he was being dragged out on the roof, the seniors and sophomores rushed for the north tower door and another fight started. After 30 minutes the brawl ended, the flags were restored. Weaver released, and a truce made. The first Class Day was over.
The University Courier commenting on the incident wrote:
"The enthusiastic class spirit which prevailed last Friday was something new for the University. We do not remember that classes have even been quite so distinctly separate. The May pole and the little axe did it all. It was a good thing and we all enjoyed it. It is just such episodes as those that make college life enjoyable and that will be the object of pleasant memories in the years to come."
1000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
Long Awaited Fieldhouse Is Under Way
Plans for the 16,000 seating capacity University of Kansas fieldhouse are now being drawn in Topeka under the direction of Charles Marshall, state architect, J. J. Wilson, K.U. business manager, said today.
It is hoped that the blue prints and specifications for the fieldhouse, which will be one of the nations largest, can be completed by early fall.
The huge structure will be located west and a little south of the Military Science building in the south-west portion of the campus. The long axis will run north-south on the extreme western intramural field and the vacant area to the
north, straddling an imaginary projection of 16th street.
The fieldhouse proper will be $347\frac{1}{2}$ feet long with a clear span (no posts) width of 245 feet. The sides will be 60 feet high and the roof at the center will be 98 feet above the ground level.
A guiding principle in the planning was that there should be a maximum of permanent seats, Mr. Wilson said. 65 percent of the 16,000 capacity will be permanent steel seats in the balcony on all four sides. The 16,000 capacity is figured on a basis of 18 inches per person with 2 feet and 4 inches between
rows. The arena space between balconies will be 108 by 204 feet, although the floor arena will be a bit larger, projecting underneath the balconies.
For basketball a portable floor will be placed on the special claydirt arena floor. Temporary bleachers will be erected from the basketball court edge to the balconies.
Mr. Wilson said the fieldhouse is being planned so that a gymnasium addition could logically be added at some future date.
The arena floor will have an 1/8 mile indoor track.
Approximate dimensions of the
fieldhouse proper now being constructed at Kansas State college are 320 by 180 feet. However it is being built as a complete unit with gymnasium added.
The first floor of the K. U. building will have locker rooms, showers, storage and offices for the athletic program. No definite assignment of space has been made yet, according to Wilson.
Athletic Director-elect Arthur "Dutch" Lonborg has been consulted in the planning and is in touch with the situation.
The exterior of the building wil
probably be a stone finish, Mr. Wilson said. However the large steel skeleton will provide the basic support.
The 1949 legislature appropriated $750,000 for the fieldhouse. "That is not enough for so large a structure," Mr. Wilson said, "but we are proceeding with the planning. A reasonably definite determination of actual costs can't be made until the plans and specifications are completed."
Mr. Wilson indicated that once the basic structure is provided for, many parts can be left unfinished and completed as money is available.
PETER AND ANNA BREWER
-Kansan Photo by Bob Blank
REALLY A MOUTHFUL! Burt A. Robson, business senior, left, and Betty Ruth Cattell, College senior, right, take large bites of barbecue at the senior picnic held Tuesday at Potter lake while be entertained with skis and antics of happy seniors.
Engineers Get Dunked As Seniors Play, Eat
Law students have more "pull" than engineering students, or at least that's what one would be led to believe after seeing six engineers get dunked in Potter lake at the Senior Day tug-of-war.
Charles Hoffhaus, College senior and member of the class day committee, was on a raft in the lake trying to keep the area clear of dogs, but was not too successful.
More than 500 students watched the contest in which 3,000 pounds of lawyers pitted their fat and muscle against 3,000 pounds of engineers. Referee was Marvin Small, '49, assistant general secretary of the Alumni association.
Activities began with a "Spirit of '50" parade from the west end of Jayhawk drive to the terrace of the Union. Dressed to look the characters in the famous "Spirit of 76" painting, Louise Lambert, James Hawes, and Ernest Friesen led the parade of five carloads of cheering, active students.
On the terrace of the Union, the merrymakers were entertained with songs by the Delta Delta Delta quartet, and the ATO quintet. Heywood Davis and Win Koerper, College sophomores, presented their accordion and guitar arrangements of western ballads. Dean Banker, business senior, gave a skit showing how a coed takes a bath. James Hawes was master-of-ceremonies for the affair.
Accounting Is Hard Work Business Speaker Says
These festivities were followed by the tug-of-war, and a barbecue at the picnic grove on the west side of Potter lake. Women from Mortar Board, women's honor society, served barbecued ribs, baked beans, potato salad, and cokes to a large number of seniors and their guests.
The accounting profession means irregular hours, hard work, and pressure, but there are many continuous wage increasing jobs in the profession, Vernon B. Burgett, public accountant from Kansas City, Mo., told students at the annual School of Business convocation today.
Large businesses offer excellent post graduate courses for accountants, he told the students. Also, after working in the profession six or eight years an accountant can practice on his own account, stay in the profession with a large corporation, or go
into private accounting, he pointed out.
Mr. Burgett also pointed out that a beginning public accountant's salary was usually between $210 and $215 a month, plus overtime amounting to about $300 a year.
UNIVERSITY DAILY
47th Year No. 144
Wednesday, May 10, 1950
Lawrence, Kansas
hansan
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Strike Halts Five Railroads
Chicago, May 10—U(P).Loco-
motive firemen and engineeren
walked off the job in a strike which
crippled five big railroad systems
today and federal mediators sus-
pended all talks with the railroads
and the union pending a report to
the White House.
the White House. Chairman Francis O'Neill of the national railway mediation board, who had continued settlement attempts hours after the walkout began at 6 a.m., said no settlement was reached and that he would report to the White House today.
Mr. O'Neill acted after meeting alternately with the railroads and the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen for 25 straight hours. At one point, he said the disputants were "not far apart."
But in announcing suspension of the talks, he said "We had a package deal we were working on, but it didn't work out." He refused to elaborate.
Trapped Man Gives Up Hope
BULLETIN
Dominick Atefo was pronounced dead at 1:35 p. m. CST.
New York, May 10—(U.P.) A well-digger trapped for more than 24 hours in a shaft 18 feet beneath a Brooklyn garage gave up hope today under the agony of third-degree burns and the pressure of tons of sand and rock.
As rescuers toiling with picks and shovels neared his side in a race with death, Dominick Atteo, 45, groaned in a cracked voice: "I can't stand it any longer. I'm going... I'm going."
His friend, Father John Garrone,
shouted down into a partly dug well
where Atteo was buried to the waist
by a cave-in at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday.
"Can't you move a little?" the
priest asked. "No, please, no," At-
"Hold on, Dom, we've got hundreds of people working and praying for you," Father Garrone shouted. "Police and firemen and your family are here, and we've got an ambulance ready."
Atteo had received the last rites of the Roman Catholic church. Shortly after noon, he called for his sons. John, 27, and Joseph, 25, who had been working with the rescuers making a trench to free him.
"They're almost there, Pop; hold on a little longer." John shouted.
on a little longer.
Atteo had complained earlier of difficulty with singing. It had been feared that a flash fire of the oxygen which had been pumped into the shaft, set off by a cigaret, might have blinded him. However, Dr. Harold Berson, who had been lowered into the shaft several times to administer plasma and stimulants, said Atteo was not blind.
An Editorial By Need Seniors Pay Dues?
Why, then, should some pay and others get off scott-free? Most seniors—they think they have to pay. Yet, those who refuse to pay will be graduated. All they lose is the privilege of attending the senior breakfast or helping out with the class gift—an information booth.
During the past few weeks 1,262 seniors have paid $3.40 each for class dues. If most of them were asked why they probably would say it was required. Yet, it isn't true! Out of approximately 2,400 seniors about 900 will escape paying the dues!
Robert F. Bennett, chairman of the senior class gift committee, gave his opinion at the class meeting. After the class had decided on the gift, Bennett told the seniors they did not have to pay the dues if they were against the selection. Bennett says he feels that no senior should have to pay if he strenuously objects. Objections could include things such as the gift, the senior class breakfast, the method used in handling the senior meeting, or a personal dislike of the class officers.
Some seniors have voiced opinions on paying the dues. They have legitimate gripes. Some attended other schools until this year. Some have other needs for the money. There are many reasons for not paying the dues.
Nearly 800 seniors were graduated in February. Fewer than 100 of these will come back to commencement or pay the dues. Figures of past classes uphold this figure. Perhaps 200 of the June graduates will not trouble to attend any of the activities such as baccalureaate services or commencement exercises. They also will refuse to pay their dues. Yet, everyone else is expected to pay.
Students have been discussing where the total class dues will go. This is a difficult question to answer. There is no way to determine how many seniors will pay the dues.
The class of 1949 held its annual meeting in Hoch auditorium with a box lunch eaten while the class prophecy was read. This was held at noon and yet only 450 seniors attended. Perhaps this year's graduates will get up at 8:30 a.m. to eat eggs and smoke the traditional corncob pipe and tobacco—which will cost approximately 25 cents per person.
Then there is the class deficit. This was incurred by dances that flopped. The total deficit was $411.17 until the All Student Council appropriated $253.11 to apply on the debt.
Those are expenses to be reckoned with. Those are things the $3.40 helps pay. But what about those who will not pay? Those who were graduated in February or who will not be here for commencement and most likely will not pay. Presumably the rest think they have to pay the dues.
The Veterans administration refused to pay the $3.40 for veterans on Public Law 16 or 346. This is because they claim the University does not require every senior to pay the fee. The V.A. pays only those things that are required of everyone. Yet, the veterans are expected individually to pick up the check when even the V.A. knows better!
The proper procedure to keep from paying them is to write a petition asking that you be exempted. Reasons should be stated for refusing. Many students objected to the gift, some do not want to attend the breakfast, others say they should not have to pay for debts incurred by others. These are some reasons. There are many more.
When the petitions are turned in at the student organizations' window of the business office, a committee of four persons will examine them. Members of the petition committee are as follows: Karl Klooz, University bursar; Harold Swartz, accountant for student organizations; Miss Lambert; and Bennett.
FAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1950
Amateurs Can Record Own Earthquakes
St. Louis—U.P.-William F. Sprengnether, Jr., hopes to create a new corps of hobbyists in the near future--amateur seismologists.
With his father, the 40-year-ole physicist operates the Sprengrether Instrument company here. The firm, founded by Sprengnether, Sr., 40 years ago, claims to be the only one in the world specializing in the development and production of seismographic equipment.
Young Sprengnether has applied for a patent on a device which he believes will develop a lot of interest among hobby-minded Americans.
His invention is a home-mode
seimograph, a low-priced, simplified
version of a regular quake-
recorder.
Sprengnether hopes to have the instrument on the market "within the next six or eight months." He reported the gadget will cost in the neighborhood of $75" and that it can be operated easily by any
person of average intelligence, high school age or over.
The physicist said the 40-pound instrument will come complete in every detail, down to a 14-karat gold wire from which the pendulum that touches off the wire-recording mechanism will swing.
To whet the hobbyist's curiosity and test his mechanical ingenuity, the midget-sized seismographs will be sold partly unassembled.
Thrown in as an added attraction will be a set of graphs and scales for determining the distance of an earth tremor without having to perform any complicated mathematical calculations.
Sprengnether noted that part of the fun in dealing with the gadget will be putting it together. A hobbyist will "pick up principles of
optics and physics he never knew,' Sprengmether said.
Looking into the future, he envisions the day when amateur seismologists will be able to furnish seimological and meteorological stations with pertinent information that the too-few-and-far between posts are unable to gather currently.
The physicist said his instrument will be able to record anything from minuscule oscillations to a major earthquake thousands of miles away.
As one example, Sprengether cited the use of the home-model seismographs along the coast lines, where they could be used to trace hurricanes and thus warn ships of impending danger zones.
Shortly, he plans to go to Washington, where he will try to interest members of the Seismological Society of America in helping organize an amateur society for the "seismologists."
Peck Plays Cornet With Fine Intonation
Bv MELVA LUTZ
With clear articulation Jeanne Peck, cornetist, played the very modern "Sonate" (Hubeau) on her senior recital Sunday afternoon.
- Although her soft passages lacked clearness she played the "Sonate" with fine intonation. The number of staves, "Stirnmode," "Intermeted," and a "Spiritual."
She played exceptionally well, except for a few tongued passages, the "Chorale and Aria" from Cantata No. 43 (Bach-Peck). She played first a slow movement and then a fast movement.
Miss Peck concluded the program with "Legende" (Enesco) and the fast, shawy, "Concert Etude" (Goedicke).
"Etude de Concert" (Poot) and the very melodic, modern "Andante Cantabile" (Fitzgerald) were played with good tone quality.
Wednesday, May 10
Official Bulletin
Y.W.C.A. group discussion, 4 p.m.
today, East room, Union.
Jefferson county students, 7:30 today. Miller hall. Work on decorations for alumni dinner to be started.
Sociology club, 4 p.m. today. 110 Strong hall. Lars Manner, "Life In Sweden." All invited.
Jay James rush tea, 3 to 4:30 p.m. today, Pine room, Union. Wear uniforms.
A.S.C.E. 7:30 p.m., 101 Hall snow.
Elections. Rolf Vollenweider, "Engineering Education in Switzerland."
Important Red Pepper meeting,
7:30 p.m. Thursday. 103 Strong hall.
Le Cercle Francais jeudi 11 mat,
5 p.m. moins le quart chez made-
moisele Crumine, 20 Missouri
Programme et pique-nique; cotisation,
vingt "cents" americains.
Spanish movie "Los Heroes del Barrio," sponsored by department of romance languages and literatures, 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. Friday Fraser theater. English sub-titles. Public invited.
General Semantics club, 7:45 p.m. Thursday, 111 Strong hall. Phillip Persky will report on "General Semantics Bibliography."
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Unpublished on request. Entered as second clips matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
University Dally Kansan
K. U. Dance Manager applications now being accepted by Tom White, social committee chairman of A.S.C. State qualifications and send to 1111 W. 11th before Friday.
Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship,
7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday, 131
Strong hall. Mrs. Bryans, former
missionary to China, speaker.
Election of 1950-51 Engineering council representatives, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday basement of Marvin hall.
China's Hope Is In Building Stronger Sense Of Nationalism, Dynan Says
United States' hope in China now is that the Chinese will develop a strong sense of nationalism, a former member of the air transport command told members of the International Relations club at a dinner meeting Tuesday.
Phil Dynan, president of the International Relations club at Central Missouri State college, Warrenburg, Mo., said the United States has made a great blunder in its foreign policy in the Far East. He believes we should join in the revolution there instead of bucking it. Commenting that the Chinese may assent to a leader, he declared they still want to call China their own.
"The Chinese will go with anyone who can give him a bowl of rice," he said. "But how long can Russia put a bowl of rice before him?"
Mr. Dynan, who observed the Russian army in action during World War II, described the Red war machine as "super." He noted that the Russians have little regard for life and practically everyone is in the army. One Russian officer told him that by 1955 the entire Russian infantry would be airborne.
supposedly have freedoms, Mr. Dynan explained, but are afraid to exercise them. Those who go to church are taxed more heavily, and those in the army who do so have the lowest ranks. At the close of the war, before the Iron Curtain was thrown around Russia, he said, the common man had an unusually warm feeling for the Americans.
"The hope for peace lies in the United Nations". Mr. Dyian asserted, but warned "we've got to put more teeth in our policy."
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Machines Do Everything But Replace The Sweater
Los Angeles—(U.F.)—Machines can do everything around an office now but wear sweaters. The Southern California Business show has proven the time is here when the boss can arrive in the morning, open his mail, tell one machine what to write in reply, tell another to get those orders out fast and then relax with a dictating machine on his knee.
What's more, the machines never chew gum, get phone calls, or skip out to the powder room.
A one-machine accounting department that cost $5,000,000 to build but only $4,000 to b1 y is making its first public appearance at the show under the sponsorship of the National Association of Cost Accountants.
"It adds, subtracts, multiplies, divides, types, lists and posts," a demonstrator said. "It even makes up its own problems.
"The only thing it won't do is mix
a Martini, and we're working on that."
A push-button letter writer is built on the theory that 90 per cent of all business letters say the same things. The owner writes standard paragraphs to fit all needs such as "settlement of your account has not
been received" or "we have no openings at present." Then the boss or his secretary can punch buttons for paragraphs 7, 31, 42 and 79 and go out to lunch.
Even if the boss wants to write something original, it's pass to dictate to a steno. He uses a dictating machine. It can't spell--yet--but it can correct his mistakes automatically.
"If he wants," the man from the company added, "He can hold the microphone on his knee."
MAY 14
Another company offers an automatic policeman. It claims its time clock eliminates time keepers, checkers, counters and cheating. The boss also can figure out how much time is being spent at the water cooler.
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The image contains text that appears to be part of a newspaper or journal article, with headings and paragraphs. However, the specific content is not clearly visible due to the low resolution and blurry nature of the image. Therefore, no detailed reading can be performed from this image.
Gambles "The Friendly Store"
WEDNESDAY, MAY 10. 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
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Ice Man Hath Cometh Far In More Than A Century
Washington, D.C.—Nature has made ice for eons, but not always where and when man wanted it. That put man in the business a century ago—an anniversary noted by commercial icemakers conventioning in New York just as the season's first thin ice collar formed around Central Park lake.
Because man has made ice in ever increasing amounts since the 1840's, the diet of much of the world's population is vastly improved, the National Geographic Society observes. A century ago, fresh meats and dairy products could go but a few hours' journey to market. Seafoods were strictly for seaboard dwellers.
Salinas, California, for example,
uses 4,200 tons of ice daily in the
fruit and vegetable shipping seasons
for cooling produce in transit. Texas
and Florida packers blow shaved
ice through big hoses on to vegetable
baskets which then need no re-icing
en route to such distant points as Boston
and Seattle. Sea harvests from
shrimp to salmon are sand-
wiched in ship holds with generous
layers of crushed ice.
Mechanical home refrigerators, unknown 30 years ago, today provide some 26 million American households with miniature ice plants. Despite the enormous ice-making capacity of these home units, commercial plants today are producing and selling almost twice as much ice as three decades back.
Barely one-third of today's "iceman ice" is used in homes. Another scant third of the 50-odd-millionton total supplies restaurants, stores, hotels, and hospitals. Most of the rest cools food in transportation in refrigerator cars, trucks, and ships.
The cave man stored surplus perishable food briefly in cevern crevices away from the heat of the sun. The farmer developed the springhouse to add precious hours to his fresh milk and butter. Later, cutting and storing winter pond ice for his own use, he began to sell it to townsfolk.
In George Washington's time, ice to cool summer foods and drinks was for the wealthy few in America
95 in Europe. It was laboriously hacked by hand in late winter and stored in inefficient underground icehouses.
The pioneer ice-making machines of the 1850's couldn't produce at a cost as low as that of harvesting and transporting natural ice. Not until the 1880's did ice plants take a firm hold, especially in the smaller cities and towns.
Improved cutters for harvesting ice and better icehouses, built aboveground, came early in the 19th century, not long after the first household icebox patent was issued to Thomas Moore, a Maryland farmer, in 1803. By mid-century, the refrigerator had become a house-bold necessity, and farm icehouses were commonplace.
Mechanical refrigeration now quick-freezes foods, with ice crystals so tiny they do not break food cells as slower freezing does. The process eliminates the last barrier to nation-wide distribution of perishable seafoods, fruits, and vegetables.
By 1890, Maine's potato county, Arroostook, was cutting and storing more than three million tons of ice each winter, largely for shipment south. Other northern areas were in the business, but the peak for traffic in natural ice had arrived.
Refrigerated freight cars made their appearance. Outsized iceboxes for preserving fruits for months after the autumn harvest marked the start of the community cold storage business. Federal projects such as TVA and REA introduce cold storage to remote regions even today.
Greenland's Cape Morris Jessup,
440 miles from the North Pole, is
the northmost known land point
on earth.
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Upstream Includes Articles By Ise
The desperate need for trained students who can "think judiciously and saneily about important economic and social problems" is stressed by Dr. John Ise, in an article appearing in the final issue of Upstream.
The publication will be sold today in the Union building, in front of Watson library, and in Strong rotunda. Dr. Ise's article is entitled "The Sales Problem in Education."
Other articles include a letter by H. J. Laski, leader of the British Labor party who died recently and a story by Henri Peyre, professor of Romance languages at Yale.
Andreas To Represent IFC
At a meeting of the nity council Monday night, Warren Andreas, college sophomore, was elected I.F.C. representative to the All Student Council. The election of officers for the inter-fraternity group was postponed until the next meeting, on Monday, May 15.
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THE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1950
Russ Would Gripe About More If He Weren't Always So Busy
Someone once said that a student's future success can be determined by his participation in school and extra-curricular activities while in college.
If this is true, then Russell J. Oleson, journalism senior, is going to be a mighty busy and successful man in a few years.
Take a look at some of his accomplishments during the last four years: president of Sigma Delta Chi; professional journalism fraternity; member of the Kansan board; assistant telegraph editor, telegraph editor and city editor of the University Daily Kansan; member of Scabbard
RUSSELL OLESON
and Blade, honorary military fraternity, and secretary and athletic director of Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity.
Success to "Russ" eventually means a position as a writer on "Downbeat," which he describes as "a national magazine for modern musicians."
This ambition seems to come naturally. "Russ" played a cornet in the early 1970s, and several army bands overcame. He has also played piano in some bands.
His main interest, however, is newspaper work. He hopes to get a job on some large midwestern daily newspaper after graduation to gain experience for the magazine position.
"I'll be glad to get out on my own again, but I think I will miss college life before long," he commented thinking of his graduation this spring.
"About the only thing that keeps me from finding more to gripe about," he commented, "is that I'm too busy most of the time."
"Russ" has several pet peeves about some of the existing conditions on the campus. Being a musician he is mainly concerned about the lack of name bands that are brought to the campus.
"The last name dance band to play at the University was Duke Ellington three years ago. That is unless you want to call the Spike Jones orchestra a dance band."
This 6 foot 3 inch senior, whose home is in Council Grove, Kan., also has definite ideas about the memorial campanile under construction. "I think that it will be a good thing, but I sure don't see why it wasn't built in a more prominent place rather than buried behind Strong hall."
While in high school he lettered three years in basketball, two years in baseball and track, and one year in football.
Russ's schooling began near Eldorado, where he was born in 1924. He moved to Dunlap for his first three years of high school and was graduated from the Dwight high school in 1942.
He entered the army in May, 1945 and spent 15 months overseas in Germany, Belgium, England, and France. His army duties ranged from company clerk to personnel sergeant major. While in Germany he was in a jeep wreck that hospitalized him for two months, which he described as his worst experience. Receiving his discharge in April, 1946, he entered the University the fall semester of that year.
"The job I liked best in the army was playing a trumpet in a 13-piece band near the Heidleberg, Germany area," he said.
Teacher Wins First Prize For Radio Script
Miss Frances Grinstead, assistant professor of journalism, won first prize in radio script writing in the annual Missouri Press Women's contest.
Results of the contest were announced in connection with the University of Missouri's annual journalism week program. First place winners in each of the eighteen divisions judged will have their winning entries entered in the National Federation of Press Women contest.
Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers
Sigma Kappa Holds Scholarship Dinner
A charter member of the women's press club, Miss Grinstead was awarded the first place on the basis of a book review she prepared for her weekly radio program, "Pleasures in Reading," heard at 2:30 p.m. Thursday on KFKU. She reviewed Marion Starkey's recent publication, "The Devil in Massachusetts."
Sigma Kappa sorority held its annual scholarship dinner May 4 at the chapter house.
E. H. Taylor, professor of zoology, was the principal speaker. Jamie Estlack, president, presented awards.
Members with the highest grade are: Jamie Estlack, Diane Danley, averages were announced. They Harriet Flood, Marion Miller, Gay Bonney, Nora Marie Mason, Patricia Watson, Carolyn Oliver, Carolyn Lacey, Dorothy Glamann, Sally Sherwood, Ila Pabodie, Annaliese Schrierle.
Miss Kathleen Doering, associate professor of Entomology, presented the achievement award to Miss Estlack. This award is given to the girl whose service to the chapter has been outstanding during the past year.
Billie Ann Carter, Carol Dunn,
Virginia Frost, Barbara Burnham,
Barbara Cooper, Nita Brewster,
Mary Pat Davison, Norma Hunsinger,
Elda Lou Phillips, and Nancy
Sewell.
Alpha Chi Omega Formal
Alpha Chi Omega sorority entertained with its annual spring formal April 29, in the Crystal ballroom of the Eldridge hotel.
Guests at the formal were Rens McClure, Pat Dunne, Bob Idol, Karl Eldridge, Gene Nelson, Jack Conlon, Charles Hyer, Tom Murphy, Tom Williams, Tom Fritzlen, Bill Raehl, Ronnie Paris, Ronnie Hammel, Milton Young, Peyton Bartlett, Eddie Green
John Stites, Jack Stewart, Janet Mallott, L. R. Bond, Betty L. Brown, Bill Hamilton, Sally Stepper, Bob Arbuckle, Bud Roberts, Erma Lutz, Jerry Smith, Bob Morey, Jack Busher, Bill Brooks, Jim Houghton
Hal Edmondson, Jack Street, Sally Dial, Don Stephenson, Joe-ann Bousman, Dave Breidenthal, Milt Faddler, Bob Thayer, George Emrick, Jim Blocker, Bill Palmer, Jonell Ascraft, Joe Wolf, Jim Weidensaul, Jerry Pauls.
Mary Brown, Don Cain, John Hipp, Earl Cosner, Warren Cook, Dick Hite, Robin McGeorge, Gloria Cramer, Dick Brent, Marvin Ravsch, Robert Mullen, Jack Steinle, Dick Milton, Don Diefendorf, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Siefkin.
Chaperons were Mrs. Ralph Park, Mrs. Mercedes Kreiger, Mrs. W. S. Shaw, Mrs. Eugene Alford, Mrs. Kenneth Whyte, and Mrs. R. L. McCreary.
Kanza Hall Dinner Partv
Kanza hall, a woman's dormitory organized in the fall of 1949, gave a dinner party at the Castle tea room May 6.
Margery Myers was mistress of ceremonies for the entertainment during dinner. Guests were Richard Anderson, Robert Ausherman, Robert Crane, Jack Harper, Larry Jones, Edward Levy, Jack Moon, Max Pachil, William Rader, Stan Sager, Don Studley, Paul Teeter, and Jim Turney.
A
Note To Graduating Seniors!
Only a few left!
College days will soon be over for you. You need a Jayhawker to refer to time and time again in the years that follow your graduation. . . . to keep alive your memories of K.U.
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And To Undergraduates!
Although you'll be back again next year, you are winding up this year's activities. Your Jayhawker will be a lasting memory of the 1949-50 school year and of your graduating friends.
Get Your JAYHAWKER Today at the Jayhawker Office
Battenfeld Hall Gives 'Gay Nineties' Party
Guests at the traditional "Gay Nineties" party held May 6 at Battentreff hall were: Susan Manoville, Jeannine Neihart, Beverly Jennings, Doris Kendall, Susan Cravens, Darlene Clark, Mary Lou Fischer, Marilyn Fatton, Patricia Woelhoff, Ruth Wells, Mary Ann Dudley, Donna Dudley, Shirley Jarrett, Joyce Rohr, Patricia Gay.
Janice Broadword, Sue Plummer, Ellen Osborn, Yvonne Luce, Georgia Storey, Carol Donovan, Peg Downey, Gray Wycoff, Mary Hook, Rosie McCray, Clara James, Barbara Paul.
Shirley Matson, Mary Helen Ryder, Carol Dunn, Josephine Merrill, Christine Johnson, Doris Tihen, Gay Bonney, Shirley Lyon, Jeannine Prichard, Phyllis Debnac, Nancy Smart, Jean Lutrick, Ruth Brotherhood, Joan Wilson.
Flora Lee Pringle, Marjorie Jenere
Flora, Glenna Davis, Austin Harmon,
Erica Johnson
Claude Moore, Dale Judy, Delmer Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Wackerle, Harold Sandy, Melvin Rice, Duane Atterberry, Donald Gardner, Bruce Talmadge, Hugh McCaughey.
Mrs. P. H, Klinkenberg, Mrs. Treva Brown, Mrs. Vivian Christian, Mrs. J. R. Scott, Mrs. Lawson R. Kite, Mrs. Louis Stanley, Mrs. R. G. Roche, Miss Julia Willard,mr. and Mrs. Donald Alderson,Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Youngberg, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Palmerlee, Dr. and Mrs. Laurence Woodruff, Miss Susan Woodruff.
Chaperons were: Miss Carlotta Nellis, Mrs. Althea Galloway, and Mrs. Lorraine Gosney.
In Spain, which is about twice as large as Oregon, 5,000 rod-and-line fishermen live by catching trout and salmon for market. Netting is forbidden.
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Wedding Gowns Now 'Convertible', Editor Says
By VIRGINIA FROST
A small, blonde woman with a cluster of bright oranges on her hat, walked out of a 65-mile-an-hour gale into the Kansas City airport. Jooking neat and trim and not at all windblown.
She was Marjorie Binford Woods, editor-in-chief of Modern Bride magazine, who had flown from Chicago to speak in Lawrence at the Matrix Table banquet of Theta Sigma Phi, honorary Journalism fraternity for women. Mrs. Woods edits what is still considered a "baby" publication by her publishers, since it was just started in January 1949.
On the way to Lawrence, Mrs. Woods relaxed in the car, smoothed her chic navy blue wool skirt and navy and white checked jacket and talked about brides.
"This is a wonderful time of year to talk about weddings," she said with a smile. "June is always the 'wedding month', although many of the 3 and three-quarter million brides in the country are married at other times of the year."
Mrs. Woods is interested in the women who are helping to put their husbands through college. She said these women want all the romance and glamour of a formal wedding, but are willing to pitch in and work
hard to keep up an apartment and job as soon as the wedding and the honeymoon are over.
This charming Chicago editor, who is a native Hoosier, is well-qualified to speak on brides, wedding dresses and trousseaux. She was a bridal consultant for the William H. Block company, in Indianapolis, before starting Modern Bride. There she handled more than 7,000 weddings in three years and loved the excitement and the romance of the work. She has also written a book, "Your Wedding, How To Plan and Enjoy It."
Her magazine, she said with a well-justified touch of pride, is keyed to the working girl. All of the wedding fashions are priced for the girl on a budget. And the honeymoon locations which she suggests to young couples are also reasonably-priced.
"Many persons seem to think that fancy weddings are old-fashioned and out-moded," she said. "I
don't believe that. A wedding is something that usually happens to a girl just once in her life and she should have the costume and the setting to make her truly a star."
Mrs. Woods said this year's wedding gowns are of many styles and colors. The long, full-trained, white gowns are always popular, but many brides-to-be are choosing a gown in a pink, ice-blue or champagne color. A new style is the "convertible" wedding outfit. This is a sheath of satin or taffeta, an ankle-length or full-length skirt, with a strapless bodice, which is covered with a redingote and a train of marquisette, net, chiffon, or organdy for the wedding.
Each issue of Modern Bride shows what the editor calls "Love of the Season," a short wedding suit or dress with several pieces which can be mixed and matched on the honey-moon and afterwards.
"No matter how many weddings a girl has attended, she is still bewildered when she begins to plan her own." Mrs. Woods believes. "We try to take a bride-to-be by the hand and help her direct and plan her wedding, so that when that day comes she'll be rested and radiant."
Dances, Teas, Picnics Climax Social Activities
Phi Beta Pi Spring Dance
Phi Beta Pi Spring Dance
Phi Beta Pi medical fraternity entertained recently with a spring formal at the Eldridge hotel. Dr. and Mrs. W. C. Fleming, Dr. and Mrs. P. G. Roofe, Dr. and Mrs. N. P. Sherwood, and Mr. and Mrs. I. D. Rowe were chaperones.
Guests were: Betty Hatcher, Mary Hardman, Bety Bartell, Shirley Rhodes, Marjorie Jence, Helen Jones, Marilyn Morgan, Eleanor Brown, Shirley Wilkie, Carolyn Barndt, Marilyn White, Marilyn Lindberg, Mary Verschoyle, Lynn Trousdale, Mary Spillman, Jeannine Troughard, Ardice Wilson, Betis Kensall, Virginia Baley, Betty Blaker, Mina MacNair, Marjorie Reash, Patti Harris, Betty Clinger, Lois Cooke, Renee Benjaminov, Phyllis Fangman, Betty Ott, Sally Wood, Kathryn Casady, Lois Ruhl, Jean Weber, Carmen Edwards, and Emily Stewart.
Watkins Honors Mothers
Watkins hall entertained with a Mother's day breakfast Sunday. Guests were; Mrs.M. F.Hyde, Mrs.J, C McKinney, Mrs.C. D. Hawkins, Mrs.C. G. Harris, Mrs.R. E. Steffey, Mrs.Iva Rothenberger, Mrs, Ie Bukowski, Mrs.John Blaylock, Mrs.B.W.Botofft, Mrs.Kenneth A. Sells, Mrs.E.F. Glover, Mrs.Roy Hobein, Mrs.Horton Vorse, Mrs.Fra Lappin, Mrs.Llovd B. Locke.
Mrs. Alto Benitz, Mrs. Owen C.
R. Calwings, Mrs. Max Heilbrunn,
Mrs. S. E. Davidson, Mrs. Claude
Scheuerman, Mrs. David C. Grove,
Mrs. R. G. Thomson, Mrs. D. O.
Millison, Mrs. George V. Buxton,
Mrs. Carrie Christensen, Mrs. H. A.
Kelly, Mrs. H. L. Westoff, Mrs.
Albert Legler, Mrs. Lee Gore, Mrs.
Harry Yakle.
Mrs. A. W. Settle, Mrs. A. R. Jacobson, Mrs. Paul E. Reade, Mrs. Violet Esch, Mrs. Cora Ashby, Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women,
and Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women.
Chi Chi Chi Picnic
Chi Chi Chi fraternity held a picnic at Lone Star lake Sunday. Guests included Janice Auer, Mary Hook, Mildred Gulnik, Vera Nugent, Joeanne Mannon, Maxine Holsinger, Donna Jean Long, Faye Wilkinson, and Mary Nibble.
Chaperons were Professor and Mrs. George Anderson, Mrs. O. M. Bruchmiller, and the Rev. Robert Swift.
Corbin Hall May Fete
Corbin hall will entertain faculty members with a May Fete from 5 p. m. to 6:30 p. m. Wednesday near the stadium.
Booths will be set up for fortune telling, ring tosses and other small games. A picnic lunch will be served, and 11 Corbin hall women will entertain with a maypole dance.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News.
Phi Delts Choose Officers Charles Hall, business junior, was elected president of Phi Delta Theta fraternity Monday. Other officers for the fall semester will be:
Bufford Bissel, scholarship chairman; Fred Six, senior member of the executive council; Dolph Simons, alumni secretary; Alan Teah, chorister; Stanley Staats, decorations manager; Dick Hughes, historian; Tom McGuire, librarian; Rodney Dyerly, chaplain.
James Lowther, reporter; Henry Zoller, freshman trainer; Dean Wells rush chairman; Robert Orr, social chairman; Jack Howard, teasurer; Arthur Brewer, recording secretary; William Buechell, warden; Robert Chaput, intramural manager.
Phi Kappa Tau Officers
look Formal
feel Informal
Phi Kappa Tau Officers
Beta Theta chapter of Phi Kappa Tau fraternity has elected the following officer; Don Johnson, vice-president; Larry Rudrauf, treasurer; Bob Vetter, recording secretary; Jim Garr, corresponding secretary.
Ray Hower, house manager; Chuck Jones, rush chairman; Emory Williams, pledge trainer; Jim Weimer and Jerry Sherman, social co-chairmen; Larry Ireland, sergeant e- arms; Dean Miller,
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steward; Frank Moses, chaplain Bill King, athletic director; and Roger Butts, song leader.
Members of the executive committee are: Jack McFadden. Don Johnson, Larry Rudrauff. Emory Williams, Jim Garr, and Chuck Jones.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES
Mrs. Gagliardo, Lawrence Children's Author Will Lead Mid-America Writers' Section
Mrs. Ruth Gagliardo of Lawrence, director of the children's traveling book exhibit of the Kansas State Teachers' association, will share the chairmanship of the writers-for-juveniles section of the Mid-America Regional Writers conference at Kansas State college.
and journalist, has edited the Children's shelf in the Kansas Teacher magazine for the past eight years. Now she is chairman of the reading and library service of the National Congress of Parents and Teachers.
Co-chairman of the conference, which will be held from Monday, June 19, through Friday, June 30, is Miss Margaret Lesser, children's book editor of Doubleday and company. Her books have won the Newberry medal for the most distinguished book of the year for young people, the Caldecott medal for the best picture book, a $300 award from the committee on the Art of Democratic Living, and other national honors.
Mrs. Gagliardo, a former teacher
The Lawrence writer's children's book reviews in the Emporia Gazette were the first in the United States. They preceded by two years those in the New York Herald.
She is the wife of Domenico Gagliardo, professor of economics.
Why Be 'Cash Out' When You Can 'Cash In' With KANSAN Classifieds?
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GRANADA THEATRE Saturday Owl Show May 13, also May 14, 15, 16, 17
WARD MEMBERS may obtain tickets from Inter-Ward Council members.
I. S.A. MEMBERS may obtain tickets from House Representative or at I.S.A. office after Thurs., May 11.
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1950
Sandefur Pitches Three-Hitter For 7 To 2 Win
Bv BOB NELSON
Carl Sandefur, big sophomore righthander, turned in a masterful 3-hit pitching performance to give the Jayhawkers a 7 to 2 win over the Iowa State Cyclones Tuesday on the Varsity baseball diamond. The victory gave Coach Bill "Red" Hogan's club a clean sweep of three games played with Iowa State this year.
Sandefur hurled near perfect ball in allowing only two singles and a triple for one earned run. He walked one and struck out three to register his third conference win against a single loss. His season record now stands at 4-1 to lead the K.U. pitchers.
BIG SEVEN STANDINGS
| | W. | L. | Pct. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Nebraska | 6 | 2 | .750 |
| Oklahoma | 4 | 2 | .667 |
| Colorado | 2 | 1 | .667 |
| Missouri | 7 | 5 | .583 |
| KANSAS | 5 | 5 | .500 |
| Kansas State | 3 | 5 | .375 |
| Iowa State | 1 | 8 | .117 |
Monday and Tuesday's Results:
Iowa State 6-2, KANSAS 7-7
Missouri 0-3, Colorado 8-0
This Week's Schedule
Friday and Saturday:
KANSAS at Kansas State
Colorado at Oklahoma
Nebraska at Iowa State
Kansas has a 5-5 Big Seven record and a season mark of 7-5 to hold down fifth place in the league standings. Four of Kansas' six remaining games are with Kansas State on a home-and-home basis. The Jayhawkers play the Oklahoma Sooners here on Monday and Tuesday, May 22 and 23, to complete their schedule.
After a scoreless first inning, Jack Delbrue, Iowa State right fielder, led off the second with a sharp grounder between third and short. First baseman, Bob McLuen, tripped to right center scoring Delbrue with the game's first run. Sandefur bore down to retire the next three batters to leave McLuen stranded at the hot corner.
The Cyclones scored their second and final run in the third innings, which was unearned. Lefty Jack Luhring, Cyclone starting pitcher, reached first on an error. After moving to second on the game's only stolen base, catcher Ray Stewart sacrificed him to third base for the first out. While Capt. Bob Henely was being thrown out at first from deep short, Luhring scored to give the visitors a 2 to 0 lead.
Delbridge, who collected two of Iowa State's three hits, lead off the fourth inning with another grounder between third and short. Ater reaching second on a passed ball, Sandefur retired the next three batters to leave him stranded at the mid-way point.
Kansas got three hits in the fourth, but could only push across one run. Frank Keenig, shortstop, led off with a single to left-center, but was cut down attempting to steal second base.
Sandefur faced only 20 batters in registering the final 18 outs. The only men to get on base were Stewart by an error in the fifth and Sterling Singley, who drew Sandefur's only base on balls, while pinch hitting for Frank Swan in the seventh.
With two away, Carl Ellis drilled one of Luburn's fast pitches against the bottom of the fence atop the embankment in right field for a double. Lou DeLuna, CU first, was a stammer on right-center, which lowers to right-center for Kansas' first run
The Jayhawkers sent eight men to the plate in the fifth inning to score three runs and the margin of victory needed to give Coach Hogan's club its fourth win in five home games.
Henry Lamping beat out a bunt to start the rally. With two away, Jim Vonavaugh walked to place runners on first and third. Koenig drove Lamping home with a single to right to knot the score at 2-all.
Temple's roller to deep short scored Cavonaugh with KU's winning run. Ellis singled to left-center field scoring Koenig before DeLuna ended
the rally by flying out to right field. Kansas knocked Luhring out in the sixth inning by scoring one run on two hits. Mabry reached first on an error and moved to second on Herb Weidensau's sacrifice. Ken
Iowa State (2) AB R H PO A E
Stewart, c 3 0 0 6 4 0
Henley, 2b-ss 4 0 0 2 4 2
Stone, cf 4 0 0 0 1 0
Delbridge, rf 4 1 2 1 0 0
McLuen, 1b 4 0 1 10 0 2
Johnson, lf 4 0 0 1 0 0
Gumersy, 3b 3 0 0 2 3 0
Swan, ss 2 0 0 1 1 1
Foell, 2b 0 0 0 1 0 1
Luhring, p 2 1 0 0 1 0
Burgess, p 1 0 0 0 0 0
Hackbarth, p 0 0 0 0 0 0
Singley 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals ... 31 2 3 24 13 6
Kansas (7) ... AB R II PO A E
Cavonaugh, 2b ... 4 1 1 3 1 3 1
Koenig, ss ... 4 1 2 1 0 3 1
Temping, 3b ... 5 0 1 3 1 4
Ellis, lf ... 4 1 2 2 0 0
DeLuna, 1b ... 5 1 2 16 0 0
Mabry, rf ... 3 2 1 0 0 0
Lamping, cf ... 2 1 1 3 0 0
We'dsai, cf ... 0 0 0 0 0 0
Morrow, c ... 3 0 1 4 0 0
Sandefur, p ... 4 0 0 0 5 0
Totals ... 34 7 13 27 15 2
Singley walked for Swan in 7th
Iowa State ... 011 000 000—2
Kansas ... 000 131 20x—7
Iowa State-Kansas Box Score
The results of the tennis match are as follows:
Singles
Crawford (K) defeated Magee, 6-2, 8-6.
Swartzell (K) defeated Radin, 6-3, 6-4.
Jamie Currin (N) defeated Ranson. 8-6, 7-5.
6-2, 5-6.
Freiburger (K) defeated Andy Bunten, 8-6, 6-3.
KU Splits With Huskers In Tennis And Golf
RBI: Henely, McLuen, Cavonaugh
2, Koenig, Temple, Ellis, DeLuna.
2B: Ellis, DeLuna. 3B: McLuen.
SB: Luhrung. SH: Weidensault,
Stewart. DP: Henley to McLuen.
LOB: Iowa State 4, Kansas 10.
Pitching summary: BB: Luhrung 3,
Burgess 1, Hackbarth 1, Sandefur 1.
SO: Luhrung 4, Burgess 1, Sandefur 3.
Runs and hits off: Luhrung 5
and 10 in 5 2-3 innings, Burgess 2
and 3 in 1 1-3 innings, Hackbarth
0 and 0 in 1 inning. PB: Morrow.
HBP: Burgess (Weidensault). Earned
runs off: Luhrung 4, Burgess 2,
Sandefur 1. Losing pitcher: Luhrung,
Umpires: Michaels (plate) and
Edwards. Time: 2:00. Att. 375
(est.)
K. U. broke even—winning in tennis, 6-1, and losting in golf $ 7 \frac{1}{2} $ to $ 10^{\frac{1}{2}} $ in matches against the Nebraska Cornhuskers Tuesday in Lincoln. Both teams hold previous victories over the Huskers.
Bob Swartzell, K.U.'s No. 1 man,
downed Bob Radin, the Huskers'
top player, in straight sets—all seven
matches were decided in straight
sets—6-3, 6-4.
Charley Crawford extended his singles winning streak to six by defeating Jerry Magee, 6-2, 5-6. Crawford lost his first match of the season to his Oklahoma opponent, but has gone undefeated since.
Dave Dennis shot a 72, par for the Lincoln links, to take medalist honors. Bob Dare, who sparked K.U. in the closing holes, carded a 75—including five birdies, Howard Logan scored a 76 and Gene Rourke 77 for Kansas. Dick Ashley, conference singles champion, did not go to Lincoln.
For the second straight time the Jayhawkger golf team dropped a match in which they were down only one stroke in total score. Nebraska's foursome toured the course in 299 strokes, while Jayhawkers took 300 swats in completing the 18 holes.
Other winners for the Jeyhawkers were John Freiburger, and Bill Thompson. Jack Ranson, although losing his singles match, teamed up with Crawford to win the No. 1 doubles. K.U. regular Hervey Macferran did not make the Lincoln trip.
It was the third victory in seven starts for Coach Dick Richard's young tennis team. Coach Bill Winey's golfers have won three dual matches and lost two.
Thompson (K) defeated Jeff Delton, 6-1, 8-6.
Crawford-Ransom (K) defeated Currin-Bunten, 6-3, 6-3.
Doubles
feated Radin-Magee, 6-3, 6-3.
Swartzell - Freiburger (K) de-
The results of the golf match are: Dennis (K-72) outpointed Joe Giifford (73), 2 to 1.
Dare (K-75) divided with Dick Spandler (75), $1\frac{1}{2}$ to $1\frac{1}{4}$.
Dennis-Dare (K) divided with Gifford-Saundler, to 11%.
Rourke (K-77) divided with Doug Dale (77) $1 \frac{1}{2}$ to $1 \frac{1}{2}$.
Steve Flansburg (N-74) outpointed Logan (76), $2_{1/2}$ to $1\frac{1}{2}$.
Date-Flansburg (N) outpointed Rourke-Locan. 12% to 1/4.
Morrow's single off the third base sack and Cavonaugh's second hit scored Mabry.
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Head Cyclone, Coach L.C. "Cap" Timm, ordered Koenig intentionally walked to load the bases. Don Burgess, chunky righthander, replaced Luhring and promptly retired Temple on a long fly to left fielder Ken Johnson to end the rally.
Hankies
Singles to left field by DeLuna and Mabry, a hit batter, and a walk provided K.U. another marker in the seventh inning. Cavonaugh's sharp grounder to Burgess scored Mabry from third for the fi..al run of the game.
Gene Hackbarth, sophomore right-hander, replaced Burgess in the eighth to face only three batters. With one away, Ellis walked, but was quickly erased as DeLuna grounded into the game's only double play, shortstop Henely to McLuen.
GAME NOTES—DeLuna saved the day at first base on several low and wide throws by making spectacular pick-ups and stops . . . He also kept the K.U. infielders from being charged with errors on several throws in Monday's game. Lou hit the ball hard in getting a double and single to chalk up one RBI ... He had three for nine in the series.
While warming up in the Cyclone bullpen, one of the pitchers was chased by a big St. Bernard dog . . . Guess the big fellow didn't like the pitcher's books. . . The fans received quite a laugh out of hearing "Goodwill Embassador" Marv Small's announcement over the P.A. concerning the engineers' and lawyers' tug-of-war rope pull across Potter's lake. . . It seems the southern gentleman is always worth a good laugh, no matter where he speaks or what the occasion may be.
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Big Mike Beams, Irish Ivory Intact
The cap from a tooth lost more than a month ago was found Monday night by Big Mike McCormack, co-captain of next year's Javahawk eleven.
McCormack lost the cap on April 6 when a foot came in contact with it. A search proved tightness and McCormack gave it up for loss.
Monday night as Mike lined up for a play he saw something white on the ground before him. He picked it up, and sure enough, it was the lost ivory. Now he once again has that ole unblemished Irish smile.
Tuesday's star—Ralph Kiner of the Pittsburgh Pirates who blasted two homers and drove in seven runs in a 10 to 5 victory over the Brooklyn Dodgers.
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
the two in yn
KU Trackmen Risk Perfect Record At MU
The Missouri Tigers seem destined to end the undefeated outdoor season record of Coach Bill Easton's Kansas track team when the two squads meet at Columbia Saturday. But an abundance of record-breaking performances is not too likely.
Indoors this year, the Tigers stopped K.U. by a 23-point margin and were slated to add the Big Seven championship to their 1940 conference outdoor crown. Then the Jayhawkers pulled a big upset to win the indoor title. But the Tigers are still rated the toughest team in the league and again will be favorites May 19 and 20 in the league running at Lincoln.
Latest victim of the Missourians was Nebraska, loser by 62-1-3 to 68-2-3. K.U. edged the Huskers by a single point earlier in the season.
was Nebraska, i.e. 68
2-3. K.U. edged the Huskers by a single point earlier in the season.
Track fans are awaiting the matches of Missouri ace Bill McGueir against K.U. Capt. Bob Karnes in the mile run and against Jayhawker sophomore flash Herb Semper in the two-mile. Karnes and McGuire are old enemies.
During the indoor season, however, the Tiger never got started after a great year in 1949. But he his shirt shape again, as attests his brilliant 9:16:2 two-mile in a blizzard at the Drake Relays recently. Semper set a Big Seven record at the conference meet in March in the two-mile race which McGuire started but did not finish. The young Jayhawker's best effort to date is 9:21.7.
Records that likely will go are in the half-mile, two-mile, and high jump. Others seem quite secure.
Missouri will be favored in the three dashes, relay high jump, shot put, discus, and broad jump. Kansas has its best chances in the half-mile, hurdles, and javelin. The mile, two-mile, and pole vault rate as toss-ups.
Coach Easton is planning few changes in his usual list of starters. The major one is the move of game little Emil Schutzel from the 100- and 220-yard dashes into the 440-yard field. That leaves Bob Devinney and Jerry Waugh to carry the load in the short sprints.
Softball Nears Playoffs
Favorites came through in women's intramural softball contests played Tuesday in perfect softball weather. Although four more games, excluding play-offs of ties, will remain to be played, today's results will decide division championships.
Homers Feature Early Play
New York, May 10—(U.P.)—Home runs are a dime a dozen in the major leagues this season but the magic number for glamour slammer Ralph Kiner of the Pittsburgh Pirates is "714."
Kiner is hitting them out of the park at a clip that may enable him to eclipse Babe Ruth's 60 in a season. He's not shooting at a season's record, however. He's "competing with the greatest guy of them all—a guy who hit 714 home runs in his career."
"That total is a lot more significant to me than the fact that he hit 60 in a season," he said. "I've still got a long way to go and if eventually I can come close I'll be satisfied."
Kiner lowered the boom Tuesday night on the Brooklyn Dodgers.
He blasted a grand slam homer, and a three-run homer to account for seven of Pittsburgh's runs in their 10 to 5 decision over the Brooks. When he hit the basesloaded homer off Carl Erskine in the seventh it marked the second time in four games and the eighth time in his career that he had turned the trick. He also moved into the league lead in runs-batted-in with 20.
Lefty Johnny Schmitz of the Chicago Cubs was superb, scattering hits and allowing no batter to get to second base which enabled his team to defeat the Giants, 6 to 0 at Chicago. Giant starter Larry Jensen again succumbed to his gopher ball curse. He served up home run pitches to Roy Smallley, Bill Serena, and Wayne Terwilliger.
The Athletics came from behind and scored seven runs in the fifth innning to defeat the Indians, 9 to 8, at Philadelphia.
The Red Sox continued their carnival days at home by bumping off the Detroit Tigers, 6 to 1, for their 12th triumph in 15 home games. Leffy Mel Parnell scored his third victory, getting able support from Bobby Doerr andookie Walt Dropo who smashed home runs. The victory put the Red Sox into a virtual tie for first place.
Little Lloyd Hittie of the Washington Senators hurled a 3 to 2 triumph over the White Sox at Washington. The past year Winnie won five games or the Nats but three were over the White Sox.
- Harmon slid into a first-place tie in division III with a resounding 25 to 4 rout of Gamma Phi Beta. Betty Thomas kept her homer-per-game record.
Kesterson and Hopkins scored their fourth victory against one loss for the co-op.
Alpha Delta Pi rallied in the fourth inning to defeat an aroused Alpha Omicron Pi team 20 to 12 and guarantee themselves number 2 slot in division II. Coppedge and Tessendorf registered the victory.
0018. Tremruth split their season record to take third place in division II when Kanza forfeited.
Pitcher Dick Hack weathered a late inning uprising to hurl Alpha Tau Omega to an 18-10 victory over Phi Delta Theta in an "A" game Tuesday. Hall allowed seven hits and struck out ten Phi Delts.
A booming 24-hit attack by Sigma Chi “A” team was enough to give them a 14-5 victory over Tau Kappa Epsilon陵逊 T. Pittere Odd Williams, who hurled the Sig team to the Hill championship last year, set down the TKE's wath only six hits to register his third win of the season. It was Sigma Chi's third win against one defeat.
Today's Probable Pitchers
St. Louis (Widmar 0-0) at New York (Reynolds 1-1)
(Won-lost figures in parentheses)
American League
Detroit (Hutchinson 1-1) at Boston (Pobson 3-1)
Boston (Roy 2-0) at Chicago (Lade
0-0)
0-10
Fitchburg (Roberts 3-1) at Pitts-
lumber (Cheeses 1-2).
(Dobson 5-2)
Cleveland (Simon 2-1) at Phila-
tica (Simon 1-1), Night.
deipm
Chiemsee (Kuzava 6-2) it Washington
(Hagy 2-1). Night.
burgh (Chessen II) 1-0), at St.
New York (Broadway I-2). Night.
with (Broadway I-2). Night.
Brooklyn (Roe 2-1) at Cineinnati
(Baffensberger 0-4). Night
Major League Standings American League
National League
America W. L. Pct. G.B.
Boston 10 7 667 1
Detroit 10 5 667 1
New York 10 7 558 2
Washington 9 7 563 $_{2/2}$
Philadelphia 7 10 412 5
Cleveland 6 9 400 5
Chicago 4 9 308 6
St. Louis 4 10 286 $_{6/2}$
W. L. Pct. G.B.
Brooklyn 11 7 611
Philadelphia 12 8 600
St. Louis 10 8 556 1
Chicago 7 6 538 $_{1/2}$
Boston 10 9 526 $_{1/2}$
Pittsburgh 10 9 526 $_{1/2}$
New York 5 9 357 4
Cincinnati 4 13 235 $_{6/2}$
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1950
World Wide News Floods Hit Midwest
Two of the dead were crewmen who died in the flaming wreckage of their 50-car freight train which broke through a storm-weakened bridge over Wild Horse creek in north central Oklahoma. The other victims were killed in Nebraska. Most were motorists who were engulfed when flash floods rolled across highways without warning.
Chicago, May 10—(U.P.)—Flash floods, roaring down rivers in a broad belt from Oklahoma to Canada, left nine persons dead today and seven others missing.
Southwest Iowa, hit by heavy rainfalls, prepared for flood conditions as rain water drained into streams already bursting their banks. In Wisconsin, the Mississippi was expected to rise 18 inches within three days.
The Red river in flood-ravaged North Dakota and Minnesota was expected to hit a new crest of 46 feet sometime today. The forecast of only scattered light showers brought hope that the situation there might be eased.
But in Nebraska a search was resumed for seven persons missing in the wake of floods which followed a torrential $7^{1/2}$-inch rainfall Monday. The bodies of four members of one family were reported recovered after their car was swept off a highway north of Auburn, Neb., into the raging little Nemeha river.
The body of a motorist, who had been missing or more than 24 hours, was found Tuesday night. His companion still was unreported. Searchers also found the body of a bus driver whose vehicle plunged into a water-filled ditch. The body of a passenger also was recovered. Four other bus passengers still were missing as was a section hand who stepped from his home into the path of the swirling waters. Two children were missed after their parents lost their grip on the youngsters as flood waters engulfed their car.
Cabano Now A Tent City
Cabano, Quebec, May 10—(U.R.)—The army erected a tent city today in the ruins of this fire-razed lumber town for 1,200 residents whose homes were destroyed. Firefighters from six neighboring towns extinguished the blaze late last night after battling the wind-driven flames for more than eight hours.
The disaster bit Cabano, which has 4,000 residents, four days after the same fate befell Rimouski, Quebec, 65 miles to the north.
The fire leveled about one third of the town. It burned most of the main street business buildings and 150 houses. Damage was estimated at two million dollars.
Russian Boycotts Council
Tokyo, May 10—(U.P.)-Lt. Gen.
Kuzma Derevyanko, Russian representative on the Allied council for Japan today boycotted a council meeting at which the U.S. denounced Russia for its treatment of Japanese war prisoners.
W. R. Hodgson, British commonwealth representative, said Russia's failure to repatriate or account for 300,000 prisoners should be taken before the United Nations general assembly.
It was announced that Gen. Douglas MacArthur had sent resolutions of the Japanese parliament, requesting a UN investigation, to the UN.
The Veterans Administration will accept sealed bids until June 13 for the construction of a new 500-bed VA hospital at St. Louis.
Harvard Doctor To Give Lecture
The initial E. J. Curran lectureships in ophthalmology at the University of Kansas School of Medicine will be given by Dr. Edwin B. Dunphy of the Harvard university school of medicine at 4 p.m. Wednesday May 17.
Dr. Dunphy will lecture in the amphitheater of the Clinic building at the K.U. Medical center in Kansas City. His subject will be "Ocular Therapeutics, Theoretical Considerations and Practical Applications."
Dr. Edward James Curran of Kansas City in 1948 endowed an annual lectureship in ophthalmology. Dr. Curran has been a member of the K.U. medical faculty for 39 years, 34 of them as chairman of the department of ophthalmology. He received his M.D. degree from Harvard in 1908 and three years later became professor of anatomy at the University.
Bracke Calls KU
'Snobbish' In Book
William B. Bracke, 35, former instructor in English at KU., is the author of a new book about Kansas entitled "Wheat Country," which has been reviewed for the Christian Science Monitor by William L. White.
The book, which tells the story of Kansas from the days of Coronado to the present, is ranked high in both the American Folkways series and in the literature on Kansas by the son of the famous William Allen White. However, Mr. White says that he feels that "some of the professor's observations will not be received in Kansas with universal aplause.
"He called his alma mater, the University of Kansas, 'one of the most snobbish schools in the Midwest' whose 'tight coteries of the fraternities and sororities cause a good many potential students, particularly the daughters of farmers and small business men,' to attend smaller colleges 'where the adolescent heartbreak of not being oledged is unknown.'
"This was also an accurate description of K.U.," Mr. White adds, "when I attended it for a year in 1920, and found it to have been a much more snobbiest institution than Harvard. One can only hope that it is not true today."
Mr. Bracke, is now teaching English at Washington State college
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Guest conductors for the orchestra and band will be Guy Fraser Harrison, conductor of the Rochester symphony; Richard Duncan, conductor of the Omaha symphony; Gerhard Schroth, leader of the St. Louis philharmonic, and C. J. McKee, Topeka High school.
Protect it with regular lubrication every 1,000 miles.
Jobs for geology graduates are going to be difficult to find, T.E. Weirich, chief regional geologist for the Phillips Petroleum company, told members of the Geology club Tuesday. He estimated that there are three or four students for every available position.
Noble Cain, Chicago composer and choral conductor, will be guest leader for the choral division. Donald Gleckler, Topela High school, will again be the regular director of the chorus work. All the guest leaders will be making return engagements.
The orchestra and band will present the regular series of six Sunday afternoon and evening concerts. Women will be housed in Corbin hall and the men in McCook hall. Nevin Wasson, Kansas City, Mo., will be boys supervisor.
Phillips Geologist Sees Job Drought
Professor Wiley will be regular leader of the band, which last year had members from 16 states. Prof. Ferguson will lead the camp, will lead the orchestra.
Dates for the 13th season of the Midwestern Music camp at the University will be June 19 to July 30, Prof. Russell L. Wiley, director announced today.
Mr. Weirich went on to show how the study of geology is not a complete loss even though the knowledge is not directly applied. He explained that geology could be valuable to one as a citizen, military strategist and engineer.
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Ray Ocamb, College senior, was presented the Erasmus Haworth award which is given to the outstanding senior geology student each semester.
Billy Gwin, graduate student, was elected president of the club for next year. Other officers elected are Rober Beu, engineering senior, vicepresident and Sally Smith, College junior, secretary-treasurer.
Third Man Is Charm
Omaha—(U.R.)—Detectives pulled a fast one on some gamblers. Two officers walked through an establishment, looked around and found no play in progress. They left, but a third detective hid in a dark hall and watched as the boys started making bets and spinning wheels again.
Young Country Folks Like Television; May Keep 'Em Home On The Farm
Waltham, Mass., (U.P.)—Science may have answered that age-old question—how're you going to keep 'em down on the farm?
The answer may be television,
Carleton I. Pickett, executive secretary
of the Massachusetts Farm
Bureau federation, has said.
"Video's going to make home a little more pleasant for the young folks, said Bucket, whose organizer is 6,000 Massachusetts farm families.
"We use to have too many young people going away from the farm. Television's going to make them more content down on the farm."
Farm leaders said the biggest trouble to date has been that telecasting facilities still were too limited to bring big city entertainment into front parlors in all rural sections.
But in video-viewing areas, they said, farmers seem to be outdoing their city slicker cousins in raising television aerials on their chimneys.
"I know from observation that there are proportionately more sets out in the country than in the city," Pickett said.
The commissioner said television could be much more valuable than radio or written extension service bulletins in teaching farmers the latest tricks of their trade.
"It's difficult to tell a man how to set strawberry plants or prune a tree," said Chandler. "But on television, you could show him how to do it."
Eibel Studies Injuries
Duluth, Mimn. - (U.P.) A 10-year study of high school athletics shows that 78 per cent of all injuries happen on the football field. The study was made by Edwin R. Elbel, University of Kansas physical education instructor. Only 1 per cent of the injuries resulted from wrestling or baseball, Elbel said.
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 10.1950
UNIVERSITY. DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE NINE
Prize Winning Picture Is Included In Exhibition Of 45 Photographs
A prize-winning photograph of a brass porch lamp is one of 45 photographs being exhibited on the third floor of Strong hall. The photographs were taken by Robert Rose, University photographer, and his wife.
The lamp print won second place at the Kansas Professional Photographers convention at Wichita this year. The brass parts of the lamp are finished in a copper toning. The wrinkled surface of the glass globe is shown in great detail.
A large train wheel showing every bolt the serial numbers on the wheel and oil dripping from the drive shaft won first place in the Topeka Camera club contest. The print was used on the "Kansas Engineer" cover.
"The Window," which won honorable mention this year at the Wichita convention, is on display. The photograph shows a window in which three sections of one pane are broken. In one pane is a reflection of the trees and sky. The other three sections are black. Streaks of rust from rusty nailheads are visible on the wooden wall surrounding the window.
A print, entitled "Danger," which shows a road lamp flickering in the darkness is being exhibited. Only dim outlines of rocks can be seen.
Mrs. Rose has photographed a curly-headed little girl, Terrie, in a starched, dotted Swiss pinafore.
"Crisis" is a portrait of a man with a glaze of weariness in his eyes, which indicates that he has exerted his every effort and is waiting for the results. His unkempt hair, hole "T" shirt, perspiration and unshaved face add to the effectiveness of the idea behind the picture.
On exhibition is a human interest print of a man relaxing in an easy chair with his feet propped on top of the Sunday newspapers atop a footstool.
"Christ," a portrait of a boy in a pensive mood, is on display. The light shining on his curly hair, revealing each strand of hair, shows the meticulous work of the photographer.
Eyes Of Humans Will Make Mistakes So Machine Checks Drugs For Flaws
a wagon wheel sticking out of the muddy water of a pond was photographed by Mr. Rose. Only four spokes remain attached to the axel. Part of the rim lies on the bank.
New York.—(U.P.)A new electronic "eye" is now being used to inspect medicine and keep out foreign substances that may injure health. The "eye" has proven far more effective than the human eye which can and does make mistakes.
The device, developed by scientists of Radio Corporation of America is being used primarily to determine foreign substances in tiny glass vials known as ampuls which contain insulin, morphine, and other drugs.
The new device uses a beam of light coming from a projection bulb. The ammals are fed into the machine
The Federal Food and Drug administration has strict regulations that the vials be free of particles, and up to now the drug manufacturers had to depend on human inspection.
Seniors Again Get Sheepskin Diplomas
light coming forth. The ampuls are fed into the machine and as they are exposed to the beam the ampuls are whirled. If there are no particles in the vial then the beam of light goes straight with no deflection. Such a straight beam of light operates a photo-electric tube which in turn operates a mechanism that passes along the vial as "accented."
The sheepskin diplomas which are traditionally given to graduating seniors at commencement will return to the campus this year.
However, if there is a particle—no matter how tiny—the light beam is deflected. It strikes another photoelectric tube and that tube sets off the mechanism that kicks out the vial as rejected. In a third process, the "eye" can call for a recheck. One device can test about 3,000 ampuls per hour. Eventually, the new "electronic eye" is expected to be standard equipment in all drug manufacturing laboratories.
The sheepskin, which is imported from England, was not available at the commencement exercises in 1947, so high quality parchment was used temporarily.
The eighth annual Sunflower Girl's State at the University will be June 11 through June 18, Mrs. Grace Bell of Perry, director, said today.
About 260 girls who are finishing their junior year in high school will attend, Mrs. Bell said. During the week the girls learn by holding elections for and organizing local, county and state governments with legislative, executive and judicial functions.
The University is one of the few schools which still gives graduates the 17 by 14 inch sheekskin.
The convention, a "laboratory in good citizenship," is sponsored by the Kansas department of the American Legion auxiliary.
Girls' State Dates Set For June 11-18
San Antonio Starts After Hollywood
Austin, Texas—(U.P.)-San Antonio may become the Hollywood of Texas.
The Texas secretary of state's office recently issued a charter to a motion picture company which plans to set up permanent studios at San Antonio and produce 26 full-length movies.
M. R. Armold will head the new company, incorporated at $1,000 as Atlas Motion Pictures & Television productions. Other incorporations were Henry S. Marasco and Kendall McClure.
Mr. Arnold said Jack Rabin, formerly of Los Angeles, would produce the company's first movie. Atlas releases will be distributed by Eagle-Lion, Republic and Film Classics, he said.
Finished in a sepia color is a holstein cow munching hay in a barn-vard.
Mr. Rose has photographed an ola stone mill. Remnants of a dam can be seen. A skum-covered river flows in front of the mill.
Humboldt, Ia. (U.P.)—A plush coat won in an election bet when Lincoln became President is the pride of Frank Lewey Arnold, 84. Every Lincoln's Birthday, he shakes out the mothballs and wears the coat. Arnold was given the coat by his uncle, John Lewey Arnold, who served as consul to Russia under Lincoln. John Arnold won the coat in a bet that Lincoln would be chosen president.
He Wears Lincoln's Coat
"Old Faithful" is a picture of the back of an old-model car. The car has a broken tail light and a trunk without a top.
The photographs were taken for salon purposes. They have been exhibited in a salon in Topeka, Mr. Rose said. Most of the prints were taken with a 2.25 camera Kodak reflex. A few were shot with a larger camera.
Mr. Rose's work on the campus includes making slides for history courses and other courses, photographing architectural models, photographing student work in the art department, and other similar jobs.
Teachers' Workshop At KU June 7-17
The Association for Childhood Education will sponsor its fourth annual workshop for elementary school teachers at the University June 7 through 17, Dean George B. Smith of the school of education said today.
Former Student Receives Naval Aviator Commission
The short course will enable elementary teachers to make an intensive study of some subject of individual interest and to obtain an overall picture of elementary school topics. Two hours of graduate or undergraduate credit may be earned.
Jack Pearce Zimmerman, former K.U. student, has been commissioned a naval aviator in ceremonies at the Naval Air Station, Corpus Christi, Texas.
Ensign Zimmerman graduated from Topeka High school in 1943 and attended the University as a part of his naval training. After leaving here, he took pre-flight and basic-flight training at Pensacola, Fla., and multi-engined aircraft training at Corpus Christi.
The Kansas City, Missouri VA regional office received 131,447 pieces of mail during the month of February. 1950.
Expert Watch REPAIR
Electronically Timed Guaranteed Satisfaction
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WOLFSON'S
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100
--objective and nature of the course for the orientation and training of instructors at the Command and General college at Ft. Leavenworth. The meeting is open to all members of the faculty.
Give Mother her Favorite RECORDS
A Record Album for Mystery Dust
SOUTH PACIFIC
KISS ME KATE
MISS LIBERTY
FINIAN'S RAINBOW
Mother's Day Original Broadway Casts of
"The Record Rendezvous"
L. L. SMITH CO
Colonel To Address AAUP Wednesday
Phone 725
Col. Harold D. Kehm, chief of the instructor-training section at Ft. Leavenworth, will speak at a meeting of the American Association of University Professors at 4 p. m. Wednesday in Strong auditorium. Colonel Kehm will discuss the
846 Mass.
THE BLOSSOM SHOP
Mom Loves Flowers
Don't forget to place your order now for Mother's favorite cut flowers, corsage, or potted plant. Delivery anywhere for Mother's Day.
Phone 998
326 W. 9th St.
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PAGE TEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY RANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1950
The Editors Report DO LAWRENCITES
Want K.U.?
by Doris Greenbank
University students are nothing more than a nuisance to Lawrence residents. At least, that is what one would believe after attending the city council meeting Monday night.
The subject of a heated debate which seemed directly to involve K.U. students began like this: at the convergence of West campus road, 11th street, and West Hills terrace lies a piece of property which is about to be sold. Several Greek organizations have requested to buy the land in order to build new housing facilities.
At present the lots lie in a class A zone which does not permit the building of such a structure. But the city's zoning board has recommended that the city council re-zone the district to class C in order to permit the construction of a fraternity or sorority house on the site.
Simple solution? No, not quite. You see, the townpeople heard about the plan. Representatives of a group which calls itself the West Hills association attended the council meeting to register their protests. They did not wish to "see a nice residential district destroyed."
They did not want their children to be kept awake at night by the noise of an organized house. They did not desire to have the intersection congested with traffic.
"K.U. wants to monopolize the whole top of the hill. Already it has taken over much private property for dormitories," complained one citizen.
But, you ask, where are students to live? How can the University continue to expand?
That's easy, they say. There are 75 city blocks in Lawrence, ample room to pick another site—not realizing that sites adjacent to the campus are rare and that students might wish to live adjacent to the campus rather than several blocks or miles from it.
Even the members of the zoning board who urged that the area be re-zoned did not seem to have the students' welfare in mind. They cited the rumor that, if the property were not sold to one of the seven sororities or fraternities who desire to acquire property, the landowner might give it to the University for whatever use it saw fit.
"We thought a decent sorority would be better than letting K.U. build just anything there," said one board member. Another reminded the council that Lawrence would receive more taxation money if a fraternity or sorority house were erected than if the property were sold to three private home builders.
Thinking of the student welfare? Well, why should they? After all, K.U. students don't aid Lawrence townspeople. They don't buy their merchandise, attend their movies, eat in their restaurants, or patronize them in any way—do they?
Anyone who has seen the city vacated in the summertime knows that Lawrence thrives upon the University. So why not let the University thrive in Lawrence?
RENT CONTROL VS.
By Robert Leonard
Property Rights
Senate committee hearings on the extension of rent controls are due to start and this will be the beginning of official debate on an important issue.
If you protest that your property should not be taken slyly by rent control without just compensation which the Bill of Rights guarantees, here is the answer you will get: "Ah, yes, but you don't understand. The tenants outnumber the property owners. We must make democracy work."
If you protest against government subsidies to farmers at your expense,you will be told:"But we must have parity amongst our citizens."
If you protest that private charities and not political agencies should care for those who need help, you are told: "Don't be old-fashioned. It is the democratic duty of government to provide for everybody. Everyone has a civil right to all he wants."
These are no exaggerations. This is the new definition of democracy. Democracy means that everybody must be cut down to the same hat-size—according to the present ruling clique in Washington.
If you own some property or a business, or make more than $5,000 a year, you belong to the "over-privileged class." You must be pared down to the average no matter what your ability.
This kind of democracy is just the opposite of the republic our constitution set up. Our republic, still unique in the history of the world, protects the individual, minorities, and property against unreasoning equalitarianism—which today calls itself democracy. Yes, we have a republic, not a democracy. Let's keep it!
Elliott and Gigi's romance reportedly went on the rocks because of what he terms an "inexcusable" interview given in St. Louis in which she said, "Elliott is a wonderful fellow. I'm very much in love with him." If we were Elliott, we'd feel pretty indignant about a rash, unfounded statement like that, too.
King Rama IX made the symbolical gesture of declining before taking over the official duties as king of Thailand. That may be all right once in a while, but we hope he doesn't make it a habit as some administrative officials in Washington seem to do.
TODAY'S MAIL
Aye!
For the past several weeks I have followed the discussion of what name the new fieldhouse will be. Like most persons I am in favor of naming it after Dr. Naismith and Dr. Allen.
Sir:
If I remember correctly the United States is still a democracy and things are done according to the way people vote. If this does not hold true on the campus, please correct me. Instead of just talking about naming the fieldhouse, let's do something about it.
Let's let the University know what the people want in no uncertain terms. Let's express the choice of the people through the power of the vote. That's the foundation that our nation has rested on for 175 years.
I for one would be willing and eager to help in setting up the polls and working in recording the votes. A person cannot enjoy the fruits of his labor after he is dead. So let's show Dr. Allen how we appreciate his efforts and respect his ideals by naming the new fieldhouse after Dr. Allen and Dr. Naismith.
WE
Let's live democracy, not talk it Let's Vote!
William S. Stanfill College sophomore
Editor's note: r. Mtianfill has an excellent suggestion here. Has any-one else any ideas on how we would go about bringing the issue to a vote?
Editor's note: Mr. Stanfil has an be assumed open for publication.
However, writer should add his address, University classification, telephone number, and any other information about himself he thinks we should know.
No letter will be published without clear identification except under the most extinguating circumstances.
All writers should exert as much care as possible to avoid libel, invasion of privacy, profane or inconsiderate language, and bad taste.
No length requirements are imposed. However, we reserve the right to cut down any letter needing deadwood removed or grammar tidied up.
University
Daily Kansan
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.
News Room K.U. 251
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Adv. Room
James Morris
Editor in Chief
K. U.376
Doris Greenbank James Shriver
Managing Editor Business Mgr.
Asst. Man. Editors Norma Hunsinger
Kay O'Connor John Hill
Ralph Heinemen
City Editor Edward Chapin
Asst. City Editors Nelson Olk
Marilyn Marks Elaine Elvig
Steve Ferro
Feature Editor Frank Keelby
Photograph Editor Frankie Watts
Telegraph Editor Robert Sigman
William Graves
Richard Tatum Louis Bolte
Sports Editor Richard Dilsaver
Asst. Sports Editors Bob Leonard
Gus Mgr Roy Salden
Arthur Moore Monna Milliken
Society Editor Faye Wilkinson
Asst. Society Editors Billie Stover
Emily Stewart
Editorial Assts. Keith Leslie
Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner
Cu. Mgr. Yoyone Jossermand
Net. Adv. Mgr. Forrest Washburn
Classified Ad. Mgr. Lee Dyer
Promotion Mgr. John Wiedeman
Solon's Library Has Grown To Largest In World
Washington—(U.R.)—The Library of Congress is celebrating its 150th birthday anniversary.
When established in 1800, the library was little more than a book-lined reading room in the Senate wing of the Capitol.
Today it is the world's largest storehouse of information. It occupies the two largest buildings on earth devoted exclusively to library purposes. The buildings are jammed with its great collection.
Librarian Luther H. Evans said in his annual report that while the services of the library are available to scholar and casual reader, the "Library of Congress belongs to Congress." It is Congress' source of information and counsel in all fields—economic, social and legal. It can and does answer almost any question puzzling to congressmen.
Evans, in honor of the anniversary, compiled some information about the library.
A special legislative reference service was established in 1913 to answer inquiries from congressmen. Last year, the service received and answered an all-time high of 22,852 congressional queries. More than 3,000 requests were received in March alone. This one-month total was 50 per cent higher than the annual total of questions a quarter of a century ago.
The questions, answered by a team of specialists, covered a wide field. They ranged from the tribal rights of the Cheyenne-Arapaho Indians on the Fort Reno military reservation to international control of the navigation of the Danube River.
The library's researchers have access to an estimated total of 27,560,-873 pieces, exclusive of 2,274,497 unbound newspapers and parts of periodicals and serials awaiting binding.
This collection includes 8,689,630 volumes and pamphlets, 11,320,000 manuscripts and 128,055 bound newspaper volumes. Maps, reels of microfilm and motion pictures, printed and other recorded music, prints and other photographic copies are among the items included.
By virtue of copyright laws, exchange agreements, and direct acquisitions, the vast collection is constantly expanding. Last year the library added 1,557,409 pieces of all categories to its collection, selected and consolidated out of more than 7,000,00 items received.
Included in this mammoth collection is the largest group of Chinese books and manuscripts outside China and Japan; the largest collection of Russian magazines outside the USSR; the largest collection of maps and charts in the world; the largest law library in the United States and the greatest number of books printed during the first half century of printing, prior to 1500, in the western hemisphere.
Navy Cocked Hat Is Austerity Victim
Washington, D. C.—Another British tradition falls a casualty to usury, with the Royal navy's decision to abandon its full dress uniform—ocked hat, frock coats, and epaulets included.
Such formal attire, with national variations, has long been a "must" for naval officers of the leading seafaring powers. Now, however, most nations have either discarded or modified the dressy costume. There is even a chance the United States navy may decide against reinstating its own cocked hat regalia for post war formal dress use.
As everyday uniforms have grown more and more utilitarian with the demands of active service, the fancy-dress accessories have lingered on chiefly as a reminder of the days when military forces sought to impress one another with their color and magnificence.
This Time She Got The Degree
Knoxville, Tenn. (U.P.)—Mrs. Eleanor C. Wolcott, in her divorce bill, said she was willing to stick it out while her husband, Bob got his bachelor and master degrees at the University of Tennessee. But when he enrolled in dental school and made plans to get a medical degree next, she said it was too much. Divorce granted.
Hangry Hill...the story of a feud that flamed for 40 bitter, brawling years!... told by the author that gave you "Rebecca" and "Frenchman's Creek."
P. B. C. A.
J. ARTHUR RANK presents
MARGARET LOCKWOOD
on DAPHNE DU MAURIER'S
'HUNGRY HILL'
GEEKY JEAN BARBAS
PARKER - SIMMONS WARING
PRICE - SINCLAIR
Directed by BRAN DESMOND HURST
Produced by WILLIAM SISTROM
Screenplay by TREVENUE HUMBER
A two CITIES FILM A PRESENTE PICTURE
Released through UNIVERSAL INTERNATIONAL
Special Limited Engagement No reserved Seats All seats 75c tax incl. Special Student Price 50c tax incl.
PENNY
VARSITY
2 DAYS
TONITE
Af
Fc
O
AND THURSDAY
WEDNESDAY. MAY 10. 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE ELEVEN
Atoms Can Work For Agriculture
toms Can Work Kansan Classified Advertising
Aboard Truman Train, May 10—(U.P.) President Truman revealed today that government research has uncovered a "real promise" that the peacetime application of atomic energy can bring vast agricultural improvements in grain and livestock.
The chief executive, traveling through mountainous Idaho, told an audience at Pocatello that it also was within the range of possibility to power ships and airplanes with atomic energy.
He spoke not far from the huge atomic plants along the Columbia river which played an important part in the development of the lethal bombs that ended the war with Japan in 1945. At the same time, he announced that he had approved the national science foundation bill (S. 347) "to develop a national policy for the promotion of basic research and education in sciences."
Mr. Truman said creation of the foundation would add to the nation's store of scientific knowledge much information "indispensable to our continued growth, prosperity and security."
Before leaving Wyoming last night, the president told a crowd at Laramie that this government was trying to get food through Communist lines to relieve famine on the Chinese mainland.
Mr. Truman, under Republican n fire for leaving China to Commun-ism, admitted that this country had been unable to help the Chinese "since the Nationalist government disintegrated and the Chinese communists seized control." But he said this government had been "working for some time on steps which our country might take to feed at least some of these stricken people" through religious and educational missions behind the Communist lines.
He also praised Secretary of State Dean Acheson and said he knew that Mr. Acheson "has the confidence and the support of the vast majority of the American people."
Mr. Truman said he vowed long ago to do his utmost to see that atomic energy "was used in a way that would make the world a better place."
"Nothing that has happened since 1945 has shaken my resolve to see that this great force is used for peace," he said. "We have been making real progress in putting atomic energy to work. Already, atomic research has led to important discoveries in medicine, and there is real promise that it will lead to much better grains and livestock on our farms."
The atomic energy commission is now building a new reactor testing station at Areo, Ida., 70 miles northwest of Pocatello and Mr. Truman said that "from the knowledge we gain there, it should be possible to develop machines to generate useful power and drive ships and airplanes."
He said the national science foundation would boost "our knowledge in every branch of science" and "help us to develop the best scientific matters and to exert a more vital force for peace."
"Whatever the future may hold, we must bend every effort toward our major objective—world peace and the welfare of mankind," he said.
The President spoke at Pocatello at 6 a.m. It was the first stop of the most strenuous day of his transcontinental tour which winds up Monday, May 15 at a big Democratic party rally in Chicago.
Before the day is over, the President will have delivered at least 14 speeches in Idaho and Oregon. His major speech of the day will be a review of the national economy at Pendleton, Ore.
Tonight he will leave his train at Wallula, Ore., and drive to the atomic production area near Pasco, Wash., for a brief visit before continuing into Washington state to speak tomorrow at the dedication of the Grand Coulee dam.
Greenland's Cape Morris Jessup,
440 miles from the North Pole, is
the northernmost known land point
earth.
Phone K.U. 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are acceptées
with the understanding that the bill will be
promptly received, promptly in advance,
in during the 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (ex-
cept Saturday) or brought to the University
Office of the Student Office. Journals
beijing not later than 45 p.m. the day
before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One
day Three
days Five
25 words or less...35c 65c 90c
Additional words...1c 2c 3c
FOR SALE
THREE CLEAN cars; 1947 Chevrolet, 2 door style, 1953 Dodge. New top; 1939 Ford Deluxe slick. All in top condition; see to appreciate. West 9th Auto Sales. Photos 11-12.
GERMAN Shepherd dog for sale. 16-
months old. Exceptionally good dis-
position. Registered, W. O. Nelson, Phone
2631, 545 E. 19th. 16
EXPERIENCED Remington portable typewriter with Italian keyboard in good condition for only $12.50. Student Union Book Store. 16
47 FORD Business Coupe, R. & H., 5.
Calreite Krieke, 3873M.
NOW AVAILABLE! A fountain per especially designed for left-handed writers. Only $5.00 at your Student Union Book Store. 16
THEERE IS STILL time to let College Outline Series help you get you a better grade. One for every subject at the Student Union Book Store. 16
SENIORS! One of your treasured remembrances of your time will be the KU songs. Produced by the Alumni Association and now available at the Student Union Bod
948 HARLEY-DAVIDIS motorcycle 125
Hilchstuhl 800 miles. Call Richard
J. Cunningham
DINNER: Spaghetti and meatballs; 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Thurs., May 18, R.L.D.S. church lower auditorium, at 12th Vermont. Tickets available at Round Corner Drug, 5th and Mass., 75c. Come and bring your friends. 16
1938 BUICK. 5 passenger coupe, radio,
heater, good tires, clean, good condition
mechanically. $250. 1234 Tenn. Atermone
and evenings. 11
1939 LINCOLN with Mercury motor.
Zentih 8 tube radio and south wind heater organ system to cool conditioned works. Priced to sell immediately $275. Phone 443
WHITE dinner couch, $15. Summer tusk
tuxedo, 37 or 38, Like new, 13w,
Appet. A. 4.
1940 STUDEBAKER Commander Coupe Heater and holder. 50,000 actuual miles of fuel.
FINEST TELEVISION-Best in sets and
virals at lowest prices. New shipments
just arrived. $75.70 and up. See the new-
est Emerson table model set at $159.50.
Easy terms. Bowman Radio and Electric,
$26 Bermond. Phone 133. tf
ON MOTHER'S DAY say "I Love You"
with a box of assorted cresme and nut
filled chocolates from the DIXIE CAFE
MEL CORN SHOP $25.25
Five pound box, $6.95 Wrapped free for
the Dixie Carmel Corn Shop
842 Mass, $3.99
THURSDAY 2 big days
HURRY ENDS
TONITE
Shirley Robert
Temple Young
"ADVENTURE IN
BALTIMORE"
COBRA
STREETS of LAREDO
color by Technicola STREETS of LAREDO
Plus "Land of Lost Jewels" World News. Fairway Champs
P
OUTLAWS against OUTLAWS...
FOR LAWLESS SUPREMACY!
color by Technicolor
STREETS
of LAREDO
William Holden
William Bendix
Macdonald Carey
Mona Freeman
Shown 8:25-10:30
Plus "Land of Lost Jew-
els" World News.
Lawrence DRIVE-IN
Theatre
24 FOOT NATIONAL house trailer. Completely furnished. See after 5 p.m. 1313 N. 6th St. Chicago, IL 60619
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. 10
WHITE dinner. cost, $15. Summer tux
equipment or 30 or 38. like new! 128.
Oreed. Apt. 4
Tuxedo. $350.
BUSINESS SERVICE
STUDENTS! Bring or send your Tennis, Badminton, Squash raucquis to Gulfillo Sporting Goods, 1711 Minnesota, Kansas City, Kansas. Prices start from $2.25 up.
FORMSAL AND DRESSES of all types made to order. Also alterations and remodelling, Call Mrs. Scales. Phone 3060-W. 1414 Tenn. 15
THE LAWRENCE Women's Club invites the people of Douglas County and surrounding towns to use their clubhouse for business and social meetings and receptionals. A small fee to cover utilities. Call resident hosts. Telephone 209.
TYPING: Theses, term papers, letters,
etc. Regular rates, Prompt, accurate
work. Mrs. Schear, Apt. R-36 1810 La;
phone 2373-R.
SUMMER WORK. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION will employ several alert, mature students with good personality for summer work. This is a dignified sales activity representing the older generation in an educational 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. Grosso at Grant Ave, Kansas City, Mo. Giving qualifications, school and home address. 24
TYPING: Thesis. Term Papers, Reports.
Telephone: Mrs. Wilde. 12
Team Phone: 30988M. 12
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pot field. Their needs are our business. Our one-stop shop lets you find for you Grant's Pet and Gift Shop 1218 Conn. St. Ph. 418. ff
THOROUGH on the auto check, easy on the G.I. check at Had Bare. Easy on the bike, easy to tune-up body and fender repair, auto painting, used cars, 317 E. 17th. Phone 785 or use Notes, etc. Prompt Services Mrs. Sheehan, 1028 Vermont. Ph. 116R8. *t*
FYPING. Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rules. Prompt attention Mrs. Shields. 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601
TRANSPORTATION
WANT RIDERS or share the driving to summer school. Leave Plaza 7 a.m. return 11 a.m. JE 3178, Kansas City, Mo. after 6 p.m.
TF
BETWEEN Watson Library and Lindley hall around 11 a.m. Tuesday, one small brown mcnilla expanding envelope with note cards for English term paper, num address and phone number on outside. addressed, Newman Shaver, 1801 143480K.
RIDERS WANTED: Leaving for Wilchita every Friday at 4 p.m. Returning Sunday evening. Please call between 7-9 p.m. Harry Shultz, phone 31012J.
WANTED: Someone to drive to carWestern New York in early Jun..W.
PLASTIC rimmed glasses in brown case with Molter Optical company written inside. Possibly near Jay Hawkery Theater. Marvin Liggett, Phone 3445. 12
LOST
FOUR-MONTH-OLD binder cup
Reward. Phone 3437 or 1996. 12
SELL ALL your used books to the Student Union Book Store Monday, May 29 Tuesday, May 30 and June 1st will pay up to cash prices for all current books, and the Wileox and Follette representative will buy all obsolete and discontinued titles. Student Union Books are $5 per book.
EXPERIENCED stenographer qualified to take dictation. Permanent work or research position at L. Wiley, Band Dept., Phone KU 385.15 ARE you leaving KU, for the summer?
ARE you leaving K.U. for the summer?
Graduate student, wife and child will care for your home in exchange for use of home. Phone 2579J. 11
TUX. size 40, Call Chuck Arnold at 868 or
1089M. 10
MOBILE HOUSE TRAILER in exchange from apartment 11
summer. Phone 619-294.
FOR RENT
RIDING HORSES for rent by the hour.
Bridle paths and trails nearby. For hay-
rack rides, call Mott Stables, Phone 1842,
1700 West 4th, Phone 126
$31^{\circ}$-ROOM apartment near campus. Private bath and private entrance. All electric kichen. Will furnish if desired. Available now. A similar apartment is also available.
THREE APARTMENTS for rent, reasonable phone, 2082 or 3311 16
SUMMER SCHOOL rooms for boys
2917M. 1234 Oread. tf
NEW four-room house, completely furnished, garage, automatic洗衣, modern and comfortable. Adele June time 5 p.m. to 3711 J. KU. 517 in 5 p.m. or 3711 J. after 5 p.m.
ROOMS for summer or fall. 3 double and
1 single. Sleeping porch. Single beds.
$10.00 a month per person. 1222 Miss.
Phone 495. 24
HONEYMOONERS! Vacationists! For rent in Estes Park area, modern housekeeping cabins. Completely furnished, big stone fireplaces, electricity, bath, gorgeous outdoor furniture, only Mrs. O. H. Zumwinkel, 2474 S. Jackson, Denver, Colorado. 12
TWO LARGE, cool rooms for summer students. Single beds, linens furnished. rooms kept clean, kitchen privileges if you have Phone 25223 or can be seen exegines. 19
AVAILABLE June 1. Modern. 5 room.
1st floor apartment. Clean, convenient
to K.U. See at once at 1700 Tenn.
10 MAKE BETTER GRADES! Ren a room
for $200 per month for $300 a month
or $1.00 a week. All makes and
models at Student University Book Store. tf
Ends Tonite A Laff Riot! "Mother Didn't Tell Me"
YOU'LL LOVE "LIL"
STARTS
THURSDAY
WHAT LIL HAS...
there's no substitute for!
WHAT LIL
HASN'T GOT...
she's out to get!
EDWARD I. ALPERSON
presents
DAKOTA LIL
COLOR BY CINECOLOR
GEORGE ROD
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Teachers Get More Money
Chicago—(U.P.)—Teachers' pay as well as their job requirements have gone up, it was shown in a survey by the Civil Service assembly.
Four of the 13 U.S. cities with more than 500,000 population boosted teacher salaries year and, in 1848, city raised their salaries in 1848 the survey showed.
It also showed that all the large cities now require a bachelor's degree or its equivalent for all teachers. New York, Chicago, St. Louis and Boston require a master's degree for high school teaching. Most of the cities allow salary differences on the basis of preparation or professional advancement as well as on length of service.
Minimum salaries for elementary teachers ranged from the low of $2,200 in Pittsburgh and Buffalo to a high of $3,046 in Detroit.
Starting salaries were $2,200 a year in Pittsburgh and Buffalo, while some New York teachers received as much as $5,325. Only Boston, Chicago, New York and Los Angeles differentiated between high school and elementary school teachers' pay.
Seven cities had maximums over the median level: New York, Detroit, Los Angeles, Cleveland, Baltimore, San Francisco and Buffalo.
The maximum for elementary
eachers with bachelor's degrees
anged from $3,924 in Boston to
5.125 in New York.
They're Followed By Fire
West Brookfield, Mass.—(U.P.) Four days after Royal J. Wallace's home was destroyed by fire, a fire swept the summer cottage into which his family had moved for emergency shelter.
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"Intruder In the Dust"
PAGE TWELVE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1950
Whitewashing Isn't Public Relations Job, Hicks Says
Sarge Emerges Top Dog At Law-Engineering Feud
By FRANCIS J. KELLEY
There was bedlam on the banks of Potter lake Tuesday as the engineers and lawyers staged their annual tug-of-war.
Complete with a dogfight, a "sea-going" observer, a drenched referee, and the roar of cheering onlookers, the contest was exciting if abrupt.
During the lengthy preliminaries before the big pull, a dog called Sarge, a golden retriever, stole the show with his swimming feats. Many times Sarge swam vallantly to the middle of the lake and back after bits of wood or a used beer bottle. Each time he returned to the bank he received a round of applause—and scattered the onlookers by shaking himself dry.
Finally, another dog decided to stop Sarge's fun. A fight developed. The squabble ended when their owners decided to call it "no contest." Sarge went back to his swimming while the other dog was bodily restrained from getting into the act.
After a long wait, the lawyers and engineers finally organized for their contest. The lawyers got on one side of the lake and the engineers took the other. The lake was surrounded with onlooking students and faculty.
From the west side came a little rubber liferaft with the reefee in it. He shipped water all the way to the middle of the lake to get the tug of war started.
From the east side, an unidentified "Fuck Finn, Jr." suddenly appeared on a raft of boards, poling himself to a vantage point in the middle. Another energetic observer, perched high in the fork of a tree, laughed so hard he almost fell into the lake.
The cheering spectators were somewhat disappointed. Most of them were bewildered by the suddenness of the finish. And even more of them went away asking each other, "Who won?"
Finally, the referee emptied the water from his megaphone and believed the starting signals. The shack was taken up in the rope and the annual tug of war started. The west side team surged into the lead and never lost it. The members of the losing east side team were slowly dragged into the slimy water. As suddenly as it began, the pull between the lawyers and engineers was over.
Looking back over the entire contest it would seem that Sarge was the top dog at the long pull of Potter lake though the lawyers had won.
KU Stargazers Also Study
When the average student lifts his head late at night to look into the sky he either has a romantic interest in the moon or he is wondering whether the weather will ruin a planned picnic. Thoughts of atmospheric heat waves or high-altitude clouds seldom occur to him.
To the K.U. astronomy student though, these heat waves or clouds are disastrous. For when they are present, astronomical phenomena such as the ice-cap on Mars, the mountains of the moon, and the rings of Saturn will be impossible to see or greatly distorted.
These students of the stars regularly brave the chilly winds atop Lindley hall to study the stars and planets. There, with the aid of $15-000 worth of equipment, including a six-inch refracting type telescope, the universe becomes as familiar to them as the streets in their home town.
The study of astronomy at KU was begun by the physics department shortly before the turn of the century. At that time there was no observatory and the stars were studied from a point south of Blake hall. The first observatory was built on the site which is now Hoch auditorium.
In 1926, under the supervision of Densmore Alter, present director of the Griffith Planetarium in Los Angeles, the observatory was moved to the area east of Lindley hall. The
Lawyers Give Bust Back To Engineers
Campus police stood near the Jimmy Green statue in front of Green hall to protect it from roving engineers who wanted to paint it.
Following the engineers' defeat in a tug of war with the lawyers Tuesday unorganized groups of engineers made a futile attempt to rescue the "Bust of Marvin", by assaults on Green hall.
"In order to save the engineer's pride, a mass of lawyers presented the 'Bust of Marvin,' bronze statue of the first dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, to T. De Witt Carr, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, this morning." Robert Bingham, third year law student, sai
Veterans should tali on the copy of their origin papers when making a loan or a GI loan from a lender
department was moved to its present location in Lindlev in 1944.
Now under the direction of Dr. N. W. Storer, associate professor of astronomy, the study of astronomy has become more popular, partly because the observatory is opened to the public whenever planets and other phenomena are visible. Over 900 students have been enrolled in astronomy courses in the past 11 years.
A 27-inch reflecting telescope will be added to the present equipment this summer. This instrument is more useful in the Midwest, Dr. Storer says.
With its aid, K.U. astronomers are preparing for the biggest thing in astronomy that has happened for some time. August 21, 2017, there will be a total eclipse of the sun. The first since 1878, students of astronomy are eagerly awaiting it—but they are not holding their breath.
The objective of public relations is not to whitewash a firm's policies that are detrimental to public interest. Rather, the public relations man should recognize such policies and show management why they will harm the organization as well as the public.
This was pointed out by Joseph W. Hicks, Chicago public relations consultant from Chicago, when he spoke before the annual School of Business convocation at 11 a.m. today in Fraser theater.
"Before our age of communications and intensified industrial development, people's business and personal contacts were pretty well limited to their local communities." Mr. Hicks pointed out. "When misunderstandings arose, they could simply sit down and talk things over, or come to blows, if they preferred." The technical era changed all that and people found themselves doing business with strangers on the other side of the globe. Employers with thousands of employees found they could know only a few individually.
"A specialist was needed who could feel the public pulse, interpret it to management and, in turn, get management's side of the question back to the public in acceptable terms." Mr. Hicks said. "That specialist became known as the public relations counsellor."
Any company, to maintain good community relations, must do more than operate within the requirements of the law, pay its taxes, and conform to wage and hour laws and other regulations governing treatment of employees, he said. It must be known as an honest and fair organization and prove itself to be sincerely concerned with the welfare and success of its employees.
"It is impossible to divorce employee relations from public relations because employees are a part of the public and because employees in their discussions with their families and friends can be the company's best or worst ambassadors," he emphasized.
A public relations man can counsel management on public relations and industrial relations policies, problems and programs; prepare and distribute news articles; and plan, design, write and distribute institutional books, pamphlets, and brochures, Mr. Hicks said.
Beginning today and ending Tuesday, May 23, students in the Editing II course will run the desk of the University Daily Kansas. Two of them will be responsible for turning out the paper each day, although the managing editor is still the executive head.
Editing Students To Run Kansan
The students run the desk as part of their examination for the course. William S. Chapman and Robert P. Sigman, journalism seniors, are the executives for today's issue.
Summer And Rush Week Counselors Are Chosen
The old and new presidents of Pan-
Hellenic, Associated Women students,
and other A.W.S. members have
chosen summer counselors and rush
week counselors for next year.
After reading applications that were sent in for counseling jobs and interviewing the women who applied, Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women; Grace Gwinner, education senior; Lorraine Ross, College junior; Erdis McCarty and Marie Schumacher, education juniors, and Jerry Hesse, College freshman, selected the following women to be summer counselors:
Blanche Brown and Patricia Cameron, College juniors; Janice Broads-
word, Mary Fischer, Jane Koelzer,
and Edris McCarty, education juniors;
Virginia Brown, fine arts junior;
Carol Krehbiel, Mona Millikan,
Evelyn Milennil, Suzanne Springer,
and Helene Steinbuchel, College sophomores; Frances Barnhart, and Ada Watson, education sophomores; Joyce Friesen, Patsy Harris, and Doris Wertz, fine arts sophomores; Loretta Cooley, Joan Culver, Harriet Flood, Fiona Floyd, Gertha Harper, Ada Hatfield, Joan Lambert, Virginia Mackey, Cynthia McKee, June Porter, Mary Roney, and Annaliese Schierner, College freshmen; and Ann Wagner, education freshman.
Present Need For Doctors Far Exceeds The Supply
As usual, this year's demand for doctors of medicine far exceeds the supply.
The ratio of hospital internships and the graduates to fill them is "two to one roughly," Dr. Franklin D. Murphy, dean of the School of Medicine, said.
Paradoxically, there are only half as many Kansas hospitals approved by the A.M.A. as students in the School of Medicine. The seven Kansas hospitals approved for internship by the American Medical Association are in Kansas City; Bethany, Providence, and St. Margaret's hospitals, and the University of Kansas Medical Center; and in Wichita; St. Francis, Wesley, and Wichita hospitals.
The University of Kansas Medical
Center offers training in any of the specializations of medicine, and the other offer training in some of the particular fields.
However, the graduate is not limited to Kansas hospitals in his choice of internship. Financially intriguing are the Army, Navy and Public Health hospitals, which offer internships with pay ranging from "three to five times" that offered by the average internship, said Dean Murphy.
Although Kansas is unorthodox in not requiring a medical graduate to take a year of internship before practicing medicine, he is advised to do so. If he is thinking of entering into practice, the rural areas are far below their quota of doctors.
Robert R. Schnorr, assistant instructor in German, a native of Germany, won first prize of $50 with the poem, "The Beggar's Ocarina."
Foreign Students Win Laurels In Annual Carruth Poetry Contest
Foreign students won first and third prizes in the annual William Herbert Carruth poetry contest sponsored by the English department.
Second prize of $25 went to Carolyn Smith, fine arts freshman, whose entry was "Today I Do Not Love You."
Honorable mentions were awarded Albert Roland, graduate student from Italy, and Jane Schmidt, College junior. These consisted of books of poetry.
Neehiem Kronenberg, third year law student from Palestine, was awarded third prize of $15. His poem was entitled "Fallen Flags."
Final judges in the contest were
Beard Raising A Ticklish Problem
A hidden desire coupled with a legitimate excuse were sufficient reasons for Dick Marshall, College sophomore, to sport sideburns and a beard. Dick is one of the several Kansas Citians who are growing whiskers to help celebrate that city's Centennial.
Dick started his beard bright and early on the morning of February 10 when he heaved his trusty razor into the ash can. Since then he has trimmed it only twice. A near tragedy occurred recently, however, when he accidently whacked part of it off early one morning before he was fully awake.
he passion to grow a beard began when he was a member of the 11thorne division. The upper brass be it as the whiskers became in the chin straps of the hammets. Dick doesn't think he have managed it then anyway. he has had no trouble in he started culti-brush. He added, however, on the girls had
C. J. WILLIAMS
—Photo by Edward Chapin DICK MARSHALL
varied comments on his manly en-deavor. Some said it made him look distinguished and some said it made him look like an old man. Some said it made him look like heck, but all agreed it tickled.
When he first began to grow it he said that he had trouble getting used to it. It was some time before he became accustomed to the stares.
Dick plans to keep his chin warmer until July 5 at least. He has never had any uncomfortable itching. His only statement concerning the future was "that as soon as it gets a little longer I intend to buy a hen to nest in it so I can have fresh eggs every morning."
Business News Out Today
"The Jayhawk Business News," a semi-annual School of Business publication, will be released on Wednesday to all business students. All articles are by business students. Gene Balloun, business junior, is editor of the publication for this year.
John Holmes, professor of English at Tufts college, Medford, Mass.; Everett Rich, chairman of the English department at Emporia State Teachers college; and John E. Hankins, professor of English at the University.
Professor Hankins was chairman of the board of judges. He was assisted in the preliminary judging by Miss Dorothy Van Ghent, assistant professor of English, and Thomas G. Sturgeon, instructor in English.
PT Club To Elect Officers Next Fall
Officers of the Physical Therapy club will be elected next fall, it was decided at a meeting of the club Wednesday. The election has been tentatively set for the second week of the fall semester.
Requiring freshman and sophomore physical therapy majors to join the club and participate in certain of its activities was discussed as a possible plan for next year. It was also suggested that the Physical Therapy club, the Occupational club, the Pre-Nursing club form, central committees so they could work together, we decided that no definite plans concerning these suggestions would be made until next fall.
This was the last meeting of the club for the current semester.
Balloting Is Slow In Business School
Balloting was slow in the Business School association elections today. Only 110 had cast their votes by 11 a.m.
Poll workers thought that Eugene Balloun, candidate for president on the Commerce party ticket, was leading, and would probably win the election.
Official results of the election will be known this afternoon, after the polls close at 1 p.m., and the ballots are counted.
Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 11, 1950
R
e r l e d s t e r l a s e
o t s d n y n x e e d e
y s b n k o t t l g o s e
e
STUDENT NEWSPAPER
Lawrence, Kansas
Post Editor To Speak At Kansan Dinner
Ben Hibbs, editor of The Saturday Evening post, will be the speaker at the annual Kansan board dinner at 6:30 p.m. Friday in the ballroom of the Union building, Mr. Hibbs was a 1923 journalism graduate of the University. Approximately 285 journalism alumni, Kansas news-papermen, students and faculty members of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information are expected to attend the dinner. Lou Sciortino, chairman of the board of the University Daily Kansan, is in charge of the informal dinner.
Before becoming associate editor of the Country Gentleman magazine in 1929, Mr. Hibbs was assistant instructor of journalism at the University; news editor of the Fort Morgan, Colo., Times; news editor of the Pratt, Kan., Tribune; head of the journalism department and director of publicity at Fort Hays State Teachers college; editor and manager of the Goodland, Kan., News-Republic; and managing editor of the Arkansas City, Kan., Traveler.
Mr. Hibbs was born in Fontana, Kans and was graduated from Kingman high school. At KU, he made 110 hours of "A" and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He was a member of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity; Sigma Phi Epsilon, social fraternity; Sachem, and the Quill club. He was editor-in-chief of the Kansan his senior year.
In 1940 Mr. Hibbs became editor of the Country Gentleman and in 1942 was promoted to editor of the Saturday Evening Post.
Mr. and Mrs. Hibbs will arrive in Lawrence this afternoon and will be guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ellsworth. Mr. Ellsworth is the K. U. alumni secretary.
Mr. Hibbs will also be a guest speaker at the Communications in Society class at 2 p.m. Friday in 102 Journalism building.
The following annual awards will be presented at the dinner;
The Henry Schott memorial prize to the man considered by the faculty to be the outstanding junior man in the School of Journalism. This is a cash award to assist the man in his senior year.
Certificates to the senior men and women students considered outstanding in the news and advertising sequences in the School of Journalism.
The Sigma Delta Chi achievement citation to the outstanding senior man.
The Sigma Delta Chi scholarship certificates to the students in the top ten per cent of the senior class in the School of Journalism.
Members of the Limaean club will go into the field Saturday and Sunday morning to collect the flowers. Although the specimens will be kept in pots, they must be transplanted only a short time before the display opens.
in the School Certificates for the best news stories, best feature stories, best editorials, best institutional advertisements, and best promotional advertisements appearing in the University Daily Kansan in the 1949-50 school year.
Both common and rare flowers will be shown. Each will be labeled with both common and scientific name.
Over one hundred varieties of wild flowers now blooming in the woods and prairies near Lawrence will be displayed by the botany department from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday on the second floor of Snow.
Botanists Will Display Flowers
Positions Open On Jayhawker
Applications for secretary and circulation manager of the 1951 Jayhawker must be submitted to John Eulich, business manager, in the Jayhawker office in the Union before Thursday, May 18.
The circulation manager will be paid on a commission basis. Applications for the positions should contain qualifications, activities, and ideas for the 1951 Jayhawker.
Crop Prospects Below Average
Washington, May 11—(U.P.)-The government soon may find itself holding farm prices down—not up. This possibility arose today in the wake of an agriculture department report that food crop production prospects are below average.
The report, based on May 1 conditions, said the 1950 wheat crop for the first time in seven years is likely to fall below one billion bushels. And it said fruits—especially peaches—are likely to be scarce this summer.
There was further bad news for consumers. Dun and Bradstreet said wholesale food prices—with meat leading the way—have advanced to the highest level in 16 months. Retail prices usually follow shifts in the wholesale level.
Unless crop prospects improve, officials said, the farm support program—for many major crops—will have to shift into reverse gear after the 1950 harvest.
Instead of increasing its investment in farm surpluses to hold up farm prices, the government would have to start moving some of its stockpiled products back on the market to avert shortages and high prices. The government now has almost three billion dollars--about three-fourths of its price support investment—tied up in wheat and cotton.
Speaking Contest Begins Tonight
The informative speaking division of the intramural speaking contest will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in Green hall. The women will present their speeches in room 106 and the men in 105.
The contestants will give five to eight minute talks "in which the chief emphasis is on describing, explaining, or giving worthwhile knowledge to the audience," William Conboy, instructor in speech, said.
Judges for tonight's contest will be: Gene Courtney, Harold Harvey, Don Palmquist, Thomas Rea, and Thomas Shay, instructors in speech; Soey Bong, business junior; Fred Six, College junior; Beatrice Buehler, Nancy Lindsey, Jerome Lysaught, College sophomores; Patricia Gardenhire, College freshman; and Abigail Bixby, education senior.
Tonight's contest is the second in a series of three intramural speaking contests being sponsored by the Forensic league and the department of speech and drama. After-dinner speeches will be given Thursday, May 19.
Positions Now Open For Publications
Positions are open for editor and business manager of the following publications: the Student Directory, K-Book, and K.U. Calendar. Anyone interested in these offices should turn in a written application to Jack Howard, 1621 Edgehill road by Friday.
500 See Barbara O'Neal Named Law School Queen
BEST FRIENDS OF THE YEAR
—Photo by Gagliardo-Clarkson
Business Slate Elected Commerce Party Wins 3-1
BARBARA O'NEAL, fine arts junior was chosen from 22 contestants to be Miss Res Ipsa Loquitur (Let the thing speak for itself), first queen of the School of Law. She is shown receiving a gold loving cup from Lee Turner, 1st year law student, one of the judges who selected Miss O'Neal. The selection was announced at the annual banquet Wednesday night honoring the late Dean W. L. Burdick.
The Commerce party elected its slate of candidates for the Business School council by a 3 to 1 majority in elections held Wednesday. Balloon, business junior
THE WEATHER
Band To Give Final Concert
The University of Kansas concert band, under the direction of Russell L. Wiley, will present its final concert of the year at 8 p.m. Monday, May 15 in Hoch auditorium.
The band will play four major works during the evening including Rimsky-Korsakov's "Capriccio Espagnole," Wagner's "Brunnhilde's Awakenings" from the opera "Sieg-fried," and the "Frescoes Suite" by Hayden Wood. The latter is reminiscent of the sea chanty music for which Wood is well known.
For the final selection the band will play the popular "1812 Overture" by Tschikovsky. It will be presented with a background of church bells, chimes, and cannon salutes, commemorating the Russian victory over Napoleon in the War of 1812.
Included in the program will be two soloists; Tom Lovitt, cornetist, who will play "Hungarian Mclodies" by Vincent Bach; and Neill Humfeld, trombone who will play Boccalari's "Fantasia d'Concerto."
KANSAS: Fair west and north clearing southeast. Not so cold extreme northwest tonight. Fair and warmer tomorrow.
Eugene Balloun, business junior, received 136 votes to 45 for Eugene Westergren, the Professional party candidate for the presidency. Westergren, as the defeated candidate, automatically becomes member-at-large of the council.
Other officers elected are: vice president, Lewis Jagger; treasurer, Charles Hall; secretary, Betty Jo Bloomer; all are business juniors.
Only 183 ballots were cast, and two were disqualified because or illegal marking. On both the bad ballots, the voters had cast a vote for each candidate for treasurer.
Balloting was slow during the voting period, and the polls were very quiet, except for a disagreement over the time for closing the polls. The Business News, business school paper, had listed the time for closing as 1:30 p.m., but the time was changed to 1 p.m., so that poll workers could attend the senior-faculty ball game. Professional party officials objected to the change, and the polls were kept open until 1:30 pm.
Editorial Writers To Hear Henry
John M. Henry, director of public relations for the Des Moines Register and Tribune, will speak to student editorial writers at 9 a.m. Friday in 102 Journalism building.
Mr. Henry is also the editor of the "Main Street" column in Cosmopolitan magazine. He was a student at the University from 1913 to 1915.
The highlight of the annual Law School Day banquet in honor of the late Dean W. L. Burdick was the crowning of Barbara Jean O'Neal, fine arts junior, as Miss Res Ipsa Loquitur of 1950.
More than 500 persons attended the affair, including members of the Kansas Supreme court, Chancellor and Mrs. Deane W. Malott, the deans of several schools, and judges and lawyers from Kansas and Missouri.
A gold loving cup and a kiss were presented to Miss O'Neal, a member of Alpha Chi Omega, by Lee Turner, 1st year law. She was selected from 22 contestants. The queen's nine attendants and runners-up in the contest were: Yvonne Josserand, Barbara Hagan, Pauline Reade, Patricia Ames, Melba Mather, Anne Murphy, Barbara Peck, Barbara Burdick, and Jeanette Steiner.
Principal speaker of the evening was Judge William L. Vandeventer of the Missouri circuit court of appeals. His topic was "Lawyers and Doctors." Paul Nye, president of the senior law class, was toastmaster for the occasion.
Awards for distinguished work in the moot court were made to Lawrence R. Wagner and Robert H. Royer, 3rd year law students. For their work on the Law Journal, awards were made to Robert H. Bingham, editor; Willard A. Burton, Jr. and Jesse H. Foster, Jr., co-editors; Anthony T. Dealy, Ted R. Ashmore, Paul B. Watson, J. Glenn Hahn, Joseph Stryker, Patrick Thiessen, Charles D. Johnson, Robert H. Meyer, Lloyd Faust, Ervin Johnston, H. Morgan Wright, and Jess Van Ert, staff members.
New members of the Order of the Coif, honorary law society, are: J. Glenn Hahn, Paul B. Watson, and Forrest A. Wilson. Chief justice W. W. Harvey of the Kansas supreme court was made an honorary member of the order.
A portrait of Dean Burdick, painted by Mrs. Bernice Lopez, was presented at the banquet to the Burdick Memorial association. The memorial is a fund to build a fireproof extension on Green hall to house the law library.
A skit lampooning faculty members was presented by several law students. Bernadine Read, fine arts senior, sang and dinner music was provided by a string ensemble composed of Merle Clayton, fine arts senior, cello; Dorothy Shoup, graduate student, piano; and Isabelle Gaddis, education junior, violin.
Student Receives Travel Scholarship
R. C. Broadstone, fine arts sophomore, has received a scholarship for a three month trip to Europe this summer. The scholarship was awarded by the Student International Travel association.
The scholarship is the only one awarded to undergraduate students from universities by the association. Broadstone was awarded the scholarship on the basis of home community work and general achievement. He is from Dighton, Kan.
Broadstone will travel in France and Switzerland, and will be accompanied by a professor of French from some American university.
Chancellor Malott Elected Head of State Universities
Chancellor Deane W. Malott was elected president of the National association of state universities for the 1950-51 school year at a recent meeting of the association in Chicago.
Presidents of 50 state and territorial universities hold membership in the organization.
FAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 11, 1950
Doctors Find New Test
Washington—(U.P.)—Two new blood tests to detect active tuberculosis and which may serve as a barometer on progress of the disease were announced at the annual meeting of the National Tuberculosis association.
One test, reported by Dr. Gardner Middlebrook of New York's Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, uses two elements in a patient's blood that can be checked against one another to determine whether tuberculosis germs are at their deadly work in the human body.
The other test, reported by Dr Bruno Gerste of the Veterans hospital, Oakland, Calif., measures the blood's gamma globulin that carries anti-bodies, or disease fighters. It
has been found that the gamma globulin content appears to rise with an increase of disease and fall with improvement in the patient's condition.
The new test reported by Doctor Middlebrook is an improvement over a technique he previously announced in conjunction with Dr Rene J. Dubos, also of the Rockefeller Institute.
Drama Dinner To Be Friday
The University's outstanding actor and debater will be honored at the annual speech and drama banquet at 6:15 p.m. Friday in the Kansas room of the Union.
Mrs. Frances Feist, instructor in speech, will present the acting award, and E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, will give the Delta Sigma Rho award to the top debater of the year. Awards for excellence in speaking, play production, and acting will also be made.
Those eligible to attend the dinner are members of the speech and drama faculty, the debate squad, the University Players, all speech and drama majors in the College and education seniors who are majoring in speech and drama.
Tickers for the dinner are 65 cents each. All reservations should be submitted to the speech office, Green Hall, by 10 a.m. Wednesday. They should be given to Don Dixon, assistant professor of speech, William Conboy, or Thomas Shay, instructors in speech.
Correspondent's Clippings Due
County correspondents of Statewide activities should submit their news clippings to the Alumni office to be judged for the cash awards. The deadline is noon Monday, May 15.
First orize is $20, second, and third $15. The winners will be announced Friday, May 19.
Burkhart Discusses Neon Display
The role of electrical display in advertising was discussed May 4 by Mr. Charles Burkhart, president of the Stalcup Neon company in Kansas City, Mo., at the spring initiation dinner of Alpha Digma Sigma, professional advertising fraternity.
He pointed out that electrical display was the third ranking medium of advertising from the standpoint of money spent, and showed slides and examples of present electrical displays in Kansas City He also gave a brief history of the electrical display industry and described the effect of electrical displays on every day life.
Mr. Burkhart discussed at some length the intricacies of the electrical spectaculars. He described in detail some of the displays in Times Square, discussing the size of the sign, the thousands of bulbs used, the complicated electrical relay control systems, and the miles of wire used in construction.
A colored slide presentation of how an actual display in contracted, created, and built was shown. He also demonstrated the use of "black light" and fluorescent paints.
Mr. L. N. Flint, Prof. Emeritus of the William Allen White School of Journalism, was honor guest. The following men were initiated:
Richard Nash and Gerald Messer, journalism seniors; Robert Carr, Lee Dyer, and John Weidenman, journalism seniors; James Brunson and Edward Franke, College juniors; and Robert Jornayvaz and Richard Hale, College sophomores.
MINSTRELS
BENEFIT Bert Nash Mental Health Clinic
Sponsored by BETA SIGMA PHI NU PHI MU LAWRENCE ADULT EDUCATION PROGRAM
Sponsored by
Friday & Saturday
May 12th & 13th 8:30 p.m.
LMHS Auditorium
Adults $1.00
Children 50c
University Players Elect Four Officers
TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT . . .
Bell's Music, Rankin Drug, Round Corner Drug.
Mary Lou Lane education junior, was elected president of University Players at a recent meeting of the organization.
Other officers elected were: Were O'Connell, College junior, vice-president; Phyllis Clegg, education junior, secretary-treasurer; and Raymond Beery, College freshman, recording secretary.
A new system was approved at the meeting for the admission of new members. Applicants for membership will be required to acquire a certain number of points in order to qualify for membership. The points will be given for activities in the speech and drama department, for work on the major productions, and for work on the laboratory productions.
University Daily Kansan
Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University 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.
Telfel Discusses Journalism With High School Students
Job possibilities, salaries, and preparatory training in journalism were discussed by Emil L. Telfel, assistant professor of journalism, before journalism students of Liberty Memorial high school Tuesday.
Professor Telfel's speech was a part of the school's annual "Career Day" activities.
Light Bill Costs Plenty
Richmond, Calif —(U.P.) -Clyde Mothershed, 25, decided the street was too dark. He pulled a handy switch on a light. A judge gave him the choice of a $75 fine or 20 days in jail for turning in a false alarm.
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THURSDAY, MAY 11, 1950
PAGE THREE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Teachers Need More Hours
The Kansas Board of Education has increased the college education requirements for new elementary teachers. Elementary instructors who will begin teaching in the fall of 1951 must have a total of 45 hours of college training. This does not affect persons now teaching in Kansas schools.
--free spring afternoons have been unavoidably passed by.
Through a previous action, the Board had set 20 semester hours as a minimum for beginning teachers next September. New teachers in the present year were required to have at least 24 hours.
"The shortage of teachers in elementary schools brought into the teaching profession many excellent though inadequately trained 'emergency' teachers. It is now imperative to raise the training level for those with little or no college background," Dean Smith said.
George B. Smith, dean of the School of Education, said those in the University teacher training program are in complete agreement with the policy of the Kansas State Board of Education.
"The gradually increased training requirements set by the board have been an excellent attempt to increase the efficiency of teachers now on the job and of beginning teachers.
Violinist Gives Senior Recital
Mrs. Charlotte Braly, violinist,
presented her senior recital Tuesday
before 60 persons in Strong theater.
One of her best numbers was the difficult "Concerto B Minor, No. 3 (Saint-Saens). Her handling of the second movement conveyed a gentle lyrical quality. Mrs. Braly played with warmness the sweet, muted number, "Beau Soir," (Debussy-Heifetz). She also played a catchy folk song, "Danse de Colinette" (Gretry-Franko) and "Malaguena" (Sarasate), as well as the "Sonatina for Violin and Piano, Opus 100" (Dvork.)
The violin is one of the most difficult instruments to play and Mrs. Braly lacked exceptional technical ability. Her program offered little variety for there was not a wide enough contrast between the slow and fast movements.
This Year We Get 'Summer Sickness'
You asked for it, and now you've got it—yes, that inevitable summer weather you prayed for is here in all its glory. Of course it won't promise to stay, but it came in answer to our pleading prayers.
Along with this unusual weather came the wind, a wind which produces many changes on the campus. The scenic valleys of our continuously well-planted campus are hidden by clouds of good old Kansas soil blowing into Missouri.
This year the students of the University of Kansas feel that all is not fair. They have been denied their usual pleasant symptoms of "spring fever." The campus has been plunged from cold, damp weather into a hot, humid, stiffling atmosphere. Those pleasant carefree spring afternoons have been unavoidably passed by.
"Summer sickness," instead of "Spring fever," will now become an epidemic throughout the campus. Dull eyes, perspiring brows, and swollen feet are the symptoms that all students will contract eventually.
When flys buzz around your head and you stick to your seat in the lecture room, remember that you are the one responsible. You prayed for summer weather.
Sleep Doctor Bans Reading In Bed
Chicago—(U.P.)—Dr. Paul H. Fluck has given 10 commandments for getting a good night's sleep, and has banned reading in bed. Doctor Fluck, of Lambertville, N.J., said most insomnia is caused by bad sleeping habits or lack of regular routine.
Writing in the American Medical association's magazine, Health, he listed these "10 commandments" for good sleeping:
1. Go to bed at the same hour every night.
2. Try to get at least one hour of sleep before midnight.
New Cancer Test To Be Given Trial
Dr. Penn, in explaining the test at the recent meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research in Atlantic City, said an extract of antigen derived from human cancerous liver tissue is added to a blood serum taken from the person being tested.
New York—(U)R) The newly-developed Penn blood test for cancer, said to be 98.6 per cent perfect, is going to be given a challenging trial.
The test, reported by Dr. H. S. Penn of the University of California at Los Angeles, is to be given the independent tryout in Seattle, Wash. If the investigators there obtain the same results as were obtained by Dr. Penn and his associates, then the test might well be accepted generally.
The serum, he said, shows particles in suspension if the person has cancer.
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3. Drink no more than a glass of milk or eat no more than a small bowl of cereal for a bedtime snack.
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5. Never listen to the radio in bed.
6. Never read in bed.
7. Provide a regular schedule "for the hobby, dog or wife or husband who interferes with your rest."
8. When you go to bed, "close your eyes and go to sleep."
9. If that doesn't work, try to recall in what position you awake in the morning, and assume that position.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 11, 1950
McNown Sees Improvement In New Generation
By CHARLES PRICE
After 41 years of teaching in colleges and universities throughout the country, William C. McNown, professor of civil engineering, believes that the character and caliber of the younger generation is good and shows tendencies toward improvement.
Professor McNown has faith in the students of today becoming better citizens than those of many years ago.
"I have no sympathy with the supposed fact that youth is decaying," he said. "I don't believe a word of it. This current generation is not any worse than the past two generations. In fact, I believe it is getting better."
In comparing K. U. with some of the other colleges and universities where he has served and visited, Professor McNown said that the University stands out significantly in that "here there is a highly cultural atmosphere which was probably instilled by the early administrators. The University has been very fortunate in obtaining teachers and administrators such as Frances Snow and Frank Marvin."
"Secondly, the University has a most magnificent physical setting on Mt. Oread overlooking the two valleys," Professor McNown explained. "Some of the other college campuses have the advantage of surrounding water, but even with small Potter lake, K. U. ranks along with the prettiest," he said.
While he has been here, Professor McNown said, "the engineering students have always been a serious hard-working group of men. They
Professor McNown, chairman emeritus of the civil engineering department, will retire this June after spending 41 years as a teacher and administrator. Thirty-seven years of his career have been spent at K.U.
have come from middle-sized towns and farms and are not afraid of work. They learn the value of the dollar in their early life and because of this staunch background, are preferred by the industries of the East.
"The days of the unrefined engineer are gone forever. The tendency through the years has been for professional men to develop a more gentlemanly character."
He came to Kansas in 1913 as an assistant professor of civil engineering. In 1934 he became a full professor and chairman of the civil engineering department. Five years ago he gave up his chairmanship for full-time teaching.
Professor McNown is a member of Tau Beta Pi, Theta Tau, Sigma Xi. The American Society of Civil Engineers, The Kansas Engineering society, and The American Society of Engineering Education. He is a former president of both the Kansas section of A.S.C.E. and The Kansas Engineering society.
Seventy years of age but not showing it, Professor McNown possesses a memory that serves him well. He remembers when Jayhawk drive was only a cinder road, and fuel for the heating plant was hauled to the campus in horse-drawn wagons.
He knew the men after whom the buildings on the campus are named when these men were teaching and holding administrative positions. He has seen the School of Engineering and Architecture, which he refers to as "one of the best engineering schools in the country," grow from fewer than 400 students to its present enrollment of 1,455.
Pi Tau Sigma Officers
Pi Tau Sigma, honorary mechanical engineering fraternity, recently elected the following officers: Thomas Fisher, president; Wayne Kohman, vice-president; Howard Hession, treasurer; Joyce Holmberg, corresponding secretary, and Robert Umlhitz, recording secretary.
Phi Kappa Psi Officers
Phi Kappa Psi fraternity announces the election of the following officers: Clyde L. Wharton, Jr.; president; Dave Grimes, vice-president; Roy Eugene Lund, treasurer; Floyd Grimes, recording secretary, and Jack Sevier, corresponding secretary.
Evelyn Keyes Says It's Possible For Stars To Avoid The Psychiatrist's Office
Read the Want Ads Daily.
Hollywood—(U.P.)—It's possible, Evelyn Keyes said recently to be a movie queen without getting neurotic. You just turn a deaf ear to all the phony compliments.
"That's what I do," the peppy blonde beauty said. "And I have yet to spend a small fortune on some psychiatrist's couch."
Miss Keyes says she will be the first to admit a glamour her girl's path is plumb full of chances to climb on a temperamental high-horse.
"And it's awfully hard sometimes to remember you're not worth it. Every once in a while I have to stop and think how small Evelyn Keyes is in comparison with the rest of the universe."
"When you're acting, everything's focused on your own insignificant body," she shrugged. "The camera . . the other actors . . the make-up man everybody's concentration on making you look good.
Alpha Chi Pinning
"They should read the newspapers, too," she says, "and find out what's going on in the world. That's a swell way to convince yourself how insignificant you are."
After hours there always are the glad-handlers who hang around every actress who ups herself to the swimming-pool-Cadillae convertible brackets.
She thinks all actresses ought to get an outside hobby. And that doesn't mean ways and means to snag more camera close-ups or handsome he-men to drag em to Ciro's. Miss Keyes currently is studying up on famous bridges in history.
Alpha Chi Omega sorority announces the pinning of Miss Jeanne Shafer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Shafer of Great Bend, to Mr. Dean Wells, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rene Wells, son of Great Bend.
Miss Shafer is a College junior. Mr. Wells is a college sophomore and a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
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Phi Sigma Initiates 11 At Banquet
One hundred nineteen members of Kappa chapter of Phi Sigma, honorary biological science fraternity, attended the group's annual initiation banquet at the Union the past week. Eleven new members were initiated.
Officers for the next year were announced, and three charter members of the club were given recognition. Dr. Noble P. Sherwood, professor of bacteriology, Dr. O. O. Holmquist, assistant professor, and Dr. E. Lee Tree, professor of bacteriology, are the charter members.
of the physiology department spoke on "The No Man's Land of Science". New initiates are William J. Arnold, William G. Barnes, David T. Dailey, Richard W. Fredrickson, and Howard J. Koonse, College seniors; Mary Lackey, College junior; John F. Bailey, Maurice F. Baker, Shirley G. Gleason, George S. Marquis, and Robert W. Reese, graduate students.
The new officers are Roy Peterson, president; Ivan Shields, vice-president; Mary Works, recording secretary, Keith Bowman, treasurer; Richard Draemel, corresponding secretary, and George Lewey, editor for "The Biologist," national Phi Sigma publication.
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THURSDAY, MAY 11, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Dances, Picnics, Costume Party Planned
Phi Gam Buffet Supper
Phi Gamma Delta fraternity will give a buffet supper at the chapter house from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. today.
Chaperons will be Mrs. P. H. Klimkenberg, Mrs. Fannie DeLozier, Mrs. F. L. MacCreary, and Mrs. Clark Mandigo.
German Club Picnic Friday
Members of the German club will hold a picnic and dance from 6 p. m. to 10 p. m. Friday at Potter lake. Dr. J. A. Burzle, Miss Christine Oertel, and Miss Marlies Kornfeld will chaperon.
Phi Kappa Tau Spring Dance
Phi Kappa Tau fraternity will hold a formal dance from 9 p. m. to midnight Friday at the Eldridge hotel, Mrs. Thomas A. Clark, Mrs. Fred Fultz, Mrs. Eugene Alford, and Mrs. Richard Blume will act as chaperons.
Delta Chi To Hold Dance
Delta Chi fraternity will entertain at the house with a dance from 9 p. m. to midnight Mrs. R. G. Roche, Mrs. John Skie, Mrs. E. R. Hooper, and Mrs. H. J. Overholser will chapenor.
Hillcrest Spring Formal
The spring formal dance of Hillcrest House will be held in the Palm room of the Union from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Dr. and Mrs J. A. Burzle, Miss Marjorie Austin and Mrs. John Oliver will act as chaperons.
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Beta Theta Pi Party
Beta Itheta
Member of Theta Pi fraternity will entertain with a party from 9 p. m. to midnight Friday at the chapter house. Mrs. Dean Alt, Mrs. Clark Mandigo, and Mrs. J. H. Kraemer will act as chaperons.
Foster Hall Costume Party
Foster Hall Costume Party
Foster hall will give a costume party at the house from 9 p. m.
midnight Saturday, Miss Carlotta Nellis, Miss Julia Willard, and Mrs.
Justice Wright will be chaperons.
Phi Kappa Spring Formal The spring formal dance of Phi Kappa fraternity will be in the chapter house from 9 p. m. to midnight Saturday. Chaperons will be Mrs. John Skie, Mrs. R. G. Roche, and Mrs. H. J. Overholser.
Harmon Co-op Semi-Formal
Harmon Co-op Semi-Formal Harmon Co-op will have its spring semi-formal dance at the house from 9 p. m. to midnight Saturday. Chaperons will be Miss Jean Guthrie, Miss Velma Hess, and Miss Betty Hensley.
Lambda Chi Alpha Format
Members of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity will hold their spring formal dance in the Crystal room of the Eldridge hotel from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday, Mrs. F. L. MacCreeary, Mrs. Ralph Park, Mrs. P. W. Henry, and Mrs. Tomas H. Stuart will be chaperons.
Lambda Chi Alpha Formal
Two Halls Give Party
TWO BOATS
Steering hill Oliver halls will entertain with a picnic and dance at Lone Star lake from 5.30 p.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday. Chaperons will be Mrs. Lorraine Gosney, Mrs. Althea Galloway, and Mrs. Lela Wilson.
Theta Tau To Have Party
Theta Tau, engineering fraternity, will entertain from 7:30 p.m. to midnight Saturday with a party at the chapter house. Chaperons
Theta Tau To Have Party
will be Miss Florence Black, Miss Martha Peterson, and Prof. and Mrs. G. W. Bradshaw.
Kappa Eta Kappa Dance
Kappa Eta Kappa, electrical engineering fraternity, will have a dance at the chapter house from p.m. to midnight Saturday. Mr. Edward L. Jordon, Dr. Donald Wilson, and Mr. James Wolf will act as chaperons.
Kappa Eta Kappa Dance
Wesley Foundation Picnic
The members of Wesley Foundation will hold a picnic from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday at Clinton park.
Dr. and Mrs. Edwin Price, Dr. and Mrs. O. E. Allison, and Miss Helen Currier will act as chaperons.
Wesley Foundation Picnic
Triangle Formal Dance
The formal dance of Triangle fraternity will be in the Kansas room of the Union from 9 p. m.
to midnight Saturday. Chaperons will be Mrs. Dean S. Nite, Mrs. Richard Blume, Mrs. Fred Fultz, and Mrs. Glenn Porter.
Sigma Chi To Hold Dance Members of Sigma Chi fraternity will hold a dance at the house from 5 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Mrs. Arthur Little, Mrs. Fannie DeLozier, and Mrs. Eugene Alford will be chaperons.
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The engagement of Miss Ann Carinder to Mr. Bill Jenkins was announced at the spring formal dance of Acacia fraternity recently.
Miss Carinder is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Carinder of Caney, Kans. She was graduated from the School of Fine Arts of the University in February.
Mr. Jenkins, the son of Mr. and Mrs. George E. Jenkins of Caney, is a College freshman.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 11.1950
THURS
Three KU-MU Records Should Fall
Kansas and Missouri track teams have built an impressive set of records in their 43 dual meets that date back to 1901. In fact, five of the 15 K.U.-M.U. meet records exceed the Big Seven conference marks. But even so sterling a set of standards as these will likely be partially rewritten Saturday when the Jayhawkers and Tigers meet at Columbia.
Three records seem sure to fall if weather is not too inclement. And no one would be too surprised should at least three more be altered.
The marks destined to be rewritten are those in the 880-yard run, two-mile run, and high jump.
Kansas All-American Pat Bowers makes a habit of breaking records. His latest was a 1:53.2 half-mile in the Kansas-Kansas State dual the past Saturday. The K.U.-M.U. mark is 1:55, so Bowers is likely to shatter it.
In what promises to be a great race, Kansans Herb Semper and
Cliff Abel will tangle with Missourians Bill McGuire and Robert Fox in the two-mile run. Semper, a sensation as a sophomore, has a best time of 9:21.3 which he produced against Kansas State. McGuire, usually at his best in the mile, started the best of them when he ran 9:16.2 in a near blizzard at the Drake relays. Close behind him was Fox. Semper passed up the open event to help Kansas win the four-mile relay. So there is little doubt that the present 9:40.7 dual record will not be in existence a year from now.
After a good indoor season in which he gained a tie for the Big Seven championship, Bob Gordon of Missouri is in form in the high jump. In his last outing he cleared 6 feet 6 inches. The meet record is 6 feet $4^{1/2}$ inches. With Jayhawkers Del Norris and Bill Richardson pressing him, Gordon ought to get a new standard.
Events where the records might fall are the 440-yard dash, mile relay, and 120-yard high hurdles.
of quarter-milers, of one them. Elmer Kline, is co-holder of the meet record of: 48.8. And he may come out of Saturday's fractas with a new mark all to himself. He will be pressed by teammate Jim Whitacre and Jayhawkers Emil Schutzel and Jim Dinsmore.
Missouri always has a good crop
In his first outdoor start of the season, the preliminaries of the Texas Relays, Kansas Jack Greenwood zipped over the high hurdles in :14.5. Although he hasn't done too well since then, he still rates a chance to crack the existing meet mark of :14.7.
At the Kansas Relays the Missouri mile-relay team finished a creditable third to Rice whose record-breaking time was 3:15. The meet record is 3:19.7. That makes it appear as though the Tigers could set a new mark if they wanted to.
In 1830, the first locomotive built in the United States to pull passengers puffed 13 miles over the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. It weighed six tons and was called the Tom Thumb.
Sig Ep's Cinch Tie By Downing Beta's
Fletcher Bell pitched six hit ball Wednesday to lead his Sigma Phi Epsilon team to a rousing 13-1 victory over Beta Theta Pi in an "A" game. The win insured the Sig Epos of a tie for the division championship with a record of four wins and one defeat. It was Beta's first loss and left them with a 3-1 record.
Bell had complete control of the game although the Beta's touched him or four hits and one run in the fifth inning.
Sig Ep pounded out 14 hits including a home run and single by second baseman Don Wright. Right fielder Ernie Shank got a triple and two singles in four trips.
The Sig Alphs were unable to fathom Phi Gam pitcher Shelby Smith's fast ball until the seventh and last inning when they rallied for four runs. Doug Gill, Sig Alpha third baseman, led the hitting with a homer and single in four tries. Second baseman Bob Thompson contributed three singles in four trips.
Phil Gamma Delta pulled themselves into a first place tie by defeating Sigma Alpha Epsilon 10-7 in an "A" game Wednesday. The game was tied at 1-1 going into the fifth inn when the Phi Gams unlimbered up their bats and carved themselves a 5-1 lead. A five run spurred in the next inning gave them their margin of victory.
Read the Daily Kansan daily
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Today's Probable Pitchers
(Won and lost records in parenthesis)
American League
St. Louis (Widmar 0-0 and Starr 1-2) at New York (Reynolds 1-1 and Sanford 1-0)—two games.
Detroit (Hutchinson 1-1 and Gray 1-1) at Boston (Dobson 3-1 and Stobbs 2-0)-two games.
Cleveland (Garcia 0-1) at Philadelphia (Kellner 2-1) Chicago (Pierce 1-1) at Washington (Haynes 0-1)
National League
Brooklyn (Hatten 1-1) at Cincinnati (Blackwell 1-1)
Philadelphia (Roberts 3-1) at Pittsburgh (Chesnes 1-2)-night
Boston (Sain 3-2) at Chicago (Voiselle 0-0)
HEINE'S
STORY
Mr. Wizard
Guarding the Forest
New York (Koslo 1-2) at St. Louis (Brecheen 2-1)—night
Big Jess Van Ert swung the heavy stick for the Phi Gams with a three run homer in the big fifth inning. He had an earlier single for two bats in three trips.
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Women's Division I Three Way Race
Attempting to finish their schedule before rains halt their softball games, women's intramural teams crowded four contests into Wednesday's slate.
Kappa Alpha Theta edged Chi Omega 7 to 5 to close its season play in second place in division II with a 3-1 record.
McCune and Neff registered the victory for the Theta's as Godding and Webb were handed the loss.
Pi Beta Phi made it a three-way tie in division I by defeating Locksley 3 to 3 to match a 3-1 record with the Jayettes and Jolliffe for first place. Locksley holds a reverse record for fourth slot in the division. Baker and Stodder went all the way for the winners.
Kappa Kappa Gamma scored its first victory of the season with a rousing 25 to 7 defeat of Miller, giving them both 1-3 records with a game apiece yet to play.
Yancey and McKelvy gave the Kappa's victory.
The Jayettes evened their score with Jollife 9 to 5 in the first round of the tie play-off in division I. Schedule for today's game:
Diamond 1-4 p.m.
Delta Gamma vs. Miller
Diamond 2—4 p.m.
Tri-Deltis vs. Alpha O. Pi
Diamond 3—4 p.m.
Alpha Chi Omega vs. Chi Omega
Diamond 4—5 p.m.
Kappa Kappa Gamma vs. Gamma
Phi Beta
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THURSDAY, MAY 11, 1950
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
PAGE SEVEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
SPOTLIGHT SPORTS
Jay Drake, former University student, recently accomplished the rare feat in baseball of "hitting for the cycle."
This unusual feat, which compares to the pitchers' no-hit role, occurred in Drake's 13th professional game while catching for the Albany Cardinals in the Class D Georgia-Florida league.
By BOB NELSON
Coach Bill "Red" Hogan's Jayhawers open the most important leg of their baseball season Friday at Manhattan playing the Kansas. State Wildcats. . . After playing Coach Fritz Knorr's club the two-game series at Manhattan this weekend, KU. returns home to play the Wildcats on Wednesday and Thursday, May 17 and 18.
On May 3, Drake blasted a home run, triple, double, and single, in addition to scoring three runs and driving home another four with his long ball hitting. Jay's batting average is just under the .300 circle and he has won the hearts of the fans with his terrific hustle and enthusiasm to make good in organized ball. Too far this season Drake has either batted in or scored a total of 26 runs in 13 games with his 15 hits that included two homers.
Mackenzie Coehler Hogan's club finishes the 1950 season by playing host to the Oklahoma Sooners on Monday and Tuesday, May 22 and 23. This two-game series should give K.U. students a chance to see college ball at its best. . The Sooners have two of the league's top pitchers in a pair of junior righthanders, Jack Shirley and Jim Kirk.
Oklahoma's most recent wins have been 11 to 5 and 12 to 5 victories over the strong Oklahoma A. and M. club. . . We understand several "ivory hunters" are using the same travel schedule as Coach Jack Baer has arranged for his Sooners.
The Jayhawkers and Wildcats have lost several close games, and this weekend's series stacks up as probably one of the most important tests for K.U. thus far .Both teams are capable of playing topflight ball and have played below expectation in several contests.
Kansas State is expected to send two of the Big Seven's top sophomore hurlers, Perk Reitemeier and Jim Iverson, out to silence the Jayhawker bats. . . Kansas' ace sophomore, big Carl Sandefur, will hurt for K.U. Saturday and is expected to face either Reitemeier or Iverson.
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Phillies Top National League
New York, May 11—(U.P.) The Brooklyn Dodgers, who started to make a joke of the National League race, collapsed into second place today under the weight of bad pitching.
Ken Raffensberger, a 32-year-old southpaw the Dodgers would like very much to own, put them there. He held them to three measly singles last night in a 4 to 0 victory for the Cincinnati Reds.
for the Cleveland That put the idle Philadelphia Phillies on top by a half game and enabled the St. Louis Cardinals, who beat the Giants, 5 to 1, to tie Brooklyn for second.
If the Dodgers want to buy Rafflesenberger now, they will have to pay through the nose. He never looked better in beating them. Preacher Roe matched him for five scoreless frames, then gave up two runs on
doubles by Grady Hatton, Bob Usher, and Virgil Stallcup. Reliefer Barney yielded two more in the eighth, setting 'em up himself when he failed to touch first base on a grounder fielded by Gil Hodges.
The scrappy Phillies had their game with the Pittsburgh Pirates trained out.
Lefthander Max Lanier pitched the Cards into the second-place tie by holding the Giants to seven scattered hits. He gave up a third inning run on doubles by Ed Stanky and Whitey Lockman, but the Cards came right back with three runs and never were headed. The fiery Stanky, fined for a run-in on Tuesday, was ejected from his second straight game.
played in the majors, the Cubs got six-hit pitching from Doyle Lade and Paul Minner and beat the Boston Braves, 6 to 3. Sid Gordon croused his sixth home for Boston with one on. But the Braves committed four errors and every one of them figured in the scoring.
night game.
At Chicago, in the only day game.
The Athletics in their night game at Philadelphia gave up three unearned runs with two out in the ninth inning and lost to the Cleveland Indians, 6 to 4. With two down, Lou Boudreau reached reliever Bob Hooper for a single. Jim Hegan also singled and pinch-runner Bob Avila raced for home when Sam Chapla bobbled the ball. Chapman's throw to the plate was in time but Mike Guerra dropped it.
KU Host To K-State Golf, Tennis Teams
The Big Seven conference meet is only a little more than a week away—Friday and Saturday, May 19 and 20—but the K.U. golf and tennis teams are not looking ahead that far.
The K-Staters smashed Wichita 7 to 0 and 6 to 0, Iowa State 7 to 0, and Nebraska 6 to 1. Missouri, a team that has beaten Kansas twice, downed the Wildcats 6 to 1, and Washburn, C.J.C. champion and loser only to Kansas, edged them 4 to 3.
Coach Dick Richard's net team meets a formidable opponent Friday, in the Wildcats. The sophomore-led Wildcats ran up four straight victories before losing to Missouri and Washburn the past week.
Instead, they are concentrating on dual matches--home-and-home engagements with Kansas State, and a golf date here with Missouri.
The Kansas State golf and tennis teams will be in Lawrence Friday, and then Jaybawkers will return the visit on Tuesday, May 16. Coach Bill Winey's golfers will cross nibbles with the defending champion Missouri Tigers on Thursday, May 18. The latter is a reschedule of a rained out match.
only to Kansas. A pair of Winfield sophomores, Roger Coad and Chris Williams, have been setting the pace for Kansas State this season. Coad has won five of six singles matches from his No. 1 position. His only loss was to Dick Mechem, Washburn's switch hitting ace. Coad defeated Missouri's captain, Bill Miller, for the Wildcat's only point in their match with the Tigers.
Tigers.
Williams. No. 2 man for the Wildcats, has also won five of six singles matches. For the Jaghawkers maintain the smooth-working Aggie pair will probably be Eob Swartzell, winner in five of seven matches, and Harvey Macferran, winner in two of six.
Iowa State, Nebraska, and Wichita Losses were to Nebraska, Wichita and Missouri.
Dick Atkinson, K-State's No. 1 man has been shooting consistent golf all year and should give Kansas' veteran twosome of Dick Ashley and Dave Dennis a battle for medalist honors. Other Kansas State golfers are Bob Funk, Bob Batt, and Bill Mohoney.
Kansas should be in better shape for the Wildcats than they were Tuesday against Nebraska. Ashley, KU's No. 1 man, who has missed the last two road trips, will be in the lineup against Kansas State.
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They got to Lincoln just a few hours before match time and went onto the links with almost no sleep.
The Jayhawker golf team, sporting a 3-2 record after close losses to Missouri and Nebraska the past week, meets an up-and-down Kansas State team in Friday's match at the Lawrence Country club. The Wildcats have broken even in six dual matches. They hold victories over
Completing the Kansas State team are Jim Neumann, a three letter winner, sophomore Don Upson, and letterman Ken Skelton. Dick Nichols and Dave McFarland have seen some action for the Wildcats and may get into the lineup against Kansas.
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 11, 1950
HURSI
Medical School Is Distinguished By Continued Progress
By FRANKIE WAITS
(Editor's note: This is fourth in a series of articles about the various schools in the University).
The story of the founding, establishment, expansion, and growth of the University of Kansas School of Medicine reads like a pioneer's tale. What the school has accomplished in the past 60 years seems impossible. It has been a struggle for the students in medicine, the doctors and professors connected with the school, and the laymen who are interested in the success of its projects. The medical pioneers at K.U. before 1888 had a difficult time trying to interest the citizens of the state in medical education.
But the state medical society was in earnest and never gave up their dream of a School of Medicine. The majority of the faculty members were horrified when the society petitioned for permission to secure a
To list all of the improvements and additions to the Medical Center
Kansas legislature and the United States Public Health service.
At
[Surgical Room]
OPERATING PROCEDURE at the University of Kansas Medical Center shows the television equipment in action. The earphone in the surgeon's left ear enables him to hear questions asked by students and doctors in distant classrooms. The surgeon's descriptions of each step in the operating procedure reaches the observers through a two-way sound system.
Chancellor Francis Huntington Snow, who followed Mr. Lippincott, recommended a complete medical course, but his suggestion wasn't adopted until 1894 when Dr. Simeon B. Bell gave the necessary amount of land to build a Medical Center. A School of Medicine was organized in 1899. Enrollment was small, however, and dwindled with the years, until after the arrival of Chancellor Frank Strong in 1902. Chancellor Strong felt that Dr. Bell's offer was the answer to the problem of the school and it was renewed, extended, and utilized. By 1905 there were 90 students enrolled at the Kansas City Medical Center and 60 at K.U.
cadaven for dissection. This incident put the medical society out of commission until 1888.
a few of the improvements made in the last few years.
Today there are 400 medical students in the school. At the Medical Center there are approximately 280 medical students, 25 interns, 50 resident physicians, 10 dietary interns, 15 studying medical technology, 10 in physical therapy, three in X-ray techniques, three in occupational therapy, and 125 in nursing. There has been an increase in the intake of medical students up to 25 per cent, from 80 to 100 students a class. This spring there are 83 in the graduating class of the school.
Since Franklin D. Murphy became the fourth dean of the school there have been additions and buildings completed totaling one million dollars. At the present time the school is planning expenditures of an additional $4,700,000 from the
Most students do not enter medicine until they have secured their B.A. or B.S. degree in the College. At present, medical students spend one and two half years at the K.U. campus and two and one half years at the Medical Center. From freshman to graduate, the medical students study the fundamental sciences; at the Medical Center during their last two and one half years much of the work is done at the bedside so that the students may observe methods of treatment and the processes of making a diagnosis and prescribing treatment.
would be impossible in this article. It's a big project, a big school with big ideas, and big accomplishments. There have been complete new units added to the campus in Kansas City, Kan., additions to buildings already in operation, and new instruments installed for cancer and heart disease research—and these are only
TORONTO
—Photo by Frankie Waits
DR. FRANKLIN D. MURPHY, dean of the school of medicine, speaks with Chancellor Malott in one of Dr. Murphy's hurried though frequent visits to the University.
The Medical Center includes Bell Memorial hospital, Hixon laboratories, clinical buildings, a tuberculosis division and psychiatric ward. The Medical Center directs the residency programs at the veterans hospitals in Topeka, Wadsworth, and Wichita, Kan, and Excelsior Springs, Mo.
Dr. Murphy's varied activities leave him little time of his own. When he does have some spare hours, he likes to play a few holes of golf, or read the murder mysteries of Agatha Christie. Dean Murphy reads a great deal, with emphasis on documentary writings. He is married and has three girls: Joyce, seven; Martha, five; and Carolyn, who is one year old.
Franklin D. Murphy, dean of the School of Medicine, said that the divided campuses of the medical school pose problems which he hopes can soon be resolved.
The department of nursing is another division of the school that has continued to grow in enrollment each year. Under a new plan, the B.S. degree in nursing is now being granted by the faculty of the School of Medicine.
Dean Murphy is one of the most active men in medicine in the country today. He was recently elected vice-president of the American Association of Medical colleges and
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was chosen by the United States Chamber of Commerce as one of the ten outstanding young men in the nation in 1949.
The amount of research at Kansas City and at K.U. has tripped in the last two years. The curriculum is now being altered to include a program of conservation in hearing.
MARY JOSEPH COURTIS
MEDICAL STUDENTS are determining the basal metabolic rate of "patient" Leon Berube, freshman in the School of Medicine. Left to right the men are: Paul Wilhelm, Thomas Batty, and Roy Peterson, all graduate students.
One of the outstanding things at the Medical Center of which the students and doctors are especially proud is the Logan-Clendening collection of books and the general library. These together constitute perhaps one of the best medical libraries in the Middlewest.
Another of the outstanding features offered by the School of Medicine are the postgraduate courses. Monthly courses are scheduled at the Medical Center and faculty members give postgraduate lectures in strategically located spots over Kansas once a month.
Dean Murphy said, "The postgraduate course offers one of the most diversified programs of this type in the entire country. I feel
2. A guarantee of continued excellence in doctors through the postgraduate courses at the Medical Center.
that our television is most valuable in this method of teaching."
"Our main purpose in the School of Medicine," said Dean Murphy, "is to turn out a citizen-physician. We want our students to be more than skilled technicians. We want them to recognize their responsibilities as participating citizens."
1. More and better physicians for Kansas which means better health for the entire state.
3. A renaissance in research reflecting great credit upon the University and the people of Kansas in the contributions to medical science.
All those persons connected with the school are working toward three common goals, in the way of helping the people of Kansas, said Dean Murphy:
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HURSDAY, MAY 11, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE NINE
At the Flicks By Bill Stratton
"Stage Fright" Jayhawker Theater
A well-rounded cast and the adept directing of Alfred Hitchcock make "Stage Fright" a hard to coat murder mystery. Beginning with the necessary ingredient, a murder, the movie veers from the beaten track and carries you through a series of events that not even a chief of detectives could anticipate.
Sutry and barely audible, Martine Dietrich plays a self-centered musical comedy star whose husband is murdered. She gets her lover, Richard Todd, to clean up any items that might connect her with the killing. In doing so, Todd is accused of the murder. He runs away and enlists the aid of a friend, one Wyman, who is convinced of its innocence. Determined to clear Jane investigates on her own falls in love with a Scotland Yard detective, Michael Wilding. When Todd, Wyman, and Wilding get together under assumed names, things become both humorous and suspenseful.
"Roughshod"
Patee Theater
An outdoor romance of a very common type is "Boughshod" RKO Radio's offering, which is filmed in the Sonora Pass region of California's High Sierras.
The story deals with the efforts of a hard-working local rancher and a younger brother to drive a valuable horse herd across the pass and down to his California ranch. At the same time he is handicapped by the responsibility of conveying some dance hall girls to Sonora, while harrassed by a trio of escaped convicts who have a "score to settle" with him.
surely. Robert Sterling is the determined rancher, while cherubic Claude Jarman, Jr., as his brother, appears intermittently with "Annie Rooney" advice. John Ireland once again protrudes his jaw to play a vindicative convict.
"Dakota Lil"
Granada Theater
Displayed in pasty Cinecolor, "Dakota Li" is another Western that should attract the "12-year-old and under" group. A children's ticket is worth the price while an adult fee would be charity on the part of the patron.
The directors throw a cowboy hat over George Montgomery's Hollywood haircut to call him an army scout. He is given the task of capturing Rod Cameron and his notorious "Pole in the Wall" gang. Marie Windsor is a clever fugitive who forges names on unsigned, newly printed bills stolen by the gang. Montgomery promises the girl easy money to obtain information on the desperadoes. Naturally, he becomes fond of her. However, things get rough. Fists begin swinging and gun start blazing. Before the movie is over, there's a body for each patron on the front row.
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Actress Puts Children First, To Milliners' Great Dismay
New York—(U.P.)—Millinery workers, shocked at the news that Joan Crawford has bared her head to keep her children from going barefoot, have rushed to her rescue.
She can keep right on buying the chic chapeaux for which she's famed, they said, and they'll pick up all the hat checks.
The movie glamor queen confessed the other day she'd sworn off hats because, with four youngsters to feed and clothe, she can't afford them.
"What—Miss Crawford, beautiful,
beautiful Miss Crawford, without a hat!"
cried Nathaniel Spector.
"Never. We can't let it happen."
The "we" are members of the Milliner Workers union (A.F.L.), of which Spector is manager. Crawford is their favorite star.
"Miss Crawford has been a glamorous woman for years, and for years she has set the hat styles for the women of America," Spector said with enthusiasm.
"But no woman," he added firmly, "can look her best without a hat— not even Miss Crawford."
"Anyone can afford hats -- the most fashionable, the most up-to-date hats," Spector said. "They
don't have to be expensive. Maybe Miss Crawford did spend as much as $250 for a mink-trimmed fur hat—we're turning out stylish hats every day that sell for almost nothing—$5, even less."
As for Miss Crawford, she doesn't need to stint herself, he said, if she'll accept the millinery workers' offer.
"For a full year, without charge, we're willing to supply her with the most fashionable millinery to be found," he promised. "The hats will be the best that money can buy, and we'll provide them for every occasion. Nothing but the best."
That goes for her youngsters, too,
he said, from 10-year-old Tina right
down to her two 3-year-old
moppeps. And even the 5-year-old
boy she's planning to adopt next
month.
Medical Students To Present Reports
The role of research in a medical school and the presentation of research reports will be features of Student Research day at the University of Kansas Medical center Friday in Kansas City.
Dr. J. Garrott Allen, associate professor of $^{f}$ surgery at the University of Chicago, will speak on research in a medical school. Eight students and three graduate physicians will report on original research projects. The school's research committee will award $100 prizes for the best paper in each division.
Presenting research reports will be four medical freshmen from the Lawrence campus. They are Leon Berube, James N. Winblad, Bernard Brock, and Gilbert Casady. These seniors will report their research: William B. Gerlach, John K. Griffith, Barbara E. Russell, and Richard N. Todd.
Papers will also be presented by Dr. C. S. Lee, fellow in oncology, Dr. Franklin C. Behrle and Dr. William N. Harsha, resident physicians.
Mother-In-Law Still Affects Marriage
Shreveport, La.—(U.P.)—Robert W. Garner, 31, will still have to seek his mother-in-law's permission to see his 12-year-old bride.
District Judge Robert F. O'Neal dismissed for lack of evidence a suit in which Garner claimed that Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Mosher had kept their daughter, Patsy Ann, away from him since their April 12 marriage.
O'Neal also said that evidence showed the marriage license was issued illegally and the ceremony illegally performed by a justice of peace.
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Dance Manager Position Open
Applications for K. U. Dance manager must be submitted to Thomas C. White. Social committee chairman of the A.S.C. be fore Friday.
All regularly enrolled students are eligible for the position. State qualifications in form letter and mail to 1111 West 11th street.
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But Mom is used to special service every single day of the year—electric service, of course Dependable, hard-working, willing, it stands ready to help her cook and clean and sew, wash, iron and entertain. It's like an extra pair of hands that take a lot of work out of housework.
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PAGE TEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 11, 1990
HURSD
The Editors Report —
By Bible
STATES CONSIDER
A Short Ballot by Cloyd D. Michel
After conducting reorganization investigations much like those of the Hoover commission, several states are considering the short ballot. Arizona, Connecticut, and Idaho have made some moves in this direction.
Nineteen other states are now investigating the idea. It looks like the short ballot, which has been hashed over many times before, may at last be gaining in popularity.
If the short ballot were adopted it would mean that the states would have more appointive and fewer elective officers. The offices most susceptible to the plan are those corresponding to the federal cabinet. Most states elect a secretary of state, a treasurer, an auditor, attorney general, and an officer of commerce regulation amongst others.
The total votes cast for these officials are usually considerably less than those cast for the higher offices. A large number are from straight tickets. The reason for this is that too few persons known the candidates. Many voters never heard of them.
Generally, the nominees have been elected to the ballots in primaries if there is any competition within a party. Primary voting is usually fairly light. If none of the men on the ballot are from the region where the vote is cast, the voters seldom can make a really wise choice.
Moreover, short ballots assure more harmony in the carrying out of executive duties. That is why the president of the United States has an appointive cabinet.
This is good sense for if the policies followed nationally are not approved by voters, it is fairly easy to place responsibility for them. There is no tiresome cycle of pointed fingers and the cry "he's to blame... not me!" If the short ballot were adopted at the state level, the tiresome cycle could also be eliminated there."
CASE METHOD:
By James Page
Interest Arouser
Recent developments in the educational field indicate that the case method of instruction is gaining support among the powers who determine the procedures used in the majority of our colleges and universities.
Briefly, the case study method differs from the textbook system now universally used in that actual or hypothetical cases illustrating the problems to be solved by the student are discussed and lectured upon by the instructor. This is more practical than the instructor outlining the text and presenting the general rules of the course in stilted and often meaningless language.
The student studying the case is able to identify himself with the person facing the problem. Almost firsthand, he sees the questions as they arise. It is easier for him to formulate the general rules himself. He sees for himself what they are.
Case method courses are far more interesting to both the class and the instructor. Interest breeds curiosity and a satisfied curiosity about the questions raised in a course will invariably guarantee a deeper understanding of the subject material.
The field for the case method is somewhat limited. Yet in such courses as law, medicine, sociology, journalism and business the method has been a tremendous success. Although not suited to every course and despite serious drawbacks at present, the case method should be thoroughly investigated by educators. The mere fact that it arouses more student interest in a subject should be reason enough to guarantee the plan a fair chance of succeeding.
EASY MONEY MIRAGE
Nothing For Something
Birth of the F.H.A. in 1934 brought with it wide use of a home financing practice badly needed. That was the regular monthly amortization of mortgage debt.
During the active house-building days of the 1920's mortgages on most homes had no pay-as-you-live-in-it provision. Many were for short periods, five years or so, which meant the debtor sometimes had to scramble to find a new creditor at fairly frequent intervals. When real estate prices collapsed in the 1930's many a home owner became home ownerless.
When the F.H.A. started, the longest mortgage it insured was for 20 years and the minimum down payment was 20 per cent. Now it's possible to get a government insured loan for 30 years with only 5 per cent down.
But there's a catch. The family that buys a $7,000 house on such terms will still owe $5,282 on it 10 years later. And the debt will be down only to $3,191 at the end of 20 years. That's not much protection; in a period of high prices for homes it's easy to forget they can go down, too.
This "easy money" practice, of course, falls neatly into the something for nothing philosophy of the Welfare Staters. But the taxpayer some day will find out that he gets nothing for something, when these houses are dumped back into the government insurer's hands. The Wall Street Journal.
A newspaper headline proclaims, "Pepper Facing Defeat," and we suppose that salt is assured of an easy victory.
No Recognition For Inter-wards ISA Head Says
LSA. will not recognize "any so-called inter-ward council, wards, or constitution," until a ward reorganization plans is submitted and approved by the LSA. executive council, Dick Krimminger, president, said.
Ward liabilities will not be recognized by I.S.A. except through approval of the I.S.A. executive council, he added.
Krimminger stressed the need for delegation of authority within the ward system, which ISA founded and sponsored. The ward plan is essentially good and will not be discontinued, he asserted.
A system of joint membership between the wards and parent I.S.A. was set up for 1950-51 school year at an I.S.A. council meeting Monday. I.S.A. members living in unorganized houses, and only I.S.A. members, may become ward members of the district in which they reside. In addition, the wards shall assess their members for social functions on the "ward level" which are not included in the membership fee of the wards
The following appointments were announced at the I.S.A. council meeting; Marese Ball, publicity chairman; Marian Mussatto, activities chairman; Joan Elaine Harris, mens chairman; Roger Price, men's gayual chairman; and Patys Ann Gayu, membership chairman.
The last I.S.A. council meeting will be at 7:15 p.m. Monday, May 15 in the Pine room of the Union.
YMCA Drive On Until Saturday
In an effort to supply foreign countries with much needed books and clothing, the Y.M.C.A. is sponsoring a drive at the University to continue through Saturday.
Boxes for clothing and containers for books have been sent to all organized houses. Donations may also be made at the Y.M.C.A. office in the Union.
Graves, Stratton Run UDK
The editing II students in charge of running the copy desk for today's Kansan are William Graves and William Stratton, journalism juniors.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
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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
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
Marlton Morton
Elaine Elvig
Steve Ferro
Feature Editor Francis Kelley
Photograph Editor Frankie Walts
Telegraph Editor Roger Simmons
William Groves
Richard Tatum
Lloyd Holdek
Sports Editor Richard Delaver
Asst. Sports Editos Rob Bennett
Ray Solidan
Arthur McIntire
Mona Millinkin
Society Editor Fayre Wilkins
Asst. Society Editors Billie Stover
Emily Stewart
Editorial Assts. Keith Leslie
Adv. Mgr. Charles Reiner
Cir. Mgr. Yvonne Joserand
Nat. Adv. Mgr. Forrest Bellus
Classified Ad. Mgr.
Emotion Mgr. John Wiedeman
Little Man On Campus
TEST TOMORROW
REVIEW
B.B. Blyge
"Oh! I don't mind not having paper—It helps my memory if I just write on anything."
'Small Things'
by Keith Leslie
Elizabeth Taylor is certain her marriage will last "because we both adore oversize sweaters, hamburgers with onions, and Ezio Pinza." What, no mention of night clubs, favorite cowboy's horse, or astrologer?
Two Chicago psychiatrists suggest baldness may be caused by scalp wrinkles resulting from a fixed, toothy smile. Our immediate ancestor, who spent many long years trying to keep us in school and out of trouble, firmly maintains gaiety has nothing to do with it.
JUST ARRIVED!
Metronome
Yes, we've just received a shipment of this 1950 Motorola "Personal" model.
This compact little radio has remarkable power and tone for its small size. It has four tubes and rectifier; automatic volume control and Motorola's exclusive "Aerovane" built-in antenna.
A BARGAIN FOR A STUDENT'S BUDGET
Mahogany $14.95 Ivory $16.95
at .
BEAMAN'S RADIO & TV
1200 N.Y.
Phone 140
Swi.
11, 19
ible
IURSDAY, MAY 11, 1950
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE ELEVEN
Official Bulletin
Thursday, May 11
veterans' requisition books for
lipment and supplies will not be
aired after May 20.
A.V.C.F. missionary meeting, 12
son Friday, Daniforth chapel, Mrs.
evans, speaker.
inter-Varsity Christian fellowship, 0 to 820 tonight, 131 Strong hall. ss. Bryard, former missionary to ain. speaker,
General Semantics club. 74-5 to 111. Strong hall. Phillip Pery, report on "General Semantics bibliography."
Le Cercle Francais jeudi 11 mai,
p.m. moins le quart chez made-
oiselle Crumrine, 920 Missouri.
ogramme et pique-nique; cotis-a-
sing "cents" américains.
important Red Pepper meeting,
tonight, 103 Strong hall.
Location of 1950-51 Engineering Council representatives today, polling place basement of Marvin hall open until 5 p.m.
Christian Science organization regular meeting, 7:30 tonight, Danforth chapel.
Gamma Alpha Chi. 5 p.m. today.
Journalism building. Discussion
elections; attendance required.
Mortar Board. 9 tonight, Delta
Delta Delta house.
Spanish movie "Los Heroes del barrio" sponsored by department of romance languages and literatures, 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. Friday, Fraser theater. English sub-titles; public invited.
K.U. Dance Manager applications
now being accepted by Tom White.
Social chairman of A.S.C. State
Qualifications and send to 1111 W.
11th before Friday.
Swiss Engineer Breaks To ASCE
Rolf Vollenweider, special student in engineering, speaking before the American Society of Civil Engineers, told members to choose the job where it is possible to learn more about your field.
Too many graduates look only at the salary when considering jobs. A new years of continued learning and of earning a good reputation is much more important when considering job possibilities than the salary, he added.
Vollenweider is a graduate of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. He spent four years in field work in Switzerland before coming to the University to continue his studies.
The practical problems of engineering are stressed at K.U., whereas more emphasis is placed on theoretical problems in Switzerland, Vollenweider said.
Call K.U. 251 With Your News
VARSITY Phone 132 for Sho Time
12c - 39c
"Hungry Hill"
all seats 75c tax incl. special
student price 50r
Friday - Saturday
Action Ace George Houston "Lone Rider Ambushed"
..plus..
in "A Chump at Oxford"
Laurel and Hardy
Also: Late World News
Ch. 8 "Bruce Gentry"
University Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone K.U.376
Terms: Cash, Phone orders are accepts with the understanding that the bill will be promised promptly. Admits to being in during the week up to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansai business office. Joins on later. Purchases a 34 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five
day days Five
25 words or less ... 35c 65c 90c
Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
FOR SALE
1938 FORDOR Ford. Mechanically perfect Good body, and paint, $229.00. See Jack Schlegel, 1045 West Hills. Phone 1700. 17
FOR SALE by owner, 1948 Mercury convertible miles, excellent 15
12754
THREE CLEAN cars; 1947 Chevrolet, 2 doo style Master; 1941 Chevrolet contai-
cre, new top; 1339 Ford DeLuxe,
slick. All in top condition; see to ap-
reciate. West 9th Auto Sales. Phone
323. 12
GERMAN Shepherd dog for sale. 16-
months old. Exceptionally good dispo-
sition. Registered, W. O. Nelson, Phone
354-554-1980. 16
EXPERIENCED Remington portable
portable writer with Italian keyboard in good
condition for only $12.50. Student Union
Book Store. 1F
47 FORD Business Coupe. R. & H., 6
jew tires, sidewalls, a good coat.
370MU, 379MU.
NOW AVAILABLE! A fountain pen especially designed for left-handed writers. Only $5.00 at your Student Union Book Store. 16
THEIR IS STILL time to let College Outline Series help you get you a better grade. One for every subject at the Student Union Book Store. 16
TWO CHEVROLETS, 1940. Master Deluxe and Special Deluxe, both with radio, heater, good tires, loud sound. See these to see the Vern Schimmel. 15 inch Mass. Ph. 424. Wielens
SENIORS! One of your treasured remembrances of your days at K.U. will be the record album of K.U. songs. Produced by the Alumni Association and now available at the Student Union Book Store. 16
1948 HARLEY-DAVIDIS motorcycle
new clutch 8000 miles. Call Richard &
Henry
DINNER: Spaghetti and meatballs; 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Thurs., May 18. R.L.D.S. church lower auditorium, at 12th Ver. Tickets available at Round Corner Drug. 8th and Mass., 75c. Come and bring your friends. 18
1939 LINCOLN with Mercury motor,
Zentih 8 tube radio and south wind
heater. Clean and in excellent condition.
Everything works. Parking is sell in.
8275, Phone 443
1938 BUICK, 5 passenger coupe, radio,
heater, good tires, clean, good condition
mechanically, $250. 1234 Tenn. Aternoon
and evenings. 11
WHITE dinner couch, $15. Summer fux pants, $37 or 38. Like new, $15. Bathroom, $4. Aqua, $4.
1940 STUDEBAKER Commander Coupe
Heater and Holder, 50,000 actuum
123 720-874-1234 13
ON MOTHER'S DAY say "I Love You"
with a box of assorted cured nuts and nut
filled chocolates from the DIXIE CO.
MEL CORN SHOP $1.25
Five pound box. $6.95 Wrapped free for
the Dixie Carnel Corn Shop.
842 Mass. 11
Jane Martene Richard
WYMAN·DIETRICH·TODD
THE STAGE IS SET FOR EXCITEMENT!
ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S
STAGE
FRIGHT
FINEST TELEVISION-Best in sets and
certain at lowest prices. New shipments
just arrived. $87.50 and up. See the new-
entrance Emerson table model set at $193.50.
Easy terms. Bowman Radio and Electric,
$23 Vermont. Phone 138. tf
Features at
TYBING. Thesis, Term Papers, Reports.
Telephone: Mrs. Wilde 115
Tenn. Phone: 30288M.
Itself:
STUDENTS! Bring or send your Tennis,
Badminton, Squash racquets to Gulloff
Sporting Goods, 1711 Minnesota, Kansas
City, Kansas. Prices start from $2.25 per
unit.
Today thru Saturday JAYHAWKER
24 FOOT NATIONAL house trailer. Com-
monly furnished. See after s. 13 p. 138
Kv.
FORMALS AND DRESSES of all types made to order. Also alterations and re-modeling. Call Mrs. Scales. Phone 3060-W. 1444 Teen. 15
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 known firm 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 vanced percentage of jobs. W. F. Griffin Grand Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Giving qualifications, school and home address. 24
BUSINESS SERVICE
Features af
1:00 - 3:00 - 5:05 - 7:10 - 9:15
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jawbawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our one-stop pet shop has everything for Pet and Gift Shop. 191F Comp. St., Ph. 418. tf
THOROUGH on the auto check, easy o-
f the G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor,
Motorcar and fender repair, auto painting, used
cars. 317 E.17. Phone 1825 or 1821f
FYRING. Term papers, notebooks, letters, theses, legal papers. Accurate work. Regular rules. Prompt attention Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Phone 1601
TYING, Theses, Term Papers, Reports.
Mrs. Sheila
1028 Vermont, Ph. 11638.
TRANSPORTATION
RIDERS: WANTED: Leaving for Wichita every Friday at 4 p.m. Returning Sunday evening. Please call between 7-9 p.m. Harry Shultz, phone 3101J. 12 WANTED: Someone to drive car to westen New York in early June. Call
WANTED: Someone to drive car to western New York in early June, Call 1620-W.
WANT RIDERS or share the driving to summer school. Leave Plaza 7 a.m., return 11 a.m. JE 3178, Kansas City, Mo., after 6 p.m. TF
LOST
BETWEEN Watson Library and Lindley hall around 11 a.m. Tuesday, one small brown manilla expanding envelope with note cards for English term paper, address and phone number on outside. Newman Shaver, 1801 Ala., 3490R.
PLASTIC rimmed glasses in brown case with Molter Optical company written inside. Possibly near Jayhawker Theater. Martin Liggett, Phone 3445. 12
FOUR-MONTH-OLD blond cocker pup.
Reward. Phone 347 or 1996. 12
WANTED
EXPERIENCED stenographer qualified to take dictation. Permanent worker Jessel (Jessie) Wiley, Band Dept., Phone KU 385.15 ARE you leaving KU. for the summer? Graduate student, wife and child exchange for use of bohe. Phone 25794
SELL ALL your used books to the Student Union Book Store Monday, May 29. Tuesday, May 30. Wednesday, will pay top cash prices for all current books, and the Wilcox and Follette representative will buy all obsolete and discontinued titles. Student ref.
MOBILE HOUSE TRAILER in exchange with student for 4 room apartment for summer. Phone 619-R. ___ 11
FOR RENT
RIDING HORSES for rent by the hour.
Bridge paths and trails nearby. For hay-
rack rides, call Mott Stables, Phone 1842,
770 West 4th. 12
HONEYMOONERS! Vacationers! For rent in Estes Park area, modern housekeeping cabins. Completely furnished, big stone fireplaces, electricity, both. gorgeous mountain view. Humane room only. on W. Zumwinkel, 2474 S. Chester, Denver, Colorado. 12
Open 12:45
STARTS TODAY Continuous Shows... Open 12:40
Patee
PHONE 121
Adm. 12 & 39c
Blazing Excitement in the High Sierras!
INTO THE WEST... INTO DANGER!
Roughshod
with Robert Sterling • Claude Jarman, Jr. • Gloria Grahame
Patee PHONE 121
Pat
e
1920
Roughshod
- Added Fun -
COLOR CARTOON
Co-Hit
Soon
"Cheaper by the Dozen"
"I Married A Savage"
See "ZORITA" do her
ser. snaked e
---
Her name is
"LIL" and
BANDIT QUEEN and SECRET SERVICE AGENT Blaze a Trail of Gunsmoke!
DAKOTA LIL
"CINECOLOR"
Starring GEORGE MONTGOMERY ROD CAMERON MARIE WINDSOR
SAT. OWL - SUNDAY
Every word is true!
Claudette Colbert
"THREE CAME HOME"
Also
COLOR CARTOON - NEWS
Granada PHONE 946
35%-ROOM apartment near campus. Private bath and private entrance. Available now. If desired. Available now. A similar apartment available June 15. 1101 Tenn. 16
THREE APARTMENTS for rent, reasonable,
phone 2082 or 3311. 16
SUMMER SCHOOL rooms for boys:
5471M, 1234 Orcad. Fev vacancies! PC
PC
ROOMS for summer or fall, 3 double and 1 single. Sleeping porch. Single beds. $10.00 a month per person. 1222 Miss Phone 495. 24
NEW four-room house, completely furnished, garage, automatic洗衣机, June 1. September 1. Call K.U. K17 before 5 p.m. or 3791-J after 5 p.m. 15
TWO LARGE, cool rooms for summer students. Single beds, linens furnished, rooms kept clean, kitchen privileges if not needed. Phone 25232 or can be seen evenings.
JAYHAWKER
NOW THRU
SATURDAY
MAKE BETTER GRADES! Rent a portable or standard typewriter for $3.50 a month or $1.00 a week. All makes and models at Student Union Book Store tf
Jane Wyman Marlene Dietrich Richard Tolk
STAGE FRIGHT
FRIGHT
Fright Times
1:00-3:00-5:05-7:10-9:15
SUNDAY FOR 4 DAYS
PREVUE
Saturday
Nite
11:15
HARRY M. POPKIN presents RONALD COLMAN "Champagne for Caesar" Fun from United Artists CO-starring CELESTE HOLM
HARRY M. POPKIN presents
"Champagne
In Caesar"
---
TONITE
LAWLESSNESS TOOK ON A NEW MEANING WHEN THEY RODE INTO LAREDO
AND FRIDAY
color by Technicolor
STREETS
of LAREDO
WILLIAM
WILLIAM
HOLDEN
WILLIAM
BENDIX
MACDONALD
CAREY
Mona Freeman
Clem Bevins
A
ADDED:
● Land of Lost Jewels
● Fairway Champions
● World News
Shown 8:25-10:30
Just Drive-in--you'll love it!
KIDDIES UNDER 12 FREE
Lawrence DRIVE - IN
PAGE TWELVE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 11, 195
Sigma Pi Sigma Chapter To Be Installed May 15
The University chapter of Sigma Pi Sigma, national physics honor society, will be installed Monday, May 15. Dr. Marsh W. White, national executive secretary, will officiate.
Following the installation ceremonies in the Pine room of the Union, 18 undergraduates, four graduate students, and six faculty members will be formally initiated into the society.
-
Dr. White, who is a professor of physics at Pennsylvania State college, will be the guest speaker at a dinner in the Palm room at 7 p.m.
Sigma Pi Sigma was founded in 1921 at Davidson college, Davidson, North Carolina. The society now has 71 chapters in universities and colleges over the country.
Officers of the K.U. chapter are Richard A. Moore, president; Norman P. Baumann, vice-president; John McKinley, secretary; and Edward House, treasurer. Chapter adviser is Dr. L. W. Seagondollar, assistant professor of physics.
Objects of the society are to serve as a means of awarding distinction to students having high scholarship; to promote student interests in research work, to encourage a professional spirit among those who have displayed marked ability in physics, and to popularize interest in physics with the general collegiate public.
Undergraduates to be initiated are Norman Baumann, Richard Bee, Richard Capps, Davis Crawford, Thomas Daniel, Arthur Francis, Edward House, Festus Liverett, John McKinley, Marvin McKinney, Ralph Moon, Richard Moore, Elton Noble, Francis Prosser, Fred Rollins, Arthur Smith, Jerry Wackerle, and Donn Wimmer.
Graduate students to be initiated are Joe Beeler, David Thomson, Laurence McAneny and George Cole. Former members of Sigma Pi Sigma who will affiliate with the University chapters are George W. Griffing, Charles Lundquist, Gordon G. Wiseman and Dr. John Patton, professor of religion.
Faculty members of the department of physics to be initiated are Dr. J. D. Stranathan, professor of physics; Dr. L. W. Seagondollar and Dr. Everett Lothrop, assistant professors of physics; Dr. F. E. Kester, professor emeritus of physics; Dr. Max Dresden and Dr. Frank Hoecker, associate professors of physics.
Engineers Vote For 16 Council Members Today
Students of the School of Engineering and Architecture are voting today for the 16 members of their 1950-51 engineering council. The council is the student governing body for the School of Engineering and Architecture. Polls opened at 8 a.m. this morning in Marvin hall and will be open until 5 p.m.
All candidates are engineering students. The candidates are:
For president: John M. McKinley, junior; Keith C. Smith, junior; Charles W. Stephens, (Kansas City, Mo.) sophomore. For vice-president: Dwane M. Crowl, Kenneth W. Philo, Lane W. Harold, juniors. For secretary-treasurer: John L. Halstead, George R. McNeish, Thomas A. Hendricks, Thomas E. Kobett, juniors.
Truman, Taft Clash Over Denham's Job
Washington. May 11—(U.P.)—President Truman's proposal to abolish Robert N. Denham's job as NLRB general counsel goes to a senate vote today with opponents confident of victory. Sen. Robert A. Taft, (Ohio Republican) leader of the opposition, said he has "little or no doubt" that his side will get a "clear-cut majority."
Administration forces, conceding that the vote will be close, said there was a "good chance of upsetting Taft and letting the plan go through". The president's proposal, whi:h would become effective May 23 unless vetored by the house or senate would abolish Denham's job and transfer his functions to the National Labor Relations board.
The post of independent counsel was created by the Taft-Hartley law which Taft co-sponsored. Denham and the board have engaged in an angry dispute over the division of authority.
the senate, by a 50 to 22 vote, laid aside the administration's fair employment practices/ bill yesterday to take up Taft's proposal to kill the NLRB plan. With a strict limitation on debate, a final decision was scheduled for late afternoon.
Taft contended that the president's reorganization order is a "clear attempt" to by-pass the will of congress. He pointed out that the issue was specifically considered during Taft-Hartley debate and that both houses voted for an independent general counsel.
Aboard Truman train, President Truman made a last minute appeal today for elimination of Robert N. Denham's job as independent chief counsel for the national labor relations board.
"No group of men could efficiently operate the two-headed freak which the organization of the labor board now represents. The history of this matter leads me to believe that most of the opponents of plan 12 are more concerned with politics than with the merits of the proposal."
The president pleaded for defeat of Taft's resolution in a telegram dispatched from his special train to vice-president Alben W. Barkley. In his telegram, the president said, "The issues now involved in consideration of plan 12 are not matters of personalities neither do they go to the substance of the controversy over the Taft-Hartley act, as opponents of plan 12 have attempted to argue."
WAATo Hold Spring Picnic
Miss Ruth Hoover, associate professor of physical education, will award blazer sweaters and letters to 17 high-ranking women in intramural sports at the annual spring picnic of the Women's Athletic association today. Activities which start at 5 p.m. at Clinton park will also include initiation of new members, installation of officers, games, and a weiner roast.
As the high point of the day, Miss Hoover will present blazers to the following women who have earned 1,350 points by participation in intramural sports: Kathleen McKelvy. College senior: Arlene Hill, Frances Pence, and Beverly Pepper, all education juniors.
She will also award letters to these women who have a 650-point total: Marion Greenlee, Ann Hendershot, and Ruth Wolf, seniors; Nancee Bell, Mary Carter, Jeanne Hillyer, Maxine Holsinger, Jackye Simpson, and Patricia Watson, juniors; and Sydney Ashton, Rita Carl, Shirley Mickelson, and Chloe Warner, sophomores.
Installation of the recently-elected officers and sports managers of the organization will follow initiation of the 34 women eligible for membership. Softball and relay games will precede this part of the program. During the supper the initiates will entertain the members with skits under the supervision of Frances Pence.
For senior representative: Richard H. Harris, Jack Gillium, junior. For junior representative: Edward House. Robert Kipp, George Christopher, sophomores. For sophomore representative: Dean Barrett, Earl Petty, freshmen.
Each department of the School of Engineering and Architecture is allowed one representative to the council. Departmental candidates are: Chemical: Dean Kloepper, Robert Pope, Melvin Smith. Electrical: Frank Renneisen, Robert Kleist. Civil: Chester Leonard, Ralph Stoutimore, William Gartung. Architecture: Don Schaake, Stanley Staatz, Carl Stentstrom. Engineering physics: Davis Crawford, Richard A. Moore.
Mechanical: John Kipp, Vincent Coffman, Robert Strobel. Mining and Metallurgy: Theodore Crane, Kermit Oswalt. Geological: John Busley, Marion Scholes, Jack Porter. Petroleum: George Gear, Kenneth Carey, Carl Nelson. Aeronautical: William Hand, Donald Trent, Clifford Newberry.
A joint meeting of the present council and the council-elect will be held Wednesday, May 17. This meeting will be the last meeting of the present council.
Fisher Is New Head Of Pi Mu Epsilon
Robert C. Fisher was elected director of Pi Mu Epsilon, honorary mathematics fraternity, recently.
Other new officers are Arthur H. Kruse, vice-director; Frances L. Wolfe, secretary; Wealthy Babcock, corresponding secretary; and Kathleen O'Donnell, treasurer.
Nine students who recently became members of the group are Russell N. Bradt, Jean Deloid, Harry W. Johnson, Kenneth R. Lucas, John M. Shirley, graduate students; Richard H. Cappus, Claire Grothusen, Ralph Moon, College seniors; and Donald S. Simpson, College junior.
World Wide News
Czech Demand Obeyed
Prague, May 1—(U.P.)The United States instructed all but 15 of the American employees at its embassy today to leave the country after Czechoslovakia warned it would not be responsible for their safety beyond Sunday. The instructions were issued by Ambassador Ellis O. Briggs.
American officials said Briggs had decided to bow to a Czechoslovak demand on April 28 that the United States cut its diplomatic staffs in this country by two-thirds. The Czech government supplemented the demand last night by informing Briggs orally that it would not be responsible for the safety of American diplomats if the staff cut was not completed by Sunday.
Hungarians Reject Appeal
—The Hungarian supreme court today rejected the appeals of American businessman Robert Vogeler and his British associate Edgar Sanders from long prison terms on espionage charges.
Mr. Vogeler, assistant vice-president of the International Telephone and Telegraph company, was sentenced to 15 years in prison Feb.21 after conviction on charges he was an American spy.
Mr. Sanders, a business associate, was sent to prison for 13 years.
Thousands Leave Winnipea
Winnipeg, Man., May 11—(U.P.) Thousands of women and children jammed the railroad station and remaining highways today, trying to escape Red river flood waters threatening the city with darkness, hunger and disease. The men stayed behind to fight the flood which broke through another dike and inundated one fifth of the city.
BELL'S
give the flood fighters more room to combat the ever-rising waters, are lessen the strain on essential services. Troops guided the refugees in the largest mass movement of population in Canada's history. An estimated 30,000 will have quit the city by tonight or Friday. Many said they had no idea where they could go.
22 Dead In Nebraska Flood
The entire town of Syracuse—population 1,000—turned out Wednesday to help right the bus and search for occupants, but at dark Wednes day night they had made no progress. Of at least eight person known to be in the bus, three wei rescued and two were found dead Tuesday.
On London Records 79c
Lincoln, Neb., May 11—(U.P.)—Receding waters of southeastern Nebraska's swollen creeks and river were watched by search parties day and authorities said 22 persons now were listed as dead in week's flash floods. The bodies of 13 have been recovered. The search parties hunted nine persons missing since Monday, and regarded as certainly dead. Other bodies still missing included at least three occupants of a Burlington Trailways bus which had been engulfed by flood water at Syracuse.
County To Sponsor Supper
Jefferson county students will sponsor a pot-luck supper and two movies for K.U. alumni and high school seniors of Jefferson county at 7:30 p.m. Friday, in the high school auditorium, Oskaloosa.
The movies will be "Our University" and a varsity picture of the K.U.-O.U. football game.
When you're sick... you see a DOCTOR OF MEDICINE
The Third Man Theme
Back In Stock!
If your car is ailing, Bring it to the DOCTOR OF MOTORS
played by
ANTON KARAS
4
HUNSINGER - M.D.
922 Mass. Phone 12
A man in a suit stands confidently with his hands on his hips. He is smiling and appears to be at a public event or meeting. The background is plain, with no discernible features.
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