st y of the to see bell be of the bees beh MU channel ulumni ones. g and display- exist grow Brown hope next ons Uni- explain engi- dorn we up we had i such i read ation" t it is great r, and chant use the on the r. Six went helped y lax of this, es for once a at the L.S. layers or the football. nition Carl Ken- l next t any men of mu. ing it. M. Room 376 Al Assn. e Press. Madison Marshall e Snyder Price Anderson Zahm Taylor Burch Sarten Swartz Danillo Sy' Hearick Hearick Hale Taggart Blaylock Barbera Dooren 49th Year No. 54 Monday, Dec. 3, 1951 LAWRENCE, KANSAS FCC THREE FINALISTS have been selected from the nine women pictured above for queen of the 1951 Military Ball. Misses Donna Arnold, Kay Magers and Diane Wade were announced today by the Military Ball steering committee as the three finalists. One of these will be crowned queen at the annual affair Friday, Dec. 7, by bandleader Tex Beneke. The candidates and their sponsoring houses: (bottom row, left to right) Betty Barton, Pi Beta Phi; Donna Arnold, Gamma Phi Beta; Diane Wade, Alpha Delta Pi, and Ann Sims, Pi Beta Phi; (top row, left to right) Donna McCall, Alpha Phi; Nancy Morsbach, Pi Beta Phi; Kay Magers, North College hall; Linda Stormont, Lockley hall, and Donna Francis, North College hall. Gloria Beuttel, Corbin hall, was not present. The University of Kentucky and Vanderbilt university met in the finals Nov. 30 to determine the winner. (Kansan photo by Don Sarten) Students Lose Law Tournament The students lost in the first round of the tournament to Lincoln university, Jefferson City, Mo. A team composed of Earl Shurtz, Eugene Mitchell and Orval Kauffman, third year law students, was unsuccessful in defending the University's national runner-up position in moot court competition at St. Louis Nov. 29. BULLETIN Proficiency Exam Registration Open Last year's University team won the St. Louis regional tournament and went to New York where they brought home second place in the nation. All juniors and seniors in the College and the Schools of Education and Journalism who plan to take the proficiency examination in English composition must register today, Tuesday or Wednesday. Cairo, Egypt—U.P.) The government announced tonight that Egyptian police and British troops fought a gun battle in the Suez Canal zone and unofficial Egyptian sources said 17 persons were k'iled. College students should register at the College office, 229 Strong hall, education majors in 103 Fraser hall and journalism students in 106 Journalism building. The government announcement was made in parliament by Interior Minister Fuad Serag El Din Pasha. He placed the casualties at nine Egyptians killed and 62 injured in the fight in which civilians joined. The unofficial sources said later that the casualties had risen to 13 Egyptians and four Britons killed. The examination will be given from 2 until 5 p.m. Saturday. Students who fail to register will not be admitted to the exam. --music sorority; Mortar Board, honorary senior woman's organization; and Pi Lambda Theta, education sorority. Dixie Takes Place With United Nations University of Missouri band members met in the rotunda of Strong hall Saturday afternoon waving Confederate flags and singing "Dixie." They quickly noticed that the Civil War emblem was not among the many flags displayed there. That was soon remedied, however. From what had been an empty holder, a tiny Confederate flag soon waved proudly alongside the bright-colored flags of United Nations members. Sophomore Convo Wednesday A sophomore convocation will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday in Fraser theater. Sophomores who wish to attend will be excused from class but not from any work which may be missed. University debaters were rated excellent and good in participation in the Iowa State university debate and forensics contest at Iowa City, Iowa Saturday. Debaters Win At Iowa City The two teams attending the tournament participated in four rounds of debate in meeting teams from the University of Wisconsin, the University of South Dakota, the University of Minnesota, the University of Iowa, Kansas State college, Michigan State college, Northwestern university, and Wichita university. The team of William Nulton, College junior, and Stephen Rench, College senior, received a rating of excellent and William Crews was rated excellent individually. Keith Lawton Named Assistant To Chancellor Robert Shaw Group ToAppearTuesday The appointment of Keith Lawton, director of dormitories, as administrative assistant to the chancellor was announced today by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. Lawton will be responsible for coordinating the operations of the University's physical plant, Chancellor Murphy said. He will assume the duties of Joseph J. Wilson, KU business manager for the past two and a half years. Wilson has resigned, effective January 1, to devote full time to the management of the Rapid Transit company in which he purchased an interest several months ago. During December he will continue on the part-time basis he has been on since he made the purchase. William Chestnut, assistant manager of KU's Kansas City Extension center, will take Mr. Lawson's place as director of dorxitories. Both are alumni of KU. Mr. Lawton came to the university from Kiowa and was graduated from the School of Business in 1947. He was assistant secretary of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce for a year and a half. He became director of dormitories in July, 1948. Chestnut was graduated from the School of Business in 1945. For a time he worked for an oil company in Venezuela, and in the spring of 1949 he became a University Extension field representative. Mr. Chestnut will assume his new duties here as soon as practicable. He will direct the operation and maintenance of 21 University residence halls and the Sunnyside apartments. ISA Movie Tickets Good This Week Students with ID cards will be admitted free to the concert by the Robert Shaw chorale and orchestra at 8:20 p.m. Tuesday in Hoch auditorium. I. S.A. movie ticket No. 3 will be valid at the Granada theater for "Too Young to Kiss," with June Allyson and Van Johnson Monday, Dec. 3 through Wednesday, Dec. 5. Homecoming Bright, In Spite Of Mist Cool and misty weather failed to dampen the Homecoming spirit for last weekend's activities. The expected 35,000 persons showed up with raincoats, blankets, and traditional mums to witness the 60th Kansas-Missouri football game. The Missouri fans had the spirit but Coach Don Faurot looked sad after the game in which the Jayhawkers defeated his Tigers 41-28. The KU band, Jay Janes, and Red Peppers shivered in the mist to form a heart and arrow for the presentation of red roses to the queen, Jeannine Neihart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Neihart of Lyndon. Miss Neihart received more than the traditional kiss from Gov. Edward Arn and Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy as the press photographers called for retakes. Her ambition is to teach school and someday be a housewife. She says her favorite pastimes are sewing, knitting and playing cards. The bands of both schools were out in bright uniforms and good marching form to parade before the spectators. Miss Neihart is an education senior and a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. She is 5" 8" tall with dark brown hair and brown eyes. She is a member of Jay Janes; Kappa Phi, Methodist student organization; Sigma Alpha Iota, honorary TREVA MILNE When asked what she liked best JEANNINE NEIHART about KU, she replied, "The people." Attendants to the queen were Mary Ream, College sophomore and member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority and Janice Brown, fine arts freshman, nominated by North College hall. Miss Ream is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Ream of Topeka. She is 5' 6" tall with brown hair and hazel eyes. She is interested in dramatics and likes to read for a past time. "I also like to play golf although I'm not very good at it," she said. She is a member of the YWCA Junior cabinet and French club. Mis Brown is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Brown of Columbus. She is 5' 5" tall with brown hair and blue eyes. Her favorite food is quail. "I guess that is because my father likes to quail hunt." she said. She is a member of Red Peppers, YWCA and the University chorus. Her favorite past time is talking with the girls. When asked why she liked KU, she replied, "Everyone is so nice, even the faculty." The alumni registered at the Union as attending 1951 Homecoming. Many of them attended the open house in the lounge after the football game. Organized houses were crowded to over-flowing with parents, friends and alumni, who came for coffee and doughnuts after the game and to visit old friends and students. The program which follows will range from the serious to the popular: Introit and Kyrie, Dies Irae Offertory, Sanctus, Benedictus, Agnus Dei and Communion from the Requiem Mass in D minor (K 626), (Mozart). Liebeslieder Waltzer Op. 52 (Nos. 8-16). (Brahms). These are nine waltzes, written in a light folk-song fashion. Trois Chansons, (Ravel). These are French songs. "It Ain't Necessarily So." and ROBERT SHAW "Lament for Brother Robbins," from Porgy and Bess." (Gershwin). W. E. M. C. Mr. Shaw will arrive ahead of schedule tomorrow to attend a luncheon given by the fine arts and music education faculties. He will work with the University chorus and the University chorale in special rehearsals during the afternoon. Mr. Shaw was director of the Fred Waring Glee club from 1938 to 1945, when he went into the Navy. Education Talks Start Tomorrow A leaders' conference to improve adult education in Kansas will be held at the University Tuesday. Dr. Herbert M. Hamlin, chairman of the agricultural education division of the University of Illinois, will speak. The conference theme is "Your Community Looks at Adult Education." It is sponsored by the Kansas Adult Education association and University Extension, and with the cooperation of the Kansas State Teachers association. The KU conference will open at 9:30 a.m. in the Memorial Union building with an address by Dr. Hamlin. He is an executive committee member of the U.S. Adult Education association. Following the address a panel will discuss adult educational services. Participants will be: C. O. Wright, chairman, representing the Kansas State Teachers association, Topeka; Per G. Stensland, Kansas State college institute of citizenship, Manhattan; Dean Frank T. Stockton of University Extension; Gerald Pearson of the Kansas Adult Education association, Lawrence. A panel on "Responsibilities and Opportunities for Adult Education in the Local Community" will be led by N. Webster Rickhoff, manager of the KU Extension center in Kansas City. Other members will be Walter Russell, representing Topeka night schools; Roland Rhodes, Lawrence, representing industrial organizations; George B. Rush, Jr., Lawrence, representing professional and business groups; and H. S. Moses, Topeka, representing public libraries. The second afternoon panel on "Putting Your Community to Work" will be led by Waldo Wilmore, Topeka, executive secretary of the Kansas Tuberculosis association. Other participants will be O. R. Young, director of Leavenworth adult education; Supt. W. D. Wolfe of Lawrence; E. J. Logsdon, director of Lawrence adult education. / Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, Dec. 3, 1951 Little Man On Campus Kansan Editorials by Bibler Pity The Poor Lantern The Ohio State Lantern has had an irritating year. First the administration came forth with the "gag" law, forbidding outside speakers on campus without first being approved. Then the Lantern's news sources started to cause trouble; reporters were thrown out of meetings and news stories were almost suppressed. But last week the Lantern raised its arms in a gesture of complete disgust and helplessness. "Some things," it said in an editorial, "are so stupid and vulgar that they aren't deserving of comment. But this little verbal atrocity calls for an answer." The Lantern's target was columnist-author Upton Close, who recently told a convention of Ohio Kiwanians, "Professors are men who can't compete in the business world and protect their weakness in academic freedom. Academic freedom to them means freedom to sponge off the public and freedom to think crooked." "Such a statement," cried the Lantern, "is not only foolish . . . it's outrageous." Regarding the speaker's "gag" law at Ohio State, Close said, "I would not trust the faculty as a whole. They have mischievous instincts and like to do sensational things. There should be a board of deans or selected older men of approved American instincts to make decisions as to who should speak. The average American is too confused to speak for himself. "... If you want to destroy our society completely, just invite anyone you want to talk to our children in schools and colleges. Maybe we should bring in murderers and rapists and someone to preach free love and a free world." Asked the Lanters; "... Are we to assume that 'approved American instincts' are to be designed as mere confusion? And when it comes to doing sensational things, after all, Close is better qualified to judge sensationalism than we." "We could go on," continued the editorial. "He said a group of murderous Communists has control of the Fellowship of Reconciliation. He attacked internationalism. He . . . well, what's the point of going on?" Sports And Columnists Frustrated columnists have found a "safe topic" to write about. They have made national spectator sports their scapegoat. Writers who have written as few as 10 words on sports have devoted at least nine of them to criticism of at least one national sport. This criticism reflects the temper of the times. International tension and corruption in the national government have created an attitude of distrust for all things. This is bubbling over into an area that is usually reserved for the momentary escape from the ills of the world. A fix on a basketball game, a death in the prize ring, the big time aspect assumed by football, the monopolistic practices of baseball, and the pet ills of all other sports are not to be minimized. But, to point out what are often isolated instances of abuse, and to magnify them to the extent that they appear as common practices is not fair. To continually point out the mistakes and abuses committed by a minute part of all athletes, writers make the cancer seem larger than the victim. Writers can play an important part in rejuvenating sports. By telling their readers what they should expect to see in a particular type of contest, writers can influence athletic organizations to produce what is expected of them. By congratulating a player for performing an outstanding service in sports, or an act influenced by what he has learned from sports, writers will positively inspire all other athletes to act with higher motives than the dollar bill. If we keep emphasizing the good, the fair, the honest, the lack of these on the part of any one player or organization will not need broadcasting. The player or organization not practicing true sportsmanship, would bring unpopularity upon itself, and unpopularity in spectator sports means a box office drop. The positive approach, although not always easy to take, will prove to be the best friend that spectator sports can find. Dear Editor: 'A Dozen Eggs Fried By The Union Costs Me $1.20' Monday the Daily Kansan announced what the student-consumer had already found out. That increased wholesale prices must be passed on to the consumer. But we must look at the facts. To compensate for a six cent increase on the wholesale level, the Union's retail price on a case of milk has risen 28 cents. Higher prices, diminished quantity, and poorer quality are the bywords of the Union cafeteria as every student-consumer knows. Let's look at the latest. Prior to Nov. 1, the wholesale price of milk in half-pints was $1.26 a case, or five and one-fourth cents each. The Union price was 8 cents. On Nov. 1, the wholesale price was increased to $1.32 a case, or an increase of one-fourth cent a half-pint. Letters To The Editor price of a fried egg from 8 cents to 10 cents, which amounts to a 25 per cent raise. This means that one dozen eggs costs $1.20 after being fried by the Union. In effect, half of what I pay for an egg goes to the Union for frying it, and the other half is passed on to the wholesaler, the farmer, and finally the chicken. Is this the Union "efficiency" that we want expanded by the present building project? The egg situation is similar. While the wholesale egg prices have been holding steady at less than 60 cents, the Union has seen fit to increase the With the coming of Mr. L. L. Woolley to the directorship of the Union, I am sure many of us voiced our approval with the hope that his commendable work with the Student Union book store would be passed on to the cafeteria. Daily Hansan News Room Student Newspaper of the Adv. Room KU,251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU 376 Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York City. EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief...Alan Marshall Editorial Associate...Anne Snyder NEWS STAFF Managing Editor Charles Price Assistant Managing Editors Nancy Anderson, Benjamin City Editor Joe Taylor Sports Editor Charles Burch Telegraph Editor Don Sarten Society Editor Katrina Swartz News Adviser Victor J. Danilov BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager...Bob Sydney Advertising Manager...Dorothy Hedrick Assistant Adv. Manager...Dick Hale National Adv. Manager...Bill Taggart Circulation Manager...Elaine Blaylock Promotion Manager...Ted Barbera Business Adviser...R. W. Doores I challenge Mrs. Ruth Monroe and her cohorts, who hold inefficiency and profit in higher esteem than student needs, to show in what way the present policy of the "Student" Union cafeteria has any semblance of student welfare in mind. In examining these two highly incompatible examples of business forms, we find that one passes profits on to the student-consumer, the other passes on the increased wholesale costs. I can hope for a cafeteria modeled after Mr. Woolley's book store, but all I can see is a cafeteria directed by individuals who consider themselves elevated above the pulse of the University. Curtis D. Terflinger College junior Mall subscription: $3 a semester. $4.50 a postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans. every afternoon during the University year. Published in university holidays and examination periods Entered as second class matter Sept. 17. Underwent university visit. Kans. under act of March 3, 1879. Bobbie "Worthful, these past few weeks have been wonderful—how soon did you say you're taking the casts off?" Fight Fire With Fire Dear Editor: You say, "why worry about" America's future. We do not think that we are victims of hysteria when we refuse to sit on our hands and shrug our shoulders in the face of the Red menace. There are more active Communists in the U.S. today than there were in Zarariist Russia at the time of the Bolshevist revolution. We have in the past approved whole heartedly of the Kansan's courageous stand against guilt by association. We are dismayed, therefore, to find that the same dubious methodology was employed in your editorial of Nov. 29, comparing hte Huntington, W.Va., anti-Communist league to the Ku Klux Klan. Do you disapprove of the method per se or merely of the stratagem when it crucifies your pet fads? You suggest that "fear of Communism is a deep distrust of Democracy." The leaders of Poland, Czechoslovakia and Hungary can not "fear Communism;" according to your logic they have achieved a glorious bran dof Democracy. You ask, "Are we in America truly worried about our way of life?" WE ARE! (100,000 casualties in Korea can not be laughed off as a figment of Red-hater's imagination.) You accuse Mr. Foley of being afraid of Communism. Our only reaction is that it is better to be afraid OF Communism than to be afraid FOR it. Reuben E. Short Graydon D. Luthey Peter S. Gross Roy S. Bennett Jr. Law Freshmen. Editor's Note: Our point is this: we feel that this Communist business is assuming the trappings of a witch-hunt. If our editorial suggested to you that we are not opposed to Communism, then something was wrong somewhere. Society of Red Haters is, we think you'll admit, a rather childish title for an organization adults. A.G.M. Praises Sociology Program Dear Editor: May I take the liberty of using your "Letters" column for a purpose other than taking a blast at something or somebody? I have in mind the excellent series of radio talks on radio station KLWN call "Sociology On The Air." The speakers, to date, have been getting over to both students and townpeople many of the important ideas of the present day. John Ise's recent talk on flood control broadened my whole view on this problem. I had not quite exactly thought about flood control in the way that he did. So to with the talks by Chancellor Murphy and Merely training college kids to be capable technicians is not enough. We've got to have people who are capable of tackling the issues facing us today—issues bordering on the realm of economics, political science and, of course, sociology. Dean Lawson. Both Murphy and Lawson strongly felt that one of the purposes of education was to develop a feeling of social responsibility in the young adult. I now agree with this point of view. The sociology department should be commended for this fine series of radio discussions. Let's have more Clark Alden Grimm College Senior. Bibler Page 3 University Daily Kansan w 3 ransan's, amayed, employed , anti- of the s your of De murs hieved a truly ties in nagina- do not on our There were in our only to be munist editorial then is, we ion y and of the developlity in e with to be mough. no are facing on the eccience should ries of mor Monday, Dec. 3, 1951 Varsity To Play Baylor In Opener After Defeating Freshmen 73-33 Fresh from a 73-33 victory over the freshmen, the KU varsity basketball team opens its 1951-52 season tonight by playing the Golden Bears of Baylor. The varsity squad got its final practice under game conditions Friday night but appeared to be below par for a team slated by many to capture the Big Seven crown this season. Tipoff time is 7:30 o'clock in Hoch auditorium. The game is on set No. 1 of student tickets. Clyde Lovelleli led the scoring in the varsity-fresh tilt with 20 points. He shot little in the first half but began to reveal the accuracy of his hook in the third quarter. At one time he was successful on five straight shots from the field, ending with nine baskets in 15 shots. Dean Kelley showed marked improvement in ball handling and added considerable speed to the normally slow team. He is scheduled to start at guard tonight along with veteran Bill Hougland, who scored four points in the practice game. Bill Lienhard demonstrated a set shot that will contribute much to the KU scoring. He ripped the cords for 12 points. Bob Kenney and Lienhard will send forwards and Lovellette at $enter. Coach B Henderson's starting team, which averages 6 feet 3 inches compared to KU's 6 feet 4 inches, also is dominated by seniors. They include forwards Derrell Davis and Ralph Johnson and guard Howard Hovde. Two juniors, guard Norman Mullins and center John Starkey, Freshmen----33 Fresenheim 1 0 3 Fg F1 Ft Ff Fg F1 Ft Alberts 0 4 2 Lienhau 6 0 1 Alberts 0 4 2 Lienhau 6 0 1 Davenport 4 0 2 Kenney 1 0 0 Thompson 4 0 3 Godwin 2 0 0 Padgett 1 0 1 Lovelette 9 2 0 Franklin 1 0 1 Lovelette 9 2 0 Franklin 1 1 2 Houghton 2 0 0 Heittholt 3 0 1 Johnson 1 1 2 Holmes 0 0 1 Johnson 1 1 2 Smith 2 2 DK, Kelley 2 0 1 Anderson 1 0 1 Buller 3 0 1 Anderson 1 0 1 Buller 3 0 1 Squires 0 3 2 totals 12 9 11Totals 31 11 10 will complete the starting quintet for Bavlor. Johnson and Mullins were the team's leading scorers last season, with a 13.5 and nine-point average respectively. The Bears came in next to the All Type Pens and Pencils Repaired QUICK SERVICE STUDIO MICHAELS STUDENT Union Book Store KANSAS 14 KANSAS 11 KANSAS 17 KANSAS 8 KU'S STARTERS against Baylor tonight will be, left to right, Dean Kelley, guard; Bill Lienhard, forward; Clyde Lovellette, (kneeling) center; Bill Hougland, guard, and Bob Kenney, forward—Kansan photo by Don Sarten. bottom in the Southwest conference the same spot again this season cage campaign last season with observers picking them to finish about They won eight games while drop-servers ping 16. KAYWOODIE PIPES ARE PERFECT George's PIPE SHOP 727 Mass. Gifts The present of perfection; GIVE the easiest writing portable ever built ! WORLD'S NO. 1 PORTABLE Here is an enduring... ideal gift, the most beautiful Portable you've even seen—and the smoothest and fastest. 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Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, Dec. 3, 1951 Jayhawkers Complete Best Season Since 1947 With Win Over MU By CHARLEY BURCH By CHARLEY BURCH Daily Kansan Sports Editor The Kansas Jayhawkers finished their best season since 1947 by trouncing Missouri 41-28 before a Homecoming crowd of 35,000 Saturday. Their season's record stands at eight wins and two losses to be the seventh team in KU's 62-year-old history to compile that good a record. The victory was particularly sweet to Coach J. V. Sikes it marked the first time under his tenure that the Jayhawkers have defeated Missouri. The KU victory locked the Big Seven ceilar door on Coach Don Faurot's team to place them there for the first time since 1935. The 10-touchdown scoring spree, which set a record for the 60-game series, saw two TDs scored in the first quarter, three in the second, one in the third and four in the fourth. Bob Brandeberry caught a 6-yard pass from Charlie Hoag to start the scoring. Hal Cleavinger, defensive halfback, recovered a fumble by Jim Hook, MU quarterback, on the Tiger 27 to set up the play. John Konek booted the extra point to put Kansas ahead 7-0 with 5 minutes and 13 seconds gone in the initial period. Orville Poppe, sophomore tackle, ended MU's first drive by recovering a fumble on Mizzou's 40. Ten plays later Hoag ripped off the remaining yard. Konek's kick boosted the score to 14-0. Finally managing to hold on to the ball, the Show-Me team traveled 55 yards to score. Buddy Cox, freshman subbing for injured Tony Scardino, led the assault from the spread formation. Hook passed to Bill Fessler for the first MU marker. Paul Fuchs kicked the extra point. Both teams scored in the remaining 40 seconds of the first half. Jerry Robertson connected on a 10-yard pass to Hoag in the end zone. A 42-yard aerial from Robertson to Orbon Tice set up the TD play. Konek again was successful. Thirty-four seconds later MU countered with seven points to make the score 21-14 at the half. Hook threw to Harold Carter, who was finally knocked out of bounds on the KU 1 by Tom Brannan. Hook sneaked across on the next play. Fuchs added the extra point. A lone TD was scored in the third frame when Robertson heaved a 14-yard pass to Tice to complete a 54-yard advance. Konek's kick was true to make it 28-14. Four more TDs were squeezed into less than seven minutes of the final stanza. Bud Laughlin, who picked up 101 yards rushing, pushed across from the KU 7 to score. Konek missed the uprights. Play In Big Seven Starts With Games This Week Kansas City—(U.P.)-The Big Seven basketball campaign gets under way with a full head of steam this week, with four of the conference teams tucking wins under their belts in Saturday night's kickoff efforts. Kansas State college, the defending champion, launched its drive for high honors again with an easy 67-51 win over Purdue of the Big 10 Saturday night before a record opening night crowd of 12,000 in Manhattan. Elsewhere on opening night it was Colorado 62, Wichita 57; Nebraska 60, Iowa State Teachers 44, and Iowa State 54. South Dakota 50. Kansas, with another tall and potentially powerful club, begins its operations tonight against Baylor at Lawrence. Games This Week: names is Week. Tonight: State State Morning- side, Ohio State at Kansas State. Eldridge Pharmacy Drugs, Sundries, Fountain, Pipes Agency for Mixture No. 79 701 Mass. Phone 999 Baylor at Kansas, Texas at Oklahoma. Wednesday—Oklahoma at Southern Methodist. Friday-Iowa State at Creighton, Colorado A&M at Colorado. Saturday-Kansas State at Arizona, Colorado at Colorado A&M, Denver at Kansas, Minnesota at Nebraska. PRECISIE WATCH REPAIRS Watch Repair Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed Wolfson's 743 Mass. Call 675 CHESTERFIELD — LARGEST SELLING CIGARETTE IN AMERICA'S COLLEGES Massachusetts Tech Engineers know the facts. AT M.I.T. Tech Pharmacy We certify that Chesterfield is our largest selling cigarette by 2...to 1 SIGNED PROPRIETOR 2 to 1 because of MILDNESS Plus NO UNPLEASANT AFTER-TASTE* *From the Report of a Well-Known Research Organization ...AND ONLY CHESTERFIELD HAS IT! Monday, Dec. 3, 1951 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Oklia- South- ighton, Ari- A&M, ta at 575 BASKETBALL TONIGHT 5 Vern Schneider BETTER USED CARS 1010-12 Mass. Phone 424 K.U. vs. BAYLOR HOME GAMES SET 1 SET 2 Dec. 3 BAYLOR Dec. 8 DENVER Jan. 5 OKLAHOMA $ ^{*} $ Dec. 18 RICE Feb. 4 COLORADO $ ^{*} $ Feb. 2 IOWA STATE $ ^{*} $ Feb. 19 OKLAHOMA A.&M. Feb. 16 NEBRASKA $ ^{*} $ Feb. 25 MISSOURI $ ^{*} $ March 7 KANSAS STATE $ ^{*} $ Norman Edmond's Grocery 1903 Mass. - Conference Games Name Pos. No. Age Ht. Wt. Home Town Alberts, Jerry F 3 18 6-3 178 Lincoln, Ill. Anderson, Don G 19 20 5-10 170 Lawrence Anderson, John G 2 17 6-2 210 Grand Island, Neb. * Beck, Walter G 10 20 6-3 195 Mission Bogue, Jerry G 25 21 6-1 172 Wichita Born, B. H. F-C 23 19 6-9 195 Medicine Lodge Buller, Kenneth F 35 20 5-11 180 Buhler Davenport, Larry F 4 18 6-2 165 Newton Dye, Everett F-G 12 19 6-2 155 Independence Forsyth, Bob G 26 18 6-1 178 Medicine Lodge Franklin, Don F 7 18 6-1 168 Parsons Godwin, Bob F 15 19 6-1 178 Beloit Guess, Paul G 28 17 6-4 190 Holton Heitholt, Bill F-G 21 18 6- $ \frac{3}{1} $ 178 Quincy, III. * Hoag, Charles F-G 5 20 6- $ \frac{2}{1} $ 185 Oak Park, Ill. * Hougland, Bill G 17 21 6-4 180 Beloit Johnson, Weston G 13 19 6-3 174 Newton * Keller, John F-G 20 22 6-3 185 Page City Kelley, Allen G 22 18 5-11 164 McCune * Kelley, Dean F 14 20 5-11 165 McCune * Kenney, Bob F 9 20 6-2 185 Winfield * Lienhard, Bill F 11 21 6-5 180 Newton * Lovellette, Clyde C 16 21 6-9 230 Terre Haute, Ind. Martin, Loren F 30 18 6-1 175 Overbrook Nicholson, Eldon C 31 18 6-6 190 Pittsburg Padgett, Gary F 32 18 6-2 164 Greenleaf Rodgers, Jack F 36 19 6 171 Oak Park, Ill. Schuldt, Williard G 39 19 6-4 210 Elgin, Ill. Smith, Dean F 33 20 5-10 160 Topeka Squires, LaVannes F 6 20 6 165 Wichita Taylor, Jerry G 40 18 6-3 186 Carrollton, Mo. Thompson, John F 24 19 5-11 165 Grandview, Mo. * Wells, Dean F-G 38 21 6 170 Great Bend Whitney, Wesley C 34 19 6-3 204 Newton Young, Rich F 37 19 5-11 159 Salina Fotopolous, Gene F — 20 5-9 155 Hutchinson TEAM MEMBERS Willie's Your Favorite Beverage In A Tall Glass. 1017 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Rieder's Farm Mkt. GRADE A MILK . . 18c qt. 23rd and La. A WOLFERMAN ASSOCIATE Reeve's Grocery 900 Miss. Phone 413 Zook's Standard Service 23rd and La. University Daily Kansan Monday, Dec. 3, 1951 图 YOUR EYES Page 6 should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. Phone 425 1025 Mass. Book your air reservations now! No deposit or payments needed. No charge if you have to cancel. Make your airline reservations now and be sure you have a seat on the flight of your choice. Did you know that air reservations are already heavily booked for coming Christmas holidays? URGENT! Patronize Kausan Advertisers Low "sky coach" and "family fare" rates. We will show you the most economical routing home! Don't delay. See Downs Travel Service today for all airline reservations. Phone 3661 for all your travel needs open evenings 6:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. No Booking Fees downs travel service 1015½ massachusetts st. lawrence, kansas downs travel service 1015% massachusetts st. lawrence, kanwas Sigma Kappa Takes Pride In Its Philanthropic Projects From its beginning Sigma Kappa has undertaken some form of national philanthropy. KU's Xi chapter joins the 59 other chapters in contributing to the support of the Maine Sea Coast Mission at Bar Harbor, and the American Farm School at Thessaloniki. Greece. The mission project in Maine was chosen because the sorority's five founders were all natives of that state. Sigma Kappa, one of the oldest sororites in the nation, was founded at Colby College, Waterville, Maine, in November 1874. Xi chapter was instituted at the University April 1, and 2, 1913, after existing for a little over a year as a local sorority, Delta Psi. A special honor was the participation in the first initiation ceremonies of one of the founders, Ida Fuller Pierce, who was the personal guide and friend of Delta Psi, and directly responsible for its origin. Delta Psi had established a home of its own at 1247 Ohio street in 1912, renting the house for three years. It then moved to 1245 Oread avenue and bought the house in 1916. Outgrowing this residence Xi built a house at 1625 Edgehill and moved into it in October, 1923, a little more than 10 years after the chapter's establishment at KU. Xi's traditions include celebration of Founder's day, Homecoming weekend, spring formal, senior breakfast and a dinner given for members whose names appear on the chapter honor roll. An incentive to scholarship is the trophy given annually to the freshman making the highest grades. Benjamin Holman, journalism senior from Bloomfield, N.J., has been elected president of Kappa Alpha Psi social fraternity. Other elected officers are Freddie Anderson, fine arts sophomore, vicepresident; Adolphus Toliver. College sophomore, secretary; Solomon Pleasant, College junior, treasurer; Cornelius Reed, College junior, sergeant-at-arms. George Stewart, College sophomore, assistant sergeant-at-arms; Thomas Fox, pharmacy senior, dean of pledges; and Harold Piper, graduate student, house steward. Dr. Craia's Mother Dies Kappa Alpha Psi's Elect Ben Holman Dr. Barbara M. Craig, assistant professor of French in the department of Romance languages and literatures, has been called to her home in Toronto, Canada, because of her mother's death. Miss Craig left Lawrence Sunday and is expected back the end of this week. Her mother had been seriously sick for several months. An evening of duplicate bridge was spent by members of the University club Friday night in the club rooms at $100\frac{1}{2}$ Mass. Street. Hosts for the evening were Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Calvin and Leonard H. Axe, dean of the School of Business, and Mrs. Axe. Official Bulletin University Club Holds Bridge L. M.O.C. All Student Council, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Pine room, Union. Lozenski Pledging Announced Rose Marie Lozenski, fine arts freshman from Leavenworth, was pledged Nov. 19 into Theta Phi Alpha sorority. - No. 9 - Quill club, 4 p.m. Tuesday, East room, Union, coffee. Engineerettes bridge and canasta, 7:30 tonight. Pine room. Union. Social Work club, 4 p.m. Wednesday, AWS lounge. Brief but important meeting, all urged attend. Kappa Beta covered dish supper. 5:30-7 p.m. Tuesday, Myers hall. Guest night, movies. College, education, and journalism juniors and seniors: The English Proficiency examination will be given on Dec. 8 from 2 to 5. Register in the office of your dean on Dec. 3. 4. 5. Mathematics colloquium, 5 today, 211 Strong. Chess club, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday, 111 Strong, 5th round of tournament THE Travel Service THE WATCH FOR IT FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Tel. 30 8th & Mass. Send your cleaning to LAWRENCE LAUNDRY Expert Dry Cleaning --- They'll Look Like New! LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS CALL 383 Student Chapter ASTE, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Lindley hall auditorium. Mr. Harl Day, Butler Mfg. Co., of Kansas City, speaker. "Production and Tooling." All students of School of Engineering invited. Annual joint meeting with parent chapter of Kansas City. Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity, 7:15 p.m. Tuesday, English room, Union. Program. International Relations club dinner, 6 p.m. Tuesday, Kansas room, Union. Nazeer Ahmed, speaker. Call Betty Barton, 415 for reservations today. Brighter Shines WITH 1/2 THE RUBBING COVERS SCUFF MARKS! GIVES SHOES RICHER COLOR! Black, Tan, Brown, Dark Tan, Mid-Tan, Blue, Oxblood, Mahogany, and Neutral Ask any G.I. about KIWI (KEE-WEE) SHOE POLISH KIWI BOOT POLISH BROWN KIWI BROWN • KIWI BROWN OPEN TIN Twist COIN IN 25 OZ LESSON IN HOW TO BE HOME instead of en route SAN FRANCISCO ORLANDO 405 ANGELES PHOENIX BROOKIEQUE EL PASO MAD AMONTON DENVER KANSAS CITY ST. LOUIS CALIFORNIA TULSA OAK CITY HOLSTER HOUSTON TOPEKA To DENVER 31/3 HRS. GARDEN CITY 31/4 HRS. DODGE CITY 2 3/4 HRS. Call your travel agent or 3-2307. Airport Ticket Office, Topeka. CONTINENTAL AIR LINES CONTINENTAL AIR LINES Page 7 Monday, Dec. 3, 1951 University Daily Kansan Shakespeare Travels To KC Under Speech Dept. Auspices The department of speech and drama presented William Shakespeare's "Midsummer Night's Dream" at Northeast Junior High school, Kansas City, Mo., Saturday. Other performances will be given on Dec. 8 and 15 for Kansas City junior and senior high school students. The same play was presented by the University Players in April in Fraser theater and taken on a two-week tour to Kansas and Oklahoma schools. The Kansas City productions are being sponsored by the Junior League of Kansas City, Mo., as a part of their Children's theater project. The play, under the direction of Tom Rea, speech instructor, will have a run of six performances, two each Saturday for three weeks. The production schedule is as follows: Dec.1, Northeast Junior High school; Dec. 8, Southwest Junior High school, Kansas City, Mo.; and Dec. 15, Shawnee Mission High school. Kansas City, Kans. Members of the cast include Wilson O'Connell, assistant speech instructor; Robert Ziesenis, College senior; Leola Stewart, education senior; Nancy Morsbach, College sophomore; Maxine LeRow, education senior; Dan Palmquist, speech instructor; Shirley Samuelson, College freshman; Patrica Elliott, College sophomore. Mary Beth Moore, College junior; Barbara Donovan, College senior; Carol Donovan, education senior; Shirley Strain, College junior; Mark Gilman, College sophomore; Kirtle Walling, College junior; Tom Rea, John White, College seniors; William Thompson, College freshman; Gerald Scott, College freshman; Gary Lehman, College sophomore, and Max Zent, College freshman. Nine KU Mountaineers Spend Thanksgiving In Estes Park, Colo. Nine members of the University Mountain Climbing club spent the Thanksgiving vacation on a training outing in Estes Park, Colo. They rented a cabin at $1 a day per person at Tinytown, a group of cabins in the park. In the cabin was a gas range, a refrigerator and all the modern conveniences, even blankets. Members who went on the outing were Miss Joanne Rusee, instructor of engineering, Jack Shears, education senior, John Rythe, College freshman, John Hall, graduate, Burtram Blanke, graduate, Li Chi Chiang, graduate, Jerry Clark, engineering sophomore, Gordon Stecker, special student, and John Fast Among the equipment which they took along was nylon rope, the most important item, and old but sturdy clothes. Each person had a sling rope and a carabiner, an oval ring made of duralumin, used in repelling, a method of descent. During the vacation they climbed Eagle cliff; the Owls, which are twin rocks; Mt. Olympus, one of the smaller peaks in the park, and down into Big Thompson canyon. To acquaint the new members with walking through deep snow, they went on a snow hike from Lower Hidden to Upper Hidden valley. "High peaks are not climbed at this time of year or at the Easter outing because there is too much snow," said Miss Ruese, the cook. Not forgetting the holiday season, Miss Rusea cooked a turkey, and the nine had a feast Thanksgiving day. Radio Schedule The week's schedule of program to be heard on KFKU, University radio station. 1250 on the radio dial Monday The Flying Carpet 2:30 p.m. Broadway Rhapsody 2:45 p.m. Great Symphonies 7:00 p.m. Art By Radio ... 2:30 p.m. KU Calvalcade of Hits ... 7:00 p.m. Memo Pad ... 7:25 p.m. Wednesday Music From Mt. Oread...2:30 p.m. KU in the News...2:45 p.m. Concert Hall...7:00 p.m. Adventures in Music Land ..2:30 p.m. Brain Busters .. 7:00 p.m. Thursday Friday Friday Story Book Train 2:30 p.m. Museum of Art Organ 2:45 p.m. Chamber Music 7:00 p.m. Phone K.U.376 Yansan Classified Advertising Classified Advertising Rates 25 words or less ... 50c Additional words ... 1c Terms: Cash, Phone orders are accepted with tr. understanding that the bill will be paid on or before the date during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Dally Public Business office. Journals must be delivered by 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. FOR SALE TUXEDO FOR SALE Cleaned and in ex- tended condition 35-37. 12-6 landlady. Phone 3566. HOMECOMING GUESTS! Be a smart girl! Homecoming Guests! Facebook Glasses, A set of Libby Saftey gloves on the Jayhawk on them in three brilliant colors, only $2.95. Rowlands Book Stores, 1401 Ohio St. 1237 Oread. I-84 CRUMBO ETCHINGS for Christmas; a courtroom. Pat Read, across from 12-7 Courthouse. SWINGLINE TOT STAPLER are now inventory. Students visit our Union Book Store. Only 98k WHAT'S NEW! The newest KU novelity is the Jayhawk Football Glass. It's a Libby Safedge with the Jayhawk in three brilliant colors. A set of eight for only $2.95. Rowlands Book Store, 1401 Ohio st., 1237 Oread. 12-4 Few Atomic Workers Hurt By Radiation Dr. Rozenhaal said, "The accident record is remarkable in view of the vast number employed and the hazards encountered." TRADE-IN SALE! ! Between now and Christmas we will accept any used pen (all parts intact) for 20 per cent of the price of the New Sheaffer Pen of your Cleveland, Ohio — (U.P.) "Injuries to workers from radiation exposure in American atomic energy plants are rare," Dr. H. M. Rozenhaal, a physician connected with the General Electric Research Laboratory, savs. To beat off a siege of Syracuse by the Roman general Marcellus two centuries before Christ, Archimedes designed a spectacular crane which could grapple attacking galleys, hoist them into the air and then plunge them beneath the sea. The large use of colors to identify dangerous materials and the proper labeling of properties with unknown qualities unfamiliar to workers was cited by Dr. Rozenhaal as the main reason for the small number of accidents. ORDER EARLY! Give books for Christmas this year. The gift that is treasured more each year. Come in and order any book, gift from your Student University Book Store. 12-7 BOOK LAMPS! The original clip-on lamp with 6 foot cord and 10 watch. An unusual fit for only $1.98. Student Union Book Store. 12-7 Ask us about family rates, sky coach, and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book passage, no other European travel next week. Call Mm. 302. Call N.B.A. National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30- WANTED: Girl to do fountain and wait Wednesday, and Friday at The Call. 12-3 Wednesday, and Friday at The Call. 12-3 FOR RENT HELP WANTED AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange international travel whether tours or individual service. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Service, 1015 Mass. RENT A TYPEWRITER NOW! Choose from our wide selection of portables. Pick your grades improve when you type your papers. Student Union Office Store. 12-7 TRANSPORTATION TWO ROOMS nicely furnished for student. Fridigiaire, hot and cold water. gas furnace heat. telephone. Half block from bus. 1817 Lt. Phone 28585M. 12-3 MISCELLANEOUS JUST ARRIVED, new shipment of pencil erasers. Soft and self cleaning for drawings and tracings. At your Student Union Book Store. 12-7 NICE, QUET apartment for boys. Pri- lson, bills paid $48 a month. 120 Laa. LARGE DOUBLE ROOM for two men. Large room, good location, steam 12-7 1324W. The Department of Speech & Drama BUSINESS SERVICE SHOURY'S BARBER SHOP at 837 New three on Friday and Saturday. Haircuts 75c. Plenty of reading material. Give motto cleanliness. Good service payees. Presents TYPING DONE promptly and accurately. between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. for further information. Selection. Hurry now to the Student Union Book Store. 12-7 Oscar Wilde's Sparkling Comedy Present I-D Cards at Ticket Office Basement Green Hall for Reserved Seats Open Daily 9-12, 1-4 THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST FRASER THEATRE curtain at eight I-D Cards Admit Dec.5,6,7,8 WED., THURS., FRI., SAT. Now Showing! BAFFLING! WHAT IS IT? HOWARD HAWKS' production THE THING from another world Evening Shows At 7:00-9:00 "BUGS BUNNY" "ALPINE CHAMPS" ADDED Matinee Tuesday At 2:30 Patee PHONE 1321 Now Showing! THE FUNNIEST COMEDY OF THE YEAR... JUNE VAN ALLYSON·JOHNSON TOO GOOD TO MISS! "Too Young to Kiss" NOTE I. S.A. TICKET NO. 3 NOW GOOD Evening Shows - 7:00-9:00 Matinee Daily At 2:30 ADDED COLOR CARTOON Latest Movietone News Granada PHONE 940 TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses- prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhod Island. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: term papers note books, theses, medical and biological reports, miscellaneous. Mrs. Schoenberg 838 Lm., Apt. 4, upstairs. Pt. 2775J after p. 48. CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pasties. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from a.m. until midnight. RADIO AND TV repair service on al-makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ment area as we assuring fast efficient service made for Television. Phone 138, 826 Vermont free pickup and delivery. TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work prompt attention. 10 years theses typing. Mets. Shields. 1209 Ohio P. 1601. STUDYING late tonight? Refresh your self with fountain beverages and sano wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. t CRYSTAL CASTA serves choice steaks sandwiches, malfs, home-made pies and ice cream for customers at customer Air-conditioned. Obsp. menu a.m. tmidnight. Crystal Cake. 609 Vt. TYPING: Experience in these term papers, miscellaneous typing, and sten cil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phon 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. tt JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleant ant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk pet shop. We have everything in the pets. Our needs are our business. Our one-stop service is fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. t' LOST KITTEN, half grown, grey and black Phone 3683-8. Weward. 12-5 BROWN BILLFOLD on campus. Person calling case Kent Sanboro. 110w. **Reward:** 30-3-5 BROWN BILLFOLD with ID and basketball ticket lost on Crescent Road by the Call. Finder can keep money. Pat Davis, Phone 3493W. 12-6 LADYS GOLD Bulova watch. Finder call Joan Harner KU 516 368-2450 Comfort Continental JAYHAWKER NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS NOW thru WED. 2:30-7:00-9:00 Vivien Leigh Marlon Brando "A Streetcar Named Desire" - ADMISSION • MATINEE 75c NIGHT $1.00 Students Anytime With ID Cards 75c Children 25c VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD NOW thru TUES. Open 6:45 Roy Rogers "SPOILER OF THE PLAINS" —AND— "LOST PLANET AIRMEN" —Plus— Pro-Football Late News Bugs Bunny In "BUNNY HUGGED" Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, Dec. 3, 1951 Union Displays Malott Photo A large photographic portrait of Deane W. Malott, former chancellor and now president of Cornell university, was placed on display in the Union building lobby Saturday as Homecoming festivities began. Yousuf Karsh of Ottawa, Canada, made the camera study earlier this fall. Karsh has probably photographed more of the world's current notables than any other man. A plaque to be placed on the frame will read: "Deane W. Malott, Chancellor, 1939-51. A gift from students, faculty and friends, photographed by Karsh of Ottawa, Canada." A volunteer student committee obtained funds for the portrait at the close of the 1950-51 school year. The contributions came from students, faculty and alumni. Allyn C. Browne, San Francisco, Calif., organized the committee and was its chairman. Other members were James K. Logan, College senior; Marvin Arth, Great Bend; Mary Lou Fischer, education senior; Virginia Thomas, business senior; Gene Balloun, first law; Paul Arrowwood, business senior; Helen Maduros, education senior; and James Stewart, engineering junior. P. A. H. S. B. R. THE ABOVE PHOTOGRAPH of Deane W. Malott, former chancellor, has been placed on display in the Union. Some Names Are News,But Others Make A Good Story By JIM POWERS If names are any indication, the University staff is certainly versatile. The words in capital letters appearing in the following story are names of KU faculty members: "I WARNE you, Miss Jones," the professor said, "you'll REALY LEAVE to WAKE up and be SHARPE in my classes. Poor MARKS are WIRTH nothing. What's MOORE, you KRUSE around in the PARKS in a NASH then HARP about assignments on the HILL." The SWEET YOUNG thing was MOODY as she ROSE to go. “You’re WRIGHT, sir, but I've paid my FEE and if I want to raise CAIN, FISH-ER CAREY books I should be able 'to decide for my SELF.'” "Just remember to JAHR loose and MIX some school work with your other FIELDS or you certainly won't MERRITT anything except DOWNS this semester." As the little LAMB walked STRAIT down the LONG HALL, her BROWN HAIR blended with her GREEN eyes. The STEELE clips on her WHITE shoes created SPARKS which bounced against a nearby LOCKER "That SEMPEL SHOEMAKER" she thought. "Td sure COOK his goose if I had an AXE HANDY, even if I had to FRYE for it." She pulled her CAPE over her BAER arms to protect them from COLE air on the outside. Across the MEYER came FAUL, HATTIN hand. "Was the BARON CROSS this morning?" he asked. "You look MADDEN DUNN in." "YEH, the old WOLFE was anything but HAPPY," she replied as they heard a BIRDWHISTELT from a nearby BUCH. "It would be different if I were a BOER a man. Then I'd BELT him one." They strolled down the LANE toward the LAKE, where she hoped he would RING the BELL by giving her a DIAMOND. She said her head was AIKEN and she'd like to sit a while. As soon as they were seated on a STUMP, she felt herself caught in the WEBB of ARMSTRONG and warm. He KESTER. He imagined he could see the PAGE in their book when they would PIERCE through the MAZE of studies and be showered with RICE. "Of course the PRICE of marriage is "high" he thought. "Before we can live under the same ROOFE, I'll have to save u a few MOORE NICHOLS." “Oh, SHAW,” he said aloud, jumping off the STUHL, “the guys who walk the PLANK sooner or later end up in their GRAVES. So LONG, honey. I think I'll go over to the bar for a BEER.” (Sorry, there's no MOREAU to this tale. It's simply FULLER KERN.) The conference is entitled "Planning for Professional Progress in Music and Art in Kansas Schools." 21 To Attend Music Meeting Twenty-one University faculty members will take part in the art and music conference to be held Wednesday and Thursday in Salina. It is sponsored by the Fine Arts and Education schools and the departments of music and art education at the University and the Salina public schools. Those participating in the conference are Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts and Dean George B. Smith of the School of Education. Profs. E. Thayer Gaspo of music education. Reinhold Schmidt of voice and Russell L. Wiley of band and orchestra. Associate professors J. Sheldon Carey and Arvid Jacobson of design Gerald M. Carney, Elin K. Jorgensen and James Nickerson of music education and Miss Maud Ellsworth of education. Assistant professors Karel Blaas of music theory and viola; Miss Evelyn Degraw and Carlyle H. Smith of design and Robert Green of drawing and painting. Instructors Marcus E. Hahn, Leo Horacek, Clayton Krebhiel and William W. Sears of music education and Raymond Zepp of band. Miss Alice Schwartz, graduate student and assistant in art education. Research Occupies Chem Engineers Research on atomic problems, on reactions resulting in anti-freeze chemicals, and freeing natural gas of the useless nitrogen content are a few projects underway in the department of chemical engineering. By JERRY RENNER The objective in the case of the atomic studies is to find out more about the processes of distillation, absorption, and extraction. Dr, J. O. Maloney, chairman of the department, said. These processes are common in the refining of petroleum and the manufacture of natural gasoline. By distillation a quantity of crude oil can be processed into gasoline, kerosene or diesel fuel. Extraction methods give oils additional lubricating properties. Absorption methods are used to purify gasoline. By using radioactive carbon, researchers can trace these processes through a complete cycle. Professor Kurata and three graduate students have been investigating a procedure to remove the nitrogen content from natural gas before it is piped to the consumer. The nitrogen, which is never used, increases expense to the industry. Prof. Fred Kurata, associate professor of chemical engineering, is doing special work on ethylene oxide which reacts with water to form such materials as ethylene glycol, a common anti-freeze for automobiles. The future scientists in the chemical engineering field take general engineering courses their freshman year. Sophomores begin the study of the physical aspects of matter followed by a study of its chemical changes. calculate chemical reactions. The department differs from other departments in the School of Engineering and Architecture in that students are required to spend the summer between their junior and senior years making laboratory experiments and visiting factories in this area of the state. These studies are supplemented with courses on thermodynamics involving the effects of heat and cold on matter. In design classes they are taught how to design equipment and Graduates holding bachelor of science degrees generally go into the operation phase of industry. Sometimes they do pilot plant work. This is operating a new manufacturing process on a small scale and developing techniques until they may be used on mass production schedules. These men also may go into design work. Holders of master of science degrees do pilot plant work or research in development laboratories. Doctors of philosophy usually do research or teach. News Roundup House Representative Involved In Tax Fraud Washington—(U.P.)—A Justice Department attorney testified today that Rep. Frank Boykin (D.-Ala.) tried to stop prosecution of an Alabama tax fraud case. Government Attorney John H. Mitchell, who was assigned to prosecute the case, gave the testimony. He testified that Boykin said prosecution of the case would be "a grave mis-carriage of justice." Chairman Cecil R. King of a House investigating subcommittee said today that Supreme Court Justice Tom Clark and Attorney General J. Howard McGrath will be asked to testify later this week in the tax fraud inquiry. Prepare For Exchange Of Prisoners Panmunjom, Korea—(U.P.)-The Communists are gathering data on Allied war prisoners they hold in preparation for a mass exchange of prisoners if a Korean armistice agreement is signed, a Communist correspondent reported today. The United Nations command truce team asked the Communists on Nov. 27 to start gathering facts on the prisoners in preparation for negotiations on the question of exchange. The Reds have not yet mentioned the subject in the truce talks here. But Wilfred Burchett, correspondent for the Paris Leftist newspaper Ce Soir who is reporting the talks from the Communist side, said the Communists were assembling names and facts on the allied prisoners. American Airmen Located In Hungary London—(U.R.)—Communist Hungary may demand the return of the 11th century Crown of St. Stephen as ransom for four American airmen forced down by Soviet fighter planes two weeks ago. The Communists finally broke their silence early today on the fate of the American airmen, who disappeared Nov. 19 in an air force C-47 on a flight from Germany to Belgrade, Yugoslavia, with diplomatic pouches. The Communist delay in making the announcement was interpreted as a play for time to give Hungary an opportunity to bargain with the United States over long-standing differences over St. Stephen's crown. The Communist regime had tried and failed to include the crown in the ransom for release of American businessman Robert Vogeler. Non-Union Insurance Agents Working Newark, N.J.—(U.P.)—More than 12,000 non-union office and maintenance workers crossed picket lines and went to work today at the huge headquarters here of the Prudential Insurance company. The walkout of 15,000 agents started officially Saturday, normally an off day, but international officials of the AFL insurance agents postponed picketing until today. The strike affected Prudential offices in 32 states. Racial Violence Flares In Florida Miami, Fla.—U.(R.P.)—Three explosions rocked a Negro housing project and a Synagogue here Sunday causing a near riot by Negroes and bringing angry demands for police action by Jewish leaders. Police said a crude dynamite bomb was thrown from a passing car, shattering expensive window panes at the Miami Hebrew School of Congregation. A second blast did no harm. A third bomb was set off near Carver village, an unoccupied Negro apartment project near a White residential section, but police could not learn the exact location of the explosion and said apparently no damage was done. Arrest Former Egyptian Official Denver, Colo.—(U.P.)-Abdel Mohsen Homouda, 29, a former Egyptian embassy official in Washington was under arrest today on a charge of immigration law violation. His attorney said he thought Homouda was victim of an "illegal seizure." Kenneth N. Kripke, Homouda's attorney, said that Homoudo "suspects" that he had aroused "trouble" because he had been speaking in support of Egyptian government policies which are in opposition to the Middle Eastern defense pact, and "in violent opposition to British colonies in the near East." Order AP Chief To Leave Egypt Cairo, Egypt—(U.P).-Fred Zusy, chief of the Cairo bureau of the Associated Press, said today that the Egyptian government had canceled his residence visa and ordered him to leave the country by Friday. The director general of the press ministry of the Ministry of Interior said Sunday that Zusy was being asked to leave on the ground that his dispatches showed ill-will toward Egypt. Ike Flattered By Presidential Offer Washington—(U,P)—Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower replied with a non-committal "thank you" today to a poll showing that more than a fourth of the Republicans in the House favor him as their presidential candidate. Eisenhower wrote Rep. W. Sterling Cole (R.-N.Y.), who conducted the poll, that he was "flattered" to hear the Republicans "feel that I have the necessary qualifications to fill the highest post in our country." Kansas State Historical Society - UNIVERSITY DAILY Topeka, Ks. and day ny llly hts ial da k- p- si- a n i s st ABRAH WHATTA I DO NOW? Ralph Johnson, No. 11, seems to be in a dilemma as to what to do with the ball. Everett Dye, No. 12, is close on him with Bob Kenney, No. 9, standing at the side. In front is KU's B. H. Born, No. 25, and LaVannes Squires, No. 6, to complete the encirclement. Tom Strasburger, No. 10, and John Starkey, No. 15, are the other identifiable Baylor (Kearns photo by Al Marshall) "We had a fine time, Junior," writes the old grad of 1915 to his son at KU after the Homecoming game, "but the inflation is terrible." The letter continues: "Saturday morning we started out in our $2,500 car. Our pre-World War I flivver cost about $600 and we filled the tank with gas which in those days was 8 cents a gallon. It's 25 cents today. players. (Kansan photo by Al Marshall). 'We Had A High Old Time,' 1912 Graduate Writes Son "In 1912 it took us from sumpit tilt nilon to make the 120-mile trip because I had to change for the twice and make a patch for a tube. When we used in Lawrence we used to go into a cafe and have a fine roast beef dinner for 35 cents, but Saturday's meal cost us $1.15 each. BY JEANNE LAMBERT "We drove along at 60 miles an hour, twice as fast as in 1912 and we rode on a concrete highway that cost more than 10 times the cost of the old, graded and graveled roads. "The well dressed player of 1912 could be equipped complete with noseguard, shinguard and all for about $25 each while today $150 takes care of the equipment for each player. "As for the game itself—the effects are easy to see. In my time the boys had three downs to gain five yards while Saturday's heroes had four downs to make 10. "I must tell you though that your mother and I have decided to hold the line against any further inflation so any increase in your allowance at the present time is out of the question" "We're glad KU eked out a victory in a "close" game and of course we're glad to have seen you. "And let's take a look at the score while we're on the subject of rises. In 1912 an 18 to 6 victory over the Tigers would have been a slaughter but this year's 53-33 win over Iowa State wasn't considered wild. As to the cost of football players—well, that's hard to say, but you can't deny the price has gone up there, too. Your loving father MEMORIAL PLAVE trance marker early this morning with the addition of metal letters to the large center slab of Indiana limestone. THE WEST ENTRANCE to Memorial drive will be plainly marked for sightseers visiting the KU campus. Workmen are shown applying finishing touches to a marker showing the way to the Campanile. The drive itself is in the final stages of completion —Kansan photo by Don Sarten. Memorial Drive Opens Today Construction of the east entrance marker could be done in one day, according to workmen, if the final shipment of stone arrives today. Stone for the markers is Junction City, Cottonwood Falls and Indiana limestone. The paving of Memorial drive was to receive a dust coating today to absorb excess asphalt and be opened to traffic this afternoon, according to the Constant Construction company. Weather permitting, the stone markers at the entranceways to the drive will be completed this week. Tuesday, Dec. 4, 1951 Workmen finished the west en- hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS KU Symphony Will Present Concert Dec. 6 The University Symphony orchestra will present its annual fall concert in Hoch auditorium at 8 p.m. Thursday. Sophomores who attend will be excused from class but not from any work which may be missed. The 78-piece orchestra will be conducted by Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra. Identification cards will admit students. The program will open with an exciting overture from "The Russian Easter Festival" by Rimsky-Korsakov. This number was enthusiastically applauded at the All-Music Versers in November. Delores Wunsch, fine arts senior, will be guest soloist for the concert. A student of Jan Chiapusso, professor of piano, she will be featured in Chopin's Concerto No. 2 in F minor. Members of two existing committees elected by the Senate will constitute the new group. They are the advisory committee and committee on committees. The concert will close with Dvorak's Symphony No. 4 in G major, termed "one of the most refreshing symphonies we have done for quite some time" by Mr. Wiley. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy has appointed a group to study the problem of examining the validity of University committees. Murphy Lists Study Group He said that although Dvorak is better known for his Symphony No. 5 in E minor (The New World), the G major work is youthful and highly melodious. Prizes will be awarded to winners of the Quill club annual fall creative writing contest at 4 p.m. today in the East room of the Union. Chairman of the advisory committee is Leland J. Pritchard, professor of economics. Other members are Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism; Miss Florence Black, associate professor of mathematics; Charles Michener, professor of entomology; Kenneth Rose, associate professor of metallurgical engineering, and Donald Wilson, professor of electrical engineering. The class will make plans for coming events, and have entertainment at the meeting. Quill Club Awards To Be Given Today Chairman of the committee on committees is Dr. Ray Q. Brewster, professor of chemistry. Other members are E. B. Stouffer, professor of mathematics, and A. H. Turney, professor of education. Class yells will be practiced by the sophomores at a convocation at 10 am. Wednesday in Fraser theater. Robert Ziesenis, College senior, will be awarded a $10 cash prize for his one-act play, "An Irish Fantasy." Other business of the meeting will include the reception of new members in the club and the returning of contest manuscripts. A sophomore committee meeting will be held at 7 p.m. today in the Associated Women Students' lounge. The short story, "To Be or Not To Be," will be to read the club, will be awarded honorable mention in the college's annual Student Athletic Eugene Goltz, College sophomore. Sophomores To Hold Meeting Wednesday Panel Will Discuss Role Of Faith Today "The Role Of Faith In Our World of Transition" will be the topic of discussion at a panel sponsored by the B'nai B'ith Hillel Foundation for Jewish students at 8 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 13 in Strong auditorium. The public is invited. Dr. Karl A. Menninger, director of education at the Menninger Foundation of Topeka, will be one of the guest speakers on the panel. Dr. Menninger was a member of the special commission on psychiatry in the European theater during World War II. He also acted as advisor to the surgeon general of the Army in 1945. He is the author of several books on psychiatry. Other speakers on the panel will include; Dr. Amiya Chakravarty, visiting professor of humanities at K.U. A graduate of Oxford university, Dr. Chakravarty was one time literary secretary to the late Bengali poet, Sir Rabindranath Tagore, who was a winner of the Nobel prize. He was also a close friend of Mo-handas K. Gandhia, the late Hindu nationalist leader of India. The past year Dr. Chakravarthy was official advisor to the Indian UN delegation at Lake Success. Rabbi H. R. Richmond of Temple Emanu-El of Wichita will speak. He served as an Army chaplain in World Wars I and II. Dr. Arthur W. Davidson, assistant dean of the Graduate school at KU, will act as moderator for the panel. Robert Shaw Chorus To Appear Tonight The Robert Shaw chorale will appear at 8:20 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium. The Hillel program is carried out with various religious, cultural, inter-faith, and social activities for students with varied beliefs. Benjamin S. Benjaminov, counselor to the Ku'Bni'biv Hillel group, said the purpose of the panel is to shed some light on the question of the role that faith plays in our world of transition. The KU group is a member of the national Jewish collegiate organization sponsored by Bnai Brith, an international cultural and social organization. The concert is on the concert course series, and students with I.D. cards will be admitted free of charge, Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts said. Others may purchase tickets at the fine arts office. Tickets run from $1.50 to $2.50 plus tax. WEATHER The scripts will be sent to Dallas Williams, director of the University theater at Nebraska university for judging. Four winners in both the men's and women's divisions will present their skits in the revue. Organized houses planning to participate in the Rock Chalk Revue Friday, March 14, and Saturday, March 15, must turn in copies of their script no later than Friddy, Dec. 7. Rock Chalk Script Deadline Friday Two copies should be delivered to Frank Norris at the Sigma Nu house and one copy kept by the organization's house director. At least one copy must include a sketch of floor plans and of costumes. Considerable cloudiness followed by light rain or snow in extreme northwest tonight, warmer tonight, Wednesday cloudy with showers east and rain or snow in northwest portion. Colder in central and west in the afternoon. Low tonight 30-35 northwest, 38-45 east and south. High Wednesday 32-38 northwest to 55-60 southeast. ROTC Cadets Parade Today The review will be a presentation of all drill work AFROTC students have learned during the first semester. Approximately 900 Air Force ROTC men will take part in a mass practice review at 4:15 p.m. today on the intramural fields south of the Military Science building. It will be a practice review preparing the units for the regular spring review in April. At that time a special inspection party from the 10th Air Force at Selfridge Air Force base, Mt. Clemons, Mich., will review the University unit. Col. Lynn R. Moore, professor of air science and tactics, will be in charge of the review today. He will be assisted by Lt. Col. James J. Hausman, associate professor of air science, and Maj. George C. Whitely, assistant professor of air science. The cadets, participating in full dress, will be divided into three groups for the review. Cadet-Col. Eugene Haley, wing commander, will act as troop commander for the review. The AFROTC drum and bugle corps will also participate. Wednesday D-Day For Names On Cover Wednesday is the last day students may pay 35 cents to have their names embossed in gold on the cover of the 1982 Jayhawker, Richard Eackney, business manager, announced. Names will be taken until 5 p.m. at the Hawkwer office and the information booth. First issues may also be picked up. Importance of Being Earnest ToOpen At 8 p.m.Wednesday "The Importance of Being Earnest," a speech and drama department play will open at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Fraser theater for four nights. The play is said to have been written by Oscar Wilde principally to "say a great many witty things." Students may exchange ID cards for reserved seat tickets at the ticket office in Green hall. Admission for others is $1. According to Life magazine, the plot is "of monumental unimportance." The high-face comedy is full of witty and satirical statements about love, life and morals of the Victorian period. The story concerns a London dandy, John Ernest Worthing and his friend Algernon in their pursuit of two young ladies. The most amusing portions of the play come in Ernest's subsequent unraveling of his true identity. Entertainment and confusion are added as both romancers assume the name "Ernest." The play, after a long run on Broadway in 1947, has had a recent widespread revival especially in community and summer theaters. Kansan Editorials University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Dec. 4, 1951 If further refutation of the outrageous attack is wanted, a review might be taken of a poll of Korean correspondents on the MacArthur dismissal by the Saturday Review of Literature. Eighty-seven per cent of the men polled felt Truman was right in dismissing the general. Fifty-two per cent thought the morale of the troops had not been affected by the removal. Thirty per cent thought it had been boosted and three per cent thought it had been lowered. General MacArthur's former chief of intelligence Maj. Gen. Charles Willoughby, last week tagged six newsmen and three magazines with blame for the firing of his ex-boss. General's Charge Brings Investigation In the ensuing public discussions and investigations, little was said of the blame which must go to MacArthur for the defeat at the hands of the Chinese Reds. And yet it was his decisions, more than any other factor, which disqualified him as an adviser on global and Far Eastern strategy. In the bloody retreat of the First Marine division alone, more than 5,000 men were killed, wounded or frost bitten. The Marines had advanced up to the Changjin reservoir on the Yalu on orders from the Army. Although the increasing frequency of ambushes warned them of considerable enemy concentration, they were told that only a division of Reds was in the area. The individual newsmen involved have given a more than ample rebuke to the deposed intelligence officer. In doing so they have again bared the circumstances surrounding MacArthur's tragic strategy. Willoughby charged that their "biased, prejudiced and inaccurate" news coverage of the Korean war had "created an atmosphere of tension, uneasiness and distrust between Tokyo and Washington." He defended MacArthur's strategy as UN commander. On Nov. 25—a day before the Red onslaught—they were ordered to move on in spite of field reports of enemies to the south and west. They were ordered to attack the day of the Red offensive and for two days afterward in order to deflect the main enemy force from the Eighth Army. Two Marine regiments were sent against a dozen or more Chinese divisions! The charges bring to the front a situation which has long been crying for investigation. That is a thorough review of the causes of the humiliating and unnecessary American army retreat from the Yalu river. On Nov. 28, 80,000 to 120,000 Reds attacked and the gruesome retreat down "Nightmare Alley" began. The bitter details have been reported in the press and newsreels. The man responsible for this and the other defeats are Douglas MacArthur and his intelligence officers—including General Willoughby. Instead of an intense grilling as to the exact motivations for his decisions, MacArthur was interviewed by the Senate investigating committee as an expert on Far Eastern policy. The debate speaks for itself. At one point Senator McMahon did ask MacArthur about his judgment in recommending measures against Red China in view of his estimate at the Yalu. MacArthur replied that everything involved in international relations is a gamble, a risk, and the matter was dropped! Because that which is sordid commands more attention than that which is good, college students today are definitely on the defensive. The white banner of American colleges must look ragge dto the beholder. MacArthur said the Chinese would not enter the war and that their forces at the Manchurian border were no threat, that they would be slaughtered if they crossed the Yalu. The country has been told by newspapers, magazines and movies that we have lost our integrity, our morals, thrive on "fixed" athletics, are social snobs, and are carrying on other ugly practices which even the big ears of the press have not caught but are willing to imagine plausible. MacArthur, as did Willoughby, attempted to justify the lapse in intelligence on the grounds that aerial reconnaissance, which would have given them the number of enemy troops, was forbidden for political reasons. The joint chiefs of staff revealed, however, that MacArthur had led some to believe that by reconnaissance over the China coast, and in some cases inland. WE PROTEST. This sudden upsweep of dirt by the press, radio and movies is dangerous because it is based partly on the truth. That there are cases of shady dealings in college sports, that there are many incidents of snobbery in Greek fraternities, that some students take illegal shortcuts to good grades, and that some have low moral standards cannot be denied. Even if effective approaches to information on the enemy had been denied MacArthur, where did he get the sources for his recommendations at Wake Island? At this Oct., 1950, meeting, he told President Truman that the war would be over by Christmas. He even offered the second division for Europe! Colleges On the Defense What more cause need there be for an investigation? — Ben Holman. We feel justified in charging that periodicals are not really interested in correcting such evils through exposition, but are baiting the public for increased circulation. The stories are usually one-sided and well-advertised. Thus we students of 1951 bear the burden of living down the charges heaped upon us from many directions outside our walls. If our elders are sincerely concerned with this supposed degeneration of America's youth, the logical course of action is the encouragement of the real achievements of American colleges. Too seldom do magazines feature the scientific research, play productions, books, poems, and short stories of college students. What large segment of society is not vexed by the vices of some of its members? Our position is ironic when one looks back to the years when a student's primary concern was to meet the code of intellectual integrity which one accepted with the privilege of being an American college student. —Cincinnati News Record. Daily Hansan News Room Student Newspaper of the Adv. Room KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU 376 Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York City. EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief ... Alan Marshall Editorial Associate ... Anne Snyder NEWS STAFF Managing Editor ... Charles Price Assistant Managing Editors ... Nancy Anderson, Benjamin Holman, Lee Shepeard, Ellsworth Zahm City Editor ... Joe Taylor Sports Editor ... Charles Burch Telegraph Editor ... Don Sarter Society Editor ... Katrina Swartz News Adviser ... Victor J. Danilov BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager ... Bob Sydney Advertising Manager ... Dorothy Hedrick Assistant Adv. Manager ... Dick Hale National Adv. Manager ... Bill Taggart Circulation Manager ... Elaine Blaylock Promotion Manager ... Ted Barbera Business Adviser ... R. W. Doores I saw your letter in the Daily Kansan of Nov. 9 and I agree with every word of it. Couldn't be that KU men, having grown so much faster than American industry, now appear "too big for their breeches?" Dr. Charles A. Silen Oak Park, Ill. College '07 Medicine '10 Seven per cent of the pedestrians killed in urban automobile accidents last year were crossing intersections against the signal. Backs Ise Charge To John Ise: Mail subscription: $ a semester. $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans. every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods are on the Monday of March 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. A New Brannan Plan? The administration is almost ready to bring forth its 1952 successor to the controversial Brannan farm plan which was so bitterly opposed last year by some farm groups and later rejected by Congress. For the past month Agriculture Secretary Charles Brannan and his aides have been checking the results of a "grass roots" survey conducted to see what the federal government can do to provide more help for small farmers. The resulting proposals undoubtedly will be a major issue in the coming campaign. The administration will be making a determined effort to keep the rural votes it won in 1948. Beginning early in the summer the Agriculture department sponsored thousands of meetings of farmers and others interested in agriculture. At these meetings they discussed the present government role in crop controls, price supports, farm loans and research programs. Each local meeting was asked to submit recommendations which in turn were incorporated in county and state reports. These were due in Washington not later than Oct. 15. A special committee made up of department officials and representatives of private farm organizations then began going over the reports looking for ideas to improve the present farm program. Secretary Brannan specifically instructed the meetings that he wanted to know how his department might better serve the millions of small farmers who found it difficult to farm successfully. He spoke particularly of those who were handicapped by inadequate land, machinery, livestock or knowledge. The nation would have a balanced farm production, he feels, if every acre of farm land were used for the purpose for which it is best suited, if every hour of farm labor were efficiently used, and if the latest farming methods were adopted. He believes that if the productivity of the sub-standard farms could be increased, many of agriculture's problems which show up in demands for price supports and other financial aid would tend to disappear. Although the details of the program have not been made public yet, they are expected to cause a good deal of controversy. Already the idea of the poll has incurred the opposition of the powerful Farm Bureau federation. Officials of that organization have refused to take part in the discussions and in many states have advised their members to remain aloof. It is their contention that Brannan is wrong in attempting to inject the Agriculture department into the field of policy determination. They believe that the department should concern itself solely with administration. But despite whatever criticisms are presented, two recommendations appear certain to emerge from the survey. First, it will be reported that there is needed a broader technical assistance program to aid the less efficient farmers. Second, the department will ask for a larger farm loan program designed to help such farmers to acquire land, machinery, equipment, livestock and the knowledge needed to operate efficient units. Joe Taylor. Letters To The Editor Sophomore Class President Lashes 'Senior Superiority' Dear Editor: Many persons may have thought as they left Hoch auditorium last Friday night that the seniors had actually shown their superiority in the class contests held between the varsity-freshman basketball game and the Jayhawk Follies. This is wrong! Not only did they show a lack of superiority but they also showed that in order to win, they had to use dishonest methods. Let me enumerate a few of the events which took place Friday night that show the true caliber of the "skilled" seniors. According to the Nov. 30 Daily Kansas, the "grudge battle" was to be held at the half time of the game. The apparent confusion of the M.C. and other seniors at half time and the fact that the battle was held at the end of the game makes it obvious that the seniors failed to make proper arrangements with the officials. Contrary to the words of Woody Davis, master of ceremonies, "the seniors wear hats at all times," neither Woody nor the queen were In the senior-sophomore contest which involved passing a ring from one pencil to another, the seniors gave themselves a decided advantage by using a much larger ring. The sophomores won in spite of the odds. wearing senior hats. In the "bag" race (named for the seniors), the seniors again stacked the deck. They locked the sophomore's suitcase and kept the key, and also gave them more clothes to don—more binding ones at that—shoes, etc. The third contest was definitely to the senior's advantage. They having much bigger heads, could do the head-on-baseball-bat contest much easier. The seniors had a time advantage, too. They had been practicing those skills for weeks, whereas the sophomores were notified at the scene of the contest. All fair-minded persons can see from this that the sophomores are "among the living" and the seniors are "just a bunch of dead beats." Marilyn Miller Sophomore class president 951 Page 3 University Daily Kansan and y ey ide Construction Of Million Dollar Hall HighlightsMedicalSchoolExpansion A $1,600,000 six-story service building which will provide service to the rest of the University hospital is now being erected in Kansas City, Kan. The basement floor will include a storage and receiving room. There will also be a central supply workroom, orthopedic room and printing office. The first floor will contain kitchens and dining rooms. An obstetrics ward and delivery room will be included on the second floor. Patients' bedrooms will also be on this floor. Surgical patients' rooms will be on the fourth floor. The building will be an addition to the present "D" building and will be a 140-foot extension. The fifth and sixth floors will include a chest disease ward. Other additions to the Medical center are a medical science building, and women's residence. The six-story basic medical sciences building is expected to be completed in April, 1952. The ground floor will contain a necropsy suite and morgue, men and women student lockers and an anatomy dissecting suite for residents. An auditorium seating 180 persons will be on the first floor. Student laboratories, a pathology museum and a museum for the public with educational displays on public health and tuberculosis prevention will also be on this floor. On the second floor will be the department of pathology laboratories and offices. The department of pharmacology will have its laboratories and offices on the third floor. The fourth floor will house offices and laboratories of the bacteriology department. The fifth floor will contain an enlargement of the present animal quarters as well as space for radioactive isotope research. The design is modern and parallels the Women's residence which is now under construction and will house women doctors, interns and nurses. It is expected to be completed in April, 1952. A new cardiovascular disease unit was recently established on the fourth floor of the clinic building. This unit offers combined facilities of a cardiovascular laboratory, outpatient clinic and in-patient consultation rooms for the first time at the School of Medicine. 12 THE BASIC MEDICAL SCIENCES BUILDING now under construction at the University Medical center in Kansas City, Kan. is expected to be completed in April, 1952. The building is being built at a cost of $1,600,000. The six-story, T-shaped building will contain the departments of pathology, pharmacology and microbiology, and two public museums. Air General To Talk At Military Banquet General Hutchison will speak at a banquet preceding the Military ball. He will be guest of honor at the ball. Brig. Gen. David W. Hutchison, commanding general of the 21st Air division, Forbes Air Force base, Topeka, will speak on "Young Officers in the Air Force" to Arnold and Hap Arnold Jayhawk Air societies and ROTC staff members Friday. He served under Lt. Gen. Ennis C. Whitehead for four years. General Whitehead is the highest commissioned officer to come from Kansas. The biggest gold nugget ever found was 54 inches long, $ \frac{1}{4} $ inches thick and weighed 195 pounds. It was dug out of the Morgan claim at Carson Hill, Calaveras county, California, in 1854. Eighteen members of The Future Business Leaders of America have formed a typing pool to raise money for the club treasury. Dr. E. Grey Dimond, assistant professor of medicine, is director of the unit. Any student who has taken a business course is eligible to enter, Marjorie Seeley, president, said. Most of the present members are business education or secretarial training majors. Form Typing Pool To Boost Treasury Members of the pool are Lo Ree Waterson, Anneliese Schnierle, Louise Garvin, Darlene Clark, Marlene Shaw, Ruth Hobbs, Esther Harms, Mary Klooz, Mary Hadley, Jeanne Parkerson, Patricia Kennedy, Frank Hammett, Donna Hillier, Joan Fink, Marjorie Seeley, Margaret Hazard, Robert DeVinney and Joseph Cona. By using our one day special service you can bring your uniform in as late as Thursday and pick it up in time for the Ball. MILITARY BALL UNIFORMS Need cleaning and pressing after today's Review. We will give your uniform a sharp military pressing job. - 3 DAY SERVICE 1 DAY SPECIALS NEW YORK CLEANERS PHONE 75 Grover R. Keller, Graduate OFK In 1942, Died Nov. 21 University officials have received word that Grover R. Keller, '42 graduate in mechanical engineering who obtained his master's degree in aeronautical engineering in 1949, died Nov. 21 at St. Charles, Mo. Tuesday, Dec. 4, 1951 His death was attributed to cornary thrombosis. Post Office's Establishment DatesTo1908 In that year the federal government allowed $250 a year for expenses of the office. It was located in the University business offices in Fraser hall. The University post office, located in the basement of Strong hall and maintained for the benefit of the students, was established in 1908. The postal work was done under supervision of Registrar George O. Foster and two clerks selected from the student body. The steady increase in business during the next 10 years warranted an independent station with a postmaster. On April 1, 1922, the federal government took complete charge of the office. The office remained in Fraser hall until January, 1924, when it was moved to the basement of Strong hall upon its completion. The post office is mainly a receiving office for mail but also performs all the duties of the downtown office. Office hours are 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. week-days and 8:30-11:30 a.m. Saturday. L.M.O.C. - No. 9 - WATCH FOR IT Everything You Need To Do Laundry Quickly and Easily At RISK'S Self-Service Laundry 613 Vt. Call 623 EUROPE 1952 Low-cost transportation and tours to Europe for 1952 are rapidly being booked to capacity. It is imperative to make your reservations now for choice accommodations. Downs offers a complete selection of SITA tours (Student International Travel Association) ranging from $500. These trips vary from the Spartan bicycle tours to the Grand Tours at $1800. Special individual program offered this year for those who wish to live with selected families in France, England, Germany or Switzerland. Rates from $550. A few study tours carrying university credit are offered from $550 to $850. See the Olympic Games at Helsinki, Finland. Special extension, $150. FREE DESCRIPTIVE FOLDER ON EUROPE Travel available upon request No Obligation. Phone 3661 for all your travel needs open evenings 6:30 p.m.-9:00 p.m. No Booking Fees. No Booking Fees. downs travel service 1015% massachusetts st. lawrence, kansas Patronize Kansan Advertisers s. ...There the hermit slaked my burning li Tennyson: Holy Grail Could be he found Coke at the hermitage. For Coca-Cola is everywhere ...and everywhere it has the same delicious and refreshing quality. DRINK Coca-Cola 5¢ DRINK Coca-Cola REGULAR PAT. OFF. 5¢ BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY LAWRENCE COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. "Coke" is a registered trade-mark. $ \textcircled{C} $ 1951, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Dec. 4, 1951 Big Clyde Scores 28 As KU Downs Baylor By CHARLEY BURCH Daily Kansan Sports Editor With All-American Clyde Lovellette funneling through 28 points, Kansas successfully opened its 1951-52 basketball campaign with a 57-46 win over Baylor Monday night before 2,500 fans in Hoch auditorium. The Jayhawkers, who never were headed after taking a 5-4 lead in the early minutes of play, are host to Denver in the second game of the season Saturday night. Despite Lovellette's 28-point effort, he was pressed for individual scoring honors by Baylor guard Norman Mullins, whose deadly long shots plus a pair of charity flings netted him 24 points. Phog Allen's five broke from a 28-20 halftime lead to score eight consecutive points to boost the margin to 36-20—their largest lead of the evening. The Jayhawkers, never threatened seriously by the visiting Golden Bears, unveiled one pleasant surprise in LaVannes Squires, the first Negro to play varsity basketball at KU. The six-foot forward from Wichita pleased the crowd and his coach with his rebounding and ball-hawking. He added a pair of field goals-one of them from considerably beyond the free throw range. Dean Kelley, six-foot junior, also displayed considerable ball handling talent. He started the game along side of Bill Hougland at the guard position. Baylor's Ralph Johnson, the Southwest conference's leading scorer last season, was held to 10 points—largely through the defensive efforts of Houghton. Baylor took the lead in the first 40 seconds with Derrell Davis breaking the scoring ice. Two minutes later Lovelletta scored his first five points to put Kansas ahead 5-4. From then on Kansas stayed out in front with a 16-9 first quarter lead and a 28-20 halftime count. Davis kept his team in the running through the first period with five points until Norman Mullins began to *lend* the range on his set shots. He demonstrated the accuracy which made him his team's second top scorer last year. Coach Bill Henderson's Bears used screen plays considerably but were unable to can many of their shots from close under. They managed, however, to pull within two baskets of the Jayhawkers in the second period with a score of 17-13. The Golden Bruins tried a full-court press late in the second quarter and continued to use it throughout most of the remainder of the game. It proved only a partial success as Kansas continued to control the ball and the scoring. Both teams showed signs of firstgame raggedness at times with several miscues resulting. B. H. Born, 6 feet 9-inch center, made his first apparance late in the third quarter when he replaced Colossal Clyde briefly. He scored only one free throw during his play at the post. At the start of the fourth quarter, Coach Allen had only one starter, Bob Kenney, on the court. The other positions were filled with Everett Dye, Squires, Weston Johnson and Born. He switched his crew around a lot with most of the starters in the game at the end. Until the last two minutes, Coach Allen had his team break last year's policy of not shooting free throws. KU's cagers scored 21 points from 26 attempts but took the ball out of bounds twice in the dying minutes of the game. Thirteen of the points came in the second half without a miss. K-State Posts 2nd Win By Downing Ohio State Manhattan — (U.P.)— Kansas State college's basketball team had another intersection victim on its list today. The sharpshooting Big Seven conference champions started slow but went by Ohio State midway in the first quarter to clinch the game, 78 to 54, here before 11,000 fans last night. K-State had a 20-17 margin at the close of the first period and then turned on the steam to blaze in front the remainder of the game by a margin never less than 15 points. It was 41-24 at the intermission. Center Paul Ebert of Ohio was high scorer with 18 points. Forward Jesse Prisock led K-State with 12. In about one out of five fatal traffic accidents during 1950, interference with vision was reported. Here's everything needed for miniature photography ... including flash and color KODAK PONY CAMERA OUTFIT A SUPERB GIFT $53.65 Here's everything needed for miniature photography . . . including flash and color PONY CAMERA FIT KODAK Pony Camera Outfit A SUPERB GIFT KODAK PONY CAMERA OUTFIT A SUPERB GIFT $53.65 MOSSER WOLF MOSSER-WOLF $53.65 MOSSER WOLF MOSSER-WOLF Still Love(ly)llette Name G-GA F-FA F Pts. Kenney 2-11 2-2 2 6 Heitholt 0-3 4-4 0 4 Lienhard 1-6 3-3 0 4 Lovellette 10-16 8-12 3 28 Born 0-1 1-1 1 0 Kelley 0-1 0-0 2 0 Johnson 1-1 1-2 0 3 Hougland 2-4 2-2 1 6 Squires 2-3 0-0 0 4 Kansas (57) Totals 18-48 21-26 13 57 Baylor (48) | Name | G-GA | F-FA | F | Pts. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Johnson | 5-12 | 0-1 | 1 | 10 | | Davis | 2-6 | 1-4 | 5 | 5 | | Harris | 1-3 | 0-1 | 2 | 2 | | Starkey | 1-4 | 2-4 | 5 | 4 | | Hovde | 0-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | | Mullins | 11-19 | 2-4 | 4 | 24 | | Fleetwood | 0-3 | 1-1 | 1 | 2 | | Strasburger | 0-4 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | | Wimp | 0-4 | 0-1 | 3 | 0 | Totals 20-56 6-16 23 46 Half-time score: Kansas 28, Bay- ler 20 Officials: Kite Thomas (Kansas State) and Jim Willcoxson (Colorado). One-fifth of fatal motor vehicle accidents in 1950 involved a driver of pedestrian who had been drinking. Travel Service THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Tel. 30 8th & Mass. Among certain South African native tribes a young man must not only earn his bride by working as a servant for her father but is also required to pay his father-in-law for each of his own children. To match the intensity of cultivation of India's most crowded regions, an American farmer would have to feed, clothe and house nearly 100 persons on the yield from his "south forty." OCEAN FRESH SEA Foods ARE OUR SPECIALTY French Fried Shrimp Broiled Maine Lobster Soft Shell Crabs Florida Pompano ... also TENDER STEAKS FRIED CHICKEN DUCK'S Sea Food CAFE 824 Vermont The Biggest Stock in Town! ALL THE NEW RELEASES on 45 and 78 r.p.m. COME IN AND SEE OUR COMPLETE STOCK OF ALBUMS 9th and Mass. St. The Record Nook Xmas Gifts NEED IDEAS FOR A CHRISTMAS GIFT? A I 1 Give him (her) a LEATHER BRIEF CASE or BAG. A new shipment now in. SEE THEM NOW AT YOUR STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Dec. 4, 1951 Page 5 Bounding out the top 10 were Princeton, Stanford, Wisconsin, Baylor and Texas Christian. Vols Voted No.1 For 1951 Season New York —(U.P.)— Tennessee was killed the No. 1 team in the nation for the 1951 football season by the United Press coaches ratings board which released its final rankings today. 2 Oddly, Tennessee did not win its conference championship even though it won the national championship. Georgia Tech took the Southeastern conference title because it won seven league games to Tennessee's five. The Duke tie was outside the conference. The Vols' single wingback machine, assembled by Coach Robert Neyland, wound up its regular campaign undefended and tied with a 35-27 triumph over Vanderbilt Saturday, and that was enough for most of the 35 outstanding coaches who rate the teams weekly during the season. Twenty-three of them placed Tennessee first on their list of 10, and the others placed the Vols sixth or better. Michigan state—also a perfect-record team—ranked second in the final go-round. Illinois, the Rose Bowl representative from the Big Ten, was placed third. Maryland fourth and Georgia Tech fifth. Not one of the top five lost a game, although Illinois was tied by Ohio State and Georgia Tech by Duke. 8 'B' Games On Schedule The Kansas "B" basketball team is scheduled to play eight games this season, their first being here Wednesday with a team from Forbes Air Force base of Topeka. The game will be in Hoch auditorium at 7:30 p.m. No admission will be charged students. Schedule Dec. 19—Olathe Naval Air Station-hoa Jan. 8: Forbes Air Force base Topeka Feb. 7: Warrenrsburg Teachers "B"—here Feb. 8: Kansas State "B"—here Feb. 14: Olathe Naval Air station —Olathe Feb. 20. Warrensburg Teachers “B” Warrensburg, Mo. eb. 28. Kansas State "B"—Manhattan By JACKIE JONES The first round of the women's intramural basketball will begin tonight with the defending champion Kappa Alpha Theta team playing the Freshman BL team. Women's Basketball Starts Tonight Play will continue through a 56-game.schedule for six weeks. This year over 200 women on 29 teams will play for the championship. The games will be played in Robinson gym instead of the annex as in past seasons. All games will be Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, and anyone wishing to watch should go to the courts on the second floor. The champion Theta have almost the same squad as last season, but several teams will offer plenty of opposition. Your Plymouth Man . . . has a used car priced for you. Buddy GALLAGHER 634 Mass. Ph.1000 CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY (Nationally Accredited) An outstanding college serving a splendid profession. Doctor of Optometry degree in three years for students entering with sixty or more semester credits in specified Liberal Arts courses. REGISTRATION MARCH 3. Students are granted professional recognition by the U.S. Department of Defense and Selective Service. Excellent clinical facilities. Athletic and recreational activities. Dormitories on the CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY 1845-H Larrabee Street Chicago 14, Illinois THE DRAWING FOR THE GRAND PRIZES OF CARL'S FREE FOOTBALL PICK-EM CONTEST WILL BE HELD WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5 AT OUR STORE! IF YOU WERE ONE OF THE THREE WEEKLY WINNERS YOU ARE ELIGIBLE TO WIN A BOTANY '500' SUIT PAIR LEONARD MACY SLACKS BOTANY WOOL SHIRT AND YOU ARE INVITED TO ATTEND THE DRAWING AT 9:00 A.M. Contest Winners - Dec. 1st 1ST: GEORGE LEARNED 2ND: JOE WESTON SMITH 3RD: R. L. BARTH Phone CARLS GOOD CLOTHES 905 Mass. St. 905 Foster hall with Ernestine Dehlinger and Shirley Mickelson from the varsity last year, Alpha Chi Omega, Jayettes and Delta Delta Delta should be strong contenders. The 29 squads are divided into six divisions of five teams each. 7 p.m. Temruth vs. Alpha Delta Pi Kappa Alpha Theta vs. Freshman BL Tonight's Games 7 p.m. 8 p.m. Foster vs. Freshman KMM 8 p.m. 9 p.m. Sellards vs. Alpha Phi Jayettes vs. Freshman MJ Wednesday's Games 7 p.m. Monchonsia vs. Alpha Omicron Pi Tri Delt vs. Freshman BA Wednesday's Games Co-Hops vs. Watkins Delta Gamma vs. Freshman AA 9 p.m. Locksley vs. Sigma Kappa Miller vs. Freshman MK PRECISIVE WATCH REPAIRS Watch Repair Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed Wolfson's 743 Mass. Call 675 Patronize Kansan Advertisers HOW MANY TIMES A DAY DO YOU N NHALE? 50? 100? 200? IF YOU'RE AN AVERAGE SMOKER THE RIGHT ANSWER IS OVER 200! ESTABLISHED OVER 100 YEARS PHILIP MORRIS & CO.LTD. Inc. FINEST EXCLUSIVE SMOKE BREWED MADE IN U.S.A. PHILIP MORRIS & CO. LTD. NEW YORK PHILIP MORRIS Yes, 200 times every day your nose and throat are exposed to irritation... 200 GOOD REASONS WHY YOU'RE BETTER OFF SMOKING PHILIP MORRIS! PROVED definitely milder . . . PROVED definitely less irritating than any other leading brand . . . PROVED by outstanding nose and throat specialists. EXTRA! ATTENTION ALL COLLEGE STUDENTS Every Tuesday Evening over NBC THE PHILIP MORRIS PLAYHOUSE Presents an Outstanding College Student Featured with Famous Hollywood Stars in the PHILIP MORRIS Intercollegiate Acting Competition LOVE IS SAYING IT ALL in the PHILIP MORRIS Intercollegiate Acting Competition LISTEN IN CALL FOR PHILIP MORRIS Page 6 University Daily Kansan tuesday, Dec. 4, 1951 | ROTC's To Attend Ball Linen Made Of Pineapple To Be On Sale At YW Bazaar The YWCA will have its annual Christmas bazaar in Henley house, 1236 Oread street, on Friday and Saturday. Most of the organ houses on the campus have made various things which they will donate to the bazaar. From Alpha Chi pi placemats; Alpha Delta Pi, dolls made of socks; Alpha Omieron Pi, candy; Alpha Phi, candy and yarn bears, and Chi Omega, lunch sets. Delta Delta Delta, tea-towels, aprons and tablecloth sets; Delta Gamma, velvet ties; Gamma Phi Beta, baskets made of Christmas cards; Kappa Kappa Gamma, Christmas stockings and aprons, and Pi Beta Phi, potholders. The YWCA has obtained many goods on a consignment basis, that is, the organization receives a certain per cent of the sales. Among the consignment goods will be jewelry, Vermont maple sugar and syrup, fine linens from Gatlinburg, Tenn., and wood carvings, woven baskets and mats and pineapple cloth from the Philippine Islands. Corbin hall, denim aprons, coke aprons, hostess aprons; Miller hall, baked goods; Wattins hall, baked goods, and North College hall, silk fireplace mittens. Pineapple cloth, which is made from the leaves of the pineapple, is considered by some persons to be the finest linen made. The cloth for sale at the bazaar is all handwoven and hand embroidered; varying in price from $2 to $100. The pineapple cloth was brought to the U. S., last summer by Mrs. J. D. Bravo, whose husband is a research assistant in chemistry, Mr. and Mrs. Bravo formerly lived in the Philippines. The Ingrots, a mountain Official Bulletin Faculty forum, Wednesday noon, Faculty club. "Education under Totalitarianism." Faculty and staff welcome. KuKu club, 7.15 p.m. Thursday. Pine room, Union. Election of officers, attendance required. Pledges 7 p.m. Obtain application blanks for the SA scholarship in dean of women's office. All blanks must be turned in by Thursday, Dec. 13. Tau Sigma, 7:15 tonight, Robin- on gvm. Christian Science organization, 7 tam Thursday. Danforth chapel. Last "Dates and Mates" lecture, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Henley house, sponsored by YMCA and YWCA. The Rev. Dale Turner, "Religion and Marriage." International club 7:45 p.m. Thursday, girl's gym, Haskell Institute. Bus leaves Union 7:30 p.m. Kolk dances and songs. U.S. Air Force Rifle club, 7:30 tonight, 107 M.S. Dues must be paid. Campus affairs committee, 7:15 2003 Stang Campus affairs committee, 715 p.m. Wednesday, 222 Strong. Sophomore convocation, 10 a.m. Wednesday, Fraser theater. Shopo- wores excused from classes. All Student Council, 7:30 tonight, Pine room. Quill club, 4 today, East room, Union, Coffee. Social Work club, 4 p.m. Wednesday, AWS lounge. Brief but important meeting. Members urged to attend. Graduate coffee, 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Hawk's Nest. Chess club, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday, 11 Strong, 5th round of tournament. Kappa Beta covered dish supper, 30-7 tonight, Myers hall. Guest night. Deutscher Verein Donnerstag, 5 pm. 502 Fraser. Deutsche Studenten erzeahlen von ihrer Heimat. College, education, and journalism juniors and seniors: The English Proficiency examination will be given Saturday from 2 to 5 p.m. Register in the office of your dean today or Wednesday. Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity, 7:15 tonight, English room, Union. Program. Student chapter ASTE, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Lindley hall auditorium. Mr. Harl Day of Butler Manufacturing company, will speak on "Production and Tooling." Annual joint meeting with parent chapter of Kansas City. people of the Philippines, made the cloth, said Mrs. Bravo. Students who have completed ROTC courses and received commissions but have not graduated, and former ROTC students who are enrolled in the graduate school may attend the Military ball by paying the $2 fee to their respective ROTC offices. The ball will be Friday, Dec. 7, in the Military Science hall. CQ-Code practice session Wednesday night, E. E. lab. Interested students welcome. I A Military Ball Date A Military Ball Date Is a special event requiring you to look your loveliest. Make An Appointment Today Phone 997 MARVIN'S Triangles Give Hour Dance Triangle engineering fraternity entertained Alpha Delta Pi sorority at an hour dance Thursday evening. 620 W. 9th Thirty-seven per cent of the pedestrians killed in urban traffic accidents last year were crossing streets between intersections. BEFORE A BLIZZARD YOUR CAR DON'T WAIT FOR TROUBLE! NEEDS TUNED UP AND PUT IN SHAPE FOR ZERO TEMPERATURES. DON'T WAIT FOR A BREAKDOWN! HAVE THESE POINTS CHECKED TODAY AT SANDERS! - RADIATOR ENGINE - TRANSMISSION BRAKES - DIFFERENTIAL - BODY - CRANKCASE - LIGHTS SANDERS MOTORS 622-24 Mass. Phone 616 No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money. Laughs The Department of Speech and Drama Presents Laughs Laughs! THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST Tomorrow, Thurs., Fri., Sat. Fraser Theatre Curtain At Eight I-D Cards Admit! Present I-D Cards at Box Office Basement Green Hall for Reserved Seat Tickets 9-12, 1-4. he pe nfc ac crossing NO ENJOYMENT! Brunei, small but oil-rich British protectorate on the northwest coast of Borneo, is one of the few countries in the world today which has a sizeable cash surplus after expenditures. It's Wonderful Loafing in Genuine Ripons ENJOY "stocking-foot" comfort in a pair of famous Ripons! Washable pure soft wool and glove leather soles. New styles in many beautiful colors and patterns for men, women and children. It's Wonderful Loafing in Genuine Ripons from $2.50 to $3.95 Royal College Shop 837-839 Massachusetts Air Force Cuts Waiting Period Persons qualifying now or in the near future as aviation pilot cadets can expect assignment to the April 17 class, the Air Force has announced. The reduced waiting period represents a decided change from earlier policies, officials said. Because the backlog of accepted persons was large earlier, the delay between acceptance and assignment was as much as 10 or 12 months. Reasonably quick entry into cadet observer classes also is forecast for men now qualifying. There are eight pilot classes a year. Some 700 airmen are earmarked for the class beginning Jan. 16 and slightly over this number will begin training in the following class, March 4. As of this week, however, there are practically no accepted airmen on hand for the April 17 class which has a quota of over 750 airmen. Other classes scheduled for next year begin May 29, July 17, Aug. 22, Oct. 2 and Nov. 16. Any student interested should contact the US Army and US Air Force recruiting station at 609 Massachusetts or phone 575. Ireland To Talk On Park The rugged beauty of the new Big Bend National park will be shown in full-color pictures and described by Dr. H. A. Ireland Wednesday evening at the University club, 10074 Massachusetts; The lecture will begin at 8 p.m. and club members may bring guests said Prof. Elmer F. Beth, host. Dr. Ireland, professor of geology at the University since 1948, has made seven trips into the Rio Grande area in Texas which was made a national park in 1944, and covers 788,000 acres. Dr. Ireland was director of geological research for Standard Oil in Texas before he came to Kansas. During the war, he was with the U. S. Geological Service. He received his B. A. at Ohio Wesleyan, M. S. at Oklahoma, and Ph.D. at Chicago. Non-collision traffic accidents on roadways, overturning and running off the road caused the deaths of 10,700 people during 1950. TICKETS AND RESERVATIONS FIRST NATIONAL BANK Dr. Bier (18 Days until Christmas Vacation) DESTINATION - SANTA CLAUS From K.C. (Round Trip Tax .. Bnf ..Dallas ..$71.07 CAL ..Denver ..76.48 TWA-EAL ..Chattanooga ..88.44 MCA ..Minneapolis ..63.37 C&S ..Birmingham ..85.33 Ask us about —Sky Coach —Family Rates —Cruises —Tours —Steamships EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR AMERICAN AIRLINES See Your Travel Agent At THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE TRAVEL AGENCY Miss Rose Gieseman, Manager Miss Rose Gleseman, Manager 8th and Mass. St. Telephone 30 Classified Ads Classified Advertising Rates 25 words or less ... 50c Additional words ... 1c One day Three Five days days 75c $1.00 45c 2.99 Additional words ... Ie ... ze Terms; Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (excluding public holidays). Daily Kansan Business office, Journalism bldg., not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. FOR SALE TUXEDO FOR SALE Cleaned and in ex- tention 35-37. 12-6 landlady. 3566. 12-6 Christmas Bazaar HOMECOMING GUESTS! ! Be a smart hostess by using Jayhawk Football Glasses. A set of Libby Safedge with the Jayhawk on them in three brilliant colors, only $2.95. Rowlands Book Stores, 1401 Ohio St., 1237 Iread. 12-4 DO YOUR Christmas shopping early at the Y.W.Q.A. Bazaar, Dec. 7th and 8th from 8 to 8. Gifts from your campus and all over the world. 12-7 CRUMBO ETCHINGS for Christmas; a saturn, Pat Read, across from 12-7 Courthouse. WHAT'S NEW! The newest KU novelity is the Jayhawk Football Glass. It's a Libby Safedge with the Jayhawk in three brilliant colors. A set of eight for only $2.95. Rowlings Book Store, 1401 Ohio st., 1237 Oread. 12-4 SWINGLINE TOT STAPLER are now in stock. See them at your Student Union Book Store. Only 98c. 12-7 JUST ARRIVED, new shipment of pencil erasers. Soft and self c-aning for drawings and tracings. At your Student Union Book Store. 12-7 TRADE-IN SALE! ! ! Between now and today (all parts intact) for 20 per cent of the price of the New Sheaffer Pen of your choice and how to buy the Union Book Store. 12-7 BOOK LAMPS! The original clip-on lamp with 6 foot cord and 10 watt lamp. An unusual gift for only $1.98. Student Union Book Store. 12-7 ORDER EARLY! Give books for Christmas this year. The gift that it is treasured more each year. Come in and order any wish from your Student University Book Store. 12-7 MISCELLANEOUS COLLEGE SENIOR has 20 hours a week to work for somebody. Type, general office work, etc. Gotta eat! Call Norm Storer, 858M after 7 p.m. I2-7 TRANSPORTATION University Daily Kansan AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether on domestic or international itineraries. Phone Mrs. Lois Odafter, 610-835-6193, Downs Service, 1015 Mass. Ask us about family rates, skoy camp and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book in advance during summer. Call Miss Glesenam at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30- FOR RENT RENT A TYPEWRITER NOW! Choose from our wide selection of portables. Pick your grades improve when type your papers. Student Union Book Store. 12-7 HELD OVER! THRU THURSDAY SHOCKING! THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD! Can We Survive? Will It Destroy Us? NBC RADIO RELEASE Evening Shows at 7:00-9:00 Continuous Sat. and Sunday ADDED FUN "BUGS BUNNY" "ALPINE CHAMPS" New PATEE PHONE 321 Tuesday, Dec. 4, 1951 ARGE DOUBLE ROOM for two men they have a good location, steam at 1324W. 12-7 NICE, QUIET apartment for boys. Pri- ate bath, bills paid, $4$ month, 12- 45. BUSINESS SERVICE TYPING: Themes, term papers, and mimeograph work. Accurate service by Business Leaders of America typing pool. Contact Anneliese Schriner, phone 534. Page SHORTY'S BARBER SHOP at 837 New Hampshire has two barbers hardy and three on Friday and Saturday. Haircuts 75c. Plenty of reading material. Give us a try. Our motto, cleanliness and good service pays. 12-7 TYBPING DONE promptly and accurately. 2 hours, 5 p.m. for further information. 12-8 TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses; prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs. Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. ff EXPERIENCED TYPIST: term papers, note books, theses, medical and bibliog- illations, miscellaneous. Ms. J. Roscoe, 838 Lau, Apt. 4, upstairs. 2757J after p. 4 morn. 12-6 CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. tf RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment in this area thus assuring fast, efficient service. Vermont or Television. Phone 138: 820 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. ff TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these typing experience. M. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio. Pt 161. TYPING: Experience in theses, term papers, miscellaneous typing, and stencil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. tt STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. tf CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, maltos, home-made pies and cakes. Free parking for customers. Call 917-526-4040 a.m. a.m. tf midnight. Crystal Cafe, 69 Vt. IAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet room. All our show are out, we one-stop pet shop, everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf NOW! THRU WEDNESDAY Too Funny to miss! M.G.M Joyfully presents June Van Allyson "Johnson" "Too Young to Kiss" AM M-G-M PICTURE NOTICE I.S.A. NO. 3 NOW GOOD THRU WEDNESDAY Shows Daily at 2:30-7-9 Continuous Sat. and Sundays ADDED Color Cartoon - News Starts Thursday DICK POWELL CRY DANGER Co-starring RHONDA FLEMING Granada PHONO 45 DICK POWELL CRY DANGER Co-starring RHONDA FLEMING Granada PHONE 043 LOST BROWN BILLFOLD with ID and basket ball ticket lost on Crescent Road by The Call. Finder can keep money. Pa Davis, Phone 3493W. 12- KITTEN, half grown, grey and black striped with white blib. 1231 Oreat Phone 3683-W. Reward. 12- LADYS GOLD Bulova watch. Finds these cell Joan Harrier K51 168 239-400-7777 Patronize Kansan Advertisers GREY AND BLACK briandle-colored dor Phor 2888M. David Harmer, 1700 Kg 2888M. David Harmer, 1700 Kg BROWN BILLFOLD probably in Gra- nada theater. Finder can keep money please return billfold. Seymour Baum garden. Phone 2282W. Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWNER NEW Park-Book CUSHIONED CHAIRS NOW thru WED. Shows at 2:30-7-9:20 Vivien Leigh Marlon Brando "A Streetcar Named Desire" Admission ADULTS Matinee Night 75c $1.00 STUDENT WITH I-D CARD-ANYTIME Matinee and Night 75c CHILDREN 25c THURSDAY The Most Daring Naval Rescue Raid Of Our Time! STARBUCKS SUBMARINE COMMAND starring WILLIAM NANCY HOLDEN·OLSON WILLIAM DON BENDIX·TAYLOR A JOHN FARROW PRODUCTION A Paramount Picture Adm. 14c 60c SHOWS Thurs.-Fri. 2:30-7-9 Sat. Continuous 1 p.m. VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD LAST TIMES TONIGHT Open 6:45 "SPOILERS OF THE PLAINS" 'LOST PLANET AIRMEN' WED.-THURS. 25c-60c Fine Arts Presentation "MARRIAGE IN THE SHADOWS" (German) Medical Center Has Color TV The first color television to be set up for regular teaching has been installed at the University Medical center. It will be put to use each day in surgical and other teaching. The new system will supplant black-and-white TV in use two years at the Medical center. It presents a truer-to-life picture of organs and tissues, seen by the surgeon in actual operations. Colors will contrast and reveal differences, for instance, of nerves and arteries. Monitoring equipment radiates the pictures through a co-axial cable that goes to two teaching auditoriums and a physians' conference room. In these three places are TV receivers with two-way sound connections, making it possible for watchers to ask questions to the surgeon. An extra installation is a "silent" cable with headsets, which enables teachers during surgery to communicate without being heard by the audience: Teachers using the "silent" cable can offer suggestions and criticisms to the surgeon at work. Aside from student instruction, color TV will help practicing doctors who attend postgraduate courses at the center. The color system also will be used when an unusual case is being handled at the center. Signals will call doctors and students to the receivers. Rifle Club Vies By Mail A program of from one to three postal matches each week with colleges throughout the nation, has been scheduled for the Women's Rifle club. Matches this past week were with Beaver college, Jamestown, Pa.; Cornell university and Oklahoma A&M. Results of these matches will not be known for several days. About 30 women are now members of the club, but only the top six scorers count in official matches. Leading shooters during the past week and their scores were: Martha Combs, College senior, 98; Japy Rau, College senior, 97; ibarbara Brown, College senior, 95; Emmalou Burbank, education junior, 94; Donna McCall, College sophomore, 92 and Constance Hyre, College sophomore, 91. Plan Faculty Recreation A recreation program which will include swimming, volleyball, square dancing and handicrafts is being planned for members of the University faculty and their wives or husbands. The University branch of the American Association of University Professors, which is sponsoring the project, has sent out cards asking faculty approval of the following program: Swimming on Saturday afternoons at 4. Men members may now swim from 7 until 9 p.m. on Wednesday and Friday and from 2 until 4 on Saturdays. Swimming hours for women are 5 until 6:30 on Tuesday and Thursday and from 11 until 12 noon on Saturday. Volleyball for men has been arranged on Monday and Friday at 5 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 4, 1951 A group of seven square dance lessons costing $5 is scheduled for Friday nights. For those interested in silver craft, block printing, sketching, ceramics, screen printing or book binding, the art handicrafts room will be operated one night a week. A $6 fee will be charged each time the room is used and will be pro-rated among the group. Prof. C. Vanderwerf Honored Calvin Vanderwerf, professor of chemistry, has been elected national secretary of the chemical education section of the American Chemical society. University Daily Kansan News Roundup Violence In Canal Zone As Egyptian Students Riot Cairo, Egypt—(U.P.)—Egyptian police fired over the heads of rioting students here today and the government proclaimed a state of national emergency after British-Egyptian clashes in the Canal zone Monday in which 116 persons were killed or wounded. More than 5000 university students, led by their professors, surged through the streets demanding arms to fight the British and yelling "blood for blood" and "Egypt will avenge her martyrs." Pacific Volcano Erupts Killing 100 Manila, Philippines—(U.P.)-Volcanic Mt. Hibok-Hibok on Camiguin Island erupted today "like an atom blast three miles high" and as many as 100 persons were reported killed. Dust clouds from the explosion drifted 100 miles from the island. Navy ships were alerted for possible evacuation of the tiny island's 65,599 inhabitants. This is the third violent eruption of Hibok-Hibok in three years. Reds Want Rotation Program Halted Panmunjom, Korea—(U.P)—The Communists demanded today that the U.S. stop its troop rotation program in Korea during an armistice and insisted on their own right to build airfields during a truce. Modoc Robbery Suspects Arrested Topeka, Kan.—(U.P.)—Agents of the Kansas bureau of investigation announced here today that two youths sought in the robbery of the state bank at Modoc, Kan., have been arrested in San Diego, Calif. Agents identified the youths as Bobby Joe Goodwin, 19, and Darrell Dean Wylie, 20. They were taken into custody in a San Diego hotel. According to the agents, charges will be filed against both in California, before they are returned to Scott City, Kan., for prosecution in the $4,000 holiday. The loot already has been recovered. AMA Head Wants Halt To Socialism Los Angeles, Calif.—(U.P.)—Dr. John W. Cline, president of the American Medical association, called today for militant political action by the medical profession to halt the "creeping advance of Sociaialism." "In the main, the approach is through voluntary health insurance," he said. Christmas Gifts of Love No better time to express your love tha Gifts of Love way than with a traditional diamond ring duo! Our engagement and wedding ring sets range from the modest to the truly lavish-each pair individually chosen by us for the utmost in beauty and value. Roberts Gifts Roberts Jewelry 833 Mass. Buses were involved in one per cent of all fatal motor vehicle accidents last year. Passenger cars were involved in 73 per cent of all fatal motor vehicle accidents last year. Campus WEST Final Reduction Sale Original Price to Now Suits $55.00 $27.77 Skirts 17.95 11.85 14.95 9.85 10.95 6.85 7.95 4.85 Wool Dresses 17.95 9.85 Wool Jersey Blouses 8.95 5.85 5.95 3.85 Cardigan Sweaters 5.95 3.85 Pullover Sweaters 3.95 1.85 All Sales Final Store Hours 9'til 5:30 "A thing of beauty is a joy forever..." but Cigars are a Man's Smoke! You need not inhale to enjoy a cigar. CIGAR INSTITUTE OF AMERICA, INC. Jaro Fabry but Cigars are a Man's Smoke! but Cigars are a Man's Smoke! You need not inhale to enjoy a cigar CIGAR INSTITUTE OF AMERICA, INC. Kansas State Historical Society olved in vehicle 77 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 hours :30 Freshmen To Meet Thursday With High School Principals Forty-three Kansas high school principals will come to the University Thursday to meet with freshmen to discuss problems of adjustment from high school to college routine. The freshmen will meet in assigned rooms at a specified time. Appointment letters have been sent out by the registrar's office. James K. Hitt, registrar, believes 75 per cent of the 800 freshmen will be given opportunity to take part in this third annual conference. The conference will begin at 8:30 a.m. and end at 4:15 p.m. Students will be asked what the University could do to help freshmen become orientated to college. They will also be asked to give suggestions as to how the high school A tax conference sponsored by the School of Business for tax attorneys and accountants interested in excess profits taxes will be held Thursday at the University. Will Sponsor Tax Meeting The morning session will be devoted to the subject of excess profits tax provisions of the recent tax law. The principal speaker will be Leonard Raum from the chief counsel office, Bureau of Internal Revenue, Washington, D.C. Introductory remarks will be made by Dean Leonard H. Axe of the School of Business. The conference, beginning at 10 a.m., will be held in the Union building, with discussion sessions in the Pine room. A luncheon will be held at noon in the ballroom. The afternoon session will also center on the tax law. Two panel discussions will be held; one will relate to flood losses. Members of the panel will be W. Keith Weltmer, assistant professor of economics, chairman; Mr. Raum; David Lieberman, Kansas City, Mo. lawyer; Thomas D. Mustard, Wichita tax attorney, and C. Merritt Winsby, Wichita C.P.A. Conditions Favor Education-Hamlin Conditions are exceedingly favorable for adult education in the United States, Dr. Herbert M. Hamlin, professor of agricultural education at the University of Illinois, told Kansas adult education leaders today. Thirty persons attended the meeting sponsored by the Kansas Adult Education association and University Extension in co-operation with the Kansas State Teachers association. Other groups are attending similar conferences this week in Dodge City, Emporia, Hays, Manhattan, and Pittsburg. He listed as other favorable factors the leadership of higher institutions of learning in sharing the responsibilities of adult education and the large grants given by private firms for the development of adult education. "Pollls indicate that people want more education than they are getting at present," Dr. Hamlin said. "Already the present enrollment in adult education in this country is between 30 and 40 million," he said. Abilene, 307 Lindley; Arkansas City, Strong Annex B, room 12; Atchison, 225 Strong; Augusta, 214 Strong; Beloit, 105 Fraser; Blue Rapids, 202 Strong; Bucklin, 211 Marvin; Coffeyville, 103 Marvin; Columbus, 7 Marvin; Concordia, 302 Marvin; DSeoto, 306 Marvin; Emporia, 124 Lindley; Garnett, 108 Marvin; Great Bend, 246 Lindley. Haskell Institute, Strong Annex B; Hiawatha, 411 Lindley; Highland Park, 1 Strong; Junction City, 226-7 Snow; Lawrence, 220 Strong; Leavenworth, 228 Strong; Lyons, 245 Lindley; Manhattan, 209 Marvin; Marysville, 208 Marvin; Newton, 104 Strong; Oberlin, 211 Marvin; Olathe, 103 Marvin; Osawatomie, Strong Annex B, room 13. A list of the schools to be represented and the room where each school is holding its conference follows: curriculum could be improved for better preparation for college. Ottawa, Strong Annex B, room 13 Paola, 220 Snow; Rosedale, 11 Marvin; Russell, 103 Marvin; Salina, 137 Lindley, Shawnee-Mission, 1 Strong; Sunner, 216 Strong; Topeka, Strong Annex B, rooms 7, 8. 10, 11; Turner, Strong Annex B, room 3; Washburn, 306 Marvin; Waterville, 1 Strong; Wellington, Strong Annex B, Wichita East, 221 Snow; Wichita North, 22 Strong; Winfield, 1 Strong; Wyandotte, 103 Fraser. There is still a need for housing at the Student Voluntary Movement conference to be held at the University Dec. 27 through Jan. 1. An appeal to fraternities and sororites has been successful, however, other houses are still needed, according to Russell Stephenson of the University Extension. Approximately 15 organizations have indicated a willingness to accommodate conference delegates. Others tentatively will be housed in dormitories. Housing Needed During Vacation If any organization would like to participate during the Christmas vacation further information about housing arrangements may be had by calling KU 390. Army ROTC Cadets Subject To Call For Eight Years Kansas: Increasing cloudiness, showers in east tonight and Thursday morning and possibly a little snow in west tonight. Somewhat warmer in southeast and south central tonight, colder Thursday, winds becoming strong west to northwest in west portion tonight and in east on Thursday. Low tonight 25-35 in west, 40-48 east. High Thursday 35 in west, 42-48 east. WEATHER This was the explanation given by Col. E. F. Kumpe, professor of military science and tactics, regarding the new national order issued by Mrs. Anna Rosenberg, assistant secretary of defense last week. KU Graduates Promoted University Army ROTC students will be subject to Army call for eight years. College students not in ROTC will be subject to military call for a period of 18 years. Two University graduates have been awarded higher positions in the Uprn Pharmaceutical company of Kalamazoo, Mich. C. V. Patterson, 25, has been appointed one of two native vice-presidents. However, no ROTC student is automatically deferred, Colonel Kumpe added. He must maintain his grades and physical standards required for eligibility for deferment. Under the present law, any student enrolled in Army ROTC who is maintaining his standards in the F. A. Eberly, '32, replaces person as director of production. ry and academic field is eligi- deferment until he gradu- will go into the service as lieutenants at the end of four years of college. They on active duty for two years then will be subject to recall more years. In all probability I serve only two years unless or war breaks out. They are subject to the draft. new law does not affect Air and Navy ROTC students. lents under the Army ROTC lents under the Army ROTC m will go into the service as ents deferred because of on the other hand, are sub-the draft from 18 years of til they are 36. DAILY UNIVERS Wednesday, Dec. 5, 1951 Five new members will be initiated into the University of Kansas chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, national liberal arts honor society, today on the 175th anniversary of the establishment of the organization. A tea and the initiation will be held at 4 p.m. in the Kansas room of the Union. Dr. Amiya Chakravarty, visiting professor of humanities, will give the annual address. All active members of the society are invited to attend. The new members, all College seniors and Summerfield scholars, are George Betz, Henry Bradshaw, Bruce Joseph, James Logan and Glenn Miller Jr. Students who fail to register will not be admitted to the examination, which will be given from 2 to 5 p.m. Saturday. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Today is the last day for juniors and seniors to register for the proficiency examination in English composition. All juniors and seniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and the Schools of Education and Journalism are required to take the examination. They should register in the offices of their deans. Seventeen midshipmen from the University spent Sunday at Oathe Naval Air station for an indoctrination tour of the base. hansan Arriving at 10 a.m., the middies were taken on a tour of the grounds and buildings during the morning. After a meal at the Bachelor Officer's mess, they were taken up in an R4D, the Navy's version of a DC3. ASC Demands Jayhawker Explain High Picture Rates Col. Moore Lauds Cadets "Id be willing to present them for final review today," Col. Lynn R. Moore, professor of air science and tactics, said yesterday after watching 900 Air Force ROTC cadets march in practice review. The cadets were divided into three groups and marched by the reviewing stand. The review was in preparation for the final spring review in April. At that time, special inspection officers will come to the University from the 10th Air Force, Selfridge Air Force base, Mt. Clemons, Mich. After watching cadets present the drill they have learned during the first semester, Colonel Moore, who acted as reviewing officer, said he was "certainly gratified with the showing." He said he was "proud of every one of them." Phi Beta Kappa Will Initiate 5 17 KU Midshipmen Visit Olathe Base The AFROTC men impressed the colonel as having "taken their military training seriously." The groups marched to the music of the 45-piece AFROTC band. The band also paraded in review before the officers. Exam Registration Deadline Today All the Midshipmen were given a chance to handle the controls during the two hour flight, which took them over Kansas City and Lawrence. --- A second group of midshipmen will go to Olathe on Dec. 16th. A. DELORES WUNSCH Pianist To Play In Fall Concert Delores Wunsch, fine arts senior, will be the featured piano soloist in the annual fall concert of the University Symphony orchestra. The concert will be at 8 p.m. Thursday in Hoch auditorium with Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra, conducting. Miss Wunsch will play Concerto No.2 in F minor by Chopin with the 78-piece orchestra. Students with ID cards will be admitted free. Daughter of State Sen. and Mrs. Paul Wunsch of Kingman, Miss Wunsch has been an honor student in the School of Fine Arts for the past four years. She is a student of Jan Chiapusso, professor of piano, and has been first violinist in the University Symphony orchestra. She is president of Mu Phi Epsilon, honorary music sorority, and a member of Gamma Phi Beta. In the summer of 1950, Miss Wunsch received a scholarship to study piano under Mrs. Joanna Graudan at the Music Academy of the West in California. Haskell Trip Planned By International Club The International club will be guests of the Haskell Indian institute at 7:45 p.m. Thursday at the girls' gym at Haskell. The Haskell students will perform Indian dances for the members of the International club. Also the club members will present a short program for the Indians which will consist of French songs, and singing by foreign students from Germany. Members of the club will go to Haskell institute in a chartered bus. it will leave the Union at 7:30 p.m. Tool Engineers To Hear Guest Speaker Today The student chapter of the American Society of Tool Engineers will hold its annual joint meeting with the parent Kansas City chapter in Lindley hall auditorium at 7:30 p.m. today. O. H. Day of the Butler Manufacturing company, Kansas City, Mo., will speak on "Production and Tooling." The All-Student council has voted to require representatives of the Jayhawker to appear at an open hearing and show cause for the high rates charged to organizations placing pictures in the annual. The bill was introduced at a meeting Tuesday evening by Frank Exter, engineering representative. He explained that many students feel that the rates are unjust and would like to know if they are necessary. The bill was passed without opposition. Chester Lewis, 2nd year law, reported to the council that a committee studying the possibility of establishing quiz files for all students has met with both favor and opposition to the plan. An amendment to the ASC bill on campus publications was passed. By this bill the council hopes to give all students a better chance to serve on publication staffs. He said, "It will take some time to establish the files, as many instructors must be contacted. The deans of the Law school and the College are favorable to the plan, but many individual instructors are opposed." The content of the amendment reads: "That the publications board be required to keep in the office of the dean of men a supply of application forms available to all students desiring appointments to the various campus publications staffs. "That the publications board be required to keep an up-to-date list of the vacant positions posted on an appropriate bulletin board outside the office of the dean of men." A report by the housing committee showed that the new commission on student housing is having trouble obtaining volunteers to act as inspectors. Anyone interested in this should contact Lawrence Kravitz. Twenty teachers, principals, supervisors, inspectors and lecturers from 17 foreign countries will be guests of the University today. James Logan, council president, read a letter from the Kansas State Student council which thanked them for the courteous treatment given the K-State council at the football game between the schools. Foreigners To Visit Here August Jujul Bal, Belgian East Africa; Michael Leopold Palti and Miss Rachel Gilboa, Isreal; Primitivo Lara, The Philippines; Edward Bernhard Lysne, Norway; Elias Nicola Madany, Syria; Mohammed Ali Naghibadeh, Iran. The State department arranged for these persons to come and study the American educational methods. The University will be the only state university they will visit in the mid-western area. The visitors are: Miss Marcellka Emmanouil Houmierianou, Greece; Miss Graciela Huacuja Betancour, Miss Ana Maria Munoz and Sergio Diaz Ortega, Mexico; Mrs. Estelle Flavia D'Rozario, India. Hettiarachchige Don Sugathapala, Ceylon; Silvio Francisco De La Torre, Cuba; Theognis Dias, Brazil; Prosper Ramon Isidro Ruiz Coen, Dominican Republic. Erik Borge Dybmose, Denmark; Huseiny Yildirim, Turkey; Mrs Mya Mya, Burma, and Virgilio Augusto Cordeiro Boto, Portugal. Statewide Activities To Give Cash For KU News Stories Statewide activities will award cash prizes to county correspondents for work published in hometown papers concerning students at the University. The prizes will be judged on quality of the correspondents' work. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday,Dec. 5,1951 Kansan Editorials La Prensa And The Executive Order A very different La Prensa came off the press Nov. 19 in Argentina, bearing the inscription on the masthead, "Year 1, Number 1." When the old La Prensa bit the dust 10 months ago, the final issue read "Year 82, Number 29,474." The new newspaper carried a six-column banner headline which said, "By Decision of 5,000,000 Workers La Prensa Renew Activities Today." Thus President Juan Peron carried out an earlier promise that "La Prensa must be surrendered to the workers." There was very little to criticize in the early issues of the new paper, other than that it gave more favorable writeups of the dictatorial administration and that it was not being run by its rightful publishers, members of the Paz family. The first issue carried two-column cuts of President Peron and Senora Peron, as well as congratulatory letters from them. Most of the edition was devoted to sports news, although a special section devoted to labor news and trade union activities appeared the following day. New York Times reporter Foster Hailey cabled his paper that 30 of the former news staff of 150 are working for the new La Prensa, including most of the former foreign desk. He also said that 400 of the former 1,000 to 1,200 mechanical and office staffs have their old jobs back. In a talk several weeks ago, Peron said Argentina is becoming a "labor union state" and that politics is "on its way out." Until La Prensa started up again, newspapers controlled by the Peron administration had refused to allow any opposition statements published therein. But, surprisingly, a report critical of unfair governmental policies in the conducting of the election campaign was carried in the second issue of the new La Prensa. This was seen here as an effort to appease the wrath of those in the U.S. who are shouting "freedom of the press." La Prensa's untimely fate was a shady affair, but there are a few details which resemble situations existing in the U.S. Argentina is not the only country that undergoes strict censorship. Since President Truman's executive order on security information, there has been a steady tightening up by U.S. military news sources. While the order was only the first step toward complete governmental control, it has caused the withholding of information which has had no bearing on the security of this country. Person considers big business and capitalism as his biggest enemy, so he forbids statements by the opposition, with some exceptions, as indicated by the election report printed in La Prensa. In the U.S. Congressmen and military leaders consider Communism as America's biggest foe. And notice the comparison. Even if a person writes an objective analysis of Communism, forgetting the warped viewpoints of the Soviet Union and writing from a sincere desire to evaluate the merits and defects of the system, he is likely to be branded by members of Congress as a Communist. Security is one thing. And giving aid to an enemy or promoting a revolution must never go unchecked. But unlimited discussion of economic and political values must be tolerated if America is to maintain world leadership in the future. The problem is. Where does free speech end and governmental control begin? Peron has overstepped the line in Argentina. Is the U.S. far from doing the same thing? Jim Powers. Oatis And The Press While we're on the subject of press freedom, let's change the geographical setting from South America to Czechoslovakia. For there is a case in point of the ever-tightening restrictions on the press. Bill Oatis, an Associated Press correspondent, is being held in a Czech jail on a trumped up charge of "working for the United States government." It all boils down to spying. What this means is that Czechoslovakia cannot stand a free press that may criticize the actions of its government. When Oatis began hitting close to home, he had to be called off. To the Czechs, jail was the only way of doing it. And, knowing the traditions of the American press, they were probably right. When the Oatis imprisonment was first discovered the American press set up a terrific howl. The State department took up the case. But nothing happened. The Indiana Daily Student is sponsoring a nationwide campaign of college campuses. They ask each college and university to "sponsor a petition to Congress for the immediate release of Bill Oatis from his Czechoslovakian prison." What comes of the campaign remains to be seen. It is a part of the over-all campaign that we believe will continue until Oatis is released. It is also a basic component of a continuing fight by the American press for its freedom. Best selling novels and top box office movies are those that are banned. The Socialist Study club got wise—they got Anvil magazine banned from the campus. Result—sold out. -A.G.M. A Daily Kansan feature editorialist observes that a queen shouldn't be a "cultured babe." We'll pass the word on to Elizabeth. 2. Some of the same material was used by President Taylor in a speech at Boston university March 12, 1949. The occasion was a human relations institute sponsored by the National Students association and the National Conference for Christians and Jews. 3. Various people heard about the speech and in response to numerous requests for copies, the Community Relations service in New York City printed and circulated it. The Boston speech is in pamphlet form, and is obviously an educational pamphlet. Dear Editor: Letters To The Editor A Reply From Sarah Lawrence Comments . . . Writing about "campus intellectuals," a Michigan State News columnist declared, "The majority of them wear horn-rimmed glasses, sport long, wavy hair, and delicately hold king-size cigarettes in their long narrow fingers. Many of them feel that, being philosophers, they should smoke nothing but pipes, and are rarely seen without one." 1. President Taylor made a speech on student government at the University of Wisconsin in March, 1949. The speech from which the New Yorker quoted was then rewritten as an article for the Harvard Educational Review. Vol. 19, No. 2, in the spring of/1949, and entitled, "The Student as a Responsible Person." Editor's Note: With a cigarette in one hand and a pipe in the other, how the hell do they put on their horn-rimmed glasses? This is in reference to Roscoe Born's Nov. 23 column in the Topeka State Journal, called "Fits and Starts." Mr. Born speculates on the funny coincidence published in the New Yorker magazine reporting the similarities between Deane W. Malott's Cornell inauguration speech and an article of Harold Taylor's, president of Sarah Lawrence college, printed two years ago. Since the source of Mr. Born's column was a story written by Daily Kansan reporter Joe Taylor, it is important that the following facts be referred to him so that he will have an accurate picture of President Taylor's position in this matter: Motorcycles were involved in two per cent of all fatal motor vehicle accidents last year. It was distributed to organizations, educators and universities all over the country. This seems to be the educational handout, ephemeral in nature, that President Malott refers to in his statement to the Kansas City Star. This also is in answer to Mr. Born's wish that reporter Taylor "had asked Malott what 'some educational organization' it was that contributed so heavily to the wisdom of our university presidents." Claire Aub Clare Ann Editor-In-Chief THE CAMPUS (Student newspaper at Sarah Lawrence college) Hits Allen Article Dear Editor: The most recent editions of Quick magazine and the Jayhawker featured articles by one of our most prominent members of the faculty. Both articles deserve comment, one being very misleading and the other as undemocratic and as untypical of KU as I ever expect to see. In the Jayhawker, referring to the basketball scandal in New York in particular he says, "...the dead end kids from the cesspool of New York sold out." Anyone in close contact with the true story of the scandal realizes that this dynamic phrase which really sounds good is really only a poor substitute for the truth. In Quick he states his cure for fixes. However, this "cure," printed in a magazine with national circulation does not speak well for KU. In these times when the big democratic sales point is equality and when we like to think of the kid from the other side of the tracks attaining success, this kind of "cure" is as great an evil as that which it is supposed to combat. A cure was stated as follows: "Don't select boys from the lower strata of sociological. . life for your college teams." I hope, with an amount of certainty, that Dr. Allen does not practice what he preaches, So, Doc, let's not bleimish the name of KU just for a little publicity, OK? Then again, is it publicity or is it an attempt to whitewash KU and keep investigators from poking their noses around here? I wonder . Lawrence C. Kravitz Engineering sophomore News From Other Campuses Students To Select Program Students 16 Select Program Texas A&M students, anxious to be considered actively interested in music, will study whereby they will pick the music program for Houston symphony orchestra. Band Protects Low Budget Students in the Syracuse university band have recently protested the low budget the organization is allowed. Wrote one member, "Our budget does not even allow us to purchase a paltry sousaphone." Daily Hansan News Room Student Newspaper of the Adv. Room KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANASIS KU 376 Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York City. Editor-in-Chief...Alan Marshall Editorial Associate...Anne Snyder EDITORIAL STAFF NEWS STAFF City Editor ... Joe Taylor Sports Editor ... Charles Burch Telegraph Editor ... Don Sarten Society Editor ... Katrina Swartz News Adviser ... Victor J. Danilov Managing Editor Charles Price Assistant Managing Editors Nancy Anderson, Benjamin Business Manager ... Bob Sydney Advertising Manager ... Dorothy Hedrick Assistant Adv. Manager ... Dick Hale National Adv. Manager ... Bill Taggart Circulation Manager ... Elaine Blaylock Promotion Manager ... Ted Barbera Business Adviser ... R. W. Doores Two Cent Postal Card Has Red Stamp When you stop at the post office window after the first of January to get a penny post card, you'll be in for two surprises. The first such cards went on sale Nov. 16 in New York City in connection with the National Postage Stamp show of the American Stamp Dealers' association. They were cancelled "9 a.m. November 16, 1951," so that all stamp collectors had an equal opportunity to get the first cards mailed, called "first-day issues." In the first place, the postmaster will ask for two cents, and instead of the card with a green stamp, you will get one with a red-colored, rectangular stamp. These changes are but part of several postal rate increases voted by the last session of Congress. The new two-cent card has a portrait of Benjamin Franklin. It replaces the picture of Thomas Jefferson now printed on penny cards. The new cards are the same size as the present one-cent card which is $ 3 \frac{1}{4} $ inches wide by $ 5 \frac{1}{2} $ inches 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 administration periods. Entered as second class mail. 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. The post office department was expected to reap as much as $10,-.000,000 profit a year in increased revenues, but the plan was a disappointment. Its first year's effect was a $6,000,000 decrease in revenue; it was quickly repealed. Across the top of the stamp in a shaded panel appear the words, "United States," and across the bottom, "Postal Card," in white-faced gothic lettering. The name, "Franklin," on a ribbon at the bottom of the portrait completes the design. long. The figure, "2," and the word, "cents," is arranged vertically to the left of the portrait of Franklin. This is not the first time the government has tried the two-cent idea for cards. The last attempt was made in 1925 when Congress raised the postal rate for souvenir and private mailing cards from one to two cents. Goddess of Liberty. It gave s- m that card was 3 by 5-8 inches in size. Goddess of Liberty. It gave explicit instructions to its sender. In the left- side. Another such attempt was made near the end of World War I, it too, was quickly abandoned. The stamp of that card was also printed in red. The post card has been used in the United States for 78 years. It was introduced in 1873 when U. S. Grant was president. hand corner were these directions: "Write the address only on this side—the message on the other." In addition it bore the name, "United States Postal Card," and the word "To" with two lines for the address Undoubtedly there were some vii- lators of these instructions because in 1875 the following directions appeared on the card: It was 12 years before anything but the Goddess of Liberty was used for the stamp design. In 1885 Jefferson's head was used. It was followed by portraits of Grant, Adams, McKinley, Sherman, and Sheridan for double cards, Washington, Mrs. Washington, and Lincoln plus occasional returns to the Goddess of Liberty. "Nothing but the address can be placed on this side." Now the instructions are: "This Side of Card Is for Address." About 60 million cards were printed the first year the card was in circulation in this country. Now more than two billion cards are issued annually. The postal card came to this country from Great Britain where Prime Minister Gladstone had introduced it in 1870. They are printed at a rate of 250,000 an hour by the government printing office in Washington, D. C. Page 3 University Daily Kansan rnn, e? td g. KU 'Foreign' Student Is Native American By YUJIRO MAEDA CYTAL TRACTURA Suppose you had left the United States in your early teens for the country where your ancestors originated, and passed your youthful days over there. Which of the two countries would you find your real home? Tesugio Endo, 27, came to this country from Japan this summer to study in the Graduate school of KU under the Army-sponsored exchange program. Unlike most of the foreign students at the University, he is having what may be called a "homecoming" visit. Born in the town of Warmspring, Nev., in 1024, Endo lost his American citizenship at the age of 12 when his parents took him back to Japan to give him Japanese school education. A fifth-grade pupil of an elementary school at Ruth, Nev., at that time, he was not conscious at all of his racial origin. He did not even understand the Japanese language well. Boarding a vessel for Japan at San Francisco, he felt lonely when he found himself among a group of California-born Japanese who were conversing with one another in Japanese. This feeling of loneliness continued to oppress him even after he finished his elementary school education and entered a secondary school in Japan. Japanese manners and customs and their ways of thinking, however, gradually penetrated his mind. He was kept too busy accommodating himself to his new environment to recall memories of life in his native town. In his efforts to get rid of his strangeness, he buckled down to the study of Japan and things Japanese until he was graduated from a college in Yokohama. When he decided to come to America last year, he looked forward to revisiting the country which was once his home. Before coming to Lawrence, he visited with a relative in Layton, Utah, where he used to spend a lot of his time when he was an American. He found the area, which had been a quiet agricultural community in his memory, a thriving town with the streets lined with a number of dwelling houses. Horses which his Nine companies were represented at the meeting of the Industrial Management institute sponsored by the University Extension Friday and Saturday. Nine Companies At Institute John M. MacKenzie, associate professor of industrial engineering at the University of Minnesota, old the group Friday evening that job simplification increases the individual worker's production and reduced expense in manufacturing processes. Dean Frank T. Stockton of University Extension acted as discussion leader after the talk. Saturday morning Dr. Russell L. Moberly, director of the Industrial Management institute at the University of Wisconsin, said better cooperation between workers and supervisors can be obtained by familiarizing the worker with the why of each order. He said production increased as worker-supervisor cooperation improved. The group was shown a movie "Beyond the Towers" and the meeting closed with a luncheon. Most of the participants attended the homecoming game. Two KU Students Awarded Grants Miss Hope Nansen, former University student, and James Irby. College senior, have been awarded grants by the Mexican government for study in a Mexican university for the academic year beginning February, 1952. These fellowships are two of 19 given to Americans through the Institute of International Education, New York. They were established under the Mexican-United States commission on cultural co-operation, and are designed to promote good relations between the U.S. and Mexico. relative had used to plough his farm were all gone. Despite a hearty welcome by the relative, he felt as if he had never been there before. It seemed that the traces of his 12-year life in America no longer remained with him, although he maintains there is not much difference in the fundamental character of the people of the two countries. "When I finish my study here, I would like to go back to Japan," Endo said, "That will be my real homecoming trip." Two former KU music students, now of Kansas City, Mo., will be soloists in a recital at 8 p.m. Monday, Dec. 10, sponsored by Mu Phi Epsilon, professional music sorority. Ex-Students In Recitals The recital will be held in Strong auditorium with no admission charge. One of the soloists, Mrs. Elizabeth Wilkinson Vaughan, soprano, was graduated from KU in 1930. She also did graduate work here and Kansas City. Mrs. Vaughan has appeared as a concert and radio soloist throughout this area. She has soled with the C.B.S. Messiah presentation. Mrs. Joanne Johnson Baker, pianist, instructor of piano at the University of Kansas City, was a student of Carl Preyer at KU from 1940 to 1942. Her undergraduate work was continued at the University of Michigan where she received her bachelor of music degree. University graduates interested in doing predoctoral work in biological, physical, and engineering sciences may apply for a fellowship from the National Science foundation. While completing the requirements for a master of music degree in piano, Mrs. Baker was a member of the Michigan university piano faculty. Science Fellowship Applications Open Any citizen of the United States who has demonstrated ability and aptitude for advanced training in the sciences and who will be able to begin or continue graduate work in the 1952-53 academic year is eligible. Graduates who are accepted will receive from $1,400 to $1,700 in addition to family allowances, tuition, and fees. The fellowship is for one year. Applications may be obtained at the chemical engineering office, 127 Lindley, and must be turned in to the National Research council by Monday, January 7. A policeman was getting ready to tag Hannabauer's car when he noticed that the license number corresponded with a traffic ticket that had been issued before. He also noticed a red tag inserted under the windshield winer. Wheeling, W. Va—(U.P.)—Wheeling police are willing to forgive a parking ticket or two if the offender is from out of the city but they believe Robert R. Hannabauer of Charleston, W. Va., abused the courtesy. 68 Parking Tickets Ruin Any Excuse The officer called for a tow-truck to haul the vehicle to a garage and climbed into the driver's seat. In doing so, he tipped the windshield visor downward and was showered with 68 red tickets. Professor To Attend Language Meeting PRECISIVE WATCH REPAIRS Philip M. Mitchell, assistant professor of German and Mrs. Dorothy Van Ghent, former KU assistant professor of English, will participate in the 66th annual of the Modern Language association of America to be held in Detroit Dec. 27-29. In addition to being acting secretary of the "Scandinavian Language and Literature group," he will read a paper entitled "Holberg Today." Watch Repair Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed Mrs. Van Ghent will read a paper entitled "The Window-Figure and the 'Two Children' — Figure in Wuthering Heights." Wolfson's Women's Clubs Put Men On Guard, Professor Says 743 Mass. Boston—(U.P.)A Boston University history—a professor says women are more powerful when they act individually rather than as a group. Warren S. Tryon believes women who organize into clubs and political groups are defeating their own purpose. Call 675 "Female organizations of this type serve only to put men on their guard," he said. In 1950 18 per cent (5,581) of fatal accidents occurred when a car ran off a straight road. There's A Story Behind The Title, 'Tex Beneke And His Orchestra' When Tex Beneke takes the bandstand in the Military Science building Friday night for the 1951 Military ball, students will dance to the music of Tex Beneke and his orchestra. There's quite a story behind that official title: "Tex Beneke and his Orchestra" It began on February 14, 1914, in Ft. Worth, Texas. Gordon Lee Bencke was born. His music career is nearly as old as he is. At nine, Beneke was given a soprano saxophone by his parents. He began to take lessons immediately. At 13 he played with school ROT* and dance bands. He later formed a trio with Beno Hogan on the drums, before Hogan gained national fame as a professional golfer. Summers, he toured with his small band. Beneki's first important job was with Ben Young at the Texas Centennial in 1936. Early in 1938 he joined Glenn Miller's band. He entered rehearsal with a "Hi ya fellas. I'm glad to be heath." From then on Gordon Beneke was "Tex" Beneke. Beneke is known for his sax work and vocals. He has sold millions of copies of such hits as "Kalamazoo," "Chattanoga Choo Choo," and "Body and Soul." He was featured in two movies and has made numerous shorts with Miller and his band. When Miller was listed as "missing in action" in 1944 Beneke took over leadership of the band and it was "Tex Beneke and the Glenn Miller Orchestra." As the years passed and Miller was declared officially dead in 1945 the band became known as "Tex Benchek and His Orchestra." The debate question at the University of Toronto is to be: "Resolved: that academic work is over-emphasized on this campus." Travel Service THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Tel. 30 8th & Mass. RESTAURANT WHAT'S SO DIFFERENT ABOUT ENGLEWOOD, N. J.? In Englewood, the local telephone exchange looks pretty much like the telephone building in any other town. And Englewood's telephones seem just the same as the twenty-seven million other dial telephones in the country. But there's a difference . . . You can pick up a telephone in Englewood and dial San Francisco telephone numbers direct! In fact, you can dial any one of eleven million telephone numbers in thirteen widely scattered areas from coast to coast. BELL SYSTEM INDUSTRIAL MFG. CO. BELL SYSTEM INDUSTRIAL MFG. CO. That's what makes Englewood different - the new kind of Long Distance telephone service on trial there by the Bell System. Long Distance dialing is another example of the Bell System's constant search for ways to provide you with ever-better telephone service. BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM KU Cagers Aim For 2nd Victory Here Saturday Both teams will be shooting for victory No. 2 of the new basketball season when Kansas plays the Denver university Pioneers here Saturday night. DU won its first game with a decisive 65-46 beating of Colorado State college at Greeley, Dec. 1. The State team, however, is expected to finish at the bottom of the Mountain States league and probably can't be considered a good test of the Pioneers. Dale Toft, 6 foot 6-inch center, leads the Pioneer scoring attack along with Joe Hughes, a guard who has a deadly set shot. Guards Dick Gray, Fred Howell are also returning veterans along with forwards John Griffin, Bob Knichrehm and John McGaughey. Coach Hoyt Brawner has all of his last year's team, which took third in the Skyline league, with the exception of one player. The Denver team is expected to be stronger than last year and is considered a contender for the Skyline championship. A bright note was discovered, however, in that Coach Allen may have more powerful reserve strength than last year. LaVannes Squires, Everett Dye, Weston Johnson and Bill Heittholt served notice that they are capable of handling the varsity chores. All are sophomores except Heittholt, who is a freshman. In defeating the Golden Bears of Baylor in their initial tilt Monday night Kansas still looked unpolished and lacked speed around the basket. B. H. Born can replace Lovellette without any loss of team height. He lacks the tremendous scoring ability that Colossal Clyde has but his rebounding ability is improving. Further experience will doubtlessly result in great improvement in the tail Medicine Lodge sophomore. Dimag To Tell Future Plans Phoenix, Ariz. — (U.P.) — Joe Dia- Maggio will tell co-owner Del Webb of the New York Yankees today whether he will play next year but it will be at least 24 hours before the rest of the baseball world is in- formed of the $90,000-a-year outfielder's decision. DiMaggio was to make his decision known to Webb at a private luncheon following his arrival from San Francisco this morning. Then the pair will fly in Webb's private plane to New York where DiMaggio's decision will be announced either tomorrow or Friday. Webb and his partner, Dan Topping, already have indicated that DiMaggio can have his record $00-1000-a year contract for a fourth straight season merely by consenting to play. No effort will be made to slice his salary despite a .263 batting average in 1951. DiMaggio's decision is awaited just as eagerly by the seven other clubs in the American league as by the Yankee management. For the decision entails much more than whether one of the greatest players in history has finally decided to call it a career. General manager George Weiss and manager Casey Stengel have indicated at the minor league meetings at Columbus, Ohio, that they will adopt a "stand-pat" policy toward major trades if DiMaggio decides to play again. At the same time, they indicated they would be prepared to open negotiations for Boston Red Sox slugger Ted Williams if DiMaggio decides to retire. Wednesday, Dec. 5. 1951 The mystery concerning DiMaggio's plans and the resulting indecision by the Yankees as regards attempting to close a big deal apparently have been major factors in holding up tentative transactions at Columbus. DiMaggio's decision, one way or the other, undoubtedly will have an important bearing on whether big deals now in the "if" stage at Columbus will be closed when the owners move to New York for the major league meetings over the weekend. Page 4 University Daily Kansan M. BARRERAS & F. GABRIELS YANKEE SHORTSTOP PHIL RIZZUTO gets some advice from elder statesman Bernard Baruch at opening class of American baseball academy in New York. Rizzuto heads a staff of nine major league baseball stars who are instructing 1,200 boys Frosh Cagers Open Season Against Air Force Tonight Coach Richard Harp's freshman basketball team gets a crack at a squad outside the Jayhawker realm tonight when it opens against Forbes Air Force base of Topeka at Hoch auditorium. Starting time is 7:30 p.m. between ages of 10 and 18 in daily classes until Feb. 15. Thoroughly thumped by the Jay- hawk varsity, 73-33 Friday, the "B" club makes its first scheduled start tonight. Forbes was rudely bounced in its season opener with Kansas State's "B" squad. Dec. 1. The Wildcats won 98-45 in the K-State-Purdue Columbus, Ohio — (U,P) — The Brooklyn Dodgers, with what generally is regarded (except by the Giants) as the best club in baseball, went out after real big game today—Stan Musial, the best all around player in the game. Although none of the three clubs involved in the proposed deal would comment, the report was: There was more substance to the possibility of a deal between the Dodgers and the Cineinnati Reds, involving that additional pitcher the bums have been seeking for so long. 1—That the Dodgers would give up outfielders Carl Furillo and Snider plus $16000 in cash to the St. Louis Cardinals in return for Musial. Dodgers Want Stan Musial Dodger vice-president E. J. (Buzz) Bavasi met with general manager Gabe Paul of the Reds and Bavasi announced, "I think there is a good chance that we will work out something with the Reds, for Gabe is anxious to make changes that will help his ball club." "And at that time all of you fellows laughed," he said. "Well it just happened that somebody else had the last laugh." The source which outlined the story went on to reveal that he also was the man who forecast that the club owners would repudiate A. B. (Happy) Chandler as commissioner. 2—The Cardinals would send Furillo to the New York Giants for Eddie Stanky, the little guy owner Fred Saigh of the Cardinals wants for their new manager. General speculation was that Howie Fox was the Red pitcher involved with the Dodgers offering outfielder Cal Abrams and infielder Rocky Bridges. preliminary Forbes, though highly outclassed, did show scoring potential not centered on any one player. Two of the Air Force five notched nine points. The rest were well scattered. Bolstering the Jayhawk roster will be Ken Buller, Bob Godwin, Allen Kelley and Dean Smith. Wes Whitney, untested in the varsity-frosh game, will start at center for KU. Smith, 5 feet 10 inches, chalked up six for the freshmen. Kelley, 5 feet 11 inches, scored two for the varsity. Both will start at guard positions. Buller, 5 feet 11 inches, and Godwin, 6 feet 1 inch, will be at the forward positions for Harp. Buller got six points, Godwin got four in the freshman game. With the elimination of the rule that "B" squad members cannot play varsity ball. Harp will have a healthy supply of reserves for his starting five. New regulations permit "B" team members to move up to the varsity if they're good enough. Barring injury to a weak ankle, Whitney, 6 feet 3 inches, will hold down the center position. More than seven centuries ago, Korea was compelled by Mongol conquerors to provide a fleet of ships for an invasion of Japan. After two disastrous defeats, the Mongolian "Golden Horde" gave up and turned westward toward Europe. Remember - You Get Same Day LAUNDRY SERVICE At RISK'S Self-Service Laundry 613 Vt. Call 623 Kansas has placed four men on the Associated Press All-Midwestern football team. Two other Jayhawkers were listed as honorable mention on Colliers magazine's midwestern team. Colliers, AP Name Six KU Players The AP picked linemen Oliver Spencer and George Kennard and backs Bob Brandeberry and John Konek for honorable mention. Colliers listed George Mrkonic and Bud Laughlin on their sectional squad. Among the few Tibetan concessions to Western medicine is vaccination. Entire villages once were wiped out by smallpox. Now even the Dalai Lama submits to vaccination. Plymouth Your Man . . . has a used car priced for you. Buddy GALLAGHER 634 Mass. Ph.1000 Yello-bole pipes sold at RANEY'S DRUG STORE 909 Mass. Phone 521 MR BUSY BEE Steers a true course with the pipe that starts sweet...smokes sweet...stays sweet AVAST THERE, CAPN! GOT THE "BREAK-IN" BLUES? GET YELLO-BOLE PIPE... IT'S A PLEASURE CRUISE! POLICE FROM FIRST TO LAST... EVERY PUFF TASTES SUNNY WITH THE PIPE WHOSE BOWL IS COATED WITH HONEY "A YELLO-BOLE PIPE NEVER NEEDS 'BREAK-IN' THE HONEY HELPS BUILD A MELLOWING "CAKE" IN! JUICE U A PIPE FULL OF PLEASURE IN EVERY WAY GET A HONEY-TREATED YELLO-BOLE PIPE...TODAY! JACK THOMPSON (2) FOR EXTRA VALUE AND SWEETER SMOKES FOR THAT FAMOUS YELLO-BOLE, FOLKS $1, $1.50, $2, $2.50 All Imported Briar Light up your Yello-Bole for real s-m-o-o-h sailing. All styles . . . all shapes . . . at just about all stores. And don't forget, Yello-Bole pipes make mighty welcome gifts! YELLO-BOLE pipes Defeats Prove Costly To Intramural Teams Any defeat this year in intramural football proved to be a crucial one, or so one might reason by glancing at the final intra- cal football standings for 1951. In both fraternity and independent competition, "A" and "B" divisions, division champions were all undefeated teams. Phi Gamma Delta, winner of Fraternity "A" Division III title, wound up as "Hill champs" by rights of a final playoff victory over Jim Beam, independent champion team. Although Beta Theta Pi dominated each division in which one of their teams was entered, all of their three teams were ousted in playoffs to produce fraternity champion. Five teams were repeaters from last night as division winners. They are Beta Theta Pi, Phi Kappa Psi, Jim Beam, Phi Gamma Delta "B," and Beta Theta Pi "B." Final 1951 Intramural Football Standings: FRATERNITY "A" Division I Division I W I Delta Tau Delta 4 0 Alpha Tau Omega 3 1 Sigma Phi Epsilon 2 1 Kappa Sigma 1 3 Phi Kappa Tau 0 4 Division II Phi Kappa Psi 1 Sigma Nu 3 Alpha Kappa Lambda 3 Kappa Alpha Psi 2 Tau Kappa Epsilon 1 Triangle 0 Division III Division IV Phi Gamma Delta 5 0 Phi Delta Theta 4 1 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 3 2 Delta Upsilon 2 3 Alpha Phi Alpha 0 4 Phi Kappa 0 4 Division I FRATERNITY "B" Beta Theta Pi 5 Sigma Chi 4 Delta Chi 2 Pi Kappa Alpha 2 Lambda Chi Alpha 1 Sigma Pi 0 Division II Beta Theta Pi ... 4 P Delta Theta ... 4 Kappa Sigma ... 3 Alpha Epsilon Pi ... 1 Sigma Alpha Epsilon ... 1 Sigma Chi ... 1 Beta Theta Pi (2) ... 5 Phi Gamma Delta ... 4 Phi Kappa Psi ... 3 Alpha Tau Omega ... 2 Delta Tau Delta ... 1 Delta Chi ... 0 INDEPENDENT "A" Division I Jim Beam ... 4 0 Battenfeld ... 3 1 Don Henry ... 1 2 Oread ... 0 3 Kappa Eta Kappa ... 0 4 Division II Jolliffe ... 4 0 AFROTC ... 3 1 Stephenson ... 2 2 CINEMAS OF BALTIMORE RONALD NANINI, Fremont, Calif., high school football star, died in a hospital several hours after being hurt in a game between Oakland and Fremont high schools. At first he was believed not to be seriously injured. Sterling - Oliver ... 1 3 NROTC ... 0 4 INDEPENDENT "B" Oread 4 0 Peach Orchard Boars 2 1 Temple Dermons 1 2 Mu Epsilon Nu 0 2 Twin Pines 0 2 New York—(U.P.)-The NCAA plan for controlled television helped football attendances, a United Press survey revealed today. NCAA Plan Increases Gate In 1950, there was unlimited televising of football games. In 1951, the NCAA permitted only a peep a week. The national result was only an increase of .03 of a percentage point, but the big drops were in areas not affected by television. In the East, where there's the most television, attendance sneaked up .02 per cent. In the Midwest, where there's also a lot of television, it went up 1.76 per cent. In the far West and South where there was limited television, the West teams jumped 4.99 per cent and the Southern teams 6.09 per cent. But the big drops in non-television areas tend to show that TV didn't keep many folks away from the games. Instead, other factors did. In the Southwest, TV is no problem because the NCAA TV games didn't reach that area. Attendance fell 1.22 per cent. In the Rockies, the picture is the same because there's only one TV station in the whole area. The drop was an alarming 18.17 per cent. In the midlands, where there are few stations and sets, the fall was 15.01 per cent.* Those figures would indicate that a little television didn't hurt. By and large, a good football team drew fans and a poor one didn't. The attendance breakdown includes: Midlands University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Dec. 5. 1951 1951 1950 G. At. G. At. Kansas 5 120,000 5 153,000 Kansas State . 4 50,774 5 49,619 Missouri 5 92,795 5 142,000 Oklahoma 5 194,837 5 210,710 Okla. A&M 5 90,500 5 94,353 Tulsa 5 80,757 6 82,000 Wichita 6 50,237 6 44,491 Nebraska 6 150,000 6 190,000 Totals 41 839,900 98,187,30 Av. At. 20,485 24,102 Percentage of decrease 15.01. 28 Swimmers Try For Team After nearly three weeks' training the KU swimming squad seems to be shaping up fine, according to Walter J. Mikols, swimming coach. This year's team is greatly hampered by lack of experienced competitors. The remodeling of the pool and cancellation of the entire schedule. No team will be chosen for about six weeks from the 28 swimmers who are practicing to give them an opportunity to prepare sufficiently for the time trials. Mahon Ball and Sam Perkins, free style, received freshman num- erals and have some competitive ex perience. Aside from experience the greatest need is for backstrokers. With only two returning lettermen, Harry Newby, free style, and Tom Payne, breast stroke, Coach Mikols has to rely mainly on freshmen for his team. Other swimmers snowing promise are Charles Orthwein, Jerry Scott and Dick Effin, breast surgeon and shoulder John Welsh and Dan Glasseo, baekstroke; and Bob Wellborn, Arch Unruh and Dallas Chestnut, diving. Although league rules permit only 15 swimmers to compete, Coach Mikols plans to carry 18 or 20 on the squad. They will meet Nebraska here for their first meet Jan. 12. Page 5 PHI GAM PHI GAM PHI GAM PHI GAM PHI GAM PHI GAM PHI GAMMA DELTA'S intramural football teams won both the "A" and "B" division championships this season. Players pictured above, left to right, front row: Larry Cheatham, Jim Potts, Jack Wolfe; second row: Ed Madden, Joe Terrill, Bill Michener, Bille Bunten and last row: G. H. Jones, Dick Penfold, Bob Clawson, Jack Shields, Woody Davis, Ed Kruger and Van Gillespie. —Kansan photo by Dion Sarten. Winners In IM Minor Sports Emerge As Competition Ends Contestants for intramural individual sport crowns relaxed this week as champions for handball, badminton, tennis and golf emerged after several months of fierce competition. The handball doubles team of Tom Schwinn and Jim Stewart, representing Beta Theta Pi fraternity, gained top honors by defeating Phi Kappa Psi's Merlin Stickelber and Charles Orthwein. Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity men dominated the final playoff to determine badminton doubles champions. Harold Titus and Richard Cameron of SAE won the laurels by trimming fraternity brothers Henry Gerling and Robert Meier. Singles champion will be decided this week when Schwinn and Odd Williams complete a series of playoff games. Schwinn is leading in the series. Instructor Evaluation To Be Discussed Today Gene Fotopoulos, Phi Kappa Psi, became 1951 singles tennis champion by defeating Roger Price. Fotopoulos completed his sweep of tennis honors by teaming with Dick Mercer to snare the doubles crown. They downed the Roger Price-Bob Instructor evaluation sheets, the method by which students rate their instructors, will be discussed at the campus affairs committee meetings, at 7:15 p.m. today in 222 Strong. Any University student or faculty member is welcome to participate in the campus affairs meeting. Olmstead duo in the final. Dean Frisbie of Delta Tau Delta won the intramural golf championship. Wichita In Romp Over Baylor 93-59 Wichita surged out in front in the opening minutes and maintained a comfortable lead throughout the game although Baylor rallied weakly three times. Wichita—(U.P.)—A 21-point scoring performance by Negro freshman Cleo Littleton midfielder U.S. University-breaking 35–95 conquest of Baylor, last night. It set a new school scoring mark for Wichita. The old record was 90 points against Washburn in the 1947-48 season. Ralph Johnson, leading scorer of the Southwest conference last year, was the bright performer in Baylor's attack with 20 points. Sophomore Paul Scheer was second high for Wichita with 17. It was 42-24 at halftime. Wichita banged the basket for 39 of 48 field goal tries for a 46.9 percentage while Baylor hit 21 of 58 for 36 per cent. GET YOUR UNIFORM CLEANED FOR THE MILITARY BALL OUR EXPERTS KNOW HOW TO GIVE PROPER MILITARY PRESSING. P. S. We Have 1-Day Special Service For You Last Minute Boys. ROGERS Fashion CLEANERS EIGHT EAST EIGHTH STREET Call498 Foster, Theta's Open With Wins Bv JACKIE JONES A Foster hall team which is loaded with talent may be a tough team to beat in the women's intramural basketball program this winter. Tuesday night they opened the season with a 64 to 17 victory over the Freshman KMM squad. The defending Kappa Alpha Theta team won over the Freshman BL squad 39 to 12, proving that they stand a good chance of retaining their crown. The Jayette team, which is another championship contender, registered a 28 to 19 victory over a scrapy Freshman MJ six. The other game of the evening ended in a 38 to 38 tie between Alpha Delta Pi and Temruth. Both of these squads have great offensive power, but are not too strong on defense. The Theta's had little trouble with the BL's as their smooth attack, one of the best in intramural play, was too much for the opposition. Barbara Quinn paced the winners with 16 points and Sydney Ashton got 15. In the Foster-KMM game, Shirley Mickelson led the winners' attack as the little forward dumped in 29 points. Ernestine Dehlinger was close behind with 25. Their defense was excellent as the freshmen were unable to work the ball in for close shots. A defense of short but talented players held the MJ team to 19 points as a strong Jayette six took their opening game of the season. Their offensive scoring was led by Jackie Jones with 14 points and Mary Snead with 12. Flavia Robertson paced the freshmen with 8. The Temtruth-A. D. Pi game was a scoring battle between Esther Harms and Jo Ann Stone. Harms poured in 36 points for Temtruth and Stone tallied 26 for Alpha Delta Fi. The substance with the lowest melting point is helium, a gas present in small proportions in the atmosphere. It melts at about 458 degrees below zero, F. URGENT! Did you know that air reservations are already heavily booked for coming Christmas holidays? Book your air reservations now! No deposit or payments needed. No charge if you have to cancel. Make your airline reservations now and be sure you have a seat on the flight of your choice. Low "sky coach" and "family fare." Low "sky coach" and "family fare" rates. We will show you the most economical routing home! Don't delay. See Downs Travel Service today for all airline reservations. Phone 3661 for all your travel needs open evenings 6:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. No Booking Fees downs travel service 1015½ massachusetts st. lawrence, kansas downs travel service 10154 massachusetts st. lawrence, kansas 1 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 5, 1951 Hillel Foundation To Celebrate Festival Of Lights December 16 Latkes, an Oriental delicacy, will be served at 6 p.m. Dec. 16 at the Lawrence Community building, when the Hillel foundation, organization for Jewish students on the campus, celebrate their holiday of Chanukah. Chanukah, also called the Festival of Lights, is a holiday celebrating the victory of the Jews in their fight for freedom against the Selucid, Greek-Syrian Empire in 165 B.C. This victory under the leadership of Judah Maccabeus and the Maccabeus has served as an inspiration to all oppressed peoples to fight for democracy and freedom of worship. Early Christians also observed this holiday and in some parts of the world it is still observed by Christians. The Hillel foundation will celebrate this holiday with the ritual lighting of the candles which symbolizes freedom. Rabbi Maurice Solomon of the Kehilath Israel synagogue of Kansas City will address The University club will sponsor four events during the month of December. December Events At University Club On Friday, Pat Beedles will be "caller" for an evening of square dancing in the club rooms. Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Huxtable and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bodin will be hosts for the evening. The first will be an illustrated lecture by Dr. H. A. Ireland, professor of geology tonight. The lecture will feature beautiful full-color pictures of a 1000-square mile area along the Rio Grande in Texas. This was the former haunt of the Comanche and Apache Indians, rustlers, and outlaws. Dr. Ireland has explored the area many times. Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism, will be host for the evening. Members may bring guests. The Christmas dinner party and dance will be held in the Kansas room of the Union Dec. 12. A program and dancing will follow the dinner. Clyde Byson's orchestra and vocalist will furnish the music. Prof. of Biochemistry R. C. Mills and Mrs. Mills, Associate Prof. D. J. Mulford and Mrs. Mulford, Assistant Prof. of Bacteriology Theodore G. Metcalf and Mrs. Metcalf, Assistant Prof. of Physical Education Walter M. Mikols and Mrs. Mikols, Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Fearing and Assistant Prof. of Aeronautical Engineering William Simpson and Mrs. Simpson will be hosts at the party. Dec. 29 there will be a covered dish supper and bridge in the club rooms. Prof. of Political Science B. O. Stene and Mrs. Stene, Prof. of English W. D. Paden and Mrs. Paden, Assistant Prof. of Civil Engineering Dwight F. Metzler and Mrs. Metzler, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Wigglesworth and Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Shull will be hosts. the group on the meaning of the holiday. Jewish residents of Lawrence and University students have prepared a program of movies and group sing- traditional Latkes, will be served. No admission will be charged members of the foundation. Nonmembers are asked to pay a nominal 25 cents. For reservations phone 3513. Official Bulletin Upstream meeting Wednesday is postponed until 2 p.m. Thursday, Union lobby. Student Union Library committee 5 p.m. Thursday, SUA office. Physical Therapy club tea honoring Dr. Rose, 2-5 p.m. Sunday, English room, Union. All members please attend. ISA general council meeting, 5 today, AWS lounge, Strong. All representatives attend. Phi Chi Theta, 6 p.m. Thursday East room, Union. Dress for initiation. Obtain application blanks for the ISA scholarship at dean of women's office. All blanks must be returned by Dec. 13 QST-KU amateur radio club, ;30 tonight, EE lab. rencing club, 7:30 tonight, Robinson gym. Alpha Kappa Psi informal initiation tonight. Meet in Union 7 p.m. CQ code practice session, 7:30 tonight. EE lab. KuKu club, 7:15 p.m. Thursday. Pine room, Union, election of officers. Attendance required. Pledges 7 p.m. Christian Science organization, 7 p.m. Thursday, Danfort chapel. Last Date and Mate lecture, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Henley house. Rev. Turner, "Religion and Marriage," Sponsored by YMCA and YWCA. International club, 7:45 p.m. Thursday, girl's gym, Haskell Institute. Bus leaves Union 7:30 p.m. Folk dances and songs. Campus Affairs committee, 7:15 tonight, 222 Strong Social Work club, brief but important meeting, 4 today, AWS lounge. All members attend. Graduate coffee. 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Hawk's Nest. Chess club, 7:15 tonight, 111 Strong, 5th round of tournament. Johann Brennermann p.m. 502 Freistadt Deutehe Studenten erzahlen von ihrer Heimat College, Education, and Journalism junior and seniors: The English Proficiency examination will be in March 2019. Register in the office of your dean today. YOU ARE THE BEST WOMAN IN THE GAME. Student Chapter ASTE meeting. MISS SANDRA DEXTER Dexter-McDonald Engagement Told Mr. and Mrs. M.F. Dexter of Topeka announce the engagement of their daughter, Sandra, to Glenn McDonald, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. O. McDonald of Topeka. The announcement was made at North College hall Nov. 19 by Betty Cole, after which mints were passed. Miss Dexter is a freshman in the College and he'd donate to Washu- ing University. No date has been set for the wedding. University Women To Give Christmas Mrs. Thomas G. Sturgeon will play Christmas music on the Baroque organ, after which will follow a program of Christmas choral music under the direction of Clayton Krehbiel. instructor in music education. The University Women's club will give a Christmas tea at 3 p.m. Dec. 6 in the Museum of Art. Mrs. George Malcolm Beal is general chairman of the tea and Mrs. James Nickerson is program chairman. A short business meeting will precede the program. 7:30 tonight, Lindley hall auditorium. Mr. Harl Day, Butler Mfg. Co., speaker, "Production and Tooling." Annual joint meeting with the parent chapter of Kansas City. Square Dance club, 7:30 tonight, Recreation, Union. Inter- Varsity Christian fellowship 7:30-8:30 p.m. Thursday, 206 Strong, 445 Lexington Ave. IVCF missionary meeting, 12. 50 p.m. Friday, Danforth chapel. Rehearsal of German Christmas choir, 5 tonight, 306 Fraser. All interested in singing German carols invited. Jefferson County Statewide Activities meeting, 3 p.m. Thursday, 111 Strong. La reunion de Noel du Cercle français aura lieu jeu a sept heures et demie dans la salle 131 Strong. Favors Bathing Suits That Fit Curves Hollywood—(U.P.) A fashion designer said today the least the women can do is choose the proper bathing suits to match their curves. Designer Milo Anderson, who's been gowning glamour gals for 18 years, said that he has found most women wiggle into beach garments that make them look 10 years old and 10 pounds heavier. "Find you which movie star you curve like and buy your suit accordingly if you want to be a sensation on the sands next summer," Anderson advised. "Even if she thinks she has a few extra bulges here and there she can make the men stare google eyed. There's a swimsuit for every shape," he growled. "Obviously, the full-busted girl would not wear a two-piece suit. She could show off her bountiful gifts in a one-piece proportioned suit like Jane does," he said. "Wanda." Anderson said, "would never think of wearing a full-skirted suit. It'd make her look like a pigmy. Two-piece—that's her forte. With no trick skirts and ruffles to Take the Jane Russell type. Then there's the Wanda Hendrix type. .or the petite girl. emphasize her short torso." "The hippy gal in a Mae West-ish sort of way should go in for stripes .or maybe even rows of buttons," Anderson suggested. Anderson, who has just moved in as head designer for Catalina swimsuits, said if you are a tom-boy like Doris Day, you can fool every lifeguard in the land with a little artful shirring here and there. If you are built like Jane Wyman, "the paradoxical feminine-tailored type," you'll do your best sirenring in simple lines with feminine accents. "And even if you've got the perfect bathing suit figure, which Ginger Rogers has," he sighed, "you have to be careful. An ill-chosen suit will ruin any figure. 图 YOUR EYES EYE should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. Lawrence Optical Co. Phone 425 1025 Mass. "Take as much time picking out a bathing suit as you do a party gown," Anderson urged. "It's the least you can do for us men," he said, "and remember we have to look at you and you don't." Give Kodak Accessories to the Photo Fan! wide selection here! HIXON'S 721 Mass. Phone 41 Hollywood — (U.P.)—Movie queens with a wen for Italian delicacies has latched onto Hollywood's newest ad—"non-fattening spaghetti." Starchless Spaghetti Is Latest Dieting Fad And the little lady who serves it up is a walking plug for her specialty. She is Yolanda, an Italian charmer whose svelte shape makes it hard to believe she's the mother of three grown kids, one of 'em a full-fledged jet pilot. She doesn't look like she's been guzzling spaghetti all her life. But she has. They've discovered a restaurant in the sprawling town and country market where they can lap up long ropefuls of the forbidden stuff and still keep those trim curves. "This non-fattening kind," she chuckled. "It's not new—only to this country. Back home we call it butoni." How it keeps the bulges off is sort of a secret process, according to Yolanda. But it's got the starch squeezed out and a whole flock of proteins and wheat germs shot in for free. "But it's worth it, to the ladies who have to keep their figures," she shrugged. "Even Greta Garbo loves it." Well, not exactly for free—to be low in calories, Yolanda says, it has to be high in price. It is almost three times as high as the fattening kind. "She came in one day with Gaye- lord Hauser and had spaghetti—with no sauce—and salad—with no dressing. She didn't act very happy with it. "A few days later she came back—without Hauser. This time she ordered everything.. sauce and dressing and lots of spaghetti." Jeanne Crain like it piled high, too, and so do most of the glamour gals who do their shopping in the exclusive market. "And the men . . ." Yolanda grinned. "They're interested in their waistlines, too. Clifton Webb was in this noon. Name any movie star you want to . . . man or woman . . . and I've fed them my 'non-fattening' spaghetti." Eugene Pallett was there, too. He must just like that taste of the stuff. He's long since stopped fretting over his MIDDLE. Communion For Episcopals Holy Communion at Trinity Episcopal church, 7 a.m. Thursday. Breakfast will be served after the service. Rides will be furnished students with 8 a.m. classes. 1950 MISS JOYCE BOWER Miss Joyce Bower To Wed Victor Rew Mrs. Leo C. Bower, Goodland, nounces the engagement of her daughter, Joyce Dian, to Victor M. Rew, son of Mrs. Eva Rew, Lawrence. Miss Bower is a College sophomore. Mr. Rew was graduated from the University in June, 1947, and is now with the Arthur Young and company in Kansas City, Mo. The couple plan to be married next summer. Bees trained to pollenize red clover will increase seed production from the usual one to four bushels an acre to about 12 bushels. Simon Patino, "tin king" of Bolivia and one of the wealthiest men in South America, was once a store clerk who was fired from his job and given a "worthless" tin claim in lieu of back pay. L.M.O.C. — No. 9 — WATCH FOR IT The Department of Speech & Drama Presents Oscar Wilde's Sparkling Comedy THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST FRASER THEATRE TONIGHT, THURS., FRI., SAT. Dec. 5,6,7,8 curtain at eight I-D Cards Admit a Present I-D Cards at Ticket Office Basement Green Hall for Reserved Seats Open Daily 9-12,1-4 Page 7 ew and, as of her doctor M. IAW- sophod from and is g and ze redductionoushels narried Bolivia men in store his job claim It's East vs. West In Berlin Propaganda War Of Nerves Washington D. C.—Out on a 100-mile limb in Soviet-occupied Germany, Berlin today is a city of split personality, each side trying to talk or other down. By loudspeaker, electric sign, radio, placard and parade, free West Berlin and the Communist Eastern Sector clash in a continual war of ideas. The National Geographic Magazine, is an illustrated profile of "Berlin, Island in a Soviet Sea," describes what it is like to live with the Communist world just across the street. "Iimagine Washington apportioned like a pie among four victorious powers, one of them a Communist dictatorship," Frederick G. Vosburgh, an assistant editor of the magazine, writes. "The dictator's minions hold the biggest section, about 45 per cent, including most of the Government buildings—or what is left of them. Ranging the oodynyse is nine diverse districts enriched by society. No train, truck, car, or barge can move in or out without permission. The only road link with free territory is the autobahn from Helmstedt in the British zone—as far from Berlin as Harrisburg, $ \mathrm{Pa}_{2} $ , is from Washington, D. C. "Ranging the countryside round- In Berlin's Soviet Sector, beneath banners urging the people to "protest the remilitarization of Germany," dark military columns march—rifle-toting men in black jack-boots, midnight blue uniforms, and black rainoats that recall the old Nazi SS troops. Last year West Berlin's major political parties invited their Communist-ruled fellow citizens to express opposition to Communism, and their desire for free and secret elections. Yet on May Day morning a half a million Berliners gathered in a phalanx on the free side of the Brandenburger Tor, war-scarred gate at the boundary between the city's two worlds. Thousands from the Soviet Sector poured across the line to stand with their friends in defiance of their Communist overlords. Two sociology professors agreed Sunday, in a radio talk over KLWN, that race prejudice is ingrained in the culture. Prejudice Aired In Radio Talk The speakers, E. Jackson Baur, associate professor, and E. Gordon Ericksen, assistant professor, took part in a Sociology on the Air panel and discussed the subject "What Do We Know About Race and Prejudice?" Dr. Baur explained that there is "no reliable scientific evidence of more intelligence in one particular racial group than in another. The difference in intelligence comes from the differences in environment and experience." Both speakers agreed that insecurity is a significant element in prejudice and said that if economic insecurity were eliminated, prejudice could be. "Iisolation reinforces prejudice," said Dr. Ericksen. "When two races live together or in close proximity, they will work out their difficulties eventually. Each group will find a course for the other." Brookings, S.D.—(U.P.)—A bug collection started by a South Dakota State college entomologist has become one of the most extensive in the world, with 1,200,000 specimens. Professor Collects 1,200,000 Specimens Prof. Harry C. Severin has mounted and cataloged insects from North America, China, Germany, France, England, South Africa and the Mediterranean islands. An 11,000-mile trip through the United States took Ukrainian biologist British Columbia last summer gave Severin an additional 75,000 specimens. South Dakota, he has collected 116 species of grasshoppers. His collection occupies three rooms in the college's entomology department. by mailing to the West Berlin city hall the stubs of their expired adult ration books. City hall desks were snowed under by more than 400,000 replies. Despite the knowledge that they live on a battleground of psychological warfare, West Berliners do not act like people under siege. They are cheerful and alert, extremely proud of the progress they have made in rebuilding a peaceful life. Although 85 per cent of Berlin's production facilities were dispersed, destroyed, or taken east as Russian reparations at the end of the war, industry has made a surprising comeback in the Western sections despite the Soviet stranglehold. Much of the rubble left by wartime bombing has been cleared. Salvaged bricks and stones go into new construction backed by the Marshall Plan. Music, art and higher education have had a rebirth. New stores on West Berlin streets are stocked with luxury goods—sheer stockings, jewelry, lingerie—at prices roughly comparable to those on Fifth Avenue. Most people, and there are many East Berliners among them, have to content themselves with window shopping. One housewife put it this way: "We have seen so many poor things that we like to see nice things, even if we cannot buy them." German China Is On Display A collection of German made porcelain which Phillip Mitchell, assistant professor of German, has found in various Lawrence homes, is on display this week in the German department, third floor Fraser. Included in the display are: a table setting of early 20th century Bavarian porcelain for everyday use; Bavarian porcelain in the Meissen style—famous about 1900, and German The best known factories were at Meissen, Vienna, Nymphenburg and Frankenthal. Porcelain of Chinese origin was not imitated successfully in Europe until the 17th century. The first German porcelain was produced in Dresden about 1708. Soon a number of factories sprang up in the various parts of Germany. The art degenerated somewhat until the middle of the 19th century when a movement by the royal Copenhagen porcelain factory spread to Germany and elevated the manufacture to new artistic levels. Classified Ads The Meissen factory, the most famous maker of German porcelain, is still operating today in the Russian zone of Germany. Classified Advertising Rates 25 words or less ... 50k 75k $1.00 Additional costs Phone calls are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought by another office. Journalism bldg. not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. FOR SALE REGISTERED male German shepherpa pups, 3 months old. Phone 3602. 11 TUXEDO FOR SALE Cleaned and in ex- cellence 35-37. 35-41. Landlady. Phone 3566. 12-6 CRUMBO ETCHINGS for Christmas; a courtroom. Pat Read, across from 12-7 Courthouse. SWINGLINE TOT STAPLERS are now Union Book Store, Only 98% 12-7 Christmas Bazaar DO YOUR Christmas shopping early at the Y.W.C.A. Bazaar, Dec. 7th and 8th from 8 to 8. Gifts from your campus and all over the World. 12-7 TRADE-IN SALE! I !! Between now and Christmas we will accept any used paper goods. We will pay the price of the New Sheaffer Pen of your choice and now to the Student Union Book Store. JUST ARRIVED, new shipment of pencil erasers. Soft and self cleaning for drawings and tracings. At your Student Union Book Store. 12-7 ORDER EARLY! Give books for Christmas this year. The gift that is treasured more each year. Come in and order any wish from your Student University Book Store. 12-7 BOOK LAMPS! The original clip-on lamp with 6 foot cord and 10 watt lamp. An unusual gift for only $1.98. Student Union Book Store. 12-7 MISCELLLANEOUS JERRY—meet me tonight at 8 p.m. in the Pink Elephant. Bill. 11 COLLEGE SENIOR has 20 hours a week to work for somebody. Type, general office work, etc. Gotta eat! Call Norm Storer, 858M after 7 p.m. 12-7 TRANSPORTATION NEEDED, a ride from Kansas City to Lawrence and back daily, starting after Christmas vacation. Will help on ex-tenants. Leave message at Daly Kansas II KU 376. AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether overseas or in prereviewed countries. Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass. Ask us about family rates, sky coach, and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book the bus to summer. Call Miss Glesesman at 123 National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mace. Phone 30. FOR RENT RENT A TYPEWRITER NOW! Choose from our wide selection of portables. Select your grades improve when you type your papers. Student Union岛 Store. 12-7 ONE CLEAN ROOM for boys. Close to U1 versity and bus line, 1817 I. BUSINESS SERVICE ARGE DOUBLE ROOM for two men, good location, steam room 1324W, 1324H, 12-7 TYPING: Themes, term papers, and micrograph work. Accurate service by pool. Nexus Leaders of America typing pool. Contact Anneliese Schiff phone 534. tf SHORTY'S BARBER SHOP at 837 New amphetamines Street, San Francisco, Friday and Saturday. Haircuts 75c. Plenty of reading material. Give the boy a motto. Cleanliness good service payoffs. TYPING: Themes term papers, theses—prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs. Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. tf TYPING DONE promptly and accurately. Call Mrs. Merritt, KU 296 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. for further information. 12-6 HELD OVER! THRU THURSDAY THE THING THE THING from another world! WHAT IS IT? Where Did It Come From? AN REO RADIO RELEASE University Daily Kansan 'BUGS BUNNY' CARTOON "ALPINE CHAMPS" STARTS FRIDAY ADDED Wednesday. Dec. 5. 1951 ROBERT JANE MITCHUM·RUSSELL HIS KIND OF WOMAN VINCENT PRICE TIM MOLT AN BKO-RADIO PICTURE Evening Shows Daily - 7-9 Matinee Friday 2:30 p.m. Continuous Sat. and Sunday HIS KIND OF WOMAN VINCENT PRICE AN EKO-BADI PICTURE TIM MOLT EXPERIENCED TYPIST: term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. E. Bentley, Apt. 4, upstairs. 2757J after 4 p.m. 12-6 New PATEE PHONE 321 CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastry. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 am. until midnight. TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these tesis typing. Mrs. Shields, 1290 Ohio. Phi 1601. RADIO AND TV repair services on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ment, are most assured fast, efficient area. Service by Televislon. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. tt STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. tf TYPING: Experience in theses, term papers, miscellaneous typing, and stencil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. tf CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malts, home-made pies and cakes. Free parking space for customers. Entrance: 9 am. s.tm. midnight. Crystal Café, 609 Vt. JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jawhawk pet shop. We have everything in the pheid. Their needs are our business. Gift cards, food, fun, fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet Shop, 1218 Comm. Phone 418. t LOST KTTTEN. half grown grey and black wash. hallowbill. 1231 Oz. phone 3883- W. Reward. LADYS GOLD Bulova watch. Finde. cell call Joan Harner KU 516 12 pim.) BROWN BILLFOLD with ID and basket ball ticket lost on Crescent Road by The Call. Finder can keep money. Pa Davis, Phone 3493W. 12-8 HELP WANTED BROWN BILLFOLD on campus. Person finding it please call Kent Sanborn, Ph 1106. Reward. 30-3-1 BROWN BILLFOLD probably in Gren- nada theater. Finder can keep money, please return billfold. Seymour Baum garten. Phone 2282W. ( Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWK HAIRCUTS NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS STARTS COLLEGE MEN familiar with Green houses, work on convenient evenings Sunday through Thursday delivery in organized houses. Cm Ken Duhue at 444. Thursday ENDS TODAY 2:30-7-9 "A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE" NAMED DESIRE" Thurs. - Fri. Shows At 2:30-7-9 FOR DAYS THRILLING ACTION OFF THE KOREAN COAST! SUBMARINE COMMAND starring WILLIAM NANCY WILLIAM DON HOLDEN·OLSON·BENDIX·TAYLOR JOHN FARROW production Saturday Continuous 1:00 p.m. On Late News Screen Snapshots VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD TODAY - THURS OPEN 6:45 FINE ARTS PRESENTATION "MARRIAGE IN THE SHADOWS" (German) Adm. 25c - 60c VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD Starts Thursday IT'S A THRILLER From Start To Finish! DICK POWELL TRAILING TROUBLE ...AND A DOUBLE- DEALING DAME! CRY DANGER CO-STARRING 15.0 MASS RHONDA FLEMING Matinee Monday Thru Friday At 2:30 — Open 2 p.m. FEATURE TIMES: 3:12, 7:42 and 9:43 Continuous Shows On Saturday and Sunday From 1 p.m. Color Cartoon Granada PHONE 940 Movietone News HURRY ENDS TONITE — "TOO YOUNG TO KISS" 30014, 30020, 30030, 30040, 30050, 30060, 30070, 30080, 30090, 30100, 30110, 30120, 30130, 30140, 30150, 30160, 30170, 30180, 30190, 30200, 30210, 30220, 30230, 30240, 30250, 30260, 30270, 30280, 30290, 30300, 30310, 30320, 30330, 30340, 30350, 30360, 30370, 30380, 30390, 30400, 30410, 30420, 30430, 30440, 30450, 30460, 30470, 30480, 30490, 30500, 30510, 30520, 30530, 30540, 30550, 30560, 30570, 30580, 30590, 30600, 30610, 30620, 30630, 30640, 30650, 30660, 30670, 30680, 30690, 30700, 30710, 30720, 30730, 30740, 30750, 30760, 30770, 30780, 30790, 30800, 30810, 30820, 30830, 30840, 30850, 30860, 30870, 30880, 30890, 30900, 30910, 30920, 30930, 30940, 30950, 30960, 30970, 30980, 30990, 31000, 31010, 31020, 31030, 31040, 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39630, 39640, 39650, 39660, 39670, 39680, 39690, 39700, 39710, 39720, 39730, 39740, 39750, 39760, 39770, 39780, 39790, 39800, 39810, 39820, 39830, 39840, 39850, 39860, 39870, 39880, 39890, 39900, 39910, 39920, 39930, 39940, 39950, 39960, 39970, 39980, 39990, 40000, 40010, 40020, 40030, 40040, 40050, 40060, 40070, 40080, 40090, 40100, 40110, 40120, 40130, 40140, 40150, 40160, 40170, 40180, 40190, 40200, 40210, 40220, 40230, 40240, 40250, 40260, 40270, 40280, 40290, 40300, 40310, 40320, 40330, 40340, 40350, 40360, 40370, 40380, 40390, 40400, 40410, 40420, 40430, 40440, 40450, 40460, 40470, 40480, 40490, 40500, 40510, 40520, 40530, 40540, 40550, 40560, 40570, 40580, 40590, 40600, 40610, 40620, 40630, 40640, 40650, 40660, 40670, 40680, 40690, 40700, 40710, 40720, 40730, 40740, 40750, 40760, 40770, 40780, 40790, 40800, 40810, 40820, 40830, 40840, 40850, 40860, 40870, 40880, 40890, 40900, 40910, 40920, 40930, 40940, 40950, 40960, 40970, 40980, 40990, 41000, 41010, 41020, 41030, 41040, 41050, 41060, 41070, 41080, 41090, 41100, 41110, 41120, 41130, 41140, 41150, 41160, 41170, 41180, 41190, 41200, 41210, 41220, 41230, 41240, 41250, 41260, 41270, 41280, 41290, 41300, 41310, 41320, 41330, 41340, 41350, 41360, 41370, 41380, 41390, 41400, 41410, 41420, 41430, 41440, 41450, 41460, 41470, 41480, 41490, 41500, 41510, 41520, 41530, 41540, 41550, 41560, 41570, 41580, 41590, 41600, 41610, 41620, 41630, 41640, 41650, 41660, 41670, 41680, 41690, 41700, 41710, 41720, 41730, 41740, 41750, 41760, 41770, 41780, 41790, 41800, 41810, 41820, 41830, 41840, 41850, 41860, 41870, 41880, 41890, 41900, 41910, 41920, 41930, 41940, 41950, 41960, 41970, 41980, 41990, 42000, 42010, 42020, 42030, 42040, 42050, 42060, 42070, 42080, 42090, 42100, 42110, 42120, 42130, 42140, 42150, 42160, 42170, 42180, 42190, 42200, 42210, 42220, 42230, 42240, 42250, 42260, 42270, 42280, 42290, 42300, 42310, 42320, 42330, 42340, 42350, 42360, 42370, 42380, 42390, 42400, 42410, 42420, 42430, 42440, 42450, 42460, 42470, 42480, 42490, 42500, 42510, 42520, 42530, 42540, 42550, 42560, 42570, 42580, 42590, 42600, 42610, 42620, 42630, 42640, 42650, 42660, 42670, 42680, 42690, 42700, 42710, 42720, 42730, 42740, 42750, 42760, 42770, 42780, 42790, 42800, 42810, 42820, 42830, 42840, 42850, 42860, 42870, 42880, 42890, 42900, 42910, 42920, 42930, 42940, 42950, 42960, 42970, 42980, 42990, 43000, 43010, 43020, 43030, 43040, 43050, 43060, 43070, 43080, 43090, 43100, 43110, 43120, 43130, 43140, 43150, 43160, 43170, 43180, 43190, 43200, 43210, 43220, 43230, 43240, 43250, 43260, 43270, 43280, 43290, 43300, 43310, 43320, 43330, 43340, 43350, 43360, 43370, 43380, 43390, 43400, 43410, 43420, 43430, 43440, 43450, 43460, 43470, 43480, 43490, 43500, 43510, 43520, 43530, 43540, 43550, 43560, 43570, 43580, 43590, 43600, 43610, 43620, 43630, 43640, 43650, 43660, 43670, 43680, 43690, 43700, 43710, 43720, 43730, 43740, 43750, 43760, 43770, 43780, 43790, 43800, 43810, 43820, 43830, 43840, 43850, 43860, 43870, 43880, 43890, 43900, 43910, 43920, 43930, 43940, 43950, 43960, 43970, 43980, 43990, 44000, 44010, 44020, 44030, 44040, 44050, 44060, 44070, 44080, 44090, 44100, 44110, 44120, 44130, 44140, 44150, 44160, 44170, 44180, 44190, 44200, 44210, 44220, 44230, 44240, 44250, 44260, 44270, 44280, 44290, 44300, 44310, 44320, 44330, 44340, 44350, 44360, 44370, 44380, 44390, 44400, 44410, 44420, 44430, 44440, 44450, 44460, 44470, 44480, 44490, 44500, 44510, 44520, 44530, 44540, 44550, 44560, 44570, 44580, 44590, 44600, 44610, 44620, 44630, 44640, 44650, 44660, 44670, 44680, 44690, 44700, 44710, 44720, 44730, 44740, 44750, 44760, 44770, 44780, 44790, 44800, 44810, 44820, 44830, 44840, 44850, 44860, 44870, 44880, 44890, 44900, 44910, 44920, 44930, 44940, 44950, 44960, 44970, 44980, 44990, 45000, 45010, 45020, 45030, 45040, 45050, 45060, 45070, 45080, 45090, 45100, 45110, 45120, 45130, 45140, 45150, 45160, 45170, 45180, 45190, 45200, 45210, 45220, 45230, 45240, 45250, 45260, 45270, 45280, 45290, 45300, 45310, 45320, 45330, 45340, 45350, 45360, 45370, 45380, 45390, 45400, 45410, 45420, 45430, 45440, 45450, 45460, 45470, 45480, 45490, 45500, 45510, 45520, 45530, 45540, 45550, 45560, 45570, 45580, 45590, 45600, 45610, 45620, 45630, 45640, 45650, 45660, 45670, 45680, 45690, 45700, 45710, 45720, 45730, 45740, 45750, 45760, 45770, 45780, 45790, 45800, 45810, 45820, 45830, 45840, 45850, 45860, 45870, 45880, 45890, 45900, 45910, 45920, 45930, 45940, 45950, 45960, 45970, 45980, 45990, 46000, 46010, 46020, 46030, 46040, 46050, 46060, 46070, 46080, 46090, 46100, 46110, 46120, 46130, 46140, 46150, 46160, 46170, 46180, 46190, 46200, 46210, 46220, 46230, 46240, 46250, 46260, 46270, 46280, 46290, 46300, 46310, 46320, 46330, 46340, 46350, 46360, 46370, 46380, 46390, 46400, 46410, 46420, 46430, 46440, 46450, 46460, 46470, 46480, 46490, 46500, 46510, 46520, 46530, 46540, 46550, 46560, 46570, 46580, 46590, 46600, 46610, 46620, 46630, 46640, 46650, 46660, 46670, 46680, 46690, 46700, 46710, 46720, 46730, 46740, 46750, 46760, 46770, 46780, 46790, 46800, 46810, 46820, 46830, 46840, 46850, 46860, 46870, 46880, 46890, 46900, 46910, 46920, 46930, 46940, 46950, 46960, 46970, 46980, 46990, 47000, 47010, 47020, 47030, 47040, 47050, 47060, 47070, 47080, 47090, 47100, 47110, 47120, 47130, 47140, 47150, 47160, 47170, 47180, 47190, 47200, 47210, 47220, 47230, 47240, 47250, 47260, 47270, 47280, 47290, 47300, 47310, 47320, 47330, 47340, 47350, 47360, 47370, 47380, 47390, 47400, 47410, 47420, 47430, 47440, 47450, 47460, 47470, 47480, 47490, 47500, 47510, 47520, 47530, 47540, 47550, 475 THE PROMISSORY SHOULD BE THE EVERYTHING FOR YOU, IN ALL OF ITS STATUS. THE FIRST SHOWING of "The Importance of Being Earnest," speech and drama department farce comedy, will be at 8 p.m. today in Fraser theater. Pictured above are Murray Trelease as John Washing and Jane Davis as Hon. Gwendolen Fairax. John Worthing and Jane Davis as Hon. Gwendolen Fairfax. 'The Importance Of Being Earnest' Opens At 8 Tonight In Fraser The cast of "The Importance of Being Earnest," speech and drama department comedy opening at 8 p.m. today in Fraser theater, will appropriately include two persons of English background. The play's locale is London. Rupert Murrill, instructor in sociology, will portray Lane, a man-servant. Mr. Murrill, although born in Mexico, has lived a good part of his life in England and Canada. He recently applied for United States citizenship. "I have always been interested in the theater, although I know nothing about it," said McKenzie recently. McKenzie said one of his first experiences was "a supporting role in a Jack and the Beanstalk-theme play" while in grammar school. Frances Feist, instructor in speech and director of the play, says, "The farce-play play, such as this one by Oscar Wilde, is a difficult one for students to produce as it requires much control of action." Hugh McKenzie, special student in engineering from Sanderdale, England, will play the part of the Revered Canon Chasuble. There are still good seats left for tonight's performance, Don Dixon, assistant professor of speech, said. the light-hearted and absurd situations created. "Some reserved seats will be available at the door for students who cannot be at the ticket office in Green hall to present their ID cards for reserved seat tickets," he said. The plot in itself is not important, but the play depends instead upon Admission for non-students is $1.00. Army Colonel Will Lecture Here Tonight Col. Frank H. Loomis of the Command and General Staff college, Fort Leavenworth, will speak on "Unconventional Warfare" tonight in the Military Science building. The lecture, to begin at 7 p.m., is one of nine presented by Scabbard and Blade, senior honorary military society. The lectures are designed to better acquaint ROTC students and other interested individuals with military policy. Colonel Loomis' talk will deal with chemical and biological warfare, psychological warfare, organized sabotage, and nuclear submarines. Robert Shaw Program Shows Perfectionism Those who attended the Robert Shaw chorale concert Tuesday night in Hoch auditorium received entertainment they probably never will forget. The program was refreshing at all times. It was dominated by the personality of the director, who reversed advance notices by proving that he is not always temperamental and moody. By JIM POWERS At least Shaw was in one of his better moods Tuesday, and before the concert ended he proved that he has a friendly and spiritual sense of humor. The listeners liked him and his thrilling music, and they clamored for more. Shaw's rollingick antics were not the only reason for the many encores. His meticulous perfectionism seemed to produce music as he himself felt it. The peak of his personal projection came in 1962 when "Lacroyosa" movement in Mozart's "Requiem Mass" in D minor." The entire work by Mozart was remarkably played and sung. It carried a tremendous impact of penetrating pathos intermingled with fervent prayerfulness. The soloists blended well as a quartet, and the alto section of the chorale stood out as exceptional. The nine "Liebeslieder Waltzer" Writing Contest Prizes Awarded By Quill Club by Brahms were s and grace. The two with the conductor this did not detrace all beauty of the songs. The group sang including "From O the Lord," "O De Matter Be?," "Poll" "The Mockingbird Go Through the homa," "There is Dame," and a mc carols. After working Chansons" by Rev skipping on to "Porgy and Bess" called back again encores. Prizes were awarded to winners o the Quill club's annual fall creative writing contest yesterday at a meeting held in the East room of the Union at 4 p.m. ag with charm anists were not all times, but from the over- well-liked love rough "Trois and skillfully excerpts from e chorus was und again for Half-way throu "There is Nothing sung by male men, Shaw turned ence and shouted go home, shut up all night." extras in all, f Zion Comes What Can the Lilly Doodle," Robert Ziesenis, College senior, received the first place award of $10 for his one-act play, "An Irish Fantasy," in the best short story division. Richard Sheldon, College sophomore, received the $5 first place award for his poem, "Old Dog, in that division. Incidently, the men topped arrangement sum and Hammerstein the year. The S of "Okahoma," an arrangement, prochorus but the come up to the "Little Bird, "low," "Okla- hing Like a of Christmas Eugene Goltz, College sophomore, received honorable mention for his short story, "To Be or Not To Be." The prize-winning poem and play will be published in the December issue of Upstream. Thomas Sturgeon, instructor of English and one of the judges in the contest, in commenting on Zieens' play, "An Irish Fantasy," said, "An Irish Fantasy" indicates more literary ability on the part of the author than any contest entry I have judged since I've been at the University." Following the awarding of the prizes new members of the club were accepted. They were: Ann Ivester, College junior; Mrs. Ada Storner, fine arts junior; Robert Ziesenis, College senior; Eugene Goltz, College sophomore and Mary Rawlins. College sophomore. number byr the same the Rodgers earlier in presentation differently far better work did not our group's Richard Sheldon, College sophomore; Maize Harris, College freshman; Winifred Meyer, College freshman and Roger Yarrington, journalism junior. iage 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 5,195 The Quill club is one of the oldest organizations on the campus. The club originated at the University in 1901, and became a national organization in 1909. It is composed of persons of proven literary talents and its purpose is to encourage and stimulate interest in creative writing. H. A. Meyer, Jr., president of the Kansas Press association, will be a guest at a joint meeting of professional journalism societies at 7 p.m. today in the Pine room of the Union. Mr. Meyer, publisher of the Independence Daily Reporter, will lead the informational discussion with members of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity, and Theta Sigma Phi, professional journalism sorority. M. Mr. Meyer will speak to the Newspaper Administration class conducted by Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism, today, on various problems of newspaper administration and national retail advertising. Mr. Meyer will lunch today at the Faculty club with Professor Beth, Emil L. Telfel, associate professor of journalism; Victor J. Danilov, assistant professor of journalism; Robert W. Doores, instructor in journalism; Thomas C. Rythe, assistant professor of journalism; Calder M. Pickett, assistant professor of journalism, and Harold Reddoch, graduate assistant in journalism. KPA President To Speak Tonight All journalism students are invited to attend the meeting. The largest music crowd of the year went home convinced that the Shaw choristers really might have sung "all night" had the chorale not had an engagement the next day. rendition. --- All persons interested in playing soccer are asked to attend a meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 106 Strong. Those unable to attend should call Bernie Weitzner at 3513. Page 8 Anyone Interested In Soccer, Note --- News Roundup Hibok-Hibok Erupts Again, Hundreds Die On Island Manila, Philippines—(U.P.)—Rescue workers dug "hundreds of bodies from piles of steaming rock and hot ashes at the foot of Mt. Hibok-Hibok today. Press reports said at least 500 persons died in the volcano's two eruptions, but verified deaths totalled 157. Gov. Paciencio Ysalina of Misamis Occidental province estimated 2,000 persons had been killed and said "80 per cent of Barrio was wiped out." However, Red Cross officials described the governor's figures as "too staggering." British Highway Tragedy Kills 23 Boys Chatham, Eng.—(U.P.)—A bus driver whose 25-year safety record was shattered by the worst highway accident in British history sat stunned in his darkened home today, still unable to tell how he ran down and killed 23 boys and injured 19. The lumbering red double-deck bus, moving at normal speed but with only parking lights on, plowed into a column of 53 Royal Marine Chatham cadets last night. The boys, between 10 and 13 years old were marching along a dimly-lit road three abreast down a hill to a boxing tournament. The bus came from the rear and plowed through the column. Driver John William George Samson, 57, knew many of the boys personally. Previous plans had called for him to be decorated by his bus company tomorrow for 25 years of driving without an accident or even a traffic ticket. GOP Campaign Emphasizes Tax Burden Washington—(U.P.)—Republican accountants have figured out that the United States government has collected about $555,000,- 000.000 in taxes since the treasury opened for business in 1789. The Republicans have begun a campaign to impress on voters that more than half of this tax total has been collected and spent since Harry S. Truman became president. No Gambling In Kansas Says Fatzer Topeka, Kan.—(U.P.)-Atty. Gen. Harold Fatzer won't tolerate gambling in Kansas with or without federal licenses. "The collector of Internal Revenue at Wichita informs me that three federal licenses have been issued in Sedgwick County since the licensing law went into effect Nov. 1," said Fatzer . Sedgwick County Attorney Tom Seed was asked to make an investigation and to take appropriate action if state gambling laws have been violated, he said. War Not Over For Frontline Vets On Outpost Line, Korea—(U.P.)-The war is far from over for American Gi's holding the 8th Army's Northernmost point of advance into Communist Korea. The Yanks are taking no chances here on the central front. They are spreading out and digging in. French Fail In Defense Production Paris—(U.P.)The defense drive has made hardly a dent in the normal French industrial production and France will fall far short of her defense commitments for the year. U. S. officials are putting pressure on the government to get the rearmament drive going. But it appears certain that the French promise to have 10 divisions for the North Atlantic army by the end of 1951 will not be kept. The record shows a complete failure in production of heavy and light weapons. Denver, Colo.—(U.P.)—Residents who claimed "that all East Denver is a target" scheduled a mass meeting for tonight in the wake of two Denver area air crashes in two days which left 11 persons dead and seven others injured. Repeated Crashes Worry Denverites "These planes take off and come in awfully low," Donald E. Kelley, a Denver attorney said. "If they conk out on a takeoff, neither they nor we would have a chance. The jets worry us, too. We've been jittery for a long time. All of East Denver is a target," he said. Seattle, Wash.—(U.P.)—Sen. Estes Kefauver said Tuesday that he may be a candidate for the 1952 Democratic presidential nomination and he labeled Gen. Douglas MacArthur a "Monday morning quarterback." Hungarians To Free Yanks Sometimes Sen. Kefauver May Run For President Washington—(U.P.)—Four American airmen held in Hungary may be freed as soon as they have served their purpose as Communist propaganda, U.S. officials said today. Russian Airpower Continues To Mount London—(U.P.)—A Russian secret warplane has been spotted over northern Europe, apparently flying reconnaissance missions, the authoritative Jane's "All The World's Aircraft" said today. The aviation annual also said that Russia has developed at least five new swept-wing jet fighter planes—probably capable of exceeding the speed of sound—in addition to types like the previously-identified MIG-15 jet now flying for the Communists in Korea. 5, 1951 Kansas State Historical Society n, d UNIVERSITY TORKKS Y DAILY of Mt. died in olerate one that since record ory sat now he d out 55,000,- 789. voters spent oys den imimated rio was ernor's --- ver for of ad- in the r short hike an g laws speed Royal and 13 t down ar and the boys stated by an ac- front. Denver of two ad and get the French by the failure . that nomina- morning d over us, the it least of ex-iously area. ry may munist wald E. wakeoff, us, too target," No.57 Dec 6,1951 State Principals Interview Frosh High school principals from all over Kansas are on the campus today to interview freshmen who graduated from their respective schools. They are meeting with freshmen in various rooms to ask questions on how the University and high schools can improve their programs to make the transition between the two schools easier. This is the third such conference on the campus. James K. Hitt, registrar, believes the conferences have been quite successful in the past. "The University obtains information it could not get otherwise because the freshmen will make complaints to their former high school principals and will not discuss such complaints with their University advisers." Mr. Hitt said. "We try to plan the conference after mid-semester grades have been sent out so the freshmen will have a better knowledge of how they are coming along in college." Mr. Hitt said. A 16th century German Nativity play will be the feature of a Christmas program to be presented jointly by the German and speech departments on Wednesday, Dec. 19, in Green theater. 2 Departments To Present Play The original Nativity play, which tells of the birth of Christ, was produced by the German townspeople who acted out their occupations in real life as parts in the play. The lines by the actors were a conglomerate of various dialects. A 16th century German play is very similar to the English plays of the Middle Ages characterized mainly by its minimum of scenery, vernacular language, much hamming and a naive charm. A choir made up of students in the department of German, directed by Clayton Krehbiel, instructor of music education, and William Oldham, education junior, will sing German Christmas carols. A German choir from the Lawrence Junior High school will be in the program also. Register For Rides In Union Students who need rides or who are looking for riders to go home for Christmas should contact the Christmas Holiday Riders bureau in the Student Union Activities office or register at the hostess desk in the Union. 7 Russell L. Wiley, professor of bane and orchestra, will conduct the University Symphony orchestra in its annual fall concert at 8 p.m. Thursday in Hoch auditorium. Now in his 25th year as a college director, Mr. Wiley came to the University in 1934 from Phillips university in Oklahoma. RUSSELL L. WILEY Identification cards will admit students free. Wiley Conductor For Fall Concert Of KU Symphony He will conduct the orchestra in an overture from "The Russian Easter Festival" (Rimsky-Korsakoff), Concerto No. 2 in F minor (Chopin) and Symphony No. 4 in G major (Dvork). Well-liked by the students in his music groups, Mr. Wiley nevertheless is very critical and frequently interrupts rehearsals to tell someone what he is doing wrong. He is particularly known for his outstanding bands, which annually rate among the finest in the country. At Phillips he directed the band to honors in a national contest. Delores Wunsch, fine arts senior will Witticisms, Epigrams Plentiful As Ernest Becomes Earnest WEATHER Delores Wunsch, fine arts senior, will be guest solist for the concert. A student of Jan Chiapusso, she will be featured in Chopin's concerto. Strong west winds and gales this afternoon shifting to northwesterly in west portion this afternoon and in the east tonight, diminishing tonight. Fair to partly cloudy and much colder tonight and Friday. Low tonight 18 to 22 west, 25-30 east. High Friday 25-30 west and north to 35 southeast. By PHIL NEWMAN Murray Trelease displayed his experienced stage touch as he teamed up with William Solnler to produce constantly comical situations. Eloise Schenk as Lady Bracknell effectively made light of Victorian period manners and morals. Few flaws in the polish of the able cast could be detected by the average theater-goer. Jonell Ashcraft was cast well in her "exuberant youth" role of Cecily Cardew. An air of triviality coupled with an abundance of witticisms entertained a crowd nearly filling Fraser theater at the premiere performance of Oscar Wilde's "The Importance of Being Earnest," Wednesday evening. The role of the governess, Miss Jane Davis looked the part of an experienced actress in her portrayal of the Hon. Gwendolen Fairfax. Hugh McKenzie fit well into the picture as the Reverend Canon Chasuble. The English dialect, of course, presenting no problem to an Englishman. Rupert Murrill and Robert Edmons were convincing as servants. Prism, was very creditably played by the experienced Jo Anna March. The many epigramms in the dialogue combined with Wilde's satire on society produced a lighthearted program which moved smoothly. The play continues through Saturday. "Beauty and the Beast," a French film with English titles, will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Friday in Hoch auditorium. No admission will be charged. 'Beauty, Beast In Hoch Friday The film is written and directed by Jean Cocteau, one of the leading film directors in France. The story deals with an impoverished merchant and his three daughters, two of whom are vain and ill-tempered, the other being kind and aptly-named, Beauty. When the merchant comes upon a mysterious castle in the forest and plucks a rose for Beauty, there appears before him a strange being, half-man, half-beast, who demands one of his daughters as payment for the rose. Beauty offers herself as the victim and through her love she is able to lift the spell from the Beast, who then resumes his original identity as a handsome Prince. The film was made in 1946 in the Saint-Maurice studios near Paris, in an old castle in Touraine. 2,000 Expected At Military Ball More than 2,000 persons are expected to attend the 1951 Military Ball 8 p.m. until midnight Friday in the Military Science building. The crowning of the Military ball queen by bandleader Tex Beneke will highlight an evening of dancing, entertainment and refreshments The queen's identity will not be disclosed until the ball. Donna Arnold, Gamma Phi Beta; Kay Magers, North College hall; and Diane Wade, Alpha Delta Pi, are the three finalists in the queen competition. They were chosen from a group of 58 contestants. The number of contestants was reduced to 10 by special staff officers of the Army, Navy and Air Force ROTC groups. The three finalists were chosen by the Military Ball steering committee at a tea Friday. Sophomore class yells rang out through Fraser theaster Wednesday as the sophomores held their first convocation of the year. Sophomores Test Yells Suggestions for a class party were made and referred to the class executive committee for action. Any further ideas are to be submitted to Catherine Langworthy, chairman of the party committee. Led by cheerleader Myron McClenny. College sophomore, the students learned the new yells which will be used at future University functions. Speaking briefly at the outset of the meeting Marilyn Miller, class president, said: "We hope to be able to develop a feeling of lasting friendship among the members of the class of '54 by having well organized class functions throughout the year." The group voted to have official class hats. The hats will be available in the near future. Entertainment was provided for the meeting by Albert Hedstrom, College sophomore, Bill Krehbiel, engineering sophomore, and Jo Anna March, College sophomore. KuKu's To Elect Officers Nomination and election of officers of the KuKu club, men's pep organization, will take place at 7:15 tonight in the Pine room of the Union. Dean Cole, president, said that attendance by members is mandatory and that pledges would meet at 7 p.m. GroupBacksContinued Instructor Evaluation Evaluation of teachers and courses by University students should be continued, the campus affairs committee decided at a meeting Wednesday. 'Dates And Mates' Last Lecture Tonight "Religion in Marriage," the last of the "Dates and Mates" series, will be given by the Rev. Dale Turner of the Plymouth Congregational church at 7:30 p.m. today in the chapel at Myers hall. The series has been sponsored by the YWCA and YMCA. All students are invited to attend tonight. Fiction Contest To Award $400 The American Humanist association, with the cooperation of Harper and Brothers, is sponsoring a short story contest with more than $400 in prizes to be awarded. The contest closes March 15, 1952. The American Humanist association and Harper and Brothers are sponsoring the contest in an attempt to find good, humanistic fiction on the undergraduate level. Students interested should ask Bertram Vogel, assistant professor of English in 211 Fraser for further information, or write directly to the American Humanist association, Yellow Springs, Ohio, for an announcement containing the rules. Nolan Miller, instructor of creative writing at Antioch college, and editors of Harper's magazine will act as final judges. "I believe there are a good many students at the University whose writing would compare quite favorably with undergraduates of other colleges." Mr. Vogel said. "I would like to encourage any number of students to enter this contest." The short stories will be published in the AHA magazine. California Alumni Hear Murphy Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy was in Los Angeles Monday, to attend a board meeting of the Council for Medical Education and Hospitals, a division of the American Medical association. He also spoke at a dinner meeting of the California KU Alumni association in the evening. The California Alumni association is making plans for a KU scholarship fund. Each member in that area will be asked to donate $1 to help send a student to the University. The student will be picked by a special committee and will be judged on the basis of scholastic standing, school activities and financial need. At least $280 will be needed for the scholarship. This amount will pay out-of-state tuition for a year at the University. Leah Ross, College junior, gave the report of findings by a student committee on the effectiveness of the rating sheets from the students viewpoint. A majority of the students interviewed agreed that teacher evaluation plan has significance, that they should be continued and that their chief value was an opportunity for students to air their opinions about their courses and teachers. Methods of improving the present method of instructor and course evaluation by students were discussed. J. Neale Carman, professor of languages, gave the report compiled by a faculty committee. Most of the faculty members questioned felt that the student evaluations had been helpful to them, that the present method of filling out the evaluation sheets was satisfactory, and that the present security safeguards were alright. It was agreed that a committee composed of four students, three faculty members and a representative from the guidance bureau should be formed to study further methods of improving the evaluation questionnaires. The next campus affairs committee meeting will be Wednesday, Jan. 9. School spirit will be discussed. Philander Smith college is the only four-year Negro college west of the Mississippi. College Head To Speak To Foundation Dr. M. LaFayette Harris, president of Philander Smith college, Little Rock, Ark., will be the speaker at the annual Wesley foundation Christmas banquet 5:30 p.m. Sunday, at the First Methodist church. Committee chairmen for the banquet are: Darrell Brown, ticket sales; Ethlyn Bird, hostess; Ronald Sammons, worship; Wanda Jean Anderson, decorations, and Barbara Lee Thomas, programs. Phi Kappa, Methodist women's organization, will have a Christmas program at 7 p.m. Friday in Danforth chapel. Reports will be given on organization projects. Tickets are available at the Wesley foundation office in Myers hall. Only 200 tickets are available, selling at 50 cents each. Methodist students will go caroling Wednesday, Dec. 19, as has been the custom for many years. Student Debaters To Enter Contest Five University debaters and William Conboy, instructor in speech, will leave Friday for Winfield to participate in the 22nd annual Southwestern college debate tournament Friday and Saturday. Gamma Alpha Chi Will Do Christmas Shopping For You Persons who are having trouble getting their Christmas shopping done may turn their problems over to members of Gamma Alpha Chi, professional advertising sorority, who will shop for them. The Gamma Alpha Chi gift service is taking orders for Christmas gifts at the information booth from 10 a.m. to noon and 1 to 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday. The service will have the same morning hours on Fridays as on previous days, but will close at 3 p.m. this Friday and 2 p.m. Friday, Dec. 14. The gift service will continue until Dec. 14. Persons who use the service merely specify to whom the gift will be sent, what type of gift he wishes bought for the person, and give Gamma Alpha Chi the money for the gift. A minimum of $2 is required for any gift ordered through the gift service. Receipts are given for all orders taken and gift cards are provided by the service so that the sender may include his name with the gift. The gift service will buy the gift according to specifications given by the sender. gift wrap it, and mail it. Members of Gamma Alpha Chi visited fraternity houses Tuesday and Wednesday nights to advertise the service. They will visit more houses tonight and next week. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 6, 1951 by Bibler Kansan Editorials Eureka!A Solution For Hour Examinations After much deliberation and considerable bickering, we have arrived at a solution for all campus ills. It is the closest thing to a quiz-free school life yet to spring from the minds of common journalists. Even our most bitter critics admit it may revolutionize the American system of collegiate study. What we propose is designed to take the burden off the student and at the same time allow him an immeasurably better chance at making better grades. Perhaps it sounds like a Utopia and in its own small way it may be. Our proposal is this: "Be it resolved that all teachers, instructors, professors, deans, janitors, milkmen, and lawyers, who deem it necessary that their pupils should be given periodical examinations, should henceforth post, in a public place, regularly visited by their colleagues, the proposed date and time of any such mental torture." One must excuse the extremely legalistic verbiage used in the resolution. It was deemed necessary by the Daily Kansan legal advisers. What it means is precisely this: We need some sort of a plan which will eliminate students having three and four hour quizzes on the same day. With so many days in the week, is it necessary for the tests to all be on one day? If this sounds like sour grapes, forget it. It is. But such a proposal does have its merits. There really is no justification for such a situation in the middle of the semester. A few days difference one way or the other isn't so terribly important. And it would make it so much easier on the student, both physically and mentally. Wouldn't it be possible for each department of the curriculum to make some arrangements to avoid this totally undesirable plan? Perhaps a simple list on the office bulletin board would alleviate the situation. Or even more simpler, a brickbat might work. And so we ask you of the faculty, can't you take some steps toward remedying the situation? If done only on a departmental situation, it would help some. An entire school of the University would be even better, and eureka, the whole damn University would be wonderful. (Drop curtain as editor slumps to the floor, a jeweled dagger through his heart and a crimson cup at his lips.) —A.G.M. Saturday's clashes between such good old rivals as Army-Navy, Kansas-Missouri, and others ended a tough and troubled season for college football. Football In '52? And almost immediately people will begin to wonder how the alma mater team will shape up next season, what's going to happen to the two-platoon system and the substitution rules—yes and even what will be the fate of our old favorite, honored and traditional American sport—football. This year seemed to climax all the attacks that have ever been made on the game. Almost everyone, including college presidents, professors, and even Hollywood, has been out to slam that "primitive, uncultured, uneducational, and demoralizing" sport from our American way of life. Thank goodness there are two, and even more, sides to the controversy. To quote, "When it comes to criticizing football, the nation's college presidents seem to be divided into offensive and defensive platoons." We're wondering just how long it will last. Football games could no more be thrown out of our list of traditions than Thanksgiving day, fireworks, or Santa Claus. If the time comes when it's proven that football has more bad points than good, Okay, proceed with the changes. But the sight of thousands of people of all ages thoroughly enjoying themselves on Saturday afternoons in stadiums all over the country—win or lose—is proof that the time hasn't come yet! —Kansas State Collegian. But in all their attacks these authorities have overlooked one important part of the game—the fan. Or to be specific, the people who sit on the sidelines and shiver or swelter, and the people who stay glued to their radio and TV sets at home. Editor's Note: The Collegian editorial is printed for two reasons. First, to provide a topic of discussion with a relatively new angle of approach. And second, to present "the other side" of the controversy. We have taken no definite stand on the subject. Our only comment is that most controversy seems to center about deemphasis rather than abolishment, although a few schools have done the latter. —A.G.M. Letters To The Editor American Imperialism And The Quakers Dear Editor: Little Man On Campus The drift away from reality which has characterized our Asian policy since 1945 has turned into a pell-mell flight into nightmare, if Hanson Baldwin's thinking can be taken as any index of State department opinion. We have wont to regard post-war events in Asia from the confining perspective of the sand in which our ostrich heads are buried. Yet Mr. Baldwin wonders why our strategic position in Asia worsens year after year. Americans see the revolution of 1776 as the successful attempt to get the British off our backs. But when Asians, smoldering under three centuries of Western colonialism, show the same contempt for their rulers, we conveniently (if blindly) label their hostility as being "foreign-inspired," and rush into every bristling area to prop up the status quo. The fact that Asia's status quo is represented by such rotters as Bao Dai, Chiang Kai Shek, and Synghman Rhe has not the least impression upon us. How is it that America, who, throughout the era of British and French imperialism, fought the concept of the "white man's burden," is now guilty of defending it all over When Hanson Baldwin spoke to a schoolwide convocation recently, he had just returned from an extensive tour of Asia. He reported that things are so bad for "us" in Indo China that French officials can no longer sit chatting at their sidewalk cafes in Saigon without fear of a grenade being thrown in their midst. But no. People like Mr. Baldwin are ready to extend the Korean war to include bombing of Manchurian bases "and take the chance of this involving us in World War III." The rearming of Japan is a quiet, respectable reality to him. What puzzles me is that he doesn't seem to Asia? To make the struggle palatable to the American people, we call it "the defense of the free world against Communist aggression." This might be ironically amusing, were it not true that our nation is the main source of material for France's continued subjugation of the people in this rich colony. Where is the anger of the American people, who have studied in their history books that colonies are simply a source of cheap labor and raw materials for an already rich nation? I should think that we would accord to the Asians the same right of revolt against economic oppression that we accord ourselves. It would seem self-evident that a continent of people sitting in daily fear of being bombed out of existence would show hostility to the nation who threatens the bombs. Not to mention the disturbing effect which our Operation Killer—20th century Christianity in practice—has had on all of Asia. How can they feel friendly, knowing of the deliberate annihilation of North Korean civilians by napalm and other enlightened weapons of the Great Democracy? I would welcome a schoolwide convocation, with a speaker from the American Friends Service committee, who would present the thinking of the Quakers on international events. understand why we won't have any friends in Asia. What are we coming to? More napalm and an atom bomb to settle their acid indigestion? Sue Buckingham Freshman Medicine I read their pamphlet, "Paths to Peace," which was quoted in a recent Daily Kansan editorial, and their analysis seems sober and constructive. It is imperative for all of us to have peace. Let us hear from the Quakers, who are leading proponents of that doctrine. BiBiK "I guess Worthal won't be running down Battenfeld steps for a while!" News From Other Campuses Something Different In Polls New Type Of Debate Students named Aristote, Washington, Jackson, Jefferson, Taft, Marshall, Lincoln, McCarthy, Hamilton and Harding were interviewed at the University of Wisconsin in an effort to find out student views on a proposed compulsory American history course there. Students Seek Jazz Course A student-inspired agitation to add a jazz appreciation course to the music curriculum at the University of Washington is in progress. Among reasons given by students for the new course was that jazz is one of the few arts truly American. Debates by mail is the latest thing at Iowa state college. Tape recordings are made and sent to the competing school. The new plan is proposed with the idea that it might eliminate some of the malpractices of the present discussion contests. Mail subscription: $ 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 classes. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. BRING YOUR FRIENDS . . . IT'S FUN THESE MENUS RATE AN'OSCAR' In the movies it's a superlative performance that rates an "Oscar". Our menus rate a rave, too! Full course meal or just a snack-you'll find pleasing variety here to suit your taste. Open 11 a.m. Curb Service After 4 p.m. CHATEAU DRIVE-IN MASS.AT 182ST. Enjoy Good MUSIC AND SHUFFLEBOARD AT THE NEWEST FUN SPOT IN TOWN 1031 ARD N Mass. DOWNBEAT A woman applying perfume. UPCOMING TINA ROBINSON DINNER IN THE ROOM Advertisers COOKING COIN SAMPLE'S WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU GO OUT FOR A LARK? I COME HOME AND MY WIFE GIVES ME THE BIRD! MIRCELLE BERGER LAUNDERAIDES at SUNFLOWER, KANSAS and LAWRENCE, KANSAS 813 Vermont Ph. 2515 TOYS FOR GIRLS AND BOYS KIRKPATRICKS Phone 1018 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 6, 1951 Society Aspects Too Much Or Too Poor, Dr. Ise Says Too much and too poor sums up the various aspects of modern methods of entertainment, habits and numerous other aspects of our present day life and society, John Ise, professor of economics, said at the Sociology club dinner Wednesday. Professor Ise criticized the American policy of "keeping up with the Jones," The abolition of that family from the American scene would allow the people of the country to revert to a happier and more simple life. Life a generation ago was an unhurried affair. People had time to think, do a few of the things they liked, and enjoy life in general. With the advent of mass production and faster ways of doing things we started going haywire, he believes. The faster we produce methods of saving time to have more leisure time, the more of that leisure time was taken up in producing methods of saving time. He felled the culprits of modern entertainment. Movie producers turn out rubbish which if free would be too expensive. Radio has its silly soap operas and dramas of blood and gore. People wonder why we have crime waves. Television is a lower form than radio and a great attraction for children. Newspapers, make people want more than they can afford, he added. Another destroyer of our leisure time, Dr Ise said, is our quest of success. In striving for success and security we ignore the flower of youth and wind up with the success and security but with a withered flower that has lost it's scent. Another slice of leisure time is lopped off as we scurry from one SANTA WITH GIFT BAG give glamour give stockings by MOJUD Make her Christmas glamorous with these sheer dreams for looks-fit-feel-wear! Mojuds have extra "give" and spring-back right in the knit. Exquisite Fashion Harmony colors . . . proportioned leg sizes for tall, short and medium belles. Make it merry — make it MojudI ONLY $1.50 A PAIR meeting to another of various organizations we join. TERRILL'S "But there is a silver lining in the cloud," he said, "or is it brass?" Many of the people who buy the cheap, standardized goods, listen to the cheap, standardized radio and television drama, and drive their shiny cars at 60 miles an hour from one organization to another, would not care for anything better. 803 Mass. Phone 325 Dr. Ise said that if we would slacken the pace of our everyday life we might find time to read something that would enlighten us as to the economic and political problems in America. It will be necessary for us to practice selectivity in our various forms of entertainments and tastes. Dr. Ise said we must choose between leisure and personal importance. As age increases so usually does our responsibilities and importance. If our importance is so great that there is no leisure, an examination of that importance should be made to determine whether or not it is too high a price to pay for the forfeiture of our leisure time in which to enjoy life. EUROPE 1952 It is imperative to make your reservations now for choice accommodations. Low-cost transportation and tours to Europe for 1952 are rapidly being booked to capacity. Special individual program offered this year for those who wish to live with selected families in France, England, Germany or Switzerland. Rates from $550. Downs offers a complete selection of SITA tours (Student International Travel Association) ranging from $500. These trips vary from the Spartan bicycle tours to the Grand Tours at $1800. A few study tours carrying university credit are offered from $550 to $850. See the Olympic Games at Helsinki, Finland. Special extension, $150. FREE DESCRIPTIVE FOLDER ON EUROPE Travel available upon request No Obligation. Phone 3661 for all your travel needs open evenings 6:30 p.m.-9:00 p.m No Booking Fees. downs travel service 10151 massachusetts st. lawrence, kansas Gospel Secretary To Speak Tonight The Rev. R. J. Reinmiller, general secretary of the Gospel Missionary union of Kansas City, Mo., will speak at the Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in 206 Rest hall. The Rev. and Mrs. Reinmiller were missionaries among the settlers, lumberjacks and Indians of northern Minnesota for four years and the reverend has also been pastor of churches in Missouri and Arkansas. The union, of which he is secretary, is an interdenominational faith society which sends missionaries to Morocco and Fren Sudan in North Africa and to Ecuador and Colombia in South America. Organized in 1892, the Union is one of the oldest American Faith boards. All students are invited to attend the IYCF meeting tonight. Ancient Norsemen believed the lights of the aurora were the Valkyries riding their ghostly horses through the sky. Some Eskiñbo tribes of Alaska believe them to be the spirits of the dead playing a game resembling soccer, using a walrus skull for a ball. PRECISION WATCH REPAIRS Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed Watch Repair Wolfson's 743 Mass. Call 675- Patronize Kansan Advertisers Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests No. 28... THE OVENBIRD I don't go for these half-baked claims! Past Grand Master of the Royal Order of Gourmets and Racontleurs—our outspoken friend knows how to find the proof of the pudding. Especially such a thing as cigarette mildness! A "quick puff" and a "single sniff" left him hungry for facts. Smokers everywhere have tried the same tests and discovered the one true test of cigarette mildness! It's the sensible test...the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test, which simply asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke, on a day-after-day, pack-after-pack basis. No snap judgments. Once you've tried Camels for 30 days in your "T-Zone" (T for Throat, T for Taste), you'll see why... CAMEL TURKISH & DOMESTIC BLEND CIGARETTES CHOICE QUALITY After all the Mildness Tests . . . Camel leads all other brands by billions --- --- T 知 302 O T ... 1 ... 2 1 ... 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ABC DE F G H I J K L M N O Page 5 Versatility Is A Great Advantage, Publisher Tells Journalism Fraternity "Versatility is a great advantage for a journalist," H. A. Meyer Jr., publisher of the Independence Daily Reporter, Independence, Kan., told persons Wednesday night at a joint journalism fraternity and sorority meeting. Journalism is becoming more and more specialized. The journalist never knows when he may be called on to step into something new and different, he said. Mr. Meyer led an informal discussion on journalistic problems with members of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity, and Theta Sigma Phi, professional journalistic sorority, and their guests. "The newspaper business is improving and changing all of the time and you need to keep up with it." Mr. Meyer felt that a journalist should inject new ideas and practices into his work as he goes along to keep up his enthusiasm for his job. Mr. Meyer said that it is helpful to know a little about all of the phases of the business. "If you get too set in your ways, I can see where it would be very dull," he added. "Newspapers have a great admiration and respect for a journalism school graduate" because "he is exposed to a well rounded viewpoint of the business as a whole," he asserted. PLT Sorority Initiates 19 Pi Lambda Theta, education sorority, held a dinner and initiation for 19 new members Nov. 28 at the Hearth Tea room. Dean George B. Smith of the School of Education spoke on "Women in Education." The initiates are Abigail Bixby, Mary Margaret Hardman, Bernita Mansfield and Lilja Peussa, graduate students; Josephine Bonney and Virgie Rawline, education iuniors. Marcia Goddling Alley, Caroline Crosier, Barbara Glover, Patricia Gloyer, Lucille Hart, Darlene Kerbas, Doris Lyons, Jeannine Neihart, Dana Richmond Saliba, Patricia Anne Salyer, JoAnna Sargent, Vera Smoots, and Chloe Warner, education seniors. The next meeting of Pi Lambda Theta will be a Christmas party on Dec. 13. Ann Harms, fine arts senior, and Barbara Langdon, fine arts senior, drew all of the figures for the Homecoming decorations sponsored by the four University pep clubs. They also helped paint the figures. Homecoming Decorations Took15 Hours Martha Jane Heywood, business junior in charge of the decorations, said the Jay James did most of the painting. The KuKu's braced the figures and put them up. They also took them down. About 15 hours' work by University students went into the Homecoming decorations in front of Strong hall the past weekend. Actual work on the decorations started Nov. 27. All of the painting and drawing was done in the basement of the Military Science building. "Several members of the military staff helped with the decorations," Miss Heywood said. "They helped L.M.O.C. — No. 9 — WATCH FOR IT Out of Gas? Dead Battery? Flat Tire? phone 4 For Men With Know How phone 4 For Men With Know How CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. 8th and N.H. Phone 4 Downtown—Near Everything CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. 8th and N.H. Phone 4 Downtown—Near Everything △ CITIES Education Group Visits In Kansas City About forty women students from the School of Education spent Tuesday morning in Kansas City, Mo., visiting three public schools. The students are senior physical education majors and members of the Personal and Community Health class taught by Miss Joie Stapleton, associate professor of physical education. The group visited the George B. Longan school, where they attended physical education and health classes. Some of the students visited the Benjamin Harrison school, while the others went to the R. J. DeLano school. us cut cardboard. They also offered to lend us a truck to take the decorations up to Strong hall." Members of the decorations committee were; Miss Heywood, Patricia Hoge, College freshman; Charles Garneye, business junior; Charles Hyer, business junior; Antony Merz, engineering junior, and Bill Stewart, College freshman. Travel Service THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Tel. 30 8th & Mass. Gifts for Years to come SHEAFFER'S University Daily Kansan For Years to come SHEAFFER'S TM* TIMOTHY SHIELDING LTD. SHEAFFER'S SENTINEL TM* Pen, $15.00; Pencil, $5.00 PIGEON SHEFTERS SHEAFFER'S STATESMAN TM* Pen, $10.00; Pencil, $5.00* THE SPEAKERS JULY SHEAFFER'S VALIANT TM Pen, $12.50; Pencil, $5.00 NEW TWIN WOOD CARTER'S Stationery 1025 Mass. Phone 1051 NEW Timmood CARTER'S Stationery 1025 Mass. Phone 1051 Stati Thursday, Dec. 6, 1951 $ EASE the SQUEEZE on Your OOD BUDGET We make every price a low price every day and that means sure savings . . . bigger savings . . . on every food order. Try shopping here for one month. You'll make the pleasant discovery that you're taking less money out of your pocketbook and putting more money in your bankbook. Jimmy Cole Self-Service Meats LOIN END lb. PORK ROAST 49c CENTER CUT lb. PORK CHOPS 69c CORN KING SLICED lb. BACON 45c FRESH lb. GROUND BEEF 63c Grocery Dept. GERBERS Strained or Chopped 3 cans BABY FOOD 25c FLEMINGS FLAVOR-RICH lb. COFFEE 79c GOOD VALUE Colored Quarters -- 1b. OLEO ... 21c FANCY 2 lb. bag MIXED NUTS 97c Fruits & Vegetables SEEDLESS SWEET 5 lb. bag ORANGES or GRAPEFRUITS 29c GOLDEN PASCAL Large Stalks each CELERY 19c FINE FOR SALADS each AVOCADOS 15c Shop to Music-At Your Convenience OPEN WEEK DAYS 9:00 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M. OPEN SUNDAYS 9:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M. COLE'S FOOD CENTER SUPER MART colina food center 2nd & LINKOLIN ALWENCE KANSAS PLENTY PAYED PARKING J. R. COLE, Proprietor 2020-4 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 6, 1951 Junior Jayhawkers Blast Forbes 81-53 By FORREST MILLER Dick Harp's Junior Jayhawkers overwhelmed the Forbes Air Base basketeers, 81-53, Wednesday night in Hoch auditorium as freshman Larry Davenport fueled the attack with 14 points. Cagers Work On Rough Edges Coach Phog Allen is working his Jayhawker cagers hard to smooth the rough edges before they play Denver here Saturday and Creighton at Omaha Monday night. In their first outing the Jayhawkers looked unimpressive as they downed the Golden Bears of Baylor 57-46. Coach Allen is drilling his team on increasing their speed under the basket. In the Baylor game the Kansas team showed downcourt speed but definitely slowed down to a virtual crawl when it came to working in the ball. The Denver university quintet is idle this week before coming here Saturday night. The game is on a four-game road trip for the Pioneers. From Mount Oread they will trek to Michigan State, Ohio State and Kansas State. KU plays its first engagement away from the local auditorium when it travels to Omaha to play the Creighton Bluejays. Kansas defeated the Jays last year 51-35 in the season's opener here. Creighton coach Duce Belford has five returning lettermen including Paul Gradoville, Bill Heyden, Bill Bauer, Dave Pedersen and John Tobin. Elton Tuttle and Ray Yost are two of the top sophomore contenders for the varsity. The Creightonians lost to Wichita university 100-63 Wednesday night, after opening their season Dec. 1 with a 61-55 win over Buena Vista college. The first canal connecting Lake Superior and Lake Huron was built in 1797 by the Northwest Fur company. The 9-foot lock, only large enough for canoes, was destroyed by American forces during the War of 1812. The Kansas "B" squad, ahead all the way, rolled to a 20-10 first quarter lead, increased it to 45-22 by halftime, were rolling 64-37 at the end of the third quarter and added 17 points in the final period. The Topekans hopelessly outclassed by the Jayhawkers, were led by Charles Holmes, a fancy 6-2 Negro center who tallied eight points while playing less than half the game. Every player on both teams, 15 Kansas and 14 Forbes cagers, broke into the scoring column. Following Davenport in the Kansas scoring parade were freshman Jerry Alberts, sophomore Allen Kelley and junior Dean Smith, all of whom tallied nine points. Kansas hit 34 of 73 shots at a 47 per cent pace and added 13 of 21 free throws-63 per cent. Forbes made 19 of 76 shots good for a 25 per cent average and flipped in 56 per cent of its free throws-15 of 27. Kelley and Bob Godwin shot the Jayhawkers into a quick 4-0 lead at the end of the first minute. Kelley's free throw followed one by Forbes Dick Godfrey to make it 5-1 and a pair of Air Base goals by Ray Probst and Mike Cunningham pulled the Topekans up 5-4—the closest they were to get all evening. From there the Jayhawkers upped the count to 18-4 as Wesley Whitney, Ken Buller and Godwin led the rout. Harp's second quintet of John Thompson, Jerry Alberts, Davenport, Don Anderson and Eldon Nicholson, all of whom were put into the fray shortly before the first quarter ended, increased the already-rapid scoring pace. Alberts hit three straight second quarter goals as did Davenport to make the scoreboard favor the Jayhawkers at halftime. 45-20. The second half scoring was more evenly divided, but Kansas still held a 36-31 margin. Only three times in the entire second half did Kansas win consecutively without a Forbes bucket or chanty fling between. Kansas led, 78-53 with 30 seconds to play and Gene Fotopoulous' set shot from the corner accounted for the 79th and 80th points. Candy HOMEMADE CANDIES ... CANDIES FOR PINNINGS OR ENGAGEMENTS SPECIAL CHRISTMAS ASSORTMENTS SPECIAL CHRISTMAS ASSORTMENTS • CANDIES • POPCORN • ROASTED NUTS • MINTS Use Dixie's Lay-Away Plan For Your Christmas Gifts MAKE YOUR SELECTION EARLY A New Line Of Party Favors We Will MAIL Your Orders Dixie's CARMEL CORN SHOP 812 Mass. Harp's Angels Phone 1330 Forbes Air Force (53) FGA-FG FTA-FT FGA-FG FTA-FT F 11 Propst 3-0 2-1 1 Gammond 7-2 2-1 0 5 Godfrey 1-0 1-1 1 2 Mansfield 9-2 2-2 1 0 Cungh'am 7-3 1-1 0 7 Woodruff 2-1 1-0 1 2 Holmes 7-3 4-2 1 8 Hughes 5-1 4-2 4 4 Weiss 8-2 4-2 2 6 Coffey 10-0 2-2 4 2 Gadon 1-1 0-0 0 2 Licht'hann 5-1 0-0 0 2 Moravek 5-1 3-1 0 3 Lee 6-2 1-0 2 4 Totals 76-19 27-15 18 53 Totals 76-19 27-15 Kansas "B" (81) | FGA-FG | FTA-FT | F | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Godwin | 5-3 | 3-1 | 1 | | Thompson | 3-0 | 1-1 | 0 | | Padgett | 1-0 | 2-2 | 1 | | Buller | 5-3 | 1-0 | 2 | | Alberts | 5-4 | 1-1 | 6 | | Franklin | 5-2 | 1-1 | 1 | | Whitney | 2-0 | 2-2 | 5 | | Nicholson | 7-2 | 1-0 | 1 | | Davenport | 12-7 | 1-0 | 2 | | Fotopoulos | 4-2 | 0-0 | 1 | | Smith | 8-4 | 2-1 | 3 | | D. Anderson | 1-1 | 0-0 | 9 | | Guess | 6-1 | 1-0 | 1 | | A. Kelley | 4-3 | 5-3 | 1 | | J. Anderson | 5-2 | 0-0 | 3 | | Totals | 73-34 | 21-13 | 81 | Patronize Kansan Advertisers Man . . . has a used car priced for you. Plymouth Your Buddy GALLAGHER 634 Mass. Ph. 1000 TICKETS AND RESERVATIONS FIRST NATIONAL BANK Far Away Places Are NEAR VIA AIRLINES (16 Days Until Vacation) From K.C. (Round Trip) From K.C. (Round Trip Tax Incl.) Bnf ... San Antonio ... $103.16 C&S ... Havana ... 158.36 MCA ... Sioux Falls ... 47.61 AAL-TWA ... Buffalo ... 118.22 (Ask about sky coach reduced rates to EUROPE starting April 1) Ask us about —Sky Coach —Family Rates Cruises Tours Steamships EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR AMERICAN AIRLINES See Your Travel Agent At THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE TRAVEL AGENCY Miss Rose Gieseman, Manager th and Mass. St. Telephone 30 8th and Mass. St. Telephone 30 Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers. --- NEED IDEAS FOR A CHRISTMAS GIFT? CHE 100 Give him (her) a LEATHER BRIEF CASE or BAG. A new shipment now in. SEE THEM NOW AT YOUR STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE bello Was bvd EW bhiup Is a Nfnit o frwyome to boffab Page 7 University Daily Kansan Fraley Fears Olympics To Be Propaganda Test By OSCAR FRALEY New York—(U.P.)-The Olympic games were designed originally to promote international good will but once again today they loomed as a proving grounds for propaganda. As much as the athletic idealists hate to admit it, come next summer it will be the nations of the free world against Soviet tyranny on a bloodless muscular battlefield at Helsinki, Finland. The tipoff on this came from Albert F. Whelte as he retired as president of the AAU mincing no words, he disclosed that Russia is spending $5,500,000 on athletics as part of the cold war. For the first time the Soviet is eligible for the games. No indication has been given whether it will participate, This is because Russia wants to be certain of a sensational showing. Domination of the games, according to Whtlelt, would set up the Soviet for a gigantic propaganda offensive. It is a situation reminiscent of 1936 when the windy furor with the stache hoped to use the Olympics IM Basketball Starts Tonight By BOB STEWART Intramural basketball makes its bounce into the limelight this weekend beginning with "B" and "C" league competition tonight. Competition in "A" league isn't scheduled to begin until Monday, but Walter Mikols, Intramural director, announces that from now on Robinson gym and annex will house boys' basketball games most days of the week, including Saturdays and Sundays. With the exception of 7-10 p.m. in Robinson gym on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, when the girls play, boys' leagues will occupy both buildings at all other times. Play on Saturday and Sunday will be from 2-6 p.m. Team managers can make court cravation for team practices at the IM office. The annex has been open since yesterday for practice sessions, and will be open through Sunday. No IM games have been scheduled for Friday night because of the number of boys attending the Military ball. Mr. Mikols says that managers and coaches should be looking for outstanding players in all classes, freshmen through seniors. There will be a playoff at the end of the year to determine the class champion of all four classes. Approximately ten outstanding players from each class will play on their class team. Some referees for IM games are badly needed. IM referees are paid one dollar for each game they officiate. Those interested should apply to Mr. Mikols, and should have had some previous experience. Today's Games Robinson Gym Fraternity "B" 6:45 p.m 6:45 p.m. E—Beta Theta Pi vs. Phi Kappa Tau W—Phi Kappa Psi vs. Alpha Epsilon Pi. 7:45 p.m. E—Lambda Chi Alpha vs. Alpha Tau Omega. W—Phi Delta Theta vs. Alpha KapaLambda. F—Delta Tau Delta vs. Phi Kappa Sigma. W—Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. Triangle. 9:45 p.m. E-Kappa Sigma vs. Pi Kappa Alpha Pia nu vs. Pi Chi Chi W—Sigma Nu vs. Chi Chi Chi. Geological Survey Hunts Kansas Clay For Firebricks Ceramists of the State Geological survey at the University of Kansas will leave the firing ovens this week long enough to go digging in central Kansas Dakota clays for more fire-clay samples to fire. Norman Plummer and W. B. Hiadik, who currently are conducting a comprehensive study of reservoir clays in Kansas, will examine and collect samples from Dakota Clay deposits in Dickinson, Marion, Ellsworth, and Russell counties. as a means of demonstrating to the world the validity of his Aryan concepts. Ambitious Adolph figured his pedigreed blonds would convince potential victims that resistance would be futile when he stepped into the wholesale real estate business a La Genghis Khan. The Nazis thought they had the dice loaded. They were all set to throw a load of naturals and the boss man with the cowlick was ready and waiting to give three hearty hells for his victorious Aryan supermen. He overlooked a few little items marked "made in the U.S.A." or "made in Great Britain," or "made in Mexico," and such. They hailed from spots where nobody questioned their antecedents, their religion or the color of their skins. They were there because they gloried in competition—and had it on the ball. One such was a non-Aryan named Jesse Owen, and what he did to the Nazi propaganda scheme was a double-dyed caution. Adolph left in a mortified huw when Jesse carved off more gold medals than the entire aggregation of Aryan supermen. No, it didn't stop Adolph from ultimately trying to branch out. Nor, if the free countries manage to outscamper the athletes from behind the iron curtain in July, will it probably alter the shape of world events to come. Nine KU Players Among Leaders But it could be a whisper of encouragement to the despairing and the terrorized. The free world could prove once more that those who covet the world still aren't supermen but simply ordinary beings with an extra slice of ego and greed. It is important to show the part of the world that's trembling on the fence that guys like these can be licked—for money, marbles or chalk. Representatives from the Big-7 conference third place Kansas Jayhawkers were scattered throughout the individual final statistics released by the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic association. Leading the pack for the Jayhawks were Bud Laughlin, Bob Brandeberry, and Jerry Robertson. Laughlin carted off conference scoring honors with Oklahoma's Buddy Leake. Both scored 13 times for 78 points. The jarring junior fullback also cashed in as the number four man in the ball-carrying department. Laughlin carried 117 times for 642 vards. Brandeberry came out in the runner-up slot for ball-carriers with a net gain of 649 yards in 136 carries. The Sooners' Buck McPhail racked up 865 yards in 97 trips to lead the conference. Brandeberry scored eight TD's and 48 points for fifth place scoring honors. Robertson also held a runner-up spot for the Jayhawkers. The tall Texan attempted 113 passes and completed 54 to net 925 yards. Iowa State's Dick Mann led the passing division with 104 completions of 212 attempts for 1296 yards. Injury - plagued Charlie Hoag landed a seventh place berth in the ball-carrying division. Hoag carried 95 times for 505 yards. John Konek took the number three position for scorers with five touchdowns and 33 conversions for 63 points. Orbon Tice ran number 17 for the Jayhawks in the scoring with five counters for 30 points. Tice was third best among the pass receivers. The 6-foot senior from Hutchinson latched on to 19 aerials for 363 yards. Co-captain Bill Schaake grabbed 16 passes for 221 yards and the number 10 spot among receivers. George Mrkonic's 35.3 yards per kick average was good enough for eighth place among the punters. Mrkonic kicked 42 times for 1486 yards. Dear Wells lugged 14 punts back for 148 yards and 10.5 yards per return average. Wells was sixth in that department. 'Gags and Gals in L.M.O.C. No. 9 Are Fine! Ima Rater, Sophisticated Sophomore Jayhawker's PROFESSIONAL Directory FORREST D. BROWN, D. D. S. STOWITS REXALL STORE Prescriptions 9th and Mass. St. Phone 516 800 E. Massachusetts Phone 374 RANEY DRUG STORE Prescriptions 909 Mass. St. Phone 521 VAN'S PRESCRIPTION SHOP Phone 601 Residence Phone 3486-R 105 E. Eighth St. DR. C. R. ALBRIGHT Chiropractor - X-Ray and Physio-Therapy Thursday, Dec. 6, 1951 1023 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Ph. 1531 HOLT PHARMACY 14th and Mass. Phone 234 cross from High School DR. M. L. BROCKWAY Chiropractor 10 E.9th Street Telephone4224 CRAIG - COLBURN Chiropractic Clinic Four Women's Teams Win As First Week Of Play Ends By JACKIE JONES 1024 Vermont St. Telephone 115 Delta Delta Delta, Sigma Kappa, Watkins and Freshman AA basketball teams came through with hard fought victories Wednesday evening as the first week of the women's intramural basketball program ended. The Tri-Delt's took a close 26 tj 20 win over the Freshman BA squad. They trailed by six points at the half, but in the second period Pat Garrett found the range, connecting for 15 points, to put her short but talented team ahead. Sigma Kappa took a thriller from Locksey 32 to 31. Locksey trailed by three points at the half and were never able to catch their opponents. Marian Miller scored 17 points for the winners and Carolyn Neff got 13. Luella Schmalzried scored 24 for Locksey. Watkins had a tough battle with the Co-hops, but came out on top 26 to 22, after a 10 to 7 lead at the half. Allie Grove led the Watkins scoring with 10 points and Betty van der Smissen poured in 20 for the losers. The Freshman AA team had little trouble with Delta Gamma winning 35 to 16. The DG's defense was unable to cope with the scoring ability of Mary Demeritt as the freshman dumped in 29 points. Bettie Muir scored 14 for Delta Gamma. Eye Eye should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. Lawrence Optical Co. Phone 425 1025 Mass. ARROW SHIRTS, SPORT SHIRTS AND TIES. ALL AT The Palace 843 Massachusetts He, Hi G "Hey fellers! Here's that Gabanaro sports shirt you heard about!" Wear it open for sports, or... Gabaranbo . . . with the amazing new Arafold collar with a tie for stepping out. $6.50 ARROW SHIRTS • TIES • SPORTS SHIRTS • UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS GET YOUR ARROW GABANARO AT CARL'S . . IN SIX COLORS! 905 Mass. St. CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Phone 905 20 no more video content Page 8 --- University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 6, 1951 Senate 'Stabilizes' Housing For Presidential Steeds Before adjournment, the Senate passed a bill relieving the army quartermaster general of responsibility for providing the president with a stable for his horses—a non-existent responsibility since the days of William Howard Taft. The bill recalls the days when presidents rode down Pennsylvania avenue in open carriages, drawn by matched pairs of spanking bays. The White House stables, says the National Geographic society, have a long and varied history, and the horses and carriages reflected the personalities of the presidents. The first stable was in a building several blocks east of the executive KU Women's Club Plans Xmas Tea The Christmas tea given by the University Women's club, 3 p.m. today at the Museum of Art, will feature a program of choral music appropriate to the Christmas season, under the direction of Clayton Krehbiel. Mrs. George M. Beal is general chairman and Mrs. James Nickerson is program chairman. They will be assisted by the following commit- Decorations, Mrs. Arvid Jacobson, chairman. Table decorations, Mrs. Fred Ellsworth, chairman; Miss Maude Ellsworth, Mrs. Millard Easton, Mrs. Max Dresden, Mrs. James Drury, Mrs. Richard Garrett and Mrs. Richard D. Wintermote. Refreshments, Mrs. John Hankins, chairman; Mrs. James Hitt, Mrs. Don Firhurst, Mrs. Richard Howey, Mrs. Leo Horacek, Miss Edna Hill, Mrs. John Ise and Mrs. Eden Fields. Hostesses, Mrs. Clyde Hyder, chairman; Mrs. Frank Hoeker and Mrs. Fritz Heider. mansion, on a site now occupied by a shoe factory. The cost of succeeding stables occasionally stirred congressional debate when appropriations were asked for building or repair. Objections were raised to $6,670 used by Van Buren and $14,016.19 by Grant. Erection of new stables at a cost of $20,000 in the Pierce administration apparently aroused no congressional protest. But while Congress, sometimes grudgingly, provided the president with housing for his horses and carriages, it did not supply animals or vehicles. Transportation was given the presidential staff, but the chief executive had to pay for his own up until the time of the automobile. Personal presidential ownership of horses and carriages provided politicians and friends an opportunity for making expensive gifts, and several presidents accepted matched pairs and fancy carriages. One of the earliest horse-drawn vehicles associated with the White House was a $1,500 chariot used by Dolly Madison. In President Madison's day a $1,500 coach was the equivalent of a high priced custom-built sports car today. Andrew Johnson, however, ruled such gifts improper as far as he was concerned. He declined "a magnificent carriage with horses and harness" bought for him by a group of New York merchants and bankers. Chief show of Whit House horses and carriages was the inauguration parade. Come presidents, however, PHILIP MURRAY, president of the CIO, addresses the opening session of that organization in New York saying that "America deserves a better congress than it had this year and 1952 is the year to change it." Murray was re-elected CIO president. attempted to keep the democratic touch. Jackson walked from his temporary quarters to the capitol and rode from the ceremonies to the White House on horseback. William Henry Harrison rode a white horse to and from the capitol. President Taft brought the first automobile to the White House—a White Steamer. He had little use for the stables—except to shelter Pauline, the family cow. White House automobiles, unlike horses, are not the personal property of the presidents. They are leased by the government from manufacturers, who supply the cars at nominal rates because of the publicity value. Consciences Are Upping The 'Kitty' Washington — (U.P.)— Guilty consciences have netted the United States Treasury $1,804,340.03 in the last 140 years. Generosity also prompts some Americans to contribute to the treasury. Such conscience-free donors have mailed in an additional $34,-91,166.91 since 1862 just because they wanted to help the government. Contributors to the Treasury's "conscience fund" confess they have defrauded the government in some way and usually mail in small sums. The first contribution, a $5 bill, was received in 1811. The next payments came in 1827 and have, except for 1348, continued every year since. Contributors rarely identify themselves and many quote the Bible, one explain they stole supplies from the armed forces. Others forged unearned government checks to themselves. Still others smuggled goods into the country or evaded income taxes. The smallest contribution was two cents from a woman who used a two-cent stamp twice. The largest single payment, $30,000, came in 1916 from a man who sent the Treasury several payments totaling $50,000 or 'our times the sum (he) stole . . .' CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY Excellent clinical facilities. Athletic and recreational activities. Dormitories on the campus. (Nationally Accredited) An outstanding college serving a splendid profession. Doctor of Optometry degree in three years for students entering with sixty or more semester credits in specified Liberal Arts courses. RECISTRATION MARCH 3. Students are granted professional recognition by the U.S. Department of Defense and Selective Service. CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY 1845-H Larabee Street Chicago 14, Illinois He explained he made a fourfold repayment because the Bible said that was the way to atone for a theft. One contribution came from a westerner who sent 40 cents with the message: "When I was a small boy of about 12 years of age, I made four counterfeit fimes and passed them at a small cafe for hot tamales for which I apologize." A minister sent in 15 cents because the "rightful ownership cannot be established." Another man wrote that after a Civil War battle he found a mule straying near the battlefield. He kept the mule and worked it on his farm until it died. Many years later he mailed the Treasury $100 to quiet his conscience. This year the Treasury received a $10 bill with a note; "Please find $10 for payment for gasoline I helped take from a CCC tractor back in 1934." An airman who later became a priest送 $15 to pay for a box of razor blades, soap, and shaving lotion he took from a crate of government supplies in Karachi, India, during the war. A flood of letters followed outbreak of the Korean war: One letter received in July, 1950, read: "Please accept check for one hundred dollars to be used as a help for immigration in their effort to stop the situation and bring lasting peace on earth." "This will be the best investment a free man could ever make," the letter said. A&P SUPER MARKET Christmas Candy Values Season's Greetings 5 lb. Box MILK CHOCOLATES $2.13 3 lb. Box $1.53 Worthmore 1 Ib. Box MILK CHOCOLATES 59c Bob's Pkg. of 6 CANDY CANES 27c Christmas Trees 3 to 4 feet --- $1.49 5 to 6 feet --- 1.99 7 to 8 feet --- 2.99 Bible Study Club To Hold Meeting Prices Effective thru Sat., Dec. 8th The Bible Study club will hold its weekly meeting at 9:30 p.m. today day at the regular meeting place, Twin Pines co-op, 15371 Tennessee. Gordon Maxwell, president of Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship, is leader of the club, which was started last semester. The club usually discusses a book in the Bible, although other broad topics, such as "Pacifism" and "Is There a God," are studied. The club completed the book of Mark last semester. This club is open to persons of all religious faiths, and in addition welcomes those of no religious faith. And Was His Face Red! Great Falls, Mont. —(U.P.)—Joe Guza, police juvenile officer, locked himself in the police paddy wagon by mistake. Passing pedestrians ignored his calls of "let me out." Finally an understanding service station operator turned the latch from the outside, after Guza had just about resigned himself to indefinite imprisonment. --- FEDERAL PHOTOGRAPHY KODAK SANTA A smart, new box camera that will make a grand Christmas Gift BROWNIE HAWKEYE CAMERA Takes 12 black-and-white shots per roll of Kodak 620 Film...9 full-color pictures from each roll of Kodacolor 620 Film. Negatives, $ 2 \frac{1}{4} \times 2 \frac{1}{4} $ Camera, 7.20; Kodak Photo Flasher for "flash" shots, 3.95; including Federal Tax. HIXON'S STUDIO 721 Mass. Phone 41 Season's Greeting WITH YEAR 'ROUND MEANING BLOOMSBURY PUBLIC ACADEMY For Her! The super handy Princess Gardner Registrar . . . in choice of five luscious colors. From $2 Prince Gardner Registrar For Him: The superbly crafted, uniquely convenient Prince Gardner Registrar. Princess Gardner Registrar From $5 As advertised in 905 Mass. St. Phone CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES 905 of all wel- with. By HELEN LOU FRY service latch had in- ite ak color of gra, h-5; From Mission Bells To Library Relic Old Cannon Lived An Eventful Life Changing from a shiny weapon to a broken, old relic has been the fate of Old Sacramento, a cannon famous in the days when slavery caused several states to rebel. The four and one-half foot canon now lies in the Lawrence room on the fourth floor of Watson library. Many pictures and other relics tell the story of this town's early settlement. Cast from the bell of a Mexican church, Old Sacramento got its name from its use during the U.S.-Mexican war. The cannon was being used by Mexico to defeat Fort Sacramento in February, 1847. The U.S. captured the fort and 10 pieces of artillery including Old Sacramento. The cannon was hauled to Liberty, Mo., where it was stored in an armory. When border warfare between Kansas and Missouri broke out, Old Sacramento was used by the pro-slavery faction. A sheriff Jones was in command of the pro-slavery troops when they tried to destroy, with cannons, the Free State (Eldridge) hotel in Lawrence. The business had been catering to easterners who came to Kansas to vote against slavery. A Missouri grand jury had condemned the hotel as a nuisance. Sheriff Jones, after being hospitably received at dinner in the hotel, gave Lawrence residents a warning to vacate the hotel and turn in their weapons. The Lawrence safety committee decided to give no opposition. mind decided to give no opposition. Old Sacramento was used to blast the hotel but Sheriff Jones had imbibed a little too freely at the dinner and his commands were not able to destroy the building with cannonballs. The hotel was burned instead. Meanwhile, the office of the newspaper, Hearld of Freedom, was burned and the type from which the paper was printed thrown in the Kaw river. It was later recovered. Three weeks after the Jones affair, a well-known citizen of Lawrence, Major Hoyt, was killed in a Missouri camp. This angered many Lawrence residents who decided to attack the camp with cannon fire. A group lead by Captain Bickerton captured Old Sacramento and brought it to Lawrence. Their only trouble then was—no amunition. One of the men remembered the type recovered from the river and persuaded the newspaper to give it up. Sand molds and melted type Shop BROWN'S First LADY LEVI Genuine - Original JEANS Sizes From 24" Waist $4.25 LADY LEVI Stockman Style RIDERS Square Top Pockets Pearl Buttons $9.98 RENT-A-TUX All Sizes All Or Any Part Of Outfit Is Available Complete Accessories B9 PARKA HOOD COATS $24.95 GABARDINE TOPCOATS 100% Wool Zip-Out Lining $34.95 First Door South Of The Patee Theatre Brown's TOGGERY 830 Mass. The cannon was first used against the Missourians at Fort Titus with the cry of "The Heard of Freedom is issued again!" were combined and six 100-pound balls made. From then on, Old Sacramento continued in the battle against slavery until near the end of the war when Captain Bickerton, fearing the cannon might fall to the enemy, buried it on a farm west of Lawrence. On July 14, 1896, the cannon was used for the last time. There had been a drowning in the Kaw and it was believed that a discharge of artillery would raise the body. Old Sacramento was rolled into place near the Bowersock mill. After each ineffective shot, a heavier charge was used. Finally, three pounds of powder was put in the barrel and wet sacks, clay, and grass hammered in. Old Sacramento wasn't used again until Abraham Lincoln was elected president. When the election news came, Captain Bickerton exhumed the cannon and used it to fire a 13-gun salute in Lincoln's honor. Old Sacramento was later given to the University and has been in the Lawrence room since 1933. The resulting blast tore away half of the barrel of Old Sacramento, throwing pieces of cannon across the river. One large piece was blown through the wall of the mill. Persons wanting to see this historical room may contact Miss Maud Smelser, accession librarian, in the Kansas room of the library. Miss Smelser is in charge of the Kansas collection and she said she is happy to show anyone the pictures and relics. Faculty Members To Attend Music, Art Conference Twenty-one University faculty members will take part in the art and music conference Friday and Saturday in Salina. University Daily Kansan The conference, "Planning for Professional Progress in Music and Art in Kansas Schools," is sponsored by the Schools of Fine Arts and Education and the department of music and art education at the University and Salina public schools. Those participating in the conference are: Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts and Dean George B. Smith of the School of Education; Professors E. Thayer Gaston of music education, Reinhold Schmidt of voice and Russell J. Wiley of band and orchestra. Assistant professors Karel Blaas of music theory and viola; Miss Evelyn Degraw and Carlyle H. Smith of design, and Robert Green of drawing and painting. Associate professors J. Sheldon Carey and Arvid Jacobson of design; Gerald M. Carney, Elin K. Jorgensen and James Nickerson of music education, and Miss Maud Ellsworth of education. Instructors Marcus E. Hahn, Leo Horacek, Clayton Krehbiel and William W. Sears of music education, and Raymond Zepp of band; and Miss Alice Schwartz, graduate student and assistant in art education. Drivers under 25 years of age are involved in 28 per cent of the nation's fatal traffic accidents. Connie Sports Black or Blue CREPE SOLES 10 on new Kilties 10 Comfortable way to bounce back to school in style! Above: Rich Black suede oxford with deeply ribbed sole; below: Oxblood smooth leather step-in, stitched in white, with zig-zag twin buckled straps. OR AGENTS IN OUR GROUP TO Guaranteed by Good Housekeeping and an additional advisor. wonderful at just $6.85 AS SEEN IN SEVENTEEN HAYNES and KEENE 1819 Mass. Phone 524 Kodak Duaflex Flash Outfit Kodak Duaflex 11, f18 Camera. Kodak Duaflex Flashholder. 8 SM Flash Lamps. 2 rolls Kodak Verichrome 620 Film. "Photo-Tips" Book. 2 Photoflash Batteries. Kodak 2-Way Flashguard. MOTOR CYCLE GUILD 10 YEAR OF ENERGY FOR MOTOR CYCLES DUAFLEX KIT WITH KODET LENS ___ $20.50 DUAFLEX KIT WITH KODAR LENS ___ $28.30 MOSSER WOLF No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money. This Year IT'S SMART TO GIVE USEFUL GIFTS From Gibbs He'll Enjoy a Gift To Wear Van Heusen Shirts Van Heusen Sport Shirts He can always use an extra white shirt. Regular or wide spread collars-barrel or french cuffs. Give him a sport shirt that is completely washable. Deep tone colors as well as plenty of the lighter shades. $5^95 Others $3.95 to $6.95 Van Heusen Ties New ideas-new colorings in this large assortment of Van Heusen Ties. Large patterns or neat small figures. $100 up Van Heusen Pajamas Smart patterns in broadcloth coat style $395 up pajamas. Elastic belt or draw string pants. Cooper Hosiery You can afford several pairs at these lower prices. Plenty of cotton argyle as well as other smart patterns. 55c up Gates Gloves Smartly styled and made of fine quality capeskin, deerskin and pigskin. Unlined or warm lined. $325 up Gibbs Clothing Co. 811 Mass. St University Daily Kansan Page 10 Thursday, Dec. 6, 1951 Monchonsia Hall Named For Indian and Old Silverware Silverware and an Indian chief were the deciding factors in naming Monchonsia hall when the Endowment association purchased it for use as a women's residence hall in 1947. Silverware which once belonged to Miller hall and engraved with the initials MH was given to the newly purchased hall at 1014 Mississippi street. Since it was a necessity to have the name of the hall start with an M to fit the silverware, Deane W. Malott, who was then chancellor, suggested that the name Monchonsia be used. Monchonsia, according to early Kansas history, was chief of the Kanza tribe of Indians who roamed the northeastern lands of Kansas before white men set foot on the soil. The house, which now accommodates 28 girls, once belonged to Prof. D.H. Spenser, a member of the KU faculty for a number of years. It had been built with the intention of providing rooms for students, so when it was purchased by the University four years ago it did not have to be altered much. After its purchase the house was completely redecorated and ready for use the following fall. At first it accommodated 32 girls, but a downstairs room was later converted into a lounging room so now 28 girls live in the house. In keeping with its Indian name Monchonsia hall holds a traditional "Indian Summer" party every fall. Gamma Delta cost supper, 5:30 p.m. Sunday, 17th and Vermont Book review by Dr. A. M. Rehwinkel. "The Flood." Official Bulletin Danforth chapel service 8:45 a.m. Sunday, sponsored by Gamma Delta Psychology club, 7:30 tonight, 21 Strong, discussion. Delta Sigma Pi business meeting 7:30 tonight, Strong Annex F, rm. 3. KU Disciple fellowship, 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Myers hall. Rev. Turner, "What Can a Modern Christian Be? recreation." Jefferson, Colorado State Jefferson County Statewide Activities meeting 3 today, 11:50 tities meeting 3, today II. Strong library committee 5 today, USA office Physical Therapy. club tea honoring Dr.Rose, 2-5 p.m. Sunday, English room, Union. All members please attend. Phi Chi Theta, 6 today. East room, Union. Dress for initiation. Obtain application blanks for ISA scholarship in dean of women's office. All blanks must be turned in by Dec. 13. KuKu club, 7:15 tonight, Pine room, Union, election of officers, attendance required. Pledges 7 p.m. Christian Science organization, 7 tanight, Danforth chapel. International club, 7:45 tonight. Girl's gym, Haskell Institute. Bus leaves Union, 7:30 p.m. Folk dances and songs. All welcome. Graduate coffee, 7:30 tonight, Hawk's Nest. Deutscher Verein Donnerstag 5 p.m. 502 Fraser. Deutsche studenten erzahlen von ihrer Heimat. Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship Inter-College University 508 Strong, Mr Reinpuller, smoker IVCF missionary meeting, 12-12V 50 pm Friday, Danfort chanel La reunion de Noel du Cercle francais aura lieu jeudi a sept heures et demie dans la salle 131 Strong. Interfraternity Council meeting 9 p.m. Monday, Union. Christmas Holiday Riders Bureau. Register for ride or for passengers SUA office or hostess desk, Union. In the fourteenth century, the bubonic pleague, or black death as it is more commonly referred to by medical historians, came closer to exterminating the human race than any other source. More than 60,000,-000 persons are believed to have died of the disease. A feature of the Marshall plan train, now touring Germany and attracting 10,000 visitors daily, is a telephone question game where visitors dial questions about the value of the Marshall plan to Germany and listen to recorded answers. Laundry Wax Gives Crinoline Crisp Look With crinoline the foundation for many winter costumes, lucky is the girl who gets a crinoline petticoat in her Christmas stocking. They give a charmingly feminine appearance. The problem confronting many girls has been to keep these petticoats looking crisp and new. Here is a way to do a really professional job. To keep crinoline sparkling white, use bluing in the wash water. Put the little bluing beads into hot water, add the skirt and wash. Rinse as usual. The stiffer the better for that smart perkiness of your crinoline. A quarter-of a cake of pale blue laundry wax will help cut ironing time in half, and the glossy finish will make your petticoat soil resistant. Starch can be saved for another washer day, if it is kept in an air-tight container in the refrigerator or a cool, dry place. St. Nicholas Pageant At Cercle Francais Cercle Francais, the French club, will celebrate St. Nicholas day with Christmas carols and a pantomime about one of St. Nicholas' miracles at a meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in 113 Strong. The pantomime will depict St Nicholas, the saint of children, raising three children from the dead who were killed by an evil butcher. Characters in the pantomime will be: Lue Diver, College freshman; Marjean Sullivan, College sophomore; Betsy Swigart, fine arts senior; Jack Jevons, College junior, and Ivo Malan, graduate student. A shepherd's dance will be given by William Patterson, College junior; Glen Wilson, College senior; Richard Cummings, College sophomore, and Wayne Knowles, College sophomore. Marquerite Unrein Pledges Marguerite Unrein, fine arts special student, Hays, was pledged into Theta Phi Alpha sorority Monday evening at the chapter house. THE HONORABLE MARY A. BROWN CAHTERINE LOUISE HEMPHILL CAHTERINE LOUISE HEMPHILL Catherine Hemphill ToWedRobertStrobel Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Hemphill, Baldwin, announce the engagement of their daughter, Catherine Louise, to Robert Vernon Strobel, son of Mr., and Mrs. Vernon Strobel, Dodge City. The marriage will take place Sunday. January 27. Miss Hemphill is an education senior. Mr. Strobel was graduated from the University in June, 1951 and is now employed by General Motors in Kansas City. Alpha Omicron Pi Lists Platter Party Guests Alpha Omicron Pi held a platter party at the chapter house recently. The chaperones were Mrs. Lela C. Wilson, Mrs. J. H. Hope, Mrs. R. H. Wilson, and Mrs. D. H. Denham. The guests included Martin Gutzwiller, Don Volker, Ray Hanjee, John Wilkinson, Max Zent, Larry Johnson, Rodger Warren, Larry Ferrell, Lee Pemberton, Bill Lindstrom, Roland Graham, Dick Brack, Don Landes, Ralph Moore, Sam Wilson and Jim Hosler. Tim Reynolds, Larry Hienrich, Courtney Sloan, John Baster, Emery Williams, John Carey and Joe Wim-satt. The line of greatest frequency of the aurora borealis, or "northern lights," runs through northern Norway, across central Hudson Bay, around to Point Barrow, Alaska, and through northern Siberia. Vickers Gift Shop Is overflowing with gifts of distinction and appeal. Come in and browse! Free We Pack Gift For Wrapping Mailing 1023 Massachusetts Street (Across From The Granada) Free We Pack Gift For Wrapping Mailing Although auroras, or "northern than 35 miles above the earth's surlights," sometimes give the illusion The highest, as measured by of touching the ground, none has a Norwegian scientist, extended been measured at a height of less more than 600 miles above the earth. CHRISTMAS HYMNS AND CAROLS SAN JOSE Robert Shaw, Director RCA Victor Chorale On 45 and L. P. Records 925 Mass. Bell's Go To The Church Of Your Choice Every Sunday. --- SANTA READING A BOOK Hand- picked Gift Books for all the family Wouk-The Caine Mutiny Monsarrat-The Cruel Sea Marquand-Melville Goodwin, USA Bromfield-Mr. Smith Ashe-Moses New Yorker Album Peter Arno-Ladies and Gentlemen Smith-Three Men On Third Shulman-Many Loves of Dobie Gillis Thurber Carnival Joy of Cooking-Rombauer Better Homes and Gardens Cookbook Better Homes and Gardens Handyman's Book Russel Wright-Guide to Easier Living Neutra-Mystery & Realities of the Site Mock-If You Want to Build a House McCall's Book of Modern Houses Old Herbaceous-Arkell Lloyd C. Douglas-Time to Remember Carson-The Sea Around Us Van Dyke-The Other Wise Man Audobon's Animals Rand McNally Atlas (new ed.) Tall Mother Goose Rey-Where's My Baby? Golden Book of Poetry Lenski-Papa Small Holling-Tree In The Trail Holling-Minn of the Mississippi COME IN AND SEE US THE NEXT TIME YOU ARE DOWN TOWN. The Book Book 1021 Mass. Phone 666 a 7 Thursday, Dec. 6, 1951 s surred by ended earth. University Daily Kansan Page 11 JOHN BROWNE EARL VENSEL, researcher at the Pittsburgh school of public health searching for cures for virus infections hitting our troops in Korea, has fallen victim to a virus disease himself—encephalitis. Comfort Convenience JAYHAWKER NEW Peek-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS NOW thru SAT Show Today-Fri-2:30-7-9 Continuous Sat. 1 p.m. on THE U.S. SUBMARINE "Tiger Shark" In Battle Off Korea's Coast! NAVAL SCENES NEVER BEFORE FILMED! SUBMARINE COMMAND SUBMARINE COMMAND starting WILLIAM HANCY WILLIAM DON HOLDEN OLSON BENDIX TYNOR DANN FARMER PRODUCTION Produced by KERN SCHMITZ, Music by BERNARD Story and Design by BERNARD L. KIRSHAFT Productions Plus Late News Screen Snapshot VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD Ends Tonite-Open 6:45 "MARRIAGE IN THE SHADOWS" (German) Adm. 25c - 60c FRIDAY - SATURDAY Adm. 14c - 45c Open Friday 6:45 p.m. Continuous Sat. 1 p.m. on DOUBLE ACTION - COMEDY George O'Brien The Three Stooges "Gold Raiders" Co-Feature Raymond Walburn Walter, Catlett Phone K.U.376 Father takes the AIR A MONOGRAM RELEASE —Plus — Ch. 3 "Flying Disc Man From Mars" Classified Advertising Rates University Daily Kansan Classified Advertising Additional words ... 1c Additional words ... 2c He will accept with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in person (either by mail or by calling except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journals must be submitted by 454 p.m. the day before publication date. FOR SALE REGISTERED male German shepherd pups, 3 months old. Phone 3602. 11 TUXEDO FOR SALE. Cleaned and in excellent condition. Size 35-37. Contact landlady. Phone 3566. 12-6 DO YOUR Christmas shopping early at the Y.W.C.A. Bazaar, Dec. 7th and 8th from 8 to 8. Gifts from your campus and all over the world. 12-7 CRUMBO ETCHINGS for Christmas; a book. Pat Read, across from 12-7 Courthouse. SWINGLINE TOT STAPLERS are now available in the Union Book Store. Only 986. 12-7 TRADE-IN SALE! !! Breathe now and trade in. (all parts intact) for 20 per cent of the price of the New Sheaffer Pen of your book to you, or to the Student in the Union Book Store. 12-7 JUST ARRIVED, new shipment of pennell erasers. Soft and self cleaning for drawings and tracings. At your Student Union Book Store. 12-7 Consider Dropping Football The question "Do You Want Football?" was discussed at a recent rally at Tulsa university as result of "miserable pep rallies and a general lack of school spirit" preceding the traditional game with Oklahoma A&M BOOK LAMPS! The original clip-on lamp with 6 foot cord and 10 watt lamp. An unusual book for only $1.98. Student Union Book Store. 12-7 ORDER EARLY! Give books for Christmas this year. The gift that is treasured this year. Come in and order an book you wish from your Student University Book Store. 12-7 JERRY-meet me tonight at 8 p.m. in 11 Pink Elephant. Bill. MISCELLANEOUS ALL PERSONS desiring to dispose of used or second-hand tape recorders, please write to University Daily Kansan, box No. 1. 12 COLLEGE SENIOR has 20 hours a week to work for somebody. Type, general office work, etc. Gotta eat! Call Norm Storer, 285M after 7 p.m. 12-7 TRANSPORTATION DRIVING TO New York Dec. 20. Take two, share expenses, call 2238R. 10 NEEDED, a ride from Kansas City to Lawrence and back daily, starting after Christmas vacation. Will help on en-veil. Leave message at Daily Kansan. KU 376. AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel with you. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Travel Service. 1015 Mass. **tf** Ask us about family rates, ski coach, and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book passage no more than 2 hours. Call Miss Glesseman at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30- FOR RENT ONE CLEAN ROOM for boys. Close to bath, $16. Christian home, close to University and bus line. 1817 III. 11 RENT A TYPEWRITER NOW! Choose from our wide selection of portables. Watch your grades improve when you watch your students. Student Union Boys Basketball. LARGE DOUBLE ROOM for two men, good location, steam oven. 132-7 电话 1324-9. BUSINESS SERVICE TYPING: Themes, term papers, and milo- graph work. Accurate service by poem. School Leaders of America typing pool. Contact Annellese Schiff, phone 534. SHORTY'S BARBER SHOP at 837 New Hampshire has two barbers超重 and three on Friday and Saturday. Haircuts 75c. Plenty of reading material. Give us a try. Our motto, cleanliness and good service pays. 12-7 TYPING DONE promptly and accurately. and 5 p.m. for further information. 12-6 TYPING: Themes term paper; these- prompt, accurate service; Call Mrs. Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. ff EXPERIENCED TYPIST: term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological miscellaneous, miscellaneous. Ms. J. Roscoe, 838 Lau, Apt. 4, upstairs. 2775J after p. 4 mln. 12-6 TYING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these tying papers. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio. Phi 1601. RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ment and are now assuring fast, efficient equipment. Bowman Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. tf ARTS TODAY Powell's on the PROwl! DICK POWELL RHONDA FLEMING DANGER . with CRY RICHARD ERDMAN • WILLIAM CONRAD Matinee Friday At 2:30 — Open 2 p.m. BROWN BILLFOLD probably in Gras nada theater. Finder can keep money please return billfold. Seymour Baum garden. Phone 22828. HELP WANTED Evening Shows 7 - 9-Open 6:45-Features: 3:12-7:42-9:43 A GREY GABARDINE top coat Frida suit on the miniature Pit. Call GA Bust 897 or 957 (212) 436-0150 ADDED: COLOR CARTOON - "CAT NAPPING" LATEST MOVIETONE NEWS CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pa- ties. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from am. until midnight. !AYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your *Jayhawk* pet shop. We have everything in the field. Their needs are our business. Give them a gift, or give them fur, fur, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Comm. Phone 418. A BLOODTHIRSTY CREW... RULED BY A RECKLESS, RUTHLESS WOMAN! ANNE OF THE INDIES COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR with Jean Louis Debra PETERS • JOURDAN • PAGET STARTS SATURDAY OWL SUNDAY 11:15 p.m. Seven Seas . . A Thousand BUCCANEERS, A PIRATE QUEEN AND TECHNICOLOR SOON "ELOPE-MENT" Granada Watch For "Quo Vadis" PHONE 041 20 STUDYING late tonight? Refresh your self with fountain beverages and sand wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phon 3604, 1109 Mass. LOST TYPING: Experience in theses, ten papers, miscellaneous typing, and steel cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phon 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steak sandwiches, malts, home-made pies an Air-conditioned, Open from a.m. to midnight. Crystal Café, 699 Vt. BROWN BILLFOLD WITH ID and basket ball ticket lost on Crescent Road by The Call. Finder can keep money. Pa Davis, Phone 3493W. 12-0 Continuous Shows Saturday and Sunday From 1 p.m. —BOX OFFICE OPENS 12:45 P.M.— COLLEGE MEN familiar with Gretel houses, work on convenient evening- ing, though Thursday deliverin- sandwiches to organized houses. Cal Ken Duback at 444. STARTS TOMORROW 'The hottest combination that ever hit the screen!' —LOUELLA O. PARSONS The Film The Critics Are Raving About From Coast To Coast! 'The hottest combination that ever hit the screen!' — LOUELLA O. PARSONS HOWARD HUGHES presents ROBERT MITCHUM • JANE RUSSELL in HIS KIND OF WOMAN! with VINCENT PRICE • TIM HOLT • CHARLES McGRAW A JOHN FARROW PRODUCTION R.K.O. RADIO Matinee Friday 2:30 — Evening Shows Daily 7:00-9:00 Doors Open 6:45 — Continuous Shows Sat. and Sunday Patee PHONE 321 Hurry! Ends Tonight - "THE THING" War Memorial Near Completion The opening Tuesday of Memorial drive marks the near completion of the World War II memorial. The driveway, in conjunction with the campanile, is a permanent tribute to the sacrifices of 260 former University students who were killed in the war and 8,000 men and women who served in the armed forces. The completed portion of the drive begins off Mississippi street just below Green hall. The class of 1946 furnished the marker at this point. The drive arcs westward through the edge of Marvin grove to the point of promontory where the campanile stands. It moves southwestward just below the crest of the hill above Potter lake, past Snow hall and ends on West Campus road. This section of Memorial drive is 2,630 feet long. Memorial plantings will add to the driveway's beauty. The first was provided by the class of 1925 as its silver anniversary gift in 1950. When entirely completed the driveway will form a loop around the campus. The south portion will be a 2,000-foot extension, creating a drive of more than a mile. This is a rock garden of natural character, with plants including thymes, phlox and myrtle. Recognizing the driveway as a part of the campus roadway system, the 1951 session of the state legislature appropriated $56,000 to complete the work. KU Graduate Of 1913 Receives Industrial Award Thomas Roy Jones, 13, president of Daystrom corporation, Elizabeth N.J., received the 1951 Henry Laurence Gantt award at a meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers in Atlantic City, N.J. November 28. The award is made annually by the ASME and the American Management association for "distinguished achievement in industrial management as a service to the community." It is one of the top industrial awards in the country. K-State Repeats As Champs Kansas State's poultry judging team has placed first in the International Livestock show for the second straight year. The livestock show was held in Chicago. Troop Rotation Continues; Reject Communist Demand -News Roundup- Panmunjom, Korea—(U.P.)—The United Nations refused categorically today to abandon the American troop rotation program in Korea for the sake of an Armistice. The UN also rejected a Communist demand that it withdraw from "costal islands and waters" North of the cease-fire line. A UN briefing spokesman at the same time accused the Reds of attempting to blackmail the Allies into accepting an unsatisfactory truce by refusing to discuss now an exchange of war prisoners. Tehran, Iran—(U.P.)-Three persons were reported killed and more than 200 injured today when police, troops and angry Nationalists clashed with a Communist mob in the heart of Tehran. Police fired machine guns over the heads of the Communist demonstrators in a clash in Tehran's Parliament square. The clash flared when Communist student members of the Tudeh party attempted to demonstrate at Tehran university against Premier Mohamed Mossadegh and to demand "student's rights." Communists In Iran Start Trouble GOP Leaders Here Sound Warning Wichita, Kan.—(U.P.)—Republican leaders of Kansas, attending a $10-a-plate banquet here last night, sounded a warning that the GOP may be facing its last chance to win a national election. In the concluding stage of the four-hour affair, Gov. Edward F. Arn of Kansas said "The Republicans can win in 1952 if we will just profit by our last experience and not expect to win by default." All speakers were unanimous in their condemnation of corruption, immorality and ineptitude in the present Democratic administration. Mobilization Effort Is 'Outstanding' Washington—(U.P.)-The congressional "watchdog" committee on defense production, in an obvious slap at the Senate preparedness subcommittee, today praised the mobilization effort as "an outstanding job." The Joint House-Senate group, headed by Sen. Burnet R. Maybank (D.-S.C.), said "there is no need to be alarmed at the unconfirmed reports of failure to maintain a minimum of national safety" because of lags in defense production. Mambajao, Philippines—(U.P)—The evacuation of 30 more villages was ordered today as Mt. Hibok-Hibok heaved out tons of molten lava in the third major eruption of the volcano this week. Evacuate Villagers Near Hibok-Hibok The verified death toll rose to 209. Estimates of the total dead remained at 500. Big Four Powers To Hold Meeting Paris—(U.P.)—President Luis Padillo Nervo of the United Nations general assembly said he will hold a series of private meetings with each of the Big Four powers, apparently in an effort to settle their To My Family Serve Wholesome dairy products for the holidays and the whole year through. It's the best gift you could give your family. Whole Family A Gift For The Try making foods with plenty of our extra rich milk, cream and butter and see how your meals taste better than ever. Order yours today! Golden Crest 2016 Learnard 1 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 6, 1951 differences on disarmament. differences on disarmament. The powers—The United States, Britain, France and Russia have agreed to the idea. The Mexican diplomat had little to say about what he hopes to accomplish. The four powers held their seventh and eighth secret disarmament session today under his chairmanship. They will meet again Friday Navy Continues To Build Up Fleet Memphis, Tenn.—(U.P.)-Adm. William M. Fechteler, chief of naval operations, said today that 526 ships of all types have been added to the Navy's active fleets since the beginning of the Korean war. As of last January, the Navy had 893 ships on the active list, including 269 major combatant types, 75 mine vessels, 60 patrol types, 241 amphibious vessels and 248 auxiliaries. Fechteler also emphasized the Navy's ability to deliver atomic bombs. 12th and Oread Harzfeld's MILITARY UNION Emblematic cowhide Polished leather crested with harness buckle brass. Go-together with separates . . . climax to casuals. Red, natural, ginger and black. Sizes 24 to 30. $3.95 Luxite Pierrot p. j. favorite Soft, fluffy Brushed Rayon 6.50 A dashing pajama fashion with snug-fitting elasticized trouser top, wrists, and ankles. Perky, pretty — with Luxite's Fashion-winning styling in lush red, ocean spray, and jonquil. Sizes 12 to 18. Again awarded Fashion Academy Gold Medal 1930s Luxite 6.50 O Greene's Ready-To-Wear 845 Mass. 1951 asia— say ment iday Kansas State historical Society Topeka, Ks. University Daily Kansan 49th Year No.58 Friday, Dec. 7, 1951 STUDENT NEWS PAPER LAWRENCE. KANSAS High School Principals Interview Freshmen The third annual principal-freshman conference was held at the University Thursday. Each year Kansas high school principals are invited to come to the University and interview graduates from their high schools who are now freshmen at KU. At a coffee in Corbin hall following the conference the principals discussed the merits of the day's work. "The freshmen complained that their faculty advisers were not from the school they were planning to enter," Arley Bryant, adviser from Concordia, said. "They feel they should have competent advisers from the school they plan to enter to help them plan the background for advanced study." cussed Neal M. Wheery, principal of Lawrence High school, said he and his representatives had better response from the freshman this year than in the preceding conferences, "One of our boys, a fraternity pledge, said he thought it would be a better idea if the freshman boys had a dormitory system like the girls for the first year," Mr. Bryant said. "He seemed to feel that such a dormitory would make it easier for boys to make the transition from high school to college if fraternity pledging was postponed until the sophomore year." Mrs. Frohman Meeker of Garnett High school said her former students thought it would be best to have the entrance examinations at the first of orientation week instead of toward the end. M. F. Start, principal of Hiawata High school, and Arthur Mastin, principal of Concordia High school said freshman thought there should be more English composition in high school and more essay-type examinations. "They said they were too worn out from the parties and activities of orientation week to do a good job on the examinations," she said. "Study habits seem to give my former students the most trouble." Floyd Farmer, principal of Wichita East, said. "It seems the quiet hours in the dorms are bad." "Some of them did have trouble with their freshman advisers," Mr. Farmer said. "One of the freshmen was loaded down with 18 hours at the beginning of the semester and he did not realize just how much work that was going to take. The adviser did not give him any warning of what 18 hours would mean." Table Tennis Tourney Planned The annual all-school intramural table tennis tournament for the men's singles championship will be played Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, Dec. 11, 12 and 13 at 7:15 p.m. in the game room of the Union. The tournament is sponsored by Student Union Activities and the KU Table Tennis club. The winner will receive a traveling trophy. First and second place winners will also receive individual trophies. Third and fourth place winners will receive bronze medallions. Winners will represent KU at the annual Big Seven tournament to be held at the University of Nebraska in March. Any student may enter the tournament by signing up in the Student Union Activities office before noon Monday. There will be an entry fee of 25 cents. WEATHER Fair north, increasing cloudiness south, somewhat colder northeast and north central tonight. Saturday increasing cloudiness with rain in south by afternoon or night. Continued rather cold. Lows tonight 20 northwest to 25-30 south. High Saturday 40 west and north to 45 southeast. Pianist, Soprano Present Recital Mu Phi Epsilon, professional music sorority, will present a recital of two of its former members at 8 p.m. Monday, Dec. 10, in Strong ball auditorium. The artists areMrs. Joanne Johnson Baker, pianist, and Mrs. Elizabeth Wilkins Vaughan, soprano. Mrs. Baker studied at the University of Kansas under Carl Preyer from 1940 to 1942. She completed her undergraduate study at the University of Michigan, where she received her bachelor of music degree. The public is invited. She was at one time a member of the Michigan piano faculty while finishing her master of music degree in piano. At present she is instructor of piano at the University of Kansas City. Mrs. Vaughan was graduated from KU in 1930, where she did graduate work. She later attended the University of Kansas City. Student To Play Carillon Sunday The weekly carillon program will be played at 3 p.m. Sunday by Stanford Lehmberg, College junior, who is a student of Ronald Barnes, University carillonneur. The program will feature two of his own arrangements for the instrument. The recital will include "Notre Dame" (Clement), "Calm as the Night" (Bohm), arranged by Lehmberg, Gigue (Couperin), "Where'er you Walk" (Handel), arranged by Lehmberg, "Lead On, O King Eternal," "O Come, O Come Emmanuel," "O God Our Help in Ages Past," Flemish dance for carillon (Nees) and "Crimson and the Blue." The Student Union Activities association invites all students at the University to attend a free dance in the Hawk's Nest from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday. SUA Sponsors Free Dance AWS To Give Faculty Follies In Fraser Dec. 13 The show will consist of a series of vaudeville acts by members of the faculty. Allen Crafton, professor of speech, will be master of ceremonies. The Faculty Follies sponsored by AWS will be presented at 8 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 13 in Fraser theater Among those who will appear are Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of men, and Dean George B. Smith of the School of Education. The program will contain a nine act play in 10 minutes, a carnival show, imitations, nad several quartet numbers. Annual Christmas Bazaar To Be Today And Saturday If you've found meat too expensive for your grocery bill, the State Biological survey at the University may have a solution to your problem. Dr. Rollin Baker, member of the survey said, the meat of fur-bearing animals is just as edible and palatable as that of any other wild game. Here's A Way To Save Money "The harvest of fur-bearing animals in Kansas this December and January will reach at least a quarter-million pelts and a small percentage of the carcasses will be utilized," Baker said. "The flesh of opossum, raccoon, beaver and muskrat is just as edible as quail. In fact, the meat of these animals is in top condition when the pelts are in prime shape," he explained. "Even skunk is good eating." The proceeds from the Follies will go to the AWS Memorial Scholarship fund. "The idea of eating such meat is nothing new. Our pioneer forefathers ate such meat and thought nothing of it," Baker said. People desiring such meat may obtain it from trappers in the area. "Household cookbooks contain numerous recipes for the roasting, barbecuing, or stewing of such meats." Baker pointed out. Baker said a group of Lawrence residents have taken the lead in popularizing the eating of such meats. Occasional coon barbecues are held in this area. The annual YWCA Christmas bazaar will be held in Henley house, 1236 Oread street, from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. today and Saturday. Plants in unusual holders will be sold at a plant bar and sandwiches and other food made by WYCA members will be sodd at a food bar. Corbin hall, denim aprons, coke aprons, hostess aprons; Miller hall, baked goods; Watkins hall, baked goods, and North College hall, silk fireplace mittens. Women of Lawrence have donated various items to the bazaar which have been wrapped and placed in a grab bag from which purchases may be made for 25 cents. The jewelry, maple syrup and sugar and the goods from Gatlinburg were obtained by the YWCA on a consignment basis, the organization receiving a certain per cent of the sales. cards; Kappa Kappa Gamma, Christmas stockings and aprons, and Pi Beta Phi, potholders. 29th Military Ball Set For 8 Tonight All profits will go into the YWCA general funds for use during the year. On sale will be pineapple cloth and wood carvings made by the Igrots, a mountain people of the Philippine islands; handmade silver from Florissant, Mo.; pottery from Fort Scott, Kann.; linen and weaving from Gatlinburg, Tenn.; Vermont maple syrup and sugar. The 29th annual Military Ball since 1923 will begin at 8 o'clock tonight in the Military Science building. Various items made and donated by members of organized women's houses at the University will also be for sale. Delta Delta Delta, tea-towels, aprons and tablecloth sets; Delta Gamma, velvet ties; Gamma Phi Beta, baskets made of Christmas From Alpha Chi Omega, placemats; Alpha Delta Pi, dolls made of socks; Alpha Micron Pi, candy; Alpha Phi, candy and yarn bears; and Chi Omega, luncheon sets. From the time that first ball attracted approximately 500 guests. General To Speak To Arnold Society Brig. Gen. David W. Hutchison, commanding officer of the 21st Air division, Forbes Air Force base, Topeka, will be the principal speaker at the Arnold Air society banquet preceding the Military ball. Following the banquet, Gen. Hutchison will be guest of honor at the Military ball. The general will talk before members of the society, members of the Hap Arnold Jayhawk Air society, Air Force ROTC staff members and their wives. Phi Beta Kappa's Hear Chakravarty The spirit of man has transcended all geographic barriers in the spread, ideas, Dr. Amiya Chakravarty told members of Phi Beta Kappa Wednesday. Ideas, he said, have moved somehow through the times without modern transportation and communication systems. Dr. Chakravarty, visiting professor of humanities, spoke on "East Meets West" at the initiation meeting of the fraternity. Today it should move even faster with our modern facilities, he stated. Five new members were initiated into the University of Kansas chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, national liberal arts honor society, on the 175th anniversary of its founding. Clothing Drive On For Korea Clothing for Korean refugees is now being collected by the KU Westminster fellowship chapter of Presbyterian men, as part of a nation-wide drive carried on by the National council of Presbyterian men. Clothing collected in the Lawrence area, will be shipped to St. Louis by the local group. Freight charges from St. Louis to Korea will be assumed by the U.S. Army. Normally it costs eight cents per pound to ship the clothing, but until Jan. 2 the Army will take care of all shipments. Anyone that has clothing to give should leave it at Westminster house, 1121 Oread, or call 804 and make arrangements to have someone pick up the clothing. Items needed are: men's warm suits, trousers, long underwear, sweaters, socks, overcoats, women's coats, children's coats, shoes for men, shoes for women (low heels), shoes for children, and cotton thread. All clothing should be reasonably clean and in good repair. Any money donated will be used to purchase long underwear. Mr. A.D. Weaver of Weaver's department store has agreed to let the group purchase the underwear through his wholesale source. The committee in charge of the drive includes: Robert Ball, chairman, Donald Tice, College sophomore; Frank Exter, education senior; Myron Click, engineering senior; and Donald Kerle, business senior. the event has grown until today the 1951 ball is expected to draw some 2,200 persons. 6 The tree has been painted white. Decorations will include silver balls and packages wrapped in pastel metallic paper. Small colored bulbs, plus blue and white spot lights focused from the balcony, will illuminate the tree. The entire story of the Military Ball is one of "from little acorns grow big oaks." The traditional Christmas tree will be completely decorated by Monday, according to John Parks, instructor in design and decorating committee chairman. The idea of the Military Ball was conceived by Lt. Hugh John Casey, according to Duke D'Ambra, 1700 Alabama street, who was a sergeant on the University staff in 1923. Lieutenant Casey and Maj. J. R. Cygon, commander of the Army unit at the University in 1923, carried through the plan. At that time there were two divisions of the Army located here for training, the engineers and the coast artillery. There were a few infantrymen here, Mr. D'Ambra recalls, who had to finish training they started here. "But the engineers and the coast artillery were the only official groups." Not only have those two Army units grown into the three ROTC programs offered at the University today, but invitations are quite a different matter, too. Invitations that year were sent to officers at Army posts within a 100-mile radius of the University. Invitation also were sent to Kemper Military academy, Wentworth State college and Wichita, and high school groups in Kansas City, Mo., and Leavenworth. Guests tonight will be cadets and midshipmen of the Army, Navy and Air Force ROTC units and their dates, staff members of the ROTC groups and special guests. Christmas Tree Up By Monday Mr. Parks said that the tree will be placed on a revolving stand as has been the practice in recent years. It will be featured by simplicity of color and decoration, he said. It is being placed in Strong hall rotunda today by buildings and grounds workmen. The tree will extend slightly above eye level of a person standing on the second floor balcony. The Christmas tree is annually decorated by the design department. Members of the committee this year are Mr. Parks, Ray O. Ettinger, assistant professor in design; Miss Dorothy Duddy, instructor in design; Miss Patricia Laurenceelle, instructor in design; Bernard Dietz, instructor in design, and Miss Dessa Bush, assistant professor in design. The plan of having a Christmas tree was proposed by John R. Dyer, then dean of men, on Nov. 29, 1921. That year students gathered around a tall pine tree in front of Blake hall which served as the Christmas tree. Journalism Teacher To Speak At Breakfast For Treasurers Emil L. Telfel, associate professor of journalism, will be guest speaker at the campus treasurers' breakfast Saturday morning at the Union cafeteria. The breakfast will begin at 9:30 a.m. Student Union Activities, which sponsors the presidents' breakfasts each month, has invited the treasurers of campus organizations to be its guests this time. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, Dec. 7, 1951 Kansan Editorials by Bibler Ten Years Ago Today---Pearl Harbor Ten years ago today the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. Out of that attack came many things both in the United States and in the whole Pacific area. The immediate result was to crystallize opinion and sentiment in this country to make possible a concerted effort whose end was victory. The long-range result was to change the map of Asia, to curb some forces and unleash others, to create a new Pacific world with new and bewildering problems. Before Pearl Harbor there was much indecision and dispute in this country. We went back to the pre-Pearl Harbor mentality following the end of World War II. Korea and its armed conflict was needed to awaken us. Now, as in 1941, we do not seem to clearly know wherein lie our lines of obligation and interest. There is much cleavage in this country on the question of right and advantageous cases of action. We are not a united people in respect to the problems of Korea, China, and Japan. It would be well for all of us to remember Pearl Harbor today. In fairness to the living, we must do all we can do honorably to prevent a recurrence of the terrible tragedy that struck Dec. 7,1941. But in fairness to the dead, we should not compromise our principles, disavow our commitments and purchase a worthless peace at the cost of honor. For a peace without that priceless ingredient is in the long run no peace at all. A man who borrowed a copy of the Lawrence Outlook called and told Editor Ed Abels how to run the paper. "If he should happen to impose on his neighbor again, thereby getting a chance to read this paragraph," Abels writes, "we cordially invite him to get in position to speak with $2 worth of authority. We can hope that the good counsels of peace rather than the awful fact of war can bring us to wise and honorable decisions. —Joe Lastelic. Instructor Evaluation The instructor evaluation program at the University is one of definite merit, we feel. It was with complete approval that we received the news that the student affairs committee is again backing the project. The idea is rather unique. No doubt many foreign students will be amazed at such a plan in which the student is actually allowed to rate his teachers. Such friendly relations between student and teacher seem to exist only here in America. The plan is this. Each instructor is given a number of rating sheets which cover such points as the material covered, method of instruction, and amount of outside work. Each student is given one to fill out as he sees fit. Anonymity is a requirement for the sheets. And they are not available to the instructor until final grades have been sent out. To be really effective, true and unbiased opinions by all students are necessary. A sarcastic or bitter approach to the rating serves no purpose except for letting off steam. It certainly does not enable the teacher to improve his courses. Thus a student who does not answer the questions honestly is defeating his own purpose. We hope that the sheets will again be as successful as they must have been last spring. But both sides will have to cooperate if such is to be the case. —A.G.M. Letters To The Editor Phog Hints Of Another New York Scandal The editor of a large national magazine published in New York wrote me this year as follows: Dear Editor: "You say that the first dump you heard about happened in 1943 in Philadelphia and that games probably have been dumped even prior to that time. You're 100% right." Strictly off the record, I know of at least two games that were dumped in 1935 and 1936 in the Garden. I found out about them years later. Everybody closely connected with the basketball scene around here has definitely known that dumping has been going on for years—ever since the Garden opened. I've seen practically every Garden game since N. Y. U. opened the door against Notre Dame back in 1934. (I was going to college at that time.) . . "I am positive that games have been dumped elsewhere, where the police haven't been as shrewd and as vigilant as in N. Y. . . "To understand why New York has been the focal point of the dumping pestilence, you have to understand both the city and the kids in it. The New York kid is far more sophisticated and worldly than the average kid. He grows up in an atmosphere of "angles," "big money," etc. This is triply intensified in the poorer sections, where a lot of the basketball players come from. These poor kids, from their earliest days, rub elbows with all sorts of riff-raff. As a result they grow up without any clear-cut principles about right and wrong. These are the kinds of kids much more disposed to look upon bribery without too much moral Indignation. This is an exceedingly flimsy picture of the sociological structure underlying the New York cespool of basketball dumping, but it is one of the principle reasons for the epidemic that hit New York. Examine the backgrounds of most of the exposed dumpers and you discover that these kids all came from similar environments. Daily Hansan "You may also be interested to know that the situation is going to get worse before it gets any better. Right now, as I write this, the district attorney has two more dumps on the carpet. Their names haven't been revealed as yet (I know who they are, however), but when they start "singing" the stench is going to deepen and spread. News Room KU 251 Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Adv. Room KU 376 Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press: Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York City. EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief ... Alan Marshall Editorial Associate ... Anne Snyder NEWS STAFF Managing Editor ... Charles Price Assistant Managing Editors ... Nancy Anderson, Benjamin Holman, Lee Sheppeard, Ellsworth Zahm City Editor ... Joe Taylor Sports Editor ... Charles Burch Telegraph Editor ... Don Sarten Society Editor ... Katrina Swartz News Adviser ... Victor J. Danilov BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager ... Bob Sydney Advertising Manager ... Dorothy Hedrick Assistant Adv. Manager ... Dick Hale National Adv. Manager ... Bill Taggart Circulation Manager ... Elaine Blaylock Promotion Manager ... Ted Barbera Business Adviser ... R. W. Doores ".. The only answer, as unsatisfactory and nebulous as it may seem, is through intensifying the teaching of basic moral principles. . The man upon whom most of the responsibility rests is the coach." Personally, I am prone to accept the word of the New York editor rather than that of sophomore Lawrence C. Kravitz. This editor must know his New York. And in this proposition, I do practice what I preach. Again, there is no "attempt to white-wash KU and keep investigators from poking their noses around here." It appears that there have already been some big noses poked around here. Forrest C. Allen Little Man On Campus F. Schaefer Mail subscription: $ 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 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. "The higher you write your crib notes the less the teachers object!" Europe Needs Ike Recent reports of growing strength in the German SRP party, coupled with failure of the 12 Atlantic Pact nations to agree on methods of creating a large continental army, raise some questions as to the advisability of General Eisenhower relinquishing his post in the NATO to run for the presidency. The SRP was founded a year and a half ago by Fritz Dorls, a disgruntled rightist in the West German parliament. Before long, uniformed guards, who looked and acted like Nazi storm troopers, took charge at party meetings. The SRP, or Young Socialist Reichs party, is an organization suspiciously like the late National Socialist party. Members are working to recruit young Germans, and in May and October elections the party showed a distinct gain. No one can say exactly what effect Eisenhower's departure from Europe would have on the situation but indications are that it would deal an extremely severe blow to West German morale. Despite political upsurges like the SRP, and squabbles among leaders of the Atlantic Pact nations, the general military and political outlook in Western Europe is much brighter now than it was a year ago. The arrival of American and British divisions has given morale a big boost, particularly in West Germany. But the spark-plug of the entire affair has been the personality of General Eisenhower. West Germans, and other Europeans, have a deep faith in General Eisenhower. They feel he is the one man who is sincerely dedicated to the job of rebuilding and protecting Western Europe. He probably is the only man who could have achieved the cooperation evident during the past year. Responsible observers agree that the tremendous appeal of Eisenhower is perhaps the most important factor in preserving good morale in a precarious situation. They feel that if it were withdrawn the people of Western Europe might not have the faith and hope needed to resist hostile movements at home, and at the same time cooperate to make the NATO successful. His presence has convinced Europeans that NATO is something more than an idle dream of the Western powers. They know now that if war should break out on the continent they will not be fighting alone. —Jack Zimmerman. News From Other Campuses Nothing Like Keeping Warm Dances Ruin Gym Floor Nothing Like Keeping Warm There were 121 violations of liquor laws and 110 confiscations at home football games at the University of Minnesota this year. This was a decrease of 6 per cent over violations last year. Oregon Encourages Talent A series of entertainment programs in which various surrounding colleges exchange talent has been arranged at. Oregon state college. The purpose of the programs is said to be "to provide larger audiences for Oregon college talent." Dances in the University of Arkansas fieldhouse were ruled out, during the basketball season. Reason for the ban—dances are too hard on the floor and they hinder basketball practice. An Unusual Combination Five dormitories at Brown university in Rhode Island, where fraternity and non-fraternity students are housed in separate sections under the same roof, have been opened this fall for occupancy by 500 students. Friday, Dec. 7, 1951 University Daily Kansan Page 3 11 Campus Publications Show Variety By JEANNE FITZGERALD There are two political magazines, a calendar, a humor magazine, an orientation book, a student activities publication, and a humanities and political magazine among the 11 student publications at the University. Besides the above varieties, there are three publications for special groups and a daily newspaper to broaden the scope of the student's reading. These publications differ greatly in their purpose, from the liberalism of the Dove, political magazine, to the school spirit and activities listed in the Jawhacker. The purpose of the Jayhawker is to "cover pictorially and with feature stories as much of the life of the campus as possible," said Win Koerper, College senior and editor of the annual. Donovan Hull, president of the senior class, said the purpose of the KU Calendar is to give students a means of keeping track of campus activities and something in the way of a souvenir. The third publication is the K-Book published primarily as a means of orientating new students. K-Book chairman is Donald Woodson, College junior. Among the political sheets, FACTS, official fact of FACTS student political party, is published every two months, and the Dove, which leans toward liberalism in politics, comes out irregularly. Two other publications of the same nature are the Y-Not, WYCA publication, and the Y-Jayhawker, YMCA publication. The Y-Jayhawker has not been published yet this year, due to financial difficulties, but the Y-Not is mimeographed once a month and sent out to all the YWCA members. Elmer Rusco, graduate student, is a past editor of the Dove. The magazine hasn't appeared yet this year. It was published only three times last year with a different editor each time. The Rochdale Rag is a weekly newspaper published by members of co-operative houses on the campus. It is published for members of the co-operative houses only, and serves as a means of communication between them. Rusco said the reason for the turnover in editors was that most students didn't feel they had time to take on the responsibility of editing more than one issue of the publication. The Sour Owl, campus humor magazine, has the simplest purpose of all. Lee Sheppead, journalism senior and editor of the magazine, 150To200KU Students Use Nursery School For Research By LORENA BARLOW The University nursery school, 1100 Missouri street, has two purposes. It is used by 150 to 200 University students of child development and psychology for research and observation. Mrs. Luella M. Foster is the director of the school. The staff includes Miss Ruth McNeilly, Mrs Cledith Jennings, Mrs. Maxine Allen and Mrs. Virginia Williams. Thirty-five University students assist them It also provides youngsters of the area with an opportunity to learn to play with other children and to discover their own interests. New additions, recently completed, are an observation room, concrete play areas outside, a play house and a toy shelter. In addition redecoration of the entire house has been finished by the University buildings and grounds department. The nursery at present has 40 youngsters enrolled. Any normal child regardless of race may be enrolled at the school. There have been several visitors at the nursery each year from abroad and throughout the country. Many other nurseries are modeled on the same plan as the one here. The house includes two large play rooms, a kitchen, a dining room, three bathrooms, a sleeping room, two observation play rooms and a For critical discussions, students may turn to Upstream, a humanities and political magazine. Dan Gallin, College senior and editor, said the magazine contains articles on politics and national issues as well as purely literary articles, and poems. Three companies will interview graduating engineers Monday in Marvin hall: Interviews Socony Vacuum Oil company. Society Vacuum Oil company. Topographical division of the United States Geological Survey. RCA Victor Corp.of America. Interested persons should sign schedule in the engineering office. The University Daily Kansan, student newspaper, is the only daily student publication. Its staff is made up of students in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information as well as students from other schools in the University taking journalism courses. said, "Our policy is to be funny. That's all." Three hundred dollars in cash prizes is being offered to advanced design students in the department of architecture for the best drawings applicable to prefabricated housing units. room for work at "child carpentering." Contest Offers $300 In Prizes Give Kodak Accessories to the Photo Fan! Give Kodak Accessories to the Photo Fan! wide selection here! HIXON'S 721 Mass. Drugs, Sundries, Fountain, Rines The school was founded in 1943 by the University under the provisions of the Lenham act. The act provided funds for day care of children whose parents were employed in work helpful to the war effort. At the close of World War II in 1945 the University took over the financing of the school and now charges a fee for each child. Judges for the contest will be Neal Reyburn, president of the Home Building corporation; J. M. Kellogg, professor of architecture; Vernor F. Smith, associate professor of architecture; Alton C. Thomas, assistant professor of architecture, and Helen R. Beal, wife of Professor Beal. Agency for Mixture No. 79 701 Mass. Phone 999 Lightning Takes The Line Since the war the nursery has been remodeled and expanded: All furnishings in the building are "pint-sized" and made especially for use by children. Eldridge Pharmacy The contest is sponsored by the Home Building corporation, Sedalia, Mo. First prize is $100, second prize $50, four prizes of $25 and five prizes of $10. Memphis, Tenn.— (U.P.) — W. B. Roberts was talking on the telephone when lightning hit the telephone wires and knocked Roberts out of his chair. Professor Beal said the judges hope to have the results of the contest by the time students come back to school from Christmas vacation. "Only students enrolled in Architectural Design V, VI, or VII are eligible to enter the contest," George M. Beal, professor of architecture, said, today. All entries must be turned in by noon Saturday, Dec. 22. Details of the contest have been posted in 307 and 308 Marvin hall. Professor Deal, technical advisor to the project, added that each contestant must limit the scale of his drawings to 1,000 square feet of floor space, and also make use of the standard prefabricated units in his design. A Personalized Christmas MONOGRAMMING At No Extra Charge SHIRTS FOR MEN - SPORT SHIRTS ROBES PAJAMAS SCARVES FOR WOMEN Mass. BLOUSES SWEATERS - A Palace Service - Students Train To Become Amateur Radio Operators By PHIL NEWMAN The Palace 843 Want to become a licensed amateur radio operator? Then just start attending the code practice sessions sponsored by the Amateur Radio club. The meetings, at 7 p.m. each Wednesday in the Electrical Engineering building, are used as teaching periods on amateur radio operation code efficiency. The sessions are conducted by Richard Shackelford, engineering senior who is club president, and Kenneth Jellison, engineering freshman. "There are 15 persons in the class now and we hope more will join soon because it isn't too late," Jellison said. To obtain a novice operator's license the applicant must be able to send and receive at least five words in code a minute. "Our equipment consists mainly of a tape code-sending machine," Jellison said. After mastering this requirement the applicant takes an FCC examination in Kansas City. If he passes the exam he is issued a novice class amateur radio operator license. "We use the regular international Morse code in our work. It's quite a bit different from the Morse code used by the railroads," he said. During the code-practice sessions code is sent over a loud-speaker into the room. Students take it down in a notebook. Each person also practices sending the code. This higher classification requires the applicant to send or receive 13 words a minute and entitles him to operate a radio telephone and operate on all amateur radio bands. In comparison, a person with a novice license is restricted to certain frequency bands. Learn to Drive! TO Bridge Standard FOR Service 601 Mass. --- Santa holding a book Hand-picked Gift Books for all the family Wouk-The Caine Mutiny Monsarrat-The Cruel Sea Marquand-Melville Goodwin, USA Bromfield-Mr. Smith Ashe-Moses New Yorker Album Peter Arno-Ladies and Gentlemen Smith-Three Men On Third Shulman-Many Loves of Dobie Gillis Thurber Carnival Joy of Cooking-Rombauer Better Homes and Gardens Cookbook Better Homes and Gardens Handyman's Book Russel Wright-Guide to Easier Living Neutra-Mystery & Realities of the Site Mock-If You Want to Build a House McCall's Book of Modern Houses Old Herbaceous-Arkell Lloyd C. Douglas-Time to Remember Carson-The Sea Are Ums Van Dyke-The Other Wise Man Audobon's Animals Rand McNally Atlas (new ed.) Tall Mother Goose Rey-Where's My Baby? Golden Book of Poetry Lenski-Papa Small Holling-Tree In The Trail Holling-Minn of the Mississippi COME IN AND SEE US THE NEXT TIME YOU ARE DOWN TOWN. The Book Nook 1021 Mass. Phone 666 --- Iris Page 4 University Daily Kanson Friday, Dec. 7, 1951 MISS CLARICE C. DAVIS, 20, a Negro co-ed, was elected "homecoming queeh" at the University of Illinois. Miss Davis, first Negro ever to be chosen for this honor in the Western conference, won over 16 finalists Kansas Alpha chapter, the only one in the state, was founded in 1890 and was the first chapter west of the Mississippi river. A. W. Davidson, assistant dean of the Graduate school, is the president. 16 finalists. The medal was warded to Joseph Goffe, Dartmouth, 1791. He was the great grandfather of Mrs. Crawford. The keys, then called medals, were made of silver and were square in shape. There are less than six existing today. One of the oldest Phi Beta Kappa medals now in existence is in possession of a University faculty family. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Crawford Phi Beta Kappa Honors Founding Mrs. Crawford is a member of the Wisconsin chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. Mr. Crawford, professor emeritus of history, and the couple's eldest son, Richard, are members of the Kansas chapter. Kentucky Restaurant To Fly Over Pacific Louisville, Ky.—(U,P)—A Louisville restaurant soon will be flying the Pacific ocean. The C-54 Grill, housed in the fuselage of a Douglas C-54 Skymaster, has been bought by a small airline which operates between Seattle and Tokyo by way of Alaska. The airline plans to make it an airplane once again. The C-54 Grill was opened in 1947 after the fuselage was bought from the War Assets administration for $500. The fuselage will be taken to an aircraft plant on the west coast, fitted with wings, tail assembly, engines and controls. Wren Hatches Eggs On Jeep Montgomery. Ala. — (U.F.) — A mother wren built a nest and hatched her eggs in the radiator grill of a jeep station wagon here, despite the fact that the vehicle frequently was driven from 50 to 100 miles per day. Vic Vetsays VETERANS ENTITLED TO NONSERVICE-CONNECTED PENSIONS WHO ARE SO HELPLESS THAT THEY NEED THE REGULAR AID OF ANOTHER PERSON IN THEIR HOMES MAY BE ENTITLED TO THE HOME PAYMENT OF $120. A MONTH UNDER A NEW LAW NEW LANE M-293 For full information contact your nearest VETERANS ADMINISTRATION offices Driving Instructor Urges Safe Attitude "The proper attitude is the keynote of safe usage of our streets and sidewalks on the campus," according to Fred Henderson, in- structor in the driver education program. "Speed and not paying attention to business go hand in hand to make the biggest hazard on the campus," he said. "Drivers should not only watch the cars in front and back of them, but also the persons on the sidewalks." Although there have been no traffic deaths on the campus there have been many near accidents. Mr. Henderson gives the following traffic rules for pedestrians and drivers. For pedestrians: 1. Cross streets Offers Fellowship ToStudyInHavana The Cuban-American Cultural institute is offering the Father Felix Varela fellowship for an American graduate student to study at the University of Havana for the academic year beginning September 1952. Applications must be filed not later than Saturday, March 15, 1952. Application blanks are available at the German department office, 304 Fraser. Eligibility requirements for the fellowship are: United States citizenship, a bachelor's degree from an American college or university of recognized standing by the date of departure, a good knowledge of Spanish, demonstrated academic ability and capacity for independent study, good moral character, personality and adaptability. Students in the fields of philosophy, Spanish and Spanish-American literature, history, education, social sciences, and law are preferred. at the crosswalks painted there for that purpose. 2. Think about crossing safely, not quickly. 3. Think about the business at hand. Do not "drag" across the street. 4. Stand on the curbing and not in the street while waiting to cross. 5. Avoid zig-zagging between cars. For drivers: 1. Know the rules to be observed by pedestrians and cyclists. 2. Be alert to possible emergencies. 3. Stop at crosswalks and proceed slowly through them. 4. Don't pass cars at intersections or crosswalks. 5. Give the driver behind you ample warning that you are going to do something different from the routine flow of traffic by proper signaling. The signals designated by the Kansas laws are to be observed on the campus, he said. The arm extended straight out indicates a left turn, up indicates a right turn, and down indicates that the driver is going to momentarily disrupt traffic. The latter includes slowing, stopping, pulling into or away from curbs. 'Beauty And Beast' Film Showing Friday "Beauty and the Beast," a French film with English subtitles, will be shown at 7:30 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium. This is the fourth in the University foreign film series to be shown to students and faculty free Cars discharging passengers in the middle of the street is another danger to the safety of all concerned. Mr. Henderson stated. Drivers should pull over to the curb and passengers should get out of the car onto the curbing. Men's Pep Club Elects New Officers Donald Horttor, College junior, was elected president of the Ku Ku club, men's pep organization, Thursday night. BRUNSWICK'S POOL SNOOKER 714 Formula For Fun... Sprinkle with a few friends and musical background. Result: Generous portion of FUN. Mass. Take one cue and a smooth green table. Add 16 balls, arranged in a triangle. Other officers elected were Thomas Oliver, vice-president; Paul Thomas, recording secretary; Lewis Clum, treasurer, and Lloyd Robbison, corresponding secretary. The new officers will begin their duties Thursday, Dec. 20, at the regular Ku Ku meeting. 824 Vermont It's DUCK'S For Patronize Kansan Advertisers DUCK'S TAVERN Enjoy a Sea Food Dinner Tonight SEA FOODS - French Fried Shrimp - Soft Shell Crabs - Maine Lobster - Florida Pompano At Manhattan Shirts At Ober's for $ \frac{7 A. B ' s} {who are S. C.} $ Bentley the Manhattan 'Burt' — White button-down oxford, soft roll to the collar. Popular as a holiday with the fellows and the gals. the Manhattan 'Range' the Manhattan 'Range' —Fine white broadcloth, extreme widespread collar. Sharpest shirt on the quadrangles this year. *Style-Conscious Manhattan Mustang's Manhattan The Manhattan Shirt Company, makers of Manhattan shirts, neckwear, underwear, pajamas, sportshirts, beachwear and handkerchiefs. Drivers And Pedestrians Must Cooperate For Safety Non-observance of the stop signs and excessive speed are the worst safety hazards on the campus, in the opinion of Joe Skillman, chief of the campus police. "Failing to give hand signals constitutes a hazard. It would be much easier if the patrolman on duty and the driver in the car behind could know what's going on." he said. Pedestrians should walk with the traffic when it is being directed by a patrolman, he pointed out. Chief Skillman said that a complete set of regulations concerning driving on the campus is available to the students at the traffic office in Robinson gymnasium at any time they would like to call for it. "The top speed limit on the campus is 20 miles per hour, except in the area where it is unadvisable to travel that fast," he stated. "All approaches to the campus are marked with that limit, and any speeding violators are cited to the city court." Rules for keeping hazards to a minimum, according to the chief, are: 1. Acquire a skill in the control of the car. 2. Know what to expect of your car. 3. Avoid taking unnecessary chances. 4. Have regard at all times for the rights of others. 5. Always signal your intentions when driving so other drivers may know what to expect. 6. Be prepared to compensate for the mistakes of others. "The safety record this semester on the University campus has been very good," he said. "There have been only four minor accidents with no personal injury." Owing to the number of pedestrians on the campus motorists are asked to take extreme caution at all times, but especially during the between class rush. The pedestrian also has a definite responsibility in crossing the street where cross walks are designated, he said. Gorillas Can't Exist Ex-Professor Says New Haven, Comm.—(U.P.)—Gorillas can't keep up with this modern age. A retired Yale professor, Robert M. Yerkes, predicts that within the next 100 years the popular zoo animal will be extinct. Gorillas have "no chance of survival in competition with man," says Yerkes. "The animals either must be protected in their natural habitat or bred successfully in captivity. Otherwise they won't be around any more." Pottsville, Pa.—(U.P.)—A calf born on the farm of Charles Knerr has a total of 12 toes. Instead of the split hoof of a calf, this one has a triple formation on each foot. WALKERS! Think for two- The driver and you NATIONAL SAFETY COUNCIL 3 Of Faculty To Editors' Institute Three faculty members of the William White School of Journalism and Public Information will take part in a one-day Weekly Newspaper Editors' Institute Saturday at Garden City. University Daily Kanson Burton W. Marvin, dean of the School of Journalism, will preside over the day's activities which will include discussions of mechanical difficulties and cost of running a Kansas weekly newspaper. The institute is sponsored jointly by the School of Journalism, the Southwest Kansas Editorial association, and the University of Kansas Extension Southwest Kansas Center. Bill Nelligan, '49, director of the University of Kansas Extension Southwest Kansas Center, made the arrangements for the meeting. R. W. Doores, instructor in journalism, will lead a discussion on "What Are Your Costs?" Thomas C. Rythe, assistant professor of journalism, will lead a discussion on "How Can You Meet Rising Costs?" Dean Marvin, Mr. Doores, and Professor Rytter plan to visit several Kansas editors today on their way to Garden City. Research physicists at the University are aiding the United States Signal corps in the development of electrets—small, powerful "magnet" useful in wartime communications. KU To Continue Magnet Study Supervising the research is Dr. Gordon Wiseman, assistant professor of physics. In explaining the project, Dr. Wiseman said an electret is the analogue of a permanently magnetized magnet. Continued study until February of 1953 is made possible through the renewal of an agreement with the Suior Army Signal laboratory. Plastics and waxes are being used in the experiments to develop sources of electrical fields that can be used in communications instruments such as microphones. One of the ultimate objectives is to develop better electrets. "The object of our research is to obtain information about the mechanisms which work to produce permanent electrical charges in electrets," he said. The study of electrets is not a new one at KU. It has been the object of research here since 1938. Assisting Dr. Wiseman in the research are four graduate students. They are Norman Baumann of Sylvan Grove. Gene Feaster of Winfield, Francis Prosser of Wichita, Ralph Moon Jr. of Kansas City, Mo, and Jack Wild of Woonsocket, S. D. University Players To Give 'Dream' The University Players will go to Kansas City Saturday to present "Midsummer Night's Dream" at Southwest Junior High school under the sponsorship of the Community Children's theater of Kansas City, Inc. Gloria Garbled, Silent Star Has Stimulating Interview The famous silent movie star, Gloria Garbled, was a visitor to the University last week and graciously granted the Daily Kansan a personal interview. The following is the stimulating word-for-word report of the event. ___ Nearly half of the cast of 22 participated in the same production when it was presented last year on a two-week tour to Kansas and Oklahoma schools. Directed by Tom Rea, instructor in speech, the play will be presented at 10 a.m. and at 2 p.m. A showing Saturday, Dec. 15 at Shawnee-Mission high school will complete the group's schedule. Introduction of drama to children in the five to 12 age group is the purpose of the Children's theater. By JOE TAYLOR Alcometer Gives Insufficient Proof New Haven, Conn.—(U.P.)—Judge Harold E. Alprovis ruled in city court that an alcometer—devised by Yale—is not enough to convict a driver of being drunk. The judge dismissed a charge against William E. Smith, 22, because the prosecutor lacked corroborating evidence. The alometer is a device which measures the percentage of alcohol in the blood. Question: Tell me, Miss Garbled, why are you referred to as "the famous silent movie star?" Miss Garbled: (silence) Q: What brings you to the University of Kansas? Miss Garbled; (silence) Q: Do you feel that your visit here has been a success? Q: Are the rumors concerning you and your current leading man true? Miss Garbled: (silence) Q: Which of the many fine pictures you've made do you consider your best? Q: How do you feel about being a top contender for the 1951 academy award? Miss Garbled: (silence) Q: Here is the final question. What are your picture plans for the future? Miss Garbled: (silence) Miss Garbled: (silence) Miss Garbled appeared on the campus through the courtesy of Golden pictures whose motto, "Golden Is Silence," is known throughout the world. The famous silent movie star currently may be seen playing the title role in "She Didn't Say No." CHRISTMAS COOKIES EGG NOG PLUM PUDDING For The HOLIDAY SEASON Try Some Of These ICE CREAM Specials PEPPERMINT CANDY and BELL CENTER BRICKS LAWRENCE Sanitary MILK AND ICE CREAM CO. Phone 696 Friday, Dec. 7, 1951 202 W. 6th Air Scientists Say Space Begins At 10 Miles Above The Earth New York—(U.P.)—Just how far up does space begin? There have been theories that it begins at 400 miles and upward. A new hypothesis put the beginning of space at a mere 10 miles or so above the earth. The new theory comes from Dr. Hubertus Struggh, professor of aviation medicine at the U.S. Air Force school of aviation medicine, San Antonio, Texas, and three of his colleagues. Dr. Strughold, writing in an issue of the Journal of Aviation Medicine, and his colleagues divide the properties of the earth's atmosphere into three categories—oxygen, solar radiation, cosmic particles and thirdly, the escape from gravity. The first category—or property—according to the scientists, disappears about ten miles up. Once a pilot gets that high, he'd better be careful of his pressurized cabin. An accident at that altitude would let the ain escape from the cabin and in about 13 seconds the pilot would lose consciousness. At 12 $ \frac{1} {2} $ miles, the body fluid boils if exposed to the semi-vacuum of the upper air. The condition gets no worse as the pilot goes higher. CLEAN NEAT CLOTHES NEEP FIGURE TRIM A man in a suit. WITH MESSY DUDS YOU JUST CAN'T WIN! A man in a suit. Send Them To ACME and We'll Make Them Look Like New. ACME Bachelor Laundry and Dry Cleaning 1111 Mass. Phone 646 for everything: under the tree Weavers 901 Mass. Elizabeth Arden Precious Perfumairs for the toe of the stocking! Elie Jon Arden LONDON NEW YORK PARIS Can't-spill, can't-leak perfume carriers in their own jeweler's case hold the famous fragrances: Blue Grass, On Dit, My Love, White $2.50 Orchid, Night and Day. price plus tax Weaver's Cosmetics—Main Floor Weaver's Cosmetics—Main Floor Your Gift from Weaver's means more . . . to her. Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, Dec. 7, 1951 Even Color Blind Giftwrappers Can't Go Wrong This Christmas By HARMAN W. NICHOLS United Press Staff Correspondent The people who put out the pretty wristings and ribbons at Christmas have come down to my level this year. I'm color blind. Mixing "shocking pink" and red used to bring about a shudder and make me a social outcast. Likewise dubonnet and cardinal red, and lilac and vermillion. Today, anything goes. Furthermore, experts say when you mix up the colors you create another one. The paper you'll wrap your presents in this year runs a dizzy gamut from stuff to match a lady's eyes to simulating the argyle socks a 'teen-ager knits for her old man. For big packages, you'll select big, bold designs. Small patterns are for little packages. There also is the problem of wrapping—something I never have mastered. As a wrapper of packages, I have all of the skill of a pigeon-toed pachyderm. Mrs. Mona Keene, a specialist for Hallmark, gave me some tips that I pass along for free. Put a pretty bow on each package and, if you mail it, protect same with a cardboard box protector. I tried it, but it didn't work. I still think you can save a lot of time by having a trained department store emglove wrap your package. Our experts says to be careful and not spend too much for paper. It's plain silly to put out 20 cents for a package of paper in which to pretty up a 10-cent whistle. Mrs. Keene also suggests that people who receive fancy wrappings on their packages should not throw them away. The ribbons can make Altea or Tebiatha look pretty in her pig tails. The kids also will get a kick out of cutting out figures in the wrappings for their scrap books or they can paste them on dime-store wastepaper baskets, or on lamp shades in their rooms. The big folks might like to glue some of the prettier parts of the wrappings on match-boxes, coasters, book ends or the like. Personally, I'm looking forward to a lot of wrappings. They do a fine job getting the logs going in my fireplace. Official Bulletin Varsity Dance, 9-12 p.m. Saturday, Hawk's Nest, Union. All cordially invited. Gamma Delta cost supper and program, 5:30 p.m. Sunday, 17th and Vermont. Danforth Chapel service, 8:30 a.m. Sunday, sponsored by Gamma Delta. Mathematics collouquium, 5 p.m. Monday. 211 Strong hall. Lutheran Student association meeting, 6 p.m. Sunday, Trinity Lutheran church, cost supper and student panel. Lutheran Student association sponsor a concert, 8 p.m. Sunday, Trinity Lutheran church, 13th and New Hampshire. Public invited. Alpha Kappa Psi formal initiation, 9 a.m. Sunday, Kansas room, Union. Christmas Holiday Riders bureau Register, for ride or for passenger Interfraternity council, 9 p.m Union. KU Disciple fellowship, 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Myers hall. Rev. Turner, speaker, cost supper and recreation Obtain application blanks for the ISA scholarship at dean of women's office. Return blanks by Dec. 13. Physical Therapy club tea honoring Dr. Rose, 2-5 p.m. Sunday, English room, Union. Members please attend. Kappa Sig-Gamma Phi Dance Kappa Sigma fraternity entertained Gamma Phi Beta sorority at a dessert dance Thursday. Chapernes were Mrs. Edna Stewart and Mrs. Ralph Park. Erma Lutz To Wed Jerry Smith Jan. 26 Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Lutz of Dodge City announce the approaching marriage of their daughter, Erma Lee, to Jerry M. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Millard Smith of Wichita. Miss Lutz is a junior in the School of Fine Arts and a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Smith is a junior in the engineering school and a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. The wedding will take place Jan 26 in Dodge City. Dean T. DeWitt Carr Celebrates Birthday A quiet birthday party was held Wednesday afternoon in Marvin hall by the engineering office force for Dean T. DeWitt Carr of the School of Engineering and Architecture. The Dean replied to the usual question, "I'm 39—the same age as Jack Benny." Among those present were Mrs. Carr, Miss Mary Smith, Mrs. Nellie Walter, Mrs. Maureen Straub and Mrs. Marilyn Gaugh. Westminster Groups Meet Students who attend a supper Sunday evening sponsored by Westminster Fellowship will have an opportunity afterward to participate in five discussion groups on the subjects faith, life, Christian outreach, stewardship and fellowship. The supper and meeting will take place at 5:30 p.m. at Westminster hall, 1212 Oread. All university students are invited. "What Can a Modern Christian Believe" will be the topic of the lecture by The Rev. Dale Turner of the Plymouth Congregational church at the meeting of the Disciple fellowship of the Christian church at 5:30 p.m. Sunday. This will be the last lecture of the morality series. Religious Notes Christians To Hear Turner Westminster Turkey Dinner A turkey dinner for members of the newly organized men's club of Westminster Fellowship will take place Dec. 20. New members will be admitted and the group will receive its charter. Reservations for the dinner should be made before Dec. 15. Westminster Tree Trim Party Westminster Fellowship will have its annual Christmas "tree trim" party Dec. 14. Gamma Delta Hears Schmid The student lounge and church addition to be started soon on Immanuel Lutheran church, will be the topic of discussion at the meeting at 5:30 p.m. Sunday in the church, of Gamma Delta, Immanuel Lutheran student fellowship group. The Rev, Walter Schmid, member of the board of directors of the Kansas district of the church, will be present to answer questions and explain the plans for the additions to the church. All students are invited to attend the meeting in the church at Seventeenth and Vermont streets. YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. Lawrence Optical Co. Phone 425 1025 Mass. SANTA CAROLINA'S STOCKING A Spill? Call Us! INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners Phone 432 1903 Mass. 740 Vt. Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertiser> Worthal says: "I've just had a preview of the ninth edition of "LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS" and I want to tell you that it is chock full of gags and girls that will tickle your funny bone. I really had fun in these cartoons, and I know that you will enjoy reading this fine book-get a couple, one to send home to your old mother." On Sale Next Week! 6 HAVE AN EXTRA QUARTER IN YOUR JEANS EARMARKED FOR L.M.O.C. NO.9 "LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS" Ninth Edition University Daily Kansan Page 7 Weekend Social Events Phi Gam-Pi Phi Dessert Dance Phi Gamma Delta will entertain Pi Beta Pi sorority at a tea dance from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday. Chaper- es will be Mrs. C, A. Thomas and Mrs. Dean Alt. Gamma Phi Beta sorority will hold a formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight tonight in the Kansas room of the Union. Mrs. J. H. Kreamer, Mrs. Arthur Little, Mrs. John Skie Sr., Mrs. Andrew McKay and Mrs. W. S. Shaw will be chaperones. Delta Tau Delta Dinner Dance Alpha Delta Pi will hold a formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house. Mrs. D. I. Denham, Mrs. John Skier, Sr., Mrs. Edna Stewart and Mrs. Hazel Jenkins will be chaperones. TKE Formal Saturday Alpha Delta Pi Formal Dance Gamma Phi Party In Union Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity will entertain with a formal dance from 6 p.m. to midnight at the chapter Muse Saturday. Chaperones will be Mrs. H. M. Ryan, Capt. and Mrs. W. R. Terrell, and Dr. and Mrs. Roland Baker. Delta Tau Delta fraternity will hold a dinner dance from 7 p.m. to midnight tonight at the Union. Chaperones will be Mrs. Thomas H. Stuart, Mrs. Dean Alt and Mrs. C. A. Thomas. Triangle Winter Formal Triangle fraternity will entertain with a winter formal at the chapter house from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Mrs. R. G. R. Goche. Mrs. Wilma Hooper, Mrs. Arthur Little and Mrs. J. I. Hollsworth will chaperone. DU-Chi Omega Dessert Dance Delta Upsilon fraternity entertained Chi Omega sorority at a dessert dance Thursday. Mrs. James A. Hooke and Mrs. J. R. Scott were chaperones. A Omicron Pi Formal Dance Alpha Omicron Pi will hold a formal dance at the chapter house from p.m. to midnight tonight. Chaperones will be Mrs. L. A. Clark, Mrs. R. L. Blume, Mrs. Edward Dicks and Mrs. Dean S. Nite. Phi Beta Pi medical fraternity will entertain with a party from 8 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth Jochin, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Carttar, Mrs. Earl Fowler and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cook. Pi Kappa Alpha entertained Kappa Alpha Theta sorority at a dessert dance Tuesday. Mrs. Frank Baird and Mrs. Eugene Alford were chaperones. Phi Kappa Christmas Formal Pi KA-Theta Dessert Dance Ella Kappa Christmas Formal Phi Kappa fraternity will hold a Christmas formal from 8 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house. Mrs. Lela Wilson, Mrs. Edward L. Dicks and Mrs. R. H. Wilson will chapelone. Lutheran Association To Hear Concert Miss Marian Jersild, organist, and Mrs. Myna Lynch Brown, soprano, and Mr. Richard Preis, baritone, will present a concert at the Lutheran Student association meeting at 8 p.m., Dec. 9 at the Trinity Lutheran church. Miss Jersild is organist at Trinity Lutheran church and instructor in piano at the University. Mrs. Brown graduated from the University last spring. She is continuing her music study with Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice. Mr. Preis, graduate of Carthage college, Carthage, Ill., is also studying under Prof. Schmidt. Accompanists for Mrs. Brown and Mr. Preis will be Frances Henningson and Marjorie England. During the evening, a free-will offering will be received for Lutheran Student action, a program which provides aid for worthy students in other countries. The public is invited to attend the concert. Carruth To Have Formal Carruth hall will entertain with a formal dance from 9.p.m. to midnight Saturday at the hall. Mr. and Mrs.Bromleigh Lamb, Mrs.Louise Cochran and Miss Laura Jennings will be chaperones. Friday, Dec. 7, 1951 Phi Delta Phi legal fraternity will entertain with a dance at the Eldridge hotel from 9 p.m. to midnight tonight. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Cartar, Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Slough and Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Grimes will be chaperones. Kappa Psi pharmaceutical fraternity will have a dinner-dance from 7 to 11 p.m. Saturday in the Kansas room of the Union. Charles F. Peterson, Duane G. Wengel and Raymond E. Hopponen will chaperone. Phi Chi medical fraternity will hold a formal dance at the Eldridge hotel from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Chaperones will be Mrs. John H. Hope, Dr. and Mrs. T. G. Metcalf, Dr. and Mrs. S. W. Lesher and W. S. Baumgartner. Kappa Psi Dinner-Dance Phi Chi Formal At Eldridge Phi Delta Phi Party Tonight The University chapter of Sigma Alpha Iota, national music fraternity for women, honored Miss Mary Jane Waggoner, province president, at a banquet Thursday noon in the English room of the Union. SAI Banquet Honors Mary Jane Waggoner Phyllis McFarland, fine arts senior, presided at the table and introduced the guests. Alpha Phi Alpha Dinner-Dance Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity will entertain with a dinner and dance from 8:30 to midnight tonight. Mrs. Irene Spencer, Mrs. Ray Davis and Mrs. Arthur Stanfield will be chaperones. Alpha Phi Alpha Dinner-Dance The military science Reserve Officers Training Corps will hold a Military ball from 8 p.m. to midnight in the Military Science building tonight. Col. and Mrs. Edward F. Kumpe, Lt. Comdr. and Mrs. Lynn Moore and Comdr. and Mrs. W. M. Dickey will chapenor. The chapter presented a musicale Thursday evening featuring the works of American composers for Miss Waggoner. Following the evening program, a formal meeting and initiation services were held. ROTC Military Ball Tonight Sigma Nu's 28-Acre 'Ranch Is Biggest Fraternity Estate Nu chapter of Sigma Nu fraternity at KU has a 28-earce "estate" which makes it the largest land owning fraternity chapter in the country. The chapter house at 945 Emory road was purchased in 1926 from ex-governor Stubbs who built it while serving as the state's chief executive. Twenty-eight acres of land was included in the transaction. Governor Stubbs took over the old Sigma Nu house at 1246 Oread and later sold it to the Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Nu chapter was the first chapter of Sigma Nu founded west of the Mississippi. It was organized in 1884 and members met every Saturday night on the third floor of the Eldridge house. Sigma Nu was the fifth fraternity on the KU campus. Travel Service THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Tel.30 8th & Mass. Sigma Nu had its origin at Virginia Institute at Lexington in 1869. In its early days it was known as the "Legion of Honor." Founders were James Franklin Hopkins and Greenfield Charles of Arkansas; James M. Riley, of Missouri. Among Sigma Nu's distinguished alumni are Senator Andrew Schoepel, of Kansas; "Doc" Blanchard and Bob Fenimore, Fulton Lewis Jr., Zane Grey, Kay Kyser and the late Glenn Miller. L.M.O.C. — No. 9 — WATCH FOR IT Be Happy- GO LUCKIES TASTE BETTER! It takes fine tobacco to give you a better-tasting cigarette. And Lucky Strike means fine tobacco. But it takes something else, too—superior workmanship. You get fine, light, mild, good-tasting tobacco in the better-made cigarette. That's why Luckies taste better. So, Be Happy-Go Lucky! Get a carton today! STUDENTS! Let's go! We want your jingles! We're ready and willing and eager to pay you $25 for every jingle we use. Send as many jingles as you like to Happy-Go-Lucky, P. O. Box 67, New York 46, N. Y. 101 The poet of the Rubáyát, In listing what hed like, Left out the greatest treat of all- A tasty Lucky Strike! Joseph D. McCadden Fordham University LUCKY! don't think I would care to dig Deep down for pirate treasure; I'd rather light a Lucky Strike For deep-down smoking pleasure. Gloria A. Arnason Univ. of North Dakota LUCKY STRIKE IT'S TOASTED CIGARETTES VOL. 10, NO. 26 THE NEW YORKER L.S.M.F.T. We rambling wrecks learn many things From calculus to law- But only Lucky Strike we find So easy on the draw! Albert W. Smith Georgia Tech. learn many things law - ke we find draw! L. S./M.F.T.-Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco COPYR., THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY Page 8 University Daily Kanson Friday, Dec. 7, 1951 Potent Pioneers Pose Threat To Jayhawkers Jayhawker hopes for an early-season string of victories could be dampened here tomorrow night by the potent Pioneers from Denver university. | ___ The non-conference tussle will get underway at 7:30 o'clock at Hoch auditorium. Denver coach Hoyt Brawner has a big and experienced squad on which to call. Three of his probable starters, John Griffin, Bob Knichehm and Dale Toft, average 206 pounds and 6 feet and $4\frac{3}{4}$ inches. Toft is the main scoring threat with a deadly hook shot. All - American Clyde Lovellette will be well guarded by the tall trio in hope of cutting off KU's main source of points. Kansas must have more scoring from its other four players if it expects to continue its winning ways. In KU's game with Baylor, the Terre Haute Terror racked up 28 of the 57 points made by Kansas as he again carried the point-making burden. Bill Hougland and Bob Kenney were next in line with six points each. A more balanced scoring attack must be developed if the Jayhawkers hope to live up to their advanced billing. The Pioneers are a fast breaking team which could give the slower Jayhawkers a difficult time. They have one victory under their belts as they rolled over a hapless Colorado State team 65-46 in the season's opener Dec. 1. LaVannes Squires and Bill Heitholt will probably be used by Coach Allen in an attempt to inject more speed into the team. The freshmen demonstrated considerable speed and ball handling ability as well as signs of scoring as in the first varsity play against Bavlor. Injuries are hampering the Kansas club. John Keller is still out of action with a severe charleyhorse which has halted his cage activities for three weeks. The Page City senior may be in shape for Southern Methodist games next week. The other crippled Jayhawker is Charlie Hoag. His football injury hasn't healed completely but treat-ment will bring him around in shape soon. The game will be the first between the two schools since Kansas defeated Denver 36-25 in 1942. Probable Starters Denver J. Griffin B. Knichrehm D. Tale Toft F. Howell Joe Hughes F F C G G Kansas Bill Lienhard Bob Kenney C. Lovellette Bill Houghland Dean Kelley Cage Scores By UNITED PRESS East St. John's 66, Brigham Young 52 Brooklyn Col. 70, Ft. Monton 47 Manhattan 65, Texas Christ. 52 Dartmouth 76, Middlebury 55 South Vanderbilt 78, Lipscomb 63 South Carolina 76, The Citadel 56 Midwest DePaul 87, Chicago Teachers 58 Indiana 68, Valparaiso 59 Indiana State 45, Hanover 42 Loyola 92, Wayne 73 Purdue 68, DePaul 56 West. Kentucky 69, Evansville 56 Xavier 81, Chase 65 Gaston Lutherus 66, Concordia (Minn) 59 West Caroll 61, West. Montant 51 Wyoming 55, Montana State 48 East. Washington 81, Gonzaga 62 Pittsburg Downs Nebraskans 67-50 Pittsburg, Kan. —(U.P).—Pittsburgh State college defeated Peru, Neb., State college, 67 to 50, last night despite a 24-point scoring performance by Peru center Robert Davis. Pittsburgh took a 18-14 lead at the end of the first quarter and held a margin throughout the game. It was 33 to 20 at halftime. Kenny Callaway, with 15 points, and Lee Olmsted with 13 led the Pittsburgh attack. 21 Officials Discuss Big 7 Athletics The overall picture of athletics in the Big Seven is being discussed by university officials at a conference meeting in Kansas City which will continue through the weekend. Also scheduled to meet are the athletic business managers, athletic directors, faculty representatives and football coaches. BILL LIENHARD Reeves Peters, executive secretary of the conference, said that no specific agenda has been planned for the university presidents. He expects however that they will discuss the national athletic picture and the 12-point program to be presented to the convention of the National College Athletic association at a meeting in Cincinnati in January. A 10-man committee of university presidents is now studying the athletic situation. Dr.R.G. Gustavson, of Nebraska university is a member of the committee and will review the progress of that group before the Big Seven leaders. Football coaches will review the past season, make plans for next season and discuss next year's officials at their meeting on Sunday. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. A. C. Lonborg. J. V. Sikes and Earl Falkenstien are representing KU. No announcement of faculty action will be made until the conclusion of Saturday's session. Manager Thinks Present Crop Of Heavies Best In History Santa Rosa, Calif.—(U.P.)The most successful manager in the history of boxing said today that the present crop of heavyweight contenders is the best the world ever has known. That's the word from dapper John Leo McKernan, aged 63, and better known as Jack (Doc) Kearns. "Why the current crop of heavyweight contenders is better than it ever was," the balding, sprightly manager said. "It's just like comparing the horse and buggy with the automobile and the automobile with the airplane—everything keeps improving." He listed in the present crowd eligible to get a crack at Jersey Joe Walcott, former champion Ezzard Charles, his boy, Joey Maxim, the light-heavy champ; Lee Savold, Rocky Marciano and possibly, Joe Louis. "Compare these fellows with the guys who were chasing Jack Dempsey," he went on. "Why, I licked most of them with a 160-pounder Mickey Walker. Standout candidates in those days included George Godfrey and Bearcat Wright, both 240-pounders, and Mickey licked em both; and he also licked Jack Sharkey, although it was called a draw." Kearns, a fast-talking, quick - thinking man started his career when he went to the Klondike and palled around with men like Jack London, Wilson Mizner, Robert Service. Rex Beach and Alex Pantages. Since that time, he has managed seven world's champions—Abe Attel. featherweight; Benny Leonard. lightweight; Mickey Walker as a weltter champion; Jackie Fields, welter; Dempsey, heavyweight; and his current pride-and-joy, lightheavyweight King Joey Maxim. He would rather talk about the future than the past and ahead he sees a rosy future. He thinks Maxim will beat Ezzard Charles in their battle at the San Francisco Cow Palace, Dec. 12. After that, he believes that Maxim should get a shot at the world heavyweight crown worn by Walcott. CHRISTMAS COOKIES for your New York—(U.P.)-Bashful Chuck Taylor, who directed Stanford into the Rose Bowl for the first time in 10 years, was elected coach of the year today by the American Football Coaches association. For successful PARTIES have a plentiful supply of our delicious, freshly-baked Christmas CAKES and COOKIES Stanford's Chuck Taylor Named Coach Of The Year The jury of his peers selected Taylor over Bob Neyland of Tennessee, Biggie Munn of Michigan State and Charley Caldwell of Princeton in the annual poll conducted for the association by the Scripps-Howard newspapers. Caldwell was the coach of last year. CHRISTMAS PARTIES DRAKE'S BAKERY Phone 61 Taylor polled 797 points—102 first place votes, 78 second place votes and 53 for third. Neyland, coach of undefeated-uptied Tennessee, totaled 611 votes with 84 firsts, 50 seconds and 41 thirds. Munn totaled 536 with 66 firsts, 57 seconds and 35 thirds. Caldwell finished fourth in the balloting with 329 points—66 votes for first, 34 for second and 42 for third. 907 Mass. The last time Stanford made the Rose Bowl was Jan. 1, 1941. A fellow named Taylor played guard on that team. Taylor became Stanford head coach this season after Marchy Schwartz, his old boss quit. At the start of the season, Taylor predicted Stanford would win nine of its 10 games. Many laughed, because the pre-season dope said Stanford would be lucky to finish in the Pacific coast conference's first division. But Stanford won nine of its 10 games—just as Taylor predicted—and is in the Rose Bowl against Illinois. Told of his selection as coach of the year, Taylor said at Stanford, 'It's a great honor, but--you get something like that when you have a great bunch of assistants and a fine group of players.' PRECISE WATCH REPAIRS Watch Repair Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed Wolfson's 743 Mass. Call 675 OLDMAINE Trollers HANDSEWN VARIOUS ORIGINALS hand-crafted shoes with a thoroughbred look! Kiltie Shoes with sleek ways, suburban manners. Wonderful the way they take to city street or country lane with casual grace. And because they're Oldmaine Trotters they're 'thoroughbred"...with supple polished leather uppers, hand-crafted seams and sturdy, flexible leather soles. $9.95 In Antique Tan and Antique Brown Royal College Shop 837-839 Massachusetts High Scoring Keynotes First Intramural Tilts By WILBUR LARKIN High-scoring and mis-matched teams seemed to be the keynote in the first "B" team intramural meetings Thursday night. Beta Theta Pi took high scoring honors in their romp over Phi Kappa Tau, 78-22, andLambda Chi Alpha captured the dubious honor of low score in its game with Alpha Tau Omega, which ATO won 56-9. The Beta's showed plenty of depth in both positions and in the scoring columns in their game with Phi Kappa Tau. Winter was high-point man with 15, followed by Dare with 13, Smith with 8, Mulliken with 7, Ressler with 6. Scorers for Phi Kappa Tau were Merriman and Lacy with 7, and Kaufman and Brazzel with 4 tallies apiece Phi Kappa Psi pulled a close game out of the fire in defeating Alpha Epsilon Pi 30-19. The score by quarters was 2-2, 12-8, 15-15, and 30-19. High scorer for Phi Psi's was Brannan with 12, one for the A. E. Pi's Wolf and Borenstein with 6 each. Following for the Phi Psi's were Taylor, 6; Knightly, 6; and McBride, 4. Finishing out the A. E. Pi's scoring column were Winer with 5 and Gross with 2. A hard scrapping little Sigma Nu team downed a higher Chi Chi Chi five 34-27. Paced by Rarick with 11 points, Asman with 10, and Hahn with 8, the SigmaNu's fought back hard after trailing at the end of the first quarter 4-7. The score was tied 13-all at the half and the SigmaNu's were ahead 22-19 at the end of the third period. The Tri Chi's, although dominating in height, were completely outplayed the last half. High scorer for them was Calabresi with 10, followed by Fisher with 5, La Master with 4, Greene with 2 and Brunson with 1. Also scoring for Sigma Nu was Sheers and Jones with 4 and 1 respectively. Kappa Sigma completely dominated Pi Kappa Alpha 59-15. The score by quarters read 16-2, 25-5, 39-9, and 15-15. High scorer for Kappa Sigma was Kline with 18, the rest of the scoring being spread fairly evenly throughout the lineup. Scoring for Pi Kappa Alpha was Schmidt, 6; Wood, 4; Glick, 3; Rooney 2. Delta Tau Delta, working with a tight zone defense, defeated Phi Kappa Sigma 38-27. Scoring for the victors were Mitchell with 13, Culver with 8, Legler with 6, Pemberton IM Bowling Tourney Set Twenty-eight intramural bowling teams roll into action Monday from 4-6 p.m. at the Pladium, 9th and Mississippi. Teams will be competing for the bowling trophy, which will be awarded to the champion at the season's end. Sigma Phi Epion, last year's winner, Sigma Nu and Beta Theta Pi have each entered three teams in the competition. The bowlers have been separated into four divisions, one for each day of the week from Monday through Thursday. Bowlers will bowl on the same day throughout the entire season. Each bowler will roll three lines in every match. The competition has been set up as a handicap tournament on a round-robin basis. After the first week's scores have been posted, handicaps will be calculated for all bowlers, in an effort to even up competition. The following are the four divisions: Monday Beta Theta Pi I, Sigma Nu II Phi Kappa Tau I, Phi Delta Theta I, Kappa Sigma II, Alpha Epsilon Pi I. Tuesday Sigma Phi Epsilon I, Phi Gamma Delta I, Sigma Chi (0), Sigma Nu III, Sigma Alpha Epsilon I, Triangle I, Lolliffe I, Beta Theta Pi II. Wednesdav Sigma Phi Epsilon II, Delta Tau Delta I, Sigma Chi (R), Sigma Nu I, Bost I, Oread II. Kappa Sigma I, Sigma Phi Epilon III, Phi Gamma Delta II, Delta Chi I, Alpha Tau Omega I, Oread I, Beta Theta Pi III, Phi Kappa I. Thursday with 4, McDonald with 5, and Schmidt with 2. Pacing Phi Kappa Sigma were Ewy with 11, Murphy with 8, Swisher with 7, and Wilson with 3. Only two men broke into the scoring column on the Lambda Chi Alpha roster as they went down before a strong Alpha Tau Omega team, 56-9. Brose paced ATO with 20 points followed by Goldenberg with 15, Garvin, 8; Wilson, 6; Astle, 4, and Joust, 3. Hargis with 8 and Bore with 1 were the only scorers for Lambda Chi. Phi Delta Theta defeated Alpha Kappa Lambda 44-13. High point honors went to Merrill of Phi Delta Gamma with 13 and Bowden of AKL with 9. Sigma Phi Epsilon overcame some poor passing in the first half to come back and take the game from Triangle 26-20. High scorer for Sigma Phi Epsilon was Matthews with 10, followed by Shaffer and Smith with 6 points each, and Haues with 4. Pacing Triangle were McConnell and Montgomery with 8 points apiece. After a one-night layoff tonight for the Military ball, play resumes over the weekend with 14 "B" and "C" league contests scheduled. Saturday Fraternity "B" 2 p.m. E—Delta Upsilon vs. Phi Kappa W—Phi Gamma Delta vs. Alpha Phi Albha. Alpha. 3 p.m. E-Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Delta Chi W—Tau Kappa Epsilon vs. Sigma Chi. Fraternity "C" E—Phi Delta Theta vs. Lambda Chi Alba W—Sigma Chi vs. Delta Upsilon. Sunday. Fraternity 2:30 p.m. E—Phi Kappa Sigma vs. Sigma Phi Enslon W—Phi Gamma Delta vs. Sigma Nu. 3:30 pm 3:30 p.m. E—Kappa Sigma vs. Delta Tau Delta W—Tau Kappa Epsilon vs. Alpha Tau Omega. 4:30 p.m. E—Beta Theta Pi vs. Alpha Kappa Lambda W—Nu Epsilon Nu vs. Sigma Alpha Epsilon New York—(U.P.)—The University of Kentucky basketball team today was voted most likely to win the 1951-52 national championship by the 35 leading college coaches who make up the United Press rating board. Independent "B" 5:20 n.m. E—Alpha Iota Alpha vs.Oread W—Jolliffe vs. Chi WI Kentucky received 345 out of a possible 350 points after collecting 32 first place votes, two second place and one fourth place ballot. Under Coaches Rate Kentucky 1st In their pre-season estimate, 32 of the coaches chose Adolph Rupp's NCAA champions to wind up the coming season just where they finished in the final 1950-51 balloting—on top. Spencer Named To All-American Second Squad Oliver Spencer, Jayhawker tackle, was named to the Associated Press' All-American offensive second team announced today. Spencer, a 218-pound junior, took up the unwelcome task of filling the hole left by the graduation of Mike McCormack. He was shifted from fullback two years ago and exceptional speed and agility for his size has earned him the All-America rating. The only other Kansan honored was Kansas State's ace defensive halfback, Veryl Switzer, who was named to the defensive second team. Only other Big Seven representative was Jim Weatherall, Oklahomawarrior 230-pound tackle, who was named to a first team defensive berth. Weatherall was one of four repeaters from last year's squad, Dick Kazmaier, Princeton's triple-threat star was honored again offensively as was Bob Ward, Maryland guard. The other defensive repeater was Les Richter, California linebacker. The teams take into account the complete season's games through Dec. 1 and were selected in consultation with a board of 11 newspapermen representing every section of the nation. Hundreds of writers and sportscasters served as advisers. Five KU players were included on the honorable mention list — George Kennard, offensive guard; Bud Laughlin, offensive back; Bob Brandeberry, offensive back; John Konek, offensive and defensive back; and Galen Fiss. linebacker. FIRST TEAM Offensive Tacticive E—Bill McColl, Stanford. E—Bob Carey, Michigan State. T—Bob Toneff, Notre Dame. T—Don Coleman, Michigan State. G—Bob Ward, Maryland. G—Marvin Matusak, Tulsa. C—Doug Mosley, Kentucky. B—Dick Kazmaier, Princeton. B—Hank Laurieella, Tennessee. B—Hugh McElhenny, Washington. B—Larry Isbell, Baylor. University Daily Kansan Page 9 E—Pat O'Donahue, Wisconsin. D—Edewey McConnell, Wyoming T—Jim Weatherall, Oklahoma. T—Pug Pearman, Tennessee. G—Ray Beck, Georgia Tech. G—Joe Palumbo, Virginia. LB—Keith Flowers, TCU. LB—Les Richter, California. B—Bobby Dillon, Texas. B—Al Brosky, Illinois. B—Ollie Matson, SMU. Defensive Plymouth Congregational Church SECOND TEAM Offensive E—Tom McCann, Holy Cross. E—Bill Howton, Rice. T—Oliver Spencer, Kansas. T—Bob Werekler, Vanderbilt. G—Jim Donarski, Arizona. G—Norm Manoogian, Stanford. C—Dick Hightower, SMU. B—Ed Modzelewski, Maryland. B—Vito Parilli, Kentucky. B—Bill Wade, Vanderbilt. B—John Karras, Illinois. 925 Vermont St. E—Leo Sugar, Purdue. E—Eddie Bell, Pennsylvania. T—Jerrell Price, Texas Tech. T—Dick Midzelewski, Maryland. G—Ted Daffer, Tennessee. G—Bill Athey, Baylor. LB—Pat Cannamela, USC. LB—Don Moowm, UCLA. B—Vic Janowicz, Ohio State. B—Veryl Switzer, Kansas State. B—Jim Dooley, Miami. Dale E. Turner, Minister Defensive SUNDAY SERVICES the ranking system, a first place vote is worth -40 points, a second place vote, nine, and on down to one point for a 10th place ballot. Friday, Dec. 7, 1951 10:00—Church School Class for University Students 11:00—Morning Worship 5:30 p.m.—University Discussion Group Go To The Church Of Your Choice Every Sunday. CHRISTMAS CITY Church Services will@vt.1. Students are cordially invited to participate in activities of all Lawrence churches. In addition to the regular order of service, there are many classes and functions planned especially for university groups. Trinity Episcopal Church 9. a.m.: Holy Communion for Collegians. Breakfast and Canterbury meeting follows in Rectory. Father Swift will discuss "The Christian Student and His Major." 11 a.m.: Morning Prayer and Sermon. MEMBER ASSOCIATION CANTERBURY CLUBS Thursday, Dec. 13, 7 a.m.: Holy Communion FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 8th and Kentucky George C. Fetter, minister Gus Ferre, minister to students 9:45 University Class led by Gus Ferre 11 Morning Worship. Subject: "Spiritual Sabotage." 4:15 Roger Williams Fellowship. Meet in church for trip to Ottawa University. 7:30 Evening Worship and Song Service. First Methodist Church Vermont at 10th Oscar E. Allison, Minister Edwin F. Price, Minister to Students 9:45 Wesley Foundation Church School Class 10:50 Morning Worship: speaker, Dr. M. L. Harris, leading negro educator. 5:30 Annual Wesley Foundation Banquet (admission by ticket only) First Christian Church 1000 Kentucky St. H.M.Sippel, Minister Sunday Services 9:30 - Sunday School—Class for single students taught by Mrs. Harold G. Barr—Class for married students taught by Dr.Carroll D. Clark. 10:45 - Morning Worship 5:30 - K.U. Disciples Fellowship evening meeting in Myers Hall on Campus, Mrs. Carroll D. Clark, Student Director. 1501 N. H. Church Of Christ W. Taylor Carter, Minister Kieth Barnhart, Music Director 10:00 - Bible Stuyay 11:00 - Sermon 11:55 - Communion 6:30 - University Class 7:30 - Evening Service The Assembly of God Church 13th and Mass. J. J. Krimmer, Pastor SUNSHINE EVANGELISTIC PARTY Nationally Known Musicians and Evangelists Services every night except Saturday at 7:45. Page 10 University Daily Kansan Friday, Dec. 7, 1951 Here's What Happened 10 Years Ago By JOE TAYLOR "Keep Your Shirt On—KU Faculty Advises" was the banner headline 10 years ago in the Daily Kansan following the bombing of Pearl Harbor. Students concerned about service calls were assured by James K. Hitt, assistant registrar, that if they were registered for the draft they could "safely plan to continue their work for the remainder of the semester." Dean Paul B. Lawson backed this up by saying, "It is the patriotic duty of most young people to stay in school, study harder than ever before, and prepare themselves for essential lines of work in defense and in helping their country." In regard to the possibility of air raids, the chairman of the Civil Aeronautics Authority for the Lawrence area, Prof. Earl D. Hay, was quoted as saying, "Keep calm." He said he had not received any information as to what was to be done. However all local planes were grounded to avoid the possibility of having them fired upon by mistake. Air raid fears were present elsewhere in the country reported the United Press. It was felt that the western states were in particular danger. "A night of blackouts and air raid alarms ordered by military authorities brought the war close to the west coast today," began one dispatch. Recruiting officers across the nation were swamped with applicants. The local offices were quoted as saying they were doing a land office business. Meanwhile, in Washington, the House military affairs committee was going into session to draw up legislation which would cause wholesale changes in the national manpower mobilization plan. One of the moves believed pending was the broadening of the draft age range to include all males between 18 and 35. Previously the call had been only for those between 21 and 28. University ROTC students were preparing to go into service immediately following the end of the fall semester. The military science department made the announcement that 48 senior students were submitting their records in preparation for receiving commissions and being called to active duty. The story on the theatrical production opening that night was tied up to the war news. The lead sentence read, "The University of Kansas Players did not consult the Japanese government before choosing 'Thunder Rock,' . . . but they could not have made a more 'appropriate choice.'" Only one item on the front page broke the dreadful monotony of war news. At the bottom of the page was a five-line announcement which said that two University professors would discuss over KFKU the next evening the subject "After the War, What?" Panhandler Would Settle For Dollar Haircut Instead Watertown, Wis.—(U.P.) A panchandler stopped a business man on Main street and tried to beg a cup of coffee. The merchant said he had nothing smaller than a dollar. "Then how about staking me to a haircut?" the moocher asked. For Your Xmas Parties ... DECORATED CAKES AND COOKIES Kay's BAKERY 412 West Ninth Kay's BAKERY Phone 716 Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS Prevue Saturday Nite 11:15 p.m. SUNDAY FOR 4 DAYS TODAY-SATURDAY Paramount presents SUBMARINE COMMAND HOLDEN OISON BENDIX TAYLOR Shows Today 2:30-7-9 Continuous Saturday 1:00 p.m. On TODAY-SATURDAY Paramount presents SUBMARINE COMMAND SLATEFIELD WILLIAM PARROT WILLIAM DON HOLDER OLSON BENDIX TAYLOR Shows Today 2:30-7-9 Continuous Saturday 1:00 p.m. On Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS Prevue Saturday Nite 11:15 p.m. SUNDAY FOR 4 DAYS TODAY-SATURDAY SUBMARINE COMMAND HOLDEN OISON BENDIX TAZLOR Shows Today 2:30-7-9 Continuous Saturday 1:00 p.m. On Braving the Terror of the South Sea Jungles... for a fortune in gold... and the only white woman in a thousand miles! CROSSWINDS COLOR BY Technicolor Starring JOHN PAYNE • RHONDA FLEMING • FORREST TUCKER Continuous Sunday | Mon. thru Wed. | Late News Color Cartoon Continuous Sunday 1:00 p.m. On Mon. thru Wed. Shows At 2:30-7-9 Color Cartoon "Early To Bet" Late News Events Proficiency Exam To Be Saturday The proficiency examination in English composition will be given from 2 to 5 p.m. Saturday. Only students who have registered for the exam will be admitted. The place in which it will be given is listed on the registration cards. Spittoons Ruled Out On Trains Joe College Goes Formal New regulations at Loyola university in New Orleans require all men to wear a coat or sweater with full-length sleeves until Easter. Your Plymouth Man . . . has a used car priced for you. HE HAS A BEAUTY OF AN ALIBI! CRY NOW! ENDS SATURDAY POWELL'S ON THE PROWL! For CROOKS . . . OR DAMES!! HE HAS A BEAUTY OF AN ALIBI! DICK POWELL DANGER CO-STARRING RHONDA FLEMING Shows Tonite 7 and 9 - Open 6:45 - Features 7:42-9:43 Saturday Continuous From 1 p.m. - Open 12:45 p.m. Feature Times Saturday: 1:37-3:38-5:39-7:40-9:41 ADDED: COLOR CARTOON - NEWS STARTS SATURDAY OWL 11:15 p.m. SEVEN SEAS . . . A THOUSAND BUCCANEERS, A PIRATE QUEEN, MISTRESS OF THEM ALL! RECKLESS! RUTHLESS! SHE HURLED HER DEFIANCE AT THE DREADED BLACKBEARD HIMSELF! COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR ANNE OF THE INDIES JEAN LOUIS DEBRA PETERS JOURDAN PAGET with HERBERT MARSHALL • THOMAS GOMEZ Feature Times Sunday: 1:30-3:35-5:40-7:45-9:50 ALSO: Color Cartoon "Get Rich Quick" Movietone News Granada PHONE 946 Continuous Shows On Saturday and Sunday From 1 p.m.—Box Office Open 12:45 p.m. HE HAS A BEAUTY OF AN ALIBI!! CRY DANGER DICK POWELL CO-STARRING RHONDA FLEMING SEVEN SEAS . . . A THOUSAND BUCCANEERS, A PIRATE QUEEN, MISTRESS OF THEM ALL! RECKLESS! RUTHLESS! SHE HURLED HER DEFIANCE AT THE DREADED BLACKBEARD HIMSELF! COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR ANNE OF THE INDIES JEAN LOUIS DEBRA PETERS · JOURDAN · PAGET with HERBERT MARSHALL • THOMAS GOMEZ Feature Times Sunday: 1:30-3:35-5:40-7:45-9:50 ALSO: Color Cartoon Movietone News Granada PHONE 946 Continuous Shows On Saturday and Sunday From 1 p.m. — Box Office Open 12:45 p.m. ANNE OF THE INDIES JEAN LOUIS DEBRA PETERS JOURDAN PAGET Friday, Dec. 7, 1951 conjunction University Daily Kansan Page 11 The University Daily Kansan Classified Advertising Phone K.U.376 Classified Advertising Rates day 25 words or less ...50c FOR SALE Additional words ... 16 2c with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in person or by email (e.g., "catch except Saturday") or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office, Journals and Records, 354 5th Ave. 45 p.m. the day before publication date. SET OF FIRST Flight custom made golf irons 2 to 9 inclusive. One year old, reasonably priced. See at 1140 Louisiana, third floor, or call 3681, evenings. 11 REGISTERED male German shepherd pups, 3 months old. Phone 3602. 11 TUXEDO FOR SALE. Cleaned and in ex- vironment. 35-37. C12. Landlady. Phone 3566. Christmas Bazaar YOUR Christmas shopping early at Y.W.C.A. Bazaar, Dec. 7th and 8th from 8 to 8. Gifts from your campus and all over the world. 12-7 CRUMBO ETCHINGS for Christmas; a Pat Read, across from 12-7 Courthouse. SWINGLINE TOO STAPLERS are now available at the Union Book Store, only 98c. 12-7 JUST ARRIVED, new shipment of pencil erasers. Soft and self cleaning for drawings and tracings. At your Student Union Book Store. 12-7 BOOK LAMPS! The original clip-on lamp with 6 foot cord and 10 watt lamp. An unusual gift for only $1.98. Student Union Book Store. 12-7 ORDER EARLY! Give books for Christmas this year. The gift that is tressured more each year. Come in and order any wish from your Student U Book Store. 12-7 Competitors Take Over Houghton Lake, Mich.—(U.P.)—Russ Veston, a dry cleaner, has learned the definition of "loyal opposition." Veston was taken to a hospital for an operation. His competitors, Jack Iverson and Duane Starks, went over his place, finished up Veston's work and delivered his orders. The Really Big Musical Event Of The Fall!! M MARIO LANZA ...THE NEW IDOL OF MILLIONS! Color by TECHNICOLOR THE GREAT CARUSO Music choreo How MARIO LANZA · ANN BLYTH BOROTHY JARMILA BLANCRE KIRSTEN · NOVOTNA · THEBOM THE GREAT CARUSO Coming For 3 DAYS ONLY Starting Next Tuesday NOTE Sponsored By The American Association Of University Women... Buy Your Tickets Today New PATEE PHONE 321 MISCELLANEOUS JERRY-meet me tonight at 8 p.m. in the Pink Elephant. Bill. ALL PERSONS desiring to dispose of used or second-hand tape recorders, please write to University Daily Kansan, box No. 1, 12 COLLEGE SENIOR has 20 hours a week to work for somebody. Type, general office work, etc. Gotta eat! Call Norm Storer, 858M after 7 p.m. 12-7 TRANSPORTATION NEEDED, a ride from Kansas City to Lawrence and back daily, starting after Christmas vacation. Will help on ex-convict Leave message at Daily Kansan KU 376. DRIVING TO New York Dec. 20, Take share, expenses call, 2238R. 10 AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether at airports or other facilities. Phone Mrs. Lois Odafen, Downs Phone Service, 1015 Mass. **tf** Ask us about family rates, sky coach, and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book passage, no for European travel. Train to Calgary. Call our National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30- FOR RENT ONE CLEAR ROOM for boys. Close to Carson City and the high school, versity and bus line. 1817 Ile. 11 RENT A TYPEWRITER NOW! Choose from our wide selection of portables. Your grades improve when you type your papers. Student Union Store. 12-7 LARGE DOUBLE ROOM for two men, single beds, good location, steam heat. call 1324W. 12-7 BUSINESS SERVICE TYPING: Themes, term papers, and mini- megraph work. Accurate service by business Leaders of America. typing pool. Contact Anneliese Schiffer. phone 534. SHORTY'S BARBER SHOP at $87 New Hampshire has two barbers hardy and three on Friday and Saturday. Haircats 75c. Plenty of reading material. Give us a try. Our motto, cleanliness and good service pays. 12-7 TYINGP: Themes, term papers, theses- prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs. Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. ff TYPING DONE promptly and accurately. Call Mrs. Merritt, KU 298 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. for further information. 12-6 EXPERIENCED TYPIST; term papers, note books, theses, medical and biolo- gi STARTS TODAY The Critics Raved! You'll Rave! When You See . . . "The hottest combination that ever hit the screen!" —LOUELLA O. PARSONS HOWARD HUGHES presents ROBERT MITCHUM JANE RUSSELL in HIS KIND OF WOMAN! Shows Tonight 7-9 - Doors Open 6:45 - Feature 7:15-9:15 Continuous Saturday and Sunday Features at 12:45-3:00-5:15-7:30-9:45 New PATEE PHONE 321 cal reports and miscellaneous. Mrs. E. cal reports and upstairs. 4, upstairs. 12- 2775J after 4 p.m. TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these typing experience. Mrs. Shields, 129th Ohio. ■ 1601. RADIO AND TV repair service on all mats. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ment, ensuring fast, efficient service. Bowman Vermo and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermo. Free pickup and delivery. tt CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. $f^*$ STUDYING late tonight? Refresh your self with fountain beverages and sadd-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. rf TYPING: Experience in theses term papers, miscellaneous typing, and stencil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. ff CRYSTAL STAEL serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malts, home-made pies and cakes. Free parking space for customers. A room is a ample midnight. Crystal Cave, 690 Vt. IAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a plea ant surprise and visit your "Jayhaw" set shop. We have everything in the p- et shop, we are our business, if one-stop pet shop, you get it, fun, fir, and feathers. Grant's Pet an Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. LOST 世博会主会场 HELP WANTED BROWN BILLFOLD with ID and basket ball ticket lost on Crescent Road by The Call. Finder can keep money. Dr Davis, Phone 3493W. 12- BROWN BILLFOLD probably in Gr nada theater. Finder can keep money please return bilfold. Seymour Baum garten. Phone 2282W. A GREY GABARDINE top coat Fridays in the southern Pitt. Call Ga- burt 897 or 351-420-1600. COLLEGE MEN houses, work on sandwiches to or Ken Durbach at 44 familiar with Gree convenient evening Thursday deliverin gized houses. Ca THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD VARSITY Continuous Every Sat.-Sun. 1:00 p.m. On Mon. Thru Fri. Box-Office Opens 6:45 3 Stooges George O'Brien TODAY - SATURDAY "GOLD RAIDERS" Raymond Walburn "Father Takes Walter Catlett To The Air" Ch. 3 "Flying Disc Man From Mars" SUN.- MON.- TUES. ADM. 14c - 45c A GRAND,GRAND PICTURE THAT WILL GIVE YOU A GREAT BIG LIFT! Don't miss this wonderful,lovable story of the parson who had one foot in heaven and a heart that was down to earth! RIC RCH S MARTHA MARCH COTT "ONE FOOT IN HEAVEN" FEATURE SUNDAY AT 1:00 - 3:15 - 5:30 -7:45 - 10:00 Mon. Thru Tues. Feature At 7:06 - 9:20 WB WB Naval Exams To Be Offered Here Saturday Day-long written examinations will be given Saturday at the University to 102 high school seniors from this area who wish to receive four-year scholarships for the Naval ROTC program. The tests will be given by the Guidance bureau. Examinations will be given on the same day in eight other Kansas towns. The scholarships include books, tuition, fees and uniforms for four years. In addition the cadets will receive $50 a month. Students successfully completing the program will be graduated with commissions as ensigns in the regular Navy and are expected to serve two years in the Navv. The successful applicants will receive scholarships to any college or university in the United States which has a Naval ROTC unit. The students must pass the written examinations Saturday and the physical and oral examinations which will be given in Kansas City on Monday, Jan. 28, and Friday, Feb. 29. Slashing winds with velocities ranging up to 60 miles an hour hit the University yesterday but no serious damage has been reported. Hard Winds Cause Damage Here Trees were bent over and windows were shaken from one end of the campus to the other but apparently a few broken window panes constituted the only damage. Several radio and television aerials in the nearby area were said to have been bent far enough to make them temporarily useless. Delbert Erhard, operator of the Lawrence airport, said that although he did not take any official readings he believed that the wind there at times reached the speed of 50 miles an hour. He added that the wind velocity on the campus might have been as much as 10 miles an hour more because of the added height. Elsewhere in the area, Topeka reported gusts up to 67 miles an hour, Kansas City, Mo., was having blows between 50 and 60 miles an hour and Fairfax airport at Kansas City, Kans., clocked the wind at 72 miles an hour. Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday, Dec. 7, 1951 Talk On Propaganda Scheduled Over KLWN Nino Lo Bello, instructor in sociology, will be the eighth speaker on the Sociology on the Air broadcast at 9:45 Sunday morning over KLWN. His topic will be "Propaganda and You." Mr. Lo Bello received his graduate degree from New York university He joined the KU faculty in the fall of 1950. SAMUEL BARRALDON B. H. HORTON, Royston, Ga, believes he has set some sort of record as a blood donor. He is suffering from a rare disease which manufactures m o r e blood than needed. He has given 168 pints of blood in three years of donating. Joe and Charlie GEN. MATTHEW B. RIDGWAY (right), wearing his usual battle harness with grenade and first aid kit, is in a smiling mood as he chats with Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy, chief Allied peace negotiator (left), upon Ridgway's arrival at Munson recently for a series of top-level talks upon the progress of peace negotiations with the Reds tions with the Reds. By JIM POWERS UDK Music Critic Muses Upon Thursday's Concert Every reviewer of music events has his troubles. What to say about a concert that would be fair. news-worthy is always a problem to the would So every reviewer tries to think up some good rules to follow, if there are any. This particular writer sits down to work out some sort of a system. “Take Thursday's concert by the University Symphony orchestra,” he says to himself. “Should I give more impressions? If so, then I should tell about seeing visions of Delores Wunsch, talented young concert pianist, playing in Carnegie hall before a packed house.” He continues, "Her skillful touch and pleasing coloration of Chopin's Concerto No. 2 indicated that she has great possibilities for the future. All of which is true except that the concert was played in Hoch auditorium before a very meager audience instead of Carnegie hall as I imagined it. "Or should I be critical? Although I'm not an expert, I noticed several mistakes in the performance Thursday night," the writer adds. "Miss Wunsch made a few, although they did not destroy the general excellence of her performance. "And the string sections hung together loosely at times. "Or I could be more objective and write about the music itself, telling the readers that Symphony No. 4 by Dvorak was played in Lawrence for the first time Thursday and that only one member of the orchestra, Karel Blaas, had ever played it before "As for glaring mechanical defects, I might mention the lady string bass player who detracted from the Dworak symphony by beating time on her instrument with her hand. "I might say that the new music was very favorably received, because of its youthful melodies which charmed the audience. All of which would be true. "Or should I write about individual performance and give high praise to Fred Palmer, concert master, for his fine violin work and to Eugene Johnson for his outstanding flute solos in the Dvorak symphony? "I might even give special credit to the flute, trumpet and French horn sections, for they all did splendid work during the concert. The flutists were especially good in the second and third movements of Dvorak. "But if I mention the crowd at all, I'll have to say it was lousy." The people simply were not there." Then he smiles as he hits upon the solution. "I know," he says, "T'll give them a general picture of the concert and let them guess at the details. If they want to know any more, they'll have to go next time. "I'll say that the University Symphony orchestra played the overture from the 'Russian Easter Festival' in an inspired manner and that the number was much better than at the All-Music Vessers some weeks ago. "I'll say that Dvorak's Symphony No. 4 was played in a brilliant fashion that would make enjoyable listening for anyone, including those who prefer modern music. It was an excellent concert conducted by Professor Russell L. Wiley. "The University should be proud to claim such a high-level music group." And with that the reviewer proceeds to take another aspirin. Complete Cortisone Synthesis Was Top Science News Of The Year New York—(U.P.) —The complete synthesis of the hormone drug cortisone was the top science news of 1951 according to Paul Ellis, UP science editor. The development, accomplished by a team of Mexican scientists, might well lead to discovery of other hormone substances even better than recombinant which has brought to completion in the treatment of various diseases. Other important science stores of the year were: 2. The series of atomic bomb blasts in Nevada, indicating that the United States has developed a "baby atom bomb." 3. The discovery of the structure of several proteins, opening the possibility that science may be able to artificial bone, muscle, hair and wool. 4. Development of a blood substitute and it wholesale production. 5. The use of bacteria to fight 7. Creation of mesons—cosmic partition of matter 8. Columbia university's huge epsilon 6. Development of dromoran, a pain killing drug showing more benefit than morphine. 8. The declassification of the west face of Brookhaven's atomic energy pile and disclosure that five cancer treatments be treated by radiation from the pile. bacterial disease. 9. The preservation of milk by x-rav irradiation. 10. The use of radioactive cobalt as a substitute for radium. The cortisone synthesis was made from a cheap vegetable source, the Mexican vam. There has been no official confirmation, but the atomic blasts in Nevada indicate that the United States has made good progress in the development of a hydrogen bomb and other "fantastic weapons" of war. -News Roundup UN Reverses Its Field; Discuss Troop Withdrawals Panmunjom, Korea—(U.P.)—The United Nations did an about-face today and promised to discuss the withdrawal of troops from Korea later in the armistice talks. U. S. Maj. Gen. Henry I. Hodes also suggested at a truce subcommittee meeting that the withdrawal might begin as soon as the "armistice is going well." Despite its reversal on the withdrawal question, however, the UN reiterated it "cannot and will not" agree to abandon the American troop rotation program in Korea for the sake of an armistice. Planner Of Pearl Harbor Tells All Tokyo—(U.P.)-The Japanese admiral who planned the Pearl Harbor attack 10 years ago said today he realized later that he had picked the wrong targets. He also said the attack was not planned as a surprise. The original idea, he said, was that an ultimatum was to be delivered in Washington with the attack taking place an hour later. The ultimatum was delayed, and the attack became a surprise. "The purpose was to destroy the fleet," Rear Admiral Sadatoshi Tomioka said in an exclusive interview. "We realized later that we should have concentrated on the oil tanks and naval shore facilities." Cannon Made For Atom Artillery Shell Washington—(U.P.)—The army has perfected a cannon to fire atomic artillery shells. These shells, according to Army Chief of Staff Gen. J. Lawton Collins, will be ready for battlefield use "in the not too distant future." He indicated they may be America's answer to Russia's superior military manpower. 'Luxury' Days Over For The Military Washington—(U.P.) —The Senate preparedness subcommittee, warning that "trivial" waste in the armed forces endangers the nation's economy, served notice today that "luxury" days are over for the military establishment. 2. "Hotel-style" dormitories at Carswell field, which the subcommittee called "an unusual departure from the traditions of military housing." Criticized as examples of waste were: 1. An unidentified mess sergeant at Carlswell field who had 200 pounds of coffee on hand which had been allowed to become stale and were to be used as a floor sweep. 3. "Adequate" chairs and tables in Air Force mess halls are being replaced with more "elaborate" items such as upholstered chairs and tables with plasticized tops. Hibok-Hibok Deaths Approach 2,000 Already sprinkled with former backers of Harold E. Stassen, backers of Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio claimed their latest recruit from Kansas, Sen. Andrew F. Schoeppel, who yesterday gave a public endorsement of Taft. He split with most other Kansas Republican leaders who have joined the Eisenhower campaign. Manila, P.I.—(U.R.)—The Red Cross said today the death toll from the volcanic eruptions of Mt. Hibok-Hibok may reach 2,000 as a new flood of searing lava trapped 200 persons in the village of Nasga. Philippine naval vessels began a mass evacuation to the island of Mindanao today of thousands of persons left homeless by four eruptions of the mountain on the island of Camiguin. Mt. Hibok-Hibok continued to rumble today and there were no signs of its quieting down. Taft Supporters Gain In Power Washington— (U.P.) —The Taft-for-President organization kept chipping away today at prospective supporters of other candidates for the Republican presidential nomination. High School Grid Fixes Hit Islands Honolulu, T.H.—(U.P.)—Police have charged four persons—including two high school football players—with bribery in an alleged fix of interscholastic games in Honolulu stadium. Authorities said they believe this "is only the beginning" of a possible bribery scandal affecting other Honolulu high schools. Trial Of Newsmen Is Adjourned Lake Charles, La.—(U.P.)—District Court Judge J. Bernard Cocke adjourned the trial of five newspapermen here on charges of defamation until Dec. 19 after a stormy session during which the district attorney was ordered to leave the courtroom. The newsmen, members of the Lake Charles American Press are being tried without a jury. They are accused of "smearing" the plaintiffs in a crusade against crime and vice in Calcasieu Parish (county). Mayor Of Kansas City, Kansas Dies Kansas City, Kan.-(U.P.)-Don C. McCombs, mayor of Kansas City, Kan., for 20 years, died late last night in Providence hospital. He suffered a paralytic stroke Jan. 28 at his home, 418 No. 17th st. UNIVERSITY DAILY Topeka, Ks. Diane Wade, College junior from Mission, was crowned queen of the Military Ball during intermission festivities Friday night. The man crowns the woman. Bv JERRY RENNER MISS DIANE WADE WAS CROWNED an honorary commandant at the Military Ball Friday night by Tex Beneke, whose orchestra played for the ball. Diane, a College junior from Mission, represented Alpha Delta Pi. Kansan photo by Al Marshall. Diane Wade Crowned Military Ball Queen This time it was Tex Beneke, and not Chancellor Murphy, who gave the queen a kiss. The more than 2,000 persons who jammed the Military Science building to participate in the annual ball included Chancellor and Mrs. Murphy, Lt. Col. Lynn Moore of the Air Force ROTC, Col. E. F. Kumpe of the Army ROTC, Capt. W. R. Ter- Donna Arnold, College sophomore from Dodge City, and Kay Magers, College freshman from Parkville, Mo., were the queen's attendants. Shirley Wilson, Benene's soloist who left the Harry James band three months ago to join Benene's orchestra said. man. David W. Hutchison, commanding officer of the 21st Air division, Forbes Air Force base, Topeka. "I had no idea that it would be so much fun. Everyone is having a good time." "This is one of the most appreciative groups we have ever played for. They really seem to like us." Beneke said. Questioned about movies, he has none scheduled for the immediate future. "We have a backlog of records but they are released by the recording studio so we never know when a tune is coming out," Beneke said. The band played one of its latest releases "SWonderful" during the evening. The "Mexican Hat Dance" number was a high point of the evening with everyone going south of the border to dance with his lady in true gaucho fashion. During the evening Chancellor Murphy addressed a tribute to "those who sacrificed themselves in a war that began 10 years ago today." Fair to partly cloudy and warmer this afternoon and tonight, rather windy. Tuesday mostly cloudy and turning colder with strong northerly winds and a few snow flurries likely in north portion. Low tonight near 30. High Tuesday in 30's. "We have been on tour of the South and are working our way to New York," the band leader said. WEATHER hansan 49th Year No. 59 Monday, Dec. 10, 1951 A new look in Big Seven athletics will be the result of action taken by the faculty representatives of the member universities of the league at the athletic conference in Kansas City, Mo., Dec. 6 through 9. The conference was attended by the presi- LAWRENCE, KANSAS Big 7 Votes New Look In Athletics taken; this school year freshmen will be ineligible for inter-collegiate sports, as was the case previous to this year. The ruling was changed back because the expected student shortage this year did not develop. officials. Spring football practice, formerly limited to six calendar weeks, was shortened to 20 days. The practices may be extended over a period of five weeks. The former rule allowing one two hour practice for each day remains in tact; the basketball practice also fathes the hatchet and was shortened to 12 days. Series will ference was attended by students of the seven universities, the athletic directors, the football coaches, the athletic business managers and the faculty representatives. Members of the athletic department of each school, as a result of the new rulings, may visit high schools and junior colleges for recruitment purposes only upon the invitation of the particular school's officials. Court Rules Regents Post To Hershberger Members of the Big Seven will now be barred from entering any post season athletic contests. Okinoma decided some time ago they These were the major actions taken; The fight for possession of the ninth seat on the Kansas board of regents was settled Saturday when the state supreme court ruled that A. W. Hershberger, Wichita attorney, was legally entitled to the office. This action confirmed the ouster of Jerry Driscoll, Russell, who has held the position since 1945. The supreme court ruled by a unanimous verdict that an appointee to the regents holds office until the senate acts on the governor's appointment. However, if the senate adjourns without acting positively it fails to approve the appointment and a vacancy occurs which the governor is required to fill. nr. Driscoll was appointed to the present term by Gov. Frank Carlson on Dec. 30, 1949 for a two year period. Gov. Edward F. Arn declined to resubmit Driscoll's name to the senate for confirmation but instead presented the name of Herb Barr, Leoti, for the office. The senate declined to act and after the senate had adjourned Governor Arn appointed Hershberger to what he referred to as the vacancy. The action was upheld by other members of the board and in an opinion of the attorney general's office prior to the supreme court decision. Mrs. Joanne Johnson Baker, pianist, and Mrs. Elizabeth Wilkins Vaughan, soprano, will present a recital at 8 p.m. today in Strong auditorium. All appointees involved in the dispute are Democrats. Pianist, Soprano To Give Recital The recital, sponsored by Mu Phi Epsilon, professional music sorority will be open to the public. Mrs. Eaker, who studied at the University from 1940 to 1942, is instructor of piano at the University of Kansas City. Basketball teams of the conference next year may play only 21 games, instead of the present 24. would not accept any more post- season bowl game gobs this year. Except where contracts have already been made, athletic scholarships are limited by the new laws, to board, room, tuition and fees. Formerly included in an athletic scholarship was $15 for incidents. education. The faculty representatives took no new lecture concerning television and college sports. Action will pend on extensive reports on the subject which will be made at the NCAA convention. Numerous experimental telecasts have been made to ascertain the effect of a telecast of a sports event upon the gate receipts. Regular live telecasts of Big Seven sports events at present is not allowed. Some of the subjects dealt with in the plan are the pressure of the platoon system of substitution in football, spurious entrance procedures for athletes, excessive financial aid, high-pressure recruiting, excessive entertainment of prospective athletes, collusion in receiving gifts and benefits and possible diversion from the main goal -obtaining an education. Considerable time was spent in the conference on the 12-point deemphasis plan of the NCAA which will be taken up at the NCAA convention Jan.9 to 12 in Cincinnati. awed. University faculty representative T. DeWitt Carr, dean of the School of Engineering, said that in the main, votes by the faculty representatives on the new rules are unanimous (it takes 5 out of 7 to approve a new rule). Each representative is appointed by the university president A strong force at the conference said Dean Carr, was public opinion, which, due to the recent college athletic scandals, has been aroused and is demanding that corrective action be taken. The next meeting of conference faculty representatives and athletic officials will be in March, following the spring conference track meet. "The Big Seven is leading the way among the major conferences in the nation in taking significant steps to correct faults in college athletics," said Dean Carr. Presidents of each university in the conference, except President McCain of Kansas State, attended the conferences Saturday and Sunday. McCain was unable to leave Manhattan because of an unusually heavy snowfall. The conference presidents last met in July, 1947, at the time the NCAA sanity code was being organized. Conference football coaches met in the Hotel Muehlbach, Sunday to review the past season, make plans for next year and to discuss next season's game officials. The grid mentors meet before and after each season's campaign. 'Give A Lift' Urges Student Ride Bureau Students who are driving home for the Christmas holidays and have room for an extra passenger or two are urged to contact the ride bureau at the Student Union activities office. A number of students have informed the bureau that they need transportation home but only two cars so far have been volunteered. Drivers of these cars are going to Columbus, Ohio, and to St. Joseph, Mo. Four students would like rides to New York City, two are going to New Jersey, five to Florida and one to California. Others are seeking rides to points in Texas, Colorado, Wisconsin and Canada as well as to towns in western Kansas. Follies Tickets Now On Sale Tickets for the AWS Faculty Follies went on sale this morning and will remain on sale till 5 p.m. today in Strong rotunda and the Union. Tickets will be on sale Tuesday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the same places. Admission is 50 cents a person. The Follies will be presented at 8 p.m. Thursday in Fraser theater for one night only. Featured in the show will be a 9-act play and a carnival show. Allen Crafton, professor of speech, will be master of ceremonies and M. C. Slough, associate professor of law, will direct. ROTC Cadets To Give Blood To Red Cross The bloodmobile will be at the Military Science building for four days. Jan. 8, 9, 10 and 11. About 950 cadets and midshipmen of the Army, Air Force and Navy ROTC units at the University have volunteered to give a pint of blood to the Red Cross bloodmobile when it is here next month. Six-hundred of the 1,000 AFROTC men have already volunteered. The Army unit has 110 volunteers and the Navy ROTC has 200. Col. E. F. Kumpe, professor of military science and tactics, said that more volunteers are expected as soon as a canvass of the units is completed. I4. Col. Lenn R. Moore, professor of air science and tactics, and Capt. W. R. Terrell, professor of naval science and tactics, said the situation in the Air Force and Navy units is the same. The three ROTC commanders will be the first to give blood to the Red Cross bloodmobile. They will be followed by other members of the staff. The students must have parental consent in most cases because of age. No parents have refused this permission so far. ___ 15 NO, THIS ISN'T A BALLET ACT. It was part of the action Saturday night as the Jayhawks defeated Denver 84-53 in Hoch auditorium. Dean Wells is the twisted KU ballhawk charging toward the basket. Others identifiable in the mele include bespectacled Jerry Alberts of Kansas and Leroy Kalas (15) and John Griffin (32) of Denver.-Kansan photo by Al Marshall. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, Dec. 10, 1951 Kansan Editorials Today's Commercialized Christmas Christmas is here already. Or at least the downtown merchants would have you believe so. For them, it arrived the day after Thanksgiving. by Bibler 143 Christmas used to be a time to settle back, take it easy, and enjoy oneself. The presents exchanged were given for the joy of giving. That may still be true in isolated cases. But often it is not. Ohio State university's troubles are not confined to disappointments on the football field these days. Students and faculty are even more excited about the "gag" rule clamped on the school by its trustees, especially since the limitation on freedom now has the public support of Gov. Frank Lausche. The first test of this rule came when Bevis was asked to approve the appearance of Cecil E. Hinshaw of the Fellowship of Reconciliation, a Quaker pacifist organization. Not only was permission denied, but the rule was subsequently supplemented by an order that henceforth no student or faculty member might prepare any kind of questionnaire without approval of the university president. The trouble started last summer after Harold Rugg of Columbia university made a speech at Ohio State. Since he is regarded by some as an educational radical, the trustees adopted a rule that no person may be asked to speak on the campus without a clearance from the university president, Howard L. Bevis. The New 'Gag' Rule Bevis sought to quiet the protests by saying that relatively few speakers would be held objectionable since the rule would be applied only to those disloyal to the United States. This was construed as interference with freedom of investigation. It led to the appointment of investigating committees by the Ohio State faculty as well as by the American Association of University Professors. Non-academic people also joined in the protest; among them Roman Catholic Bishop Michael J. Ready and Methodist Bishop Hazen G. Werner. But is it disloyal to oppose war on religious grounds? Or is it disloyal to advocate social and economic changes which do not have the approbation of all members of the community? Further, is education to be advanced by an enforced uniformity of opinion? Or should a school provide the widest possible opportunity for the discussion of controversial subjects? Are not sound values strengthened by contrast with the unsound in what Justice Holmes called the free market place of ideas? If there is to be an enforced American orthodoxy how can administrators claim the right to say what is right and what is wrong, what may be said and what may not be said? Perhaps the Ohio authorities had better give a second thought to their own haughty attitude, and put a little more confidence in the good judgment of their teachers and their students. They have less to fear from free, orderly discussion than from limitations on such discussion. —St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Little Man On Campus Nowadays we give because we feel we have to, not because we want to. The commercialization of Christmas is an insidious development which we can only herald with great misgivings. It's nice to have the main streets lined with tinsel and greens and what not. Store windows look attractive with the usual Christmas trimming in them. But are they there for the purpose of decoration or to drag customers into the store? It's nice to give and receive presents from friends and loved ones. But all the fun is taken out of it when you give a present you feel it is your duty to give. Gone are the days when a simple, oftentimes homemade present would suffice. Now it's all or nothing. And the stores do their utmost to discourage the latter. The accent is now on the gift and not the giving. What with all the advertisements, slogans, and so forth, a conscientious gift-buyer begins to wonder just what Joe is going to give him. This he needs to know so that he may decide upon a similar sum for the present he is going to give Joe. But all the blame cannot be laid upon the merchants. We are also at fault for allowing ourselves to lose the spirit of Christmas. Many, particularly the younger set, look upon the holiday strictly as a time of merry-making. Certainly that is part of it. But it is forgotten that it was originally intended to celebrate a birthday. By the time all the various social duties have been disposed of, the true celebration is either purposely overlooked or completely forgotten. The old-time, really merry Christmas has been lost in the rush of today. Everything is moving too fast for us to be able to sit back and celebrate in the way it should be done. Will we ever be able to truly revere the birthday as it should be done? How many of us members of the "younger generation" can remember having done so? A.G.M. In the last month or so Franchot Tone has racked up quite a record. Actor Tom Neal knocked his block off, sending him to the hospital. When he got out he celebrated by spitting in a female columnist's face. Then he and his wife of seven weeks, Blonde Barbara Payton, sued for divorce. There's a Tone that's really gone sour. short ones John Ise writes "Merry Christmas While We Last." If war conditions get any worse and there is a good shortage, it may be "Merry Christmas While We Fast." Hungary has abolished Christmas in favor of celebrating Stalin's birthday. Aren't they Russian the season a bit? A committee of six Protestant clergymen has begun work to mobilize public opinion against President Truman's attempted appointment of an ambassador to the Vatican. It looks like now in addition to a fifth column, we'll have a sects column in this country. Daily Kansan News Room Student Newspaper of the Adv. Room KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU 376 Member of the Kansas Press Assn, National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press, the Associate Negotiator Press, Represented by the National Advertising Service. EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief...Alan Marshall Editorial Associate...Anne Snyder NEWS STAFF Managing Editor ... Charles Price Assistant Managing Editors ... Nancy Anderson, Benjamin Holman, Lee Sheppeard, Ellsworth Zahm City Editor ... Joe Taylor Sports Editor ... Charles Burch Telegraph Editor ... Dan Sarten Society Editor ... Katrina Swartz News Adviser ... Victor J. Danaley BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager...Bob Sydney Advertising Manager...Dorothy Hedrick Assistant Adv. Manager...Dick Hale National Adv. Manager...Bill Taggart Circulation Manager...Elaine Blaylock Promotion Manager...Ted Barbera Business Adviser...R. W. Doores Comments... Unique labor contracts may yet stem from a recent communication to the wage stabilization board Countering a union request that air hostesses be assigned choice routes by seniority, an airline wrote: "It is necessary to assign hostesses not on the basis of seniority, but on the basis of the best chest development." Recent tightening of laws governing the sale of catfish in Texas has shifted most of the business for nonfishing Texas catfish consumers to Louisiana, Arkansas and Oklahoma markets. Editor's Note: We'd sure like to be around when those contracts are signed. Mail subscription: $5 a semester, $4.50 a year. (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University campus Saturday and Sundays. University hours are posted online. Entered as second class matter September 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. BOLER U. DAVY KINSAN "We might as well let him in—that boy is eager!" Pre-Election Ballyhoo Pre-election ballyhoo for 1952 is gaining momentum every day, and signs of increasing Republican strength are causing members of both parties much concern. Republican leaders, remembering the bitter defeat of 1948, tend to soft-pedal comment on growing indications of party power. At least until Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower makes a statement of his position, they must face the fact that their strongest candidate, Sen. Robert Taft, is also the most controversial figure in the party. President Truman's recent statement that he hoped Senator Taft would be his opponent, and Taft's reply that such a situation would suit him fine, are indications of the approach most party representatives are taking toward the election. Labor is not rallying to the Democratic camp as readily as was expected, and some branches of labor are showing definite reluctance about supporting the incumbents at all. Many Negro members of the CIO express hostility to the administration for its failure to carry out promised civil rights legislation. The carpenters' union, one of the largest AFL affiliates, is headed by a professional Republican who never has approved of the Labor-Democratic marriage. On the other side, Democratic leaders are faced with disquieting reports of growing Republican power in the wake of scandals in high government positions. The president's idea apparently is that Senator Taft's voting record would provide far juicier campaign material than the past activities of other possible Republican candidates. By the same token, Mr. Taft obviously feels that the President would be the most likely person on whom to hinge accusations of incompetence and dishonesty in government. Most Republicans seem actually to fear, in public at least, the signs of their growing support. They had an extremely rude shock in 1948 and are loath to build their hopes on the strength of pre-election indications. Both parties seem to be developing a negative approach to the coming campaign. Each seems to be less concerned with finding its strongest candidate than with the opposition selecting its weakest man. On the other hand, a few Democrats, not underestimating the vote-getting power of the President, probably would prefer to be out of power for a while in order to mend the splits within their party. The entrance of General Eisenhower into the race could do much to restore some degree of confidence to one, or both, of the parties. Meanwhile, the contest is degenerating into a "may the party with the least undesirable candidate win" affair. —Jack Zimmerman. News From Other Campuses Twenty per cent of the students enrolled in the Schools of Arts and Sciences, Engineering and Agriculture at Texas A&M college are on probation, according to the deans of the respective schools. 20 Per Cent On Probation The faculty of Florence State Teachers college of Alabama has started a program designed to Emphasis On Teaching screen and select students to be trained, graduated and recommended by the college for teaching positions. Broaden Lower Division Three new courses, communication arts, biological science and social science have been made mandatory for freshmen at the University of Houston. The university officials feel that the first two years of college have become "too specialized." 13764054329 Page 3 E K er. Educators Study KU, Haskell Twenty foreign educators from 17 countries visited the University and Haskell Institute Wednesday. The educators are here to study educational methods used in the midwest. Their 14-month tour was arranged by the U.S.State department. A talk about Haskell Institute was given by Solon Ayers, superintendent. It was followed by a series of Indian dances by several Haskell students in Indian costume. The foreign visitors, accompanied by 40 University foreign exchange students, toured the Haskell campus. Dean George B. Smith of the School of Education presided at the luncheon given in honor of the visitors in the Union. Dean John H. Nelson of the Graduate school explained the organization and admin- Afternoon activities included tours of the Art and Natural History museums, guidance and research facilities of the University. Interviews Personnel representatives from seven companies will interview February and June graduating engineers this week in Marvin hall Cessna Aircraft company Butler Manufacturing company Kansas Highway commission Ohio Oil company Wednesday J. D. Adams Manufacturing company of Indianapolis, Ind. Cessna Aircraft company National Bureau of Standards of Washington, D.C. United States Corps of Engineers Interested persons should sign the schedule in the engineering office. Convict Prefers To Eat Moundsville, W. Va.—(U.P.)—Howard Riley, 21, an escaped convict from a state penitentiary road camp, walked into police headquarters and gave himself up after only eight days of freedom. "Eating got kind'a poor," he explained. The first school of journalism was founded in 1908 at the University of Missouri by Walter Williams. Travel Service THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Tel. 30 8th & Mass. 'Don't Kill Your Holiday By Accident,' Slogan Says "Don't Kill Your Holiday by Accident" is the slogan selected by the traffic department of the Kansas highway commission for its December program of traffic safety education. The program is a part of the current nation-wide effort to postpone the country's one million traffic death due this month. Unfortunately, at no other time of the year, are we less prepared by weather and physical conditions to slow down mounting traffic fatalities than in December. It is ironic that December, which is traditionally the happiest time of the year, is also the deadliest. This is particularly true this year since National Safety council statisticians estimate that the one millionth traffic fatality may occur sometime around Christmas. Besides the usual reduced visibility, bad weather, slippery road surfaces and a large number of drinking drivers constitute a menace that reaches its height during the Christmas season. The drinking driver isn't a problem unique to the holiday season by any means. But his prevalence during the season's festivities points up the desperate need for widespread public education to the hazards he creates. One in six drivers involved in fatal Students Undergo Surgery Eleanor Burton, College freshman, and Jean Dawson, College sophomore, underwent emergency surgery Dec. 5 and Dec. 6 respectively at Watkins hospital. Hospital authorities report their condition as "good." Friend Found Not Friendly Columbia City, Ind.—(U.P.) John Friend was fined $30 for being unfriendy. He was charged with disorderly conduct and being a public nuisance in Mayor Ed Binder's court. Give Kodak Accessories to the Photo Fan! wide selection here! HIXON'S 721 Mass. Phone 41 Harzfeld's Always on top with the most exciting fashions on the hill. Tomorrow's beautiful clothes today are a tradition at Harzfeld's Harzfeld's University Daily Kansan accidents has been drinking. About one in five of the adult pedestrians killed has been drinking. All citizens should keep off the streets this month if they have been drinking. Others should watch out for those who have failed to do this. Monday, Dec. 10 1951 Remember the slogan, "Don't Kill Your Holiday by Accident." Official Bulletin Square Dance club, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Union ballroom. Chess club, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday 111 Strong, 6th round of tournament 118 Strong, our found of ladies. Woman's Rifle club, 5 p.m. Tuesday, Fine room, Union. All women interested invited. Mathematics colloquium, 5 today, 211.Strong. Christmas Holiday Riders bureau. Register for ride or for passengers SUA office or hostess desk. Union. Interfraternity council. 9 tonight. Union. Al Etenzo se reunira el miercoles a las siete y media de la noche 113 Strong hall. Un programa de Navidad. Faculty forum, noon, Wednesday, Faculty club. Staff and faculty invited. The next total eclipse of the sun will occur on Feb. 25, 1952. Its path will cross northern Africa, Iran and central Asia. HOW MANY TIMES A DAY DO YOU INHALE? 50? 100? 200? 50? IF YOU'RE AN AVERAGE SMOKER THE RIGHT ANSWER IS OVER 200! NETARLISHED OVER 19C YEARS PHILIP MORRIS & CO. L.P. INC. FINEST SELECTED BOWTIE BLAEND MADE IN U.S.A. BY PHILIP MORRIS F.C.O., 170, 18C, NEW YORK PHILIP MORRIS Yes, 200 times every day your nose and throat are exposed to irritation... 200 GOOD REASONS WHY YOU'RE BETTER OFF SMOKING PHILIP MORRIS! PROVED definitely milder...PROVED definitely less irritating than any other leading brand...PROVED by outstanding nose and throat specialists. EXTRA! ATTENTION ALL COLLEGE STUDENTS Every Tuesday Evening over NBC THE PHILIP MORRIS PLAYHOUSE Presents an Outstanding College Student Featured with Famous Hollywood Stars in the PHILIP MORRIS Intercollegiate Acting Competition A LISTEN IN CALL FOR PHILIP MORRIS Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, Dec. 10, 1951 Cagers To Play Creighton There The Jayhawkers will play their first game away from home tonight against the Bluejays of Creighton university at Omaha. Coach Phog Allen, Dick Hart, assistant coach, and Dean Nesmith, team trainer, left Sunday night with the 13-man squad for the Nebraska city and will return early Tuesday morning. Tonight's encounter is the first of three road games for the Kansas team this week. Friday and Saturday nights they are scheduled to meet the Mustangs of Southern Methodist at Dallas. Creighton opened its season with a 61-55 win over Buena Vista college but was swamped by Wichita 100-63. Iowa State also downed the Bluesiays 57-49. Coach Duce Belford has only five returning lettermen but has filled his squad with several talented sophomores. Bill Heyden, 6 feet 6-inch center, scored 223 points last season to be the second high man on the Creighton team and is back at the post again this year leading the scoring attack. The traveling squad includes Bob Kenney, Bill Lienhard, Clyde Lovellette, Bill Hougland, Dean Kelley, LaVennes Squires, Everett Dye, Weston Johnson, Allen Kelley, B. H. Born, Larry Davenport, Bill Heitholt, and Dean Smith. EUROPE 1952 Low-cost transportation and tours to Europe for 1952 are rapidly being booked to capacity. It is imperative to make your reservations now for choice accommodations. Downs offers a complete selection of SITA tours (Student International Travel Association) ranging from $500. These trips vary from the Spartan bicycle tours to the Grand Tours at $1800. Special individual program offered this year for those who wish to live with selected families in France, England, Germany or Switzerland. Rates from $550. A few study tours carrying university credit are offered from $550 to $850. See the Olympic Games at Helsinki, Finland. Special extension, $150. FREE DESCRIPTIVE FOLDER ON EUROPE Travel available upon request. No Obligation. Phone 3661 for all your travel needs open evenings 6:30 p.m.-9:00 p.m. No Booking Fees. downs travel service 10151 massachusetts st. lawrence, kansas -Intramural Round-Up Intramural Basketball Results December 8 Fraternity B Delta Upsilon 59, Phi Kappa 18 Phi Gamma 64, Alpha Phi 60 Sigma Alpha Epsilon over Delta Chi by. forfeit. Sigma Chi 31, Tau Kappa Epsilon 29. Festesian C Phi Delta Theta 26, Lambda Chi Alpha 19 Alma 19, Sirmachi 27 delta Upsilon 41, Sigma Chi 27 Phi Kappa Sigma 32, Sigma Phi Esslil. 31 December 9 Fraternity C Phi Gamma Delta 27, Sigma Nu 12 Delta Tau Delta 29, Kappa Sigma 27 Alpha Tau Omega 43, Tau Kappa Feillon 12 Beta Theta Pi 37, Alpha Kappa Lambda,11 Nu Epsilon Nu 33, Sigma Alpha Ensilon 29. Independent B Oread 32, A I A 21 Jollife 28, Phi Chi 26. Today's Games Today's Games Robinson Gym, Independent B 6:45 p.m. E—Don Henry vs. KHK W—Stephenson vs. AFROTC. 7:45 p.m. E—Battenfeld vs. Roger Williams W—Navy vs. Varsity. 8:45 p.m. E—Beta Theta Pi vs. Alpha Epsilon Pi W—Phi Kappa Psi vs. Alpha Tau Omega. 9:45 p.m. E—Lambda Chi Alpha vs. Phi Kappa Tau W—Phi Delta Theta vs. Phi Kappa Sigma. Robinson Annex Games Fraternity A 4 p.m.—Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. Alpha Kappa Lambda 5 p.m.—Delta Upsilon vs. Triangle 6 p.m.—Sigma Nu vs. Tau Kappa Epsilon 7 p.m.—Phi Gamma Delta vs. Pi Kappa Alpha 8 p.m.—Alpha Tau Omega vs. Phi Kappa Tau 9 p.m.—Phi Delta Theta vs. Delta Tau Delta. Patronize Kansan Advertisers Completely Remodeled Studios! Give The Ideal Christmas Gift— A Recording Of Your Talent. Made Either At Our Studios or Elsewhere. University Radio Phone 4241 At Bell's 925 Mass. THE DU PONT DIGEST M.E.'s AT DU PONT [3] Plant engineering and production supervision offer interesting careers for science graduates In the past two issues of the Digest you've read of the broad opportunities that are offered mechanical engineers in research and development work at Du Pont. This month let's look at opportunities for men interested in any of the branches of plant engineering such as maintenance, power, design and construction—or in production supervision. Efficient maintenance is an important cost factor in the continuous processes of a modern chemical industry. The M.E. is called upon to diagnose troubles, work out corrective measures, and supervise repairs. Frequently he increases production by developing preventive maintenance measures. So vital is this work that in one division of the Company, 500 men of all crafts, along with a routine maintenance group, spend almost all their time on it. One example of the problems facing Du Pont engineers is the maintenance of pumps made to tolerances of 0.0001" and operating at pressures up to 6000 p.s.i. A FIREMAN adjusts lowers for the proper combustion of pulverized coal. Blown into furnace through pipes, it burns at 2500°F. 一 In power work, also, problems requiring application of mechanical engineering principles arise. For instance, a metal required in one chemical process is melted at $ 800^{\circ} \mathrm{F}. $ by immersion heaters fired by butane, which is expensive. Conversion to fuel oil presented the problem of complete combustion in the immersion chamber. Du Pont M.E.'s redesigned the heaters so combustion STOCK OVERHAUL on polytheme area injection pump is six-hour job for three men. Work must be scheduled for minimum disruption of output. could be complete and the hot gases recycled in water to use all the available heat. In design and construction of chemical plants, mechanical engineering again is of major importance because of the wide variety of plants built and intricacy of their equipment. Engineers collect basic data, design and select equipment. They also supervise many steps of construction until the plant is operating. E. SPEELMAN, JR., B.S.M.E., M.M.E., Ohio State '51, and D.A. Smith, B.S.M.E., Purdue '40, discuss a change in feed wheel design of nylon spinning machine. Production supervision attracts many mechanical engineers. Men who have the ability and interest usually move into it by one or two routes: they acquire background on all stages of a plant's operations by helping design the plant, or by operating on the job. COURT MAYER MAINtenance TEAM making a speedy change of a methanol valve to minimize production loss. Sometimes students of mechanicalengineering feel that in a chemical company they will be overshadowed by chemical personnel. This is not the case at Du Pont. Here, hundreds of administrators and supervisors, up to the rank of vice-president, started as M.E.'s. Opportunities for men and women with many types of training are described in the 40-page brochure "The Du Pont Company and the College Graduate." For your free copy, address 2521 Nemours Bldg., Wilmington, Del. .一. REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. OUPONT BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVING ...THROUGH CHEMISTRY Entertaining, Informative — Listen to "Cavalcade of America," Tuesday Nights, NBC to Coast s! Jayhawkers Set Mark In Trouncing DU 84-53 By CHARLEY BURCH Daily Kansan Sports Editor An all-time school scoring record was set by the Jayhawkers as they displayed a balanced scoring attack to swamp the Denver Pioneers 84-53 here Saturday night. Late in 1960 and Creighton in 1949 Denver faced a team scoring attack throughout the game instead of one a man effort by All-American Clyde Lovellette, who racked up 24 points. Seeing that big Clyde was being well guarded by Dale Toft, 6 feet 6-inch DU center, the other players began to pump the ball through the hoop. The old high of 79 points had been made twice in games with Kansas State in 1950 and Creighton in 1949. Bill Lienhard scored 15 points to be second high for Kansas. Bob Kenney was only two points behind with 13 and Dean Kelley got 12. Dean Smith played only a short while but tallied nine points and Bill Houlgland chipped in six. Kansas rang the bell on 31 of 69 shots from the field for a 45 per cent mark while Denver made good only 19 of 70 attempts for 27 per cent. Toft was the standout among the DU players. His hawk-like guarding of Lovellette limited him to 11 points in the first half, most of which came from scattered tip-ins and close shots. He also worked his way in for many easy lay-up shots by side-stepbing big Clvde. Lovellette couldn't get enough room to work his hook shot until in the fourth quarter when Toft fouled out. After that he ripped the nets with his hook shots to the tune of nine points in the final seven minutes. Denver took the lead with a lay-up shot by Toft but before the first minute ended KU's Bill Lienhard tied it up with a pair of free throws and Lovelette sent Kansas ahead to stay with another charity toss. From there Kansas was never behind as the team pushed to a 22-14 first quarter score and a 43-26 halftime lead. The third period saw the Jayhawkers pour through 20 points to 13 for the Pioneers to boost the score to a 63-39 lead. Kansas (84) | | FGA | FG | FTA | FT | PTs | F3 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kenney | 11 | 4 | 5 | 13 | 13 | 2 | | Lienhard | 13 | 5 | 6 | 5 | 15 | 4 | | Lovellette | 15 | 9 | 10 | 6 | 24 | 4 | | D. Kelley | 10 | 5 | 3 | 2 | 12 | 3 | | Hougland | 3 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 6 | 5 | | Dye | 5 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 | | Squires | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | | Born | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Johnson | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Smith | 4 | 4 | 3 | 1 | 9 | 2 | | Davenport | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 1 | | Heitholt | 3 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | | A. Kelley | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | Alberts | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Wells | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | Totals ... 69 31 31 22 84 29 FGA FG FTA FT Pts. F Griffin ... 7 1 3 1 1 4 Knickrehm ... 7 4 1 0 8 4 Toft ... 20 7 6 5 19 5 Hughes ... 12 1 5 4 6 4 Gray ... 8 1 3 1 3 5 Howel ... 6 0 2 1 1 3 Wasserman ... 2 1 0 0 2 0 Kalas ... 4 1 1 0 2 0 Rhone ... 1 1 2 1 3 0 Catton ... 3 2 5 2 6 2 Blair ... 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals ...70 19 28 15 53 27 Eye YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. Lawrence Optical Co. Phone 425 1025 Mass. L.M.O.C. — No. 9 — WATCH FOR IT Big Seven Race May Boil To 2 Kansas City, Mo. —(U.P.)— Nobody wanted to boil the Big Seven basketball game down this early to a two-team affair, but that's the way it likely will shape up. Kansas with All-American Center Clyde Lovellette and Kansas State with fine players three deep at all positions are the two. Oklahoma has been disappointing so far; Missouri has yet to show its stuff; Iowa State, winner of three straight, has yet to be tested, and Nebraska and Colorado do not appear to have championship stuff. Both K-State and Kansas are hitting the road this week, though the former will return home in time for a meeting Saturday with Denver, 53-84 loser to Kansas. K-State will meet California at Berkeley tomorrow night and San Francisco university in San Francisco's Cow Palace Wednesday. For Kansas it will be Creighton at Omaha, Nebr., tonight, and SMU at Dallas in a two-game set Friday and Saturday. Missouri has added something new in starting against two teams on Kentucky Makes Impressive Debut New York—(U.P.)-Kentucky may not be the same without seven-foot Bill Spivey but who's going to prove it? The nation's top-ranked college basketball team made an impressive 1951-52 debut with a smashing 96-46 victory over Washington and Lee—impressive chiefly because Spivey sat out the entire game. But the Wildcats did not seem to miss their giant star, who will be sidelined with an injured knee until mid-season, in their opener and they were out to make it two in a row against Xavier of Ohio at Cincinnati Gardens tonight. Assisting Kentucky beats Xavier, the Wildcats will then have a week to prepare for one of their biggest tests of the season—next Monday's meeting with St. John's of Brooklyn at Lexington. the same night. The double-header will be played tonight, the first game against Central college of Fayette, Mo., and the second against Missouri Valley of Marshall. Tiger coach Wilbur (Sparky) Stalcup said he would start Win Wilfong, sensational freshman shotmaker, and four lettermen against Central in the first game. Tonight—Drake at Iowa State (Ames); Baylor at Oklahoma. Other games this week: Tuesday—Northwest Missouri of Maryville at Nebraska. Thursday—New Mexico A&M at Missouri. Friday--Baylor at Colorado; Saturday--Baylor at Colorado; Fresno (Calif.) State at Nebraska; Iowa University at Missouri. KAYWOODIE PIPES ARE PERFECT George's PIPE SHOP 727 Mass. Gifts TIRE CLEARANCE SALE ON TAKE-OFFS AND U.S. ROYAL MASTER TRADE-INS Save 20% to 50% NEW AND NEARLY NEW FIRST LINE TIRES AT BIG SAVINGS WHILE THEY LAST In The Following Sizes Monday, Dec. 10 1951 University Daily Kansan Page 5 670-15 Four Ply 670-15 Four Ply White Wall 710-15 Four Ply 760-15 Four Ply 760-15 Four Ply White Wall 760-16 Four Ply 820-15 Four Ply 820-15 Four Ply White Wall 600-20 Eight Ply 700-20 Eight Ply 750-20 Ten Ply 825-20 Ten Ply 900-20 Ten Ply RAPID TRANSIT SERVICE Phone 1300 1000 Mass. Kaywoodie Pipes Sold at RANEY'S DRUG STORE 909 Mass. Phone 521 No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money. Doctors warn smokers about throats. Kaywoodie Pipes have Three Throat-Guards to give extra throat protection. SCHOLARSHIP --- SECOND THROAT-GUARD: Exclusive, patented "DRINKLESS" device. Cuts down irritating 'ars ... keeps every pipeful lit longer. FIRST THROAT-GUARD: "Wider-opening" bit. Spreads out smoke, helps cool it. No hot smoke to irritate throat or "bite" tongue. PIPE THIRD THROAT- GUARD: World's best im- ported briar. It's specially heat-resistant and porous. Makes smoke cooler., less irritating. Only KAYWOODIE pipes have these Three Throat-Guards for extra throat protection! DON'T GAMBLE WITH YOUR THROAT! Guard that throat, doctors say. And Kaywoodie gives you one...two...three Throat-Guards, protecting your throat like no other smoke can! Making the smoke easier on your throat...keeping it cooler. Yes, light up and forget about your throat. Just think about that Kaywoodie...about its beautiful lines...its satinsmooth finish. Relax with a real smoke...a man's smoke...a smoke that's giving you so much extra throat protection! C Kaywoodie imports the finest briar—and then throws 90% of it away. Keeps only the finest 10%, the very heart, for cool, sweet smoking. KAYWOODIE NEW YORK LONDON SINCE 1851 Kaywoodie Pipes are available in a wide variety of shapes and finishes. $4 to $25 Look for the Kaywoodie cloverleaf trade-mark. Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, Dec. 10, 1951 Sigma Alpha Epsilon Addition Includes Study And Sleep Room The new $66,000 addition to the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house at 1301 Campus road is nearing completion. The exterior has been finished and work is progressing on the inside. Kansas Alpha chapter, founded at the University in 1903, built the preschool house in 1917 when the enrollment was only 2,711. Growth in population made the new addition which contains sleeping and study rooms and the house mother's suite necessary. The Sig Alph's welcome a new housemother this fall. She is Mrs Harel M. Jenkins who came to the University from the Sig Alph chapter at Westminster college. Poodle Cut Keynote Of Short Hair Cuts At Westminster College Nationally, Sigma Alpha Epsilon New York—(U.P.)—Short hair is back, men. A clipped casual poodle fashion hairstyle is replacing your favorite girl's chignon faster than you can say "don't cut it." A couple of top glamour girls switched from chignons to poodle cuts. They turned a timid return to short hair into a barboring boom which one Fifth avenue hair stylist predicts "will go all over the country in six months." try in six months. Denise Carse, the latest beauty to succumb to a poodle cut, went to the same fellow who cut Faye Emerson's hair two weeks earlier. Both girls were wearing their long hair pulled severely in chignons before the poode clip left them with a brush-up coifure no a brief, brushed-up continue no longer than two inches at any spot. "Faye had nozzing to do wiz my hair cut," Denise said. "You like set, No?" She ran her fingers through her short hair. "You brush through set, and poop, you're through." get, and pop, you the curvaceous French actress was seated in the penthouse apartment which she shares with her sister, awaiting the arrival of a French doodle from a New Jersey kennel. outdoor from "I change by type to go weep short hair" she exclaimed triumphantly, looking down at her blackurtle neck Jersey sweater. "High neck is very chic wiz short hair" he bosomy, 24-year-old actress insisted she hadn't a low-cut dress in her closet. The poodle, she added, was order-ed before the haircut. The male preference for long hair and low cut gowns was shrugged off by Miss Darcel. "Men like a woman who can move around more freely," she said calmly. "My chignon was too sophisticated. Now ney could run runners through my hair and nozing comes loose." She ruffled her hair. The doorbell rang and Denise and her brunet sister, Helene Francois, pumped up. "Is poodle now?" Denise asked agently. Two French poodles bounded into the room, followed by the kennel owner. Miss Darcey looked momentarily dismayed, then rallied, "Az, race white one, I love him," she explained, "Come here, you beautiful dog." It climbed affectionately onto her lap. "Look at us together," she ex- claimed. "I look a poodle wiz my hair short, no?" LAUNDRY DONE FOR LESS Don't send laundry home. Save on postage and save your mother work by doing it at RISK'S Self-Service Laundry 613 Vt. Call 623 was founded at the University of Alabama. The organization now numbers 127 active chapters. Some prominent alumni of Sigma Alpha Epsilon include Dick Powell, Bobbie Jones, Rudy Vallee, Larry Parks, Robert Young, Herman Hickman, Yale football coach; and Andrew F. Gustafson, Miami university football coach. Construction will start soon on a $85,000 addition to the Immanual Lutheran church which will include a large student lounge. Student Lounge Part Of Lutheran Addition The Immanual Lutheran Laymen's league of Kansas will finance the purchase of equipment for the 27 by 45 foot lounge. The lounge and church proper will be contemporary design. The exterior will be a combination of brick and California redwood or cedar. The Rev. Norman Brandt, pastor of the church, said that the building is expected to be complete by next fall. Laminated wood arches will support the roof and the upper portion of the nave wall of the church sanctuary. This construction makes possible the traditional long, high church, as well as placing the church away from the lounge. For 18 months basement quarters at Seventeenth and Vermont streets have housed the congregation. The Janet Stites, Delta Delta Delta, Mission to Ron Thomas, Kappa sigma, Baxter Springs. Campus Pinnings Phyllis Grey, Alpha Chi Omega, Emporia, to Richard LaGree, Delta Upson, Newton. Phi Chi Theta Initiates Six Six business students were recently initiated into Phi Chi Theta, commerce sorority. They are Elmyra Crane, Martha Jane Heywood, June DeVall, Eileen Rogers, Katherine Scarritt, juniors and Helen Overman, senior. Delta Chi Christmas Formal Delta Chi held its annual Christmas formal Saturday evening at the chapter house. Chaperones were Mrs. Ralph Park, Mrs. James A. Hooke, Col. and Mrs. Bayard Atwood and Mrs. Violet Whitmore. present basement will be covered with asphalt tile for the floor of the additions. Construction of the additions will be financed by the Kansas district of the church and by the congregation. Raymery Himes, architect, designed the additions. Julius Kaaz Jr. company of Leavenworth is contractor. PRECISE WATCH REPAIRS Watch Repair Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed Wolfson's 743 Mass. Call 675 ARTIST & SIGNWRITER BRUSHES by Delta... NOW IN STOCK... Delta's Jewel finest Red Sable Water Color brushes from 75¢ Delta's Perma-edge finest Red Sable Showcard brushes from 70¢ Delta's Master El Greco famous interlocked white Bristle Artists' brushes from 65¢ Come in and see our stock of Delta brushes. There's a Delta brush for any medium. Delta's P finest Red Sa brushes from Co of I "Your Headquarters for Art and Sign Supplies" UNION BUILDING — FRASER INFORMATION BOOTH FRANK STRONG ROTUNDA Student Union Book Store "My latest campus adventures will be revealed to you this coming Thursday when L.M.O.C. No.9 goes on sale.I'm here to tell you that I had a fine time gathering the material for this book,and I'm sure that you will get your kicks looking thru this 'best of all' Bibler book. Better get a couple, your old mother might have a friend!" GOES ON SALE THIS THURSDAY Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers Worthal says: L. M.O.C. No. "LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS" Ninth Edition The image provided does not contain any visible text or content. It appears to be a blank or transparent area with no discernible features. Therefore, there is no text to recognize or describe. ... ... ... ... ... Fight Against TB Is Not Won, Xmas Seals Will Help Win It By JERRY RENNER Tuberculosis kills more people in Kansas than any other communicable disease. "Don't pass up Christmas seals this year believing the tuberculosis fight is won." Dr. Ralph I. Canutone, director of Wattins hospital and president of the Kansas Tuberculosis association, said today. He stated that no one ever dies of tuberculosis if the disease is detected in its early stages. "Christmas seals provide money to maintain tuberculosis tests throughout the state," Dr. Canuteson said. "Without these tests the infectee persons would not be discovered early enough and tuberculosis mortality rates would increase." he said. The X-ray machine, given to Watkins hospital by the Kansas Tuberculosis and Health association, was a product of Christmas seals. The value of these tests is shown by the decline of tuberculosis deaths, in the 1-14 age group, from 37 in 1920 to 4 in 1950. In the 15-29 age group in 1920 there were 162 deaths and in 1950 there were 14. "Early detection through testing has been largely responsible for this decrease," Dr. Canuteson said. Since the erection of Watkins hospital in 1932, tuberculosis skin tests have been given regularly each year. In that 20 year period 118 persons composed of students, faculty members and University employees have reacted positively to these tests indicating that they have the tubercle bacillus germ in their bodies. Of these 45 were active cases. Many persons who give a positive test carry the germ without being an active case. In the initial instance the tubercle bacillus enters the chest and the body sets about walling off the germ first with secretions. A fibrous tissue replaces the secretions and in time a wall of calcium encloses the germ. It is this calcium wall that shows up X- "It is usually the second attack that the individual's health is actually weakened," Dr. Canuteson said. When the individual carrying the germ gets in a run down condition, the bacillus are able to escape and the case becomes active. Page 7 Dr. Canutson said 20 University students have given positive reactions to the test since 1946. Of these 12 were active cases. The best cure for tuberculosis is rest in a hospital. Streptomycin aids the body in fighting the germ and surgical operations which collapse the lung also aid in curing tuberculosis. A farm in the state of Washington will be given by the Veterans of Foreign Wars to the most worthy and deserving farm veteran of World War II or the Korean war in the U.S. VFW Will Give Farm To Worthy Veteran The transformation of the 80-acre piece of sagebrush land into a completely developed irrigated farm will climax a five-day celebration of the completion of the Columbia Basin Federal Reclamation project. Clothing Goes To The Dogs The farm will have on it a three- room furnished house, farm buildings, planted crops, machinery, other equipment and supplies. It will be worth $50,000. Dyer, Tenn.—(U.P.)-Luther Carrell's two dogs don't like to see him swim in a nearby pond. When Carrell dived into the water, his dogs went in after him. When Carrell refused to come out, they ran off with most of his clothes. Your Man Plymouth . . has a used car priced for you. Buddy GALLAGHER 634 Mass. Ph. 1000 Radio Schedule The week's schedule of programs to be heard on KFKU, University radio station, 1250 on the radio dial. Monday The Flying Carpet ... 2:30 p.m. Broadway Rhapsody ... 2:45 p.m. Great Symphonies ... 7 p.m. Tuesday Art by Radio ... 2:30 p.m. KU Cavalcade of Hits ... 7 p.m. Memo Pad ... 7:25 p.m. Wednesdav Music From Mt. Oread ... 2:30 p.m. KU in the City ... 2:45 p.m. Adventures in Music Land 2:30 p.m. Brain Busters 7 p.m. Thursday Tuesday Story Book Train ... 2:30 p.m. Museum of Art Organ ... 2:45 p.m. Chamber Music ... 7 p.m. Med Center Offers Post Grad Courses Friday A three-day postgraduate course in pulmonary-physio-pathology is being held today through Wednesday, at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City. The course will deal with the study of the normal functions and diseases of the lungs. This subject has become of prominent interest to practicing physicians. The seventh annual postgraduate course in surgery will be offered at the Medical Center Jan. 21 to 25. The five-day program will be presented by 17 guest instructors who are teachers of national reputation in research and clinical practice. Case conferences and panel discussions will constitute the greater part of the conference. A postgraduate course in pediatrics will be presented Jan. 28 to 30. Michigan, Illinois Plan Defense Pact Lansing, Mich.—(U.P.) - Michigan and Illinois have taken steps to formulate a mutual defense pact in case of war. Civil defense directors from both states have started drafting an inter-state treaty which will provide reciprocal exchange of mobile support teams, defense equipment, medical supplies and other emergency aid. The proposed treaty, to become operative only in case of war, must be ratified by the legislatures of both states. Fewer Bats In The Belfry St. Louis—(U.P)—Now you can do something about bats in the beffrey. Monsanto Chemical Co. has come up with a chemical named paradichlorobenzene. It is sprinkled in the roost area. The bats can't stand the smell of it and leave. Late News - Cartoon Comfort! Convertible JAYHAWK NEW PushBack CUSHIONED CHAIRS "CROSSWINDS" John Payne Rhonda Fleming "CROSSWINGS" VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD NOW• Shows At 2:30-7-9 Shows At 7:00-9:00 Frederic March Martha Scott Classified Ads 'ONE FOOT IN HEAVEN' NOW. News - Screen Song Phone K.U.376 One day Three days Five days 25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00 Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c University Daily Kanson FOR SALE SET OF FIRST Flight custom made golf irons 2 to 9 inclusive. One year old, reasonably priced. See at 1140 Louisiana, third floor, or call 36858, evenings. 11 REGISTERED male German shepherd pups, 3 months old. Phone 3602. 11 TUXEDO FOR SALE Cleaned and in ex- tenuation. Phone 356-37. Contact landline. Phone 356- A GIFT THEYLL ENJOY HAVING! Give a brief bag or case for Christmas. See the wide selection at the Student Union Book Store. 14 X-ACTO PEN KNIFE! The perfect utility knife for artwork, models retouching, stripping, etching, and photography. See them at Your Student Union Book Store CREPE PAPER FOR ALL OCCASIONS! Both regular and flame proof crepe paper in all colors. Available at your Student Union Book Store. 14 KU RECORD ALBM! Hear the A Cappella Choir, Men's Glee Club, and Band non-breakable RCA Victor records. Now at your Student Union Book Store. FINE ART REPRODUCTION! We now have a wide selection of reproductions of famous paintings in full color. Student Union Book Store. 14 PHARMACY STUDENTS! New edition of Mill's "State Board Questions and Answers" is now available at the Student Union Book Store. 14 MISCELLANEOUS JERRY-meet me tonight at 8 p.m. in the Pink Elephant. Bill. ALL PERSONS desiring to dispose of used or second-hand tape recorders, please write to University Daily Kansan, box No. 1. 12 TRANSPORTATION DRIVING TO New York Dec. 20, Take two, share expenses, call 2238R. 10 NEEDED. a ride from Kansas City to Lawrence and back daily, starting after Christmas vacation. Will help on ex-tenure. Leave message at Dally Kansai KU 376. AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether for other purposes. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 610-5355, Downs Service, 1015 Mass. Ask us about family rates, sky coach, and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book an appointment in the summer. Call Miss Glesseman at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30- FOR RENT ONE CLEAN ROOM for boys. Close to UU. University and bus line. 1817 Ith. BUSINESS SERVICE TYPING: Themes, term papers, and mini- graph work. Accurate service by NOW! RECKLESS! RUTHLESS! 20TH ANNE OF THE INDIES color by TECHNICOLOR Jean Louis Debra PETERS • JOURDAN • PAGET Matinee 2:30-Open 2 p.m. Evening 7 and 9-Open 6:45 Features: 3:14:7;3:09:9:35 ADDED CARTOON - NEWS Monday, Dec. 10 1951 Granada Continuous Shows on Sat. and Sunday From 1 p.m. Future Business Leaders of America Contact Anneless Schmierer phone 834. TYPING: Themes, term papers, these- prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs. Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: term papers, note books, theses, medical and biolog- miscellaneous. Mrs. E. J. Roscoe, 838 Lau. Apt. 4. upstairs. P. 2715J after 4 p.m. TYING: These, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these tying exams. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio. Ph. 1601. RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment, which assuring fast, efficient service. Bought in Vermo and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermo Free pickup and delivery. ff CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 am. until midnight. **ff** STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1108 Mass. ff TYFING: Experience in theses, term papers, miscellaneous typing, and stencil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phon 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. tt CRYSTAL CAT serves choice steaks sandwiches, maits, home-made pies and baked goods for customers Air-conditioned Open from a.m. to midnight Crystal Cake, 690 Vt. JIAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk pet shop. We have everything in the pet store, and we know our business. Our one-stop pet shop has fun, fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet at Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. t LOST A GREY GABARDINE top coat fret DJ GABARDINE pink Pit. Call Gag. Burst 987 or 13999. Eldridge Pharmacy Drugs, Sundries, Fountain, Rines. Agency for Mixture No. 79 701 Mass. Phone 999 CALL 383 DANCE Be ready for that big date! SEND YOUR CLOTHES TO LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS CALL 383 STARTING TUESDAY 3 DAYS ONLY THE REALLY BIG MUSICAL EVENT OF THE FALL!! A Picture You Will Enjoy Many, Many Times!! LOVE STORY OF THE WORLD'S GREATEST ENTERTAINER! THE GREAT CARUSO starring MARIO LANZA ANN BLYTH DOROTHY JARMILA KIRSTEN·NOVOTNA BLANCHE THEBOM WITH TERESA CELLI RICHARD HAGEMAN CARL BENTON REID Color by TECHNICOLOR Matinee Tuesday Only At 2:30 - Open 2:00 p.m. Evening Performances 7 and 9 - Features 7:15 - 9:19 REGULAR PRICES Sponsored By The American Association Of University Women Patee PHONE 121 ENDS TONITE 'HIS KIND OF WOMAN' Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, Dec. 10, 1951 BETWEEN THE MAN AND THE TREE PUTTING THE FINISHING TOUCHES on the giant Christmas tree in Strong rotunda are Elden Tefft (on the scaffold) and John D. Parks, design instructors. The tree was decorated Saturday and is now revolving for all to see. There are about 20 dozen silver ornaments on the tree, along with many packages and lights—Kansan photo by Al Marshall. The Christmas season will get under way at the University this week with two music events in Hoch auditorium. Christmas At KU To Start With Two Musical Events The University chorus, under the direction of Clayton Krehbiel, instructor of music education, will present "The Christmas Oratorio" by J. S. Bach at 8 p.m. Wednesday. This chorus of 180 voices will be making its formal debut since its organization this fall. Soloists for the oratorio will be Phyllis McFarland, soprano; Polly Owen, alto; Richard Wright, tenor; and Maurice Casey, bass all students in the School of Fine Arts. The orchestra has been especially arranged for accompaniment by organ and two pianos, which will be played by Stanford Lehmberg, College junior, and Barbara Thompson and Donna Hobein, education juniors. On Sunday the School of Fine Arts will present the University Christmas Vespers at 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Approximately 300 persons will take part in this program which annually attracts an audience of about 6,000 persons. In Sunday's performance, the A Cappella choir, directed by Professor Swarthout, the KU Symphony orchestra, conducted by Mr. Krehiel, and the University organ, played by Prof. Laurel E. Anderson, will provide the musical setting. The tableaux have been designed this year by Robert Green and Ray Ottinger, assistant professors in the School of Fine Arts. Stage sets and lighting will be furnished by the department of drawing and painting and the costumes and props by the department of design. A new feature will be the presentation of the Memorial carillon preceding each Vespers program. The traditional playing of chorals and Christmas carols from the balcony of Hoch auditorium by a brass ensemble will be heard as usual this year. The early afternoon Vespers program will be broadcast over University radio station KFKU from 4 to 5 p.m. Sunday. A fast dye for white camels was one of the camouflage projects developed by the defenders of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan during World War II. PermaHues A Perfect Christmas Gift A beautiful set of alum- inum glasses smartly colored in green, purple, chartreuse, red, blue, gold, silver, and orange. only $4.95 a set ROWLANDS 1237 Oread 1401 Ohio Today is the third anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights proclaimed by the United Nations three years ago. United Nations Human Rights Mark 3rd Year In a statement on the first anniversary of its adoption Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt said, "Naturally, since people in different areas have different levels of development, it will not be understood in the same way in every area. "But the acceptance of this document is one of the things most important to democracy everywhere. Democracy must prove that it has due consideration for the rights and freedoms of the individual," she said. The charter was completed after years of thought and discussion. All nations contributed to some part of the declaration. In it are the combined experiences, morals, laws, aims, and beliefs of many peoples of many lands. The charter states that all children are born equal; that every child has the right to an education, and that parents have the right to choose the school for their children. This education should be free and compulsory. Higher education should be available to all who seek it. Admittance to higher schools and colleges should be on the basis of merit only. Education in the schools should promote the ideals of the United Nations Charter towards understanding, tolerance, friendship, and peace among all nations, races, and religions. UN's thoughts toward education are only one phase of a gigantic movement toward the highest goal of all-Equality among people, regardless of race, creed, or color. This should apply everywhere in the world. Mrs. Roosevelt, chairman of a commission working toward the acceptance by all nations of the declaration says, "The people must accept and respect these rights and freedoms in their own communities, and in their own lives, and by so doing, create countries, and in time, a world where such freedoms are a reality." ___ ASC Treasurer Makes Report The following figures represent the All-Student council financial report through the first week of December: Deficit from 1950-51 $ 660.42 Receipts Transfer of Funds from Reserve... $ 603.28 Activity Tickets (summer)... 376.60 Activity Tickets (fall)... 2,280.00 Social Fines... 25.00 Receipts Transfer of Funds from Total Receipts $3,341.98 Deficit 660.42 Disbursements Total ... $2,681.56 ASC Business Expense...$ 34.51 Conferences...34.86 Election Expense...38.61 Jayhawk Nibble...182.69 Traditions...189.12 Misc. Expense...5.10 Upstream...300.00 AWS...190.00 Forensic League...110.00 ISA...175.00 International Club...125.00 Engineering Council...100.00 Engineering Exposition...350.00 Statewide Activities...200.00 YWCA...250.00 Phi Lambda Upsilon...25.00 Total Disbursements ...$2,309.89 Balance on Hand ... $ 371.67 Dean Werries, Treasurer News Roundup Pike In Collision With Boat Caddillac. Mich.-(U.R.)-Dale Priest and his brother. Harold caught a nine-pound, 36-inch northern pike with an assist from a motor boat. The brothers netted the fish when they found it floating and unconscious, apparently struck by a boat. UN Issues Near Ultimatum Over Prisoner Exchange Panmunjom, Korea—(U.R.)-The United Nations accused the Communists today of blackmail "a thousand times more repulsive" than that of the lowest gangsters and demanded the Reds begin talks tomorrow on an exchange of war prisoners. Vice Admiral C. Turner Joy, head of the UN truce delegation, couched his demand for prisoner discussions in terms approaching an ultimatum. But Brig, Gen. William P. Muckols, spokesman for the delegation, later told newsmen there is nothing the Allies can do about it at this stage if the Reds reject the demand. Typhoon Adds To Volcano Disaster Manila, Philippines—(U.P.)—A typhoon struck the central Philippines today and caused at least three deaths as six new eruptions shook Mt. Hibok-Hibok on Camiguin island and sprayed more lava and ash over the area where 1,200 to 2,000 persons died last week. A United Press correspondent said the six eruptions occurred in rapid succession this morning, sending up towering columns of smoke and flame which mushroomed like an atomic explosion. Paris—(U.P).The big four powers completed today a report on their secret 10-day disarmament talks. General Assembly President Luis Padilla Nervo predicted the report will have "serious and great significance." The Mexican diplomat, who acted as chairman of the big four meetings, said East-West disagreements still exist on a number of issues of major importance. Big Four Complete Disarmament Talk Washington—(U.P.)—President Truman called in his top advisors today to plan for the coming showdown in the Korean truce talks and to deal with the political crisis brought on by nationwide tax scandals. Bankruptcy Firm Paid Big Dividends Philadelphia, Pa.—(U.P.)—National Democratic chairman Frank E. McKinney and Indiana Democratic committeeman Frank M. McHale reaped $74,000 apiece from $1,000 each invested in a now bankrupt firm, according to sworn testimony before a federal bankruptcy referee. The transactions were revealed, Deininger said, in testimony by Frank Cohen, head of the Empire Tractor Corp. of Philadelphia, which went into bankruptcy on Oct. 29, 1948, one year after completion of the deal. Truman In Confab With Top Advisors Cairo Egypt—(U.P.)The Egyptian cabinet announced today that it will meet Tuesday—normally an official holiday—to consider breaking diplomatic relations with Britain. Hermiston, Ore.—(U.P.)—A 51-year-old farmer, Norman V. Ford, was pulled alive today from a caved-in well 20 feet below the surface of the ground where he had been trapped more than 17 hours. His son, Leon, 18, with whom he had been digging the well on their farm at about 11 a.m. Sunday, had braced his back for nearly seven hours against a board support that threatened to collapse and suffocate the father. Man Buried 17 Hours Owes Life To Son Egyptians Slate Crucial Meeting Wish Your Friends a Special Merry Christmas Everyone has friends who are too close for just a Christmas card. Give them a personalized wish for a Merry Christmas. Bring them to dinner at the Castle Tea Room. The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. Phone 149 2 Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks. University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Dec. 11, 1951 LAWRENCE, KANSAS STUDENT NEWSAPER Physicists Get Federal Grant From Army Lab A grant from the Squior Army Signal laboratory has made it possible for research physicists at the University to continue the development of electrets—electric magnets useful in wartime communication. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy said that this grant would assure continued study until February 1953. Supervising the research is Dr. Gordon Wiseman, assistant professor of physics. Five graduate students are assisting Dr. Wiseman. They are: Norman Baumann, Gene Feaster, Francis Prosser, Ralph Moon and Jack Wild. ___ or physics. "The object of our research is to obtain information about the mechanisms which work to produce permanent electrical charges in electrics." he said. Life Saving To Be Shown Such materials as plastics and waxes are being used in the experiments to develop sources of electrical fields that can be used in such communication instruments as microphones. One of the ultimate objectives is to develop better electrets. A demonstration of the new method of artificial respiration will be given on the campus today and Wednesday by a Red Cross official. Warren Emery, safety services representative from the Red Cross office in St. Louis will demonstrate the Holger-Nielsen, pressure-arm lift method at 3 p.m. today in 202 Robinson gymnasium. Robinson gymnasium. He will also demonstrate the method at 4 p.m. Wednesday in 102 Robinson gymnasium. Students, faculty, and any other persons interested may attend. A third demonstration will be given in the Community building at 8 p.m. Wednesday. This new method is being adopted by the Red Cross, the armed forces, civil defense, and the Bureau of Mines. The Selective Service deferment examination will be given to eligible University students Thursday in the Military Science building. Deferment Exams Set For Thursday The ninth edition of Little Man on Campus will go on sale Thursday, Robert Sydney, president of Alpha Delta Sigma, publishers of the book announced today. Bibler Sales Start Thursday ford university, Cambridge Bibler created Worthal, a typical "little man on campus," and his Little Man on Campus cartoon in 1946 when he entered a contest for staff cartoonist for the Daily Kansan. Since that time, the popularity of the cartoon has spread to over 100 college newspapers, and has sold more than 50,000 copies of LMOC books. Bibler and his creation have been featured in articles by several national publications. It will be sold for 25 cents a copy in the Union, Fraser hall, Strong hall and the information booth all day Thursday and will remain on sale in the information booth through Friday. through Tuesday. The newest addition to the LMOC books contains 65 cartoons. All are the work of Dick Bibler, '50, who is attending graduate school at Stanford university, Stanford, Calif. national The Bibler books are distributed on the campuses of the University of Oklahoma, Norman, Okla., the University of Texas, Austin, Texas, and Stanford university, Stanford, Calif. That 'Thing' Hanging In The Hawk's Nest Is A 'Mobile' Doors open at 8:30 a.m. The exam is scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. and will end at noon. James Murray, journalism senior in charge of production of the book, said a second printing will be made after the holidays for distribution on the campuses of other universities. He: "What is it?" She: "It's a mobile." He: "What's a mobile?" She: "It's a three dimensional piece." The Guidance bureau will give the exams and send the papers back to Princeton university for grading. Students should bring their admission card and the number of their local draft board. The one in the Union came from New York. It took the artist a week to construct it. He: She: "It's a three dimensional piece of abstract art." He: "Oh." Mr. Woolley says there is no hidden meaning in the mobile. It isn't want to be interpreted as "Sunset Over the City Dump," or anything. Even if you have a blank mind you should be able to appreciate it. He and She are discussing "the thing" hanging from the ceiling of the Hawk's Nest. You've probably seen it as you go in the door. Some say it resembles the bare framework of an airplane or the skeleton of a prehistoric animal. One man remarked that the small red and black plastic pieces on the ends of the wires are similar to the blots on Rorschach tests. on Rorschach L. E. Woolley, Union director, says the mobility is achieving great popularity in the Eastern states. It is supposed to be in perfect balance and pleasing to the eye from any angle. If you have time, it's fun to watch the people watching the mobile. Some stand and look at it for a few seconds, shrug their shoulders and walk away. Others look and frown as it sways back and forth in front of them. A few are fascinated and would stand there a long time if the people behind them weren't in a hurry. Almost everyone however, whether they like the mobile or not, cannot pass it by without turning around for a second glance. There's just something about it. Chorus To Give Bach's 'Oratorio' Wednesday The University chorus, largest music group on the campus, will present a shortened version of J. S. Bach's "The Christmas Oratorio" at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Hoch auditorium. Under the direction of Clayton Krebbiel, instructor of music education, the 180-voice group will sing favorite chorals, narrative recitatives, arias and choruses which make up the great work. The University chorus was organized this fall to give every KU student a chance to sing in a large music group. In past years the annual Christmas presentation has been made by combined voices of the smaller music groups. The six parts of the oratorio were written in 1734 to be sung on successive Sundays in the St. Thomas church of Leipzig during the festival of Christmas. They have been combined to form one large work requiring four to five hours to perform. to perform. In recent years "The Christmas Oratorio" has gained popularity in this country, having been performed by a number of choruses in the eastern part of the country. eastern part of In this area, Friends university of Wichita has presented the entire oratorio in two sections since 1948. Soloist Wednesday will be Phyllis McFarland, soprano; Polly Owen, alto; Richard Wright, tenor and Maurice Casey, bass. All are students in the School of Fine Arts. Graduate Students May Study In Iran Two fellowships to graduate students have been made available for study at the University of Teheran, Teheran, Iran, for the academic year 1952-53. The closing date for receipt of applications is April 1, 1952. Application forms may be secured from the German department, 304 Fraser hall. The award covers room, board, tuition and transportation. The grants are for study or research in science or humanities. The competition is open to men only, preferably under 35. Candidates must be citizens of the United States, have a bachelor's degree, a good academic record and competence in the Persian language. Partly cloudy this afternoon, fair tonight and Wednesday, little change in temperature except somewhat colder in northeast and extreme east this afternoon and tonight. Low tonight 15-20 northeast to near 25 in southwest. High Wednesday 35-45. WEATHER Faculty Follies Set For Thursday Members of the University faculty will present an entirely different kind of class to their students Thursday night. At 8 p.m. the curtain will rise in Fraser theater upon the Associated Women student's Faculty Follies, an hour and a half of entertainment by the faculty. 2 Face Rhodes Screening Exam James Logan and Robert Wulden, College seniors, will be in Topeka Wednesday for preliminary screening of applicants for Rhodes scholarships. Those selected will appear before the district committee. Other Kansas candidates are Charles Bosserman, David Day and John Heaton, Baker university; Maurice Guy and Robert Howard, Kansas State Teachers college, Emporia; Robert Sellen, Washburn university; Girl Hurron, Southwestern college; and Stanley Wood, Kansas State college. In making appointments the committees regard the qualities set up by Mr. Rhodes for the scholarship. In addition some definite quality of distinction, whether in intellect or character, is the most important requirement. before the district Dr. Emory Lindquest, president of Bethany college and secretary of the Kansas selection committee, announced the names of ten Kansas students. He said those delegated the honor will receive two years of study at Oxford in England. Thirty-two scholarships are assigned annually to the United States. The states are grouped into eight districts of six states each for the purpose of making appointments. KU Sports Figures Popular With Police Two KU sports figures are having their troubles with the local and out of town gendarmes. or town guidance Together head football coach J. V. Sikes and basketball star Clyde Lovellette have been charged with speeding in Emporia and running three stop signs in Lawrence. Coach Sikes was charged Monday in Emporia with traveling 34 miles an hour in a 20-mile zone and posted a $10 cash bond. a $1 case. The step signs were all run by Lovellette. The first violation was on Nov. 1. The trial was Dec. 5 and he was fined $10. He appealed the case to the Douglas County District court. Lovellette ran two more stop signs at 10th and Kentucky and 10th and Vermont Dec. 8. His trial for these violations is set for 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 12. A $10 bond was posted on each charge. Less Students Seek To Be 'Experts' By Don Sarten A glance through a "little black book" in the office of the graduate school reveals a decline in the number of students working toward a master's or doctor's degree in 1951-52 as compared to the peak year of '50-51. But as the years passed by the University slowly expanded. By 1931 But figures for both years are magnified tremendously if you flip pages of the record back to the year 1920-21. 1920-21. In those years following the first world war, KU's graduate school enrollment boasted what probably was an amazing total of 118. And there were only two more men than women! There were 60 men and 58 women. a well-worn page about half-way through the notebook explained that regular students numbered 214, with a staff of 77 aiding their pursuit of an "expert in their field" rating. There were more lean years in 1941-42-43-44 and '45 prior to the flood of returning vets from World War II. In the last year of the war, for example, there were only 22 regular students and 34 staff members in the graduate school. If professional students, (ones who were working elsewhere, but studying part-time) limited enrollment, and seniors were included the total was a possible 88. was a positive result. Then Johnny came marching home again for the second time. And again the graduate school began to grow. Graduates furthering education in chemistry and social work are about even with 61 in the former classification and 59 in the other. A peak was reached in 1950 when 761 men and 193 women were taught by 269 staffers. A vast majority prefers graduate work in education. About 118 are in this field with psychology running second. Seventy-one men and women are exploring the whims of mankind. This year there are 664 men and 182 women or 846 students. A few have dropped out, but the others are studying constantly and can be found in remote parts of the library. They are easily identifiable by the stacks of books you'll have to peer around to determine their identity. Allen Crafton, professor of speech, will act as master of ceremonies for the program. The "Overture" will be by Tom Rea, instructor in speech. The show is under the direction of M. C. Slough, associate professor of law, and will be staged by Don Dixon, assistant professor of speech. Charles Oldfather, assistant professor of law, will sing ballads. Miss Elin K. Jorgensen, associate professor of music education, will give her interpretation of April Stevens as she sings "Something Elemental." Miss Elaine Kutschinski, instructor in physical education, will give a modern dance called "Willy." A nine-act play in six minutes, entitled "Tragedy of Brown," will be acted out by Mrs. William A. Conboy and Dan Palmquist, instructor in speech. Four monologues will be included in the program. They will be "Good Gravy," by Harold G. Barr, professor of religion; "Cyrano de Bergerac Durante." by John L. Handy, Jr., instructor in English; "The Bartender and the Kid," by Madison Combs, Haskell instructor, and "January Appeal," by J. Neale Carman, instructor of romance languages. A quartet composed of Clayton Krehbiel, instructor in music education; James Nickerson, associate professor of music education; Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice; and Wayne Nelson, from Lawrence high school, will sing two songs. Max Dresden, associate professor of physics, will play a few piano improvisations. Magic tricks will be revealed by Dale E. Turner, professor of religion. A combo called "The Dead Beats" will furnish music. Included are Carroll D. Clark, professor of sociology; Laurence S. Bee, professor of home economics and sociology; James K. Hitt, registrar; Kenneth E. Rose, associate professor of mining engineering; C. F. Weinaug, professor of petroleum engineering; Karel Blaas, assistant professor of musical theory; Charles Oldfather; Leo Horacek, instructor in musical education; E. O. Stene, professor of political science; and Raymond Zepp, instructor in band. A Salome dancer and a snake charmer will be featured in a carnival show presented by E. H. Taylor, professor of zoology. Tickets may be purchased for 50 cents in Strong rotunda, the Union and in organized houses. Wednesday and Thursday tickets will additionally be on sale at the information booth. "The faculty has been extremely co-operative and fun to work with, and students will be surprised at the amount of talent hidden among the KU faculty." Barbara Allen, AWS Memorial Scholarship chairman, said. Sorority To Give $110 Scholarship Gamma Phi Beta, social sorority, will give a $110 Christmas Gift scholarship to a woman student who is working, in financial need, and has a good academic and personal record. The applications may be picked up in the dean of women's office and are due at 5 p.m. Monday, Dec. 17. This is the fifth year the sorority has given a Christmas scholarship. --- Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Dec. 11, 1951 Kansan Editorials Education And Student Understanding "The student today is not given a broad understanding of a subject by his professor. Instead, in his battle for survival with the grade point, he only learns to parrot the professors' words and thoughts, to echo the text book. "Instead of being encouraged to analyze and gain insight into the subject, the student has to memorize a series of facts which are meaningless to him. He allows the professor and the text to do his thinking for him and upon leaving the University he is no more able to think for himself than upon his entrance." This is a statement from the Daily Bruin of the University of California at Los Angeles. If it is true here, it is more the fault of the students than of the professors at KU. Most of the comprehensive and correlative courses at the University are two and three hour courses. This is especially true on the junior-senior level. It is obviously impossible for much class discussion in the short time which the teacher has to cover the material of the course. So the student takes the easy way out. He memorizes his notes and the text, regurgitates them for the exams, and promptly forgets about the whole thing. Now, the problem is this. Facts are too cold. They must be correlated with each other. A professor may explain how he correlates them, but many students will find it difficult to accept his explanation. Class discussion is unavailable, and so it behooves the conscientious student to discuss it out of class. Few do. This situation could be somewhat improved on the teacher's part by giving more essay quizzes with leading questions which would demand original thought on the part of the students. But who has heard much original thought lately? What has become of the old bull sessions so famous in the college days of the twenties? Students today seem on the whole apathetic toward the issues raised in political science, sociology, economics, psychology, religion or philosophy courses. The average student seems to be afraid he will be labeled a "long hair" or a "bright boy" if he talks to his friends about anything but the coming basketball game or the new record on the juke box. We aren't arguing that college should be an ivory tower retreat, where nothing is discussed but Spinoza's theory of substance or the success of Deemphasis Of Athletics ancient Greek democracy. But if we students are going to complain that we aren't given a "broad understanding" of subjects and leave school with nothing but a series of meaningless, memorized facts in our heads, we must admit that it is partly our fault. A.LS. The Big Seven conference, in applying new restrictions aimed at removing overemphasis from intercollegiate athletics, made a move that very probably will be followed, in varying forms, all over the country. The decisions of the university presidents and athletic directors come as an answer to nationwide criticism of the growing professionalism of college sports. Many of the basic problems were attacked by the decisions. Whether or not the attack is successful must remain to be seen. We hope it is. And they were made at an opportune time. The national meeting of the National Collegiate Athletic association is scheduled for January, 1952, in Cincinnati. By dealing with the recruiting problem directly and simply the conference may have eliminated one of the most dangerous practices in college athletics. No longer can a promising high school athlete personally be visited by members of the athletic staffs or their representatives, including alumni. Enforcing this latter phrase will be difficult, of course. Who can distinguish between a person acting as an alumni or as a "personal friend" of the athlete. A high school sensation can develop a myriad of close friends, much to his own surprise. Now that a college athlete may no longer receive more than room and board, and must work for his $15 a month, another source of controversy is removed. We can imagine, though, that all-Americans will find themselves harnessed with an eight-day clock to keep wound. And all the other points, including freshmen ineligibility, fewer basketball games, tightened eligibility, and shortened spring football practice, have their attributes. Short Ones Sending an ambassador to the Vatican will imperil the religious freedom of the United States, according to some people. Probably they are the same ones who argue that increasing the nickel cup of coffee to a dime will destroy the nation's economy. There is only one ruling we tend to disagree with, and that is the elimination of all post-season competition. This includes football bowl games, the National Invitational and NCAA basketball tourneys, and the NCAA track meet. A horrified reader said he could detect no clean sportsmanship in a televised wrestling match. He might be equally surprised to learn that apples are seldom found on peach trees. We can see no serious detriment to any athlete involved if his team is selected, because of its outstanding prowess, to compete in a post-season game. Of course, as it stands now, such competition is merely an added impetus to professionalism, which the Big Seven hopes to eliminate. So why take away from an amateur his brief taste of the limelight? The NCAA is currently studying its own post-season events. And the Big Seven may be induced to amend its restrictions on the basis of NCAA findings. Perhaps, when the professionalism has gone out the window, as it surely must, at one time or another, the post-season games will be reinstated. A Prof Writes Of Hour Exams -A.G.M. Dear Editor: Your recent editorial on requiring advance notice of hour exams impressed me because, as an undergraduate, I advocated much the same solution. As you say, the idea has some merit. Why then did you clown around with it instead of advocating the plan seriously? If the proposal is important enough, you could press for student council action. That body could appeal to the University Senate whose functions include regulation of methods of examination. At least one state university has a rule that hour exams must be announced a week in advance and all activities For my own classes I have found a simple solution. (Two different college polls revealed that nearly all students thought the arrangement was "about right"). All hour exams are announced well in advance, usually at the beginning of the course. Warning is also given that some dozen or so short quizzes will be given at irregular and unexpected intervals. One low quiz score is tossed out, but an extreme in favor of the student is retained. are prohibited during the seven days immediately prior to final exams. Robert B. Wentworth Assistant Professor, Journalism. Norma Strobel Education Senior Marge Gulick College Sophomore At Last! We've been following the editorial page recently and think it's time for laurels instead of brick bats. Here's a vote of thanks to a two-fisted editor and his staff who have handled recent controversial issues with an impartiality more of us need. Dear Editor: Mai sucription: $3 a semester, $4.50 per semester, or $6 postage). Published in Lawrence, Kens every afternoon during the University year and served on university holidays and examination periods Entered as second class matter Sept. 17. Kens, under act of March 3, 1879. News From Other Campuses An honorary degree to be conferred upon persons of outstanding achievement in service to the public and to mankind has been adopted by the University of Denver. The degree will be that of "Doctor of Public Service." Research To Aid Congo Denver Adopts New Degree Research studies in agricultural economics at Iowa State college are being made by Basil Kotschoubey. His studies will aid him in designating a system of crop production surveys in the Belgian Congo. He is a member of the staff of the 10 Year Plan of Congo, Belgian Congo improvement group. Chow And Help Wanted Most At Tufts college in Massachusetts the college paper asked freshmen what they wanted most in their fraternities. Most frequent answer was, "a good chef." Second in frequency was, "access to the exam files." TRY A SEAFOOD DINNER AT DUCK'S Choice Of SEA FOODS FRIED CHICKEN or STEAKS DUCK'S TAVERN Open From 11 a.m. To Midnight 824 Vermont The Perfect Gift for the Entire Family Beautiful knit-in Argyle pattern $395 Genuine Ripons® Be sure to put genuine Ripons at the top of your gift list for your family, relatives and friends. You'll be giving luxurious year 'round foot comfort for loafing and lounging at home, after a day outdoors, traveling, at college, etc. Washable soft pure wool and and glove leather sores snuggle the feet and cushion the step. In beautiful colors and styles for men, women, children. MICKEY MOUSE Jacquard knit pattern in gay colors for children. They stay on the feet. $295 for Ladies and Girls Deluxe Style $350 © W.D.P. The Perfect Gift for the Entire Family Beautiful knit-in Argyle $295 Genuine Ripons Ripons for Ladies and Girls Deluxe Style $350 Genuine Ripons Be sure to put genuine Ripons at the top of your gift list for your family, relatives and friends. You'll be giving luxurious year 'round foot comfort for loafing and lounging at home, after a day outdoors, traveling, at college, etc. Washable soft pure wool and and glove leather soles snuggle the feet and cushion the step. In beautiful colors and styles for men, women, children. MICKEY MOUSE Jacquard knit pattern in gay colors for children. $295 They stay on the feet. for Ladies and Girls Deluxe Style $350 © W.D.P. Royal College Shop 837-839 Massachusetts 1. 已知函数 $f(x)$ 在 $R$ 上单调递增,且 $f(2) = 3$,求 $f(x)$ 的最小值为多少? University Daily Kansan Page 3 More Students Use Hawk's Nest Two attendance records at the Hawk's Nest have been broken during the past week, L. E. Woolley, Union director has announced. A homecoming crowd set a mark of 1,773 Dec. 1, a new record for use of the Nest on a Saturday. Mr. Woolley said more students are taking advantage of the services offered by the Hawk's Nest and that attendance during the evening hours is showing a slow but steady increase. Attendance is still the heaviest at mid-morning and mid-afternoon. The following Monday 2,312 students visited the Hawk's Nest to establish a new weekday record. New uniforms have been purchased for the waitresses at the Nest. "They're the exact shade of the ceiling," Mr. Woolley said. Dr. Bee To Lead Discussion Dr. Lawrence S. Bee, professor of sociology, will lead an informal discussion "Marriage and the Family" at a Coffee forum sponsored by the Student Union Activities. The forum will be held at 4 p.m. today in the Hawk's Nest in the Union. The coffee is free and all students and faculty are invited. The male of the common house sparrow is much more active in nest building than the female. LEON JOUHAUX, French trade union leader, was awarded the Nobel peace prize for 1951. He has been chairman of the international movement. MARCOS RICO Organized women's houses made and donated to the bazaar such things as placemats, dolls made of socks, candy, luncheon sets, teatowels, aprons, velvet ties, baskets made of Christmas cards, Christmas stockings and potholders. More than 300 persons went to Henley house Friday and Saturday for the YWCA annual Christmas bazaar, and spent more than $600 for an assortment of Christmas gift items. Maple syrup, silver jewelry and woven articles from Gatlinburg, Tenn., were especially popular. The YWCA made the most money off the baked goods and various things donated to the bazaar by University students and Lawrence residents. 300 Attend YWCA Bazaar All profits from the bazaar will go into the YWCA general funds for use during the year. Business was so good Friday that the grab bag was almost emptied faster than it could be filled. Dairying is second to cotton in farm income in Mississippi. Tuesday, Dec. 11, 1951 KU Engineers Go To Little Rock Dr. Weinaug, chairman of the petroleum engineering department at the University, is a member of the IOCC's engineering and secondary oil recovery committees. His position on the latter is based on his chairmanship of the Kansas Secondary Oil Recovery committee. Dr. Jewett is vice-chairman of the committee. Secondary recovery of oil and underground storage of gas will be topics of concern to Dr. C. F. Wei naug and Dr. J. M. Jewett, of the State Geological survey at the University as they attend the annual meeting of the Interstate Oil Compact commission in Little Rock, Ark., today and Wednesday. In committee session at the IOCC meeting a summary of recovery projects in Kansas during 1950, will be presented. Dr. Weinaug also will take part in the engineering committee's panel discussion on gas storage. The first free public library in the United States was established in 1822 at Dublin, N.H. PRECIVE WATCH REPAIRS Watch Repair Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed Wolfson's 743 Mass. Call 675 Patronize Kansan Advertisers L.M.O.C. - No. 9 - WATCH FOR IT CHESTERFIELD — LARGEST SELLING CIGARETTE IN AMERICA'S COLLEGES AT WESTERN RESERVE CLEVELAND, OHIO Eldred Snack Bar We certify that Chesterfield is our largest selling cigarette by...3 to1 SIGNED ... We Sales Rowan MANAGER 3 to 1 because of MILDNESS Plus NO UNPLEASANT AFTER-TASTE* * FROM THE REPORT OF A WELL-KNOWN RESEARCH ORGANIZATION ... AND ONLY CHESTERFIELD HAS IT! 9 University Daily Kansan Page 4 Tuesday, Dec. 11, 1951 KU Rolls In 2nd Half Downs Bluejays 65-47 By CHARLEY BURCH Daily Kensan Sports Editor A last-quarter scoring spree of 14 points by Cumulus Clyde Lovellette enabled the Kansas Jayhawkers to pull away from the Creighton Bluejays and win 65-47 after a tight game at Omaha Monday night. Creighton's 6 feet 6-inch center, Bill Heyden, threw a blanket-like cover over the Kansas point maker for the first three quarters. He limited him to a free throw in the first quarter and nine points the first half. Heyden fouled out with a minute gone in the final quarter and big Clyde cut loose with 14 points to raise his total to 25. Kansas was ahead 30-27 at halftime. The Jayhawkers were forced to turn on the steam in the second half to subdue the stubborn Blue-jays. \ Kansas Rated Eighth In Nation New York- (U.P.) -Kentucky, last season's NCAA champion, was the overwhelming choice as the nation's No. 1 basketball team today by the 35 coaches who make up the United Press rating board. The Wildcats, who opened their season with a 97-27 victory over Xavier although minus the services of seven-foot Bill Spivey Monday night, were the only team named by every coach and compiled a total of 341 points. Twenty-nine coaches ranked Kentucky first and the other six placed the Wildcats either second or third. Illinois and Kansas State each was named the top team in the country by two coaches and St. John's of Brooklyn and St. Louis university were named first by the other two coaches. Illinois, named second on 14 cards and third on seven, ranked second with 257 points. St. John's, which has cruised to three consecutive victories, ranked third with 217 points; the University of Washington was fourth with 150 points and Kansas State was fifth with 145 points. St. Louis, with 19 points; Oklahoma A&M, with 107; Kansas, with 101; North Carolina State and Wyoming with 76 each, and Indiana, with 67, followed in that order. In last week's pre-season ratings the coaches ranked Kentucky, Illinois, Washington, Oklahoma A&M, St. John's, St. Louis, North Carolina State, Kansas, Wyoming and Kansas State as the top 10. Kentucky was named first by 32 coaches and received 345 points last week. Team Points Kentucky 341 Illinois 257 St. John's 217 Washington 150 Kansas State 145 St. Louis 119 Oklahoma A&M 107 Kansas 101 North Carolina State 76 Wyoming 76 Indiana 67 New hybrid strains of quayule, the rubber-yielding shrub that grows wild in our dry southwest, produce 25 to 40 per cent more rubber than the best wild varieties available a decade ago. I WISH SOMEONE WOULD TELL HIM . . . TO SEND HIS CLOTHES TO Creighton was in the lead once 10-9, but a free throw by Bill Lienhard and fielders by Bob Kenney and Bill Hougland put Kansas ahead to stay. The Jayhawkers spurted quickly in the third quarter with Lovellette hitting a pair and Dean Kelley scoring five points to widen the Kansas margin. The pesky Creighton team, however, remained in the battle until the last eight minutes. At that point Kansas was ahead 48-40 and Bill Heyden fouled out enabling Lovellette to resume his point-making ways. New York Cleaners Kenney was KU's second highest scorer with 15 points and Kelley pumped through 13 points, Lienhard made seven and Hougland came through with five to complete the Kansas scoring. Freshman Ed Cole poured in 14 points for Creighton to lead his team's scoring attack. Heyden, who was the Bluejays' second top scorer last year, counted only once from the field and four times from the free throw line to fall below par with six points. CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY (Nationally Accredited) dearing service of a solvency professional. a spicacious profession. Doctor of Optometry degree in three years for students entering with sixty or more semester credits in specified Liberal Arts courses. REGISTRATION February 25. Students are granted professional recognition by the U.S. Department of Defense and Selective Service. Excellent clinical facilities. Athletic and recreational activities. Dormitories on the campus. CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY 1845-H Larrabee Street Chicago 14. Illinois THIS YEAR GIVE BOOKS We have a fine selection from which to choose Peter Pauper Press Poetry Viking Portables Complete Modern Library Phaidon Press Art Books Golden Books for Children Cartoon Books-New Yorker Peter Arno's Ladies and Gentlemen Lariar-Best Cartoons of the Year Album Lariar-Best Cartoons - 5 The new fiction and non-fiction Come in and see them the next time you are down town. 1021 Mass. The Book Nook Phone 666 Box Score Tropical Palm Leaves Kansas (65) | | G-GA | F-FA | PF | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Houglund | 1-7 | 3-4 | 5 | 5 | | Lienhard | 3-9 | 1-2 | 2 | 7 | | Lovellette | 8-27 | 9-11 | 3 | 25 | | Kenney | 6-10 | 3-3 | 2 | 15 | | Kelley | 6-9 | 1-1 | 2 | 13 | | Born | 0-1 | 0-0 | 1 | 0 | | Dye | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | | Heitholt | 0-3 | 0-0 | 3 | 0 | | Johnson | 0-^ | 0-1 | 1 | 0 | | Smith | 0-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | | Squires | 0-1 | 0-0 | 1 | 0 | Creighton (47) Totals ... 24-66 17-22 20 65 | | G-GA | F-FA | PF | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Lucas | 0-0 | 0-0 | 1 | 0 | | Statz | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | | Cole | 6-18 | 2-2 | 2 | 14 | | Bauer | 0-4 | 3-3 | 3 | 3 | | Komasinski | 1-3 | 0-0 | 5 | 2 | | Peterson | 0-0 | 0-0 | 1 | 1 | | Meyer | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | | Gradobille | 5-16 | 1-3 | 1 | 11 | | Tobin | 0-1 | 0-0 | 2 | 0 | | Yost | 0-6 | 1-1 | 1 | 1 | | Tuttle | 2-14 | 5-10 | 4 | 9 | | Thornton | 0-2 | 1-1 | 0 | 1 | | Mullin | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | | Heyden | 1-12 | 4-4 | 5 | 6 | Faculty Forum, 12 noon Wednesday, Faculty club. Staff and faculty invited. Totals ... 15-76 17-24 24 47 WOMEN'S INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL Tonight 7 p.m. Pi Beta Phi vs. Co-Hops Watkins vs. Delta Gamma 8 p.m. Freshman MK vs. Locksley Miller vs. Sigma Kappa 9 p.m. Chi Omega vs. Delta Delta Delta Freshman BA vs. Monchonsia FOR CHRISTMAS $10 Pipes For $2.45 Here's an expensive gift for an inexpensive price. $10 nationally advertised John Surrey pipes priced for Christmas at $2.45. Your choice of 12 styles and shapes in light or dark finished imported briar. Each pipe comes gloved, boxed, and gift wrapped. SANTA Make his gift complete. Include John Middleton's five mixes of aromatic pipe tobacco. A gift packaged variety----$1.50. George's George's Pipe Shop 727 Mass. HANNA'S A ZENITH Quality Gift to give or receive 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 Big set performance... big set engineering with Zenith's famous DialSpeaker design! What a BIG delight to give or receive this stunning radio. Has Super-Sensitive Zenith FM and Long-Distance* AM reception. Smart Roman grillle accentuates the smooth, simple Maroon plastic cabinet. FOR MOTHER'S DAY FATHER'S DAY ANNIVERSARIES WEDDINGS GRADUATIONS BIRTHDAYS ARMED FORCES MEMBERS Only $54.95 933 Mass. 25 DECEMBER HANNA'S Phone 303 ZENITH Quality in a Portable built to better the best 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 140 150 160 170 180 190 200 THE H401 Only $39.95 ... it's new and it's a honey! Performancewise and style-wise it sets a new standard for quality. Giant Dial-Speaker design ... it's powerful and it's portable. Plays on batteries or AC or DC current. In Maroon or Gray. Kansas State Historical Society Phi Gamma, Beta, ATO Keep IM Slates Clean Phi Gamma Delta, Beta Theta Pi, and Alpha Tau Omega made it two wins in as many tries in the "B" games played in Robinson gym Monday night. ATO continued its pace in dropping Phi Kappa Psi into the loss column, 21-7. ATO effectively bottled up by the Phi Psi's, trailed 7-4 at the end of the first period, and were still behind 10-13 at the half. High scorer for the two teams was Joe Compton of the Phi Psi with 9 tallies, with Fred Dunnire, Tom Braman and Bob Knichtly filling in the rest of the Phi Psi's scoring column with two each. Other scorers for ATO were Dick Astle, Pat Gorvin, John Brose, A. B. Collom with two apiece. Paced by Bob Wunsch with 7 points, and Don Wilson with 5, the ATO five went ahead in the third quarter 18-15 and were never headed. Al Wolf was high for AE Pi with 6 points followed by Al Bornstein with 4, and Clarence Winer and Herman Levikow with two scores apiece. Phi Delta Theta also made it two for two in winning over Phi Kappa Sigma, 44-19. The losers staged a fourth quarter rally but were staved off. The Beta's continued their winning ways in a romp over Alpha Epsilon Pi, 50-14. Led by Bob Dare and John Strawn, who scored 15 and 12 points respectively, the Beta's completely dominated the play from the opening whistle. High scorer for the Phil Delts was Les Wenger with 14, followed by Max Merrell with 12, Bob Ball with 6, Burwell Sheppard and Don Hess with 3 apiece, and Mike Chlafont and Dick Smith with one tally each. University Daily Kansan Page 5 Phi Kappa Tau defeated Lambda Chi Alpha 36-20. Overcoming some poor ball-handling tricks in the first quarter, the victors pulled away in a strong second quarter surge and led at the half. 15-8. Among the independents, Roger Williams defeated Battenfeld 59-20. Paced by Allen Craig, high score with 21 points, the Roger Williams quintet completely dominated Battenfeld both in play and height. High scorer for Battenfeld was Bob Stewart with 8, followed by Jim Perkins and John Maier with 4 tallies apiece. Runner-up in scoring honors for Roger Williams was Don Sarten with 16. Varsity, led by Orville Poppe with 13 and Frank Cindrich with 10, sailed over Navy 32-16. High scorer for Navy was Mark Hurt, with 6 points. AFROTC and Don Henry won over Stephenson and KHK by forfeit, 2-0. Today's Games Independent 'A' Robinson Annex Last Chance vs. Flying 5 5 p.m. Sterling-Oliver vs. Geology club Battenfeld vs. AFROTC Varsity 'A' vs. Misfits ASCE vs. AXE Rochdale vs. Twin Pines Cage Scores MIDWEST Missouri 62 Missouri Valley 49 Regis 79 Washburn 68 Youngstown 86 Alliance 29 Missouri 48 Central 35 Northwestern 80 Western N Northwestern 80 Western Michigan Punts 81 Marquette 68 Depaul 64 Minnesota 57 Kentucky 97 Xavier 72 Wayne 68 Michigan Normal 49 Iowa State 51 Drake 46 Kansas 65 Creighton 47 Tuesday, Dec. 11, 1951 Southwestern Institute 62 Loyola Southern, 60.8 Louisville 92 Georgetown 38 Tulane 51 Alabama 48 (overtime) Travel Service THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Tel. 30 8th & Mass. for that special Christmas gift see this perfect color team... KODAK PONY 828 CAMERA $3115 Inc. Fed. Tax Smart, new miniature camera that takes grand Kodachrome transparencies as well as Kodacolor and black-and-white pictures. Has f/1.4.5 Lumenized lens, flash shutter with speeds to 1/200. KODASLIDE MERIT PROJECTOR $2610 Inc. Fed. Tax Budget-priced slide projector for showing big, brilliant screenings of 2 x 2-inch color slides. Has f/3.5 lens, 150-watt lamp, new improved slide-feeding mechanism. MOSSER WOLF MOSSER-WOLF Card Deal Involving Stanky May Be Fouled By Tradebait St. Louis—(U.P.)—Eddie Stanky was expected to sign a "compromise" two-year contract today that will make him the manager of the St. Louis Cardinals and send pitcher Max Lanier and outfielder Chuck Diering to the New York Giants. Stanky, the bantam second baseman who helped the Giants win the 1951 National league pennant, was scheduled to arrive here by plane from his Mobile, Ala., home about 2 p.m. That hitch came about when Saigh said his next manager would have to work under a one-year contract while Stanky steadfastly held out for a three-year pact. He will proceed immediately to the Cardinals' office at Sportsmans' park where he will confer with Red Bird president Fred Saigh. Since the dickering for Stanky's services started about two weeks ago, there has been only one hitch. Today, however, it was expected he would compromise and accept a two-year contract. Although Giant Vice-President Charles (Chub) Feeney would not identify any of the players involved, it was learned reliably that Lanier, a BELLINGER electric appliances by NORGE SUNBEAM 35-year-old southpaw who won 11 games and lost nine last season, and Diering, a 27-year-old outfielder who batted .259 in 64 games, were to come to New York in exchange for Stanky. kitchens by YOUNGSTOWN Ph. 428 814 Mass. Your Plymouth Man . . . has a used car priced for you. Buddy GALLAGHER 634 Mass. Ph. 1000 Patronize Kansan Advertisers Schuck SCHUCK (20) New Schick"20" Only $24.50 Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER 809 Mass. - Hi-Velocity Heads * Rotary Motor Rotor * Faster, Closer, Force Charger Here it is—right at our counters. The finest shaving instrument of all time. The Schick "20"—with brand-new, beautifully balanced shape, and exclusive Schick features. Get a "20"—and get the best shave of your life! Easier Shaves LESSON IN HOW TO BE HOME instead of en route SAN FRANCISCO ORLANDO DENVER Salem, Iowa KANSAS CITY ST. LOUIS COLIO SPRINGS PUEBLO Golden Desert-Grosso Wichita TULSA San Diego Las Vegas Bristolwood Dallas City PHOTEMIX ALBUQUERQUE Ft. Sill London MICHAEL FALES Tucson Powell BOURBACH Caddisfield Arlington Los Angeles HOUSTON EL PASO WN ANTONIO TOPEKA To SAN FRANCISCO ORLANDO DEWVER Saline, Toledo KANSAS CITY COLIO SPRINGS PUERTO LA Toronto Jamaica City, City Land Bucharest ST. LOUIS MICHITA Dallas San Antonio Ganta Fe TULSA OKLA CITY PHOTONIX ALBUQUERQUE Pearland Fresno Calgary Las Vegas Medford San Angelo HOUSTON EL PASO MAN ANTIGUO DENVER 31/3 HRS. GARDEN CITY 31/4 HRS. DODGE CITY 23/4 HRS. Call your travel agent or 3-2307. Airport Ticket Office, Topeka. CONTINENTAL AIR LINES CONTINENTAL AIR LINES Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Dec. 11, 1951 Sigma Phi Epsilon Had Beginning As Virginian Saturday Night Club A Saturday night club was the basis of the organization of Sigma Phi Epsilon in November, 1901, at Richmond, Va. Today there are 108 chapters. Kansas Gamma chapter was formed at the University in 1923 from a local organization called the Acomas club. Two of the charter members were Ben Hibbs, editor of the Saturday Evening Post, and Dr. James Naismith, inventor of basketball. In 1928 the Sig Eps built a house in West Hills. This house is the present Delta Gamma house, which was vacated by the fraternity during the war. After the war the Sig Eps lived in the present Phi Kappa Tau house. They called it the "Brown Palace." While their present house at 17th and Tennessee streets was being built, the fraternity occupied temporary quarters in the basement of the Community building. They moved into their present 24-room house in 1948. The fraternity issues a quarterly periodical called the Sigma Phi Epsilon Journal for its active chapter and alumni members. The Sig Ep social calendar is highlighted in the fall by the Bowery brawl, a costume affair in the setting of the gay '90's. This fall Gamma chapter initiated Arthur E. Stoddard, president of the Union Pacific railroad, as an honorary member, to take the place of his son, Robert, who was president of the chapter before his death at Iwo Jima in 1945. Official Bulletin Arnold Air Society, Wednesday 000 KU Mountaineering club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 402 Lindley, showing tides of Thanksgiving outing. Tau Sigma, 7:15 tonight, Robinson ym HAJAS meeting, 8 p.m. Wednesday, 105 Military Science. All basic Air BOTC invited. Miss Clayton was graduated from the University in 1949 and is now employed in the business office of the University Daily Kansan. Mr. Mrkonic is an education junior and a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity. FACTS meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 210 Fraser. All members urged to attend. KuKu club, 7:15 p.m. Thursday, Pine room. Pledges 7 p.m. Attendance required. Fencing club, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Robinson Gym. Student Religious council, 4 today. Ayers hall. Important. Graduate students meet 8 p.m. Dance Union Dance Dance-Wife-Mite, to follow Mr. and Carl B. Amyx, Lawrence, announce the engagement of Mrs. Amyx' sister, Ruth Clayton, to George Ralph Mrkonic, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marion Mrkonic, McKeesport. Pa. Clayton-Mrkonic Engagement Told Upstream Society sponsored dinner at the Community Building, 6.am. Friday, panel discussion on The Challenge of Asia." Call 3691 or reservations. Freshawk meeting, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday. 9 Strong hall. Attendance required. Dr. and Mrs. Carroll Paul Hungate, Kansas City, Mo., announce the marriage of their daughter, Mary Agnes, to R. Kenneth Grubb, son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond K. Grubb, Independence, Dec. 8. Mary Agnes Hungate Weds Kenneth Grubb Mathematics lectures, 5 p.m. Friday, 203 Strong; 5 p.m. Saturday, 03 Strong; and 5 p.m. Monday, 203 Strong. Sasnak Christmas party, 7:15 Wednesday, Robinson gym. Games nd refreshments. Members only. night club, 7:30 tonight, sign hall, club. Radio players, 5 p.m. Thursday FKU not Wednesday at 4:30. Mr. and Mrs. Grubb were graduated from the University in June, 1951. Mrs. Grubb is a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority and Mr. Grubb's fraternity is Sigma Nu. No date has been set for the wedding. Rehearsal of German Christmas Choir, 5 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, 306 Fraser. Everybody wanting to sing German carols invited. - Deutscher Verein, Gesangsprobe Millwoch Donnerstag 5 p.m. Fraser 302. Chess club, 7.15 p.m. Wednesday, 11 Strong, 6 round of tournament. invited. Woman's Rifle club, 5 today, Pine room, Union. All interested women El Ateneo se reuniria el miercoles a las siete y media de la noche 113 Strong hall. Un programs de Navidad. Jay Janes, 5 p.m. Wednesday, Pine room, Union. Make this Christmas Well Remembered, Give GRUEN Let your gift be a constant reminder of your thoughtfulness. Fed Tax Incl. Curvex CHARM $6750 Veri-Thin ARCHER $3975 Jewelry Roberts Gifts 833 Mass. WEAVERS for everything under the tree ... to her 901 Mass. flatter her with a box of Claussner nylons Knit of finest twisted yarns, they're filmy sheer and snag resistant . . . personalized proportions, of course. 1.50 to 1.95 Weaver's Hosiery — Main Floor your gift from Weaver's means more . . . to her Practical Gift Ideas For Christmas - Sheaffer Pens and Pencils - Eaton Stationery - Desk Accessories - Buxton Billfolds - Leathercraft Briefcases - Artist Supplies Carter's Stationary 1025 Mass. No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money. The gift that never, never disappoints Parker "51" NEW Parker "51" PEN NAME FOR THE PERFECT GIFT NEW "21" A pen unsurpassed for style and Magnificent "51" Pen and Pencil set. Plathemium-tipped 14K gold point, special ink flow meter assure flawless writing. 8 colors. Pen $13.50 Set $19.75 NEW "51" Special Miracle smooth-writing point. Metered ink flow. 4 colors. Pen $10.00 Set $15.00 NEW "21" A pen unsurpassed for style and precision under $10.00! Pen $5.00 Set $8.75 THE FLIGHTER Designed for men in business or service. "51" Pen, and matching pencil, in silvery Lustraloy. Pen $19.75 Set $29.75 Parker "51" STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE - Kansas State Historical Society YOUR EYES EYE should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. Lawrence Optical Co. Phone 425 1025 Mass. Patronize Kansan Advertisers EUROPE 1952 Low-cost transportation and tours to Europe for 1952 are rapidly being booked to capacity. It is imperative to make your reservations now for choice accommodations. Downs offers a complete selection of SITA tours (Student International Travel Association) ranging from $500. These trips vary from the Spartan bicycle tours to the Grand Tours at $1800. Special individual program offered this year for those who wish to live with selected families in France, England, Germany or Switzerland. Rates from $550. A few study tours carrying university credit are offered from $550 to $850. See the Olympic Games at Helsinki, Finland. Special extension, $150. FREE DESCRIPTIVE FOLDER ON EUROPE Travel available upon request No Obligation. Phone 3661 for all your travel needs open evenings 6:30 p.m.-9:00 p.m. No Booking Fees. downs travel service 1015% massachusetts st. lawrence, kansas West 14th Street Closed Near Campus The part of West 14th street which leads onto the University campus has been closed for several days, announced James Wigglesworth, Lawrence city manager. Contractors working on the new dormitories on Alfmii Place have to lay some steam pipe in the area and the work necessitated the closure of the street. It is expected that the work will be completed within a few days. 2 KU Debaters Awarded Trophy William Crews and Richard Sheldon, College sophomores, brought home a second place trophy in the junior division of the Southwestern college debate tournament Dec. 8. The team went through six rounds of debate before being defeated in the finals by Seminole, Okla. junior college. Crews also received a certificate for over all superior speaker rating in the tournament. Hubert Bell, College freshman, and George Stoepeelwerth, engineering freshman, won four of five rounds of debate in the tournament. Lee Baird, College freshman, received a citation for speaking in the oratory section of the tournament. The Southwestern college tournament is a qualifying contest for participants in the annual West Point debate tournament, West Point, N.Y. Rifle Club Will Elect A special meeting of the Women's Rifle club will be held at 5 p.m. today in the Pine room of the Union, Union. The group, directed by Master Sgt Harold Swartwood, will elect officers and vote on membership in the National Rifle association. Those present could become charter members of the KU chapter. All University women who are interested in target shooting are encouraged to attend. Special knowledge or experience with weapons is not necessary as instructions will be given by Sgt. Swartwood The club will have postal matches with colleges throughout the nation from now until May. Matches this past week were with the University of Hawaii; Ohio university, Ohio State; College, Galesburg, Ohio; Ohio State; Bora will not be known for several days. High scores this past week were fired by Martha Combs, 99; Jappy Rau, 98; Constance Hyre, 97; Barbara Brown, 97; Emmalou Burbank, 94; and Donna McCall, 92. STARTS TODAY 3 DAYS ONLY THE REALLY BIG MUSICAL EVENT OF THE YEAR! A TECHNICOLOR DRAMA OF SONG and LOVE ! WITH YOUR "BE MY LOVE" STAR MARIO LANZA ANN BLYTH In the banquet preceding the Military Ball Friday, Gen. Hutchison said that the Korean war is only a "foretaste of what World War III is apt to be like." The general said that though the Air Force does not claim it can win a war singlehandedly, no country can win another world conflict without winning the air war. ADULTS 60c ANYTIME Because we consider materials expendable rather than men, we must counterbalance Russian manpower with technical skill and productive genius in the event of World War III, according to Brig. Gen. David W. Hutchison, commanding general of the 21st Air division, Forbes Air Force base, Topeka. Dorothy KIRSTEN Jarmila NOVOTNA Blanche THEBOM General Speaks At Banquet 2 PERFORMANCES DAILY AT 7 and 9:04 OPEN 6:45 p.m. --- FEATURES: 7:15 and 9:19 New PATEE PHONE 321 Classified Ads He brought out this and other facts in his speech to approximately 60 cadets of the Arnold Air society and HAJAS, their dates, and members of the ROTC staff and their wives. CARUSO "Individual survival is necessary for national survival," the general told his audience. "Because of that, he said, 'doctors are even now working on new medicines to combat high altitude sickness." Phone K.U.376 Classified Advertising Rate Sponsored By The American Association of University Women SET OF FIRST Flight custom made gold irons 2 to 9 insure. One year old, reasonably priced. See at 1140 Louisiana, third floor, or call 36858, evenings. 11 TUXEDO FOR SALE Clearned and in ex- tention 35-27. Landlady. Phone 3566. 12-6 REGISTERED male German shepherd pups, 3 months old. Phone 3602. 11 X-ACTO PEN KNIFE! The perfect utility knife for artwork, models retouching, stripping, etching, and photography. See them at Your Student Union Book Store. CHILDREN 25c ANYTIME One day ..50c Additional words ... workers are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in by a registered representative (e.g. cepted Saturday) or brought to the University. Daily Kansan Business office. Journals may be accepted 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. NOTE CREPE PAPER FOR ALL OCCASIONS! Both regular and flame proof crepe paper in all colors. Available at your Student Union Book Store. 14 FOR SALE UXT COXAT, 40L; tux pants 33-34; white dinner jacket 42L, Call Ken Philo 302l, 89 Three days Five days 75c $1.00 2c 2c 25 words or less ... 50c Additional words ... 1c Speaking to the cadets, the general said that the Air Force is not operating to its "full potential" in Korea. But, he said, strategic Air Force operations would be used in good effect in all-out战. "There are unlimited opportunities and careers in many fields of the Air Force," General Hutchison said. "And the members of the Air Force ROTC are in position to choose one of these fields with an unlimited future." Tuesday, Dec. 11, 1951 KU RECORD ALBUM! Hear the A Cappella Choir, Nine Glee Club, and Band non-breakable RCA Victor records. Now at your Student Union Book Store. A GIFT THEY'LL ENJOY HAVING! Give a brief bag or case for Christmas. See the wide selection at the Student Union Book Store. 14 FINE ART REPRODUCTIONS! We now have a wide selection of reproductions of famous paintings in full color. Student Union Book Store. 14 PHARMACY STUDENTS! New edition of Mill's "State Board Questions" and swers' is now available at the Student Union Book Store. 14 MISCELLANEOUS JERRY-me meet tonight at 8 p.m. in the Pink Elephant. Bill. 11 ALL PERSONS desiring to dispose of used or second-hand tape records please write to University Dally Kansan, box No. 1. NEEDED, a ride from Kansas City to Lawrence and back daily, starting after Christmas vacation. Will help on ex-tenants. Leave message at Daily Kansan U 376. AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether on business or recreational. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3611, Downs Traffice, Service, 1015 Mass. Ask us about family rates, skoy coach and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book your boat and cruise this summer. Call Miss Glesseman at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30-. FOR RENT ONLY CLEAN ROOM for boys. Close to OU versity and bus line. 1817 HI versity and bus line. 1817 HI CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. tf TYPING: Themes, term papers, and mimeograph work. Accurate service by business Leaders of America typing pool. Contact Annellese Schilmer phone 534. iff BUSINESS SERVICE STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. **tt** GRYSTAL STAAL SERVES choice steaks, pastries, ice cream and cakes. Free parking near store. TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these tesis paper. M. Shields. 1209 Ohio. Perf. 1601. TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses- prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs. Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: term papers, note books, theses, medical and biologi- tical journals, miscellaneous. Mrs. E. R. Roscoe, 838 Lau. Apt. 4. upstairs. P. 2715J after p. 4 morn. RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment, enabling fast, efficient service. Bowman Back and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. tf TYPING: Experience in theses, term papers, miscellaneous typing, and stenil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. tf Charles Dickens' Joyous Classic . . The Holiday Picture Of All Time! —STARTS THURSDAY— Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS CHRISTMAS CAROL" Alastair Sim As 'Scrooge' A New Screen Triumph ADMISSION CHILD 14c ADULT 60c Shows Thurs - Fri. 2:30 7:00 9:00 2:30 - 7:00 - 9:00 University Daily Kansan Continuous Sat. 1 p.m. on Page 7 LOST JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk pet shop. We have everything in the pet store; we are our business. Our one-stop pet shop, has fur, fin, and feathers. Gaint's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. t Air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. til midnight. Crystal Cave. 690 Vt. t/f LOST, STRAYED, or stolen from Chemical Engineering department. Lindley, arranged in set in brown wooden case. Any information appraised. Call KU 286. Comfort! Convenience! JAWHAYER NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS AIR CLEAR PLASTIC framed glass-under please leave at Western Civilization office in Strong annex or call 3694R stanley H. Dial. MAN'S WRIST WATCH, white metal band, round, on path from Union t. Snow hall, Dec. 10. Cheng Liang, KI phone 515. NOW • John Payne Rhonda Fleming "Crosswinds" Shows At 2:30-7-9 Late News - Cartoon VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD LAST TIMES TONITE Open 6:45 p.m. "ONE FOOT IN HEAVEN" WED. - THURS. Fine Arts Presentation VALLI in Feature At 7:15 - 9:15 "Two Orphans" (Le Due Orfanelle) NOW! ENDS WEDNESDAY ADVENTURE PACKED! ANNE OF THE INDIES Color by TECHNICOEOR JEAN LOUIS DEBRA PETERS JOURDAN PAGET Matinee 2:30-Open 2 p.m. Evening 7 and 9-Open 6:45 Features: 3:14-7:30-9:35 ADDED: CARTOON NEWS Starts Thursday _Fred Eleanor MacMURRAY · PARKER Side-Splitting Romantic Comedy! A MILLIONAIRE For CHRISTY Continuous Shows Saturday And Sunday From 1 p.m. Granada University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Dec. 11, 1951 Clerks' Schoo To Be Held In January Dates for the third annual County Clerks' school at the University will be January 16-17, it was announced today by Dr. Ethan P. Allen, director of the KU Bureau of Government Research. The dates and program topics were determined by a committee from the County Clerks' association meeting with members of the University bureau. The school has been set for the two days immediately following the assessment school conducted by the state commission of revenue and taxation in Topeka. The election laws, relationship between clerkes and other county officials, public speaking, budgeting and finance, and office supervision will be the subjects on the program. The faculty will be drawn from the University staff and outstanding off-campus authorities, Dr. Allen said. Dr. Ernest Scharrer, an anatomist from the University of Colorado, will deliver a public lecture Thursday at the University, speaking on "The Brain's Blood Supply." He will address a dinner meeting of the medical seminar on "Neuro-Secretions" that evening in the Union. Colorado Doctor To Lecture Here Dr. Scharrier recently discovered that certain secretions, long thought by anatomists to be passed from the nervous portion of the pituitary gland do, in reality, come from nearby brain cells. Dr. Scharrer, who holds both M.D. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Freiburg, Germany, will lecture in Strong auditorium at 11 am. The speaker will be the guest of Dr. Paul Roofe, head of the KU anatomy department, and Mrs. Roofe for a 3-day stay here. Engineers Hear Dr. John Ise Struggle of the world's lower income groups for a better life is one of the reasons for the present world unrest, Dr. John Ise, professor of economics, said at a recent initiation banquet of Pi Tau Sigma, national honorary mechanical engineering fraternity. He said that upsurge of minority groups everywhere and a universal revolt against all imperialism are additional reasons for world unrest. During the evening Charles Stephens, George Christopher, Paul Randall, Anthony Tiliacos, all engineering seniors, and Donald Creighton and Arthur Holmberg, engineering juniors, were honored as new members of the organization. Page 8 He said a realistic view recognizing the causes of the world trouble and support of real democracies abroad were the answers to the problem. "Suppression of world insurgence force is an impossible solution." By ars. "We should not support reactionary or fascist governments simply because they promise to fight communism," Dr. Ise said. Bull Session Held Weekly At Union An informal "bull" session which gives students an opportunity to meet other students, let off steam, or just ask questions in general meets at 7 p.m. every Saturday in the Music room of the Union. There are no set topics, students may leave at any time or discuss any subject they desire. Several foreign students recently discussed the degree of conformity in American universities compared with that of European universities. Other topics which have been "aired" are MacArthur's dismissal and Greeks vs. Independents. Long And Short Of It News Roundup McGrath Latest Witness In Fast Moving Scandal Washington—U.P.)—House tax investigators called Attorney General J. Howard McGrath to testify today amid speculation he soon may quit or be fired. As McGrath was called to testify today in the tax inquiry, there were these other developments in the fast-moving investigation by a House Ways and Means subcommittee: 1. Sen. Richard M. Nixon (R.-Calif.) demanded that Mr. Truman fire both McGrath and Secretary of Treasury John W. Snyder because of the tax scandals. 2. Sen. John_J. Williams (R.-Del.) said in a radio interview that Internal Revenue bureau employees dismissed from office for misconduct should either be tried or exonerated. He seconded Nixon's demand that Mr. Truman fire McGrath or Snyder or both. 3. Subcommittee Counsel Adrian W. DeWind said the group may investigate employers who have failed to turn in to the government some $96,600,000 in withholding taxes deducted from workers' pay-checks Big 4 Agree To Disarmament Talk Paris—(U.P.)—The Big Four powers announced today that they have agreed to discuss outlawing the atomic bomb and general disarmament in a new 12-nation United Nations commission. The U.S., Britain, France and Russia disclosed the agreement in a communique summarizing the failure otherwise of their 10-day effort to reconcile divergent East-West views in closed conferences here. Reject Exchange Of Prisoner Offer Panmunjom, Korea—(U.P.) —The Communists rejected today a United Nations proposal for a man-for-man exchange of war prisoners during a Korean armistice. They also refused to disclose the location of their prison camps or permit international Red Cross representatives to visit them unless the Allies agree to free all 120,000 Red prisoners during the truce. Kansas Railroads Seek Rate Increase The Reds at the same time took back an offer made only a few hours earlier to permit the American troop rotation program to continue if the Allies agreed to "neutral" policing of the Armistice. Topeka, Kan.-A request for a general six per cent increase in interstate freight rates by railroads operating in Kansas was under consideration today by the Kansas Corporation commission. J. P. McDonald, general auditor for the Santa Fe, testified Monday before the commission that earnings of the railroad were not as large as some other carriers. Red Threat To Far East Is Reduced Honolulu—(U.P.)—Vice-President Alben W. Barkley believes the chances that the Communists will seize any substantial part of the Far East are "considerably less" now than a year ago. Barkley, who arrived here after a tour of U.S. military installations in Korea and Japan, told a press conference Monday that Communism has been retarded because of the "terrific shellacking" United Nations forces have given the Reds in Korea. West Coast Bank In Legal Battle Washington—(U.P.)—Trans-America Corp. lawyers set out to prove today that the anti-trust case against the West Coast banking giant has not shown any illegal curbing of rival banks. They were prepared to cite a series of court decisions in an effort to convince the Federal Reserve board that buying out the opposition does not constitute restraint of competition and is not monopolistic. IS Russia Socialist? What Is Stalinism? Get acquainted with the socialist analysis of Stalinism—read; LEON TROTSKY: The Revolution Betrayed $1.50 Stalinism and Bolshevism $0.15 Is Russia a Socialist Community? a debate: Earl Browder (affirmative) Max Shachtman (negative) Anvil and Student Partisan Available Again. ORDER FROM THE SOCIALIST STUDY CLUB 1539 Tennessee Telephone 3691 Worthal says: "L.M.O.C. No. 9 will go on sale this Thursday, and I predict a sellout. Get a couple of copies early-and avoid the rush. Send them to your friends and your folks-they will get a large charge out of reading of my adventures here off and on the KU campus. Your dear old grandmother will probably rip her knitting when she looks at this book!" L. M.O.C.No.9 GOES ON SALE THIS THURSDAY UNION BUILDING — FRASER INFORMATION BOOTH FRANK STRONG ROTUNDA "LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS" Ninth Edition 49th U AT A half- vespe 6:45 lonn AS Se Fl show will ciety 7 p. Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks. The classroom was packed to the brim. Students were seated in rows, holding books and papers. The teacher, Mrs. Smith, stood at the front, addressing the class. The atmosphere was tense as students focused on the lecture. THE UNIVERSITY CHORUS, comprised of 180 voices, is shown rehearsing for "The Christmas Oratorio," by J. S. Bach, to be sung at 8 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium. The oratorio will be directed by Clayton Krehbiel, instructor of music education, and accompanied by Stanford Lehmberg, organist, and Barbara Thompson and Donna Hobein, pianists. Photo by Al Marshall. UNIVERSITY DAILY 49th Year No. 61 Wednesday, Dec. 12, 1951 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Annual Christmas Vespers To Be Presented Sunday More than 200 persons and all departments of the University School of Fine Arts will work together Sunday on the All-Musical Christmas vespers with tableaux. A new feature this year will be half-hour carillon recitals before the vespers to be played at 2:45 and 6:45 p.m. by Ronald Barnes, carilonneur. The traditional Christmas observance again will be given twice, at 4 and 7.30 p.m. in Hoch auditorium. The event is probably the most beautiful and impressive of the en-school year, and brings the largest audience of any indoor campus event. Attendance at the vapers, which are open to the public ASCETo Nominate See Flood Pictures Flood control movies will be shown and nomination of officers will take place at the American Society of Civil Engineers meeting at 7 p.m. today in 101 Snow hall. The Army Engineer corps will have representatives at the meeting who will show special flood control pictures and discuss problems related to flood control. The representatives will also outline job opportunities in their particular fields In addition, the society will nominate officers for next year. Officers are elected for a period of January to December instead of the usual September to June term. Setting the spirit for the occasion will be a double brass quartet who will play carols from the balcony of Hoch auditorium as the audience assembles for the programs. Cornet players are Victor Weber, Donald Macaulay, James Gleason and Barry Green. Trombone players are Karl Abbott, Al Long, Bill Hawes and Keith Carter. The A Cappella choir, symphony orchestra and a mixed glee club will be the principal musical organizations. without charge, has been more than 7,000 in some years. The 103-voice A Cappella choir under the direction of Donald M. Swarthout, professor of piano, will sing four numbers. Soloists for the choir's singing "The Shepherd Had An Angel" will be Phyllis McFarland, soprano, and Robert Snow, cor anglais obbligato. Soloists for "The Shepherd's Story" will be Richard Wright, tenor; Dale Moore, baritone; Patricia Means, soprano. The KU Symphony orchestra, directed by Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra, will play the Pastorale Symphony from Handel's "Messiah." ders necessities. Three tableaux prepared by Robert Green, assistant professor of drawing and painting, and Ray Ot- Steering Committee Terms Campus Chest A Success The 1951 Campus Chest drive was termed a success by the chest steering committee Tuesday. The committee met in the Union to prepare a report of the drive which will be submitted to the All Student Council. recent yeals, and short of our goal of $2,500." Loy Kirkpatrick, chairman of the drive, said. "But it may be that we set our sights too high." He pointed out that Kansas State set its 1951 goal at $1,500. The biggest weakness of the drive, he said, was the lack of good organization in soliciting unorganized students. "This is a problem next year's best committee will have to work out" he added. Council. The campaign raised $1,754.10 more than any other chest drive in recent years, it was reported. Other weaknesses and suggestions for improving the 1952 campaign were mentioned and are to be included in the committee's report to the ASC. tinger, assistant professor of design will be given. Subjects include "The Carolers," portrayed by Jane Klooz, John Edward Riederer, James Irwin, and Walter Anderson. Seen in "The Angel and the Shepherd" will be Donna Francis, and Phil Palmer. "The Madonna" will feature Anne Jordan MacDougall. Lawrence Community Chest, $473.63; WSSF, $473.63; YMCA, $245.56; CARE, $140.32; American Heart association, $35.08, and American Cancer fund, $35.08. Daily Kansan, $43.70; Allen Press, $36; University Press, $10, and the cost of the thermometer, $25. The total is $114.70, which leaves $60.70 more to be added to the permanent reserve. Agencies which immediately benefited from the drive are: A total of $175.40 was held in permanent reserve and the same amount was set aside by the ASC constitution for administrative expenses. During the showing of the tableaux the choral ensemble, led by Clayton Krehbiel, instructor in music education, will sing carols. Members of the choral ensemble are sopranos: Helen Lou Fry, Ramona Goering, Norma Bradley, and Maxine Ratzlaff. Altos: Delores Stritesky, Roberta Underwood, Christine Wiley, and Carol Swanson. Tenors: Faustin Robles, Lyle Middleton, Kent Bowden, and David Edwards. Basses: David Conley, William Krehbiel, Donald Pringle, Max Valentine, and Frank McCollum. The approximate expenses (several of the bills at present unpaid) are: The afternoon vespers will be broadcast over KFKU. University radio station, at 1250 on the dial, from 4 to 5 p.m. Sunday. From the reserve fund, money may be allotted by ASC action to other welfare organizations not in the chest, such as the Red Cross and Tuberculosis fund. Upstream Dinner To Include Forum Three faculty members of the University will take part in a panel discussion on Asia at a dinner sponsored by Upstream, a humanities and political magazine, at 6 p.m. Friday in the Community building. George Beckmann, instructor in history, Amiya Khakravery, visiting professor of humanities, and Walter Kollmorgen, professor of geography, will discuss "the challenge of Asia." Moderator will be Mohamed Ahmed, graduate student from India. Tickets for the dinner may be purchased for $1 from any member of the staff of Upstream or reservations may be made by calling Dan Gallin at 3691. Tickets will also be on sale today in the Union and Friday at the dinner. More Senior Rings To Arrive This Week Between 50 and 75 rings with the letters "BS" (bachelor of science) will arrive sometime this week. A senior may pick up his ring at the same time he pays for it, if the office has the correct size. Men's rings cost $33.00 and women's rings $25.80. Twenty-seven class rings are available at the business office in Strong hall for seniors who will receive the bachelor of arts degree in 1952. University Chorus To Give Bach's 'Oratorio' Tonight --- Lecture Series Will Feature Italian Expert An innovation in the Humanities Lecture series beginning Feb. 12 will be a two weeks visit at the University by Prof. Giuseppe Antonio Borgese of the University of Chicago. Previous lecture series have consisted of several three-day visits by prominent scholars and critics. Dr. Borgese is one of the foremost authorities in the field of Italian literature. He has also gained fame for his literary achievements and for his resistance to facism. Dr. Borgese will give three evening lectures on Dante in Fraser theater. He will also make other informal appearances and will schedule talks to students individually and in small groups. Dr. Borges's general topic will be an "Introduction to Dante." The three lectures, on March 11, 13 and 18 are to be entitled "Character and Culture," "Dante and his Society," and "Dante and his Poem." Opening lecture in the series will be Feb. 12, 1952 by Professor W. H Shoemaker, chairman of the romance languages department at KU He will speak on "The Generation of '98." On February 26, Professor Gilbert Highet, a member of the classics department of Columbia university, will speak on "The Migration Of Ideas." Concluding the lecture series will be a talk by Professor George Boas, department of philosophy at Johns Hopkins university who will speak on "The Problem of the Arts." Announcements of the schedules of the individual visitors for the 1952 series will be made well in advance of their arrival. UDK Will Announce Proficiency Results Students who passed the English proficiency examination given Dec. 8 will find their names listed in the Daily Kansan after Christmas vacation, Mrs. Natalie Calderwood, assistant professor of English, said today. The Kansan will also publish the names of students who did superior work on the test, in the opinion of the examiners. Those who did not pass will receive notices to try again from the deans of their respective schools. No papers will be returned, but students will be allowed to look at their papers, at a time and place to be determined later. --- "The Christmas Oratorio" by J. S. Bach will be presented in Hoch-audio- tarium at 8 p.m. today by the Uni- versity chorus. Under the direction of Clayton Krehbiel, instructor of music education, the group will sing portions of each of the six cantatas which make up the work. With the exception of the second part, each begins with a chorus number and concludes with a chorale. The chorales are hymns which were arranged by Bach for presentation in his church in Leipzig during the festival of Christmas in 1734. The tenor recitativeis in the oratorio are narrative passages of scripture which tell the story of the birth of Jesus. They will be sung by Richard Wright, fine arts junior. Among the chorales is the Bach arrangement of "Break Forth, O Beauteous, Heavenly Light." Other soloists will sing arias during the program. The soloists are Phyllis McFarland, soprano; Althea Owen, alto, and Maurice Casey, bass. Accompanists for the oratorio are Stanford Lehmberg, organist, and Barbara Thompson and Donna Hobein, pianists. This is the first formal concert by the University chorus since it was organized this fall. Harvard Offers Business Grants The fourth annual nationwide competition for the regional financial awards to the Harvard Business School has been announced by Dean Donald K. David, of the school. Admission to the Harvard school is open to any graduate man student who shows promise of developing business leadership. No specific course of college studies is required. Awards under the financial aid program provide a maximum of $2,600 for a married student and $2,000 for a single student. Similar aid will be available for the second year of study to those whose work has been satisfactory. The assistance is given to students who meet the usual requirements for admission to the school and who demonstrate financial need and ability to profit from the two-year business program. Of the total two-year award, $1,500 will be borrowed from the Student Loan fund. The remainder will be in the form of an advance-in-aid, which the student has no legal obligation to repay. The deadline for applications to the Committee on Student Financial Aid at the Harvard Business school is May 1, 1952. Requests for further information and for application blanks should be addressed to the Director of Student Financial Aid, Harvard Business school, Boston 63, Mass. Dr. Karl Menninger, Rabbi Richmond To Speak In Panel Discussion Here "The Role of Faith in Our World of Transition" will be the topic of a panel discussion to be held at 8 p.m. Thursday in Strong auditorium. A. K. BROWN DR. KARL MENNINGER The panel will be sponsored by the B'nal B'rith Hillel foundation at the University. Dr. Karl Menninger of Topea, world-famous psychiatrist and director of the Menninger foundation, and Rabbi R. Richmond of Temple Emanu-El, Wichita, will be the speakers from off the campus. Dr. Amiya Chakravarvarty, visiting professor from India and literary secretary to the late Sir Rabindranath Tagore, and Dr. A. W. Davidson, assistant dean of the graduate school, complete the panel. Dean Davidson will be moderator. "The question of faith is the crucial one of our time and we urge students and the public to hear it discussed by our distinguished panel speakers," Rose Weitnzer, Hillel president, said. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 12, 1951 by Bibler Kansan Editorials The Iowa State Daily On Brotherhood Editor's Note: The following article is a condensation of the views of the editor of the Iowa State Daily concerning an issue of growing import all over the nation—discrimination within fraternal groups. Thursday's Daily Kansan editorial page will carry a similar condensation of campus opinion at Iowa State concerning the student paper's campaign. —A.G.M. The editor of the Iowa State Daily has raised quite an issue with a campaign he is conducting on the Cyclone campus. It concerns the meaning of brotherhood as defined by fraternal groups. "Brotherhood is the foundation of democracy," writes the editor. He then cites the action of four Daily Hansan News Room Student Newspaper of the Adv. Room K.U. 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS K.U. 376 Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., and the Associated Collegate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York City. EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-In-Chief Alan Marshall Editorial Associate Anne Snow NEWS STAFF Managing Editor Charles Price Assistant Managing Editors Nancy Anderson Benjamin Holman, Lee Sheppeard, Ellsworth Zahm City Editor Paul Taylor Sports Editor Charles Burch Telegraph Editor Don Burton Socially Editor Katharine Wertz News Advisor Victor J. Daniel "These four Greek letter societies," the Daily continues, "insisted that the word 'fraternity' meant 'brotherhood,' and that brotherhood is the basis of democracy. They wanted to put the real meaning of 'brotherhood' into daily practice." BUSINESS STAFF **Business Manager** ... Bob Sydney **Advertising Manager** ... Dorothy Hedrick **Assistant Adv. Manager** ... Dick Hale **National Sales Manager** ... Bill Magan **Circulation Agent** ... Elaine Bluemuck **Promotion Manager** ... Ted Barbera **Business Adviser** ... R. W. Doores Greek letter societies at the University of Connecticut who withdrew from their national chapters in October because by-laws contained clauses discriminating against minority groups. He points out that this is not the first indication that organized groups are dissatisfied with rules that are out-dated. It was in 1946 that an Amherst college fraternity pledged a Negro, directly violating its national laws, and at the same time creating a mild national sensation. The president of Amherst followed up the action with a decree that all campus societies must abolish bias in their by-laws by the end of 1951. These and other actions the editor interprets in the following manner; "This action by fraternal groups to shed the ugly cloak of custom and independently defy their national headquarters is certainly a step forward. It paves the way for other progressive groups who feel what was good for their grandfathers isn't good enough for them." A few days later he follows with some definite suggestions. "It would be well . . . to investigate rather promptly the passage of a similar order at Iowa State. The requirement would give the organizations with such clauses five years to (1) remove any discriminatory clauses, (2) disaffiliate with the national organization, or (3) close up the individual houses. "There is no possible defense for the vicious discriminatory clauses limiting membership to Caucasians or Protestants—or for unwritten quotas and taboos on certain groups." Letters To The Editor Is This Examination Really Necessary? Dear Editor: The reason for the three hour session on a Saturday afternoon—making certain that this worthy project is not given on valuable school time —is because students are prone to slip back into bad writing habits. Here's the 1951 gripe against an English proficiency exam given each semester to students enrolled in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the School of Education, and the School of Journalism. But nowhere is an explanation to be found as to why the three schools already mentioned were singled out for this test "necessary for graduation." "I can't see why, after four semesters of English, they expect one three-hour exam to renew all the rules of grammar you're supposed to have picked up," one sweating student remarked after last Saturday's experience. The Machine Age Dear Editor: I would like to congratulate the administration for having the electric hand-driers installed in the rest rooms in Strong hall. They are the happiest things! Just wash your hands and face, drip across the room to the tidy little machines, push the button, get down on your knees, massage your face gently, and in ten or fifteen minutes you hands and face are as dry as can be—expected. The towel is indeed outdated by this wonderful little machine, even though it is a trifle more work to shine shoes, patch razor nicks, and use as an emergency handkerchief. Bud Thomas Engineering Junior. Editor's Note: You'll pardon us, Mr. Thomas, for changing your original wording a bit. Still another wondered why the university was so concerned about his writing a "letter to the editor" in a style that would reflect favorably on his KU education. He was looking forward to a test in good eating habits, the proper mode of dress for a Jayhawk graduate, and good posture. My concern is because an educational background in literature and English impressed upon me the necessity for allowing a paper to "jell," at least overnight. This, we learned, is a common practice for even the most proficient writer. It's surprising how many mistakes can be found in a paper the next morning. At least when it's your own. . And if you wait two mornings, you might discard the whole deal as a bad example of your writing prowess. A water color of a down town street scene by William Hayward, engineering senior, simply titled "Downtown" won first prize in the National Scarab Traveling Sketch exhibit. The award was made at Washington State college. Hayward said the painting was on tour and he did not know when it would reach the University. Engineering Senior Wins Art Award But here's a situation where Scarab, honorary architecture society, annually awards $25 to the winner of the contest. you're told to write two papers on subjects dreamed up by a staff of English instructors. You're given three hours and a roomful of people to keep you company—one of whom is you know who . . . Gee, wonder if I passed? The Poor Gal! Don Sarten Journalism Junior Don Sarten Dear Editor: We of the student body are certainly grateful for Miss Miller's keen observation of the happenings after the freshman-varsity basketball game. Imagine the shock that must have staggered the entire campus as a consequence of her exclusive and profound disclosures. Those terrible and dirty seniors. Something must be done. I sincerely hope that Miss Miller is able to retain her office after her latest expose, as her obvious innocence is a rare attribute for today's office holder, especially of a sophomore stature. A letter like hers from a freshman, maybe, but from a sophomore? Is it possible? Or maybe the results of Friday's contests weren't so untrue. As for the "among the living" sophomores, it looks like some of them haven't even been born. Dick Martindell College Senior Little Man On Campus Mail subscription: $5 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. KU DIDLER J. DOLBY XHUAN "These discussions concerning university policy get rather violent at times!" The Missouri Soup Pot The political soup pot in Missouri is beginning to boil far ahead of schedule. Both the Democrats and the Republicans have staged huge statewide rallies a full year in advance of election time. First the Republicans-sponsored the Kem-Kirksen powwow in Kansas City, then the Democrats followed up with a fund-raising affair in St. Louis. By the time the Jackson day and Lincoln day banquets roll around at the first of next year, the big political kettle will be throwing off more steam than is usually generated until late summerm. While there are several reasons for this, two stand out in great importance than the others. One is that Missouri is President Truman's home state. The other is that the Republicans are growing more confident of victory each day. The biggest question is what Mr. Truman is going to do.Although the state is strongly tied to the rebellious South,state loyalty gives the President heavy support. This is true even now when his position nationally is shaky. Furthermore, state leaders realize that having the Truman name at the head of the ticket in Missouri would strengthen it. They are losing no chances to whoop up party spirit in hopes of luring him once again into the role of party standard bearer. The Republicans showed their new confidence when their legislative leaders warned the opposition about trying to jam through any congressional redistricting bill. If that is done, they say they will call for a referendum on the issue. That would mean that in 1952 all congressional candidates would be forced to run at large. The bill turned out by the state senate gives the GOP two sure districts of Missouri's 11. The house measure provides them with three. But the view of the minority leaders in the legislature is that it would be better to shoot the works and perhaps win all or a majority than to meekly accept a token gift. Also, if the state is not redistricted at this time the problem be passed on to the next session of the legislature. If the Republicans are correct in their judgment of the state's political temperature, they will be the ones running things around the capital. Then they would be in a good position to bring about their solution to the question. Since Missouri is normally Democratic, this attitude can mean only that Republican bigwigs are hoping for a trend against both the state and the national administration. The talk at recent party gatherings supports this belief. It is generally believed that an intelligent campaign based on exposure of tolerated corruption and legislative inaction in Washington and Jefferson City alike will bring about the defeat of the New Deal-Fair Deal dynasty. So at this point, almost 12 months in advance of the election, it appears that Missouri voters are in for a generous serving of hot political soup all next year. —Joe Taylor. News From Other Campuses Union Becomes News Center wife copy from the AP teletype machine is now being posted daily in the Union building at Baylor university. The news, posted on a large bulletin board, will be headed international, national, state and sport. To Cut Tests In Half TH JO The number of tests given to Kansas State freshmen during freshman orientation week will be cut in beginning next semester. This will cut orientation week from 6½ days to three days. Cas involv some which re-ed treate believe The the p Unive City The on the dents 600 a men "To the p with he w she s As whi "The with pain mass pool polio in the are. pack patie begin musi form said. The cases undercore the t ber sale at den a dar tab che ple cul be wh sn 28 the ton of the vid cha to pus pe gar hav cal vio Therapy Clinics Help Jordan To Walk Again By JERRY PENNER Page 3 read engaged first assas in roll be en nu- ing Al- city nis one are m s- high nes re h is a Last New Year's Eve Jordan MacDougall, fine arts freshman, seriously injured in an automobile accident. Doctors did not believe she would live. When she lived, no one expected her to walk That she did walk is the story of the physical therapy clinics at the University Medical center in Kansas City and Watkins hospital. "With our short wave diatherm machine, infra-red heat, paraffin baths, therapeutic exercise, whirlpools and Hubbard tank given by Tom Poor in memory of his daughter, the department is well equipped The physical therapy department on the campus handles about 20 students each day for a total of about 600 a year. Football and basketball men are frequent patients. Anna Showalter, clinic superintendent, said. As Jordan placed her leg in the whirlpool, Mrs. Showalter explained, "The whirlpool provides the patient with heat which relaxes and relieves pain and at the same time gently massages the leg. We use the whirlpool for sprains, strains, arthritis, polio and related diseases." "The Hubbard tank is used to aid the patient in doing exercises which without the buoyancy of the water he would be unable to carry out," she said. Casualties from intramural sports involving strain and sprain cases and sometimes post bone fractures in which the surrounding muscles need re-education are most frequently treated. The clinic has treated six polio cases this semester. "In a polio case we first test all the muscles to see how normal they are. Then with the application of hot packs to relieve pain, we give the patient mild exercise which is the beginning of the re-education of his muscles. The clinic uses a modified form of the Kenney method," she said. Mild exercise may mean no more than moving the affected muscle almost imperceptibly. By prolonged exercise the muscles are strengthened until braces can be worn. from this further physical training is continued until the patient is taught correct walking habits again. In the next room, Jordan illustrated what physical therapist's calls The calendar, sponsored by members of the senior class, is still on sale for $1 at the information booth, at organized houses, and at the Student Union bookstore. At the end of the week the calendar will go on sale at business establishments downtown. A complete check of sales has not been completed by Marilyn Hawkinson, circulation manager, but more than 300 Campus Scenes In KU Calendar KU's campus and the changes it undergoes with the seasons are recorded in a series of photographs in the 1952 KU calendar. the 1,500 printed have already been sold. Bound in a blue-and-white cover which bears a picture of a campus snow scene, the calendar contains 28 photographs. This includes one of the KU "calendar girl." Sydney Ashton, education senior. This year's calendar contains a list of all scheduled school activities for the coming year and space is provided after each date for the purchaser to record anything he wants to remember. In addition to the scenes of campus buildings, a few photographs of pep rallies, commencement, football games and other student activities have been provided to give the 1952 calendar more variety than in previous years. Travel Service THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Tel.30 8th & Mass. University Daily Kansan FOLLOWING LIFE AT SCHOOL. JORDAN MacDOUGALL, fine arts freshman, is shown doing exercises to strengthen her leg muscles at the Watkins hospital physical therapy department. She was seriously injured in an auto accident.-Kansan photo by Don Sarten. She put a weight on her left foot and standing on a ladder bent the foot behind her several times. There was no strain involved and she could have lifted the weight more times. But muscles are strengthened slowly. progressive resistance, which is a means of slowly strengthening the muscles. The clinic, which also admits out patients from the surrounding area, was established in the spring of 1946. It is staffed by Mrs. Showalter and Miss Betty Wickersham who administer treatment for every type of physical disability to patients only on prescription of a doctor. When she began this treatment, her leg stuck straight out when she sat down. Today she can bend her knee almost normally. The screen was black except for a number of human hands darting and gesticulating hither and yon over the screen in a series of symbolical movements. According to the announcer, a great deal of this sort of thing will be seen in the future on TV. TV has gone classical- or is it crazy? Sunday night over the "Talk of the Town" show a sort of hand dance was given. Forty persons are looking for rides home over the Christmas holidays and so far only 10 cars are available. This was the report Tuesday from the ride bureau in the Student Union Activities office. ΓV's Going Mad—Or Is It? 40 Students Need Xmas Rides Home Room is now available in cars going to South Bend and Ft. Wayne, Ind; Jerome, Idaho; Liberal and Wichita; and to points in Massachusetts, Florida, and South Dakota. Students who want rides are heading for all parts of the United States, especially to the East and South. Drivers with room for extra passengers and students who need rides should register as soon as possible. Elmer Rusco, graduate student and former editor of the Dove, said articles on all points of view on any topic of student interest are welcome. All articles submitted for publication must be signed by the writer. In the past, the articles have been mainly political in nature. Anyone interested in writing for the Dove, campus political magazine, may attend a meeting of the Dove staff at 8 p.m. Thursday in the East room of the Union. Need Dove Writers Editor To Be Picked A new editor and business manager will be elected at the meeting. As the plans stand now, the Dove will be published for the first time this year soon after vacation. Twenty-seven students have entered the ping pong tournament at the Student Union. First round matches were scheduled to begin Tuesday evening, and play will continue until Thursday. Winners of first and second places will receive trophies, and medallions will be awarded the third and fourth place winners. A traveling trophy will also go to the champion. 27 Students Entered In Ping-Pong Meet Guam—(U.P.)-This U. S. territory in the western Pacific with an area of less than one-fifth of Rhode Island and with fewer than 100 miles of improved roads has an accident rate 20 times greater than the United States average, the Navy reported. Mexico City's lowest street is more than a mile higher than the topmost points of New York skyscrapers. Guam Unsafe For Driving If You Like SAME DAY LAUNDRY SERVICE, Come To RISK'S Self-Service Laundry 613 Vt. Call 623 Farmers Market Wednesday, Dec. 12, 1951 Come Out After Class Relax and forget your studies for awhile. Enjoy the Chateau's popular fountain specials and tasty sandwiches. Open 11 a.m. Curb Service After 4 p.m. CHATEAU DRIVE-IN MASSAT 18217. KU Graduate Named Editor Of Insurance Publication Kenneth O. Force, a member of the class of 1927, has been appointed editor of The National Underwriter, a national insurance news publication. He is a native of Scott City. After leaving KU, Force was Kansas City correspondent for several trade papers. He joined The National Underwriter in 1941. Since 1945 he has been eastern news editor, with headquarters in New York, where he will continue to live. Indiana contains 8,000 industries. 200 coal mines, and ranks 10th in U.S. farm income. Your Plymouth . . . has a used car priced for you. Buddy GALLAGHER 634 Mass. Ph.1000 Patronize Kansan Advertisers Yello-bole pipes sold at RANEY'S DRUG STORE 909 Mass. Phone 521 MR BUSY BEE solves a case with the pipe that starts sweet...smokes sweet...stays sweet I DEDUCE MR. HAWKSHAW, YOUR PIPES NO PLEASURE > LET ME GIVE YOU A CLUE TO A PIPE YOU'LL TREASURE! ** FOR THE SMOOTHEST SMOKE YOUR TONGUE EVER GREETED GET YELLO-BOLE PIPE... ITS HONEY-TREATED! BEE THE BOWLS HONEY-LINED... HELPS BUILD THE "CAKE" IN, YOUR PIPE SMOKES SMOOTH WITHOUT ANY "BREAK-IN" BEE ON THE WOOD. GET ON THE SMOOTH-SMOKIN' > TRAIL THIS WAY... GET A HONEY-SMOOTH VELLO-BOLE PIPE. TODAY! YELLO-BOLE PIPE...TODAY! A BEEF IN A PIPE FOR EXTRA VALUE AND SWEETER SMOKES LOOK FOR THAT FAMOUS YELLO-BOLE, POLKS! $1, $1.50, $2, $2.50 All Imported Briar A man doesn't have to be a detective to deduce that Yello-Bole's the pipe for his smoking pleasure. Whatever your favorite style may be, Yello-Bole's got it. And Yello-Boles make great gifts! YELLO-BOLE pipes Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 12, 1951 Relaxation and Beauty Only when you are relaxed and at ease are you at your best. Nothing is more relaxing than an Infra Red Ray vapor bath in our Howard Cabinet followed by a body massage. Mary McCormick Charme Beauty and Health Salon 9351/2 Mass. Phone 533 EXPERT UPHOLSTERING FURNITURE MAINTENANCE At DINGMAN FURNITURE 1803 Mass. Call 1503 SANTA USE OUR CHRISTMAS LAY-AWAY 10 Rhinestone Jewelry Necklaces $3.60 up Bracelets $2.00 up SAMPLE'S Phone 368 Look Your Best For The Holidays By getting your hair Styled and Trimmed 10 > 23 West 9th Phone 709 Corn's Studio of Beauty TOYS - Army Trucks - Folding Doll Bath - Lincoln Logs - Toy Cash Register - Shooting Gallery - Delivery Cycle - Toy Trucks - Pastry Set - Sewing Machine TOYS - Electric Iron KIRKPATRICKS 715 More Phone 1018 715 Mass. Phone 1018 TOYS Daily Kansan Patronize A man and woman talking. BUY A MEAL TICKET HERE You'll enjoy our choice steaks, sandwiches, and homemade pies and cakes. Advertisers CRYSTAL CAFE 609 Vt. Open 6 a.m. To Midnight Free Parking This Christmas It's LEATHER FOR THE MAN ON YOUR LIST SUEDE JACKET -- $24.50 SUEDE VEST ----- 14.95 ALLIGATOR BELT 8.50 BILLFOLD ---- 5.00 - 7.50 TOILET KIT --- 8.95-9.95 Or perhaps a gift Certificate for a pair of our handsome TAYLOR-MADE SHOES university shop 1423 CRESGENT DRIVE...IN WEST MILLS. We Invite You To The Flower Box The New Flower Shop Experience-Courtesy Quality We Have A Complete Line Of Elmer's Candies LeRoy Fleming, Owner Night Call 749 Phone278 18 E.9th. ERY THURSDAY . . . PAN FRIED CHICKEN • Home Made Rolls • Chicken Gravy ONLY 75c STREITS CAFE 9th and Tennessee MARIE KLEIN 6 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Closed Sunday SPECIALS EVERYDAY 65c to 75c HOMEMADE SOUPS 20c to 25c HOMEMADE CHILI 30c Granada Cafe First Door South of Granada Theater Open Monday through Saturday LOG CABIN MARKET 1827 Louisiana Phone 910 For Economy Grocery Buying DID YOU KNOW CIGAR SMOKE KILLS GERMS? YEAH, BUT IT'S HARD TO GET 'EM TO SMOKE! Shop While Your Clothes Wash and Dry 9 Ibs. Washed - 35c Soap Furnished Open til 8:00 p.m. Thursday LAUNDERAIDES at SUNFLOWER, KANSAS and LAWRENCE, KANSAS 813 Vermont Ph. 2515 Leather gifts have lasting beauty—lasting usefulness. They show that you were careful to make quality selections. No gifts you give will be enjoyed more than those you buy at Filkins Leather Shop. Give Leather - It Lasts SHAVING KITS BILLFOLDS BRIEFCASES OVERNIGHT CASES BELTS KEY CASES GAGE Filkins Leather Shop 820 Massachusetts SANTA 09 Hoag, Keller Bolster Jayhawker Cage Stock Things were looking up in the KU cage camp Tuesday afternoon as Charlie Hoag reported for practice and John Keller rejoined the squad after being sidelined a month with a severe charley-horse. Hoag has been undergoing treatment for the muscle injury which plagued him throughout football season. He is able, however, to see only limited practice and it will be probably sometime yet before the speedster will be in top form. Keller was in the midst of the battle for the guard position opposite Bill Hougland when he suffered a severe charley-horse in practice. He is still slowed somewhat but the Page City senior is expected to be able to make the trip to Dallas for the games with Southern Methodist Friday and Saturday nights. Last year Keller served as a stand-in for Clyde Lovette and did well in the clutch against Iowa State and Oklahoma A&M. Hoag and Keller will have a hard time edging Dean Kelley out of his starting berth. He has shown marked improvement and scoring ability this season. He is expected to see more action at guard this season as B. H. Born is now available to replace Lovellette. Coach Phog Allen was pleased with Kelley's performance against Creighton Monday night. He has chipped in 25 points in the last two games in addition to fine ball handling and defensive work. Assistant coach Dick Harp scouted EUROPE 1952 Low-cost transportation and tours to Europe for 1952 are rapidly being booked to capacity. It is imperative to make your reservations now for choice accommodations. Downs offers a complete selection of SITA tours (Student International Travel Association) ranging from $500. These trips vary from the Spartan bicycle tours to the Grand Tours at $1800. Special individual program offered this year for those who wish to live with selected families in France, England, Germany or Switzerland. Rates from $550. A few study tours carrying university credit are offered from $550 to $850. See the Olympic Games at Helsinki, Finland. Special extension, $150. FREE DESCRIPTIVE FOLDER ON EUROPE Travel available upon request. No Obligation. Page 5 Phone 3661 for all your travel needs open evenings 6:30 p.m.-9:00 p.m. No Booking Fees. downs travel service 1015 S massachusetts st. lawrence, kansas downs travel service 1015% massachusetts st. lawrence, kansas SMU and Oklahoma A&M as they tanged at Dallas Tuesday night. The Aggies finally defeated the Mustangs 50-45 in a double overtime game. Stanky Takes Cardinal Reins St. Louis — (U,P) — Eddie Stanky peppery little second baseman, took over the managerial reins of the St. Louis Cardinals today and promised he'll field a hustling club next spring. Stanky was signed yesterday to a two-year term as manager by Cardinal owner Fred Saigh at an estimated $35,000 annual salary, and promptly promised he'd be a playing manager. Baseball men agreed that Stanky, who learned many of his baseball tricks under "Lippy Lee" Durocher, is just the man to inject hustle into the aging Cardinal club. Colorful and swashbuckling, Stanky has long been known as a battler who clawed his way to major league success on courage and fight. "They're all grown men and should hustle," Stanky said of his new charges. "I'm sure most of them will but there might be a few who have to be reminded." Stanky, 34, was silent on his rebuilding plans for the Cards, who finished third last season under soft-spoken manager Marty Marion. He said the Cardinals have many young players coming up from farm clubs who might solve "a lot of problems." INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL Tuesday's Results Last Chance 2, Flying Five 0 (forfeit) University Daily Kansan Sterling Oliver 33, Geology Club 24 Battenfeld 46, AFROTC 20 Varsity 53, Misfits 21 ASCE 36, AXE 24 Rochdale 28, Twin Pines 18. Today's Games Robinson Annex, Fraternity A Kappa Sigma vs. Lambda Chi Alpha 4 p.m. 5 p.m. Sigma Chi vs. Kappa Alpha Psi Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Acacia 6 p.m. Delta Upsilon vs. Tau Kappa Epsilon 7 p.m. Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. Triangle Wednesday, Dec. 12, 1951 YOUR EYES Phi Kappa Psi vs. Sigma Pi. should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. Lawrence Optical Co. Phone 425 1025 Mass. EYE DiMaggio Trades Bat, Glove For New Television Career DiMaggio hung up his glove yesterday for good, and the battered finger mitt with which he made his last putout in the 1951 world series quickly was consigned to the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N. Y. New York—(U.P.)-Joe DiMaggio, an American success story of the grubby little kid from Fisherman's Wharf in San Francisco who became the greatest ball player of his time, was ready for a new career today as a suave, soft-voiced television broadcaster. "And the guy who wore it belongs up there, too," said manager Casey Stengel. "I sure like to know where I'm gonna get somebody to take his place." The lanky Yankee, key man of baseball's second golden era, wound up his glorious 13-year career with the Yanks in a blaze of fanfare but with an almost childishly simple explanation. 5.95 "Baseball wasn't any fun any more," he said. "It wasn't a game with me, and so I through. I've played my last game." But he was still a Yankee. President Dan Topping of the world champs was emphatic about that. "Joe definitely will remain with us in some capacity," Topping said. "We have talked about him doing television for us. And he promised to stay with our organization." The television position is open because Dizzy Dean, who handled the Yankees on video last year has gone to the St. Louis Browns. DiMaggio, who speaks slowly and distinctly and is considered to have good radio or television diction, definitely leans toward that kind of a career. He said he did not want to manage a club, and that he had no desire to be a coach or a scout. Women Play Tight Games The other scores gave Watkins hall a 27 to 15 win over Delta Gamma; Freshman MK had to forfeit to Locksley after leading 26 to 23; Pi Beta Pfieh defeated the Co-hops 27 to 25; Monchonsia won over Freshman BA 19 to 14 and Delta Delta Delta defeated Ch Omega 26 to 14. Bv JACKIE JONES Lockies won a forfeited game from the MK's after trailing 26 to 23. In women's basketball rules, a team must forfeit a game when there are less than five players. Two of the six MK players fouled out of the game, and they had no substitutes. Good defensive play, which was lacking last week, kept the women's intramural basketball scores low in the games Tuesday. The only game in which the scores went out of the twenties, was a close battle between Miller hall and Sigma Kappa. Sigma Kappa coming on out on top 36 to 35. LEON'S SHOE STORE Pi Beta Phi took another close game from the Co-hops 27 to 25. At the half the winners were behind by one point, but came back in the second period. Anne MacLaughlin tallied 19 points for the Pi Phi's and Betty van der Smissen got the same number for the losers. The Freshman BA squad took a low scoring contest from Monchonsia 19 to 14. Why Wait 'Til It Snows Fleecy SNOW BOOTS in Red, White, Green, and Brown 815 Massachusetts DiMaggio, who never looked nattert or in better physical trim, said it was the aches and pains that wracked his 37-year-old body which brought about the final decision. PRECISION WATCH REPAIRS Watch Repair Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed Wolfson's 743 Mass. Call 675 Patronize Kansan Advertisers TICKETS AND RESERVATIONS FIRST NATIONAL BANK B. B. Last Call for Christmas Reservations (11 Days Till Christmas Vacation) From K.C. Tax Incl.) CGS-AAL ... Knoxville ... $ 93.95 MCA ... New Orleans ... 101.20 TWA-AAL ... Springfield, Mass. ... 160.08 Bnf ... Houston ... 94.07 CAL-UAL ... Chevenne ... 89.47 (Ask about Tourist Class Service to Europe Beginning May 1) Ask us about —Sky Coach —Family Rates —Cruises —Tours —Steamships EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR AMERICAN AIRLINES See Your Travel Agent At THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE TRAVEL AGENCY Miss Rose Gieseman, Manager 8th and Mass. St. Telephone 30 J. Paul Sheedy\* Switched to Wildroot Cream-Oil Because He Flunked The Finger-Nail Test 10326872 SHEEDY looked bird-seedy with his ruffled hair. He didn't know sheture to bury his head, or go on a wing-ding! "Owl I ever get a date for the prom?" he asked his tree roommates. "You're robin yourself of wildroot, birdbrain," they chirped. "Better be cagey and get Wildroot Cream-Oil!" It isn't alcoholic! Contains soothing Lanolin! Grooms your hair neatly and naturally. Relieves dryness...removes loose, ugly dandruff!' Now Paul's flying high! The tweetsest little chickadee on campus has him out on a limb. So get a bottle or tube of Wildroot Cream-Oil at any drug or toilet goods counter tomorrow. And nest time you see your barber, ask him for a professional application. Then you'll really be in there pigeon! - of 327 Burroughs Dr., Snyder, N. Y. Wildroot Company, Inc., Buffalo 11, N. Y. WILDROOT CREAM-OIL HAIR TONIC Hair Tonic WILDEROOT CREAM OIL BODY LOTION LONG DATE THE MAIN RETENING MAINTENANCE LANIQU RAM-OIL Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesdav. Dec. 12, 1951 Nathaniel and Annabelle CLYDEN LOVELLETTE, KU's All-American basketball player, likes to spend his time in the kitchen when he isn't on the basketball court. He is shown here offering a helping of his latest product to his wife. Sally.—Photo by Alan Marshall. Mrs. Lovellette Can Tell Tall Tales Of Towering Husband By Paulyne Patterson As I entered the room and started to sit down, Mrs. Clyde Lovellette, wife of KU's basketball star said, "You had better find another chair, hat one leans back and only fits people like Clyde." She said that Clyde is very modest about making all-American in baseball last year and "he doesn't talk much about it." Mrs. Lovellette attended Indiana State Teachers college. When I asked about her six feet nine inch husband, she answered Give Kodak Accessories to the Photo Fan! wide selection here! HIXON'S 721 Mass. Phone 41 that she hardly notices his height except when they go to some strange town and people turn around and stare. "We went to Kansas City to see one of Clyde's fraternity brothers who is almost as tall as he. I felt so embarrassed by the looks people gave us as we walked downtown," she said. Commenting on her husband's activities at home, she said, "Clyde likes to cook, but when he is in our small kitchen there's not much I can get done. When we were first married he did quite a bit of cooking. He especially likes to cook steak and potatoes. He doesn't have too much time now that basketball season has started," she added. "His height makes it hard for him to buy sweaters," she commented. "Also he has to have shirts made at home in Terre Haute, Ind., at a factory. I make all his wool shirts and pajamas," she added. "His suits are tailor made in Kansas City but he has the most difficult time finding gloves and hats. Shoes however don't present much of a problem," she said. The Lovellettes do not have to worry about Clyde being inducted into the Armed services. He was called for a physical examination last year but the examiners just looked at him and said he was too tall. 'He doesn't know whether he wants to play professional or semi-professional basketball when he This Is Not A Flying Saucer --- It Is A Latke It is the rare Oriental delicacy you can get at the HILLEL CHANUCAH FESTIVAL Sunday, Dec. 16 at 6 p.m. Community Building. Eat all you can. We'll roll you home. Also movies. Everyone invited. Members free, others 25c. For reservations call 3513. Official Bulletin La Confrerie and Pi Delta Phi meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, home of Mrs. Wilma Callins, 1604 University Drive, Prof. J. Seavers speaking on French opera. Hillel foundation, 7:15 p.m. Friday, Danforth chapel, Jewish service. Math club, 5 p.m. Thursday, 203 Strong, recreation and refreshments. Pre-Nursing club, 4 p.m. Thursday, textile lab, Fraser, Christmas party, freshmen especially invited. Bailey Chem club, 4 p.m. Thursday, 305 B.C.L., movie and refreshments. CQ code practice session, 7:30 to-night, E.E. lab. Pershing Rifles meeting, 5 p.m. Thursday, Military science drill hall ISA scholarship applications must be returned to dean of women's office by Thursday. Obtain blanks from Vicki Rosenwald, Miller hall. ISA general council, 5 today, East room. Union. Arnold Air society, today 2000. KU Mountaineering club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 402 Lindley. Thanksgiving outside slides will be shown. HAJAS meeting, 8 tonight, 105 Military Science. All basic Air ROTC invited. FACTS meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 210 Fraser. All members attend. KuKu club, 7:15 p.m. Thursday. Pine room, Union. Pledges 7 p.m. Attendance required. Fencing club, 7:30 tonight, Robinson Gym. Graduate students meet, 8 p.m. Thursday, Union. Dance at Dine-A- Mite to follow. Froshawk meeting, 7.15 tonight, 9 Strong hall, Attendance required. Radio players, 5 p.m. Thursday, KFKU, not 4:30 Wednesday. Sasnak Christmas party, 7:15 to night, Robinson gym. Games and refreshments, members only. Rehearsal of German Christmas Choir, 5 tonight and Thursday, 306 Fraser. Everybody wanting to sing German carols invited. Deutscher Verein, Gesangsprobe Mitwoch, Densterstag, 5 p.m. Fraser Mtwöch. Chess club, 7:15 tonight, 111 Strong, 6th round of tournament. El Ateneo se reunira el miercoles graduates." Mrs. Lovellette said. She said that their present bed doesn't fit him, but there's not much they can do about it right now. "He has no trouble driving our car because it has plenty of leg room," she added. Sally Lovellette, who is five feet eight inches tall, met her husband in their home town of Terre Haute, Ind. They attended the same high school and were married June 9 of this year. She commented that the chairs around the house have to be pretty stable for him. "He has only broken a few. He has to duck to enter all the doorways," she added. a las siete y media de la noche en 113 Strong. Un programa de Navidad. Jay Janes, 5 today, Pine room, Union. Mathematics lectures by Prof. Marshall Stone, 5 p.m. Friday; 10 a.m. Saturday; and 5 p.m. Monday in 203 Strong. Dance DON'T LET THAT TWO BITS BURN A HOLE IN YOUR POCKET Spend It ON L.M.O.C.No.9 On Sale This Thursday Frank Strong Rotunda Union Building Lobby Fraser Hall Information Booth Go To The Church Of Your Choice Every Sunday. WHAT to give HIM FOR XMAS A Smart Simmon's cuff-link and stud set. $5.00 up A genuine Leather wallet, plain or in colors. $3.50 up WHAT to give HIM FOR XMAS P $4 $4 $4 $4 411 W. 14 BALFOUR Lauter Jewelers Phone 307 Weaver for everything under the tree 901 Mass. for a "sweet tooth" at Christmas .to give, to receive Helen Harrison: Assorted Chocolates: 3 lb. tin $2.89, 1 lb. tin 1.10 Chocolate covered mints; 1 lb. 95c, ½ lb. 49c DeMets: Assorted chocolates: ------------ 2 lb. tin $2.50 Turtles: ------------ 2 lb. $2.90, 1 lb. 1.45 Wedver's Candy—Main Floor your gift from Weaver's means more . . . to her ristmas ve Classified Advertising University Daily Kansan Page 7 Phone K.U.376 Classified Advertising Rates Rates Three Five days days 25 words or less ... 50c Additional words ... 1c 75c $1.00 2c 3c Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted understanding that the bill will be paid in advance, or during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univer- sity's office. Journal bldg., not later than 45 p.m. the day before publication date. FOR SALE TUX COAT, 40L; tux pants 33-34; white dinner jacket 42L Call Ken Philo 3021. TUXEDO FOR SALE Cleaned and in ex- cellence 35-37. Fashion 12-4. Ladbandy. Phone 3566. X-ACTO PEN KNIFE! The perfect utility knife for artwork, works retouching, stripping etching, and photography. See them at Your Student Union Book Store. CREPE PAPER FOR ALL OCCASIONS Both regular and flame proof crepe paper in all colors. Available at your Student Union Book Store. 14 A GIFT THEYLL ENJOY HAVING Give a brief bag or case for Christmas. See the wide selection at the Student Union Book Store. 14 KU REFCORD ALBUM! Hear the A Cappella Choir, Men's Glee Club, and Band now on-breakable RCA Victor records. Now at your Student Union Book Store. FINE ART REPRODUCTIONS! We now have a wide selection of reproductions of famous paintings in full color. Student Union Book Store. 14 PHARMACY STUDENTS! New edition of Mill's "State Board Questions and Answers" is now available at the Student Union Book Store. 14 MISCELLANEOUS ALL PERSONS desiring to dispose of used or second-hand tape recorders, please write to University Daily Kansan, box No. 1. 12 DRIVING TO Fort Wayne, Indiana, Dec 21 or 22. Can take three: share expenses. Call Jim Holdeman at 2518M after 6 p.m. RIDER WANTED going east to Massachusetts; if interested phone Ken Cox 18 AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether on business or vacation. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Service, 1015 Mass. Ask us about family rates, sky coach, and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book passes on our campus. Call M. Gieselaen at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30- FOR RENT ONE ROOM for 2 students; clean and clean desk. Board of record, if desire Phone 3348W, 534 Ohio IF YOU LIKE to live very close to the campus, double room for two girl student in. In very nice houses. Second semester. Inquire at 1035 Oread pr call 3633J. BUSINESS SERVICE TYINGP: Themes, term papers, these—prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs. Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST; term papers, note books, theses, medical and biologi- miscellaneous. Mrs. E. J. Roscoe, 838 Lap. 4, upstairs. P 2715j after a p 4.m TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these tying试卷. Mrs. Shields, 1299 Ohio. Pp. 1601 RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ment available, assisting fast efficient service. Bowman Bank and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. tt CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. **tf** STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. tt TYPING: Experience in theses, term papers, miscellaneous typing, and stenil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. tf CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, cafes, home-made pies and air-conditioned parking space for customers. A.m. to midnight. Crystal Cafe, 609 Vt. JAYIAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our goal is to find the best fur, fin, fur, and feathers. Our Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. **tt** LOST LOST, STRAYED, or stolen from Chemical Engineering department. Lindley and Lindsay are in bed in wooden case. Any information appreciated. Call KU 296. 14 MAN'S WRIST WATCH, white metal band, round, on path from Union to Snow hall, Dec. 10. Cheng Liang, KU phone 515. 14 PAIR CLEAR PLASTIC framed glasses. Finder please leave at Western Civilization office in Strong anex or call 3694R. Stanley H. Dial. Memorial Board Will Meet Here The World War I Memorial corporation, which is also the governing body of student union management, has scheduled its annual meeting at 10:45 Saturday morning in the Pine room of the Union. This group is responsible for the football stadium, the "Uncle Jimmy Green" statue, and the Union building. The board of directors is composed of alumni and a sprinkling of faculty and students. Clarence Munns, Topeka, is president of the 21-member board. On the board are Franklin Murphy, chancellor; L. C. Woodruff, dean of men and a first vice-president in the organization; Leonard Comfort! Customized JAYHAWKER NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CRAIRS Ends Tonight "CROSSWINDS" The Holiday Picture Of All Time! —STARTS THURSDAY— Alastair Sim As 'Scrooge' "A CHRISTMAS CAROL" Charles Dickens' Joyous Classic . . ADMISSION —A New Screen Triumph— CHILD 14c ADULT 60c Shows Thurs - Fri. 2:30 - 7:00 - 9:00 Wednesday, Dec. 12, 1951 Shows Thurs - Fri. KU Class Hears New Lifesaving Way Explained During his four day stay in Lawrence, Mr. Emery is demonstrating the method to first aid and water safety classes here and at Baker university. "The back pressure forces active expiration and the arm lift active inspiration," he said, explaining the new method. The Chicago researchers worked not only on normal persons, but on animals, persons actually needing artificial respiration, newly dead bodies and volunteer medical students drugged with curare, he said. "The prone pressure method depended on the elasticity of the human chest," Mr. Emery said, adding that while this "works fine on normal persons, those actually near point of death no longer have this chest elasticity. The prone pressure method, adopted officially in 1927, has given way to the back pressure-arm lift method which has already had extensive use in Norway and Denmark, Mr. Emery, said. Continuous Sat. 1 p.m. on H. Axe, second vice-president; Jim Logan, All Student Council president and a third vice-president on the board. "This new way is the first method of artificial respiration that is the actual result of clinical research," he said, telling the group of recent research done in Chicago on the subject. Electrical resistance units of glass with built-in conductors of ceramic oxide are available for heating up to $ 600^{\circ}\mathrm{F} $ and using up to 10 watts per square inch. Others are: Paul Arrowow, Christine Johnson, Martha Peterson, Dr. John Porter, Richard B. Stevens, Esther Twente, Fred Ellsworth, L. E. Woolley, James Burgoyne F. C. Alen, George Bradshaw, Arthur H. Cromb, Margaret Habein, Drew McLaughlin, Walter G. Thiele, Walter J. Keeler, Karl Klooz, and W. J. Baumpartner. The Red Cross has changed its method of artificial respiration for the first time in 24 years, Warren Emery, safety service field representative for that organization, told members of a KU first aid class Tuesday. I VICE PRESIDENT of Chase National Bank of New York, Edwin A. Locke, Jr., was appointed by President Truman as coordinator of technical and economical aid in Near East with the personal rank of am-baccoder bassador. NOW THRU TOMORROW THE PICTURE ALL LAWRENCE IS RAVING ABOUT . . . Don't Miss It! MARIO LANZA ... America's New Singing Sensation (You love me, because you love ME AYLOVE!) EXCITING MUSIC! 27 HAMED GUMBS The Great CARUSO color by TECHNICOOLOR MARIO LANZA ANN BLYTH Dorothy KIRSIEM Jamila NOVOBIMA This Picture Sponsored By American Association Features At 7:15 and 9:19 By American Association Of University Women! Adults 60c Children 25c New PATEE PHONE 321 Of University Women! TONIGHT AT 8:30 ONLY An Extra Surprise MAJOR STUDIO SNEAK PREVIEW IMPORTANT An Advance Showing of a Major Studio Picture That Will Be Here Soon! PLUS REASON FEATURE BEFORE AND AFTER PREVIEW THE PRODUCERS REQUEST THE TITLE WITHHELD HOWEVER WE CAN TELL YOU THIS MUCH . . . IT'LL BE ONE OF THESE 1952 TOP HITS! - "Callaway Went - "The Blue Veil" - Thataway" - "I'll Never Forget - "Two Tickets To Broadway" You" "Oue Vodia" - "Elopement" - "Quo Vadis" - "Week-End With Father" - Father" - "Fixed Bayonets" LAST TIMES TODAY - ALL PERFORMANCES OF Jean Peters - Louis Jourdan - Debra Paget FEATURES AT: "Anne of Indies" 7:09-9:51 - Sneak 8:30 PHONE Granada KC Center Offers Christmas Jobs Students with some background in elementary sociology, education psychology or recreation, may find a position with the Jewish Community center of Kansas City, Mo., over the Christmas holidays. Bernard Liebowitz, director of children's activities, has advised the KU office of student placement Winter Day camp program will begin Dec. 24 and last until the 28th. VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD TONITE - THURS. Fine Arts Presentation VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD "This program offers several positions for both men and women who would be interested in working with small groups of boys and girls be tween the ages of 5-12." Mr. Liebowitz said. Work will be from 1 to 5 p.m. each afternoon. Only mature students with a genuine interest and understanding of youngsters, interested in assuming part-time group leadership positions, will be considered. "Stories of this kind have long enchanted impressionable females and imaginative boys, whose faces were damned in distress, providing she looks and acts like Vali? VALLI most beautiful!" --- TWO (LE DUE ORFANELLE) RPHANS Feature At 7:15-9:15 Adm. 25-60 STARTS THURSDAY He's well-heeled, robust and romantic. She'll be an empty pocketbook, but an open mind! FRED Mac MURRAY ELEANOR PARKER A MILLIONAIRE For CHRISTY MILLIONAIRE FOR CHRISTY with RICHARD CARLSON Matinee Thursday and Friday at 2:30 - Open 2 p.m. Eve. Shows 7-9-Open 6:45 ADDED COLOR CARTOON Movietone News Ends Tonite "Anne of Indies" and Sneak Granada Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 12, 1951 Easton Speaks At Banquet Sports are now under the finest control in history despite trying circumstances, Bill Easton, KU track coach, said Tuesday in Kansas City. Speaking to 100 members and alumni of Kappa Sigma fraternity at a Founders' day dinner, Easton reminded his audience that the recent scandals in athletics are only a part of the whole picture. "Despite the scandals, athletics are enjoying the best period in history," he said. "Football has become as much a part of life in the United States as Thanksgiving or Santa Claus." "We're experiencing another cycle of criticism now," Easton continued, "but it will blow over soon. Anyone can get worked into a furor about nearly anything and this Professor's Painting Wins Popular Prize A painting by Raymond J. Eastwood, professor of drawing and painting at the University, has been awarded the Popular Prize at the Mid-American Annual exhibition at the Nelson Gallery of Art in Kansas City. time it seems, they chose sports. The painting entitled "High Fog" is a Cape Cod landscape. The award was the result of the votes of visitors to the exhibition which was held from Nov. 4 to 28. "Sports give a lot to the athlete besides the obvious qualities of healthy bodies, courage and the traits of a gentleman. Athletics teach the boy sportsmanship, something that is little publicized but should be recognized as a valuable asset, he said. "I think youth at present is in the finest era of athletics in history," Easton said. GIFT SUGGESTIONS THAT WILL MAKE HIS XMAS MERRIER HARVEY'S GLOVE HANSEN GLOVES Interwoven Socks We have them for him in Nylon, Rayon, Cotton, Orlon and Wool. In your choice of sport or dress types. A fine sock makes that perfect extra gift. Buy them lined or unlined in his choice of Deerskin, Pigskin, Capeskin or Mocha. Hansen 'Occasion-Designed' gloves will fill his every need! Gift Boxed from 55c Gift Boxed from $5 SOCKS Botany Mufflers Luxuriously soft, woolen mufflers by the master makers of fine wools. Gay Tartans with matching neckties or solid colors in a handsome array. RUGBY JACKETS Warm outerwear is always welcome and these Rugby Jackets will keep him warm. Quilt or pile lined with timton collars in waist and finger-tip lengths. Gift Boxed from $17.50 Gift Boxed. from $2.50 MILITARY JACKET SHOP AT CARL'S . . . YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID! 905 Phone Mass. St. CARLS GOOD CLOTHES 905 CARLS GOOD CLOTHES AIDS MRS. PATRICK SULLIVAN, College sophomore, mixes the recipe for orange breakfast rolls which won her the $1,000 third place prize in the junior division of Pillsbury Mills annual baking contest baking contest. KU Sophomore Collects $1,000 For Orange Rolls Mrs. Patrick Sullivan, College sophomore, yesterday was awarded the $1,000 third place prize in the junior division of Pillsbury Mills annual baking contest. The couple plan to use the money to help them complete their studies at the University. Mrs. Sullivan was one of 25 contestants in the company's final "bake-off" in New York. The recipe she prepared in the contest was for orange breakfast rolls with a slight scent and taste of oranges. It takes a minimum of four hours to prepare, because the dough must raise twice. She got the recipe from her mother-in-law, who in turn got it from a friend who tasted the rolls at a PTA luncheon. Mrs. Sullivan has been cooking since she was a very small girl. She has just been baking for the past two or three years. Besides winning the $1000 prize, she received the electric range in which she prepared her recipe and the electric mixer which she used. She received the folding table and chair on which she worked, plus the all-expense-paid trip for her and her chaperon at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel. Patrick Sullivan, her husband and a College senior, chaperoned her on the trip since the contest rules called for all underage women to be chaperoned. Two University debate teams will leave today for West Lafayette, Ind., to participate in the Purdue university debate tournament Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Debaters making the trip will be, Stephen Rench, Heywood Davis, Win Koerper, and Orval Swander, College seniors. Kim Giffin, assistant professor of speech, will accompany the group. 2TeamsToDebate InPurdueTourney The team of Koerper and Swander is, as yet, undefeated in debate this season. The two teams will participate in five rounds of debate on the topic: "Resolved, that the federal government should adopt a permanent program of wage and price controls." -News Roundup It Sometimes Pays To Forget The Purdue tournament is a contest of teams who have previously entered the West Point debate tournament, West Point, N. Y. SOMEONE IN THE MERGE Spokane, Wash.—(U.P.)—Mrs. R. H. Williams found sometimes it pays to forget. She left her purse home when she went shopping and returned for it to find her house on fire. Firemen quickly put the blaze out. ExchangeOfWarPrisoners Delayed By Red Demands Panmunjom, Korea-U.P.)The United Nations warned today that the Communists may try to hold back "sizeable numbers" of captured Allied soldiers from any exchange of war prisoners. A UN command communique said the Reds for the second straight day refused in a subcommittee meeting even to provide a list of UN war prisoners until the Allies agree to release all 120,000 or more Communist war prisoners. "We are in an unenviable position," a briefing officer said. "It appears that the Reds once again are holding this exchange of prisoners over our heads, hoping perhaps to force us into premature concessions." U.S. Troops Are 'Best Cared For' Army Tokyo— (U.P) —A House military appropriations subcommittee concluded today that U.S. troops in Korea are the "best equipped, best fed and best medically cared for army in the world." Chairman Christopher C. McGrath (D.-N.Y.), said, "We are impressed by the fine leadership which we have . . . from top to bottom." He added that Gen. James A. Van Fleet's "first consideration lies in seeing to it that as few as possible of our men are sacrificed in obtaining the objectives they seek." Egypt Postpones Ambassador Recalling Cairo, Egypt—(U.P.)—Egypt postponed the threatened recall of its ambassador to Britain today after U.S. Ambassador Jefferson Caffery urged against any such drastic action in the Suez dispute. An eleventh-hour personal message from British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden to Acting Foreign Minister Ibrahim Farag was said to have "cleared the air" somewhat in the Anglo-Egyptian crisis. The note explained Britain's reasons for building a new military road through a native village near Suez, an action which angered Egyptians. Big 4 Disarmament Talks Bog Down Paris—(U.P.)—Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Vishinsky blasted any remaining hope today for an early Big Four disarmament agreement. He delivered the coupe de grace in the United Nations general assembly's 60-member political committee by: 1. Rejecting the West's Baruch plan for international control and regulation of armaments and the atomic bomb as "utopian" and charged that even the U.S. would not and could not accept it. 2. Accusing the U.S., Britain and France of full blame for the "mad armaments race." 3. Charging that the West's proposal for disarmament by progressive stages is only a "cunning mechanism" devised to postpone indefinitely the outlawing of the atomic bomb. 4. Insisting that the essential first step in any disarmament program is adoption of the Soviet proposal for outlawing the atomic bomb. Italians Fulfil NATO Troop Quota Rome, Italy—U.P.)—Italy is close to passing her 1951 goal of delivering five divisions to Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's North Atlantic Pact army, military sources said today. The poorest of the Atlantic Pact partners has turned over to Eisenhower three divisions, plus three independent brigades which numerically amount almost to two more divisions. Another regular infantry division is now being outfitted with American arms. Even without the new infantry division, Italy's contribution to NATO is equal to that of France, military men said. 102,576 American Casualties In Korea Washington—(U.R.)American battle casualties in Korea now total 102,576, an increase of 888 over last week, the defense department announced today. The casualties include all whose next of kin have been notified from the beginning of the war through last Friday. Bleating Germans Sharply Criticized Frankfurt, Germany— (U.P.) —U.S. High Commissioner John J. McCloy criticized the Germans sharply today for making excessive demands on Allied occupation authorities and exaggerating their burdens. He said the Western Germans have developed a sort of "occupation fatigue" and are "in a mood of impatient rebellion" against remaining Allied controls as restoration of almost complete sovereignty nears. Truman Opinion Enroute To Ridgway Washington—(U.R.)—President Truman is sending Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway his views on the Korean truce talks, it was learned today. The latest secret report sums up some of the views Mr. Truman expressed in a strategy huddle Monday with top defense and state department officials. It is being relayed to Tokyo by the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Ridgway, supreme United Nations commander in the Far East, presumably will pass the ideas along to UN negotiators at Panmunjom Washington—(U.P.)—Chairman Hubert H. Humphrey announced The United States today social Week. In public policy the "F" he so frozen Soviet of the The is united Union has south "Be not f sia to co It's the coun D though isolate be a divid Breaking Prov oce th here will univer ter. Prov daught will sily wih July. Prov one h student Chemie weekl Egypt manu dyes being He teache to teach mond is now in The Faculty at 8 oater. Tick p.m. Union rotun this e ter. cents. The duction will l and a it a carr minute bers, combe The in or morial Allen, then follees and se the sh Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks. University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 13, 1951 LAWRENCE, KANSAS STUDENT NEWSPAPER O F T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F K A N S A S U.S. Better Off Than Russia Professor Says Taking all factors into consideration, the United States is in a much more favorable position than Russia today, Dr. A. William Kuchler, associate professor of geography, said Wednesday night. In the final speech on military policy, Dr. Kuchler said that both geographically and economically the U.S. far surpasses the USSR. "Forty-seven per cent of Russia," he said, "is located in permanently frozen territory. And most of the Soviet Union is in a latitude north of the United States." The loyalty of Russia's neighbors is unknown, Dr. Kuchler said. The United States, on the other hand, has neighbors both to the north and south she knows she can trust. "Because of that," he said, "it is not fair to compare the size of Russia to the size of the U.S. You have to compare all of North America. It's the territory you control that counts," he said. Dr. Kuchler also said that though it is practically impossible to isolate the United States, it would be a relatively simple matter to divide the USSR. Brewster To Leave Monday For Egypt Prof. Ray Q. Brewster, chairman of the chemistry department, will give Monday for Egypt where he will lecture at Farouk the First university during the spring semester. Prof. and Mrs. Brewster and their daughter, Miss Ina May Brewster, will sail Friday, Dec. 21. The family will return to Lawrence late in July. Professor Brewster will lecture one hour weekly to undergraduate students at the university on "The Chemistry of Dyes" and four hours weekly to graduate students. The Egyptians are unversed in the manufacture of modern synthetic dyes, most of their ancient dyes not being fade-proof. He is the second University teacher to receive a Fulbright award to teach abroad this year. Dr. Raymond C. Moore, professor of geology, is now at the University of Utrecht in The Netherlands. Faculty To Cut-Up In Follies Tonight The Associated Women Students Faculty Follies will be presented at 8 o'clock tonight in Fraser theater. Tickets will be on sale until 4 p.m. at the information booth, the Union building and Strong hall rotunda. They will also be sold this evening outside Fraser theater. The price of tickets is 50 cents. It includes, among other acts, a carnival skit, a 9-act play of 6- minutes duration, quartet numbers, four monologues and a combo. The show is an all-faculty production, consisting of 15 acts. It will last approximately an hour and a half. The AWS is sponsoring the show in order to build up the Memorial scholarship fund. Barbara Allen, chairman of the fund, has been in charge of planning the follies. The AWS house members and senate have been working on the show four weeks. Logan Into Rhodes Scholarship Finals James K. Logan, College senior from Quenemo, and Robert Howard, Kansas State Teachers college, Emporia, will go to Des Moines, Iowa Saturday to take part in the final competition for Rhodes scholarships Logan and Howard were chosen Wednesday in Topeka from a group of nine college students to represent Kansas in the district competition. Sixteen students will be in Des Moines, four of which will be chosen as winners of the two-year scholarships at Oxford, England. Thirty-two scholarships will be awarded this year to students from the United States. ArthurCapper Critically Ill Topcka, Dec. 13—(U.P.)—Former Senator Arthur Capper's condition became critical today. Mr. Capper was a former Republican senator from Kansas and was former governor of the state. "Arthur Capper is critically ill in his suite at the Hotel Jayhawk. He recovered from an attack of pneumonia last week, but is very weak. He was 86 years old last July 14." Henry S. Blake, vice-president and general manager of Capper Publications, of which Mr. Capper is president, authorized the following statement: The former senator's physician said the statesman, publisher, and philanthropist, may die. He said it was also possible that Mr. Capper would recover from his latest attack of illness. Mr. Capper served 30 years in the U.S.-Senate, longer than any other Kansan. He was the father of the National 4-H club act and was one of the key senators in formation of the powerful farm bloc in congress in the 1920's. 26 KU Students Take Service Exam Since 1948 he has been retired from active duties. It was then that he retired from the senate. Twenty-six college students, most of them from the University, took the selective service college qualification test this morning in the Military Science building. The system was set up a year ago to give local draft boards evidence of a college student's ability to contemplate their rather than enter the armed services. Chicago Prof To Lecture Here The student's deferment, however, is up to the draft board. Students who are deferred to finish college are subject to draft immediately upon graduation. They were among 22,000 students expected to take the exam in test centers throughout the country. A two-week visit to the University by Prof. Guisepte Antonio Borgese of the University of Chicago will highlight the humanities lecture series for the spring semester, Dr. M. D. Clubb, humanities chairman, announced today. Professor Borgese, Italian literary figure who also gained fame for unyielding resistance to Mussolini, will deliver three lectures on Dante March 11, 13 and 18. His stay on the campus, during which time he will make other appearances and meet with faculty and students, is an innovation in the humanities program, Dr. Clubb said. Two other nationally known scholars will each make the customary three-day visit to the campus. They will deliver a principal lecture and be available for consultations. Dr. W. H. Shoemaker, chairman of the romance languages department at KU, will be the speaker from the faculty this year. He will open the series, speaking on "The Generation of '98," on February 12. Prof. Gilbert Highet, of the classes department at Columbia university, will speak on "The Migration of Ideas" on Feb 26. The concluding lecture of the spring series will be given by Prof. George Boas of the philosophy department at Johns Hopkins university, speaking on "The Problem of the Arts." The schedule of afternoon discussions with the guests at the Museum of Art will be continued, Dr. Clubb said. Students Approve 9th LMOC Issue The general student opinion this morning was that the ninth issue of Little Man On Campus, Bibler cartoon book, is just as good and just as funny as the eighth. One undergraduate student who refused to reveal his name said, "It's just the thing I need for my nine o'clock class." Gregory Fisk, education senior who was having breakfast in the Hawk's Nest at the time he was interviewed said, "Seems pretty funny to me right now. It's just as good as any other campus humor magazine I've read." Danforth Chapel Weddings Average 80 Yearly Since '46 Carl Anderson, College and law senior: "There are some dandies in here!" Wanda Murray, fine arts freshman: "I like it very much. I've seen some of the other Bibler books in the past, and I think this one is just as good." BY-PAULYNE PATTerson Danforth chapel was dedicated on August 25, 1978, to give wisdom, strength, and courage to those who seek respite there." BY-PAULYNE PATTERSON Walter Lewin, College senior: "It's allright, but I liked the one last year better." The church was accepted on behalf of the state by Andrew F. Schoepel, then governor of Kansas, at an all-student convocation. Edward Tanner, architect, designed the chapel as a memorial to his mother, Mrs. Harriet Tanner. The initial gift toward building the chapel was made by William H. Danforth. The electric organ was presented by A. B. Weaver of Lawrence as a tribute to his father. "Christ at Gethsemane," a copy in oils of a painting by Hoffman, was donated to the church by the Clarence Poindexter family. The original painting was stolen from Danforth chapel has been the scene of many weddings in its five years. The first wedding was held on March 20, 1946. About 79 weddings are held each year, the most popular month being June. The first baptismal service was in April, 1947. The baptismal font was also contributed by Mr. and Mrs.Danforth. The chapel is open day and night. The chapel date book, in care of the Registrar's office, lists reservations made by campus groups. the chapel on Feb. 15, 1949. The frame was later found in the rear of the church. A duplicate copy was procured and may now be seen in the foyer of the sanctuary. Sunday morning services are held weekly by Gamma Delta, Lutheran student group. FRED CHEN, winner of the Student Union Table Tennis tournament levels off on the little celluloid to win over Alvin Herrington, who took second place. (Kansan photo by Al Marshall). Chen Takes Ping-Pong Tournament Fred Chen, College freshman, won the championship of the Student Union table tennis tournament as he defeated Alvin Herrington, College senior, 19-21, 21-15, 21-7, 21-18 in the finals Wednesday evening. David Wong, engineering junior, finished in the third spot taking out Gerald Oglievie, College senior. Winner Chen and runner-up Herrington received gold trophies, and Chen will also receive a traveling trophy. Wong and Oglewie were awarded gold medallions for third and fourth place. Thirty-one players participated in the contest which began Tuesday. German Play Cast Chosen The cast has been selected for the 16th century German Nativity play which will be presented Wednesday, Dec. 19, in Green theater. Members are: Narrator, Julia Bolas; singing angels, Anita McCoY, Nathale Sherwood and Mary McClelland; Joseph, Hans Winder; innkeeper, William Spomer; innkeeper's wife, Maize Harris; devil, Dennis Dahl; shepherds, Leonard Duroche, Neil Holterman, Donald Horttor and Frank Newby. First angel, Laura Calksin; second angel, Ratia Anderson; Herod, John Gagliardo; servants, Donald Pearson and Bruce Bailey; wise men, Levi Barnes, Richard Wood and Donald Pearson; conscience, Judith Veatch, and Gabriel, Mary Gayle Loveless. Deadline Extended For ISA Scholarship The deadline for Independent Students association scholarship applications has been extended until Thursday, Dec. 20. The $50 scholarship is annually awarded to an independent student on the basis of definite need, scholastic average not below a 1.5, character and an active interest in activities. Selection will be made by the ISA scholarship committee working with the University committee on grants and aids, of which Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, is chairman. The committee's decision will be announced before second semester. Applications may be obtained at the dean of women's office or from Victoria Rosenwald, College sophomore, at Miller hall. Habein Sees Bright Outlook For Dorm Plan Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, presented a bright outlook on the freshman dormitory system to the Associated Women Students house of representatives recently. Because of rumors concerning various aspects of the freshmen women's program, Miss Habein was asked to attend the meeting to answer questions by representatives from organized houses. In answer to the question concerning the percentage of freshmen women with low grades as compared to previous years, Miss Habein said there is one per cent difference. "We have never had so few dropouts in the freshman class, in my experience. as we have had this year Dean Habein was asked if it were true that closing hours are not being kept at North College. "That rumor is, certainly false." Miss Habein declared. "The freshmen keep closing hours with amazing accuracy." When asked about quiet hours, Miss Habein said, "That is a freshman problem, not ours. The only way to get quiet hours for a group is for that group to achieve their own quiet." The problem of freshman supervision was brought up. Dean Habein said there is more supervision among freshmen than in previous years when a large per cent of the freshman women lived in private homes with no supervision or in dormitories where regulations were approximately the same as those in he freshman dormitories this year. She said it was only natural for a freshman dormitory to be noisier than usual, for "freshmen have the enthusiasm of upperclassmen." Dean Habein explained two reasons for allowing freshman women to date on week nights. "Study needs vary with individuals, and the student who needs less time should not be treated exactly as the student who needs more," she said. The other reason she gave was that with 400 students it would be impossible to have a system for granting all the permissions that would be needed for night activities on the campus. "Reports from instructors indicate that more freshmen come to them for advice and problem discussions than in previous years. Miss Habein gave three additional optimistic reports. "The third report is that the guidance bureau has indicated it is working with many more freshman who are year 2 in matters of vocational choice." Dean Habein admitted there are still many problems to be solved in connection with the new freshman dormitory system, but that "there isn't a student on this campus who doesn't or who hasn't had living problems." Menninger Speaks On Panel Tonight Dr. Karl Meninger, director of the Meninger foundation in Topeka, will be one of four speakers at a panel discussion at 8 p.m. tonight in Strong auditorium. The panel is open to the public. Other members of the panel to discuss "The Role of Faith in Our World of Transition," are A. Drimya Khakravarty, visiting professor from India, and Rabbi Harry Richmond of temple Emmanu-El of Wichita. A. W. Davidson, professor of chemistry will act as moderator. The panel discussion is sponsored by the University chapter of Hillel foundation, Jewish student organization. Page 2 University Daily Kanson Thursday, Dec. 13, 1951 Little Man On Campus by Bibler Kansan Editorials Cyclone Opinion On Greek Discrimination Editor's Note: The following article is the second in a series of condensations taken from the Iowa State Daily. This article presents Cyclone campus opinion on the subject of discrimination among fraternal groups. Wednesday's Daily Kansan carried the opinions of the Daily editor. It is interesting to note that only a bare majority of readers who answered the original editorial were identified as fraternity men. All of them opposed the Daily's stand. Of the independent students who replied, most agreed with the Daily, to varying degrees, although some stood up for the Greeks. The editor, after due elaboration, had suggested the following steps be taken at Iowa State: Within five years all organizations with "discriminatory clauses" must (1) remove any discriminatory clauses. (2) disaffiliate with the national organization, or (3) close the individual houses. —A.G.M. On the following day two letters were printed, both condemning the Daily's stand, and both written by fraternity members. They argued, among other things, that "the methods advocated by the anti-clause group in order to bring about the suggested reforms call for force. Is this a democratic procedure?" "The reader can instantly recognize that practically every group which has ideals not in common with other ideals in their community set up restrictions for membership in order to maintain a homogeneity of spirit and action within the group . . ." "However, in my opinion it is not the business of any 'outsider' to try and rewrite the constitutions of any groups they are not affiliated with . . . Then, saying that "democracy" is hard to define, they queried, "Using the word in a legal sense as may be derived from the Constitution—do social organizations have a right to restrict whomever they please?" A second writer agrees "that discriminatory clauses in fraternity constitutions are not a good thing. "It seems quite silly to me to try and change the charter of one group of organizations and let the others alone. If you are so set against what a fraternity stands for, don't join one." He argues that a fraternity "is a group of men who have their own ideas and ways of life—and if they decide, among themselves, not to include someone in their organization, then that is their business, and theirs alone." But still another, describing himself as "a class A griper," called the editor a "crackpot" for sounding off before giving due thought to the problem. He pointed out that "every organization is discriminatory in some way or manner." Another said he saw in the editorials only "a suggestion to remove a clause which has long marked such organizations as being narrow-minded and prejudiced. "Individually, I find that fraternities and sororities are a normal, wonderful group of people," wrote another. "As a group, some of the rules (they) live by stink to high heaven." The only constructive suggestion was given by "a visitor in Ames." He wrote, "I am a college Daily Hansan News Room Student Newspaper of the Adv. Room K.U. 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS K.U. 376 EDITORIAL STAFF Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., and the Associated Collegate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York City. NEWS STAFF EDITORIAL STATY Editor-In-Chief ... Alan Marshall Editorial Associate ... Anne Snyder Managing Editor Charles Price Assistant Managing Editors Nancy Anderson Benjamin Holman, Lee Sheppeard, Ellsworth Zachary City Editor Joe Tayor Sports Editor Sparks Burch Telegraph Editor Don Sarton Society Editor Kathleen Swartz News Advisor Victor J. Danilov BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager ... Bob Sydney Advertising Manager ... Darothy Hedrick Assistant Adv. Manager ... Dick Hale National Adv. Manager ... Bill Togart Circulation Manager ... Elaine Blaylock Promotion Manager ... Ted Barbera Business Advisor ... R. W. Doores man from another part of the U.S. and the fraternity problem is the same everywhere. I think societies are proper in college, but not secret societies. At Princeton they had secret societies at one time, but now they have changed it so that membership is open, and any student can choose the society he wishes to join. It works out very well." And the controversy still rages, although the editors appear to want it quieted, if only the letters would cease. Only two editorials have appeared on the controversy, and both of those late in November. Their uncertainty is explained, and even given a certain nobility, as symptoms of our times, or as indicative of the vast rootlessness and lack of purpose inherent in the intellectually delicate in this country. We offer no haven for the sensitive. It is about that time in the school year when students are beginning to ponder on the value of higher learning. They wonder if it is all worth the effort they put into it, or, again, the effort they feel they put into it. It will be interesting to see if the discussion is called to an involuntary halt, or if it will die of its own accord. Much of the energy they would devote to pursuing that learning they expend in aimless speculation, twistings and turnings of the mind which are most often expressed in the sophisticated terminology of their favorite subjects. Despite all of the free enterprise and rugged individualism propaganda broadcast by the American Legion and others of its ilk, we have developed only a WPA attitude towards living. We want everything easy. If it doesn't come that way, we have manufactured the finest set of rationalizations in the history of mankind. A Rear View Mirror The argument is presented that matters mental are deprecated to the advantage of the materialistic endeavors. We are so engrossed in picking up a buck that we have given it a stature which it doesn't deserve. They are manufactured right here in our liberal arts courses, but they are manufactured inadvertently. Instead of taking what they give us as guides for living, we take them as excuses for not living. They give us high-sounding props for our failures. So, we can't study, we can't go away alone and think. I doubt whether we ever wanted to do either, but here is the answer. Just select a clause or phrase from the jargon of some study and you have your excuse—and it even sounds romantic. Or we can blame it all on the youth of the country or on its size or on the small salaries paid mental workers. But we don't blame it on ourselves. We are here ostensibly to get some knowledge and a degree which will enable us to get some place where we can use that knowledge. The plant is here, the rest is up to us. Instead of picking out all the fatalistic notions offered in courses, we ought to pick up some of the indications that show us how to avoid the situations that bring about the fatalism. And we ought to lay off ourselves and give the books or the instructors or whatever it is we are concerned with a break. And instead of constantly saying that our problems are greater now than they ever were, and then using antidotes concocted years ago to solve them, we ought to devise a few modern solutions. For nothing does more to lower the morale than a continuous dissertation on the depths to which it has plunged. We can talk ourselves into defeat. But, there probably is no answer. We are what we are and we must make the best of it. Just don't blame someone else for it. Just quit looking at life through a rear view mirror.-The Pitt News, University of Pittsburgh. Speaking on integration for Negroes, Duke Ellington recently stated, "We ain't ready yet." The Duke's a fine musician. Freshman comment on the first two issues of the Sour Owl. "What an appropriate name!" K.U. Dri... K.U. UNION FOWNTAIN! "Have you been waiting long, sir?" A Test Of McCarthy Support Another test of Republican support of Wisconsin Senator Joseph McCarthy will come up soon. The occasion will be the replacement of the late Senator Wherry (R.-Neb.) on the Senate appropriations committee. Having served on an appropriations subcommittee briefly this year, McCarthy will appeal to the GOP big brass to place him or this powerful legislative body. In such a spot, he could wield a mighty lever over his favorite victims, the administration and State department. There has to date been no clear cut disavowal of McCarny's dirty work by the Republicans. In fact, the Taft wing has given definite indication of approval. On Jan. 30, McCarthy was selected by the Republican committee on committees to the Senate appropriations subcommittee on the budget of the State department. When Senator Blair Moody (D-Mich.) replaced the late Senator Vandenberg (R.-Mich.) however the Democrats were given another representative to this committee and McCarthy was dropped. He hopes to regain this advantage as Wherry's replacement. To console McCarthy after his loss, Taft and Senator Wherry offered him a position on the GOP policy committee. When n member offered to resign, Wherry moved to increase the size of the committee by one. But this coincided with McCarthy's punch below the belt. A General Marshall, scoring off support of the more progressive Republicans, and Taft and Wherry had to fall back. The Old Guard again rushed to McCarthy's aid at the time Senator Benton's (D.-Conn.) move to censure McCarthy's participation in the Maryland election fraud against former Senator Tydings (D.-Md.) in 1950. Referring to the composite picture which showed Tydings "meeting with" a leading Communist, Senator Welker (R.-Idaho) said he thought it "very clever." Senator Knowland (R.-Calif.) took the Senate floor in defense of McCarthy Senator Hickenlooper (R.-Iowa) felt that use of the picture was not such a "heinous crime." Taft seemed truer to form a few days later in Sioux Falls, S.D. when he said, "I think Senator McCarthy has done a great service by calling attention to the extent of Communists in government." Although Taft has remained behind scenes and let his lieutenant speak out in Congress, he has had difficulty evading the issue in public. Pinned down by newsmen in Des Moines recently, Taf said coyly that McCarthy "overstates his own case," but that "they are certain points" on which I can agree with him. One columnist hit at the core of the issue when she called McCarthy a puppet. The Taft faction of the Republican party is pulls the strings. The Ohian and his group cannot expect to court American favor with a clean slate as long as the facts reveal their willingness to support McCarthy. Although more liberal Republicans have indicated opposition, speaking out in the manner of the signers of the "Declaration of Conscience" would end all doubts of their interest. In any case, the extent of support of McCarthy by all Republics will again be tested in the coming appointment to the ap propriations committee. —Ben Holloway Mail subscription: $0. a semester, $4.50 versity holidays and examination period a year, in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester Entered as second class matter except every afternoon during the University 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrens year except Saturdays and Sundays, Uni Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. University Daily Kansan Page 3 Thursday, Dec. 13, 1951 Savings Club Santa Helps 11 Million New York—(U.P.)—E d w a r d Dorset hardly looks the Santa Claus type. He's too tall and rangy. He doesn't wear a beard. He isn't plump in the right places. Yet in a way, Dorset is Santa Claus to nearly 11,000,000 people. Because of him and the organization he heads, it will be a much merrier Christmas, financially speaking. Dorset, from Richmond, Va., is president of Christmas Club, a corporation responsible for the system whereby you can save ahead for the holiday drain on your finances. Maybe you're a club member. If so, through your bank each week for the last year, you've been setting aside a dollar, two, or even $5 for your Christmas fund. Between now and Dec. 25, the bank will be sending you a check for the total saved. The idea of putting money aside for the one big day of giving was started in 1910 in Carlisle, Pa., by Herbert F. Rawl. then a salesman. Rawll looked at the banker's messy desk and decided he could work out a less confused system of handling small deposits. So the club was born. As Dorset tells it, Rawl walked into a bank one day to find a banker poring over a confusion of papers. The banker explained it was a group of small deposits by customers saving just for Christmas. Now the corporation supplies the materials and promotion needed to start and operate clubs in local banks, and also has a sales force touring the nation to sell more banks on the idea. This year, Dorset said, payments total $52,000,000 distributed to 10-875,000 members. The average per member is $87.50. Dorset said the unusual thing about club savings was the way people use them. It is not so much for Christmas spending as for other things, he said. Only 38 per cent goes for holiday gifts. Some of it is used for regular bills, some for education of the youngsters, and a big chunk -36 per cent—goes back into some form of savings. They didn't have enough capital to start a big business but, the club money was enough to underwrite a small project—stationery with desert scenes painted at the top, and for sale to tourists. Many a member has used the savings to help start a business. Dorset heard of one woman whose husband became ill and the couple had to move to the warm, dry climate of the southwest. Dorset said one widow, living on the east coast, used club money to buy one fishing boat, and now operates a fleet of vessels. Club savings are used to finance babies, for donations to the church, to pay for new homes, or to meet income tax payments. Chicago U. Professor To Be Guest Speaker Dr. Marshall Stone, professor and chairman of the mathematics department at the University of Chicago, will be guest lecturer at the University, Friday, Saturday and Dec. 17. Dr. Stone, son of the late Harlan Stone, chief justice of the U.S. supreme court, will come as visiting lecturer of the American Mathematics society. At 5 p.m. Friday he will speak on "Convex Sets"; at 5 p.m. Saturday on "The Spectral Theorem in Hilbert Space"; and at 5 p.m. Dec. 17 on "General Topological Spaces." Each lecture will be in 203 Strong hall. ICE CREAM MALTED Come In After Class Enjoy a break from studying. The Chateau's sandwiches and fountain specials will pep you up. Open 11 a.m. Curb Service After 4 p.m. CHATEAU CHATEAU DRIVE-IN MASS. AT 18TH ST. Kolfs Rolfs DIRECTOR" or "directress" billfolds Personal leather goods by Rolfs are always appreciated. The "Director" for him—or—the "Directress" for her—both have features galore. There's the secret pocket, registration against loss, spare key pockets and removable pass and photo-enclosures. Both billfolds are slim, smartly styled. "DIRECTOR" IN SMOOTH COWHIDE $5.00 OTHERS TO $15.00 Rolfs "DIRECTRESS" IN GLEAMING COWHIDE $5.00 Plus Tax OTHERS TO $7.50 Jewelry Roberts 833 Mass. Gifts "These discussions concerning university policy get rather violent at times!" CHRISTMAS GIFT Ideas --- --- NEW Parker "51" PEN NAME FOR THE PERFECT GIFT Magnificent "51" Pen and Pencil set. Plathemium- tipped 14K gold point, special ink flow meter assure flawless writing. 8 colors. Pen $13.50 Set $19.75 Parker "51" K.U. RECORDS Songs of KU 8 Popular K.U. Songs on 78 r.p.m. Non-breakable R.C.A. Records. Album — $4.90 SEMI-PORCELAIN PLATES 100 YEARS OF CHRISTMAS 10 $ \frac{1}{2} " $ , Depicting Campus Scenes. Available in blue, maroon, or brown. $ 1.50 STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE University Daily Kansan Page 4 Thursday, Dec. 13, 1951 Gripes About Restaurants Go To Board Of Businessmer BY DON SARTEN The next time you have a complaint about restaurants in the vicinity of the campus—don't forward it to the state board of health. The state of Kansas has a hotel and restaurant board composed of four members who are actively engaged in the business and whose duty it is to keep restaurants clean. Another official in the state board of health admitted that the restaurant association "is doing as much or more as our department could do with our limited budget." Frank L. Paris, the present director of the board, feels that "our system of restaurant inspection is the best in the country. Our sole duty is inspection." Complete agreement to this philosophy has been expressed by one of the top men in the state's board of health. This group works closely with the restaurant association. Standards of cleanliness are maintained by county inspectors who check various restaurants regularly. They carry a slip on which minimum standards can be checked on inspection tours. 1. No cots in the kitchen. A few of the items checked for include: 2. No animals of any kind in the kitchen. 3. Sweeping compounds must be used at all times. 4. Several rules covered the washing, cleansing and sterilization of utensils, dishes and glasses. 6. The touching of food by hands is prohibited. 5. No one preparing or serving food is allowed to use tobacco while handling food. 7. Pies, buns, cakes and other displays of food are always covered to protect them from flies, dust, and mouth droplets of the customers or employees. No health cards are required by the association, but the director of the association felt that "any person with a communicable disease sooner or later gets in touch with a doctor. And the doctor must report his findings to health authorities. So we do catch up with any disease carriers." All complaints are investigated promptly. The association has the power to close any establishment guilty of flagrant violations of cleanliness. There is no system of classification used on Kansas restaurants. In many states a system of "A," "B" or "C" cards are used to inform potential customers the degree of cleanliness conformed to by the establishment. The state association doesn't care for this system because "we feel that all kinds of restaurants are necessary for all kinds of people." In Mr. Faris's opinion, the state needs various types of restaurants to fit the purse of the poor and rich alike. Offices of the association are located in the capital building, Topeka. The inspector for this area is J. E. Koch, 1308 Massachusetts street, Lawrence. Rome—(U.P.)—A person may be born in Neo-Eboracen, with a father who is from Roffen and a mother from Novarceen, and still be an American. Where ya From, Kansanopolitan? In the Vatican's book, "The Official Pontifical Annual", it would just mean a Latin twist to familiar words. The annual lists all Catholic dioceses by Latin names. Even checking carefully, it is hard to spot your Two Debate Teams Vie At Fayetteville Two University debate teams left Wednesday for Fayetteville, Ark. to participate in the University of Arkansas invitational debate tournament Friday and Saturday. William Nulton, College junior; Stuart Conklin, N. Agnos, Kenneth Dam, College sophomores; and E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, made the trip. The teams will alternate in giving both affirmative and negative sides of the question at the tournament. own home town. New York is NeoEbracen, Rochester, N. Y., is Rolffen and Newark, N. J., is Novarcen. Just ask an Irishman whether he or his parents were born in Corcagien and see what happens. All it means is: Are you from Cork? The annual lists Little Rock, Ark., as Petriculam, which is a literal translation of "a small stone." Green Bay, Wis., comes out Sinus Virdis in the Latin list. Grand Island, Neb., is Insulae Grandis and Springfield, Mass., is Campifonius. Because ormen means "falls" in Latin, cities such as Fall River, Mass. Grand Rapids, Mich., and Great Falls, Mont., become River-ormen, Grandormen and Great-Ormen. politian while Los Angeles, Calif. transformed into Angelorum. Louisville, Ky., is Ludovicopopolitan, New Orleans is Novae Aureliae, Rapid City, S. D., is Rapidopopolitan San Diego, Calif., is San Didiac and Sioux City, Iowa, is Siopolitani But in a few cases the scholars have more or less surrendered. Washington comes out Washingtonen and Brooklyn—that's Bruklynjen. Memphis Man Has $4 Bill Kansas City is listed as Kansano- Memphis—(U.P.) —W. B. Beasent owns a $4 bill printed two years before the first Independence Day. The bill was issued by the colony of Maryland and bears the colony's coat-of-arms. Practical Gift Ideas For Christmas - Desk Accessories - Sheaffer Pens and Pencils - Eaton Stationery - Buxton Billfolds Carter's Stationery - Leathercraft Briefcases - Artist Supplies Phone 1051 1025 Mass. Hurry. L.M.O.C. ON SALE UNTIL Don't Miss This Great Cartoon Book On Campus Life! ON SALE FRIDAY AT THE INFORMATION BOOTH SENIORS SENIORS ONLY ONLY SENIORS ONLY $27.50 21.50 A limited supply of official KU rings for class of 1952 on hand at Business Office, Frank Strong Hall. FIRST COME - FIRST SERVE SAN ANTONIO JULY 1862 MAN'S RING, extra heavy MEDIUM RING, LADY'S, miniature PIN & GUARD Plus 20% Federal and 2% State Taxes $21.50 12.50 Only company authorized to supply the official KU ring. L. G. Balfour Co. 516 Altman Building Kansas City, Mo. Jap Wi rity of occupation There a not under- are not full aid in an speaking, proved a s Mainichi certain f Japanese been acco- cupation y vendence no g. The edi addition to and good- here we ments whi he success bi objected dehat the oreally cont anti public" it The sec entiment "The Jace the A which was defeated ard his v "The sen ne Japanese stack at t as not the Mainichiide toward on to old Japanese W ou' "I don't g But you an on Car hurry, joy proclaim Trojan's beace service person who own book or on sale Members of professional high plain any any student, a.m. am. ang) on The vertising riding. "We want are fully t." Murr dalesburg g new college that the young p Men's Linus Corsidors Y are the camp Corsidors x. The b au suite, our bedroom, bath IN Christ Fairy Bugs I Tom a Japan Called Satisfied With U.S. Occupation Page 5 yo—(U.P.)—Six years after the end of the war the vast marity of the Japanese people are satisfied with the results of the occupation, according to the influential Mainichi Shimun. There are some minor matters which Japanese as a nation cannot understand, and they are not fully satisfied, the newspaper said in an editorial, but generally speaking, "the occupation policy has proved a success." biggest of all such unexpected developments was the fact that the occupation policy was entirely contrary to what was generally anticipated by the Japanese public." it said. Mainichi said misgivings among certain foreign circles" that the Japanese will undermine what has been accomplished during the occupation years as soon as their independence is regained "seem to no grounds." The editorial pointed out that in addition to the fair play, generosity and good-will of the allied powers, here were unexpected developments which contributed greatly to the success of the occupation. The second factor was Japanese sentiment toward Russia. "The Japanese as a whole could face the Americans with a feeling which was something akin to what defeated athlete might feel toward his victor," the editorial said. "The sentiment which governed the Japanese in regard to the Soviet attack at the very close of the war was not the same." Mainichi said the Japanese attitude toward the Russians, in addition to old feelings about the Russomanese War, was developed by the You'll Get It . . Or Else Thursday; Dec. 13, 1951 University Daily Kansai But you will if you buy a "Little man on Campus" book, claims James Murray, journalism senior in charge during the book. "I don't get it." It's because a special new guidance service is being offered to any person who purchases a copy of the new book of Bibler cartoons, which ent on sale today and Friday. Members of Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternity high publishes the book, offer toplain any joke in the new issue tony student, male or female, betweenam. and noon (if it takes thating) on Thursday or Friday in thevertising lab of the Journalismiding. "We want to be sure our customs are fully satisfied with our pro-ject." Murray said. Men's Dorm Built Minus The Noise talesburg, Ill.—(U.P.)In design new dormitories, officials at ox college started with the prem that the human animal, especially young male of the species, is dowiders in men's dormitories are not the quietest places the campus. norridors will be eliminated at box. The buildings will have eight-room suites, each of which will have an bedroom, a home-like living room, bath and separate entrances. Russian detention of some 300,000 prisoners of war and the occupation of the Kuriles-islands Japan held before embarking on a course of aggression. "Such developments have created a deep emotional stir among the Japanese," the editorial continued. The article said it was beside the point to discuss whether it was right for the Japanese to entertain such sentiments toward the Russians. It added: "This is a state of affairs that actually exists and it compares sharply with the sentiment that the Japanese cherish toward the Americans and other nationals of the allied powers." Draft Board 11 Years Late It was this very sentiment, Mainichi concluded, which helped to a large extent to make the Japanese appreciate the Allied occupation policy. Knoxville, Tenn.—U.P.) It took a St. Louis, Mo., draft board quite a while to catch up with its man. When it did, the board found out that Chief Petty Officer Bill Brewer of the Navy recruiting office here had been in the Navy for 11 years. Michigan leads the world in production of motor vehicles. FUJIAN PRINCE MISHAAL Ibn Abdul Aziz, son of King Ibn-Saud of Saudi Arabia, arrived recently on the Queen Elizabeth for a visit in the United States. The young prince was recently appointed minister of defense. Arbor Lodge State park at Nebraska City, Neb., is a memorial to J. Sterling Morton, founder of Arbor Day. Travel Service THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Tel. 30 8th & Mass. SUNNY SNOOPY You'll Warm Up To This When cold winter winds give you a chill try a glass of warm milk flavored with chocolate syrup or molasses. For dinner a plate of delicious soup creamed with tasty milk. You'll love it! Phone 3162 GOLDEN CREST DAIRY 2016 Learnard VIEW-MASTER IN THREE DIMENSIONS VIEW-MASTER REELS Christmas Story Football Fairy Tales Historical Bairs Bunny Scenic Tom and Jerry Animals Many more to choose from Many more to choose from. MONTANA MOSSER TWOLF MOSSER-TWOLF BOW TIE MUSIC ART GROUP 100% COMMUNITY SPIRIT CONNECTION COACHING LEARNING EXPERIENCE Pressed for CHRISTMAS TIME? Serve HASTY-TASTY DINNER TREATS Caps Advertising Exchange Inc. 1839 BABY WORLD A twist of the wrist . . . and dinner is done. Just as easy . . . just as quick . . . as that—and your family is in for a delicious treat when you serve hasty-tasty table-ready foods. What a wonderful idea for these busy days when you have so much to do—and so little time to do it in. So come to Coles Food Center today and stock up with a variety of these fine foods that are so quick on the table . . . so easy on the budget. Jimmy CD/MP3 CD/MP3 HOLIDAY FOODS Ocean Spray 300 size 2 can for CRANBERRY SAUCE 33c Good-Value 2 lb. jar APPLE-GRAPE JAM 29c IGA Fancy Deluxe 14 oz. bottle CATSUP 19c Large Soft Shell 1 lb. bag WALNUTS 43c Flav-o-rite 14 oz. pkg. CHOCOLATE DROPS 25c Good Value Colored Quarters lb. OLEO 19c 105 READY TO EAT PICNIC HAMS 37c lb. Self-Service Meats SMOKED PICNIC SHOULDER Fresh Lean lb. GROUND BEEF 63c Corn King Sliced lb. BACON 45c Fresh Pork lb. LIVER 35c Fruits & Vegetables Grapes RED EMPEROR GRAPES 2 lbs. - 25c Andy Boy Large Stalks each CELERY 17c Spanish Sweet 2 lbs. ONIONS 15c Florida Seedless 10 for GRAPEFRUIT 96's 53c Shop to Music-At Your Convenience OPEN WEEK DAYS 9:00 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M. OPEN SUNDAYS 9:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M. COLE'S Food CENTER COLE'S FOOD CENTER IGA SUPER MARKET COLLEGE FOOD CENTER 2nd&LINCOLN LAWRENCE KANSAS FREE PLENTY PAVED PARKING FREE J. R. COLE, Proprietor Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 13, 1951 Kansas Cagers Seek Twin Wins Over SMU A clean sweep over Southern Methodist at Dallas Friday and Saturday nights would not only extend this season's string of Kansas victories to five, but would avenge a costly loss to the Mustangs in the finals of the 1946 Big Seven tournament. Kansas had beaten SMU twice that season 46-40 and 52-45, but lost 46-49 in the finals of the first Big Seven tournament. Texas is the only other Southwest conference team that has defeated the Jayhawkers in the 13 games played against that conference's teams. The Longhorns pulled the trick in 1939 by nosing past Kansas 36-34. The Mustangs have played four games this season, winning the first two over Oklahoma 57-49 and Tulsa 48-46. St Louis university's high scoring quintet made easy work of the SMU team dropping them 74-45. The Jayhawkers, who will leave late tonight for Dallas, will be favorites to keep their slate clean while at the Texas city. Darrell Murphy, Fred Freeman and Jack Kastman, a former star at Shawnee-Mission high school, have been the leading scorers for the southernners. Murphy and Freeman each scored 18 points against Oklahoma and Kastman came through with a field goal in the last second of play to nudge the Tulsa Golden Hurricane. Charles Wins On Decision San Francisco — (U.P.) — Former heavyweight champion Ezzard Charles was fit and ready today to make a liar out of the guy who said "they never come back." The Cincinnati Negro gave notice last night that he wag not to be stopped on the comeback trail when he belted out a clear-cut decision over light-heavy champion Joey Maxim in a bruising but dull 12-rounder at the San Francisco Cow Palace. The victory, Charles' fifth again- Maxim, was a long step back for the man who fell heir to Joe Louis' title only to lose it to aging Jersey Joe Walcott. The bout was a bruiser, but it was no fun for the audience—and the crowd showed its displeasure with the same boo's, clapping and catcalls they might give a couple of second rate waltzers. Coach Phog Allen's squad has had several recent additions, most of whom have been football players. Besides Charlie Hoag, who is now working out lightly, Bob Forsyth, Jerry Bogue and John Anderson have joined the cagers. Forsyth and Anderson are freshmen but Bogue has one year of varsity experience. Maxim, who looked every inch champion when he recently boxed the ears off Irish Bob Murphy showed little or none of his fancy work last night. On the united press score card he won only two of the 12 rounds. Two were even and the rest went to Charles without question. Referee Jack Downey, who warned Charles several times for low blows gave the former heavy king 67½ points to 64½ for Maxim. Judge Billie Burke gave Charles 68½ to 63½ for Maxim, and Judge Frankie Brown called it 70 for Charles and 62 for Maxim. Mintz said Charles would meet Walcott for the championship in either February or March, the exact time and place to be decided by the International Boxing club. KUWithholds Athletic List The University does not plan to publish a list of men who are attending school under athletic scholarship, A. C. "Dutch" Lonborg, director of athletics, said Wednesday Mr. Lonborg made this comment after the University of Missouri made public the names of all its students receiving athletic scholarships. "I don't see where anything is to be gained by the University publishing at this time the names of our athletic scholarships," Lopborg said. "I hope that the statement is not misunderstood, however. We have nothing whatsoever to hide at Kansas and have never tried to do so." "A list of our athletic scholarships, the boys who receive them, how much it costs the school, how much the boys get and all those other details are on file at the Big Seven conference office in Kansas City. Any member school that wishes to may see our setup in black and white." Jack Wolfe, a 5 feet 8-inch freshman, has also reported this week after participating in track this fall. He led the scoring last year at Lawrence Memorial high school and has shown considerable promise. Dean Wells is the only football basketball player to see action thus far this season. He made his first appearance against Denver university here Dec. 8. Shop Brown's First 1930S MEN'S TOPPERS In Popular TAN AND GREY GABARDINE Some With 100% Wool Zip-out Linings $29.95 up B9 PARKA HOOD COATS Sizes to 44 While They Last $24.95 $24.95 First Door South Of PATEE THEATRE Cage Scores Brown's TOGGERY 830 Mass. St Georgetown (D. C.) 70 Loyola (Maul) 59 Harvard 69 Wesleyan (Conn.) 55 Pennsylvania 89 Muhlenberg 64 Penn State 73 Bucknell 63 Princeton 88 Lehigh 39 St. John's (N.Y.) 63 Wagner 47 Syracuse 90 Niagara 76 Rockhurst 58 Baker 52 Concordia 67 Chicago U. 47 Central State (O.) 94 Alcorn 58 Youngstown 76 Western Reserve 65 Western Michigan 79 Valparaiso 62 Illinois 74 Loyola (III.) 66 Northern Illinois 74 DePaul 69 Brigham Young 58 Toledo 57 San Francisco Dons Startle K-State With 55-52 Victory New York—(U.P.) The University of San Francisco Dons startled the college basketball world today with the first major upset of the 1951-52 season-A 55 to 52 victory over Kansas State, runner-up for the NCAA championship last season. It was the first loss in five games for the K-State Wildcats, and was likely to affect their current standing as the nation's fifth-ranking team. The Wildcats, who beat California at Berkeley, Cal., on Tuesday, were trying an "iron-men" trick when they clashed with the twice-beaten Dons at San Francisco last night. With seven minutes to go, the Dons were in front and from then on they resorted to stalling tactics, that gave the Wildcats little chance to catch up. freshman guard Rudy Zannini "freezing" the ball for long periods with his brilliant dribbling. Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests No.29...THE HYENA I nearly died laughing! Hysteria reigned from the moment he heard the details of those quick-trick cigarette mildness tests. First he giggled . . . then he guffawed . . . wound-up rolling in the aisle! He knew that the "single sniff" test or the "one puff" test didn't prove anything! Millions of smokers have reached the same conclusion - there's just one test that really proves cigarette flavor and mildness! It's the sensible test . . . the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test, which simply asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke on a pack-after-pack day-after-day basis. No snap judgments! Once you've enjoyed Camels for 30 days in your "T-Zone (T for Throat,T for Taste), you'll see why... CAMEL TURKISH & DOMESTIC BLEND CIGARETTES CHOICE QUALITY After all the Mildness Tests . . . Camel leads all other brands by billions nwotnwo d o g n s y e h i d s Teams Win By Wide Margin In IM Games as they were much imds Page 7 Ten points was the narrowest margin of victory in six fraternity "A" division games played Wednesday night in Robinson annex. Kappa Sigma took a 6-2 first quarter lead over Lambda Chi Alpha, led 11-7 at halftime and 19-13 at the end of the third quarter, before pulling away to the final 31-21 decision. Dallas Chestnut with 10 points and Willard Schuldt with eight paced the Kappa Sig scoring. Duane Unruth seven markers for the winners. Ken Cox and Morris Kay led the Lambda Chi scoring with seven and six points respectively. A tremendous second half scoring barrage brought Sigma Chi an easy 48-13 win in their meeting with Kappa Alpha Psi. At the half, the losers trailed 14-7, but Sigma Chi stamped to 18 points in the third quarter and 16 more in the last period. Sigma Chi displayed a balanced scoring attack with every man scoring and six men making six or more points. Charles Ross with six points and Jesse Milan with five were the leading scorers for Kappa Alpha. Acacia sucumbed to a high scoring Sigma Alpha Epsilon quintet 44-18. They trailed 19-5 at the half. The Sig Alph offense was paced by Jim Robertson and Marvin White with 13 and 10 points respectively. Stan Smith contributed eight points Foster Hall Rolls To 65-23 Win A Foster hall team, starring the top offensive trio in women's intramural basketball, rolled to a 65 to 23 win over Theta Phi Alpha in the women's basketball program Wednesday evening. Rv JACKIE JONES The Jayettes and Kappa Kappa Gamma ended their close game in a 18 to 18 tie, and Kappa Alpha Theta showed their championship form in defeating Gamma Phi Beta 41 to 11. Three of the freshman teams took hard fought victories. The MJ's took another low scoring game from Sellards 23 to 26. KMM defeated Freshman BH, 22 to 11 and the BL's defeated Temruth 13 to 11. The scoring in the Foster-Theta Phi game was well divided: Shirley Mickelson countered 24 points, Ernestine Deklinger got 21 and Anita Philip scored 20. The defensive combination of Virginia Brooks, Jappy Rau and Darlene DeMeritw was excellent allowing only Mary Dixon to score for the losers. She tallied all 23 of Theta Phi's points. Kappa Kappa Gamma came from behind in the last minute of play to tie the Jayettes at 18 points each. The Jayettes held a comfortable lead at the half, but in the second period the Kappa's defense tightened and the Jayettes did not score from the field. Jackie Jones scored 15 points and Mary Snead 3 for the Jayettes and Margaret Black and Joan Piller each got 7 for the Kappas. The Thetas, showing their smooth well-balanced attack, took an easy 30 point margin of victory over Gamma Phi Beta. The Theta's defense kept the opposing forwards bottled up most of the time, allowing them to score only 11 points. Sydney Ashton and Barbara Quinn led the Thetas scoring with 9 and 19 points respectively. Flavia Robertson scored 11 points as the MJ team came from behind to take a thriller from Sellards hall Helen Bell led the losers with 14. Man University Daily Kansan With Jerry Taylor scoring 14 points and Jack Stonestreet 12, Delta Upson bombarded Tau Kappa Epsilon 47-22. DU demonstrated its superiority in the first half by sweeping to a 27-12 lead. Richard LaGree supported the DU cause with eight points. Plymouth to the attack. Jim Glass led Acacia with seven tallies. Your . . . has a used car priced for you. Jim Martin scored eight points to lead the Tekes. He was aided by Neil Lilley and Bill Hawkey with five points each. Sigma Phi Epsilon with Bob Godwin and Randy Barron showing the way, overwhelmed Triangle 56-23. Godwin connected with 15 basket and a free throw for 31 points. Barron dropped in nine shots for 18 counters, and in addition, played a fine floor game. Tom Boden scored eight points and Ken Philo five to head the Triangle scorers. Buddu Alpha Kappa Lambda beat Sigma Nu 32-19 in one of the better played games of the evening. AKL held a 15-7 halftime advantage. GALLAGHER 634 Mass. Ph. 1000 Glen Davis topped the AKL scorers with 14 points. Frank Mischlich gave him strong support with nine counters. Don Augst scored seven points for Sirma Nu. Today's Games Robinson Game, Fraternity 'P' 'B' D-Eelta Tau Delta vs. Triangle W-Sigma Epsilon vs. Alpha D-Epsilon vs. Alpha 7:45 p.m. D - Delta Upsilon vs. Pi Kappa Alpha E - Kappa Sigma vs. Chi Chi Sci Thursday, Dec. 13, 1951 E—Sigma Nu vs. Phi Kappa W—Phia Giamma Delta vs. Delta Chi E—Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Tau Euclides Rappa Cipson W—Sigma Chi vs. Alpha Phi Alpha Robinson Annex, Fraternity 'A' n.m. 5—Alpha Tau Omega vs. Pi Kappa Alpha 4—Phi Gamma Delta vs. Delta Tau Delta Phi Kappa Fsi vs. Sigma Pi 7- Bei Theta Pi vs. Phi Kappa 8- Phi Kappa Sigma vs. Delta Chi 9- Delto. Theta Phi Delta Theta vs. Phi Kappa Tau Football Banquet Open To All Men Any man may attend the football banquet honoring the University Jayhawker football team Dec. 19 at the Community building. One need not be a member of the Lawrence quarterback club, sponsor of the event, to buy a ticket. Tickets are on sale to the general public at $2.50 each. They may be purchased at the Chamber of Commerce office, Eighth and Vermont streets, in the Wren building. Featured speaker at the banquet will be Harold "Red" Grange, immortal Galloping Ghost of the University of Illinois. Besides Grange, several local and area sporting notables will be at the banquet. Movies will be shown of Jayhawkier highlights during the past season. The movie will be narrated by Max Falkenstein, who announced all the University games this season. An attempt also is being made by University Athletic Director A. C. Lonborg to obtain movies of Grange in action as a college football player. A yearly feature of the banquet is the presentation of the Ormand Beach trophy to the outstanding senior on the Jayhawker squad. The trophy is a memorial to Beach who was an outstanding player at the University. Beach was later killed in an oil-field accident. Wade Stinson was voted the award last year. The opening game at 6 p.m. pits Southwest Missouri against Kearney, Neb., State. Emporia State tangles with Eastern Illinois at 7:30. Hamine plays Washburn in the 9 o'clock game and Regis meets Southeastern Oklahoma to wind up the four-game card. Kansas City, Mo.—(U.P.)-All eight teams in the NAIB air-Christmas basketball tournament which opens tonight will see action. The finals will be played Saturday night. NAIB Tournament Opens Tonight Eye YOUR EYES EYE should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. Lawrence Optical Co. Phone 425 1025 Mass. Lawrence Optical Co. 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PILOT 100X2 Aluminum safety cap, can't come off in your pocket Anodized gold tone color, won't rust or tarnish. Highest quality plastic materials. No better workmanship in any pens regardless of price. ALSO HOODED POINT REGULAR FOUNTAIN PEN $1 LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE 735 Mass. St. Phone 548 Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertiser. UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD Go in Comfort by UNION PACIFIC UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD Go in Comfort by UNION PACIFIC ... Enjoy every minute of that holiday trip . . . and play it safe by traveling on Union Pacific. Regardless of weather or traffic conditions, you'll ride in trouble-free comfort in a restful Coach or Pullman. There's no worry about meals, either. Just stroll into the dining car and select your choice of appetizing, western-grown foods. For travel information and reservations — see your local Union Pacific Agent. UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD @DC=3 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 13, 1951 Page 8 And You Think You've Got Troubles New York—(U.R.)—First night mishaps are no novelty in the theater, But Robert Cummings claims some sort of record for the time he opened is co-star with Ann Sothern in "Faithfully Yours." Even his three-week-old daughter got into the act. "I scarcely know where to begin," Actor Cummings said as he marshalled his memories of disaster "But I might as well start by saying it was a warm muggy night, low barometric pressure and people respond badly when the barometer is falling. "On top of that the engineer at the theater apparently failed to realize how warm it was and he started up the furnace late in the afternoon. He forgot to turn off the heat and someone discovered about an hour before curtain time that the theater was unbearable hot. "They opened all the doors, and turned on the cooling system which is distracting in the quiet of a theater during performance. We finally got it shut off after an act but by this time the audience was getting too cold. "I should go back a day or so to say that the prop man, who knew all the ropes, quit suddenly before opening night. Miss Sothern had received a new set of costumes just before the opening and she was not yet adet at getting into them in a hurry. As a result I had to cover up a couple of delayed entrances by some improvised business that made me look like a complete idiot. "Then there was the baby. Mary, my wife, flew here with her in order to be at the opening. "That evening we left the baby with a nurse in our suite when we went to the theater. "About mid-way of the play, just as I was straining my ears for my cue to enter, a theater attendant rushed up to me in the wings and whispered something like 'Your hotel—a fire—the baby.' "Just then I heard my cue. I yelled some gibberish at the man about telling my wife and rushed onstage. Fortunately it was a scene in which I was supposed to go a bit haywire so I guess it didn't look too bed. "Meanwhile my wife had rushed back to the hotel and found that the nurse had gotten the baby out of the suite safely. The fire, in a room immediately above the one the baby was in, killed two elderly persons. "Outside of those things I believe everything else was normal. "Oh, yes, there was one other item. Philip Bourneuf, who has the third most important role, had been with us only a couple of days when we opened. Obviously he wasn't and couldn't have been at his best." Santa Claus Visits Children Who May Not See Christmas Bv United Press Santa paid several pre-Christmas visits to youngsters throughout the land today because many of them will not live to see the old gentleman again. He came bearing good luck, laughter, and good fortune to a few, but to many others, his trip was an emergency mission to crowd a few hours of joy into lives destined soon to be snuffed out. Old St. Nick dropped in on 10-year-old Raymond Pike, Jr., at Kalamazoo, Mich. Raymond may die any day of cancer. His last Christmas party was granged by the local AMVETS post which brought a circus to Raymond's bedside for a special performance. Clowns, jugglers, and acrobats vent through their acts only a few feet from the wide-eyed youngster. The larger acts were performed outside as Raymond watched through a window. Little 10-year-old Raphaela Frasano was granted the one wish of her life as Santa appeared to her in the form of singer Mario Lanza. The movie star was host for a pre-Christmas party given for the Newark, N.J., youngster. The child is dying of Hodgkin's disease, a rare type of anemia. The President of the United States gave St. Nicholas a helping hand. Mr. Truman gave orders to fly the two-month-old son of a sailor from Key West, Fla., to Bethesda Medical center in Maryland to see that could be done to save the life of David Minter. But Navy doctors at the hospital said there appeared little hope to give the life of the boy. David is living of water on the brain, and an operation would provide only temporary help, the doctors said. Across the nation at San Francisco, 14-year-old Ralph Ibarra, dying of cancer of the spine, stomach, and lungs, celebrated his last Christmas with the present he wanted most— television set given him by a CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY (Nationally Accredited) (Matronally Accredited) An outstanding college serving a splendid profession. Doctor of Optometry degree in three years for students entering with sixty or more semester credits in specified Liberal Arts courses. REGISTRATION February 25. Students are granted professional recognition by the U.S. Department of Defense and Selective Service. Excellent clinical facilities. Athletic and recreational activities. Dormitories on the campus. CHICAGO COLLEGE OR OPTOMETRY 1845-H Larabee Street Chicago 14, Illinois furniture dealer. He exists on soda pop because he can't eat solid food. Doctors said that the sugar in the four to six pints he drinks a day provide sufficient energy to sustain life. Another cancer victim, William Vernie Smith, three years old, watched in spell-bound happiness as the lights on his Christmas tree were turned on in Woodward, Okla. He may never see another. Vernie already has had one eye removed because of a cancerous growth. The big decision whether o remove his remaining eye will be made this week. High Speed Camera To Help Industry Columbus, Ohio — (U.P.)-Battelle Memorial Institute has developed a camera here that can take 500 pictures in 1/200th of a second to help solve some of the complex problems of our high speed industrial life. "What causes knocks in a piston engine is but one example of the type of problem we're prepared to tackle," said the designer, C. D. Miller. The invention takes pictures about 10 times as fast as previously developed cameras and will help in analyzing various mechanical difficulties. It uses only one lens to avoid distortion of objects in making a series of photos or frames for a single movie series. Miller said the developed film may be projected as a motion picture without reprinting. XMAS GIFTS For HER A beautiful comb, brush and mirror set $12.50 - $35 For the exotic look, a rhinestone neck- lace with matching earrings. BALFOUR Lauter Jewelers 411 W.14 Phone 307 Oysters and scallops are lazy members of the seafood world. In their native element they lie on one side, whereas most other bivalves live erect, standing on the edges of their shells. By law, the "pattern pieces" of a trial strike made by the U.S. Mint are now carefully destroyed. In early days, such coins often were preserved and thus came into the hands of collectors. Super Market A&P Holiday Values Pillsbury Pkg. Piecrust Mix -- 18c Warwick 1 lb. box Thin Mints --- 39c A&P 2-9 oz. pkgs. Mincemeat --- 33c Overland Brand 1 lb. pkg. Hard Candy --- 29c Pappas 2-16 oz. cans Cranberry Sauce 29c Brown or Pwd. 2-16 oz. pkgs. Sugar ------- 25c COUNTRY FRESH EGGS ___ Doz. 54c PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, DEC. 15th as seen in October Mademoiselle all eyes on ties especially when they're velvet-tied blouses Diane Young Face brightening beauty . . . boy-collared to flaunt a velvet beau tie. Spice for suits, terrific topping for skirts. Easily removable tie of imported French velvet in contrasting colors. Washable rayon tissue faille in every luscious shade. Sizes 32 to 38. $3.98 ADELANE'S 823 Mass. have But a hard time for you Will be hard to bear Won't be easy to cope with Will be hard to remember Will be hard to forget I will not give you the answer without further information. Please refer to the source for the details. Let me know if there are any other questions or requests. University Daily Kansan It Was A Lovely Evening, But Not A Night For Bliss It's probable that before leaving home, Bliss read about the death of Cornelius Vanderbilt, the railway king. It was the dav's big news. At any rate, Bliss and Miss Lee made a call in Harlem and returned almost immediately, riding downtown in a Columbus avenue street car. They stopped the trolley at 74th street. Miss Lee lived on that street. Bliss on 75th. New York—(U.P.) It was a clear, cool evening in late summer, and a fresh southwest wind was whipping across the brownstones when Henry H. Bliss left his midtown Manhattan home, never to return. It was 9 p.m. and dark. The temperature stood at 64. The early dusk, which was to help along the tragedy that came to Bliss, had been a boon earlier that day to the league-leading Brooklyn Superbas. They beat the Pittsburgh Pirates, 4 to 3, but the Pirates had three men on base when the game was called because of darkness. Bliss, 68, a partially-bald, heavyset Wall street real estate broker with a drooping mustache, and his friend, Miss Lee, who has never been further identified, headed uptown to Harlem. Bliss alighted and turned to assist Miss Lee off the car. But at that moment there was bearing down on him from behind one of the 3,200 horseslass carriages then in existence in the United States. Fifty minutes before the elderly broker and Miss Lee took a street car for Harlem, the curtain went up at the Garrick on "Zaza," starring Mrs. Leslie Carter. The automobile, running close to the tracks, hit Bliss, and as the Galveston, Texas —(U.P.)— Can't sleep? Try a beer or a glass of wine. newspapers report, "He was struck on the head by the rubber-tired wheel." The driver, Arthur Smith, said he did not see Bliss until it was too late to stop. "Knocked down by an automobile," the headline in the New York Herald said. The date of the accident was Sept. 13, 1899. Next day Bliss died. His was America's first automobile accident death. That's the recommendation of Dr Judmund Magnussen, founder of the Mental Hygiene clinic at Copenhagen, Denmark. This week end as the Christmas holidays start, the one millionth person will be killed in the U.S. by an automobile. It Ought To Beat Counting Sheep A specialist in sleep disturbances, Magnussen told a class at the University of Texas medical school branch here yesterday that those who wish to avoid insomnia should eat "a light meal in the evening and drink a glass of wine or a bottle of beer." There are 171 miles of corridors in the Pentagon in Washington. It's A New Approach Anyway It seems that the latest service offered in Watson library is an unofficial date bureau. Apparently, three KU men have devised a new system for getting better acquainted with the studious females who inhabit the place. "Naturally, I didn't notice him," she said. It seems that two of his "friends" arrived on the scene and seated themselves beside her. They immediately began to disturb the peace and in general make their presence objectionable with leers at their victim, asides to each other and the first fellow about her, and remarks about women in general, she said. As one shy education junior tells it, "I was sitting at a table in the reserve room, and this lanky blond was parked at the other end." After a short while the two left. It was then that the plan revealed it. The first chap came over to the Hugh McKenzie, special student in education from Surrey, England, has been named a delegate from the University to the 16th Quadrennial conference of the Student Volunteer movement to be held in Lawrence Dec. 27 to Jan. 1. OR Some Pigeons are Inclined to Pout Did Garcia Really Care About Getting That Message? He will be one of almost 2,500 young men and women to meet on the KU campus for what has been described as this year's largest and most widely representative student conference under inter-denominational auries. KU Delegate Set For Conference young lady, sat down, and apologized for his friends' behavior. In addition to U. S. and Canadian students from 700 colleges and universities, representing some 40 Protestant denominations, the meeting will include over 200 students from foreign lands, and 200 missionaries, student leaders and church executives who will provide the Conference leadership. When she acknowledged the apology, she found herself embroiled in a conversation, the outcome of which was a request for a coke date. Cost him $4.25 in quarters. When the bonging of the Coin Box stopped, all he could hear at the other end of the wire was a stutter of Sniffs. "Honey?" he asked. She sobbed more plainly. This is the sad story of a senior who was Serious about a Girl. In the straightforward manner of seniors, he invited her up for the Big Weekend. Bald Eagle He sat down and wrote her a nice letter a month ahead. Then he sat back and waited. And got no answer in three weeks. Finally, in despair, he phoned Her. "Harold," she wailed, "You used to send telegrams to invite me to Big Weekends —This year, all I get is a little old Letter. You don't love me." And hung up. "I told him no," she said, but added that she "couldn't help admiring his methods." Harold goes everywhere stag now. Says he prefers it that way. But when he passes a Western Union office, he sighs. A telegram takes any message right out of the casual class. It's subtle—it flatters the person who gets it. Next time you send an invitation, or a howl home for cash or a birthday greeting to Mother—just call Western Union or head for your Western Office. Thursday, Dec. 13, 1951 Brockton, Mass.—(U.P.)—Doctors at Phaneuf hospital had to use a flashlight to deliver a baby daughter to Mrs. George Belmore Jr. when a falling limb cut power lines. Both mother and daughter came through in fine condition. Has 'Eveready' Heard This? The national capitol would fit into any one of the five pie-shaped sections of the Pentagon in Washington. LOOK OUT when it's DARK OUT NATIONAL SAFETY COUNCIL Every Type . . . Every Color You Want . . . in Slippers Every Type . . . Every Color You Want . . . Gift Slippers LEATHERS FELTS! SATINS! Exceptional Quality Exceptional Values...at $2.45 to $3.85 SIZES 4 to 9 HAYNES and KEENE Exceptional Quality Exceptional Values...at $2.45 to $3.85 SIZES 4 to 9 Beautifully made moly-poly softies! Platforms with long wearing outdoor-type leather soles! Closed styles, open styles...sleek and glamorous, or warm and wooly...in every possible type and color! Phone 524 Jayhawker's PROFESSIONAL Directory 819 Mass. FORREST D. BROWN, D. D. S. 800 E. Massachusetts Phone 374 STOWITS REXALL STORE Prescriptions 9th and Mass. St. Phone 516 RANEY DRUG STORE Prescriptions 909 Mass. St. Phone 521 VAN'S PRESCRIPTION SHOP Phone 601 Residence Phone 3486-R 105 E. Eighth St. DR. C. R. ALBRIGHT Chiropractor - X-Ray and Physio-Therapy 1023 1/2 Mass. Ph. 1531 HOLT PHARMACY 14th and Mass. Phone 234 Across from High School DR. M. L. BROCKWAY Chiropractor 10 E. 9th Street Telephone 4224 CRAIG - COLBURN Chiropractic Clinic 1024 Vermont St. Telephone 115 No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money. WE HAVE THE In Brands He Will Recognize GIFTS HE WILL LIKE Wembley Ties ... $1.00 up Van-Heusen Ties ... 1.00 up Van Heusen Shirts ... 3.95 up Van Heusen Sport Shirts ... 4.95 up Van Heusen Pajamas ... 3.95 up E&W Robes ... 7.95 up Gates Gloves ... 3.25 up Haggar Slacks ... 5.95 up Paris Belts ... 1.00 up Paris Suspenders ... 1.50 up Textan Belts ... 1.50 up Rayon Scarfs ... 1.00 All Wool Scarfs ... 1.95 House Slippers ... 3.95 up Loafer Sox ... 1.98 up Shapely Shirts ... 2.95 up Gibbs Clothing Co. 811 Mass. St. ' --- Page 10 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 13, 1951 Sigma Chi First Fraternity To Employ A Housemother Alpha Xi chapter of Sigma Chi fraternity, founded at the University on May 23,1884, was the first fraternity chapter in the United States to employ a housemother. It was in 1903 that a Mrs. Virginia Petty was taken in by the local chapter as a result of the loss of her home to flood waters. The idea proved so successful that it was soon adopted by other Sigma Cl' chapters, as well as other fraternities in the nation. Alpha Xi's present housemother is Mrs. Kenneth Whyte of Kansas City. The local chapter was one of the first of the 123 chapters that are now affiliated with the national organization, which has headquarters in Evanston, Ill. The first chapter of Sigma Chi was founded at Miami university, Oxford, Ohio, on June 28, 1855. There, together with Beta Theta Phi and Phi Delta Theta, the Miami triad was formed. The chapter house is located at 1439 Tennessee street. This has always been the address of Sigma Chi at KU. Built in 1931, the present house holds 60 men and last year was ranked by the Magazine of Sigma Chi as "one of the finest Sigma Chi chapter houses in the nation." The outstanding event on the Sigma Chi social calendar is the annual Sweetheart party, held each spring. At this time the local Sweetheart of Sigma Chi is elected. Alpha Xi's present choice is Miss Carolyn Armsby, a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Outstanding Alpha Xi alumni include E. C. Quigley and "Dutch" Lonborg, athletic directors; Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of men; E. H. Lindley, former KU chancellor, and Raymond K. Nichols, executive secretary. Official Bulletin Alpha Kappa Psi winter formal, 9 p.m. Friday, Big Seven room, Eldridge hotel. Upstream society is sponsoring a dinner, 6 p.m. Friday, Community building. Panel discussion on "The Challenge of Asia." Call 3691 for reservations. Dove staff meeting, 8 tonight, East room. Union. All interconnected limited Not interested invited. No Psychology club this week. Karl Menninger on panel discussion sponsored by Hillel tonight. Student Union library, 5 today. SUA office. Red Peppers meeting, 305 Bailey. 5 today. Deutscher Verein, Gesangsprobe Mittwoch Donnerstag, 5 p.m., Fraser 302. Radio Players. 5 today. KFK111 Rehearsal of German Christmas choir, 5 today, 306 Fraser. Everybody wanting to sing German carols invited. Graduate students, 8 tonight. Memorial union. Dance at Dinea-a-Mite to follow. KuKu club, 7:15 tonight, Pine room. Pledges 7 p.m. Attendance required. FACTS meeting, 7:30 tonight, 210 Fraser. All members attend. KU Mountaineering club, 7:30 to night, 402 Lindley. Thanksgiving outing slides shown. ISA scholarship applications must be returned today to the dean of women's office. Pershing Riffes meeting, 5 today, Military Science drill hall. Bailey Club club, 4 today, 305 B. C. L. Movies and refreshments Pre-Nursing club, 4 today, Textile lab. Fraser, Christmas party Fresmen especially invited. Math club, 5 today, 203 Strong everyone welcome. La Confrerie and Pi Delta Phil meet 7:30 tonight at home of Mrs. Wilma Callins, 1604 University Drive. Hillel foundation, 7:15 p.m. Friday, Dunfort chapel, Jewish service Mathematics lectures by Prof. Marshall Stone, 5 p.m. Friday; 10 a.m. Saturday; and 5 p.m. Monday, 203 Strong. Gamma Delta cost supper, 5:30 p.m. Sunday, 17th and Vermont. Danforth chapel service, 8:30 a.m. Sunday, sponsored by Gamma Delta. Minnesota provides nearly 70 per cent of the nation's iron ore. PENNANTS MEN OF ALL AGES want Christmas gifts which have their comfort in mind. Wool will again this year form the basis for gifts. Among leaders in popularity will be (top) the all-wool tweed cap and Tyrolean model hat; all-wool sports shirts (center), and all-wool flannel slacks and argyles (bottom). Delta Tau Delta Lists Dinner Dance Guests Delta Tau Delta held its Christmas formal dinner dance Friday night at the Union ballroom. The guests were Helen Anderson, Arlene Miller, Midge Davis, Cynthia Patterson, Anne Reitz, Shirley Tinsley, Nancy Munger, Cleo Diablo, Mary Lou Penfold and Betty Cole. Jordan MacDougall, Virginia Lightfoot, Pat Gardenhire, Carol Keller, Shirley Gray, Sally Freeman, Kathy Powers, Nancy Canary, Anne Altringer, Sally Bunger and Dorothy Brown. Pat Schrader, Anita McCoy, June DeVall, Jeannine DecGroot, Barbara Seel, Carolyn Campbell, Ann Sproul, Carole Galloway, Joyce Bigham, Joanne Banks, Norma Mock, Carla Haber and Mary Ann Mahoney. Eleanor Haley, Barbara Logan, Helen Overman, Barbara McCory, Nancy Cater, Annebel Hungate, Barbara Spauling, Marilyn Hentzler, Pat Roney, Diana Sherwood, Cynthia O'Brian and Rosemary Heiny. Georgann Vandenberg, Ann McCutcheon, Mary Lou Eklund, Bobbie Hessling, Ann Galloway and Marjorie Errobe. Fourteen new members were initiated into the Alpha Rho chapter of Phi Lambda Upsilon, honorary chemical society recently. Phi Lambda Upsilon Initiates Chemists Into Membership Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Stokes. Hutchinson, announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Joanne, to Daniel L. Azarnoff, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. Azarnoff, Newark, N. J. Miss Stokes Plans Christmas Wedding They are Raymond J. Ackerman, Roger T. Beth, Joseph A. Christy, Jack G. Kay, Bert K. Larkin, David M. Mohilner, Joe I. Russell, Gene Stucker, Paul E. Wilhelm, Joe H. Cain, Aaron Feldstein, Leo Kruger, Norman Meyer and Bernard Pollock. Miss Stokes is a College junior. Azarnoff received his Bachelor of Science and Master of Arts degree at Rutgers university and is now a graduate student at the University. Alpha Delta Pi held its annual Christmas formal at the chapter house Saturday night. The wedding is planned for the Christmas holidays. Alpha Delta Pi Holds Christmas Formal the chaperones were Mrs. D. I. Denham, Mrs. Edna Stewart, I. Mrs. John Skie Sr., and Mrs. Hazel Jenkins. John Tranham, Neil Holleman, Bob Hand, Stanton Rosenberg, Kempel Wilhelmsen, Todd Johnson, Daon Balaban, Don Freely, Ron Meeker, Gary Antenzen, John Cox, Bruce Meeker. The guests included Bill Lienhard, Kenneth P. Ochs, Jack Barr, Joe Strong, Bill Farney, Jack Stone-street, Jack Stewart, Lee Shepeard, George Michale, John Cain, Kenneth Simpson. Clarence Chambers, Hugh Cox, Orinne Gray, Cloyce Wiley, Dick Logan, Reuben Short, Bill McEachen, Bob Spohn, Max Zimmerman, John Buford, Walter Rickel, Norman Junod, Beth Smith, Ann Meeker, Harold Henson, Don Ellis, Hugh Armstrong. Ken Frost, Dick McCall, Mark Gilman, Charlene Ewil, Marvin Dunn, Ben Simpson, Gloria Simpson, Bill Delap, Mr. and Mrs. Gordan Witherspoon, Stephen Rogers, Don Porter. Tau Kappa Epsilon Lists Party Guests Tau Kappa Epsilon entertained Saturday night with its traditional Red Carnation ball. The chaperones were Mrs. Harry M. Ryan, Capt. and Mrs. W. M. Terrill and Dr. and Mrs. Roland Baker. The guests were Patty Lloyd, Caroline Holmes, Donna Hobein, Elizabeth Marshall, Pat Elliot, Barbara Shepp, Ramona Goering, Joan Greef, Kay Scott, Phyllis Meyer, Beverly Miller, Betsy Thomas, Nancy Gilchrist, Lee Swanson and Phyllis Moden. Claire Ensign, Joyce Ronald, Claire Coulter, Joyce Bryan, Helen Anderson, Doris Kimmel, Kathleen Hughes, Linda Stormont, Louise Hampton, Kathryn Todd, Freddie Blanks, Pat Erwin, Suer Harper, Sue Wilson, Betty Berry, Ann Conard and Janice Kimmel. Sharon Dill, Lorraine Locke, Kathlene Shaughnessy, Shirley Samuelson, Nancy McCammon, Rene Heikes, Mary Harlow, Barbara Spaulding, Janet Bond, Polly Owen, Kathy Holthus, Carole Mchoen, Mary Light, Carol Landis, Winifred Meyer and Jo Mitchell. Madeline Hatfield, Natalie Sherwood, Helen Schenck, Regina Johnson, Jeanne Willis, Elaine Snyder, Carol Logan, Betty Jo Craig, Doria Hern, Martha Bureh, Mrs. Bruce Green and Mrs. Pat Calahan. Sam Wilcoxon, Dick Roshong, Gaines Hill, Roscoe Mendenhall, Ronald Whitsitt, Elwood Peters, David Moxley, Tom Oliver, Bud Merwin, Carl Schroff, Lloyd Pine, Mare Hurt, Victor Goering and Hal Kendig. Carruth Hall Lists Formal Party Guests Carrith Hall held their Christmas formal Saturday night at the hall. Chaperones were Mrs. Louise Cochran, Mr. and Mrs. Bromleigh Lamb, Miss Laura Jennings and Mr. John Gray. Guests were Jim Kohman, Dave Brandt, Bill Kunz, Dan Harclerode, J. P. Bryan, Russ Sehon, Ross Keeling, Ed Kaufman, Gary Stearns of Manhattan, Charles McBeth of Emporia, Dean Burnett, John Walz of Kansas City, Jim Vasper of Cherry Point, North Carolina, Clark Gugler of Kingsport, Tennessee. Phi Kappa Fraternity Hold Snowflake Swing Phi Kappa held its Christmas formal Dec. 8 at the chapter house. The theme of the dance was a snowflake swing. The chaperones were Mrs. Dana L. Anderson, Mrs. Edward Dicks, Mrs. F. L. MacCreary and Mrs. R. H. Wilson. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Bannister, Lt. Col. James J. Hausman, Barbara Ryan, Juanna Thomas, Nan Duncan, Carol Morrison, Dorothy Perkins, Bobby Lorson, Ellen Kearns, Rosemary Peek, Elizabeth McKie, Mary Dean Connor, Virginia Verbrugghe. Nan Erickson, Ina Lou Henry, Marilyn Miller, Sue Quinn, Nancy Murray, Jean Stoneman, Jackie Bushey, Irma Wagner, Rosemary Cody, Margaret Glaser, Joann Wessel, Alice Phillips, Gretchen Daniels, Marjorie Jennings, Phyllis Ward, Denise Owen Janice King, Mary Sands, Lucie Allen, Pat Carlton, Marie Carrol, Barbara McCreary, Nancy Vogrin, Miss Joan Headley's Engagement Told Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Headley, Salina, announce the engagement of their daughter, Joan, to Dean G. Shade, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Shade, Brookville. Miss Headley attended Cottey. Junior College and is a pharmacy junior at the University. Mr. Shade farms near Brookville. The wedding is planned for next summer. Jane Rawlings, Terre Sullivan, Joan- nain Dennison, Janet Pfumm, Rosemary eagley, Sue Jamison, Marriet Hanson, Kay Brown, Margaret Kelly, Mary Kingman. Jean Mayfield, Barbara Dudley, Anne Lehmann, Jessie Trapp, Nancy Dennan, Marilyn Kolar, Kay Gustavson, Pat Farley, Rossane Drake, Phyllis Beverly, Beverly Jackson. John Morris, Robert Kluge, Bill Eden, Cal Bender, Don Manley, Robert Meysenbur, Hern Ruder. Mario Lanza Sings RECORDS Christmas Songs On RCA-Victor Records Bell's 925 Mass. Christmas Gift Problems? Let Vickers Gift Shop Vickers Gift Shop Help you solve both the small and large gift needs. We have a variety of lovely items from all corners of the earth! We gift wrap and pack for mailing free of charge! AND REMEMBER- 1023 Mass. (Across from the Granada) Tel. 933 FOLIAGE New Professor Joins KU Staff Curt Teichert, professor of paleontology at the University of Melbourne, Australia, has joined the University geology department in the capacity of research assistant 't was announced today. Dr. Teichert is here to prepare a portion of his "Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology." While at the University Dr. Teichert will give several lectures at various universities in this area as well as a series here during March, according to Robert M. Dreyer, professor of geology. Dr. Teichert is a native of East Prussia and has lived in Australia approximately 15 years. Security Wanted By College Men Evanston, Ill., (U.P) - C o l l e g e graduates are more concerned with opportunity than job security, according to Dr. Frank S. Endicott, director of Northwestern University's placement service. Dr. Endicott reported on a survey among 62 members of the 1951 graduating class who were offered a total of 269 jobs before graduation, or about four each. The students rejected 207 of the proffered jobs. In 17 per cent of the rejections, lack of opportunity for advancement was cited as the main reason. In only one case was a job rejected because of an inadequate pension program, Dr. Endicott said. Twenty-one per cent of the jobs were because of a low starting salary. Toys To Be Made By Home Ec Club Toys for underprivileged children will be made by members of the Home Economics club at their annual Christmas party today 7 through 8 p.m. at the Home Management house. The girls will join in singing Christmas carols as they prepare puzzles and sew. Thelma Iden, college sophomore, is in charge of the party arrangements assisted by Rita Speckin and Donna Kempster, education seniors. Mjss Marie Zepplin, assistant professor of home economics, is faculty adviser for the meeting. Cup Of Coffee Costs Man $8,000 Groton, Conn. —(U.P.)—A cup of coffee cost Ralph Ackley $8,000. Ackley, a liquor store owner, and patrons were diving home when the skimmed off the bottom. Ackley left a strongbox, containing the money in cash and checks in the auto. When they returned the box and the money were gone. VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD LAST TIMES TONITE Open 6:45 p.m. "MARRIAGE IN THE SHADOWS" (German) Adm. 25c - 60c FRIDAY-SATURDAY Rocky Lane "FORT DODGE STAMPEDE" And Penny Edwards Grant Withers "MILLION DOLLAR PURSUIT" —PLUS— Chapter 4 "FLYING DISC MAN FROM MARS" Classified Advertising 25 words or less Additional words Phone K.J. 376 Classified Advertising Rate FOR SALE LATEST STYLE off shoulder peach formal, in heavy satin, size 16, has full skirt. White crinoline slip, inch sleeves, afternoonoses, 633 Illinois. Phone 1299R. TUX COAT, 40L; tux pants 32-34; white dinner jacket 42L Call Ken Philo 303 596 TUXEDO FOR SALE. Cleaned and in ex- posure condition 35-37. C-12. landlady. Phone 3566. C-12. phone. Phone 3566. C-12. X-ACTO PEN KNIFE! The perfect utility knife for artworks, models retouching, stripping etching, and photography. See them at your Student Union Book Store. CRPEF PAPER FOR ALL OCCASIONS! Both regular and flame proof crepe paper in all colors. Available at your Student Union Book Store. 14 A GIFT THEYLL ENJOY HAVING! Give a brief bag or case for Christmas. See the wide selection at the Student Union Book Store. 14 FINE ART REPRODUCTIONS! We now have a wide selection of reproductions of famous paintings in full color. Student Union Book Store. 14 KU RECORD ALBUM! Hear the A Cappella Choir, The Glee Club, and Band non-breakable Victor records. Now at your Student Union Book Store. 14 PHARMACY STUDENTS! New edition of Mill's "State Board Questions and Answers" is now available at the Student Union Book Store. 14 TRANSPORTATION RIDER WANTED going east to Massa- maca; if interested phone Ken Cun- 3410 AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether tours or other literary itineraries. Phone numbers: Odafee 3661, Downs Travel service, 1015 Mass. Five days $1.00 3c DRIVING TO Fort Wayne, Indiana. Dec. 21 or 22. Can take three; share expenses. Call Jim Holdeman at 2518M after 6 p.m. Ask us about family rates sky coach and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book passage now for European travel next summer. Travel by National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30. VERY NICE QUIET South room for two Cold to浴, close to single beds, ca. 2162M. FOR RENT ONE ROOM for 2 students; clean and clean the room. Board it, if desired. Phone 3348W, W54, W34 IF YOU LIKE to live very close to the campus, double room for two girl students in very nice houses or second semester. Inqurse 1038. Or call call 3833J. BUSINESS SERVICE TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses—prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs. Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports and miscellaneous. Mrs. Cheng and miscellaneous. Phr. 2725J after 4 p.m. TYING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these tying experience. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio. Pt. 163 RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment in this area thus assuring fast, reliable repairs. Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vernonft Free pickup and delivery. CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. **tt** STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. TYPING: Experience in theses, term papers, miscellaneous typing, and stencil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. tt STARTS TODAY "A MILLIONAIRE FOR CHRISTY" IS A MILLION LAUGHS FOR YOU... Fred MacMURRAY Eleanor PARKER A MILLIONAIRE For CHRISTY ADDED FUN: STARTS SATURDAY OWL SUNDAY 11:15 p.m. MOVIETONE NEWS COLOR CARTOON HERE IS ENTERTAINMENT PLUS! The Dazzling BIG TOWN Musical that's got everything! HOWARD HUGHES presents TWO TICKETS TO BROADWAY Color by TECHNICOLOR HOWARD HUGHES presents TWO TICKETS TO BROADWAY Color by TECHNICOLOR starring TONY MARTIN • JANET LEIGH • GLORIA DeHAVEN EDDIE BRACKEN • ANN MILLER with Barbara Lawrence • ROB CROSBY - The CHARLIVELS CAROLINE BROWN University Daily Kansan Watch For "CALLAWAY WENT THATAWAY" R K O RADIO MUSI Granada PHONE 946 Continuous Shows On Saturday and Sunday From 1 p.m. — Box Office Opens 12:45 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 13, 1951 CRYSTAL CASTA serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malfits, home-made pies and air-conditioned. Open space for customers. Air-conditioned. Opens at midnight. Crystal Cake. 699 Vt. JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet store, and you can buy one-stop pet shop has everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf LOST LOST, STRAYED, or stolen from Chemical Engineering department. Lindley and Lindsay set in a wooden case. Any information appreciated. Call KU 296. *Y4* MAN'S WHIST WATCH, white metal Snow ball, Dec. 10, Cheng Liang, KU phone 515. PAIR CLEAR PLASTIC from glasses finder please leave at Western Civiliza- tion office in Strong annex or call 3694F Stanley H. Dial. PRECISE WATCH REPAIRS Watch Repair Wolfson's 743 Mass. Call 675 Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed — NOW THRU SATURDAY — Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS The Holiday Picture Of All Time! Charles Dickens' Joyous Classic . . . "A CHRISTMAS CAROL" Alastair Sim As 'Scrooge' A New Screen Triumph ADMISSION CHILD 14c ADULT 60c Shows Today and Friday 2:30 - 7:00 - 9:00 Continuous Sat. 1 p.m. on "The Great Caruso" Starts Tomorrow For 4 Laugh Filled Days! LAST TIMES TODAY DON'T MISS THIS HIT! You Haven't Laughed Till You Meet Miz Birdie! The "KETTLES" Kind of Fun! The KETTLES Kind of Fun! The "LOUISA" Kind of Heart! ...from The Company that gave you Both! THE LADY FROM TEXAS COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR Starring HOWARD MONA JOSEPHINE DUFF • FREEMAN • HULL Evening Performances 7:00 and 8:00 At 7:00 It's that laughable lady from mw" in her first role since 1950 Academy Award! that gave you Both! THE LADY FROM TEXAS' COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR New PATEE PHONE 321 - Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 13, 1951 University Chorus Makes Debut To Small Audience By JIM POWERS The University chorus, 180 voices strong, made its formal debut Wednesday night before a disappointing audience that could not fill one section of Hoch auditorium. Clayton Krehbiel did a commendable job of training and directing the group. He was especially effective in his direction of the large choral works of "The Christmas Oratorio," among which the outstanding were "Glory to God in the Highest" and "Glory Be to God." The latter number might well have been the best of the evening had it not been for a fadeout when the basses had the lead. That section was weak all evening, a fact which spoiled the emotional effect of chorales like "How Shall I Fitly Meet Thee" and "The Lord Has All These Wonders Wrought," in which the movement of the bass part provides the necessary shadings. It wasn't their lack of quality that caused the men to be deficient. There were only seven tenors and 16 basses in the entire chorus. The basses had quality but not enough of it. Microphones placed in front of them helped out when they were standing, but the "mikes" picked up the tenors far better than the lower voices, it seemed. Outstanding performer of all was Richard Wright, tenor, who sang the role of evangelist with clarity and ease. His words, which told the scriptural story of Christmas, were An inspiring chorale beautifully and expressively sung was "Break Forth, O Beauteous, Heavenly Light." distinct and understandable. Unfortunately, where this person sat, a slight echo caused by the microphone arrangement could be heard when Wright or Phyllis McFarland, soprano, sang. Miss McFarland had another echo, although this one was intentional. It was Mary Lee Haury, who did a fine job of imitating the soloist in the soprano aria, "Ah! My Saviour." Maurice Casey, bass soloist, made the difficult b aria aria seem even more difficult. He worked too hard, singing "Mighty Lord, and King All Glorious," but with a little more practice could probably handle it. The soprano section, comprised of many well-trained voices, was easily the leading section of the chorus. But how the tenors kept up so well with only seven members is hard to say. The elimination of several tiring arias and duets from the oratorio was wise and left a lively, enjoyable program. If the man-shortage can be solved, the chorus, already the biggest, may become the best music group on the campus. Tito Can Offer Soldiers But Demands A High Price Belgrade—(U.P.)—Marshal Tito of Communist Yugoslavia believes that his country's defiance of the Soviet Union and its satellites since the break with the Kremlin three years ago has made an important contribution to the defense of the Western World. He wants to be paid off—in American guns, tanks and planes. Tito is going to get his United States military aid. Negotiations on that are nearing a conclusion. However, he will receive nothing like the $500,000,000 worth mentioned in some reports as his possible allotment for this year. That's the dominant impression one gathers from a press conference talk with the greying strong man who dared defy Moscow when the Russians insisted upon a complete voice in the affairs of Yugoslavia. The consensus of best informed officials here is that he will be fortunate to get half that. Allied officials at supreme headquarters near Paris look at the matter much as Tito does. They recognize the marriage of convenience far, what it is. They are grateful for the 32 Yugoslav divisions against satellite forces in Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary and Albania. They believe it is in the interest of the western powers to help him equip his rather tattered and ill-equipped forces. American officials do not want Tito in the Atlantic Fact, however, and they realize he does not want to participate. The Marshal's break with Moscow obviously has not driven him an inch closer to western democratic philosophies. He concedes t h a t Communism and capitalism can coexist peacefully but makes it clear that he looks down on the western concepts of government. His only apology is that Yugoslavia, at present, has attained only a state of "social democracy" and has not yet achieved true Communism. He contends that the Soviet version of Communism is a gross caricature of the real thing. The Yugoslav leader scoffs at the idee, held in some countries such as India, that any country can remain neutral in the current cold war. "With matters as they stand today, there can be no neutrality against aggression," says the wartime partisan leader. Tito is asking the United States to give priority to his needs for heavy artillery, tanks and aircraft. One difficulty American officials report in their efforts to come to agreement with Yugoslavia on arms aid is Tito's reluctance to agree to adequate inspection and supervision by United States officers. In all other countries, American training and inspection programs accompany the equipment to insure its most efficient use. However, Tito is reluctant to grant this right. Tito wants to play for still higher stakes. He obviously believes he is holding enough high cards to get a large chunk of military aid. He claims he is holding off about 1,000,000 troops and police in the four satellites on his eastern frontier. American officials concede him a large share in this—along with the Turks and Greeks—but declare they have no intention "to equip his army from top to bottom." Burlington, Wis.-(U.P.)—The Burlington Liars club wants only bona fide liars—no politicians—in its competition for the best liar of 1951, according to President O. C. Hulett. If You Drink Park The Car Hulett cited a couple of the whoppers as evidence that this year's entries were just about as far-fetched as ever. In all seriousness Hulett said that the club had to be quite selective because "some of the boys get kinda carried away." Hulett said 1951 had been a tough year for liars because "so many people had moved into the field. But our judges are looking over entries from all parts of the country." Gillete said he was responsible for the survival of Kansas City from the flood last summer. "When the water was at its crest," he said, "one of my cows got washed into the Missouri river and was being carried down-stream." Many Liars Seek Title Emile Gillet Jr., of Arma submitted a typical tale of prevarication that he hoped would meet with the approval of the Liars club judges. He said he hoped to announce this year's winner shortly before Christmas. For whom the bell tolls in December In mourning or with Yuletide peal Depends on how drivers remember— If drinking, stay away, form! If drinking, stay away from the wheel "I put out in a boat, got a hay rope onto the cow and was rowing back to shore when a fish swallowed it. It took a hook-up of three farm tractors to land that fish, but when we got it out on the bank, the hole it left filled up and the water went down and Kansas City was saved." This little verse might well be remembered when a person takes into consideration that 550 persons were killed by automobiles during the three-day Christmas holiday week-end in 1950. The bloody bulge in the holiday death curve can be blamed primarily on drinking drivers, according to the accident prevention department of the Association of Casulty and Surety Companies. More than 3,580 lives were lost in automobile accidents last December, Traffic deaths far exceeded the 3-210 death toll of August, peak month for highway travel, department records show. Injuries in December may have reached 140,000, the greatest number of victims for any month of 1950, according to the records. "There is strong evidence of an increase in drinking-and-driving." Thomas N. Boate, acting manager of the department, declared. "I believe that strong law enforcement can deter many drivers from taking the wheel of their cars after drinking. "Even more important, an intensive educational campaign in December might convince millions of motorists of the folly of using their automobile at times when they drink." With the wettest season of the year just ahead—alcoholically speaking—Mr. Boate strongly urges everyone to take an active part in the association's effort to convince drivers that an accident is virtually inevitable if they use their cars while drinking. "The bulk of the problem involves drivers who have consumed only enough drinks to affect their ability to drive safely and are not obviously drunk." he stated. If education and enforcement go hand-in-hand on a broad scale it might be possible to save many lives and prevent many injuries, Mr. Boate said. "If every driver knew how much even a few drinks impair his driving ability and lessen his chances of getting back home safely," Mr. Boate stated, "he would always leave his car at home and travel some other way. It's the one sure way of avoiding accidents if one drinks. "To be sure of avoiding impairment of driving ability through slowed reactions, false confidence, impaired concentration, dulled judgement and poorer vision, a drinker who must drive should remember this traffic tradegy time-table: "A driver must wait half an hour after one drink, whether it is a high-ball, cocktail, or a bottle of beer, before attempting to drive his car. After two drinks he must wait two hours; after three drinks, four hours; after four drinks, six hours, and after five drinks, eight hours." "It is much saner to leave one's car home in the first place, and travel some other way rather than risk the tragic consequences of drinking and driving." All members are urged to attend, as the party plans to discuss a proposal for re-organization of the All Student Council and certain amendments to the constitution. * A special meeting of FACTS, campus political party, will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in 210 Fraser. FACTS To Hold Special A lecture illustrated with slides on the subject "The Brain's Blood Supply" was given to medical students and the public by Dr. Ernst Sharrer, associate professor of anatomy at Colorado university Thursday morning. Prof. Speaks To Med Students WEATHER Cloudy this afternoon, tonight and Friday, with snow in west portion this afternoon spreading eastward late this afternoon and continuing over the state tonight and Friday. Moderate snow with some drifting and blowing in the west portion. Colder east and north tonight and over the state Friday. Low tonight 10 to 15 northeast. News Roundup Washington—U.P.)—President Truman said today that he is planning quick executive action to prevent federal employees from having profitable outside interests. Truman Will Act Against Profit Seeking Employees Mr. Truman at a news conference said he does not think government workers should have outside interests and he expects to do something about it, possibly this week. The President said his program would consist in general of two parts 1. Legislation to meet the situation. This will be outlined in his State of the Union message to Congress in January. 2. Direct action by the chief executive, himself, this to come shortly. Probe Oliphant's Interest In Shakedown Washington—(U.P.)—House tax investigators hoped to learn today why Charles Oliphant, resigned chief counsel of the Internal Revenue bureau, took special interest in Abraham Teitelbaum's tax troubles. Oliphant was scheduled to testify after the House ways and means subcommittee investigating tax scandals finishes questioning Bert K. Naster, Hollywood, Fla., businessman. Teitelbaum, attorney for the late Al Capone, has accused Naster and gambler-promoter Frank Nathan of attempting a $500,000 shake-down to fix his tax case. U.S. Jets Down Record Number Of MIG's Eighth Army Headquarters, Korea—(U.P.)-American Sabre jets destroyed a record-breaking 13 Russian-built MIG-15 jet fighter planes today in blazing air battles over Northwest Korea. Two more MIG's were probably destroyed and one damaged in the "MIG alley" dogfights. American losses, if any, were not given. Using Ike 'Only To Win' Is Claim Washington—(U.P.) —Sen. Joseph C. O'Mahoney today accused some Republican leaders of urging Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower to run for president "only because they think he would win." O'Mahoney, a loyal administration supporter, ridiculed claims of Eisenhower Republicans that the general is Republican. "It's perfectly absurd," he said, "to have political leaders saying Eisenhower is a Democrat or a Republican when they don't know a darn thing about what he stands for—except that he stands right on international issues." Low Kansas Draft Quota For February Topeka, Kan.—(U.P.)—Brig. Gen. Joe Nickell, state selective service director, reported today that Kansas must supply 621 men for the February draft. The February quota was considerably less than the January quota of 1,130 men. Typhoons Continue Battering Islands Manila, P.I.—(U.P.)—Two typhoons roared today toward battered central Philippine Islands where storms and volcanic eruptions have killed at least 464 persons in the past nine days. The weather bureau in Manila said the 105-mile-an-hour typhoon "Amy," which earlier this week took a reported death toll of 216 in the Central Philippines, had turned in the South China Sea and was heading again toward the west coast of Luzon. Plans For Topeka Hospital Revealed Topeka—(U.P.)—Plans for a $1,300,000 hospital at the Menninger foundation here next year were announced today. Treasurer Laird Dean said the funds for the project were in sight. He said bids for the construction probably would be received in January. About $456,000 of the total cost of the unit will be supplied from federal funds. French Easily Ratify Schuman Plan Paris—(U.P.)—The French National assembly ratified by a large majority today the Schuman plan to pool the $4,000,000,000 coal and steel resources of Western Europe. The ratification vote was 377 to 233, the largest majority the government of Premier Rene Pleven has received in its four-months in office. Two Athletes Admit Breaking Law Joplin—(U.P.)-Two teen-age athletes, one a pitching prospect of the New York Yankees, were in jail here today, charged with auto theft and burglary. Jim Samplely, who signed a Yankee contract for 1952, and Bob Evans, star Joplin High school football player, both 17, admitted to Police Capt. Roy Isgriff three auto thefts and ten break-ins in Joplin and Webb City in recent weeks. Four Die As Water Tank Collapses Tucumcari, N.M.-(U.P.)-At least four persons died and several others were injured early on when a 3,000,000-gallon water tank collapsed, flooding a section on the West side of this town of 8,500. B T T Paxton old wom the pha th sio eve Ch Jos era act this his fore Sta UNIVERSITY DAILY 49th Year No. 63 Friday, Dec. 14, 1951 hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS Students To Get Period Of Grace Before Exams A period of grace before final examinations this semester was announced today by James Logan president of the All Student council The final schedule calls for no examinations on the first morning, Thursday, Jan. 17, and no finals in MWF or 5-hour courses at all during that day. James Logan, Kathryn Conrad, College junior, and Lyle Anderson, business junior, met with the KU Calendar committee during the planning of the final schedule and worked out the present system. The schedule will leave only two Tuesday-Thursday courses to hold examinations on the first afternoon. There will be no finals on Saturday afternoon, giving the students a second grace period. Everyone will be assured of at least one day of grace, and with only two finals the first day most students will have a total of a day and a half. Logan said that the committee and James K. Hitt, registrar, were extremely co-operative, and very willing to give the grace period if it was what the student body desired. "I feel that the students will be happy with the grace period before finals, and it should be a more satisfactory system than before," Logan said. Sudden Baptism Confuses Rabbi Thursday evening the members of the panel who discussed "The Role of Faith in Our World Transition" were set to begin their talks. Each speaker -had a glass of water before him. Sitting to the right of Dr. Karl Menninger of Topeka was Rabbi Harry Richmond of Wichita. Just before Rabbi Richmond began the first talk, Dr. Menninger, in moving the microphone across the table tipped a glass of water over Rabbi Richmond. The audience chuckled. But Rabbi Richmond was master of the situation. "I came here as a rabbi" he said. "Now I have been baptized. My status is now uncertain." Christmas Party To Be Held For February Graduates A Christmas party for seniors graduating in February will be given at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 19, at the Delta Upsilon fraternity house. Only February graduates are invited. Seniors attending are required to bring a gift, price not to exceed 25 cents, for a "grab bag." The senior class committee chairmen will be hosts at the party. December Sour Owl On Sale Monday A 16-page parody on Life magazine will be featured in the December issue of the Sour Owl, official campus humor magazine which will go on sale Monday. The Sour Owl will be sold in the information booth, the Union. Marvin hall, Fraser hall and Strong hall rotunda. It will contain several picture stories including "To Hell With My Little Girl." "The last really outstanding issue of the Sour Owl was the 'Tame' edition in March, 1949. We think students will like that one just as well," said Lee Shepeard, journalism senior and editor of the magazine. Buehler To Give Oratory Advice "How to Build an Oration," will be the topic of a discussion to be led by E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, at a meeting at 4 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 18, in 105 Green hall for students interested in entering the Lorraine Buehler Oratorical contest, Thursday, Feb. 21. Black Hills Passion Play To Be Given Here Jan. 10-11 The purpose of the meeting is to acquaint students with the details of the contest so that those interested can prepare for the Feb. 14 tryouts during the Christmas vacation. "As far as we are concerned, this contest is the big forensic event of the year," William Conboy, instructor in speech, said. "One point we especially emphasize is that we do not want the word 'oratory' to scare out anyone," he said. Mr. Coboy said an oration is merely the best in speech. The winner of the contest will receive a set of Encyclopedia Americana and the second and third place will receive $20 and $10 respectively. The world-famous Black Hills Passion play will be presented in Hoch auditorium, Jan. 10-11, by the oldest production company in the world. There is no limit to the number of students who may try out, but the number will be narrowed to eight for the actual contest, he said. The prizes are annually donated by friends and supporters of University forensics, Mr. Conboy said. Union Decorated by SUA For Christmas Season The contest is now in it's fourth year and plans are that it will continue as an annual event. The Passion play will dramatize the life of Christ from His triumphal entrance into Jerusalem, on through His crucifixion and ascension. There will be matinee and evening performances each day. Student Union Activities members have given the Union a Christmas look, Members put up and decorated two Christmas trees this week, one in the lounge and the other in the Hawk's Nest. Ropes of evergreen have been fastened along the baseboards in the first floor hallway. Christmas carols will be broadcast throughout the building next week by means of a record player and amplifying system in the Student Union Activities office. featured in the role of "the Christus" will be the renowned Josef Meier. He is the seventh generation of his family to produce and act in the play. Before coming to this country he was a producer in his native Germany, but Hitler's rise forced him to flee to the United States. He is now an American citizen. In 1938 the Passion play players chose the beautiful Black Hills section near Spearfish, S.D., as the permanent home for the production. There the show is produced in a natural outdoor amphitheater which has settings from 40 to 50 feet high and includes permanent buildings. The stage alone is the length of three average city blocks. The Passion play originated in 1242 in Leunen, Germany. When it comes to the University it will be beginning its 710th year. In addition to the 50 members of the permanent play company, the production will use at least 70 persons from the University and the Lawrence area. Yule Vespers To Be Given Twice Sunday Snow will add a seasonal atmosphere to the All-Musical Christmas vespers with tableaux Sunday. More than 200 persons in all departments of the University School of Fine Arts will work together on the traditional Christmas observance. It will be given twice, at 4 and 7:30 p.m. in Hoch auditorium without charge. A new feature this year will be half-hour carillon recitals before the vespers to be played at 2:45 and 6:45 p.m. by Ronald Barnes, carillon-neur. The A Cappella choir, symphony orchestra and a mixed glee club will be the principal musical organizations. Setting the spirit for the occasion will be a double brass quartet who will play carols from the balcony of Hoch auditorium as the audience assembles for the programs. Three tableaux prepared by Robert Green, assistant professor of drawing and painting, and Ray Ottinger, assistant professor of design, will be given. The afternoon vespers will be broadcast over KFKU. University radio station, from 4 to 5 p.m. Sunday. Hillel Panel Discusses Faith Leaders in the fields of religion, humanism, and psychiatry took a look at faith Thursday night as they participated in a panel discussion before an audience that nearly filled Strong auditorium. The panel was sponsored by the University chapter of B'nai Brith Hillel foundation, Jewish organization. On the panel were Dr. Karl Meninger, director of education at the Meninger foundation in Topeka; Rabbi R. Richmond of Temple Emanu-El, Wichita, and Dr. Amiya Chakravary, visiting professor of humanities from India. Rabbi Richmond preached a sermon and Dr. Chakravarty gave a philosophical lecture. Dr. Menninger then posed the question, that if faith is so obvious and if it is right, omnipotent, and beautiful, why must we be reminded of it? Why is it so hard for people to get comfort out of a God in whom they profess to believe? Rabbi Richmond painted an optimistic picture of increased interest in religion as manifested in the United States on university campuses, in industry, and by the press. Dr. Chakravarty noted the universality of basic religious premises, and said that "there lies in literature a sense of deliverance and guidance." He pointed out, that "there must be a continual yearning after God, [or] a continuous yearning to God." Snow driven by wind swept across the campus today bringing the first real winter storm. Students hurried to their morning classes in 20 degree temperature. WindDrivenSnow Blankets Campus The weatherman says temperatures will drop to zero over the northern part of the state tonight. There also may be more snow. The sheriff's office reported that highways out of Lawrence and all over the state are extremely slippery and students leaving the campus for the weekend are advised to drive carefully. P. B. M. C. A. G. H. J. K. L. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. TWO PRINCIPALS IN THE FACULTY FOLLIES last night were Mrs. William Conboy, wife of the speech instructor, and Dean Harold G. Barr of the School of Religion. Mrs. Conboy is shown penning a letter in the play, "The Tragedy of Brown." Dean Barr delivered a monologue, "The Train Ride." The picture was taken as he said, "If the engineer had yelled, 'Come to me, baby!' I couldn't have come any faster."—Kansan photo by Lee Sheneard Lee Sheppeard. Enthusiastic Audience Sees Faculty Follies By DIANNE STONEBRAKER The AWS Faculty Follies was enthusiastically received Thursday night by an audience that comfortably filled Fraser theater. Allen Crafton, professor of speech and master of ceremonies, did an effective job of breaking the ice for an audience who didn't know just what to expect from a faculty talent show. From the moment Professor Crafton stepped on the stage the audience relaxed and prepared itself to enjoy an evening of "unprofessorish" entertainment. Professor Crafton increased his popularity by his amusing piano rendition of a disconnected, blank verse ballad with a moral about tambourines. Boisterously received was Miss Elin K. Jorgensen, associate professor of music education, doing her interpretation of singer April Stevens. She breathed through "I'm in Love Again," and then was in love again and again. The most impressive part of the 9-act modern problem play entitled "Tragedy of Brown" was the rapid changing of costumes by Mrs. William A. Conboy. The theme of the play was "when he's gone, there'll Rifle Shoot Starts Tomorrow The University Air Force ROTC rifle team will begin shooting Saturday in the 31st annual William Randolph Hearst National ROTC Rifle competition. Two teams of five men each will be entered in the postal match by Sgt. Harold Swartwood, coach of the Air Force team. The 10 men who will shoot for KU in the Hearst match will be Richard Kummer, Frank Jennings, George Lund and Max Embree—all from last year's 15th place team, and Lorrimer Armstrong, Norman Wilson, Hubert Dye, Rodney Dyerly, Donald Tice and either Jim Jukes, Leroy Carroll, or Mike Wayland. Sergeant Swartwood's shooters were 15th in the national match last year. The team will begin shooting Saturday morning. The match has to be fired between Dec. 1 and Jan. 15, 1952. Special targets are furnished for record firing by the Hearst committee. All targets and score sheets must be forwarded to the officials of the match within 72 hours after the shooting. Five shots will be fired from each of the four positions—prone, sitting, kneeling and standing. There is a 25-minute time limit. Sergeant Swartwood had 103 matches scheduled during the first 1 weeks of postal competition. With four cancellations, the team has shot 10 of those. They have won 94 and lost 5—that's nearly 99 per cent. be another," and it was humorously put across by dialog consisting of one sentence for each act. Charles Oldfather, assistant professor of law, with a calm and soothing voice rolled out three ballads, the best of which was a takeoff on "One Meatball." "Willie," a modern dance by Miss Elaine Kutschinski, instructor in physical education, inspired response only when Miss Kutschinski was "as good as she could be." E. H. Taylor, professor of zoology, portrayed a typical carnival barker. "The Bartender and the Kid," a monologue by Madison Coombs, Haskell instructor, was an old worn-out vaudeville act, but Mr. Coombs did a good striptease act. Max Dresden, associate professor of physics, pleased the audience with his piano "Improvisations." Harold G. Barr, professor of religion, got all wound up telling about a frustrating train trip, and the audience loved it. J. Neale Carman, professor of Romance languages, poked fun at the Greeks when he read a letter written to him by a sorority pledge who was flunking Italian. The Rev. Dale E. Turner, professor of religion, whose magic tricks, spiced with dry wilt, were especially well handled, combined professional skill with audience psychology. Tom Rea, instructor in speech, tried hard to get his "Overture" in. His popping in and out at unusual intervals added unminded riot to the show. Students' Articles Appear In Journal Articles by several students and members of the University law school are featured in the November issue of the Kansas Bar Association Journal. One article entitled "Some As-pects of the Law of Future Interests in Kansas" is by William R. Scott, associate professor of law. "Liability of Banks for Paying Forged Checks," by Norman G. Maben, third year law student, and a case note concerning government contracts with private companies in contracts with private banks by Katherine Lewis, '51, appear in the University of Kansas law section of the magazine. Another article, "Kansas Reaffirms the 'Right from Wrong' Insanity Test" by Robert L. Davis, third year law student, contrasts the insanity test policy used in Kansas courts with other states. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, Dec. 14, 1951 Kansan Editorials Christmas And The Foreign Student Christmas and the two week vacation period are still in the future, but already the native section of the student body is preparing to adjourn to their separate homes, the native student body being those whose homes are within the United States. These students are thinking about Christmas, their own individual Christmas in their own homes with their own families and friends. They are thinking about themselves as individuals and are automatically forgetting that there are those in the student body who will have no home in which to go. They are forgetting that there are those who must stay on campus during the holiday season. Daily Hansan News Room Student Newspaper of the Adv. Room K.U. 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS K.U. 376 Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., and the Associated College Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave. New York, City. EDITORIAL STAFF EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-In-Chief Alan Marshall Associate Associate Anne Snyder NEWS STAFF Managing Editor...Charles Price Assistant Managing Editors...Nancy Weissman Benjamin Holman, Lee Sheppeard, Elliwall Zahm City Editor...Joe Taylor Sports Editor...Charles Burch Telegraph Editor...Dorothy Scott Social Editor.Katharine Swartz News Advisor.Victor J. Daniilov BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager Bob Sydney Advertising Manager Dorothy Hedrick Assistant Adv. Manager Duk-Hie National Adv. Manager Bill Taggart Circulation Manager Elaine Blaylock Promotion Manager Ted Barbera Business Adviser R. W. Doores This group that must stay on the campus is comparatively small. It is composed of students from China, India, Austria, Germany, South America, and other countries over the globe. They are the international students of the University who came to the United States not only to obtain a college education but also to learn how the American people live and how they think and act. On the campus they live mostly in private homes and have a boarding house relation with the landlords. They rarely see inside the residence halls and fraternities and sororities to see American society on the college level. The artificial barrier that exists between the average member of the student body, and the international students is there because the native students knows nothing about these students from other lands. Each year during the Union Christmas party, the campus sees exhibits of Christmas in other lands. They learn how these students celebrate the holiday season but fail to offer the same information to them. The international students see the outward signs of Christmas on the campus, but rarely do they see the individual American home Christmas. This could all be changed this year if the American students would open their homes to the international students for a few days during the coming holidays. Inviting them to their homes so that they could see the average American family at work and at play would provide a more liberal education than a year of living in a boarding room home. And, it would relieve the monotony of a dull vacation on campus when University life is at a standstill. The Purdue Exponent. Letters To The Editor Some Thoughts About Kansas And KU "Gee, I guess I look for those broad shoulders." "I look for their more personal qualities like a car, money, etc. You know!" Door Editor: "The first thing I look for in a boy is a good personality. Next, I usually think about his probabilities for future success. Last, and least, comes his looks." (What do girls look for in boys? This was the question asked of coeds at the University of Kansas by the University News. Some of the answers: "How far that little candle throws it's beams." This morning as I looked over The Bucknellian sent to me by my daughter at Bucknell university I was saddened by the enclosed section, particularly the part around which I have put a parenthesis. "One, has he got a car?" Two, a fellow that treats me like a lady and takes someone else into consideration besides himself. Three, two big arms." Dear Editor: 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. Entitled as second class memorization periods. Enforced as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. Editor's Note: The following letter was sent to the Daily Kansan under the address of "University News." The article referred to, which we print below in parentheses, was syndicated by the Associated Collegiate Press. As you know, there ain't no such animal at KU. We are printing the letter anyway, since it contains some sincere thoughts about our state. You see, people from other states have always looked up to Kansas. As I was a child growing into young womanhood I remember my father talking so proudly of Kansas and her progressive statutes. As we drove through Kansas on a western tour a few summers ago we thrilled at the sight of those pioneer mother statues in your cities. I wanted my young people to have the vision and the courage that had "There may be a few who feel and talk like that," said I. "but you'll find that girls still want character in their men. They still want their men to be men—not pampered pets." I felt, too, that the men wanted their women to be women fit for mothers. He spoke of Kansas leading with prohibition and woman suffrage. As I went on to a college in Ohio, then came East. I still followed Kansas progress with pride, although I have no relationship with that state in any way of which I know. When my son came out of the army he enrolled at the University of Vermont and, since I have often heard him make the same indictment of the girls that are acknowledged by the girls themselves on your campus. Comments... I argued with my son, and I have argued with his friends, that it cannot be true—that girls do not change to that extent in one generation. "The total enrollment at Mount Holyoke this year is 1,258, including 364 students." From the Holyoke Transcript, Mount Holyole college: Editor's Note: The rest are just hangers-on. made our nation great. Army neuro-surgical teams in Korea are now capable of performing delicate head and spinal surgery within 20 miles of the battle lines. I must say that "the stuff" I read in numerous college publications fail to indicate any greatness of thought in the young people upon whom we shall depend to bring us out of our sordid materialistic mess. Mrs. Hettie Carroll Brown Forestville, Conn. Christmas Gift CANDY Dear Sir: No football No cuts; This college Is nuts; A letter, in its entirety, to the Cavalier Daily, University of Virginia read: I pray for higher ideals in you young people of American campus life. SPECIAL CHRISTMAS ASSORTMENTS • CANDIES • POPCORN • ROASTED NUTS • MINTS Use Dixie's Lay-Away Plan For Your Christmas Gifts MAKE YOUR SELECTION EARLY Fancy Gift Boxes - Custom Packed About Cigarets . . . Judgment... "Dear Sir: "Smoke gets in your eyes, and your cigarette is my cigaret." The United Nations civil assistance command in Korea has supplied 1.600 uniforms for South Korean nurses, nurses aides and midwives. A columnist for the Daily Pennsylvania, University of Pennsylvania, recently made a personal cigarette survey. Here's what he found: "Cigarettes always leave an unpleasant aftertaste, most people drop ashes everywhere but in an ashtray (everybody looks for one but never uses it) and a longer cigarette is a nuisance to handle (anyone not used to one tries to light it in the middle)." We Will Gift Wrap and MAIL Your Orders "I discovered most doctors don't even smoke, there is no T-zone, certain cigarettes are not firm and fully packed and it would take the gentleman who smokes two packs a day two and one-half years to get an automatic toaster with coupons offered by a certain cigaret. Deemphasized" Dixie's Carmel Corn Shop Dixie's 812 Mass. Phone 1330 Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers. Who...me? I've given up my sleigh Oh what fun it is to ride and Save the Greyhound way! Take a tip from Santa Go home by GRI Portland, Ore. ... Denver, Colo. ... Omaha, Neb. ... Des Moines, la. ... St. Joe, Mo. ... HOUND — you'll SAVE, tool $35.40 Chicago, Ill. ___ $9.05 11.35 St. Louis, Mo. ___ 6.30 3.95 New York, N. Y. ___ 26.30 4.80 Albuquerque, N. M. ___ 16.05 1.85 New Orleans, La. ___ 15.95 (Add Tax) CHARTER A GREYHOUND - Keep the gang together! You'll enjoy exciting basketball games and other out-of-town school events a lot more by Greyhound. Play games, sing, chat. No parking problems. Low fares save everybody money! Ask for details. ave GREYHOUND BUS DEPOT Telephone 707 638 Mass. Page 3 Statewide Activities Heads Chosen To County Groups The names of permanent chairmen of the county clubs in the Statewide Activities organization were announced today by Nei McNeill, president of Statewide Activities. The chairmen were elected by members of their respective county clubs in a Statewide Activities convocation held Nov. 14. Statewide Activities is an organization designed to help publicize the University. Its chief aims are to spread goodwill for the University among people in the state counties inform prospective students and their parents of the opportunities at KU, and promote and encourage student activities at the University. The county chairmen, by counties. are! Anderson, Donna Hodgson, freshman; Atchison, Hugh Bell, freshman; Barton, John R. Smith, junior; Iam R. Smith, junior; Butler, Janice Skar, freshman; Chauquette, Ann Sproul, junior; Cherokee, Marilyn Miles, freshman; Cheyenne, Walter Thompson, junior. Dickinson, Fred Rice, freshman; Don- phian, Roger Miller, freshman; Douglas, Margarete, Black, sophomore; Edwards, Mary Hite, Sophomore; Lewis Hite, Hite, sophomore; Eldsworth, Kay Mueler, sophomore; Finney, Robert Ball, soph- more; Ford, Robert Toalson, sophomore. Clark, Jonell Ashcraft, junior; Clay, Neil Peterson, senior; Cloud, Phyllis Horstman; MacKinnon, Joan Cairns, sophomore; Comanche, Jacque Canfield, freshman; Cowley, Roger Warren, junior; Crawford, John Glick Jr., sophomore; Matur, Mary Louise Woodward, sophomore. Franklin, Shirley Strain, junior; Geary, Gerry; Roy Ulrich; Graham, Gary Sandin; freshman; Gray, Frank Timken; senior; Hodgeman, Jim Sorem, sophomore; Jef Travel Service THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Tel. 30 8th & Mass. University Daily Kansan L.M.O.C. No.9 Bibler's Best ON SALE TODAY IN THE INFORMATION BOOTH ON SALE DOWNTOWN AT ROUND CORNER Drug Co. 801 Mass. Fridav. Dec. 14. 1951 HOLT'S DRUG And Prescriptions 14th and Mass. Kearny, Robert Crump, freshman; Kingman, Robert Wunsch, sophomore; Lippert, Robert Lippert, sophomore; Don Belden, sophomore; Leavenworth, Edward Chapman, junior; Lincoln, Riley, Tammann, sophomore; Linn, Wilson, Wilson junior; Logan, Norman Spurrier, freshman; ferson, John S. May, senior; Johnson, William Payne, sophomore. Lyon, Lee Lowder Jr., junior; Marion, Ralph Mitchell, senior; Marshall, Don- tle Mitchell, junior; Lou Sheets, seni- ner; McPherson, Harry Sprague, freshman; Meade, Leo Bird, freshman; Miami, Anne Conway, sopho- her, Mitchell, Richard Morrell, freshman. ROWLANDS Book Stores (Both Stores) Montgomery, George Weiser, senior; morris, John Olson, junior; NOsho, John Morris, Jr.; Nohon, Michael Held, field, sophomore; Norton, William Krebhel, sophomore; Osage, Patricia Garrett, sophomore; Osborne, Donald Darnell, marin; Ottawa, Michael McNalley, junior. Pawnee, William Frizel Jr., sophomore; Phillips, Sarah Selbe, freshman; Larsen, Michael, freshman; lings, Kathleen Holthus, freshman; Reno, Betty Lu Gard, freshman; Rice, Delbert freshman; Riley, Dave Hills, junior; Rons, Ronald Sammons, sophomore. Rush, Joe Renner, freshman; Russell, Jane Armstrong, freshman; Saline, Jack Baker, freshman; Jack Cobb, freshman; sophomore; Sedgwick, Jerry Coolet, sophomore; Seward, Max Zimmerman, sophomore; Shawne, P. K. Worley, sophomore; Harper, Rebecca J. G., junior. Sheridan, Opal Lea Smith, freshman; Sherman, Ila Dawson, freshman; Smith, Jonathan B. Hollins, freshman; Jack G. Kay, senior; Feng J. G. Walker, freshman; Stevens, Halbert Lee Walker, freshman; Sumner, John Richard Reske, freshman; Thomas, Nancy Dennen, junior Wilson, Donna Summers, freshman Wichita, Janet Stewart, sophomore Woodson, Paine Pyeatte, sophomore Wyandotte, Ann Ivyster, junior; Jackson, Mo. Kochan Ivyster, junior; Athens, Mo. Kochan Ivyster, senior; Emory, William, sophomore Oklahoma, Doris Stites, freshman; Missouri, Carla Haber, junior; Bill Karra freshman. Ice Box Is A Scorcher Boston—(U.B)—Mrs. Mary Sarris called for help when her refrigerator got hot instead of cold. Firemen arrived in time to carry out her red hot ice box and extinguish a small blaze in her kitchen. They blamed a short-circuit in the refrigerator. Final plans for the University radio department's new transmitter building were taken to Topeka for approval by the state architect Wednesday. Building Plans Taken To Topeka "Originally it was thought that the construction would be done by University labor, however a contractor will do the job." R. Edwin Browne, director of University radio, said. "In improvements where a commercial contractor is used, the state architect checks the drawings," he explained. The construction job is open for bids. Kansans will have to present title and registration receipt for 1951 before they can get their car or truck licenses for 1952. If they have lost their 1951 receipt they will have to make application directly to the Kansas Motor department in Topeka to obtain a new one. Previously when applying for a license owners merely had to obtain duplicates from the county treasurer's office where they got their original receipt. Plans for the new combination radio and television transmitter housing were drawn by George M. Beal, professor of architecture, and his staff. To Get Car Licenses, Must Have Receipts Blanks requesting the duplicate receipts are available at the county treasurer's office. Peoria, Ill.—(U.P.)—A hunter had to call on police to kill a "dead" hawk he had bagged. The hunter was bringing the hawk home in his car when it suddenly came to life. The man and the hawk battled and the bird finally was shoved out the car window. The hunter called the police. Officers Paul McLoughlin and Don Voigt found the wounded bird in an alley and permanently subdued it with their nightsticks. With The Stamina Of A Jayhawker ////// This Is Not A Flying Saucer IT IS A LATKE It is the rare Oriental delicacy you can get at the HILLEL CHANUKAH FESTIVAL Sunday, Dec. 16 at 6 p.m. Community Building. Eat all you can. We'll roll you home. Also movies. Everyone invited. Members free, others 25c. For reservations call 3513. The Assembly of God Church 13th and Mass. J. J. Krimmer, Pastor CHURCH OF GOD SAVE ME 9:45—Sunday School Student Bible Class taught by Rex Vickers. 11:00—The Church Worshipping. 6:30—Youth Vespers Services. 7:45—The Church Evangelizing. REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS 12th and Vermont Young People's Caroling Party. Meet at the Church at 7:30 Refreshments afterwards. Everyone welcome. SATURDAY: UNDAY: 9:45 a.m.—Church School. 11:00 a.m.—Morning Worship. Elder Clyde Johnson, Speaker. 6:30 p.m.—Christmas Reception and Program. Santa will be there too. Everyone welcome. CHRISTMAS VILLAGE 메이소 Church Services (1) 6.58 Students are cordially invited to participate in activities of all Lawrence churches. In addition to the regular order of service, there are many classes and functions planned especially for university groups. Plymouth Congregational Church SUNDAY SERVICES 925 Vermont St. Dale E. Turner, Minister 10:00—Church School Class for University Students 11:00—Morning Worship 5:30 5:30 p.m.—University Discussion Group Trinity Episcopal Church 11 a.m.- Holy Communion and Sermon 9 a.m.—Holy Communion for Collegians. Breakfast and Canterbury Meeting follows in Rectory. Election of officers for second semester. 11 a.m.—Holy Communion and Sermon 7 p.m.—Canterbury Club meets at the Rectory to go caroling. Dec. 19—Ember Day, 7 a.m. Holy Communion Dec. 21—St. Thomas Day, 7 a.m., H.C. MEMBER ASSOCIATION CANTERBURY CLUBS FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH QUE ANADECIA 8th and Kentucky George C. Fetter, minister Gus Ferre, minister to students 11:00 Morning Worship. Sermon: "Remaking Human Nature." 9:45 Church School. University class taught by Gus Ferre. 5:30 Roger Williams Fellowship. Student Panel: "Genuine Christmas Spirit." 7:30 Evening Worship. Song Service. Sermon by Rev. Gus Ferre. First Methodist Church Vermont at 10th Oscar E. Allison, Minister Edwin F. Price, Minister to Students 9:45 - Wesley Foundation Church School Class 5:30 - 7:00 - Wesley Foundation Informal Continuous Communion Service 10:50 - "The Messiah" (Handel) Presented by the Wesleyan Choir First Christian Church 1000 Kentucky St. H.M.Sippel, Minister 9:30 - Sunday School—Class for single students taught by Mrs. Harold G. Bar—Class for married students taught by Dr. Carroll D. Clark. Sunday Services Church Of Christ 1501 N. H. 10:45 - Morning Worship 5:30 - K.U. Disciples Fellowship evening meeting in Myers Hall on Campus. Mrs. Carroll D. Clark, Student Director. W. Taylor Carter, Minister Kieth Barnhart, Music Director 10:00 - Bible Study 11:00 - Sermon 11:00 - Sermon 11.55 11:55 - Communion 6:30 - University Class 7:30 - Evening Service A University Daily Kansan Page 4 Friday, Dec. 14, 1951 Cagers Take To Road For 2 Tilts With SMU The Jayhawkers took to the road Thursday night for the second time this season and are in Dallas for a two-night stand against the Mustangs of Southern Methodist tonight and Saturday night. The 13-man traveling squad, Coach "Phog" Allen, Dick Harp, assistant coach; Dean Nesmith, trainer, and Wayne Louderback, student manager, left from Kansas City via rail for Dallas. They will make their headquarters at the Hotel Melrose and plan to return following the game Saturday night. The squad includes John Keller, who has been sidelined with a charley-horse for a month. Keller is believed to be ready for action and will probably be used in this pair of games. KU's cagers are currently boasting a 68-point game average for three games and have held their opposition to an average of 48 points. A two-night stand is often a jinx for a traveling team and might prove such to the Jayhawkers. Assistant coach Harp scouted the Ponies as they lost to Oklahoma A&M 45-50 Tuesday night. He reported that Kansas will have to play top-notch ball to win both games. Coach Allen plans no changes in his starting lineup tonight with Bill Lienhard, Bob Kenney, Bill Hougland, Dean Kelley and Clyde Lovelete receiving the nod. But he will probably continue to substitute freely. The remainder of the traveling cagers includes B. H. Born, Larry Davenport, Everett Dye, Bill Heitholt, Weston Johnson, Allen Kelley and Dean Smith. Bring Your Car To Sanders And Get a Tune-Up! Check Brakes! Check Ignition! Lubricate! Before Driving Home For Christmas SANDERS MOTORS 622-24 Mass. Phone 616 Give THE GIFT EVERYONE ENJOYS! fresh, delicious Russell Stover CANDIES Ruarelli Steven NUTS CHEESE & COOKIES MILK & CREAM Merry Christmas A S S O R T E D CHOCOLATES Colorful Poinsettia Gift Box holds creams, fruits, nuts and caramels - dipped in rich milk and dark vanilla chocolate. $125 POUND BOX Kentucky Upset By Minnesota New York —(U.P.)—The myth of Kentucky's basketball invincibility was shattered Thursday night by a fired-up Minnesota team 'led by a rampaging sophomore center. CHOCOLATES and BUTTER-BONS Gift-Boxed assortment of creams, nougats, caramels, nuts and nut-clusters and a cellophane index names each piece! $1.65 POUND BOX Russell Stover JANSIER In an upset that shook the court world, Minnesota's Golden Gophers came roaring back from a six-point deficit at halftime to beat Kentucky, ranked the No. 1 team in the nation, 61 to 57, Thursday night in Minneapolis. Stowits Rexall Store Phone 516 9th and Mass. Sophomore center Ed Kalaafat was the big reason for the surprise. The Gopher pivot man whipped 30 points through the nets, nearly half of his team's total, and helped Minnesota dominate both backboards throughout the furiously-played second half. There was no doubt that the absence of seven-foot Bill Spivey, Kentucky's All-American center who has a knee injury, was a big help to the Gophers, but it was a brilliant performance by Kalafat nonetheless. "He faked well and was shifty for a big man," admitted Kentucky coach Adolph Rupp after the defeat. Rupp observed that "it might have been different" if Spivey had been able to play, and he also opined that, "I thought the officials called them a little too close on us in the first half." Kentucky had a 33-27 lead at the half but Kalafat's 12 points in the third quarter helped put Minnesota out in front. The teams traded baskets on almost even terms the rest of the way with the Gophers maintaining the upper hand. Kentucky was hampered by the fact that star Frank Ramsey fouled out in the third quarter and Shelby Linville and Cliff Hagan had to MU Downs Aggies43-38 Columbia, Mo— (U,P) —Missouri university's basketball team won its third straight game of the season last night, defeating New Mexico A&M, 43 to 38. Missouri jumped into a 7-0 lead in the opening minutes and held on, fighting off the stubborn Aggies. The Tigers gained a 24-19 margin at the intermission. the inter-match game. Don Dippold, senior forward from St. Louis, led the Missouri attack with 19 points while its all-conference center, Bill Stauffer, was having a bad night, hitting only five. It was rough throughout with bouts of chanting on fouls as did four Agste players. Jim Packett, Jim Blevins and Bob Priddy scored nine points each for the Aggies. Cage Scores Bradley 72, So. Dakota 35 Indiana State 77, Oakland City 57 Indiana State 50, Denver 48 Emilie Hamline 103, Washburn 68 Texas Tech 63, No. Carolina St. 62 Texas Christian 80, Howard Fayne Oklahoma A&M 73, Loyola of Los Angeles 43 NAID Journalism Southwestern Missouri St. Teachers 82 Kearney St. Teachers 50 Eastern Illinois St. Teachers 88, Pacific Lutheran 71, College of Pugt Sound 49 Emporia St. Teachers 74 Hemline 103 Washburn 68 Eastern Montana 66. Dickinson (N.D.) Teachers 65 Montana Mines 66, Carroll College 62 play cautiously to avoid the same fate. Your Plymouth . . . has a used car priced for you. Buddy GALLAGHER 634 Mass. Ph. 1000 Bobby Watson was high man for Kentucky with 16 points. The Wildcats must now re-gather their forces for a meeting at Lexington, Ky. next Monday with St. John's, the Nation's third-ranked team. The Wildcats are anxious to rebound because a win Monday would give them 100 straight victories on their home court. A $10 Gift For $2.45 $10 nationally advertised John Surrey pipes priced for Christmas at $2.45. Your choice of 12 styles and shapes in light or dark finished imported briar. Each pipe comes gloved, boxed, and gift wrapped. THE MASTER OF THE COMPUTER. Make his gift complete. Include John Middleton's five mixes of aromatic pipe tobacco. A gift packaged variety----$1.50 George's Pipe Shop 727 Mass. - 'round the clock -'round the town -'round the year SCHOOL PATRONAL GALLOVER Antique Brown Antique Tan The shoes that know no season . . . have perfect town and country coverage. Your "Oldmaine" Trotters will be the busiest shoes you own. They have handsewn trim for extra good looks and flexible leather soles that take lots of long, hard wear. ect town and country coverage. ur "Oldmaine" Trotters will be the busiest shoes you own. they have handsewn trim for good looks and flexible ner soles that take lots of long, hard wear. Brown Red $9.95 Antique Brown Antique Red OLDMAINE Trollers HANDSKIN WHEEL ORIGINALS Royal College Shop 837-839 Mass. a s tha ath "The lists on Kar exa time T "Wa by H wee place greet the Phone 648 Chancellor Murphy Agrees With Lonborg's List Policy Page 5 Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy is in complete agreement with a statement released by A. C. "Dutch" Lonborg this week stating that no list of names of students attending the University under athletic scholarships would be released for publication. "Howeyer," Lonborg said, "the lists of names and scholarships are on file in the Big Seven office in Kansas City. Anyone desiring to examine them, may do so at any time." The athletic director said further, "We have nothing to hide, we abide by the rules." Hearty approval of a move last week by Big Seven officials that placed restrictions of varying degrees on all sports, was displayed by the KU chancellor. He definitely Eye EYE YOUR EYES felt a "forward step in management of intercollegiate athletics," has taken place. should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. Lawrence Optical Co. Phone 425 1025 Mass. He added, however, "some of the rules set up by the faculty representatives at their recent meeting will undoubtedly have to be refined to make them practical and implementable." University Daily Kansan Dr. Murphy disagrees with a statement made by Frederick A. Middlebush, president of the University of Missouri, to the effect that athletic competition at Big Seven schools be restricted to residents of the state in which the school is located. To Chancellor Murphy this idea is "imprecisual, discriminatory and unfair to students." The chancellor felt that the aim of KU is to right wrongs in sports, not eliminate athletic competition. FISH AND SEA FOOD DINNERS... Expertly Prepared SWORD FISH STEAK RAINBOW TROUT RED SNAPPER FLORIDA POMPANO Enjoy a Fish Dinner Tonight At DUCK'S TAVERN 824 Vt. COMPETITION'S TOO DARNED TUFF TO LET APPEARANCE CONCEAL YOUR STUFF!! Send Your Clothes To Acme, Now! ACME Bachelor Laundry and Dry Cleaning Phone 646 1111 Mass. Intramural Round-Up Thursday's Results Fraternity "B" Delta Tau Delta 41, Triangle 13 Sigma Phi Epsilon 28, Alpha Kappa Lambda 18 Delta U 68 Pi Kappa Alpha 24 Kappa Sigma 52, Chi Kappa Chi 14 Sigma Nu 34, Phi Kappa 26 Phi Gamma Delta 44, Delta Chi 7 Tau Kappa E. 33, SA Epsilon 30 Sigma Kappa 33, Alpha Pi Alpha 24 Fraternity "A" Delta Tau Delta 37, Phi Gamma Delta Delta 35 AT Omega 27, Pi Kappa Alpha 16 Pi Kappa Psi 58, Sigma Pi 13 Beta Theta Pie 57, Phi Kappa 22 Pi Kappa Sigma 30, Delta Chi 27 Phi Delta Theta 53, Phi Kappa 26 Weekend Schedule Today—Robinson Gym Independent "B" 6:45 p.m.: E--Phi Chi vs. MEN. Fraternity **8** 7:45 p.m.: E—Phi Kappa Sigma vs. Lambda Chi Alpha and W—Phi Gamma Delta vs. Delta T Delta 6:45 p.m.: Sigma Chi vs. Sigma Phi Epsilon 8:45: E—Kappa Sigma vs. Alpha Tau Omega and W—Tau Kappa Epsilon vs. Sigma Nu. 9:45: E—Nu Sigma Nu vs. Phi Ki vs. Delta Chi W—Beta Theta Pi vs. Delta Chi 9 a.m. Jolliffe vs. Phi Beta Digits Robinson Annex Independent "A" 5 p.m.: Coffeyville Cats vs. Delta Sigma PL. 6 p.m.: Dark Horses vs. Feather Merchants. 7 p.m.: Gamma Delta vs. Boones 8 p.m.: Oread vs. KHK. Saturday—Robinson Gym 2 p.m.—Navy vs. Jolliffe "C" and W. OTC vs. 1222 Club 3 p.m.: E—Delta Upsilon vs. Phi Delta Theta. Independent "B" and "C" 3 p.m.: W—Jolliffe vs. Oread “B.” 4 p.m.: E—East Side vs. Stephenson and W—AFROTC “B” vs. Roger Williams Friday, Dec. 14, 1951 5 p.m.: E—Navy "B" vs. KHK and W—V—Chesapeake "D" John Henry. Robbins Abbey 2 p.m.: Sterling-Oliver vs. Flying 5 3 p.m.: Last Chance vs. Battenfield 4 p.m.: AFROTC vs. Geology Club. 5 p.m.: ASCE vs. Misfits. Sunday—Robinson Gym 2:30 p.m.: E—Beta Theta Pl vs. Alpha Tau Omega and W—Phi 4:30 p.m.: E—Delta Tau Delta vs Sigma Ph Epsilon and W—Phi Kappa Sigma vs. Alpha Kappa Lambda. 3:30 p.m.: E—Alpha Epsilon Pi vs. Phi Kappa Tau and W—Phi Delta Theta vs. Triangle 5. 30 p.m.; E—Delta Upsilon vs. Chi Chi Chi and W—Kappa Sigma vs. Sigma Nu. p.m.: Varsity vs. Twin Pmes. 3:30 Rochdale vs. Alpha Chi Epsilon. Robinson Annex Independent and Fraternity "B" 4:30 p.m.: Kappa Sigma vs. Kappa Alpha PSi. 5:30 p.m.: Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Lambda Chi Alpa. Christmas DANCE FREE! Sponsored by S.U.A. 9-12 Informal Remember Dec.15th H NEST P. E. B. Give Your Clothes A Beauty Treatment Send Them To INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners 740 Vt. Phone 432 1903 Mass. No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money. CHRISTMAS give Midnight by TUSSY and you give a touch of magic! The famous fragrance series; favorite of women everywhere Midnight Stick Perfume Minimall TU55Y silver capacitor Midnight Stick Perfume The luxury of Midnight perfume... in solid form. % oz., $1.50 Blue Ice Stick Cologne Midnight Midnight WITH BLUE RIM AND TUMBER ICE BOTTLE BOSSY Blue Ice Slick Cologne The magic of Mighty...captured in non-spill solid form. $2\frac{1}{2}$ ozs., $1.25 Midnight TURBY WHITE AND WOOD LOTION Midnight TURBY WHITE AND WOOD LOTION Hand & Body Lotion The lotion that leaves skin soft and smooth as soin, 6 oz., $1 JUCKER Midnight Dusting Powder Silky-soft powder, perfumed with Midn- night, 4½ oz. box with gift puff $1.25 * *oil jolts plus tex* Midnight Dusting Powder *all prices plus tax 909 Mass. RANEY DRUG STORE Phone 521 I University Daily Kansan Page 6 Friday, Dec. 14, 1951 Weekend Social Events Mu Epsilon Nu Party Mu Epsilon Nu fraternity will entertain with a dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday in the Kansas room of the Union. Chaperones will be Mr. and Mrs. James Drury, Mr. and Mrs. Otho Rasmussen and Mr. James Burgoyne. Phi Delta Theta Formal Phi Delta Theta fraternity will entertain with a formal dance from 9 o.m. to midnight Saturday. Mrs. J. H. Kreamer, Ms. Dean Alt, Mrs. Arthur H. Little and Mrs. Bert A. Weber will chaperon. Chi Omega Supper-Dance Chi Omega sorority will entertain with a buffet supper and dance from 6:30 p.m. to midnight tonight at the chapter house. Mrs. J. R. Scott, Mrs. Hazel H. Jenkins, Mrs. John Skie Sr., Mrs. Ralph Park and Mrs. F. L. Macecrey will chaperson. Sigma Phi Epsilon Formal Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity will entertain with a formal dance from 1 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Chaparones will be Mrs. Edwin B Peet, Mrs. Thomas A. Clark, Mrs. Frank M. Baird, Mrs. Edna M. Stewart and Mrs. J. I. Hollingsworth. Phi Psi-Tri Delt Tea Dance Phi Psi Tri Delt Tea Dance Phi Kappa Psi will entertain Delta Delta delta sorority at a tea dance from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday. Mrs. C. H. Wentworth and Mrs. A. H. little will be chaperones. Co-op Christmas Party 1 Phi Kappa Tau Party Jayhawk Co-op will hold a Christmas party at the hall from 9 p.m. until midnight Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Bromleigh Lamb, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Brown and Mr. and Mrs. K. Lake will chaperon. Phi Kappa Tau fraternity will hold party from 8 p.m. to midnight Saturday, Mr. and Mrs. Carlyle Smith, fr. and Mrs. Kenneth Beasley and fr. and Mrs. Donald Powell will haparon. Alpha Phi Alpha Party Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity will hold a Christmas party at the chapter house from 8:30 to midnight tonight. Mrs. Alberta Frye, Mrs. Pitts, and Mrs. J. Smothers will chaperon. Siigma Pi To Have Formal Alpha Kappa Lambda Formal Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity will entertain with a formal dance from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. Friday. haperones will be Mrs. Dana L Anderson, Mrs. Violet Whitmore and Mrs. Dean Nite. Sigma Pi To Have Formal Sigma Pi fraternity will entertain with a formal dance at the Lawrence country club from 8 p.m. to mid- night tonight. Mrs. Richard L. Lume, Mrs. Thomas A. Clark, Mrs. thomas H. Stuart, Mrs. Kenneth M. hyte, Prof. and Mrs. Elmer Beth, rs. Fanny DeLozier and Prof. and rs. Reginald R. Strait will chap- ron. STARTS • TUESDAY VIRGIL THOMSON VIRGIL THOMSON COMPOSER AND CRITIC SAYS IN THE NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE "A historical document . . a first class execution of the decade. This is what Verdi's 'Rigololetto' looks like when performed by the best contemporary artists." Tito GOBBI IN RIGOLETTO Kappa Tree-Trimming Party Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority held a tree-trimming party at the chapter house Wednesday. Mrs. Edwin B. Peet was the chaperon. Delta Gamma Formal Veu PATEE PHONE 321 Delta Gamma sorority will hold a formal dance at the chapter house from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Mrs. Andrew G. McKay, Mrs. C. H. Wentworth and Mrs. F. L. MacCreary will chaperon. Sigma Kappa sorority will entertain with a Christmas party at the chapter house from 8:30 to 11:30 night. Miss Mattie Crumrine, Miss Flin K. Jorgensen and Mrs. Mary Younkman will chaperon. Sigma Kappa Christmas Party Corbin-North College Party Corbin and North College halls will entertain with a Christmas dance from 9 p.m. to midnight tonight. Miss Barbara Lewis, Miss Elizabeth Evans and Miss Abigale Bixby will chaperon. Sigma Chi Dance Saturday Sigma Chi fraternity will entertain with a dance at the chapter house from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Chaperones will be Mr. and Mrs. Jack Heysinger, Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Weltmer and Mrs. Kenneth M. Whyte. Three Halls To Have Dance Sterling, Oliver and Sellars halls will entertain with a dance in the Union from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Mrs. Mary Younkman, Mrs. E. R. Hooper, Mrs. Dana L. Anderson, Mrs. R. H. Wilson and Mrs. Joseph Hope will chapenor. Battenfeld Dinner-Dance Jolliffe To Have Formal Battenfeld hall will entertain with a dinner-dance at the hall from 6:30 p.m. to 12:30 Saturday. Mrs. Louis Stanley, Mrs. Ruth Jeter and Mrs. Kathleen Coughman will chaperon. Jolliffe will entertain with a formal party at the hall from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Mrs. Lela Wilson, Mrs. Lela Whiteford, Mrs. Dean Nite and Mrs. Althea Galloway will chaperon. Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity will hold a formal dinner-dance at the Union and the Community building from 6:30 to midnight Saturday. Mrs. Edward Dicks, Mrs. N. M. Hopkins, Mrs. James A. Hooke and Mrs. C. A. Thomas will chaperon. Sig Alph Dinner-Dance Chi Chi Chi fraternity will entertain with a dinner-dance in the English room of the Union from 6:30 to midnight Saturday. Chaperones will be Prof. and Mrs. George Anderson, Prof. and Mrs. Raymond Beamer and Mr. and Mrs. David L. Fisher. NOW THRU MONDAY Tri-Chi Dinner-Dance Monchionsia hall will hold a party at the hall from 9 p.m. to midnight tonight. Mrs. Edna E. Ramage, Mrs. R. G. Roche, Mrs. E. R. Hooper and Mrs. Astrid Dohner will be chaperones. Monchonsia Party Tonight Don Henry Co-op will entertain with a party at the hall from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Fleming, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Curtis and Miss Helen Amyx will chaperon. Theta Tau, engineering fraternity, will entertain with a Christmas party in the Union from 8 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Miss Marcia Baty. Mr. and Mrs. R. Smith and Mrs. Diamond will chaperon. Don Henry Co-op Party Theta Tau Christmas Party Alpha Phi sorority will hold a dance at the Eldridge hotel from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Mrs. Violet Whitmore, Mrs. Ralph Park, Mrs. Thomas H. Stuart and Mrs. D. I. Denham will chapenor. Miller Semi-Formal Dance Miller hall will hold a semi-formal dance at the hall from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Mrs. H. P. Ramage, Mrs. Chaucey Veatch and Mrs. Astrid Dohner will chaperon. Templin hall will hold a formal dance at the hall from 9 p.m. to midnight tonight. Miss $^*$ Carlotta Nellis, Mrs. Althea Galloway, Mrs. Leone Wenzel and Mrs. Lela Whiteford will be chaperones. Templin Formal Tonight Give Kodak Accessories to the Photo Fan! wide selection here! Give KodaK Accessories to the Photo Fan! wide selection here! ROARING OUT OF THE HAPPY HEART OF TEXAS! 721 Mass. HIXON'S Phone 41 Starring HOWARD DUFF MONA FREEMAN JOSEPHINE HULL XAS! THE LADY FROM TEXAS" COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR That "Harvey" Woman Is Back To Make You Laugh!! with GENE LOCKHART · CRAIG STEVENS · JAY C. FLIPPEN NEW CUSHIONED SEATS FOR YOUR COMFORT! New PATEE PHONE 321 I.P.K.A. Christmas Formal Shows Tonite 7 and 9 - Features 7:37 - 9:37 Saturday Features: 1:37 - 3:37 - 5:37 - 7:37 - 9:37 Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity will entertain with a Christmas formal in the Kansas room of the Union from 9 p.m. to midnight tonight. Mrs. Edna Stewart, Mrs. Edwin B. Peet, Miss Julia Ames Willard, Mrs. Frank Baird will chaperon. A Bakery Treat for Christmas Top off your Christmas dinner with a serving of delicious fruit cake. Any fruit cake from Drake's is a delightful confection chock full of fresh fruits and crunchy nuts. Order Yours Today! DRAKE'S BAKERY 907 Mass. Phone 61 Go To The Church Of Your Choice Every Sunday. Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS Now thru Sat. "A Christmas Carol" PREVUE SATURDAY Box Office Open 11:15 p.m. SUNDAY Something to look forward to! Here's just motion pictures were made for! A modern love-bright story as touching as the first touch of lips - as up-to-the-second as your very next heartbeat! WARNER BROS "Close to my Heart" THIS THING CALLED LOVE-- AND THE WONDERFUL THINGS IT MAKES HAPPEN..! STARRING RAY MILLAND and GENE TIERNEY Continuous Sunday 1:00 p.m. MON thru WED 2:30—7—9 Late News Color Cartoon "Room and Bird" WB and Danny He's one of the reasons that moviegoers of every age, everywhere, have taken "Close to My Heart" close to their hearts! R Mem lowsih zation tained D. Clar ening Myers Hillel Luthe Chan comme cessful be cele Hillel f the La Chris plained Gamma student 5:30 p.m. Forei Firland Czecho will be Christin land an native The 6 Luke II and En The nesday Folks h Gammannual in Danf Comm An in will be fellowshiganizati day at No se morning day. Th the sing Tree-7 A h lighting per will minster terian's there Foreign to attend Christm country. A can will foll member associati church. After will atthe Hoch auing. THE TO "FOR SUN T "FAI Religious Notes Members of the KU Disciple fellowship, Christian church organization for students, will be entertained at the home of Mrs. Carroll D. Clark, 643 Indiana street Sunday evening following the meeting at Myers hall. Hillel Celebrates Chanukah Lutheran Students Discuss Chanukah, the Jewish holiday commemorating the Hebrew's successful fight for religious liberty, will be celebrated by the B'aini Brith Hillel foundation at 6 p.m. Sunday in the Lawrence Community building Christmas customs will be explained by foreign students at Gamma Delta, Immanuel Lutheran student organization, meeting at 5:30 p.m. Sunday. Foreign students from Iceland, Finland, Norway, Sweden, India, Czechoslovakia, Germany and Japan will be present. They will dress in Christmas apparel of their native land and will sing carols in their native tongue. The Christmas story as given in Luke II will be read in Greek, Latin and English. The group will go caroling Wednesday night to the hospital and Old Folks home. Gamma Delta will also sponsor an annual service at 8:30 a.m. Sunday in Danforth Chapel. Communion Service At Wesley An informal Communion service will be held for members of Wesley fellowship, Methodist students organization, from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Sunday at the church. Tree-Trim At Westminster A house-decoration, tree-trim, lighting ceremony and pancake supper will be held at 5 p.m. at Westminster house tonight for Presbyterian students and their friend Foreign students have been invited to attend and each will explain the Christmas customs of his native country. Ferengans Take Communion A candlelight Communion service will follow the Sunday dinner for members of the Lutheran Student association of the Trinity Lutheran church. VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD TONITE-SATURDAY Rocky Lane "FORT DODGE STAMPEDE" And Penny Edwards "MILLION DOLLAR "MILLION DOLLAR PURSUIT" Ch. 4 "Flying Disc Man From Mars" SUN. - MON. - TUES. Two Corn-Shuckin' Pictures Rufe Davis Pappy Cheshire "BARNYARD FOLLIES" And Weaver Bros. Elviry "SHEPHERD OF THE OZARKS" —Plus— Bugs Bunny "FAIRED HAIRED BUNNY" Classified Advertising Phone K.U. 376 Classified Advertising Rates Classified Advertising Rates One Three Five days days 25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00 Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c LATEST STYLE off shoulder peach formal, in heavy satin, size 16, has full white finish. White cinnamon skin. Call afternoons, 633 Illinois. Phone 1299R. FOR SALE RECORD PLAYER—3-speed. Chicago Webster with amplifier and speaker, all in one portable case. Call Bill Bonswell at 3197 at 6:30 p.m. 20 PADLEDS -plywood can be finished for parties. McConnell Lumber, phone 576. M. C 14 X-ACTO PEN KNIFE! The perfect utility knife for artwork, models retouching, stripping, etching, and photography. See them at your Student Union Book Store. CREPE PAPER FOR ALL OCCASIONS Both regular and flame proof crepe paper in all colors. Available at your Student Union Book Store. 14 A GIFT THEYLL ENJOY HAVING! Give a brief bag or case for Christmas See the wide selection at the Student Union Book Store. 14 Spencer, W. Va., (U.P.)-The city of Spencer, off the record, wouldn't mind too much if a certain citizen got loaded once a week, Mayor Harry Starcher hinted. City Doesn't Mind If He Gets Loaded The city has a policy calling for inebriates to work two days when they default on the customary $5 assessment. One such was assigned to the street-cleaning crew. The city reluctantly released him at the end of his two-day stint. He was invaluable to the work detail, the mayor said. Page SEASON'S Greetings SEASON'S Greetings FREE MOVIES Santa From Your Hometown Merchants Get your tickets from These Firms Adelane's Rhodes Heating & Roofing Andrews Skelly Service Lawrence National Bank Pickens City Service Logan Moore Lumber Norman Edmonds Grocery Beamns Radio-TV Knapps Log Cabin Market Rankin Drug Store Gravitts Goodyear KU RECORD ALBUM! Hear the A Cappellato Choir, Nine Glee Club, and Band from non-breakable RC Victor records. Now at your Student Union Book Store. FREE SHOW For Shoppers Guntert Plumbing-Wiring Union Cab 2-800 Lawrence Sanitary Dairy Turner Produce Rapid Transit Norris Bros. Wiley's Market Thurs.-Fri. Dec. 20-21 At Your PHARMACY STUDENTS! New edition of Mill's "State Board Questions and Answers" is now available at the Student Union Book Store. 14 FINE ART REPRODUCTIONS! We now have a wide selection of reproductions of famous paintings in full color. Student Union Book Store. 14 TRANSPORTATION MIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether at the airport or in other times. Phone Mrs. Olsa Ladefer, 3661, Downs Travel service, 1015 Mass. Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWNER NEW Park Path CUSHIONED CHAIRS RIDER WANTED going east to Massachusetts; if interested phone Ken Coates $410 DRIVING TO 'Fort Wayne, Indiana, Dec. 21 or 22. Can take three; share expenses. Call Jim Holdeman at 2518M after 6 p.m. Ask us about family rates, ski coach, and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book an appointment to travel next summer. Call Miss Glesseen at National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30. Friday, Dec. 14, 1951 University Daily Kansan VERY NICE QUET. South room for two Cold. Close to bath, single beds, cup 2162M. FOR RENT ONE ROOM for 2 students; clean and nice single bedroom. Board, if desired. Phone 3348W, 534 Ohio. 18 IF YOU LIKE to live very close to the campus, double room for two girl students, in very nice room or second semester. Inquire at 1215 Oresse or call 38833. Inquire at 1215 Oresse or call 38833. BUSINESS SERVICE EXPERIENCED TYPIST; term papers; note books, theses, medical and biolog- iological materials, miscellaneous. Mrs. J. Rosceg, 838 Laf. Apt. 4, upstairs. Ph 2757} after J.Apt. 4. upstairs. Ph 21 TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses, prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs. Stanley, 1859J, or to 917 Rhode Island. tt TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these typing Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio. Pt. 1601. RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ments and equipment for efficient service. Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. tt CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pas- sage. TYPING: Experience in theses, term papers, miscellaneous typing, and sten cil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. NOW GRYSTAL TACA serves choice steaks sandwiches, malfits, home-made pies and air-conditioned. Open from am. u.m. midnight. Crystal Cafe, 609 Vt. STUDYING late tonight? Refresh your self with fountain beverages and sani wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phor 3604, 1109 Mass. tries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from a.m. until midnight. JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleas ant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk pet shop. We have everything in the peat fur, one-stop pet shop has everything for, finn, and feathers. Grants' Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. ' ENDS SATURDAY LOST LOST, STRAYED, or stolen from Chemical Engineering department. Lindley: Designs and builds brown wooden case. Any information appreciated. Call KU 296. ADDED: Color Cartoon Movietone News FEATURES TONITE: 7:20 MAN'S WRIST WATCH, white metal band, round, on path from Union to Snow hall, Dec. 10. Cheng Liang, KI phone 515. GREEN WALLET Monday morning, Annex E. If you need money more than I do, could you at least return my paper to the Business office? 18 SIDE-SPLITTING ROMANTIC COMEDY! FEATURES TONITE: 7:20 and 9:25 - SATURDAY: 1:10-3:15-5:20-7:25-9:30 FRED MacMURRAY ELEANOR PARKER STARTS SUNDAY SPECIAL PEEK PREVUE SATURDAY 11:15 p.m. A MILLIONAIRE FOR Christy COME ALONG! OKAY K.U.!! Here Is Your Pre-Holiday ENTERTAINMENT TREAT in the Big Town! ...for a Big Time in the Big Town! HOWARD HUGHES presents TWO TICKETS TO BROADWAY color by TECHNICOLOR Grab your gal! Grab your guy! Grab yourself two tickets to the B-I-G Broadway hit that's got everything! ☆ 10 HIT TUNES THAT HIT YOU! TONY JANET GLORIA EDDIE ANN MARTIN LEIGH DeHAVEN BRACKEN MILLER ALWAYS LATEST MOVIETONE NEWS Continuous Sunday From 1 p.m.—Features: 1:14-3:14-5:14-7:14-9:14 Granada PHONE 946 - SOON • "CALLAWAY WENT THAT- AWAY" "FLOPEMENT" "ELOPEMENT" Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, Dec. 14, 1951 News Roundup Limited Troop Rotation Now Permitted By Reds Panmunjom, Korea — (U.P) — The Communists backed down slightly today and offered to permit limited troop rotation during a Korean armistice, but the Allies suspected the offer contained hidden pitfalls. In another subcommittee, the Communists for the first time indicated they hold fewer than 50,000 Allied war prisoners, including South Koreans. Altogether nearly 100,000 Allied troops—including 11,000 Americans—are missing in action in Korea. Figures On Flood Damage Released Topeka, Kan.—(U.P.)—Kansas farmers and farmers in Missouri and other adjoining states suffered nearly a half-billion dollars in agricultural losses during the flood period in June and July, final U.S. Department of Agriculture figures showed today. Truman Asked To Fire Top Aides Washington—(U.P) -Sen. Richard M. Nixon today challenged President Truman to prove his sincerity of his anti-corruption drive by firing four of his top aides. The California Republican said Secretary of Treasury John W. Snyder, Attorney General J. Howard McGrath, Maj. Gen. Harry H. Vaughan, the President's military aide, and Donald S. Dawson, his personnel adviser, should all go. London—(U.P).The silver fog—a "real pea souper"-crippled all transportation today in the biggest city in the world. Silver Fog Blankets London Trucks carrying food and other goods which keep the sprawling city alive moved in convoys led by torch-bearing guides on foot. Even Santa Remembers TO HAVE ART CHECK HIS SLEIGH BEFORE THAT CHRISTMAS TRIP HOW ABOUT YOU? I love you. Bridge Standard Service 601 Mass. Phone 3380 A Delicious Holiday Treat Lawrence Sanitary EGG NOG Non-Alcoholic RICH and CREAMY At Your Dealers Or Call MELISSA MAY Lawrence Sanitary EGG NOG Non-Alcoholic RICH and CREAMY At Your Dealers Or Call LAWRENCE Sanitary MILK AND ICE CREAM CO. Phone 696 202 W. 6th LAWRENCE Sanitary MILK AND ICE CREAM CO. Graduate Study Fellowships To Be Available The National Research council of the National Academy of Sciences has announced several fellowship programs for the 1952-53 academic year. Those being deferred now are sponsored by the National Science foundation, Merck and company, the Lilly Research laboratories, the Radio Corporation of America, Rockefeller foundation, the National Tuberculosis association and American Cancer society. There are fellowships in the agricultural, biological, engineering, mathematical, medical and physical sciences at both the predoctoral and postdoctoral level. They are open to anyone eligible to begin or continue graduate study during the 1952-53 academic year. All applications for examinations on Friday, Jan. 18 must be received in the Fellowship office of the National Research council by Jan. Information and application blanks may be obtained by writing the Fellowship office, National Research council. 2101 Constitution Ave., Washington 25, D.C. Staff Members To Discuss Asia The cultural, economic, and ideological aspects of Asia will be discussed by three members of the University faculty at a dinner sponsored by the Upstream society at 6 p.m. today in the Community building. The three men who will be members of a panel that will discuss "The challenge of Asia" are: George Beckmann, instructor in history; Amiya Chakravarthy, visiting professor of humanities, and Walter Kollmorgen, professor of geography. Mohamed Ahmed, graduate student from India, will moderate the panel discussion. Persons may obtain reservations for the dinner by phoning Dan Gallin at 3691 before 5 p.m. today. Tickets will be available at the door at $1. VanderWerf Named Acting Chem Head Calvin VanderWerf, professor of chemistry, has been appointed acting chairman of the department of chemistry during the absence of Dr. Ray Q. Brewster, who will leave Monday to accept a Fulbright lectureship at Farouk I university in Egypt. A member of the University staff since 1941. Prof. VanderWerf is a graduate of Hope college and received his Ph. D. from Ohio State university in 1941. "Science and Human Affairs" will be the topic of Carroll D. Clark, professor and chairman of the department of sociology and anthropology. Sunday in his Sociology on the Air talk over KLWN at 9:45 am. Dr. Clark will be the ninth speaker in the weekly series. Sociology Professor On KLWN Airline Reports 'Bridges Out' Memphis, Teen. — (U,F)—Chicago & Southern Air Lines lost-and- found department reported six sets of unclaimed false teeth. PRECIS E WATCH REPAIRS Watch Repair Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed Official Bulletin Wolfson's Hillel Chanukah festival, 6 p.m. Sunday, Community building, lots of food and entertainment, reservations call 3513. 743 Mass. Hui-O-Hawaiiana. 7:30 Tuesday. 112 Strong, all invited. Call 675 Christmas tree trimming party, 2 p.m. Saturday, Trinity Lutheran church, 13th and New Hampshire. Cost supper, 5:30 p.m. Sunday. Trinity Lutheran church; communion service, 6 p.m. Caroling after Vespers, meet in front of Hoch auditorium. Sigma Tau Gamma, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, 1020 Tennessee. All members at KU urged to attend important organizational meeting. Gamma Delta cost supper 5.30 p.m. Sunday, 17th and Vermont. Danforth Chapel service, 8:30 a.m. Sunday, sponsored by Gamma Delta. Mathematics lectures by Prof. Marshall Stone, 5 p.m. today, 10 a.m. Saturday, and 5 p.m. Monday, 203 Strong. Hillel foundation, 7:15 p.m. Danforth chapel, Jewish service. Upstream society is sponsoring a dinner 6 p.m. tonight, Community building. Panel discussion on "The Challenge of Asia." For reservations call 3691. Alpha Kappa Psi winter formal, 9 p.m. today. Big Seven room, Eld- ridge hotel. Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity, 7.15 p.m. Tuesday, East room, Memorial Union. Interdorm Christmas Caroling, 10 p.m. Monday. Meet at Union lounge, cocoa and doughnuts after caroling. Eldridge Pharmacy Drugs, Sundries, Fountain, Pines Agency for Mixture No. 79 701 Mass. Phone 999 ARROW SHIRTS, SPORT SHIRTS AND TIES. ALL AT The Palace 843 Massachusetts Have Yourself A Merry Old Christmas ... make it a merry Christmas for the folks at home with Arrow Gifts - Arrow Shirts $3.95 up - Sports Shirts $3.95 up - Ties ... $1.50 up • Handkerchiefs 35¢ up - Underwear ... $1.00 up ARROW SHIRTS • TIES • SPORTS SHIRTS • UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS You'll Find A Complete Selection of ARROW PRODUCTS AT CARL'S SHOP AT CARL'S . . . YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID! 905 Phone Mass. St. CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES 905 Kansas State Historical Society UNIVERSITY DAILY JESUS HOMINUM SACRATOR No. 64 By JIM POWERS ONE OF THE HIGHLIGHTS of Sunday's annual Christmas vespers in Hoch auditorium was a tableaux entitled "The Madonna," portrayed by Jordan MacDougall—Kansan photo by Lee Sheppeard. The annual Christmas vespers was a pleasing success Sunday as thousands of persons gathered in Hoch auditorium for an inspiring presentation by the School of Fine Arts. Thousands Attend Christmas Vespers The program, given twice provided a warmth indoors that made the listeners forget the freezing weather outside. The University A Cappella choir, under Prof. D. M. Swarthout's direction, sang several numbers full of Christmas joy. The processional by the choir was quite impressive. It was followed by the traditional candle-lighting ceremony by Hugo Blaas and Larry Leeb. The chorale ensemble and University Symphony orchestra, directed by Clayton Krehbiel, instructor in music education and Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra, had important parts in the program and members sang and played with unusual feeling. Three tableaux, presented by the department of design and department of drawing and painting, depicted a group of carolers, an angel and a shepherd, and the Madonna. With the choral ensemble singing carols in the background, the tableaux were inspirational as well as beautiful. It was a well-organized and well-presented program and those who had even small parts in it are to be complimented. Collect $464 At Vespers hansan The Christmas Vespers scholarship fund of the School of Fine Arts was enriched by $464.77 through the free will offerings taken at Sunday's performances. Maybe it's a sign of the times, but this year the penny ousted the dime as the most frequently appearing coin. The tally showed 837 pennies and only 789 dimes. The 10-cent piece has been the leader for many years. Campus traffic officers reported the out-of-town attendance as negligible and the cold weather and snowy streets greatly reduced attendance by Lawrence residents. Harold Swartz, student activities fund treasurer, said the offering was the smallest since 1945. The scholarship fund benefits were almost in direct proportion to the attendance, Swartz added. The record high offering was $804.92 in 1948 and attendance was nearly twice as great that year. The appointment of Dr. Calvin A. VanderWerf as acting chairman of the department of chemistry was announced today by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. 49th Year Pictures appealed to students buying the December issue of the Sour Owl, campus humor magazine, which went on sale today, according to a survey made this morning. Dr. Ray, Q. Brewster, the department chairman, is taking a leave of absence effective today to accept a Fulbright lectureship at Farouk I university in Egypt. Dr. Brewster, Mrs. Brewster and their daughter, Ina May, will return in July. New Chemistry Head Appointed Dr. VanderWerf joined the KU faculty 10 years ago as an instructor. He attained a full professorship two years ago. He is now directing a research project sponsored by the Army Ordnance department. The second annual City Clerks school, sponsored by the bureau of government research, will be held here Feb. 21 and 22. Dr. Brewster is the second KU teacher to go abroad this year on a Fulbright lectureship. Dr. Raymond C. Moore, professor of geology, is now at the University of Utrecht, The Netherlands, as special lecturer from the Association of American Universities. December Sour Owl Has Picture Appeal A parody on Life magazine complete with 'picture of the week' plus humorous and satirical advertising appeared to be next in student interest. Annual City Clerk School Scheduled Feb. 21 and 22 The two-day training school will be devoted to problems of budgeting and reporting, municipal revenues, election procedures, and changes in laws concerning cities. Monday, Dec. 17, 1951 LAWRENCE, KANSAS 2,000 To Attend Church Meeting At University About 2.000 students from all parts of the world will meet at the University from Thursday, Dec. 27 through Tuesday Jan. 1, for the 16th Student Volunteer Movement conference. The theme of the conference will be "Christ's Kingdom—Man's Hope." More than 1,450 students from colleges and universities -in the United States, Canada and Mexico have declared their intentions of attending the conference. This number includes foreign students attending American colleges. Dr. Charles W. Ransom from Ireland who is general secretary of the International Missionary council; Dr. John S. Badeau, president of the American university of Cairo, Egypt; and Dr. Rush Isabel Seabury of the American Board of Missions, Boston. Dr. John R. Mott, president of SMV for the past 64 years, will preside at the sessions. Among the conference speakers are Dr. Reinhold Niebuhr, world famous theologian and professor of Christian ethics at Union Theological seminary. Jim Logan Named Rhodes Scholar Weekly enrollment increases indicate that the final enrollment may reach the 2,000 figure expected by the conference sponsors. James K. Logan, College senior, was named a Rhodes scholar Saturday at a meeting of the fifth district committee in Des Moines. At the last quadrennial meeting held at the University In 1947,600 colleges and universities were represented. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy recently expressed the hope and invitation that SMV would consider the University as the permanent site of its meetings. JAMES K. LOGAN PETER WILSON The award of two scholarships to University students was announced today by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. "Although the conference will have speakers who are international leaders in religious thinking, the meeting is primarily a study, prayer and discussion, convention," Mrs. Patton explained. Two Scholarships To KU Students Darwin Eugene Lewis, chemical engineering senior, has been given the Josephine T. Berry memorial scholarship. The Berry scholarship was established by Mrs. Mary B. Hocker of St. Louis, Mo., in memory of her sister. Both were members of the KU class of 1893. This year's award is $100. The Charles D. Ise memorial scholarship awarded annually to an outstanding student from Coffeyville has been given to Donald A. Carey, education junior. This award was established by the late Mrs. Rosa Ise of Lawrence, in memory of her son, a prominent Coffeyville attorney. The scholarship is a $50 cash award. SMV is a world-wide, non-de- nominational group for recruiting full time church workers. Included in it are 14 major youth movements and 40 Protestant denominations. The conference this year will emphasize self-examination. Each speaker is to consider the responsibility of Christians in the current world struggle, Mrs. John Patton, local chairman of public relations for pre-conference events, said. Will be examined at: Examination Schedule Fall Semester,1951 Thursday, January 17. 1952, to Thursday, January 24. 1952, inclusive. Logan, who represented the University in competition with representatives from a six state area, won the highly prized award of two years study at Oxford university in England with all expenses paid. Previously he had been named with Robert Howard of Kansas State Teachers college at Emporia as one of the two Kansas representatives to the district finals. For a time Saturday it looked as if Logan would not even be present to take part in the final session. The train which took the Kansas contestants to Des Moines was delayed by bad weather and arrived at noon instead of the scheduled 8:36 am. They could not find a taxi, so they ran to the meeting. By that time the selection committee was already interviewing the last of the other 10 entrants. "I was shaky and tired when we got there," said Logan. "There was no diner on the train, and I'd had nothing to eat since I had a bowl of chili the night before." Logan is president of ASC, vicepresident of the Young Democrats, a Summerfield scholar and a member of Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary scholarship society. He has had a straight "A" average throughout his entire college career. Howard went first, and then Logan. After answering questions phrased to test his alertness and maturity as well as general knowledge in his major field, economics, and his avocation, politics, Logan was awarded one of the four Rhodes scholarships given by the district committee. The thirty-two American Rhodes scholars selected this year will arrive in England next Oct. 1. At Oxford Legan intend to enroll in the Honor School of Philosophy, Politics and Economics. After Oxford he intends to obtain a law degree from Harvard university and then return to Kansas to practice. Potter Frozen For Skating Potter lake, favorite skating place for the University students, has been declared safe for skating by Henry Shenk, head of the physical education department. Professor Shenk said that the ice is better than three inches deep. Constant checks will be made, and when it is no longer safe-signs will be posted at the lake. Temperatures Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights dropped below zero in the worst cold snap of the season. The official low mark was set at three degrees below while unofficial gauges recorded marks as much as 10 degrees below zero. Bright sunshine during the days did little to raise the temperature. The highest temperatures recorded did not rise over 10 degrees above. The hospital and police reported no student accidents due to the cold weather. Two KU Debaters Win At Arkansas William Nulton, College junior, and Kenneth Dam, College sophomore, brought home a first place trophy from the University of Arkansas debate tournament, Fayetteville, Ark. Saturday. The team went through four rounds of preliminary debate before defeating Kansas State college in the semi-finals and winning over Southwest Missouri State college, Springfield, Mo., for the title. 图 Page 2 University Daily Kansan by Bibler Daily Kansan Editorials The AFL All-American Team Of Senators The American Federation of Labor has named Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio as the coach of the AFL "1951 all-American team of reactionary senators." In picking the team, the AFL's weekly newspaper said that Taft had the experience and "unlimited funds to work with" to be coach. Left End—William F. Knowland (R.-Calif.), because he is "good at catching passes thrown from employers." Left Tackle—James P. Kem (R.-Mo). who "can be depended upon to vote wrong at all times." "Sen. Owen Brewster won the quarterback slot because the Maine Republican is "so proficient at calling the signals he gets from Taft." Other selections include; Left Guard—John W. Bricker (R.-Ohio), on the strength that he "says little but does much for the real estate lobby." Center—Harry F. Byrd (D.-Va.), since he "never misses a signal of reactionary interests." Right Guard—Edwin Martin (R.-Pa.), because he "can be counted on always to be on the wrong side." Right Tackle—Spessard L. Holland (D.-Fla.), a "quiet, hard-working reaction." Right End—H. Alexander Smith (R.-N.J.), who is a "good runner for reactionary interests." Left Halfback—Harry P. Cain (R.-Wash.), who also "carries the ball for the real estate lobby." Right Halfback—William E. Jenner (R.-Ind.), a "shifty, open-field runner." Backfield Coach—Homer E. Capehart.(R.-Ind.) who specializes in "plays to kill price controls." Fullback—Joseph R. McCarthy (R.-Wis.), because he is "very good at line-bucking." End Coach—Walter F. George (D.-Ga.), an "expert in soaking the poor, spare-the-rich tax bills." It would seem to us that such a team, featuring such a fearless blockbuster as McCarthy, would pack a potent punch. Apparently, the AFL has caught the brunt of their razzle-dazzle formations. Line Coach—Everett M. Dirksen (R.-III.), because "killing housing legislation is his best line." We wonder if the AFL is really serious in printing such readable but meaningless statements. Do they actually hope to dupe readers into believing their statements? Realizing, however, that many people will accept such tripe as being factual, maybe it is the best way of producing effective propaganda. But if the paper is read by intelligent persons, how many of them will accept the charges without cold facts to back them up? -A.G.M. New Rulings Are 'Signs Of Our Times' Letters To The Editor Dear Editor: The rulings at the recent meeting of the Big Seven representatives, and the subsequent praises or criticisms by the so-called "authorities" of sports, all combined, are "signs of our times." The comments by the critics range all the way from praise of individuals and of the banning of bowl games to the personal beefs about shortening training sessions, etc. The rule-makers and all of these commentators, however, seem to have overlooked one factor—a factor which should be considered the most important of all—the individual. One of the rules (as stated in the Kansas City Times, Dec. 10, 1951) reads: "Any violation of this section (the "excessive entertainment" clause) by a member institution, alumni or friend of the school, with or without the knowledge of the institution, will render the individual or individuals concerned ineligible at that institution." Let us examine the logic of this rule. The violation must perforce be committed by the institution, alumni or friend. Yet the penalty will be inflicted upon the individual student —the student, who, in most cases, innocently accepts what is being offered to him simply because he does not question (or is not in the position to question) the legality of "excessive entertainment." Would such a violation-penalty relationship be valid in a court of law? The Times continues: "While this sounds as if the boy were being penalized, the faculty reasoned that it is difficult to pin down violations on alumni and friends." In turn, we must ask, "Is it difficult to pin down the violation? Or is it against the unwritten code of institutions to bite the hands that feed their varied programs?" Why should one worry about the penalties inflicted upon the individual athlete? Ball players are expendable! Alumni are economically expansible! One more point. The Times continues its comment. "The governing body felt that by placing the ineligibility cloak above the athlete, the activities of recruiters would be cut down for fear of jeopardizing the youth's future." Can the governing body back this reasoning with acknowledged facts? Witness the recent basketball fixes, the over-extensive recruiting supplemented by the cry for victories at the price of coaches' heads and of ball players' aching backs. Have many recruiters ever worried about jeopardizing a youth's future? Or has not prestige, pride in an institution's glowing athletic record, and selfishness been the guides of past offenses? If the rule-makers wish to consider the real issue, they must awaken to these realities, human beings and individual rights are at stake. Yes, this is a "sign of our times." Damn the individual.—so long as the corrupt system, the back-slapping, hand-shaking clique, and the mouthers of easy generalizations can glory in what they believe is right. Graduate Student P. S. With all due apologies to Dean T. DeWitt Carr, University of Kansas representative to the Big Seven, who seems to take an approach different from that of the other representatives. See the Dean's comments in the Lawrence Journal-World, Dec. 11. Daily Kansan Michael N. Ingersano Jr. News Room Student Newspaper of the Adv. Room KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU 376 Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York City. ThanksForHelping EDITORIAL STAFF NEWS STAFF Editor-In-Chief ... Alan Marshall Editorial Associate ... Anne Snyder Managing Editor ... Charles Price Assistant Managing Editors ... Nancy Anderson, Benjamin Holman, Lee Sheppeard, Ellsworth Zahm City Editor ... Joe Taylor Sports Editor ... Charles Burch Telegraph Editor ... Don Sarten Society Editor ... Katrina Swartz News Adviser ... Victor J. Danilov BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager ... Bob Sydney Advertising Manager ... Dorothy Hedrick Assistant Adv. Manager ... Dick Hale National Adv. Manager ... Bill Taggart Circulation Manager ... Elaine Blaylock Promotion Manager ... Ted Barbera Business Adviser ... R. W. Doores Dear Editor: The interest of your members in our community's welfare has created most favorable comment among our citizens, and your efforts in our behalf ably exemplifies your sincere interest in making this a greater and better Lawrence. Please convey our sincere appreciation to the KU students and Community Chest Members for their generous and gracious contribution which helped us attain our objective, and put us "over the top." Thanks a million! Little Man On Campus Lawrence Community Chest J. D. King Campaign Chairman Mail subscription: $a a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). *Published in Lawrence, Kans.* every afternoon during the University year except Saturday and examination periods Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. PROF. SNARF SUGGESTION BOX A-28 PBTE "But I didn't ask for a 'Suggestion box'?" Another Kansan Steps Upward The appointment of Fred A. Seaton, Nebraska publisher, to the United States Senate to succeed the late Kenneth S. Wherry means that another native Kansan has been chosen to serve in that select body. The new senator is both Kansas born and Kansas educated. Before going to Nebraska he was active in business and political circles in his native state. In 1936 Senator Seaton was one of the leaders in the Alf Landon presidential campaign. His political teeth were cut in the Kansas Young Republican organization. —Joe Taylor. The new senator is not the only member of his family in the newspaper business. At the present time the Seaton family has publishing interests in Nebraska, Kansas, South Dakota, Wyoming, and Colorado. Richard Seaton, the senator's older brother, heads the Coffeyville Journal and the boys' father, Fay N. Seaton, is the publisher of the Manhattan Mercury-Chronical. When the Seaton Publications purchased the Hastings (Neb.) Tribune he crossed the border to become the new publisher. The paper has flourished under his guidance. In 1948 he headed the forces for Harold Stassen in Nebraska's all-star presidential preference primary campaign. With Senator Seaton's help, the former Minnesota governor beat a field which included Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, Sen. Robert A. Taft, Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Rep. Joseph W. Martin, the late Sen. Arthur Vandenberg and Gov. Earl Warren. So as the new Nebraska senator goes to Washington to take his seat the folks in Kansas should watch him with pride. What he does there will largely be the result of the training he received here. Within a short time he was up to his neck in politics in Nebraska. He served two terms as a state senator in the one-house state legislature. While there he made a mark for his interest in legislation regarding conservation of natural resources, public schools and state hospitals. News From Other Campuses Refuses College Presidency Ralph Bunche, 1951 Nobel peace prize winner for his work in the UN recently refused an offer to become president of City college of New York saying, "Unless peace can be restored by the UN, no academic job will be worth anything." Baylor Gets Extended Vacation Christmas vacation time at Baylor university is being extended so that students may attend the Orange bowl football game at Miami, Fla. Baylor meets Georgia Tech in the game. No Closing Hours For Women No Closing Hours For Women "Resolved; That University women should be allowed to stay out as late as they like," was a recent intra-school debate topic at the University of Texas. Leading Yells Is Not Enough Leading Teens Is Not Enough An attempt is being made to broaden the qualification requirement for cheerleaders at the University of California. One student said, "Cheerleading has come to include much more than merely leading yells. There are things like alumni banquets which require more experience." The Inter-fraternity council at the University of Colorado has accused the University ROTC intramural teams of "robbing the fraternity teams of members and forcing them to play against their non-ROTC brothers." Greeks Accuse ROTC Washington Has 'Broken Bowl' Washington Has 'Broken Bowl' As a climax to the football season at the University of Washington, two fraternity intramural teams will meet in an annual "Broken bowl." Team members on both squads must have some injury to be eligible for participation. Offer Bargain Tickets ave Booklets of tickets called "sports samplers" are being offered to University of Oklahoma students by Oklahoma City merchants. The booklets entitle the owner to 50 admissions to sports events and entertainment for $2. University Daily Kansan Page 3 Reading Courses Made Available Students may register now for the third six-weeks series of the reading and study course conducted by the reading laboratory in Fraser hall, according to Robert Gray, assistant instructor in reading. Three classes in the course are now open to students. They are the study methods, reading and study methods and speed in reading and comprehension. He added that classes in the course will probably commence during the second week of the spring semester. The commencement date will be announced later in the Daily Kansan. Students desiring to register now for the course may do so between 3 and 5 p.m. any day in the Reading laboratory office. The office will notify them by mail when the classes they are interested in taking will begin. Students desiring to obtain further information concerning the course may do so at the Reading laboratory office in Fraser hall. Mr. Gray said that students in the reading and study course have commonly been able to double their reading speed and, at the same time, maintain or greatly improve their reading comprehension. Monday, Dec. 17, 1951 New Menotti Opera To Have TV Premiere New York—(U.P.)—The world premiere of another opera by Gian-Carlo Menotti, "Ahmal and the Night Visitors," will be given on Christmas Eve on NBC television. Menotti was commissioned two years ago to do an opera for NBC television and was permitted to choose his own subject. He conceived a tender and touching incident involving the Three Wise Men on their way to visit the Christ Child. As with his other operas, Menotti has written both the text and music. This will be his sixth opera. All have been successful except "The Island God," which did not last in the repertory, of the Metropolitan Opera House. M. K. J. S. M. A. B. O. S. R. E. D. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. N. P. Q. R. S. T. V. W. X. Y. Z. ANDREI VISHINSKY, who laughed and laughed when the Western powers suggested disarmament discussions, chews on his fingertips in United Nations general assembly in Paris as Britain is accused by Fount Davis, Calif. — (U.P.) —The pocket gopher of California probably has less tooth trouble than any other animal. The gopher is only six inches long but grows 46 inches of teeth each year—more than seven times its own body length. Gophers Teeth Grow 46 Inches Each Year Dr. Melvin E. Smith of the University of California college of agriculture said constant use of the teeth keeps the pocket gopher's cuspids down to a sharp chisel-like tip. Gophers dig up more soil than any other rodent in California Smith said. The gophers use their teeth for drying up rocks, cutting roots, digging and fighting. William I of Prussia was crowned emperor of Germany in 1871 in Versailles' Hall of Mirrors. The armistice ending the American revolution was signed in the Hall of Mirrors in 1783. 'For Rent: Candle-Lit Room, $3 A Week But Don't Crowd-That Was Back In 1912 By HELEN LOU FRY "For Rent: Room lit by candle. $3 a week." This advertisement appeared in the classified columns of the University Daily Kansan in 1912. At that, the $3 room wasn't cheap then. Another room advertised as "nicely furnished" with a private entrance was only $1.25 a week. Maybe the roomer furnished his own light and that made the difference in price. Another 1912 advertisement offered a room, with electricity and gas, and board for $3 a week. Still another offered a splendid suite of rooms with steam heat and gas light. men's shoes" sold from $2.50 to $7. When the weather turned cold, men students had the opportunity to buy a "good knit union suit" for 35 cents. Women could probably buy such a suit too, but the advertisement didn't suggest it. As for clothing, in 1914 the "best silk hose ever produced" was advertised for 50 cents a pair. The "best of In 1927, home laundry ad offered to do shirts for 12 cents, BVD's 12 cents, pajamas 25 cents, sox (pair) 4 cents, handkerchiefs 2 cents. Women's unmentionables must have been unmentioned because the ad advised girls to "call for prices." men's shoes" sold from $2.50 to $7. Campus WEST Times have changed, haven't they? CLEARANCE PARTY CLOTHES FOR A GALA HOLIDAY original price to NOW Taffeta Dresses ---- 17.95 11.85 (Formals included) ---- 26.95 19.00 35.00 23.00 Full Taffeta Skirts ---- 8.95 5.85 (Most of our stock of wool skirts at reduced prices) All sales final Store Hours 9 'till 5:30 The new astronomical observatory atop Lindley hall should be finished by March 1—providing the weather is favorable. Construction on the new observatory, which will house the University's 27-inch reflector telescope, is in its second month. The new observatory will replace the old astronomy building that was on the campus between Marvin and Lindley halls until 1944. Astronomers Hope To Have 27" Telescope Housed On Top Of Lindley Hail By March 1 By JOHNNY HERRINGTON Since 1944 the big telescope—the largest in a 500-mile radius—has been in "mothballs" waiting for the new observatory. 100 One telescope—a six inch refractor model—was installed on top of Lindley in 1944. But the 27-inch reflecting telescope and the three inch transit style telescope were stored until completion of the new building. Sixteen vessels aggregating 77,855 tons were launched in the new Japan during the period Aug. 21- Sept. 20. The big telescope—which has a focal length of 13 feet and a diameter of 27 inches—had to be placed before construction was started. The cone-shaped observer's dome was built around it. NEW HOUSING OF A 27-INCH reflecting telescope is nearing completion. The structure is located on the southwest roof of Lindley hall. N.W. Storer, associate professor in astronomy, said that the building should be ready for use by March 1.-Kansan photo by Don Sarten Washington, D. C.—The new British airfield recently opened at Entebbe, Uganda, is Africa's largest, with runways two miles long capable of handling the latest jet planes. British Build New Airfield In Africa The transit will be housed in the same building as the big scope. The 6-inch refractor is still at Lindley. "The difference in the refractor and reflector telescopes," Dr. N. W. Storer, associate professor of astronomy, said, "is that the refractor telescope has a lens at the top and the reflector machine has a convex mirror at the bottom" Built 250 miles south of the southern border of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, the field occupies a strategically important position between the Middle East and South Africa, says the National Geographic Society. It has the advantage of year-around good weather. Entebbe, capital of the British Uganda Protectorate, nestles on the north shore of Lake Victoria, where seaplanes also can land. The 27 inch telescope will have to be turned by a motor. The smaller instruments can be turned by hand cranks. Other parts of the observatory will house a photo darkroom and small laboratories. The big machine will be mounted on a 10-ton concrete block. The size of the block and the size of the scope, itself, would make hand turning impossible. * It will run on a dome track 21 feet in diameter. After the actual construction of the observatory dome, the astronomers will have to make adjustments of the telescopes. "The adjustments that will have to be made are highly technical," Dr. Storer said. "And they may take some time. Each telescope has to be angled just right and the axis must point so that it is parallel to the Eldridge Pharmacy Drugs, Sundries, Fountain, Pines Agency for Mixture No. 79 701 Mass. Phone 999 earth's axis." He said that these adjustments may have to be made several times before the machine is placed correctly. Observation work from the 27-inch telescope will be for research purposes only, Dr. Storer said. "It would be inconvenient to try to accommodate all the people at the big telescope. This is mainly because it would be unsafe to have more than six persons at a time on the observation platform." The smaller six inch telescope will be used for open house nights. "The public can see just as much in the small telescope," he said. Your Plymouth Man ... has a used car priced for you. Buddy GALLAGHER 634 Mass. Ph.1000 SAVE - SHOP EARLY IN LAWRENCE EARLY SHOPPERS' SAVINGS QUALITY PRODUCTS - REASONABLE PRICES FRIENDLY SERVICE PATRONIZE YOUR LAWRENCE MERCHANTS 1 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday,Dec.17,1951 Lovellette Rips Cords For 42 Points AsKansasExtendsWinStringToFive By CHARLEY BURCH A record-shattering 42 points by Clyde Lovellette Friday night and a free throw by Bob Kenney in the last minute of play Saturday night enabled Kansas to rack-up 74-51 and 58-57 wins over Southern Methodist at Dallas. Daily Kansan Sports Editor The victories were the fourth and fifth of the season for the Jayhawkers, who now have a string of eight victories extending back to last season. Saturday night's tussle saw the Jayhawkers face their closest test of the young season. Kenney's free shot in the final minute broke a 57-57 tie and from there the Jayhawkers controlled the ball until the final 15 seconds. SMU gained possession of the ball with 15 seconds left and took two hurried shots but both were in vain. 1980 SMU's Jack Kastman, a former star at Shawnee-Mission High school, was the devious standout for the losers. He guarded Lovellette closely, holding him to six points in the last half. Kastman fouled out with six minutes remaining in the tilt. He led SMU's scoring with 15 points. Lovellette blasted away for 18 points in the first two periods to bring his two-night performance total to 66 points. The red-hot spice sweep boosted his scoring average to 28.6, with 143 points in five games. He played all but about three minutes of the game, setting out the last minute of the first half and two minutes of the fourth period. five games. In Friday night's battle, Lovellele broke his previous scoring record of 39 points, established in his sophomore year against Missouri, by pouring through 21 points each half. Kansas roared to a 10-point lead before the Mustangs could chalk-up a marker. SMU began clicking, however, and pulled to within one point at 13-12 with seven minutes gone in the initial quarter. BOB KENNEY The Jayhawkers began connecting and were ahead 21-14 at the close of the first quarter, 40-29 at halftime and 57-36 as the last quarter commenced. Lovellette hit a torrider 60 per cent of his 30 attempts from the field but the entire team connected on only 31 of 86 tries. Kansas looked good under the backboards as the Jayhawkers cleared 42 rebounds to the Mustangs' 21. Lovellette swept 14 for KU. Mustangs SMU-thered Kansas (58) | | FGA | FG | FTA | FT | Pts. | F | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kenney | 8 | 4 | 4 | 1 | 5 | 1 | | Lienhard | 13 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 9 | 5 | | D. Kelley | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | | Lovellette | 22 | 11 | 5 | 2 | 24 | 4 | | Hougland | 11 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 10 | 2 | | Davenport | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Dye | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Johnson | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Keller | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Heitholt | 5 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 1 | | Smith | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Totals ... 61 25 12 8 58 14 SMU (57) | | FGA | FG | FTA | FT | Pts. | F | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Murphy | 15 | 4 | 2 | 2 | 10 | 2 | | Kastman | 11 | 6 | 4 | 3 | 15 | 5 | | Holm | 12 | 3 | 6 | 4 | 10 | 2 | | Galey | 7 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 10 | 1 | | Freeman | 11 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 8 | 4 | | Haymes | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Bryant | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 1 | | Kendall | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 1 | Totals ... 58 23 15 11 57 16 Kansas (74) | | FGA | FG | FTA | FT | Pts. | F | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kenney | 17 | 4 | 1 | FT | 9 | 4 | | Lienhard | 14 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 1 | | D. Kelley | 7 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 7 | 3 | | Lovellette | 30 | 18 | 7 | 6 | 42 | 2 | | Hougland | 7 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 7 | 3 | | Davenport | 3 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | | Dye | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | | Johnson | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Keller | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Heitholt | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | Smith | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | A. Kelley | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | Born | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | Totals ... 86 31 14 12 74 21 SUMU GS. FGA FG FTFA FT Pls. F Murphy 9 2 0 4 2 Kastman 12 3 2 2 8 1 Holm 9 3 4 2 8 1 Galey 7 3 5 2 8 2 Freeman 12 4 2 2 10 2 Wheeler 0 0 0 0 0 0 Haymes 2 1 1 0 2 1 Bryant 5 2 3 1 5 3 Kendall 6 2 3 2 6 2 Cropp 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals ... 62 20 20 11 51 17 By OSCAR FRALEY Cards Counting On Stanky New York—(U,P)—The St. Louis Cardinals are counting today on a little guy out of the past to revive the ancient glories of the gas house gang. That describes him, this under- stimated scrapper who fights and snarls The Cards have won pennants since that two-fisted band of the '30's roared to baseball fame with ready knuckles and a chip on every shoulder. But none of them inflamed the imaginatio not the fans on the banks of the Mississippi as did the ones hoisted by the gas house gang. They were players of the old school—and so is the little guy who takes over now. His name is Edward Raymond Stanky but to baseball people this blue-eyed, button-nosed throwback is "Muggsy" or "The Brat." and claws like a cougar from the time the man in blue calls "play ball." Back in 1947 when the new manager-secret basement of the Cards was helping the Dodgers to the penguin, Branch Rickey said of him: "He can't run, he can't throw and he can't hit but I wouldn't trade him for Rogers Hornsby in his prime." Stanky isn't and never has been quite that devoid of talent. No, he never was fast, never threw too brilliantly and wasn't a terror at the plate. But when you needed the extra base, the sure peg or the crucial base hit, he'd be the one to get it for you. 16 CLYDE LOVELLETTE Wildcats Clash With St. John's New York—(U,P)—Kentucky and St. John's of Brooklyn make Lexington, Ky., the basketball capital of the country tonight when they clash in one of the key games of the season. St. John's, with five straight victories including an 82-62 win over Rhode Island State last Saturday night, will be making a strong bid for recognition as the country's top team. The Redmen were ranked fifth in pre-season ratings and jumped to third last week. Kentucky, ranked first in the United Press coaches board ratings but beaten by Minnesota last week, will be seeking to regain lost prestige. Kentucky probably will be a slight favorite, although minus the services of seven-foot pivotman Bill Spivey. Chief reason for what at first appears to be misguided faith is Kentucky's 99-game winning streak at home. Tactically, the Wildcats' big job will be to stop Bob Zawulok, St. John's six-foot, seven-inch center, who has averaged slightly better than 22-points a game this season. Meanwhile, the scramble to take ove Kentucky in ranking continued the week. In addition to St. John's, fourth-ranked Washington, fifth-ranked Kansas State and sixth-ranked St. Louis scored impressive victories. Washington routed California, 65-43, Kansas State state down Denver, 65-55, and St. Louis smashed Wichita, 71-45, to remain among the undefeated, second-ranked Illinois was idle over the weekend. The major upset of the weekend was Indiana's 57-55 victory over Wyoming, which was ranked ninth by the coaches' board last week. The Rice Institute Owls, who are slated to invade Hoch auditorium tomorrow night, will be the third team from the Southwest conference to play the all-victorious Jayhawkers this season. Rice To Be 3rd Southwest Team To Face Jayhawkers Kansas has been set back on twice in 15 meetings with Southwest conference teams. The Jayhawkers defeated Baylor 57-46 to open the 1951-52 season and registered two victories over Southern Methodist this weekend. Coach Phog Allen's potent cagers should have little trouble downing the Owls, who wound-up in the league cellar last year and are picked as probable repeaters this year. Rice's team, coached by Don Suman, opened its season with a disappointing 51-50 loss to Stephen F. Austin college after holding an eight-point lead late in the game. In their second outing the Owls defeated Sam Houston State 59-57 in an overtime. Gene Schwinger, 6-feet 6-inch sophomore, is one of the Owls' leading players and paces the scoring attack. The outing will be next to last game for Kansas before going into the Big Seven tournament in Kansas City Dec. 26. Saturday night Southern California is scheduled to play here. Officials Act On Bowl Tilts New York—(U.P.)—Much of the "Eig League" luster will be missing from the annual bowl games after Jan. 1, thanks to the weekend action taken by football conference officials, a nation-wide United Press survey disclosed today. In annual meetings concluded over the weekend, the Southern conference and Eastern Collegiate Athletic conference both removed themselves from the future bowl picture by voting iron-clad bans on such contests. The ban followed a similar action taken by the Big Seven a week ago. The Big Seven has produced some of the toughest bowl teams in the nation. Sweeping legislation against bowl games will be considered when the National College Athletic association holds its annual convention next month and a few conferences are waiting for the results of that conclave before making official announcements. Among those awaiting the NCAA's ultimate recommendation on bowl games are the Big Ten and Pacific Coast conference, who supply the Rose Bowl teams, and the Southwest conference, which annually sends its winner to the Cotton Bowl. Here is a conference-by-conference picture on the bowl game issue and other forms of football deemphasis: Southern conference — Banned bowl games. Dropped Clemson and Maryland from 1952 conference competition for accepting Jan. 1. bowl bids. Refused to share in Clemson and Maryland's bowl receipts and ordered all members to submit itemized reports on all athletic expenses Eastern Collegiate Athletic conference—voted against participation in all bowl games. Voted to favor restricted television, spring football practice and unlimited substitution Big Seven—Voted to ban all bowl games after Sept. 1, 1952. Spring practice was cut to 20 sessions and freshmen were barred from competing in varsity play. Pacific Coast conference-No action taken on bowl question. Curtailment of suoting is recommended. Southeastern conference — Killeen two proposals to abolish bowl games but reduced football scholarships from 90 to 30 a year. Spring practice was cut to 20 sessions. Freshmen were divided into cut later, committee members reversed themselves and ruled freshmen eligible for 1952. Big Ten—Agreement with PCC to send a team to the Rose Bowl each year still is in effect. However, it was last approved by only a 5-4 vote KU Dominates Big 7 Basketball Kansas City, Mo—(L.P.)—Kansas and big Clyde Lovette dominated Big Seven basketball today a week before the annual Christmas tournament in Kansas City. It was only a week or so ago that Kansas State was the team that caught the eye of the fan anxious to pick a sure thing. But Kansas is a better wager as long as Lovellette keeps his good health. Oklahoma's week will include rugged Illinois at Urbana tomorrow night, Iowa at Iowa City Thursday and New York university in Madison Square Garden Saturday. Coach Bruce Drake should know after those three exactly what he has at Norman. That leaves Nebraska and Oklahoma, the former 3-1 and the Sooners 1-2 in the young season. Nebraska's Huskers will see a lot of the country this week, meeting SMU in a pair at Dallas Wednesday and Thursday, mixing with Tampa at Tampa, Fla., Friday and then meeting Miami at Miami Saturday. Colorado's Buffs (2-3) try next to handle a mediocre Bradley team at Peoria Thursday and Michigan Saturday at Ann Arbor, while Missouri's week catches the Tigers meeting Tulsa at Tulsa Wednesday and Arkansas at Fayetteville Thursday. Missouri is 3-1 to date. With home games against Rice tomorrow night and Southern California Saturday, Kansas may be expected to fatten its record to 7-0 by the time it makes its tourney debut against Colorado in Kansas City's Municipal auditorium Dec. 26. Kansas State is one of the nation's best, however, despite a loss to San Francisco on its swing West. The Wildcats have a 5-1 record to date. Tonight they meet Hammie university at Manhattan and then go to Bloomington to meet Indiana Saturday. Iowa State's 4-0 record is quite respectable and it should read 5-0 after the Cyclones meet Drake at Des Moines Saturday. But Iowa State has not been through the wringer thus far and it remains to be seen how the Cyclones hold up under really hard wear. It was, of course, the closest scoring race in college history, and official National Collegiate Athletic bureau statistics showed today that Matson won out on 126 points, scored on 21 touchdowns, compared to 125 for McEllenny on 17 touchdowns and 23 extra points. W L Pct. Pts. Pts Opp Kansas 5 0 1,000 358 254 Iowa State 4 0 1,000 227 208 Kansas State 5 1 833 402 328 Missouri 3 1 750 196 170 Nebraska 3 1 750 198 198 Colorado 2 3 400 268 282 Oklahoma 2 3 233 149 153 New York —(U.P.)- By a single point, speedster Olie Matson of San Francisco beat out Hugh McElhenny of the University of Washington for the national individual football scoring championship in 1951. Matson, six-foot, two-inch Negro who also won the national rushing championship, scored at least one touchdown in every game as he led the Dons to their first perfect season in history. There was only one game in which he didn't score two touchdowns, and in four of them he scored three. His total of 21 is only one short of the record 22 scored by Bobby Reynolds of Nebraska and Wilford White of Arizona State, both last year. The Standings and Michigan State, which becomes a voting member in 1953, is on record against bowl competition. A 5-5 vote would kill the agreement. Matson Captures National Crown F ha wa to co na for o no we win the ga pic rec gas Dr and me of I con af by Ag gi T cor Be en we ful O Ge Mi del Ok T wa B is slig per sho Tightly Played Games Highlight Big Weekend By BOB NOLD Two overtime encounters and several other tightly played games high-lighted a heavy weekend of intramural basketball at Robinson gym and annex. In the overtime games the Geology club squeezed by the Air Force ROTC 32-30 Saturday at Robinson annex, and Lambda Chi Alpha defeated Sigma Alpha Epsilon 28-24 Sunday at the annex. In Friday's fraternity "B" games, the scores indicated a well balanced league. Sigma Phi Epsilon won from Sigma Chi 29-27, Alpha Tau Omega squeaked past Kappa Sigma 31-29, and Tau Kappa Epsilon edged by Sigma Nu 23-21. The independent "A" league, playing at the annex Friday, also turned in some close games. Stephenson beat the Aluminum Five 29-24; the Coffeyville Cats had a hard fight before defeating Alpha Epsilon Pi 29-27; Gamma Delta too had a struggle before winning 29-26 from the Boones, and Oread won a thriller from KHK 27-25. The remainder of the 40 weekend games were wild scoring, loosely played games. Friday — Robinson Gym Independent "B" Phi Chi 44, MEN 21 Lamba Chi 51, Phi Kappa Sig 21 Phi Gam 27, Delta Tau Delta 19 Nu Sigma Nu 39, Phi Psi 32 Beta Theta Pi 43, Delta Chi 30 Robinson Annex Independent "A" Phi Beta Digits 32, Jolliffe 17 Dark Horses 44, Feather Mer- bera 50 Saturday Ratlinson Gym Navy "C" 46, 17 AFFROTC 45, 122 Club 36 Phi Delt 53, Delta Upsilon 39 Independent "B" and "C" Jolliffe 40, Oread "B" 25 East Side 26. Stephenson 18 Bright Named For 3rd Year St. Louis—(U.P.)-Drake university halfback Johnny Bright, whose jaw was broken in a slugging which touched off a bitter Missouri Valley conference controversy, has been named to the all-conference squad for the third straight year. Commissioner Artie Eilers announced the league honors which were dominated by Tulsa university, winner of the conference crown for the second year in a row. Bright, the nation's leading ground gainer, was the only Drake player picked. His broken jaw, which he received in the Oklahoma A&M game in October, ultimately led to Drake's withdrawal from the MVC and Bradley university's announcement it would follow suit at the end of the academic year. Drake withdrew because of the conference's failure to take action after Bright, a Negro, was slugged by Aggie guard Wilbanks Smith on early play of the game which the Aggies won. Smith said the slugging was unintentional. Tulsa players named to the all-conference squad were center Jim Beasley, quarter back Rex Morris, end Tom Milner, tackle Jim Prewett, guard Marvin Matuzak and fullback Howard Waugh. Others selected were halfback Gene Shannon and tackle Buck Miller of Houston, guard Stan Gondek of Detroit and George Wooden, Oklahoma Aggie end. Tulsa's mentor, Buddy Brothers, was voted "coach of the year." Between Japan and Korea the sea is so shallow that a comparatively slight upheaval of the bottom would permit an army to walk across dry-shed. Travel Service THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Tel. 30 8th & Mass. AFROTC "B" 35, Roger Williams 24 Navy "B" 32, KHK 25 Varsity "B" 35, Don Henry 29 Page 5 Robinson Annex Independent "A" University Daily Kansan Independent A Sterling Oliver 45, Flying Five 15 Battenfeld 31, Last Chance 20 ASCE, Misfits-double forfeit Sunday Robinson Gym Beta Theta Pt 40, ATO 20 Phi Psi, Lambda Chi-double forfeit Phi Kappa Tau 50, AE Pi 36 Phi Delt 55, Triangle 16 Sig Ep forfeited to Delta Tau Delta Tri Chi forfeited to Delta Upsilon AKL 36, Phi Kappa Sigma 26 Kapsa Kappa 54, Sigma Nu 15 Robinson Annex Robinson Annex Independent and Fraternity "B" Varsity 58, Twin Pines 19 Alpha Chi Epsilon forto Roch Alpha Chi Epsilon forfeited to Rochdale dale Kappa Sig 44, Kappa Alpha Psi 9 today's Games-Robinson Gym Fraternity "B" 6:45 p.m.: E-Phi Psi vs. Delta Chi and W-Wphi Gam vs. TKE 7:45 p.m.: E-Sig Alph vs. Sigma Chi 8:45 p.m., E-Phi Delt vs. Sig Ep and W-Sirma Chi v. Psh Kappa Sig 4:45 p.m. E-Sig Alph vs. Sigma Chi vs. Delta Chi vs. Alpha Chi 9:45 p.m. E-Kappa Sig vs. TKE and W-Sigma nu vs. Delta Tau Delta Robinson Annex Fraternity "C" p.1m.-Sig Ep vs. AKL p.5m.-Delta Upsilon vs. Triangle p.6m.-Sigma Nu vs. TKE p.7m.-Phi Gam vs. Pi KA 8.1m-ATO vs. Phi Kappa Tau 8.2m-Phi Delt vs. Delta Tau Delta THE SEA IS MY BOWLING GAME. THE ENTERPRISING PHOTOGRAPHER at Miami Beach, Florida, looked for something to tie in the resort's mild winter climate with the open of the 1952 basketball season, and the next thing model Toby Gerard knew she had been thrown for a loop. A right fair crisp shot we would say. Hope the teams down Florida way don't start using pretty swim suit girls for basketballs. Monday, Dec. 17, 1951 Williams Terms Jolting Joe 'Best Ball Player I Ever Saw' By MILTON RICHMAN New York—(U.P.)—"The best ball player I ever saw," said Ted Williams, "is Joe DiMaggio. Praise from Caesar is praise indeed, but Joe DiMaggio earned much of it from other great stars during his 13 years in the big leagues. Joe himself cites as his greatest accomplishment—and thrill—his 56-game hitting streak of 1941. In all of his baseball years, Di-Maggio failed to hit 300 only once. Twice he led the league, in 1939 with .381 and the next year with .352. Twice he was the home run king, in 1937 with 46 and 1948 with 39. Thirteen times he was picked on the All-Star team. Ten times he played in the World Series. It was quite a career. But it took its toll. DiMaggio came to the big leagues a suspicious and shy youngster. He picked up great poise, as a person as well as a ball player. But he always remained the quiet "toner," who was patient and kind to fans, yet fled from them at first opportunity. Fish Given 30-Mile Drive, Escapes From Fisherman The clipper ship Great Republic, built in 1853, was christened in Boston with a bottle of water instead of champagne because some of the vessel's shareholders were supporters of the temperance movement. Grisby caught the big fish and became so excited that he wrapped it in wet.rags to keep it alive. He then drove 30 miles home in his pickup truck and invited neighbors to view his catch. Fort Worth —(U.R)— Here's one about a 56-bound catfish that got away after a 30-mile drive. Neighbors of R.E. Grigsby will vouch for its veracity. Returning to the lake, Griglsby staked out the catfish and settled down to some overnight fishing. In the morning, though, the big fish was gone after slipping its moorings. His good friends became men out of sports—a ticket broker named George Solotaire, a restaurant owner named Toots Shor. On the road with the club Joe was a pal of Joe Page, but shied away from the other players. When things were good, Joe was happy. When things were bad—and he had slumps which ate away at his good-nature—he was morose. For a man who wanted to be alone, the baseball hero's role was tough. Often he would sit for hours in the dressing room at Yankee stadium, trying to wait out the autograph hunters who clamored at the players' entrance. Yet they were always there when he left, and he signed the autographs uncomplainingly. DiMaggio was greatly respected by the ball players, and his Yankee teammates often went to him for advice. When he'd take his crack at the batting cage, other players would halt their workouts to watch. For one thing, he had such comeback greatness. The "goodbye" Joe murmured at his press conference last week was- not his first swan song. They wrote him off several times before that. For one thing, there was the heel injury of 1949. It kept DiMaggio out of the lineup Give A $10 Gift - Pay $2.45 For It Pipe smokers will enjoy John Surrey imported briar pipes $10 pipes priced at $2.45 as a Christmas Special. 12 shapes in either light or dark finish. Each is gloved, boxed, and gift wrapped. George's Pipe Shop 727 MASS. When he finally returned—in time for a crucial series against the Red Sox—he hit key home runs three times in three games. half the season. Everywhere DIMagno went, he was followed by crowds, to a restaurant, to the movies, to the barber shop. He wore the mantle of fame well if not gladly. He earned it on the playing field, and kept earning it long after it was his. He was, simply, a great ball player. Illinois Heads For Pasadena Chicago — (U.P.)— Illinois' football football team headed toward California and the Rose Bowl today as Coach Ray Eliot cooked up scoring surprises for Stanford. He said that offensive drills will be stressed as the Illini, Big Ten champions, try to develop a scoring punch lacking in their last two season starts. They were held scoreless by Ohio State in a tie game and notched a field goal for their only points to beat Northwestern. Aboard the Super Chief when it left yesterday for Pasadena were Eliot, his assistants, 44 players, trainers and others. Eliot said he probably would hold twice-a-day drills for at least 10 days after the Illini receive a civic welcome toorrow. The Illini this year won eight games and tied one. Their offensive drive was evident the last time the Illinois squad went to the bowl. They scored 45 points in 1947 to trample UCLA, 45 to 14, and set a pattern for succeeding western conference teams that has yet to be broken. It Costs Only 50c To Do Your Laundry At RISK'S RISK'S Self-Service Laundry 613 Vt. Call 623 FOR THE FIRST BABY OF1952 All The Best To You In '52 And All The Years Ahead... Our heartiest best wishes to the new year's first baby—may you enjoy the cream of life always! MEDALLION And to all others, make this year richer by using wholesome dairy products every day. BABY GOLDEN CREST DAIRY 2016 Learnard Phone 3162 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, Dec. 17, 1951 She's Engaged, She's Lovely She Doesn't Need A Diploma By SHIRLEY LYON "Say, I have a story for you," one of my recently engaged girl friends said as she approached me in the Union the other day. Knowing my plight of always trying to find a feature story, she sometimes finds choice bits of information for me. "You do? I gulped a big swallow of hot coffee that burned all the way down. "Well, I've just been noticing the way people regard me, now that I'm engaged," she said. "I didn't know how much people expect a college girl to catch a man until now. Why, if a girl gets a ring, her college career is a success regardless of anything else. "As soon as I announced my engagement everyone came up and slapped me on the back and said, 'Well congratulations, old girl, I see you finally made it!' or, 'Oh, how wonderful! I'm just so thrilled!" "There was just one person who wasn't absolutely delighted over my highly regarded 'attainment.' That was one of my professors. 'Just as soon as we get someone good in the department, what does she do but get engaged,' he said, flattering my ego." As for the boy she's engaged to, all his friends come up and say "Getting married, huh? You must be crazy or something. What do you want to lose your freedom for, anyway?" "When I started out in college I didn't think so much about abandoning a career for marriage," my engaged friend continued. "Oh, I thought it would be fine if I happened to meet the right fellow, but that wasn't my chief and only goal. And it wasn't until just the last week or so that I realized how much indirect pressure there is on a girl to catch her man above all other things in a college career. "Most people also don't think that a girl should go on with her college work when she gets married. Even before I had decided to quit next June several people, including my mother, said they thought I should live up my studies." "Well, anyway, I thought you might think of something to write about, how people regard a girl who gets her final degree. I think its sort of interesting and I guess its OK with me," she smiled as she took a final sip of coffee. Being unengaged myself, I can't philosophize on this matter of what people think a college girl's career should be, but maybe it has something to do with the supposedly outmoded saying that a woman's place is in the home. Mary O'Neil Weds Pfc. Robert McElroy Hugh Thomas O'Neil, Winchester, announces the marriage of his daughter, Mary Ann, to Pfc. Robert Lloyd McEldroy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd McEldroy, Topeka, Dec. 7. Bernice Nicholson, Topeka, was maid of honor and Helen Schenck, Burlingame, was bridesmaid. Mrs. McEliroy is an education junior and a member of Sigma Kappa sorority. Pfe. McEliroy is stationed with the United States Air Force at Barksdale Air Force base, Shreveport, La. Scabbard And Blade Elects Beauchamp Glen Beauchamp, engineering senior, was elected president of Scabbard and Blade, senior honorary military society, last night. Other officers elected were Ken Davidson, vice president; Ken Merrill, secretary, and Joe Warkoczewski, treasurer. Nine men were initiated into the society. They were Ken Merrill, William Garlock, Chapin Clark, Harold Titus, John Hamilton, Richard Taeford, Jear Warkoczewski, George Warren and Keith Kelly. Phi Sigma meeting, 8 tonight, 101 Snow hall, initiation of new members. Dean J. H. Nelson speaker, "Your Graduate School and Research." Chess club, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday, 111 Strong. Last round of tournament. Official Bulletin Kappa Beta covered dish meeting, 5:30-7 p.m. Tuesday, Myers hall. Hui-O-Hawaiiana, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, 112 Strong hall. All invited. Sigma Tau Gamma, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, 1020 Tennessee. Important organizational meeting, all members urged to attend. Mathematics lecture, 5 today, 203 Strong. Prof. Marshall Stone. Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity, 745 Tuesday. Fest week, Union ity, 7:15 Tuesday, East room, Union. Interdorm Christmas caroling tonight, meet at Union lounge at 10 p.m. candles and cocoa served after caroling. Geology club and A.I.M.E, joint meeting, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, 426 Lindley, Prof. E. A. Stephenson and Prof. R. M. Dreyer on program. Faculty Forum, Wednesday noon, Faculty club. Laurie Swigart President Of Honorary Art Fraternity Christmas Holiday riders bureau. Register for ride or for passengers SUA office or hostess desk. Union. Louise Swigart, fine arts junior, was elected president of Delta Phi Delta, honorary art fraternity, recently. Other officers elected were Ada Storer, vice-president; Marlene Peterson, recording secretary; Betty June Kreger, corresponding secretary; Virgile Rawline, treasurer; Ann Harms, Pallet editor, and Joey Brown, alumni chairman. Langford Pledges Chi Chi Chi Chi Chi Chi fraternity announces the pledging of Walter Langford, business senior from Kansas City, Mo. The Goddess of Liberty was dedicated by Grover Cleveland 65 years ago. The statue in New York harbor was a birthday present to the United States from France commemorating American independence. New York—(U.P.)-With the arrival of "Point of No Return" this week, the name of Leland Hayward as producer was on four of Broadway's top productions. The lean, restless former talent agent who turned producer with amazing results in December, 1944, has had one of the most successful producing careers in a short time in the history of the theater. Four Top Broadway Productions Carry Leland Hayward's Name He is the only individual product —The Theater guild is a corporation who can build up insurance for at least a modest run simply by circularizing a file of previous customers of his productions who like to be first in line for his new ones. "I feel that anyone who will buy tickets well in advance, and that's a gamble no matter how attractive the prospects may seem, is entitled to the best in the house. The priority list is a rather expensive operation, but I feel that it more than pays off in the long run." "We have some 40,000 names in this file at this time." Hayward said. "It has grown every year since it was started. It isn't a subscription list. No one has to buy a single ticket. These people have just sent in their names, expressing a desire to hear about any productions I plan and, if interested, they get first shot at the tickets via mail orders. Each person may buy up to six tickets. Thus, "Point Of No Return," starring Henry Fonda, had more than $500,000 in the till before the curtain went up Thursday night. Not all of it from the priority list, of course, but it was achieved without selling out performances to theater parties—against which Hayward draws the line. This fall he started a priority system in Boston where his productions are tried out. The other current shows on which Eye YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. Lawrence Optical Co. Phone 425 1025 Mass. Hayward has his name are "Remains To Be Seen" and "Call Me Madam," of which he is sole producer, and "South Pacific," of which he is a co-producer. "Point Of No Return" is his 11th production. He has had three flops, but even those managed to stay around several weeks or months, which is unusual in this period when most shows that don't start off with a bang get short shift. Hayward's first production was "A Bell For Adano" which opened Dec. 6, 1944. His biggest success to date as a solo producer has been "Mister Roberts" in which Fonda also starred and which also played the Alvin theater where "Point Of No Return" is established. Rayward has a leaning toward plays adapted from books. "Adano," "Roberts," "South Pacific" and the new one are in that category. It was well over a year ago that he acquired the dramatic rights to "Point Of No Return" a best-seller by John P. Marquand. Fonda still was playing in "Mister Roberts" at the time and he gave it to the star to read. Fonda agreed that he would like to appear in a play based on the novel if production could be held up until he finished his "Mister Roberts" tour last August. Naturally, Hayward agreed and turned the property over to Paul Osborn for adaptation. Hayward has a weak spot for Osborn, who also happens to have an excellent record as a playwright. It was Osborn who gave Hayward his first hit in "A Bell For Adano." PRECISION WATCH REPAIRS Watch Repair Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed Wolfson's 743 Mass. Call 675 We eavers 901 Mass. heavenly things for your Christmas angel to let her know you thought especially of her We'll gladly gift-wrap and mail your selections Blue Grass SOLID COLOGNE Elizabeth Arden "Blue Grass" stick cologne Snow Santa . . . 1.85* White Shoulders Collagen By Bryan White Shoulders Collagen By Bryan Evyan "Shalimar" perfume . . . 14.00* "White Shoulders" cologne . . . 2.75* SHALIMAR Charles of the Ribs Sylvathe Vanity Sets three matching pieces in jeweler's bronze . . . 8.95 Faberge Charles of the Ritz "Directorei" toilet water . 5.00* “Quartette Junior” four-fragrance set . . . 3.00* MATCHABELLI COLOGNE CAMERA MIRROR COMB Angelique STICK GUMME YELP Quartette jr. COLOGNE EXTRAORDINAIRE FABERÉE "Cologne Collection" six-fragrance set . . 3.50* Prince Matchabelli Revlon Nail Beauty Kit ... 5.95* Angelique "Stick Cologne Trio" . . 1.75* - All prices plus federal tax Your gift from Weaver's means more . . . to her Weaver's Cosmetics—Main Floor CLEANING KIT $ S^{1} $ University Daily Kansan Monday, Dec. 17, 1951 Page 7 PANELA IN BUENOS AIRES, a very small fry dissenter in background injects a loud and sour note into the festivities as Peron admirers cheer the Argentine president after his election. The infant obviously isn't one bit impressed with the fact that Juan Peron has been returned to office for another six-year term. The Radical party in Argentina said that many of the vote totals announced in the recent election were incorrect and filed protests. Italy's Rivers Bring Death Prosperity To River Basins Washington, D. C. — Northern Italy's most disastrous floods of the century have already cost more than 100 lives and an estimated half billion dollars. The rampaging Po and other rivers of the north Italian plain have marooned thousands of residents, necessitating dramatic rescue by hast-assembled boats, and air drops of supplies to isolated communities. Such inundations are not new to the northern Adriatic coast of Italy, says the National Geographic Society. The danger has kept the building of cities to comparatively high ground, away from the rivers. The filling-in process, geologically speaking, has moved at a rapid rate, and has continued noticeably in recorded time. The cities of Ravenna and Adria were once great seaports, but slitting and shifting coastal sands have built up land to the east, leaving them stranded in marshy ground. The Po, its 417 miles making it Italy's longest river, as well as the Adige and tributary rivers flowing down from the Alps, have carried silt toward the sea, gradually filling in the basin to form Italy's greatest agricultural and industrial region. The entire area was once under the waters of the Adriatic sea. Adria shares its name with the Comfort Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS NOW thru Wed. Ray Milland Gene Tierney "Close To My Heart" Late News - Cartoon VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD NOW thru TUES. Weaver Bros. Elviry "SHEPHERD OF THE OZARKS" And-- "Barnyard Follies" Flood control projects were undertaken by the Etruscans, the Romans, and the Italians. All the rivers of the lower Po valley are diked, and the Po itself is some 20 feet higher than the surrounding countryside, due to constant silting and diking. Adriatic and was a major port for the Etruscans, pre-Roman rulers of Italy. It is now 15 miles inland. Ravenna, an ancient Roman port, is five miles from the Adriatic. The Po basin also is crisscrossed by the routes of the invaders of Italy—Goths, Huns, Germans and others—and its cities were strongholds of plot, intrigue, and violence in the fratricidal wars of the Middle Ages. In the fertile basin of the Po, but in comparatively high ground, are many of Italy's great cities. Turin is near the headwaters of the stream. Milan is to the north, on the Lombard plain, and Bologna lies to the south, at the base of the Apennines, Italy's central mountain backbone. There is no illiteracy in Iceland. The island republic publishes more new books per capita than any other country in the world. TWO TICKETS TO BROADWAY BIG DAZZLING MUSICAL SHOW! TECHNICOLOR TWO TICKETS TO BROADWAY Tony MARTIN *Jane LEIGH *Gloria DeHAVEN Ann MILLER *Edna BRACKEN N-O-W! BIG DAZZLING MUSICAL SHOW! TECHNICOLOR Phone K.U.376 Shows 2:30 - 7:00 & 9:00 Latest Moviemet News Classified Advertising Rates Kansan Classified Advertising Granada Advertising Rates day Three Five days days 25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00 Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c FOR SALE LATEST STYLE off shoulder peach formal, in heavy satin, size 16, has full sleeve. White chiffon sub-layer. Call afternoons, 633 Illinois. Phone 1299R. RECORD PLAYER—3-speed. Chicago Webster with amplifier and speaker, all in one portable case. Call Bill Bonwell at 3197 after 6:30 p.m. $2^*$ BOOK-EASE IS the collapsible book holder. Use it on a desk, in bed, anyway. It is also the pages firm in place. Now, only 863 at the Student Union Book Store. RENTAL TYPEWRITER. Both new and used, portables for $1.00 per week or $3.50 per month. Can be used to better meet new papers. Come in and try one at the Student Union Book Store. CHEMISTRY MAJORS! We now have in stock three work study aids to help you toward better grades. "How to Solve Problems in General Chemistry" by Babor. "How to Solve Problems in Quantitative Analysis" by Arenson. See them at your Student Union Book Store. 21 GIFT IDEAS FOR CHRISTMAS! Give a magazine subscription for the ideal Christmas Gift. We take subscriptions to our magazines. Student Union Box Store. Tonsil Removal Brings Quiet Fort Worth, Texas—(U.P.)—Things were right quiet around the I. E. Stephens' home for a few days after a trip to the hospital by the family's five youngsters. All five had their tonsils removed. Patronize Kansan Advertisers SEASON'S Greetings FREE MOVIES From Your Hometown Merchants Get your tickets from These Firms Adelane's Lawrence National Bank Pickens City Service Norman Edmonds Grocery Beamans Radio-TV Logan Moore Lumber Rhodes Heating & Roofing Andrews Skelly Service Knapps Log Cabin Market Rankin Drug Store Gravitts Goodyear Guntert Plumbing-Wiring Union Cab 2-800 Lawrence Sanitary Dairy Turner Produce Rapid Transit Norris Bros. Wiley's Market FREE SHOW For Shoppers Thurs.-Fri. Dec. 20-21 At Your FINE ART REPRODUCTIONS! We now have a wide selection of reproductions of famous paintings in full color. Student Union Book Store. 21 TRANSPORTATION Comfort! Convenience JAYHANER NEW Park Beach CUSHIONED CHAIRS RIDER WANTED going east to Massachusetts; if interested phone Ken Cox- AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steampair and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether on business or hitherto. Phone Mrs. Lois Odera. 3651, Downs Traffice Service, 1015 Mass. DRIVING TO Fort Wayne, Indiana, Dec. 21 or 22. Can take three; share expenses. Call Jim Holdeman at 2518A from 6 p.m. FOR RENT Ask us about family rates, ski coach, and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book the resort to travel next summer. Call Miss Gleeson at National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30- VERY NICE QUIET South room for two men. Close to bath, single beds, call 2162M. 17 BOOMS FOR 3 men. No other roomers. Come or phone 3389, Gilkerson Co. 7 a.m. to 215 p.m. or 1788J at 942 Miss. > 30 p.m. to 12 midnight. ONE ROOM for 2 students; clean and nice single bedroom. Board, if desired. Phone 33438W, 534 Ohio. 18 IF YOU LIKE to live very close to the campus, double room for two girl student, in very nice house for second semester. Inquire at 1215 GIRL or call 383J. BUSINESS SERVICE TYPING: Themes, term papers, these- prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs. Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island; EXPERIENCED TYPIST: term paper- note books, theses, medical and biol- cal reports, miscellaneous. Ptrs. 275J after 4 p.m. Upstairs, Pt. 275J after 4 p.m. TYING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work prompt attention. 10 years these tying papers. Mt. Shields, 1209 Ohio, P 1601. LAST TIMES TODAY Features Tonite 7:37 - 9:37 RADIO AND TV repair service on amakes. Largest stock of finest qual- parts. We have the finest test equip- ment in this area thus assuring fas- tionable performance Radio and Television. Phone 188. 828 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from a.m. until midnight. STUDYING late tonight? Refresh your self with fountain beverages and sand wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Pho 3604, 1109 Mass. TYPING: Experience in theses, terr papers, miscellaneous typing, and sten cil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis_ phon 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. t CRYSTAL TAILCAR serves choice steaks sandwiches, maftles, home-made plies and air-conditioned spaces for customer Air-conditioned. In a m. midnight. Crystal Cake. 609 Vt. IYAHWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet's needs are our business. Our one-stop service allows fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. t' LOST GREEN WALLET Monday morning, Annex E. If you need money more than I do, could you at least return my paper to the Business office? 18 MISCELLANEOUS Starts Tomorrow SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT THE LADY FROM TEXAS TECHNI COLOR HOWARD DUFF- MONA FREEMAN JOSEPHINE HULL TITO GOBBI in VERDI'S RIGOLETTO with PAGLIUGHI SERAFIN conducting the ROYAL OPERA HOUSE OF HOME ORCHESTRA A great opera spectacle at Movie Prices! MATINEE ON "RIGOLETTO" 2:30 P.M. DOORS OPEN 2:00 P.M. EVENING PERFORMANCES AT 7:15 P.M. AND 9:15 P.M. — WE URGE YOU TO ATTEND EARLY FOR THE BEST IN SEATING - - POSITIVELY NO RESERVED SEATS!!! No Increase In Admission! New PATEE PHONE 321 New Cushioned Seats For Your Comfort! 1 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, Dec. 17, 195 AGAIN THIS CHRISTMAS SEASON, as it has annually since 1929 with the exception of the years of World War II, the Missouri Pacific railroad will light the world's largest Christmas tree. The front of the 22-story general office building in St. Louis. Mo., which fronts on Civic plaza, gives the unique effect of a huge Christmas tree through the turning on of certain lights in certain offices in the large building. Santa Will Have A Big Job In Filling Christmas Requests Washington—(U.P.)—Santa has a heart, and so do a lot of kids. I've been browsing through Mr. Claus' mail at the post office dead letter office. For instance: One little girl, named Eunice, aged eight, wrote; "If you get to Korea, Santa dear, please give those poor children something and forget me. We'll get along somehow." David, also eight, wanted nothing for himself but asked Santa to give a pipe to his daddy who has a "hurt back" in Korea. Most of the letters which wind up at the post office marked "insufficient address" are posted for delivery to "North Pole." The post office does not allow the use of last names or addresses, but most kids don't give that information anyway. A little girl named "Ruthie" asked Santa for $22.90 to pay for her mommy's dental bill and "Please give her some better teeth." Another little girl, named Margaret, asked for a two-wheel bike This one, so help me, came from an eight-year-old named Ferdinand: A little girl named Nancy asked for "a piano, a real baby, a set of drums, a banjo and a singer who can sing." and a million dollars "tax free." "Ive been a good boy except I knocked hell out of Junis. I'm sorry, but I'm all right. Bring me anything you don't want." Some of the youngsters asked for things that will get the family out of financial stress. Like a little 10-year-old named "Dickie" who wrote to Mr. Claus from Bowie, Md., where they have a fine race track. I quote his letter; "Please dear Santa—My daddy could use some new horses to bet on. Get him a couple and you can forret all about me." This week's schedule on KFKU, University radio station, will have programs geared to the Christmas theme. The schedule also includes programs to be heard Christmas Eve and Christmas day. KFKU is found at 1250 on the radio dial. Monday The Flying Carpet ... 2:30 p.m. Broadway Rhapsody ... 2:45 p.m. Great Symphonies ... 7:00 p.m. Radio Schedule Tuesday Art By-Radio...2:30 p.m. KU Cavalcade of Hits...7:00 p.m. Memo Pad...7:25 p.m. Wednesday Music From Mt. Oread. 2:30 p.m. (Yuletide Music by University A Cappella choir) KU in the News...2:45 p.m. Concert Hall...7:00 p.m. (Featuring Robert Shaw recording of Britten's Ceremony of Carols sung in Old English) Thursday Adventures in Music. Lead 2:30 p.m. Music Land...2:30 p.m. (The story of "The First Christmas Tree" with old Continental Christmas carols.) Brain Busters ... 7:00 p.m. Friday Story Book Train 2:30 p.m. Museum of Art Organ 2:45 p.m. (Featuring Both 'and' and 'trace, music written for the organ). Chamber Music...7:00 p.m. (A portion of Bach's Christmas Oratorio.) Monday Flying Carpet ... 2:30 p.m. Christmas Carols by Robert Shaw...2:45 p.m. Dicken's "Christmas Carol" 7 p.m. (Traditionally read by Robert Calderwood, associate professor emeritus of speech.) Tuesday Christmas Carols Around the World...2:30 p.m. A Portion of Handel's "Messiah" Oratorio...7 p.m. YMCA Chess Club Defeats KU Team The YMCA Chess club of Kansas City, Mo., defeated the University Chess club $ \frac{4}{3} $ to 1 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Dec. 15. The six-game match was played at the YMCA in Kansas City. The longest game lasted four and one-half hours. Henry Georgi, Kansas state chess champion and president of the University club, defeated Dr. Herbert Shuey of the YMCA club. Other results: Phillip W. Morrell, YMCA, defeated Thomas Munsen, KU; Harry A. Hardy, YMCA, defeated Robert Berrgern, KU; H. M. Wesenberg, YMCA, defeated Dr. Robert Meyer, KU; Dr. J. Zellermeyer,WMCA alternate, defeated Edgar Marihug, KU alternate, Ross Latshew, YMCA, and Russell Annis, KU, played to a draw, each counting one-half game KU Faculty Writes Only Half Of The Books Published By Kansas University Press By JEANNE FITZGERALD Everything from a book on penguins by a New Zealand naturalist to an explanation and history of the sixth amendment to the constitution has been published by the University of Kansas Press. All of the books published by the University press are of a scholarly nature and only 10 of the 23 such books published were written by faculty members at the University. The books published by the University press this year include "The Sixth Amendment: A Study in Constitutional Development" by Francis H. Heller, assistant professor of political science, who is now serving in the Army; "Sexual Behavior in Penguins" by L. E. Richdale, honorary lecturer in zoology, University of Otago, New Zealand. J. H. Nelson, dean of the graduate school and chairman of the book publishing committee, said Mr. Rich- "Mary Wollstonecraft: A Critical Biography" by Ralph M. Wardle, chairman of the department of English at Omaha university, Omaha, Neb.; and "Sturge Moore and the Life of Art" by Frederick L. Gwynn, a visiting professor at Yale university. Mr. Richdale heard about the University of Kansas press through a former faculty member at the University who offered to submit Mr. Richdale's manuscript for the book to the committee. "Sexual Behavior in Penguins was reviewed in Time, Look, and Newsweek magazines, as well as other publications. dale, who wrote the book on penguins, came to Kansas for the first time last spring expressly to visit the people who had published his book. Manuscripts for books are submitted by the writers to a committee appointed by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. Members of the committee are; Dean Nelson, C. K. Hyder, professor of English and editor of the University press; T. C. Rythe, assistant professor of journalism and superintendent of production; Burton W. Marvin, dean News Roundup of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information; Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to the Chancellor; L. J. Pritchard, professor of economics, and Glen Shepherd of the University of Kansas School of Medicine. "The University of Kansas press was organized as a formal part of the University in 1947," Dean Nelson said. "So far, all of the books have been published on the campus." All manuscripts submitted to the committee must be submitted to the judgment of authorities in the field concerned in the manuscript before it will be accepted for publication. The University press does its own printing as well as the sponsoring books for publication. The printing plant is located in the basement of the Journalism building. "The organization can publish books which commercial publishing houses could not afford to publish, since scholarly books are written for a comparatively small percentage of the reading public," Dean Nelson said. Question Plane Inspection In Wake Of Air Disaster Elizabeth, N.J.—(U.P.)—Investigators sought to determine today whether a non-scheduled, war surplus airliner was inspected properly before it took off on a cut-rate flight to Florida that ended six minutes later in fiery death for all 56 persons aboard. Smoke poured from the right motor of the twin-engine converted Curtiss Commando as it lifted off the runway at Newark airport at 3:03 p.m. EST Sunday with its 52 passengers and crew of four. Capt. C. A. Lyons of Miami, Fla., pilot of the doomed plane, tried to bank the ship to return to the field for an emergency landing when the right wing snapped. The plane burst into flame and plummeted into the shallow Elizabeth river. Washington—(U.P.)-Sen. Milton R. Young predicted today that the presidential boom for Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower will sag because of the "possible failure" of the European defense program. Predict Sag In Eisenhower Boom The North Dakota Republican emphasized, however, that he holds the state department, not Eisenhower, "responsible" for the possible breakdown of European rearmament. Young told newsmen he expects Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio to be the GOP presidential nominee next year. "With all the issues, he said, 'I don't see how the Republicans can lose.' Young obviously referred to recent disclosures of widespread corruption in high government circles. Washington—(U.P.)—The House Veterans committee will open hearings early in February on legislation to extend government educational benefits to Korean veterans. May Extend Benefits To Korean Vets Chairman John E. Rankin (D.-Miss.) said that if Congress approves the legislation, Korean veterans will "have virtually all the benefits which World War II veterans enjoy." Washington— (U.P.) —Former Sen. Millard E. Tydings today boosted his reward offer to $25,000 if Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy can prove his Communists-in-government charges to a federal grand jury. Tydings Offers McCarthy Reward Tydings previously had offered to give McCarthy $10,000 if the Wisconsin Republican would go before a grand jury and prove before Feb. 9 either of his charges that in 1950 there were 205 Communists or 57 card-carrying Communists in the State department. The "bold" program of domestic legislation was outlined by Emil Rieve, administrative chairman of the CIO committee on economic policy. Washington—(U.P.)—The CIO, in a series of recommendations ranging from rent control to social security, has urged President Tru man to increase the national minimum wage rate from 75 cents to $1.25 an hour. New York—(U.P.)-Hundreds of overseas passengers and Korean army veterans going home for Christmas were delayed today by a sudden weekend strike of Pan-American World Airways ground and service personnel. Request Minimum Wage Rate Increase About 5,800 mechanics, stewards and commissary employees struck at midnight Saturday—24 hours ahead of their announced strike deadline—catching the airline with a heavy Sunday schedule. Christmas Armistice Hopes Dwindle Allied-Communist subcommittees working on the armistice reported "no progress" at the end of brief sessions. Only 10 more days remain before the 30-day cease-fire line agreement reached by the negotiators Nov.27 expires. Negotiate For Airmen's Release He said the present minimum rate is inadequate, and pointed to the "increasing distress among lowest-income families, as reported by a number of government agencies." Strike Ruins Korean Vets Christmas Panmunjom, Korea —(U.P.)— Hope for a Korean armistice by Christmas faded today and the Communists were reported planning to seek a 30-day extension of the trial cease-fire line. London—(U.P).The U.S. Embassy in Budapest is pressing Communist Hungary to release by Christmas four American fliers forced down there by Soviet fighter planes four weeks ago, it was learned today. American officials in Frankfurt, Belgrade and Vienna—the embassies ringing the iron curtain—confirmed negotiations are in progress but declined to elaborate. MacArthur Wants Civilian Control Washington—(U.P.)—Gen. Douglas MacArthur has called for "extended and intensified" civilian control over the army to prevent the nation from becoming a military state. With universal military training now imminent, he said, it is essential that civilian control be broadened so that the youths are not formed into a "legion of subserviency to the so-called military mind." Kansas State Historical Society Toroka, Ks. Women In Engineering Not A Joke By JERRY RENNER Dina Gaskell, a black - haired, dark-eyed woman, set a precedent this fall when she became the first woman to enroll in the department of mining metallurgy in the School of Engineering and Architecture. "I'm really serious about it," Dina said, "but it began as a joke back in high school when I got a high engineering rating in an interest test." It was a standing joke around school that my girl friend, Phyllis Sims, who is on campus in the architecture department, and I were going to be engineers." The principal of the school heard about the girls' idea and encouraged it. After Dina graduated, she entered the School of Engineering. Metalurgy is divided into the processing field which deals with extracting, smelting, and refining ores and the physical field involving welding, forging, heat effects, and microsonic study. "I was in geological engineering at first; but I wanted more chemistry so I decided to switch to metallurgy." she said. Employment possibilities for women in engineering are unlimited, Dean T. DeWitt Carr of the School of Engineering told Dina. Dean Carr said. Dina will be in the class of '54. She plans to either work in industry or obtain her master's degree. Engineers are urgently needed; companies want women because they are draft exempt. They are paid on the same wage scale as men, "I don't think the engineers mind a girl in class except when the professor won't tell jokes because I am present." Dina said. Prof. Kenneth Rose, chairman of the mining and metallurgy department, said that Dina may do further work on several projects already begun or choose one of her own if she continues for a master's degree. Twenty hours of physics, calculus, geology and American people keep her busy this semester, "I don't mind because I like the course," she said. UNIVERSITY DAILY 9th Year No.65 Tuesday, Dec.18,1951 hansan Rules Announced For Final Exams Registrar James K. Hitt announced today several instructions to students and teachers concerning the final examination schedule. "We have set up a schedule that should be followed in order to avoid confusion." Mr. Hitt said. "In case of undue hardship students should write a request for change to the calendar committee." The requests should be given to Mr. Hitt, chairman of the calendar committee, 122 Strong hall, not later than Friday, Jan. 4. There were one or two asterisks placed after each class sequence listed in the copy of the examination schedule printed in the Kansan Monday. The one asterisk after the Monday, Wednesday, Friday sequences meant that three and four hour classes which hold classes on some or all of those days are to take their finals also at the time scheduled for the 3 hour courses. The following instructions are directed to instructors: Two asterisks after the Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday sequences meant that two and one hour classes meeting Tuesday, Thursday, or Saturday also are to take their finals at the time scheduled for the 3 hour courses. "Where a departure from the regular examination schedule is advisable, the request of the instructor must be submitted in writing to Mr. Hitt by Jan. 4. "Regular classes with laboratory The calendar committee may approve such a change only if it causes no conflicts for the students involved and provided that the revised time for the examination falls within the regular examination period. work only will be examined as other classes except that the hour may be any one of the several hours scheduled in the laboratory period. The choice is to be made by the instructor after consultation with the students and with other instructors concerned. "Irregular appointment classes and appointment laboratory classes will be examined at the time set by the instructor after consultation with the students and with any other instructors concerned. "In case of mixed courses in which the laboratory work does not come at the same hour as the class work, the examination may be scheduled in either of the following ways: "(1) A single examination covering both the class and the laboratory work at the time scheduled for the class hours. (2) Two examinations, one for the class work at the time scheduled for the class hours, and one for the laboratory work, at the time scheduled for the laboratory periods. "The School of Law is authorized by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, to make its own examination schedule provided that it takes care of all non-law students with causing conflicts with other examinations. "The School of Medicine, not including pre-medical courses, is also authorized to set its own schedule provided that it takes care of all non-medical students without causing conflicts with other examinations. Delta Chi Excels In Decorations As Houses Display Yuletide Spirit Indoor Christmas decorations predominate in organized houses this season. Outstanding among outdoor decorations is the roof outlined with multicolored lights at the Delta Chi fraternity house at 1245 West Campus, just west of Potter lake. On the campus the revolving Christmas tree in Strong hall rotunda is one of the main attractions around which carols are sung every year by the A Cappella choir. The carols will be sung this year on Wednesday. Santa Claus, his sleigh and reindeer are also depicted on the house. Two eight foot greeting cards on both sides of the doorway are part of the main indoor features. Christmas trees may be seen at both entrances to the Union and also in the cafeteria. Members of Student Union Activities decorated a tree in the lounge and the Hawk's Nest. Ropes of evergreen have been fastened along the baseboards. Blue lights illuminate the front of Danforth chapel showing more distinctly the north side and stained glass windows of the limestone sanctuary. Multi-colored lights on brightly decorated pine trees are the favorite stand-by for the season. Among the houses which display the Yuletide tradition are Kappa Alpha Theta, Alpha Phi Alpha, Miller hall, Chi Omega, Monchonsia hall and Kappa Alpha Psi. Santa and his pack, electrically wired to wink at pedestrians and motorists on Tennessee street, may be seen upon the roof the Pi Kappa Alpha house. Red and white is the theme for decorations at Alpha Omicron Pi at 1144 Louisiana street. A five feet snowman and snowwoman are indoor features. Greenery sprayed with white along the stairway and red and white mantle decorations complete the scene. Rudolph, the Red-nosed Reindeer, with Santa and his sleigh are featured on the Alpha Delta Pi house roof. A snowman which has little danger of melting may be seen in the yard of the Sigma Phi Epsilon house. The figure is made of papier mache Here's A Correction On Final Schedule The Daily Kansan wishes to make a correction in the final examination schedule published in Monday's paper. All sections of French 1, French 2, German 1, and German 2, Spanish 1, and Spanish 2, will be examined from 8:9:50 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 19, instead of 8:30-9:30 as stated Monday. An explanation of the asterisks used in Monday's copy of the schedule appears in the final examination story on this page. Grange Cancels Banquet Talk Laurence "Moon" Mullins, Kansas State college athletic director, will replace Harold "Red" Grange as the speaker at the annual gridiron banquet of the Lawrence Downtown Quarterback club at the Community building Wednesday night. College Faculty To Meet Officials of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, sponsoring agency of the Quarterback club, were notified over the weekend that Grange had been hospitalized and would be in bed for a week. The nature of his aliment was not made known. Recommendations of several new courses will be made today at the College faculty meeting, Dean Paul B. Lawson said. Banquet tickets, which sell for $2.50, may still be purchased at the Chamber of Commerce office, Eighth and Vermont streets. The general public is invited to the dinner and attendance is not restricted to Quarterback members. The meeting will be held at 4 p.m. in Strong auditorium. A major feature of the event will be the presentation of the Ormand Beach memorial trophy to the outstanding senior on the KU team, and the premiere showing of the film highlights of the 1951 Kansas football season. CATHERINE A. BURKE DINA GASKELL, engineering sophomore, uses a metallograph in studying the micro structure of a mineral. Miss Gaskell is the first woman student to enroll in department of mining and metallurgical engineering.-Kansan photo by Don Sarten. Nativity Play To Open In Green Wednesday A 16th century German Nativity play, "Die Heilige Nacht," will be the feature of a Christmas program to be presented jointly by the German and speech departments at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Little Theater in Green hall. The play, like the English plays of the Middle Ages, is characterized by a minimum of scenery, use of vernacular language, much hamming, and a naive charm. The play is a reproduction of the original Nativity play which was first produced by the German townspeople who acted out their occupations in real life as parts in the play. In addition to the Nativity play a m u s i c a l program will include: "Movement from Trio in G minor" (Brahms) played by Martha Heck, pianist; Donald Stewart, violinist, and Robert Stewart, cellist. "Virgin's Slumber Song" (Reger) will be song by Jeanne Aldridge. The Lawrence Junior High German club will sing two German Christmas carols. Members of the cast are: Julia Bolas, narrator; Mary McClelland. WEATHER Cloudy and windy tonight with occasional light snow mostly in north portion; blowing snow in northwest portion late night with strong northerly winds 30-35 mph. Warmer east and central tonight. Low 5 to 10 above zero northwest to 20-25 southeast. Wednesday partly cloudy with snow flurries except light snow in northeast changing to snow flurries before noon. Colder west and central Wednesday and turning colder over rest of the state in the afternoon. Strong shifting southeast winds tonight 30-40 miles an hour. Shifting to northwest Wednesday. High Wednesday 10 to 15 northwest, 34 southeast. Anita McCoy, and Nathalie Sherw- wood, three singing angels; Mary Gayle Loveless, the Angel Gabriel; Charlene Foerschler, Mary; Hans Winder, Joseph; William Spomer, the innkeeper; Maizie Harris, the innkeeper's wife; Dennis R. Dahl, the devil; Leonard Durocle, Neil Kloterman, Donald Horttor, and Frank Newby as shepherds. Laura Lee Calkins and Justine Anderson, angels; John Gagliari, Herod; Bruce Bailey and Donald Pearson, servants; Levi Barnes, Richard Wood and Victor Baptiste, wise men, and Judith Veatch, conscience. Members of the German departmentmen choir are: Kurt Asamer, Lois Beth, Lorena Barlow, John Coffman, Warren, Diefendorf, Ruth Elser, William Enoch, Ralph Flowers, Isa Gerecke, Orinne Gray, Frances Hanna, Mary Jane Harder, Maizie Harris, Gertrand Kaps, Rita Lang, Wallace LaBerge. Robert Learned Jr., Walter Lewin, Joan McCamish, Mary McClelland, Anita McCoy, Donald McCoy, Paula McVay, Ronald Meeker, Betty Parks, Dwight Patton, Myrl Dean Powell, Maxine Ratzlaf, Bernard Rickers, K. Dell Rising, Louise Steuber, Esther Storer, Nathalie Sherwood, Helga K. Vigliano, Sue Wilson, and Klaus Wrede. William Oldham, education junior, will direct the choir. Members of the Russian choir are: James Conkin, Nathalie Coutbrod, Eugene Hurwitz, Myrl Dean Powell, Kurt Klein, Marijane Lynch, Dune Nelson, Vladimir Sajkovic, John Timko, and Helga K. Vigliano. Big 7 Differ On Scholarship Listings The universities of Oklahoma and Colorado are the only members of the Big Seven which have not expressed an opinion on publishing lists of athletic scholarships granted by the schools. Kansas and Kansas State both have stated that they do not plan to reveal the information concerning the scholarships. Larry "Moon" Mullins, K-State director of athletics, has said, "as far as publicizing scholarship lists is concerned, we haven't done it in the past and I will follow that policy until my superior authorities want it changed. Actually it makes no particular difference to me one way or the other. To me it's not that important." A. C. "Dutch" Lonborg, KU's director of athletics, has gone on record against publishing the list as he sees no reason for it. He emphasizes. "We have nothing to hide at Kansas." Chancellor Gustavson said, "There The University of Missouri has made public the names of students receiving athletic scholarships, the total amount and the source of income. Iowa State officials said Monday that they have "no objections" to publication. At Lincoln, Chancellor R. G. Gustavson of the University of Nebraska has said that a list "will be made available." His statement reverses an earlier announcement by NJU's director of athletics, George "Potsy" Clark. is no reason whatsoever for not publishing the names of the individuals. If the circumstances will not stand the light of day, then there is something wrong." Missouri was the first conference school to make the move following the meeting of conference officials in Kansas City Dec. 7th and 8th. Figures revealed by Don Faurot, MU's athletic director and head football coach, show that the school's annual athletic scholarship budget is $85,000, of which $50,000 comes from inter-collegiate funds. The remaining $35,000 is from alumni sources, an educational foundation and profits from concessions at games. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Dec. 18, 1951 Daily Kansan Editorials The Present Significance Of H. H. Bliss H. H. Bliss was no doubt entirely unaware of the trend he was starting way back in September of 1889 when he helped an elderly woman off a New York trolley car. For, you see, as he reached for her hand, one of those new-fangled "gas-buggies" came along and killed Mr. Bliss. It must have created quite a stir in the New York newspapers of that day. It was indeed a historic event. For it heralded the first of what will soon be more than one million traffic deaths. Probably, though, the papers couldn't foresee this. No doubt many of them considered it a freak accident. And in treating it as such, it was soon forgotten. But as the gas-buggies increased in number, size, and power thoughtful people began to sit up and take notice. The H. H. Bliss's became increasingly frequent. By the roaring '20's the roaring automobiles had already claimed several thousands of lives. And that roar has steadily increased until today the figure stands at a known 998,000. The seven decimal mark is now within easy reach of all the drunk or amateur or careless or smart-alce or reckless drivers who will menace the highways leading home to Christmas vacation. The National Safety council predicts that the million mark will be topped within the next two weeks. Their figures are based on the traffic fatality trend so far in 1951. One million is a rather fascinating figure. It's so big that most of us are unable to grasp its true significance. We know that in money it can buy a lot of things. But can we estimate the sorrow it brings when mesaured in human lives? World War II, the most death-dealing episode in the history of the world, could not claim 126,.000 American lives. That is no where close to a million. But can you estimate the sorrow it caused? H. H. Bliss is a sort of symbol, though a rather ironic one. He stands at the head of a never-ending list of victims of a machine designed for the betterment of mankind. If that gas-buggy of 1889 ever backfired, it was truly the "shot heard 'round the world." We'll never hear the end of it. A.G.M. Short Ones More and more income tax collectors are resigning due to ill health. First noticeable symptom is a swelling of the bank account. A Kansas City fire prevention leader has proposed shaving off the traditional Santa Claus whiskers. Next thing you know, McCarthy will start a campaign to make the old boy change the color of his suit on the grounds that the youth of the nation might inherit Communist leanings from him. Letters To The Editor Greek Change Was Forced, Reader Says Dear Editor: In a recent editorial about racial discrimination among American college fraternal groups, one of the quoted statements read: "These four Greek letter societies insisted that the word 'fraternity' meant 'brotherhood,' and that brotherhood is the basis of democracy. They wanted to put the real meaning of 'brotherhood' into daily practice." The editorial goes on to say that these are not the first organized groups that are dissatisfied with rules that are outdated. It further adds that these groups defied their This quotation is speaking of four national fraternities at the University of Connecticut who severed their national affiliations because of disputes over racial discrimination. My Mistake Dear Editor: There were several factual errors in my review of the University chorus last week which I wish to correct. The microphones in front of the chorus were not used for public address, as I stated. Instead they were microphones for recording purposes and for radio station KFKU. Furthermore, I said that there were only seven tenors, which was false. Mr Krehbiel had a number of the girls singing tenor, which boosted the volume considerably, causing this writer to think that it was being helped by a "milke." The rest of the writeup, although lacking flattery, was honest. Don't be misled. The concert was very good. I see I'll have to learn not to take a student's word for things. Jim Powers Graduate Student Mail subscription: $ a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence) add $ 0.10 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans. every afternoon during the University days except Saturdays and Sunday examination periods entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. national headquarters in making the schism. These facts are not true. Not a one of the four groups voluntarily severed their national affiliations: they were forced to by a ruling of the University of Connecticut that required any fraternity with a racial restriction in its national constitution to abolish that clause or disband. All four groups fought this move and when they were unsuccessful, they reverted to a local status with no racial clause in their local constitution. At the present time they are working with the national associations with which they were formerly connected, on a project that will bring the ruling into court to try its legality. I'm afraid that the writer you quoted was going too far when he counted these groups on his side of the fence. You can consider the complaint lodged against the writer and not you as you had no way of checking on his article. My congratulations on your move to bring this subject into discussion at the University of Kansas. It is an important question of our time and worthy of consideration by the student body. Sam Moore Business Senior SEA FOODS AT DUCK'S HAVE THAT Tang of the Sea They are shipped quickly by air express to insure fresh sea quality and flavor. We offer you a wide variety of choice sea foods and other fine dishes to satisfy every taste. Enjoy a Dinner at Duck's Tonight French Fried Shrimp Deep Sea Scallops Soft Shell Crabs Duck's Tavern 824 Vermont News From Other Campuses Professor Records Wiggles An Oklahoma university professor has invented an electrical "wiggle meter" that records how much fidgeting goes on during class. Wifers are strung along on the backs of chairs, and every time a student yawns or wiggle, the impulse is recorded on the graph. Tachistoscope Is Installed A tachistoscope, a mechanical device which flashes a series of digits or a phrase upon a screen in one-thousandth of a second has been installed in the English department at Oregon State college. Purpose of the machine is to increase reading speed and comprehension. A poll of University of Arkansas students concerning the lottery system in getting football tickets showed that most students are in favor of continuing the method. Most of the students felt that they stood a better chance of getting seats under the system. Hold Lottery For Seats Helping Hand To Santa Claus Students at the University of California at Los Angeles are donating toys to be repaired and given to underprivileged children. Campus or organizations form workshops and repair the toys before they are distributed. Blood Challenge Given The University of Idaho has offered Oregon State college a challenge for their coming blood drive. Idaho collected 1,014 pints of blood in their recent campaign. Students Elect Santa Claus Watch Repair PRECISE WATCH REPAIRS University of California students are sponsoring a "pick Santa Claus" contest to raise funds for a Christmas turkey dinner for 90 underprivileged children. The candidate elected Santa Claus will distribute presents to the children. Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed Wolfson's 743 Mass. Call 675 Don't Skid Yourself Winter's Here PARKING SERVICE You can get stuck—TWO WAYS if you buy the wrong chains. Let our experienced technicians help you select the kind of tire protection you need, based on your car --- your tires --- your driving needs. Come in today! WINTER CHEVROLET Phone 77 738 N.H. After the game REFRESH YOURSELF 4 at the COFFEE - ROLLS - SANDWICHES HAWK'S NEST FRENCH FRIES - FOUNTAIN ORDERS CANDY - CIGARETTES Tuesday, Dec. 18, 1951 University Daily Kansan Page 3 KU Wins 1st Place In Purdue Debate University debaters won first place in the Purdue university debate tournament at West Lafayette, Ind. Dec. 15. Two teams composed of Win Koerper, Stephen Rench and Heywood Davis, College seniors and Orval Swander, business senior, won six out of eight rounds of debate and were declared the winners on the basis of their high over all speaking rating. The team of Koerper and Swander retained their undefeated status. Kim Griffin, assistant professor of speech, accompanied the group. Fifteen schools participated in the contest. Big Beef Over Meat Shortage Salem, Mass. — (U.P.)— A Marblehead man asked for a divorce in probate court here on the ground that his wife hit him with a five-pound roast of beef during the 1942 meat shortage. SIR HENRY A. FISHER, OF SAN FRANCISCO, CA., IS BURIED IN MARYLAND AT THE U.S. CEMETERY. HE WAS KNOWN FOR EVERYTHING HE DID, FROM BUILDING THE FASHION HOUSE TO ASSIGNING THE RIGHTS TO THE MILITIA. AND HE DIED AFTER ASSIGNING THE RIGHTS TO THE MILITIA. CPLS. HENRY AND RICHARD NEEDHAM salute the casket of their brother, Sgt. John Needham, before starting their trip from Oakland, Calif., to Lansing, Mich., as escort for their brother who was killed in action in Korea last January. Both If the great "cultural lag of modern civilization" is to be corrected, the contributions of the fields of sociology and human relations must be cultivated, according to Carroll D. Clark, chairman of the department of sociology and anthropology, who spoke Sunday on KLWN's Sociology on the Air broadcast. Sociology Can Help Correct Modern Cultural Lag, Says Radio Speaker While the natural sciences have yielded great areas of knowledge that have been utilized, this knowledge at times has threatened to get beyond control because the fund of sociological knowledge is relatively smaller or rudimentary, he declared. "Comparable knowledge of human interaction is needed," Dr Clark said. "Unfortunately building a true science of sociology has been slower than such founders as Comte and Saint Simon envisioned. Today, however, the work in sociology is winning increasing support." The speaker was the ninth in the radio series, sponsored by the department of sociology and anthropology. The Long And Short Of It Worcester, Mass. — (U.P.)— Only a quarter-inch separated two identical twins when they went to enlist in the naval reserve. Francis Duggan was accepted but his twin Walter was a quarter-inch too short. Henry and Richard also fought in Korea, receiving seven purple hearts between them. Henry is an amputee. They met in San Francisco where they were assigned to take John's body home. Christmas FOR Christmas HE (SHE) SHOULD LIKE ONE OF THESE -by Robert H. Loeb, Jr, is a picture cook and drink book written for men. The book contains recipes in picture form for breakfast, lunch, dinner, picnics, and snacks. White duck apron has blue design, and lettering. - Pens -- (He knows how to write, doesn't he?) - *Books -- (He can read, can't he?) - Typewriters -- (He has themes to type, doesn't he?) FOR THE CHEF-TO-BE A COOK BOOK AND APRON A WOLF IN CHEFS CLOTHING Book and apron both for ___ 5.95 A ROYAL PORTABLE ROYAL A SHEAFFER DESK PEN With Magic-Margin on both sides and triple, double, or single spacing. Finger flow keys for faster, easier typing. A SHEAFFER DESK PE Sheaffer's "Triumph" Desk Set Jet Crystal, $17.50 Others from $8.75 New Parker "51" Smoothest in performance . . . smartest in appearance. Exclusive Aerometric ink system. 8 colors. $13.50 And Remember---- You get a rebate on all purchases at the PEN AND PENCIL SET ONLY $19.75 TUFIDE PORTFOLIO 3-way zipper envelope. Lined in Stebco Strong- ide. 2 vertical pockets. 14 x 11". Also 16 x 12" STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Dec. 18, 1951 Rice To Resume Battle With Kansas Tonight The Rice Institute Owls and the Kansas Jayhawkers resume hostilities after a lapse of nine years at 7:30 o'clock tonight in Hoch auditorium. The game is on set No. 2 of the student ticket series. Rice has won two of its five games this season, having downed Sam Houston State 59-57 and 67-53. The Owls have had difficulty holding the lead in the last minutes of their games. After leading Stephen F. Austin college most of the way, they dropped the tilt 51-50. They also battled a superior Louisiana State team down to the wire only to lose 64-67. Coach Don Suman's team is tall but inexperienced. Louis Fulton tops the team with a 6-feet 7-inch frame, followed closely by Maurice Teague and Bill Bailey at 6 feet 6 inches. Jim Beavers, Dean Small, and Bert Dickens are 6 feet 4 inches tall. Last season the Owls won eight games and dropped 15 while becoming the cellar-dwellers of the Southwest conference. The invaders will be playing a team of Jayhawkers who are intent upon keeping their slate clean. After a victorious weekend against Southern Methodist, the Kansas team now has posted five wins this season. The Mustangs gave the Jayhawkers a rough time. Without the record-breaking performance of Clyde Lovellette the Friday night game would have been close. K-State Tickets Here About Jan. 1 Tickets to the KU-K-State basketball game in Manhattan Jan. 26 will be available to a few lucky KU students sometime after Jan. 1. E. L. Falkenstien, athletic business manager said today. Mr. Falkenstien said he does not know how many tickets will be sent for sale to KU fans but believes that the University will get its "usual block." No tickets can be reserved in advance of their arrival here. Larry "Moon" Mullins, K-State athletic director, stated in a letter to K-State fans recently that the 12,500 seats in the college's new fieldhouse have been sold since Nov. 20. "Santa Claus would make another 10,000 fans happy if he could bring us a larger fieldhouse for this one game," Mullins said in his letter. Only 1,000 reserved and 1,600 general admission tickets are ever available for any one game this year at K-State. Students and faculty occupy 5,500 seats and the remainder have been purchased by season ticket holders. The ranks of the KU squad have been lessened as Wally Beck, Bob Godwin and Dean Wells have dropped from the squad. Wells made a brief appearance against Denver. He came out late after football season. Godwin and Beck apparently were dissatisfied over not seeing varsity action. Probable Starters Kansas D. Kelley Hougland Lovellette Kenney Lienhard Rice L. Childs M. Teague G. Schwinger B. Dickens D. Lance GGCFF Henrich Takes Television Job New York — (U.P.)—Tommy Henrich, the Old Reliable, turned his back on baseball today with "a million memories and not one regret." There wasn't any fanfare, no cameras, no big batteries of reporters, newsreel men, or television crews around yesterday when the great and personable veteran of the Yankees called it quits. The contrast to the big show of a week ago was terrific. At that time Joe DiMaggio announced his retirement and the hoop-la would have done credit to a presidential inauguration. And he isn't losing any time about it either. He starts it tonight with Russ Hodges, the New York Giants broadcaster over station WJZ-TV. Before long, he will put on the show by himself, bringing in guest sports personalities and discussing sports in general. Send them all to Lawrence Laundry I TIE LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS CALL 383 Browns Fly To Los Angeles For2nd Defense Of NFL Title Cleveland—(U.P.)-The Cleveland Browns left here today by air for the defense of their National Football league championship against the Los Angeles Rams, and their "long" faces bespoke no good for their opponents in Sunday's title game. The Brownws were unhappy about having to play in Los Angeles because of the fact they would miss Christmas with their families. They had hoped the Detroit Lions would win the past Sunday and they would have been able to do their "Christmas chopping" in the nearby motor city. This will be the second championship game for the two teams in as many years. Last year in a Christmas eve blizzard, the Browns edged the Rams in the last 28 seconds of play, 30-28, on the basis of Lou (the toe) Groza's 16-yard field goal. Earlier this year the Browns beat the Rams again, 28-23, and Cleveland attributes that victory to San Francisco. "If we had lucked our way through that one we may have taken things in our stride and blown a couple important games later on." In the season's opener on the coast, San Francisco beat Cleveland, and jolted the perennial pro champions out of their complacency. "Losing to the 49ers made a different ball club out of us" Captain Tony Adamle said. Hansen Gloves "Occasion - Designed" FOR HIS MERRY CHRISTMAS From $5 TENNIS GLOVE Correct dressing makes valuable first impressions in business and at social gatherings . . . so choose the glove for him that is 'occasion-designed' from Deerskin, Pigskin, Capeskin or Suede! Shop at CARL'S...you'll be glad you did! Mass. St. 905 CARLS GOOD CLOTHES Phone 905 TRIPODS EXPOSURE METERS Gifts EDITING OUTFITS AND MANY MORE COME IN TODAY! SCREENS UTILITY BAGS EXPOSURE METERS TRIPODS 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% Gifts TRIPODS EDITING OUTFITS MOSSER WOLF MOSSER-WOLF SCREENS SCREENS UTILITY BAGS HOLLYWOOD th gs le Kansas Moves Forward To 4th Among Top Ten --- New York—(U.P.) The battle for first place in the United Press basketball ratings became a wide open affair today with Illinois winning the spot by a margin of 13 points over St. John's of Brooklyn. The 35 outstanding coaches, who are Kentucky, the pre-season favorite and leader last week, dropped to third place with seven first place votes and a total of 215 points. The 35 outstanding coaches, whose selections form the basis for the ratings, demonstrated the nature of the race as the result of Kentucky's upset defeat at the hands of Minnesota by giving first place votes to seven different teams. Illinois, winner of its only two games this season, received 11 of the first place votes and a total of 266 points while St. John's received eight and a point total of 253. Points are awarded on the basis of ten for a first place vote, nine for a second and so on down to one for a tenth. The coaches based their selections on games played through Saturday night so the outcome of last night's game between St. John's and Kentucky will not figure in the ratings until next week. Other teams to receive first place votes were St. Louis, five; Kansas, two; and Washington and Indiana, one each. Team Points 1—Illinois (11) 266 2—St. John's (8) 253 3—Kentucky (7) 215 4—Kansas (2) 187 5—Washington (1) 167 6—St. Louis (5) 151 7—Kansas State 116 8—Indiana (1) 91 9—Oklahoma A&M 83 University Daily Kansan YOUR EYES Eye should be examined today, Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. Lawrence Optical Co. Phone 425 1025 Mass. 10—North Carolina St. 44 Second 10—Utah, 43; Notre Dame, 39; Wyoming, 34; NYU, 29; Seton Hall, 26; Western Kentucky, 21; Minnesota and La Salle, 20 each; Villanova, 14; Iowa, 10. Page 5 10—North Carolina St. Cage Scores Butler 63, Michigan 53 DePaul 87, III. Wesleyan 47 Iowa 60, Washington, Mo. 53 Kansas State 92, Harlan 73 Milliken 80, Elmhurst 43 Notre Dame 77, Loyola 11, Ill. 57 Lake Forest 62, Ohio U. 57 Wisconsin 55, St. Louis U. 54 Morningside (iowa) 64, Fresno State 74 State 63 Yankton 73, Sioux Falls 45 Concordia (Minn.) 74, Moorhead St. Teachers Col. 46 Florida 69, Miami, Fla. 65 Kentucky 81, St. John's (NY) 40 Tennessee 61, Clemson 52 Vanderbilt 55, Texas Tech. 49 Wichita 84, New Mexico 58 Wyoming 51, Baylor 45 Stanford 91, Young Men's Inst. of 34, Young Men's Inst. of San Francisco 77. Man Your ... has a used car priced for you. Plymouth Buddy GALLAGHER 634 Mass. Ph.1000 The Perfect Gift for the Entire Family Beautiful knit-in Argyle $395 Pattern The Perfect Gift for the Entire Family Beautiful knit-in Argyle pattern $395 Genuine Ripons® Be sure to put genuine Ripons at the top of your gift list for your family, relatives and friends. You'll be giving luxurious year 'round foot comfort for loafing and lounging at home, after a day outdoors, traveling, at college, etc. Washable soft pure wool and and glove-leather soles snuggle the feet and cushion the step. In beautiful colors and styles for men, women, children. for Ladies and Girls Deluxe Style $350 MICKEY MOUSE Jacquard knit pattern in gay colors for children. $295 They stay on the feet. © W.D.P. Ripons Ripons for for Ladies and Girls Deluxe Style $350. LILIES BLOOMS Royal College Shop 837-839 Massachusetts Intramural Round-Up Tuesday, Dec. 18, 1951 Monday's Results Fraternity "A" Sigma Phi Epsilon 33, Alpha Kappa Lambda 31; Delta Upsilon 67, Triangle 16; Sigma Nu 28, Tau Kappa Epsilon 20; Phi Gamma Delta 28, Omega 45, Phi Kappa Tau 33, and Phi Delta Theta 35, Delta Tau Delta 31. Phi Psi 41, Lambda Chi 12; Phi Gamma Delta 54, Tau Kappa Epsilon 19; Sigma Alpha Epsilon 31. Sigma Chi 21, and Alpha Phi Alpha 45, Delta Chi 25. Fraternity "B" Phi Delta Theta 42, Sigma Phi Epsilon 14; Sigma Chi 36, Phi Kappa Sigma 35; Delta Tau Delta 43, Sigma Nu 17, and Kappa Sigma 43, Tau Kappa Epsilon 18. Fraternity "C" Travel Service THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Tel. 30 8th & Mass. Polish Your GERMAN! Brush up on your FRENCH! Ask for TUTORING! ZOLTAN DIOS Phone KU 327 English speaking European Graduate Student will assist you with these languages. Patronize Kansan Advertisers Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests No.29...THE HYENA I nearly died laughing! Hysteria reigned from the moment he heard the details of those quick-trick cigarette mildness tests. First he giggled . . . then he guffawed . . wound-up rolling in the aisle! He knew that the "single sniff" test or the "one puff" test didn't prove anything! Millions of smokers have reached the same conclusion - there's just one test that really proves cigarette flavor and mildness! It's the sensible test . . . the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test, which simply asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke - on a pack-after-pack day-after-day basis. No snap judgments! Once you've enjoyed Camels for 30 days in your "T-Zone" (T for Throat, T for Taste), you'll see why... CAMEL CHOICE QUALITY TURKISH & DOMESTIC BLEND CIGARETTES After all the Mildness Tests . . . Camel leads all other brands by billions Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Dec. 18, 1951 Dorothy Dix's Own Eulogy To Be Read At Her Funeral New Orleans, La.—(U.P.)—Dorothy Dix, the spry little woman in whom a nation confided its most intimate heartaches and problems for 55 years, will be buried here today with her own words used as her eulogy. The pioneer newspaperwoman and original "sob sister" of the journalistic world—whose real name, Mrs. Elizabeth Meriwether Gilmer, was as obscure as the sorrows, troubles and sacrifices which dogged her 90 years of life—died at Touro infirmary here Sunday. For the past 20 months she had been a semi-conscious invalid as the result of a stroke of paralysis. "I had a passion for newspaper work and I set about learning my trade with the zeal of a fanatic," she wrote in a short autobiography. "I studied the backs off books of synonyms and word books and dictionary. "I lived newspapers, I ate newspapers, dreamed newspapers and I dare say I shall go on doing this until I die. For when you are born with a thirst for printer's ink, there is no cure for it until death writes 30 at the bottom of your life copy." Miss Dix wrote seven books in her lifetime, but she was best known and loved by her millions of admirers for her column, "Dorothy Dix Speaks," a frank and often harshly critical analysis of problems submitted to her by mail. Her files contain letters numbered in the millions, each one of which received an answer in print or by personal letter. Her writings never gave hint of the tragedy of her own life. Born on a plantation in Montgomery county, Tenn., Nov. 18, 1861, she married George O. Gilmer in 1888. He was stricken with an illness two years later and Miss Dix devoted the next 35 years of her life to nursing him. The pseudonym "Dorothy Dix" was the hybrid invention of her love for the name "Dorothy" and the respect for a servant "Dick's." She liked privacy and took great care not to associate the private life of Mrs. Glimer with the professional life of Miss Dix. Buy Last Minute Gifts At Jewelry Roberts Gifts 833 Mass. Come in - see our many gifts priced to fit your purpose. Compacts Necklaces Bracelets Pins Music Boxes Cuff Links Gold Knives Tie Clasps Give THE GIFT EVERYONE ENJOYS! fresh, delicious Russell Stover CANDIES Rumrall Storm CANDIES Made with the finest materials Made with the finest ingredients Miss Chadron ASSORTED CHOCOLATES Colorful Potissetta Gift Box holds creams, fruits, nuts and caramels—dipped in rich milk and dark vanilla chocolate. $125 POUND BOX CHOCOLATES and BUTTER-BONS Gift-Boxed assortment of creams, nougats, caramels, nuts and nut-clusters and a cellophane index names each piece Russell Starr CANDIER $165 POUND BOX Stowits Rexall Store 9th and Mass. Phone 516 Margery Waddell Weds Lynwood Smith Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Needham Waddell, Salina, announce the marriage of their daughter, Margery Davis, to Lynwood Herbert Smith jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Lynwood Herbert Smith, Woodlyn farms, Bucyrus, Kans. Dec. 14 at Christ Episcalc cathedral, Salina. Mrs. Thomas Tucker Hawkins, Thomasville, Ga., attended her sister as matron of honor. Miss Sarah Waddell, another sister, was maid of honor. The bridesmaids were Misses Rosemary Kennedy, Nancy F. Anderson, Jane Floyd and Matilda Mack, Lynwood Chandler Smith was best man for his brother. The ushers were Edward Geiger Jr., Richard B. Altman, James E. Floyd, Thomas T. Hawkins, John W. Taylor and Jerry Waugh. Mr. and Mrs. Smith both attended the University. Mr. Smith was graduated in June, 1951 and is a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity. Mrs. Smith's sorority is Kappa Kappa Gamma. Campus Pinnings Sue Baldwin, Delta Gamma, Kansas City, Kam-Janes Sherman, Kappa Sigma, Hutchinson, stationed at Vance Air Force base, Okla. Virginia Cox, Delta Gamma, Kingman-Charles Brown, Delta Sigma Phi at Kansas State college, Pretty Prairie. Nancy Hampton, Kappa Alpha Theta, Mission-Joe Wolfe, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Kansas City, Mo. Claire Coulter, College freshman, Kansas City, Mo-Joe Russell, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Kansas City, Mo. Anita Inman, American Academy of Art in Chicago, Kansas City, Mo.-Marc Williams, Triangle, Highland Park, Ill. The Pentagon in Washington is three times the size of the Empire State building and 50 per cent larger than Chicago's Merchandise Mart. The Continental Divide runs through the middle of Montana. Hoover dam, near Las Vegas, Nev., is the highest in the world. Gifts For All* Christmas Wrappings* Fountain Pens * Pencils * Desk Sets * Zipper Note- books, Brief Cases * Sets of glasses, Ash Trays * Trivets, Bed Lamps, Pottery, Books, Magazine Subscriptions * Personalized Stationery, Matches, Playing Cards Leather Billfolds * Books, Floral Trays, Book Ends, Slinkeys * Boxed gift soaps * K.U. Jewelry * Sweat shirts, T Shirts * Calendars Imported place mats * Scarfs, Table Cloths Hangover hats * * * Many other Christmas Gifts Free Gift Wrapping * A Free Parking Lot East Of Store * 1401 Ohio Rowlands 1237 Oread Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertiserz. Campus WEST Premier Cashmere Treasures Campus WEST Campus WEST Premier Cashmere Treasures 1248 cloud soft sweaters by Premier...knit on super-fine needles, of the finest hand picked imported cashmere yarns individually full-fashioned to your size by the most costly workmanship, and they fairly glow with color Short sleeve pullover,... $15.95 Cardigan,... 19.95 Open Tuesday Evening Until Eight I is so h deeRneU I is o h d c c R n c U Upstream Panel Urges West To Support Upsurge In Asia That the Western world should sympathize with the upsurge in Asia was the general conclusion reached by members of a panel discussion on Asian problems recently. Walter Kollmorgen, professor of geography, Amiya Chakravarty, visiting professor of humanities, and George Beckmann, instructor in history, were on the panel sponsored by the Upstream society. The three men agreed that the United States should sympathize with the nationalist movement all over Asia and help as much as possible by co-operating with this movement for independence. Professor Kollmorgen discussed population problems, especially those of India. He discussed the various present-day theories for controlling the growth of population. However, he didn't feel that any of the plans set forth so far would be successful in India. He also felt that any attempt on the part of the United States to alleviate poor living conditions in India would not be successful. Various aspects of Indian-American relations were also discussed by the panel. It was generally agreed that both India and the United States should try to get away from purely nationalistic thinking and strive for Washington—(U.P.)—M o s c o w is having a propaganda picnic over the tax, graft and corruption investigations in this country. The Kremlin recently broadcast a mock conversation between defense mobilizer Charles E. Wilson and P. Housman, a U.S. industrialist. Kremlin Holds Scandal Drama "How are things Charlie?" Housman asked. "Have a citar." "Thanks," Wilson replied, "What's up?" "Ive come on business, Charlie. The Pentagon drafted a bill for increased air wings." "Ah, your firm wants a few orders for planes." "Sure thing, Charlie." "Well, what's stopping you?" "How much. Charlie." "五 per cent as usual. You've done that before." "Have a heart . . . that's highway robbery." "五. per cent. Take it or leave it." "Hell of a lot I care. It's a holdup, I tell you." "Why, cash of course" (cracking of paper bills). "It's highway robbery just the same. Well, how'll you have it?" "Five, 10, 15, 20. Thanks, Jim have a drink?" The commentator said anyone who doubted the significance of the chat could read the reports "on graft and corruption" in Wilson's office, the Reconstruction Finance Corp., Bureau of Internal Revenue, "and in other government bodies in the United States." N-O-W! BIG DAZZLING MUSICAL SHOW! TECHNICOLOR TWO TICKETS TO BROADWAY Tony MARTIN • Janet LEIGH • Gloria DeHAVEN Ann MILLER • Eddie BRACKEN TWO TICKETS TO BROADWAY Tevy MARTIN · Juelt LEIGH · Gloria DeHAVEN Ann MILLER · Edie BRACKEN University Daily Kansan Shows 2:30 - 7:00 & 9:00 Latest Magazine News Latest Movietone News Granada more international interests. Along the lines of ideology, Professor Chakravarty said that material progress doesn't always mean progress in civilization. He maintained that Asian culture is changing, but not westernizing. Mr. Beckmann said that the Western world should not try to impose its ideology upon the countries of Asia. He stated that we can't send democracy to Asian countries "in a tin can." He added that the change now occurring in Asian culture cannot be defined by any of the present day "isms." He asserted that the Western world should present the better aspects of democracy to the people of Asia and leave the choice of adoption up to them. He also urged a more sympathetic consideration for the upsurge in Asia on the part of the Western world. Providence, R. I.-(U.P.)-Persons on relief in Rhode Island may keep their television sets if they bring "solidarity" to the family. You Don't Have To Hock Your TV Set To Get Relief Miss Elizabeth M. Smith, acting public assistance administrator, said a television set "can sometimes be considered essential for the health and welfare . ." "We don't consider it so essential that we would provide money to buy it, but if a family has a TV set and it is found that it is serving the interests of the family's welfare, then we don't think they should be required to sell it," she said. Classified Ads Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid on time during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University by Bkgs Business office, Journalism bridge, 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. Phone K.U.376 Classified Advertising Rates 25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00 Additional words ... 1c 2c $3.00 A. S.F.C.—Wouldn't you to receive a Sheafer for Christmas? Why not give gift you would like to receive? I receive land Books Stores, 1401 Ohio and 1237 Oread. Book RONSON LIGHTERS—The perfect gift for all smokers. We still have a large stock to choose from. Rowlands Book Stores, 1410 Ohio and 1237 Oread. 20 FOR SALE A great opera spectacle at Movie Pictures! Tito GOBBI VERDI'S RIGOLETTO JOSE PAGAIUGHI MARIO AMNA MASA FILIPPESCHI • CANALI Directed by Jorge Abreu AND THE RITUAL OPERA HOUSE OF KING CINEMAS conducted by TULLIO SERAFIN MCCLAMER AS COSTUME UNIFORMAL STARTS TODAY No Increase in Admission DOORS OPEN 6:45 P.M. WE STILL HAVE attractive gifts for all Evening Performances 7:15 p.m. and 9:15 p.m. We Urge You To Attend Early - - - No Reserved Seats!! members of the family. Rowlands Boot Stores, 1401 Ohio and 1237 Oread. 28 YELLOW SCRATCH pads. We still have plenty at 20c a pad. Rowlands Book Stores, 1401 Ohio, and 1237 Oread. 20 New PATEE PHONE 321 CHRISTMAS CARDS—It’s not too late to have your cards personalized. One day service. Rowlands Book Stores, 1401 Ohio street and 1237 Doreen. 20 MONOGRAMMED napkins and matches make the gift more personal. We will live 24 hour service. Rowlands Book Stores, 1401 Ohio street and 1237 Erect. Northeast, 1867 Oak St. KANSAS Sweet Shire, sizes from 4 to 44. Tee shirts from 1 to 44, also co-organ jackets. Rowlands Books Stores, 1401 Ohio and 1237 Oread. RECORD PLAYER—3-speed, Chicago Webster with amplifier and speaker, all in one portable case. Call Bill Bonwell at 3197 at 6:30 p.m. 20 BOOK- EASE ISE the collapsible book holder. Use it on a desk, in bed, anyway. The pages firm in place. Now, only 98c at the Student Union Book Store. CHEMISTRY MAJORS! We now have in stock three work study aids to help you toward better grades. "How to Solve Problems in General Chemistry" by Babor. "How to Solve Problems in Qualification." by Solving Problems in Quantitative Analysis" by Arenson. See them at your Student Union Book Store. 21 FINE ART REPRODUCTIONS! We now have a wide selection of reproductions of famous paintings in full color. Student Union Book Store. 21 RIDER WANTED going east to Mas- suetts; if interested phone Ken Cen- 18 54 GIFT IDEAS FOR CHRISTMAS! Give a magazine idea for the ideal Christmas gift. We take subscription to all magazines. Student Union Book Store. TRANSPORTATION ARLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether for conferences or international trips Mrs. Loa Oadfer, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass. DRIVING TO Fort Wayne, Indiana. Dec 21 or 22. Can take three, save expenses. SEASON'S Greetings FREE MOVIES SANTA From Your Hometown Merchants Get your tickets from These Firms Adelane's Lawrence National Bank Pickens City Service Logan Moore Lumber Norman Edmonds Grocery Beamans Radio-TV Knapps Log Cabin Market Rankin Drug Store Gravitts Goodyear Rhodes Heating & Roofing Andrews Skelly Service Tuesday, Dec. 18; 1951 Union Cab 2-800 Guntert Plumbing-Wiring Union C-2 800 Lawrence Sanitary Dairy Rapid Transit FREE SHOW For Shoppers Wiley's Market Norris Bros. Turner Produce Thurs.-Fri. Dec. 20-21 At Your Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW YORK CUSTOMER CHAIRS Call Jim Holdeman at 2518M after 6 p.m. 15 Ask us about family rates, sky coach and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book passage, not for European travel next summer. For reservations at National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30-847-8216. FOR RENT RENTAL TYPEWRITERS. Both new and portable for $1.00 per week or $3.50 per month. The easy way to better, neat student library one at the Student Union Book Store. ROOMS FOR 3 men. No other rooms. Come or phone 3389, Gilkerson's Cafe 7 a.m. to 21.5 p.m. or 1788J at 942 MISS. 2:30 p.m. to 12 midnight. ONE ROOM for 2 students; clean and nice single bedroom. Board, if desired. Phone 3348W, 534 Ohio. 18 IF YOU LIKE to live very close to the campus, double room for two girl student in in very nice house for second semester. Inquire at 1215 Oread or call 3683J. BUSINESS SERVICE TYPING: Themes, term papers, these—prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs. Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. ff EXPERIENCED TYPIST; term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological manuscripts and miscellaneous. Mrs. E. Rossette ROSSETTE, Apt. 4, upstairs. 2F75J after 4 p.m. TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these typing Mrs. Shields, 1290 Ohio. Pt. 161 RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment in this area thus assuring fast, reliable service. Radio and Television. Phone 138. 820 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. **tf** STUDYING with late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. **tf** Comfort Conventional JAXHAWNER NEW Pork Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS NOW thru WED. Ray Milland Gene Tiernev Close To My Heart" Late News - Cartoon VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD Last Times Tonite Open 6:45 p.m. "SHEPHERD OF THE OZARKS" "BARNYARD FOLLIES" WED. - THURS. WED. - THURS. Box Office Open 6:45 1st Show 7:00 -Double Feature- One Precious Moment ... Turned Love into Sin Nancy Coleman Philip Reed "HER SISTER'S Margaret Lindsey Felix Bressar SECRET" Co-Feature The Shock Story Of Divorce . . . And The Innocent Victims . . . Children! With Brenda Donald Joyce Woods Adm.14c-45c TYPING: Experience in theses, term papers, miscellaneous typing, and steel cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phon 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steak sandwiches, mafes, home-made plaes or customer air-conditioned. Open from $ 4 a.m. midnight. Crystal Cafe. 609 Ft. JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk pet shop. We have everything in the pet store. Their needs are our business. One of the best pet stores in Fur, fur, and feathers. Grants Pet an Gift Shop, 1218 Comm. Phone 418. LOST WILL WHOEVER found my billfold please return it? The money is deeper at earl balloon than at eartail back billfold and paper-H. Lorena Barlow, 1654 University Drive LOST! Grey top coat at Dine-A-Mit Saturday night. I have wrong coat and want to trade for mine! Earl Merriman Phone 84. '2' GREEN WALLET Monday morning, Annelx E. If you need money more than I do, could you at least return my paper to the Business office? VILL THE PERSON who took by mistake, my overcoat and scarf from the day (14th) to the Student's day (14th) at noon, please call Michael Jimelonio-1879. 1-3-5 HELP WANTED MISCELLANEOUS WANTED: Part time receptionist. Hour available for typing, using box 2 Daily Kauanan office. FRED' Your sister isn't that old. Sally FREE GIFT WRAPPING on all gift purchased from us. We will also be glad to wrap for mailing. Rowlands Book Stores. 20 EUROPE 1952 Low-cost transportation and tours to Europe for 1952 are rapidly being booked to capacity. It is imperative to make your reservations now for choice accommodations. Downs offers a complete selection of SITA tours (Student International Travel Association) ranging from $500. These trips vary from the Spartan bicycle tours to the Grand Tours at $1800. Special individual program offered this year for those who wish to live with selected families in France, England, Germany or Switzerland. Rates from $550. A few study tours carrying university credit are offered from $550 to $850. See the Olympic Games at Helsinki, Finland. Special extension, $150. FREE DESCRIPTIVE FOLDER ON EUROPE Travel available upon request. No Obligation. Phone 3661 for all your travel needs open evenings 6:30 p.m.-9:00 p.m. No Booking Fees. downs downs travel service 10154 massachusetts st. lowrence, kansas Tuesday, Dec. 18, 1951 Cornell Dean Is '22 Grad Paul O'Leary, "22, has been named dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Cornell university, Ithaca. N.Y., effective Feb. 1. He is the son of the late Prof. R. D. O'Leary, who taught English here for 41 years. While in school O'Leary was the 440-yard dash champion of the old Missouri Valley conference in 1921. After going to Cornell he served as track coach from 1925 to 1931. Dean O'Leary has been at Cornell since 1924, an instructor in economics. In 1946 when the school of business and public administration was organized, he became its first dean. He is the author of several text- books on money and finance. Interviews Representatives from two companies will interview February and June graduating engineers this week in Marvin hall. Wednesday Standard Vacuum Oil company of New York Thursday Black, Sivalls and Bryson, Kansas City Interested persons should sign schedule in the office of the School of Engineering and Architecture. Jay Janes, 5 p.m. Wednesday, Pine room, Union. Official Bulletin Geology club and AIME joint meeting, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, 426 Lindley, Prof. E. A. St赫enson and Prof. R. M. Drever on program. Hui-O-Hawaiiana, 7:30 tonight, 112 Strong hall. All invited. Sigma Tau Gamma. 7:30 tonight. 1020 Tennessee. Important organizational meeting, all members urged to attend. All student council, 7.30 p.m. Wednesday, English room, Union. Wesley foundation's annual caroling party, meet 7.30 p.m. Wednesday, Union. Come and bring a friend, refreshments served. Holy Communion for Ember Day for Episcopal students, 7 a.m. Wednesday, Danforth chapel. After service students will breakfast together at Union. Faculty forum, Wednesday noon. Faculty club. Christmas Holiday Riders bureau. Register for ride or for passengers SUA office or hostess desk. Union. Chess club, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday, 111 Strong, last round tournament. Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity, postponed until after vacation. 1. Strong jaunts covered dish meeting 2. Knives covered dish meeting 3. Well today, Mervs hall Deadline for the ISA Scholarship is Wednesday. Obtain blanks from the university, and the must be turned in to dean of women's office by 5 tomorrow. Love staff meeting, 5 p.m. Wednesday, Hawk's Nest. Owl Is Chicken Thief Kendallville, Ind.—(U.P.) —George Hemrick finally caught up with the marauder that has been after his chickens. The prowler, shot down by Hemrick, was a horned owl with a 48-inch wing spread. CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY University Daily Kansan (Nationally Accredited) An outstanding college serving a sulendid profession. Doctor of Optometry degree in three years for students entering with sixty or more semester credits in specified Liberal Arts courses. REGISTRATION February 25. Students are granted professional recognition by the U.S. Department of Defense and Selective Service. Excellent clinical facilities. Athletic and recreational activities. Dormitories on the campus. CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY 1845-H LARRAGE Street Chicago 14, Illinois Page 8 News Roundup Red Prisoner Of War List Reveals Only 3,198 Yanks Pammunjom, Korea—(U.P) —The Communists gave the United Nations today the names of 3,198 U.S. war prisoners—all they hold out of 12.795 Americans missing in the Korean war. In exchange, the U.N. negotiating team handed the Communists a list of 132,474 Chinese and North Korean war prisoners held in Allied camps. Names of the American prisoners, along with about 7,000 South Korean and 1,000 other United Nations prisoners, were contained on a list handed United Nations delegates by Communist truce negotiators today. Tax Scandal Continues To Mushroom Washington—(U.P.)—House investigators have subpenaed Henry W. "The Dutchman" Grunewald to testify Thursday about an alleged $500,000 tax shakedown attempt against ex-Capone attorney Abraham Teitelbaum, it was learned today. Adrian W. Dewind, chief counsel of the House ways and means subcommittee which has unearthed widespread tax scandals, confirmed that the capital's top mystery man was under subpena "returnable Thursday." Farmers Produce Third Largest Crop Washington—(U.P.)American farmers have produced the third largest crop in history despite an uphill battle against weather and insects. The 1951 harvest and its disappointing losses in the corn and wheat crops were outlined by the Agriculture department in its final 1951 crop report. Practical Gift Ideas For Christmas - Sheaffer Pens and Pencils - Eaton Stationery - Desk Accessories - Buxton Billfolds - Leathercraft Briefcases - Artist Supplies Carter's Stationery 1025 Mass. Phone 1071 A Gift FOR 'SIS' FOR 'SIS' Go To The Church Of Your Choice Every Sunday. Make this Christmas one she'll remember always, for your gift of this exquisite pearl necklace and earring set. A girl decorating a Christmas tree with ornaments. 411 W.14 BALFOUR Phone 307 for everything under the tree Weavers 901 Mass. She'll love you for these this Christmas HANDKERCHIEF FOLDER ... scented satin envelope to care for her most precious handkerchiefs. $1.00 to 1.75 S S S S SEWING KIT ... petite traveler for her sewing essentials by Belding Corticelli. Tucks neatly in her drawer. X BED SOCKS --- 1. 75 1. 39 to 1.98 HANGERS toasty foot warmth for cold dorms no matter the temperature. Part or all wool. . . . quilted satin, plastic, or Scotch plaid covers to hang beloved coats and things. Four for 1.00 Puffy Candy Tin LINGERIE BOXES . . in soft, quilted satin, satin lined, and with lids. For gloves, hosiery, handkerchiefs. 1. 75 LINGERIE SET 577 SCUFFIES . clear plastic with pastel border trims. Keeps delicate lingerie the way she'd like. ... Reliable's Everglaze quilted, printed chintz moccasin. Washable. S, M, L. 2. 15 Weaver's Notions — Main Floor 7 A hpvo wraws ftstH otcovt G. Kansas State Historical Society UNIVERSITY TOPSKA, KS. DAILY 7 Graduate Students Awarded Fellowships Seven University graduate students are among 300 for whom final security clearances and appointments as pre-doctoral fellows of the Atomic Energy commission were announced by the Oak Ridge Institute of Nuclear Studies. The Oak Ridge institute is administering the fellowship program for the Atomic Energy commission To Sponsor Party For Foreign Girls About 30 women foreign students have been invited to a Christmas party sponsored by the Jay Janes, women's pep club, at 5 p.m. Wednesday in the Pine room of the Union. Each woman invited to the party will be asked to specify whether or not she is interested in becoming a member of the organization. Two women will be chosen for membership out of those who are interested. "We wanted to give foreign students at the University a chance to see what an American college organization is like," Helen Maduros, club president, said. "We felt this would be the most satisfactory way that the Jav Janes could do it." Civil service examinations will be given in Topeka Saturday, Jan. 12 for persons interested in becoming account clerks, guards, port of entry inspectors and bank examiners. Civil Service Exams To Be Given Jan. 12 The Lawrence Rotary club will furnish the pep club uniforms for the two women selected for membership, who will not be required to pay any dues to the pep club. Starting salaries range from $173 to $191 for account clerks I and guards, $200 to $220 for account clerks II, port of entry inspector I and law enforcement inspector I, $220 to $242 for law enforcement inspectors II and $245 to $280 for bank examiner I. Application forms may be secured from the Kansas department of civil service, 801 Harrison street, Topeka. The completed forms should be returned to the department by Jan. 9. for the current school year. Three hundred pre-doctoral fellowships were awarded to graduate students in 70 American universities and research institutions and seven others located abroad. "The A.E.C.-sponsored fellowship program is playing a vital role in giving many of our promising young scientists the opportunity to continue their research and study." Dr. Russell S. Poor of the Oak Ridge Institute said in the announcement. "We do not have to go into the future to see the need for more scientists—the need is here now. Holders of fellowships are deemed to be unusually promising for atomic energy work, although the fellowships served to increase the manpower supply for all scientific endeavor in this country." The seven AEC fellows and their departments: Persons interested in writing for the Dove, campus political magazine, may attend a staff meeting at 5 p.m. today in the Hawk's Nest of the Union. Harry John Christopher, chemistry; Manus Read Foster, physics; Gordon Alban Gallup, chemistry; William Richard Glickerson, chemistry; Alan Kellerman Jennihis mathematics; George Bruce Pedrick, mathematics; Richard Maitha Wallace, chemistry. The editor and business manager for the next issue of the magazine will be elected at the meeting. Plans for the next issue will also be discussed. Dove Invites Writers To Attend Meeting Elmer Rusco, graduate, student and former editor of the Dove, said articles on all phases of student opinion will be welcome. In the past the magazine has been essentially political. RICHA ON HIS WAY UP after one of the many rebounds he picked off the backboards for Kansas last night is All-American Clyde Lovellette. About to get the seat of his pants dirty is Gene Schwinger, center for Rice. Everett Dye, KU, appears to be holding him up, but seconds later the Rice center hit the floor. Bob Kenney is shown in the background ready for an assist. On the left is Don Lance, a hustling guard for the Rice Owls, who last 68-48—Kansas photo by Al Marshall. 49th Year No. 66 Wednesday, Dec. 19, 1951 hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS Choral Groups To Give Concert At 8 Thursday The University Women's Glee club and the Choral ensemble will present a program of Christmas music at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Museum of Art. The program will last only about one hour, Mr. Krehbiel said, "so that students may attend in spite of the busy week." The two groups will be directed by Clayton Krehbiel, instructor in music education. The glee club will open the program with the singing of "Magnificat" by Ralph Vaughn-Williams. Harriet King, fine arts sophomore, will be alto soloist and Marcus E. Hahn, instructor in music education, will play the flute obligato. Benjamin Britten's "Ceremony of Carols" will be sung by the Women's Glee club. Soloists will be Christine Wiley, fine arts sophomore; Gretta Reetz, fine arts freshman; Maxine Ratzlaff, fine arts sophomore; Mary Lee Haury, fine arts junior, and Helen Lau Fry, journalism senior. Miss Wiley, a member of SAI, professional music sorority for women, sang "Ave Maria" by Schubert and "Christmas Eve" by Hageman. She is a voice major from the studio of Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice. A student of Joseph Wilkins, professor of voice, Miss Tate sang "Villanelle" by Del'Acqua. Christine Wiley, fine arts sophomore, and Judith Tate, fine arts freshman, were the vocal soloists on the Sigma Alpha Iota Musicale program over KLWN Sunday. The chorale will sing the final number, "Hodie Christus Natus Est" by G. Palestrina. Fine Arts Students Sing Over KLWN The public is invited to attend. The accompanist was Nancy Hindman, fine arts junior. ISA Scholarship Applications Open Applications for the Independent Students association scholarship are due Thursday. The $50 scholarship is awarded annually to some independent student on the basis of definite need, scholastic average not below a 1.5, character and an active interest in activities. Applications may still be obtained from the dean of women's office or from Victoria Rosenwald at Miller hall. Geology Club Will Give Awards A talk on "What is Petroleum?" by E. A. Stephenson, professor emeritus of petroleum engineering, and Haworth awards to two geology students by Robert M. Dreyer, professor of geology, will highlight a joint meeting of the Geology club and the American Institute of Mining Engineers at 7:30 p.m. today in 426 Lindley hall. The Haworth awards are named for Erasmus Haworth, the first KU student to become eminent as a geologist. He later served as chairman of the geology department, from 1892-1920, and State Geologist of Kansas. Each year three of the awards are presented: one to the outstanding undergraduate geology senior, one to the foremost graduate student, and one to an alumni who has distinguished himself in the field of geology. Professor Dreyer will present a senior award and a graduate award. The selections are made by geology department faculty members. The selections are made by geology department faculty members Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will speak on "Balanced Feeding—The Modern Dilemma" at the annual meeting of the Kansas Authors club. Murphy To Talk To Authors Dr. Murphy will speak in the evening at the all-day session, Saturday, Jan. 26. The meeting will be held in the Jayhawk hotel in Topeka. Lawrence Nurse Killed In Wreck Of Car-Train Miss Kate Jewett, a nurse at Lawrence Memorial hospital, was killed Wednesday night when the car she was riding in collided with an east bound Union Pacific passenger train. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Gardner, Route 5, were hospitalized. Hospital authorities said Mrs. Gardner, sister of Miss Jewett, was in "very poor" condition today. She is suffering from a head injury. Mr. Gardner, who sustained a critical back injury is reported as "only fair." John Robinson, Union Pacific, ticket agent, said the engineer did not see the car coming since it was approaching from the opposite side. Gardner told attendants at the hotel to train as he approached the crossroads. The accident occurred at the first crossing east of the Bismarck Road. The sheriff's office, which was not notified until two hours after the accident by a Union Pacific official in Topeka, is investigating the case to see who authorized-the removal of the car. Carols To Be Sung By YMCA, YWCA They will carol at the hospital, Old Folks home and numerous other places. Anyone who wishes to, come is invited. Transportation will be provided. Members of the YWCA and YMCA will go Christmas caroling Thursday night, meeting first at 7:30 at Henley house, 1236 Oread street. After the caroling refreshments will be served in Henley house. WEATHER Mostly cloudy and warm today, southerly winds in east; cloudy tonight, warmer in east and south. Thursday cloudy and colder. Low tonight 25-30; high Thursday 15. Yule Customs Vary Over World By MAX A. THOMPSON The observation of Christmas in all Christian countries as the birth of Christ is marked by the various and different ways in which it is celebrated in these countries. The name Christmas comes from the early English term Christes Masse, which means Christ's mass. This term is used only in Englishe speaking countries. In most European countries the day is known as "Christ's birthday." Scandinavian countries still use the pagan name "Yule Day," and Germany and Switzerland observe "Holy Night." The date for Christmas in most lands is Dec. 25, and is characterized by religious services, the exchange of gifts, and merrymaking. The long Christmas season opens for the Austrians, Belgians, Bulgarians, French, Germans, Greeks, Hungarians, Italians, Dutch and Swiss on Dec. 6. On this date St. Nicholas, Christkindl or, Shen Koll—other names for Santa-Claus—come with their packs of gifts for the children. These countries which observe Dec. 6 for the giving of presents keep Christmas day free for feasting, carol singing, dramas and visiting with relatives and friends. The evergreen tree—used as an ornament during the Christmas season—is believed to have originated in Rome, although it appears in German literature in 1504. Today the Christmas tree can be found in many lands. On Christmas Eve in France the homes are the center of the festi- ties which include a holiday supper and the burning of the Yule log. At midnight bells are rung while each person solemnly lights his Christmas candle. The living room door in a German home flies open at dusk on Christmas Eve, and there stands a little tree ablaze with lights. German trees have nothing on them except lights and candy. Each person's presents are arranged in a pile underneath the tree. Processions, some of them religious, often form part of the festivities in Belgium, Italy, Spain, Poland, Rumania, the Ukraine, Mexico and South America. Blazing plum pudding, a crackling yule log and rosy-cheeked carol singers are symbols of English Christmas cheer. In England the gladness of the season has long been expressed by feasting and merriment. Norway, Sweden and Denmark celebrate Christmas in much the same manner as Germany. Rice pudding containing one almond is served in Finland, and the Finns believe that the person who gets the almond will be married before the next Christmas. For the children of Guatemala, Honduras and Mexico, the pinata game is an important part of the Christmas season. The pinata is a jar filled with sweets which is hung by a cord from the branch of a tree. In Holland many of the young men meet in the village square and choose a star bearer to carry a large lantern in the shape of a star, which contains many lighted candles. He leads the procession through the streets singing "Gloria in Excelsis." The children are blindfolded and take their turns trying to break the pinata by hitting it with a stick. When the pinata is hit squarely it shatters and the flood of candies which pours out is given to the child who breaks the jar. In Czechoslovakia, a girl takes a twig from a cherry tree and places it in water on Dec. 4. If the twig blossoms before Christmas Eve it is believed that the girl will be married during the year. Canada celebrates Christmas in about the same way as the United States, while Australia follows the usual English customs with picnics and holidays an essential part of the holiday celebrations. In America, Christmas customs have differed in various parts of the country since the days of the pioneers. Today our observances include almost any or all of the European customs, depending upon the decent or interests of those celebrating the anniversary of the birth of Christ. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 19, 1951 by Bibler Daily Kansan Editorials A White Campus Is Pretty---Whoomp!! A White Christmas is nice, indeed. And so is a white campus. Snow is truly beautiful—until you slip and fall on it. But it seems like this last snow takes the cake for slipperiness (if we may coin a word). Even two years ago when a glaze covered everything it wasn't so bad. The west end of Strong hall is still, (if the sun isn't out yet) an excellent example of this latest snow. The steps resemble a slide and have much the same tendencies, as numerous students have found out. Then the walks were cleared sufficiently for students to traverse them safely. And the streets gave enough traction for automobiles to travel with some degree of safety. The University used to have a small tractor which brushed off the walks while the snow was falling. That way it didn't become so solidly packed as it is now. We noticed it was operating early the first day, but didn't stay around long enough to keep the walks clear. Consequently, it was of little value. And it would certainly be nice if the University could see fit to brush off at least the sidewalks leading up steep campus hills to the campus. Thirteenth and 14th are particularly bad. If you try the Battenfeld steps, you're taking your life in your hands. It's too late to do much good this time. But we hope that the next time it snows a little more serious effort will be made toward clearing the main sidewalks and streets. It's not too much to ask. With the selection of Jim Logan as a Rhodes scholar, the University seems to be back on the trail again. In the last five years, four KU men have won the $1,400 grant. Only in 1950-51 did a Kansas man fail to win. Such is an enviable record for any college or university. There are only 32 appointments made each year from the United States. -A.G.M. Perhaps his most notable achievement as a Jayhawker was the introduction of a new political party on the campus. FACTS is a product of the very productive Logan brain. With it he was able to rouse a lethargic mass of independent students into winning an all-school election from the well-organized Greeks. It is a fitting tribute to Logan. He has made an enviable name for himself at KU and throughout Kansas with a long string of activities, awards, and scholastic achievements. While still a member of FACTS and actually a behind-the-scenes leader of the party, he took over as president of the touch-and-go All-Student Council. With the narrow majority of one vote, he led his forces into a quiet battle for continued control of the council. In the last election FACTS, while losing all freshman class officers, was able to gain an even split on the two Council seats, thus retaining their grim majority. And he has done many other things at KU, many of them going unacclaimed. But this latest recognition should have made them all more than just worthwhile. A.G.M. KU's Latest Rhodes Scholar A rapid glance about the campus reveals that the end doesn't justify the jeans. Spotlight On Basketball Three Bradley basketball players received suspended jail sentences recently as the aftermath of gambling corruption rolls on. Elsewhere in the country, student athletes who succumbed to temptation in the moral-vs.-ethical tug-of-war are already serving penal terms. And the college courts of the nation are tuning up to the ring of leather on the hardwoods; the healthy perspiration of young bodies exhibiting playing prowess suggests an ebullient sense of its being the time to pursue a common sports goal once again. And this year, especially, it has a task which supersedes its mere existence. Above and beyond its being a good exercise, an interesting diversion or a thrilling contest, it must justify itself. Basketball isn't simply in the limelight. It's in the line-up of suspects, with the spotlight trained on it for the watchful glare of all to see. This is done in a number of equally important ways. The sport itself remains above accusation only by the integrity of those who participatingly represent it—and this can never be done so much by positive evidence as, negatively, by showing no lack of integrity. Further justification must come from basketball's being worth all this commotion in the first place. For an indication of this we look toward its supporters—not the promoters, institutional or otherwise, who capitalize on the gate receipts nor the betters who attend to see their odds fluctuate with the bounce of the ball; but the plain ordinary fans. The person who will support "his" team—win lose or draw—because it's "his" team. This dyed-in-the-wool character, his quantity and quality, is where one finally determines a sport's merit or lack of it. —The Syracuse Daily Orange. Civic Pride... The Tangerine at Utica college took out its pencil and did some figuring. The result was this interesting bit of statistics: Students there have contributed $7,500 to the city of Utica in parking fines. There are a few of us die-hards attending college that are unengaged and don't feel that our college Letters To The Editor We're Not All After Husbands Daily Hansan News Room Student Newspaper of the Adv. Room KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU 376 Member of the Kansas Press Assn, National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Association, represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave. New York City. EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief Alan Marshall Editorial Associate Ann Snydler NEWS STAFF Managing Editor Charles Price Assistant Managing Editors Nancy Anderson, Benjamin Holman, Lee Sheppeard, Ellsworth Zahm City Editor...Joe Taylor Sports Editor...Charles Burch Telegraph Editor...Don Sarten Society Editor...Katrina Swartz News Adviser...Victor J. Daniulov BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager ... Bob Sydney Advertising Manager ... Dorothy Hedrick Assistant Adv. Manager ... Dick Hale National Adv. Manager ... Bill Taggart Circulation Manager ... Elaine Blaylock Promotion Manager ... Ted Barbera Business Adviser ... R. W. Doores career has been a staggering failure. In response to Monday's Daily Kansan feature story about women coming to college to catch a man . . . Some women probably do come to school to get a man, that's true, but those few shouldn't label all the rest. There are some of us that might be here because the only alternative was going out to work and earn our own living. Our theory is that if we really wanted to catch a man, rather than going to college we would take a job and use the money earned to buy such things as man-appealing clothes and fancy convertibles to catch some innocent gentleman. Some of us came to get an education because sooner or later we know that we will have to go to work and the degree may come in handy. Little Man On Campus That way the money spent in going to school and the time spent in studying and going to classes wouldn't be wasted. Man-catching could be a full-time project. Lou Fry Journalism senior. D. V. "Class--Didn't I announce in here that I wouldn't tolerate a 'Pony' during an examination?" The Dry Forces Are Ready The Dry forces of the state have announced their objective for 1951. They plan on stopping the flow of liquor in at least 25 Kansas cities through local option elections. They also hope to elect a legislature that will re-submit the liquor question in 1952. This new attempt by the Drys will be a good thing for the people of the state as well as the business of liquor sales. The big force that will keep the liquor business toeing the mark is the constant threat of repeal hanging over it's head. In addition it will give the people a chance to change their mind, if they so desire, and vote prohibition back to Kansas. One thing for sure, the campaign shaping up on the liquor question will be cleaner and more intelligent than the last one. A necessary information is out in the open now. The people will get a chance to be shown the true facts and figures on liquor consumption, revenue that tax on liquor has brought to the state and just how harmful the repeal has been to the state and it's people. Figures don't lie and it is fairly certain that the Drys will not have the necessary facts and figures to convince the people that repeal is harmful. If they obtain their goal of persuading 25 cities to go dry it is a good bet that the bootleggers will be overjoyed and that those cities will be deprived of taxes that would be of great benefit in bettering the community. We've had legal liquor for two and one-half years now. Next year's campaign will give the people a chance to take stock of what we have. It should prompt whatever changes are needed to keep repeal alive. An old saying, twisted a little, would aptly fit the situation if the state should happen to vote back prohibition. We've got everything to lose and nothing to gain. —William Stanfill. Why Not Try Fire Escape? The type of music to be plaved next is signaled by flashing lights at Washington State college dances. A blue flash signifies a slow number; red denotes fast music and both color lights means a Latin American number. The student newspaper at the University of Tennessee has protested what it called "a bit stiff" regulations concerning coeds who are late getting into dormitories at night. The paper has suggested the administration look into the matter and make some changes. Eureka, Brave New World That's Real Cool, Man News From Other Campuses A professor at the University of Wisconsin recently originated a plan wherein questions of historical significance are asked IBM machines in combining traditional and machine methods in historical research. Boxes Stuffed At Cal A recent student council election at the University of California was declared void because "several hundred more votes were cast than there were students registered to vote." The University student newspaper criticized students for their "passive acceptance" of attitude regarding the ballot stuffing. Art students at the University of Oklahoma are "out in the cold" as result of a recent reactivation of a navy base near the campus. The building used by the art school is the proposed headquarters for the recommissioned base. Fleet's In, Artists Out A publicity clinic offering campus organizations opportunity to learn application of better methods of gaining publicity was sponsored recently by Theta Sigma Phi, honorary women's professional journalism fraternity, at Oklahoma A&M college. Teach Publicity Methods 2 Mall subscription: $a a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kentucky during the University year except during the Sunday. University holidays and class meetings. Entered as second class matter. March 7, 1873 at the Post Office at Lawrence Kans, under act of March 3, 1879. er Wednesday, Dec. 19, 1951 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Give Leather Leather gifts have lasting beauty—lasting usefulness. BILLFOLDS BRIEFCASES SHAVING KITS SANTA OVERNIGHT CASES BELTS LUGGAGE Filkins Leather Shop Make Your Christmas Complete With Flowers from the Flower Box 820 Massachusetts The New Flower Shop Experience-Courtesy Quality make We Have A Complete Line Of ELMER'S CHRISTMAS CANDIES LeRoy Fleming, Owner Night Call 749 Phone278 18 E.9th. make the university shop your GIFT HEADQUARTERS Here are a few Suggestions for HIM: - PULLOVER SWEATER - PULLOVER SWEATER - LOAFER-SOX - ALLIGATOR BELT - WOOL SPORTSHIRT - ARGYLE SOCKS - WOOL SPORTSHIRT - LEATHER "DUPP-KIT" - GIFT CERTIFICATE university shop 2021 CRESENT DRIVE... IN WEST HILLS. EVERY THURSDAY... PAN FRIED CHICKEN - Home Made Rolls - Chicken Gravy ONLY 75c STREITS CAFE 9th and Tennessee MERRY CHRISTMAS KIRKPATRICKS 715 Mass. Phone 1018 Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers TREATMENTS BREAKFAST-LUNCH DINNER Try our choice steaks, sandwiches, homemade pies and cakes. CRYSTAL CAFE 609 Vermont OPEN 6 A.M. TO MIDNIGHT - FREE PARKING PERSONALIZED HAIR STYLING and TRIMMING For An Appointment Call --- Corn's Studio of Beauty > 23 West 9th Phone 709 Come To SAMPLE'S for your Last-minute Gifts. LADIE'S JEWELRY Of All Kinds. from $2.95 up SAMPLE'S 9141/4 Morg Phonc 368 914 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. Phone 368 Your Beauty Demands Attention! You'll be delighted with the new loveliness that can be yours, with just the right coiffure. Let our hair stylists study you . . . create your hair-do. Charme Beauty Salon PARTY 65c to 75c GRANADA CAFE FIRST DOOR SOUTH OF GRANADA THEATRE SPECIALS EVERYDAY Chicken and Home-made Noodles Every Saturday Closed Sunday Open 6 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday. GRANADA CAFE Shopping DO YOUR Christmas Grocery AT LOG CABIN MARKET 1827 Louisiana Phone 910 At The Bottom of The Hill. I WONDER WHAT TYPE OF PERSON LIVES LONGEST! A RICH RELATIVE! © A & M ADVERTISING CO. Shop While Your Clothes Wash and Dry 9 Ibs. Washed - 35c Soap Furnished Open til 8:00 p.m. Thursday LAUNDERAIDES at SUNFLOWER, KANSAS and LAWRENCE,KANSAS 813 Vermont Ph.2515 DEPENDABLE UPHOLSTERING THE CINEMATIC WORK OF FELIX BROOKS. 1803 Mass. DINGMAN FURNITURE Call 1503 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Dec. 19. 1951 JayhawkersExtendUnbeatenString ToSixByTrouncingRiceOwls68-48 Bv DON SARTEN Extending this season's "unbeaten" a bid to six and keeping alive a bid to shatter the record of eight ran up by the '48 Jayhawker basketball team, Kansas worked out last night against Rice and won handicap 68-48. All-American Clyde Lovelle contributed 24 points for high point honors. He used a lazy book shot repeatedly in continuing his march toward another Big Seven scoring record. Kansas was never seriously threatened by the visitors. While staying within "shooting distance" the Owls lacked the powder it takes to ignite a rally necessary to bridge the 12 to 15 point gap they trailed by all evening. Set shots by Bill Kenney and Bill Lienhard kept things interesting for spectators. The floor play and scoring versatility of Leonard Childs, a 5-foot 11-inch guard for the losers, was out standing. His six field goals for the evening topped scoring for Rice. KU had a 11-3 advantage before the game was five minutes old and Rice called a time-out. By the end of the quarter it was 25-13 and at half-time KU led 38-24. Rice, outmanned in every department and noticeably lacking in rebound strength, used but eight players. Coach Phog Allen substituted freely as 15 Jayhawk cagers shared the duties. The starting five of Lovellette Lienhard, Kenney, Dean Kelley and Bill Hougland was broken up after the first time-out by Rice. Kansas (68) Owls-ted | | FGA | FG | FTA | FT | Pts. F | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Alberts | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | | Davenport | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Kenney | 13 | 7 | 4 | 3 | 17 | | Lienhard | 12 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 8 | | Squires | 5 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | | Keller | 2 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | | Lovellette | 15 | 9 | 6 | 6 | 24 | | Born | 1 | 0 | 5 | 1 | 2 | | Dye | 2 | 0 | 2 | 1 | 0 | | Heitholt | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | | Hougland | 6 | 1 | 3 | 3 | 5 | | Johnson | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | | Kelley, A. | 1 | 0 | 4 | 2 | 2 | | Kelley, D. | 3 | 0 | 4 | 2 | 2 | | Smith | 3 | 1 | 5 | 3 | 5 | Rice (48) Totals ... 69 24 33 20 68 15 FGA FG FTA FT Ft Pts. F Fulfer 0 0 2 1 Grawender 2 5 4 6 5 Lance 3 1 4 2 4 4 Fulton 4 0 2 0 4 3 --to down Maryland, which also wound up with an unblemished record. Maryland has a terrific line as well as a fine backfield but there is a suspicion that the Tennessee Juggernaut still hasn't been really tested. An excellent Gift Suggestion for the folding camera fan KODAK KODAK Tourist Camera Has fixed-focus lens, flash shutter, and new shutter release bar. Negatives, $2 1/4 x $3 1/4; oversize black-and-white and Kodacolor Prints about $3 1/2 x 5. $26.25 here, including Federal Tax. KODET LENS HIXON'S 721 Mass. Phone 41 20 BILL LIENHARD Fraley Selects Bowl Winners; Sees Stanford Over Illinois By OSCAR FRALEY Rose Bowl Stanford over Illinois—the "line makes the Illini a six-point favorite but, even without that touchdown margin, here's a vote for the upset kids from the coast. The Big 10 has whipped the Pacific Coast representative five straight times in this grandpappy of the post-season embroglies. But in posting its record of eight wins against one tie, the Illini had many a close shave. Stanford won every one it needed and suffered a natural let-down against California when it had the roses on the mantle. Increment weather which has hampered the Illinois' efforts to stay ready may be another factor. From here it's Stanford, and if you can get the six points, so much the better. Sugar Bowl Tennessee over Maryland—the undefeated Vols are picked by seven Schwinger ... 9 3 2 0 6 4 Beavers ... 12 4 1 1 9 1 Childs ... 9 6 1 0 12 5 Jocheo ... 5 3 0 0 6 2 Teague ... 11 2 0 0 4 3 Totals ... 55 20 17 8 48 30 Rated the number one team in the nation, Tennessee, if geared up properly, should win with a freescoring tilt by at least that margin. Kentucky over TCU — This is quoted as an even contest, and trying to pick the victor is like attempting to figure the winner of a rasslin' match. Both have high-octane offenses—when they're in the mood. Kentucky has looked great at times, and pitiful at others. Ditto TCU. Each lost four games. TCU has shown an effective pass defense in several key games but the theory in this corner is that Babe Parill's pitching arm will find the few cracks available. Georgia Tech over Baylor—This is another pick 'em affair. Tech won 10 and was tied once while Baylor won eight against one tie and a single setback. Orange Bowl TREE GIVE HER GIVE HIM RONSON COMPLETE LINE $6.60 up Gustafson Round-Up THE COLLEGE JEWELER Intramural Today's Games Robinson Annex Independent "A" 809 Mass. Phone 911 47 Years 4.p.m.: Navy vs. Gamma Delta 5.p.m.: Oread vs. Aluminum 5 6.p.m.: Stephenson vs. Alpha Kappa Dc 7 p.m.: Battenfield vs. Flying Five 8 p.m.: AFROTC vs. Sterling-Oliver 9 p.m.: Last Chance vs. Geology club 4 p.m.: Twin Pines vs. Misfits 5 p.m.: Varsity vs. AXE 6 p.m.: ASCE vs. Rochdale Fraternity "A" 7 p.m.: Kappa Sig vs. Acacia 8 p.m.: Sigma Chi vs. Sig Alph 9 p.m.: Kappa Alpha Psi vs. Lambda Chi Robinson Gym Emtermity "G" 6:45 p.m.: DU vs. Lambda Chi and Phi Gam vs. ATO 7:45 p.m.: Nu Sig vs. Delta Chi and Beta vs. Sig Alph Independent "B" 8:45 p.m.: MEN vs. Oread 9:45 p.m.: Jolliffe vs. AIA and East Side vs. R. Williams 5 Women's Teams To Risk Records Five teams will risk their undefeated status tonight as the women's intramural basketball program goes into the last round before the holidays. 7:00 Undefeated squads to see action include; Freshman AA; Watkins; Pi Beta Phi; Freshman BA and Alpha Chi Omega. Two of these, Watkins and Alpha Chi Omega, should make strong bids for division titles. 8:00 Freshman AA vs. Watkins hall Delta Gamma vs. Pi Beta Phi 9:00 Aloha Chi Omega vs. Freshman KMM A. Omicron Pi vs. Freshman BA Monchonsia vs. Chi Omega Freshman BH vs. Theta Phi Alpha FOR CHRISTMAS GIVING A good morning begins the night before in PLEETWAY PAJAMAS 10 30 PLEETWAY PAJAMAS Whether a man smiles or scowls as he sips his morning coffee often depends on how well he slept. Good nights make good mornings—and sleep in Fleetway pajamas makes the most restful nights of all. Credit the exclusive features of the world’s most comfortable pajamas. And credit us for having a large and varied selection. Sizes A, B, C, and D. From $4.50 No Binding. Underarm pleat banishes chest and arm binding. U.S. Pat. No. 1973419. No Slip—No Strangle. 5 size adjustments, plus elastic inserts for perfect, permanent waistline fit. No Chafing. Roomy balloon seat eliminates crotch-cutting center seam. U.S. Pat. No. 1740554. Mass. St. CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES an ha 905 State Mottonal Cooler AS Membership In Soccer Club Shows Increase Over 1950 Soccer at the University is rapidly expanding toward a point of firm organization. From a faltering start last year, the soccer team has grown to the 20-man club today. Though team members this season don't have the soccer "know-how" of the squad of 1950,.more men seem to be taking an interest in the sport. Most players are foreign students who have had some experience at the international game. Four members of last year's team have returned to bolster the material available this year. Adnan Abdullah, engineering junior, Bezale Berger, College freshman, Baager Shirazi, engineering senior, and Bernard Weitzer, engineering senior, are the holdovers from 1950. Abdullah is from Arabia, Berger and Weitzer from Mexico, and Shirazi from India. Since last spring when the team was first organized, it has played college, Kansas State, Oklahoma A&M, and St. Benedicts. Though still unequipped as far as regulation shoes and guards are concerned, the soccer team has already played two games this fall. They tied Park College 2-2 in November, and scored a 3-3 tie with the Kansas City Benson Chiefs Dec. 2. The game is not officially recognized as a sport of the University as yet and is locally sponsored by the International club. Weitzner has been acting as coach of the team and has engineered the drive for organization of the team. The game itself resembles football in that 11 men are used in both games. One of these, however, is a goal-keeper—much like the goalie in hockey—who is the only member of the team allowed to touch the ball with his hands. The rest of the players must kick the ball toward the opposing goal. Soccer is played in halves of 45 minutes each on a field 110 yards long and 55 vards wide. Because there is no official soccer GIFTS FOR DAD A smartly styled desk clock for utility and beauty. $8 up BINOCOPE For the sportsman, a 7 x 50 power binocular with a tan traveling case. $55 plus tax BALFOUR field at the University, home games are played on the intramural fields. BALFOUR Lauter Jeweler 411 W. 14 Phone 307 Kansas City, Mo.—(U.P.)-Missouri Valley conference officials believed today that despite the loss of Drake and Bradley the conference is stronger and more firmly knit together than ever before." It is hoped by team members that not only will soccer soon be recognized as a University sport, but that it will also become a Big Seven conference game. Faculty representatives indicate as they closed their annual meeting that some expansion was contemplated, although they said the conference could continue with only six members if necessary. League Firm Despite Loss a conference spokesman said the faculty group had voted in favor of legislation which would limit the number of athletic scholarships in any one sport, and called for a national collegiate policy on "recruiting and pay of athletes." Bradley and Drake withdrew from the conference because of the Johnny Bright slugging incident which occurred in the Drake-Okla-ohauna A&M game during the past season. "Such policies are essential and must be backed by sufficient staff and facilities to hold all institutions who participate in intercollegiate athletics in line," the spokesman said. Conference officials said they favored a re-study of the bowl picture by the extra events committee of the NCAA, and added that bowl games had more merit than some de-emphasis efforts would indicate Dr. Frank L. Stovall of the University of Houston was named president of the faculty representatives. Other member schools are Wichita, Oklahoma A&M, Tulsa, Detroit and St. Louis. Rabbit Shoots Man Page 5 Baltimore—(U.P.) —When a man shoots a rabbit it isn't news. Monroe said he was awakened by a sharp pain in his hand. There was his pet rabbit peering at him over the sights of a 22 caliber rifle lying on a chair. But Julius Monroe got shot by a rabbit. Monroe figured the curious cottonail hit the trigger when it hopped on the chair to investigate the rifle. Senior Athlete To Be Awarded Beach Trophy the banquet, which is held in honor of the Jayhawker football squad, will be at the Lawrence Community building at 6:30 o'clock. The Ormand Beach trophy will be awarded to the outstanding senior Kansas football player tonight at the annual Lawrence Quarterback club banquet. Laurence "Moon" Mullins, athletic director at Kansas State, is scheduled to address the group. He replaces Harold "Red" Grange, famed University of Illinois football star who has been forced to cancel the speaking engagement because of illness. Movies of highlights of the 1951 football season also will be shown for the first time. The trophy is a gift of Mrs. Ormand Beach in memory of her husband who was a former KU football star. He was killed in an accident in 1939. Wade Stinson was presented the trophy last year and Bud French was the recipient in 1949. Mullins has a wide background in football, having played fullback at Notre Dame in 1929 and 1930 under Knute Rocke. He began his coaching career under Bill Hargiss at Kansas in 1931. Arch Ward, sports editor of the Chicago Tribune, was the guest speaker last year. Cage Scores East Connecticut 56, Yale 47 Duquesne 77, Loyola of the South 31 Syracuse 94, Dartmouth 57. Midwest 69. Oklahoma 51 Indiana 69, Oklahoma 51 Michigan State 52, Detroit 47 Michigan State 32, Detroit 47 South Duke 88, Davidson 49 Louisville 85, Kent State 67 Marshall 92, West Virginia Wesleyan 67 Maryland 57, FMI 39 North Carolina State 86, George Washington 57 Washington 57 Tulane 80, Texas 64 Virginia 51 Virginia State 57, West Virginia State 53 Southwest Texas A&M 63, Trinity (Tex.) 44 St. Edwards 74, Corpus Christi 38 Texas Coll. 67, Langston 59 Samuel Houston 61, Friends 43 Arkansas State Arkansas State Tech. 61, Little Rock JC 57 So. California 46, Oklahoma A&M 44 Creighton 55, Loyola (Los Angeles) 47. Save Those Precious Vacation Hours— Wednesday, Dec. 19. 1951 THE LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK "Pioneer of bank-air travel service in Lawrence". GOBY AIR---ANYWHERE Round trip air rates are more reasonable than you probably realize—and they get you there hours, sometimes days, sooner and allow you to linger with the home folk longer. University Daily Kansan FROM THE AIR TRAVEL DESK Kansas 'B' Team Scheduled To Play Olathe Five Tonight FLY HOME FOR CHRISTMAS Idle since Dec. 5 when they trounced Forbes Air Force Base 81-53, the Jayhawk Juniors will play their final game until after the Christmas recess. Dick Harp's once-tested, once-victorious Jayhawker "B" team moves into the cage spotlight tonight against the Olathe Naval Air Station team. Tip-off time is 7:30 o'clock in Hoch auditorium. WAA Dinner 5:30 Today The banquet, held each year following volleyball season, is the top fall social event of the association. Members of the honorary varsity team in volleyball will be presented to the group, and any awards of WAA blazers and plaques will be made. The annual hockey-volleyball banquet of the Women's Athletic association will be held at 5:30 p.m today in the Kansas room of the Union. New members will be initiated following the banquet. Each of the new members must participate in a short skit which protrays some WAA activity. A woman must earn 125 points in intramurals to be eligible for membership in the association. Jerry Alberts, Allen Kelley and Dean Smith followed Davenport with nine points each. Led by freshman Larry Davenport's 14 points, all of Harp's 15 team members contributed to the defeat of Forbes. Harp is nearly as strong in reserves as he is with scoring punch. John Thompson, Alberts, Davenport, Don Anderson and Eldon Nicholson round out the second five. Thompson scored once against Forbes. Anderson got two. Nicholson pitched in four points. Travel Service THE Ken Buller will probably start at forward for Harp Wednesday. Smith and Kelley will be at guards. Wes Whitney will be in at center. Whitney tossed in two points against Forbes. FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Tel. 30 8th Fm. Mar 8th & Mass. FIRM Open 11 a.m. Curb Service After 4 p.m. Stop In Before Xmas Vacation Take home pleasant memories with you-thoughts of a good meal at the Chateau. Eat here tonight. CHATEAU DRIVE-IN MAIL AT 18TH ST. Give THE GIFT EVERYONE ENJOYS! fresh, delicious Russell Stover Russell Steven COFFEE Cinnamon Milk Coffee with Chocolate Chocolates (Jambo) Mineral Clearance ASSORTED CHOCOLATES CHOCOLATES Colorful Poinsettia Gift Box holds creams, fruits, nuts and caramels—dipped in rich milk and dark vanilla chocolate $125 POUND BOX CHOCOLATES and BUTTER-BONS Gift-Boxed assortment o creams, nougats, caramels, nuts and nutclusters and a cellophane index names each piece! $16.5 POUND BOX Rosette Storer CANDIES Stowits Rexall Store 9th and Mass. Phone 516 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 19, 1951 Help For Christmas Shoppers Comes With Careful Planning By KATRINA SWARTZ If you are a last-minute shopper, an unfortunate with classes that last long after the stores have closed or just a natural procrastinator, you had better get all the help you can right away. If you sit down and study your list with a knowing eye and some regard for the taste of the recipient you can easily do your Christmas shopping quickly and painlessly. An hour thus spent is "home-work" hat pays off. Imaginative gifts that show time and thought has been given outweigh all the ordinary selections. Nobody can tell you exactly what such a gift is. You have to do the brain work yourself, whether it is a handmade silver bracelet for your girl, a copy of a rare edition of a favorite book for your father or gift certificates for twelve live Maine lobsters to be shipped on a date you indicate. you more! Suggestions however belong to the run-of-the-mill gift giver, the others think out their own. Gifts are gifts and clever people spend hours conjuring up the right thing for the right party. Others buy a dozen handkerchiefs and pass them out to all the women in the family. Surprise is a pretty element of gifts, but make it a real surprise. Official Bulletin During Christmas vacation all parking regulations will remain in effect on Jayhawk Blvd, Zones HJG, and LG. Other zones will be open to all with or without permits. Regular parking rules start again at jam. Jan. 3. Deadline for the ISA Scholarship is today. Obtain blanks from Victoria Rosenwald, Miller hall, must be turned in at Dean of Women's office by 5 today. Chess club, 7:15 tonight, 111 strong, last round of tournament. Christmas Holiday Riders Bureau. Register for ride or for passengers UIA office or hostess desk, Union. Wesley foundation's annual caroling party tonight. Meet at 7:30, lobby of Union. Refreshments after caroling All Student Council, 7:30 tonight, english room, Union. No Square Dance club this week party has been cancelled. German Nativity play, 8 tonight, Little Theater, Green Hall. 320-764-8500 CQ-code practice session, 7:30 to right, F.E. lab, night, E.L. Lee and ASTE and ASME, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Pine room, Union, Al Conn, speaker. 10:59 staff meeting, 5 today, lark's Nest. Jay Janes, 5 today, Pine room, union. M. Dreyer in Christian fellowship, 7:30-8:30 p.m. Thursday, 32 strong hall. Geology club and A.I.M.E. joint meeting, 7:30 tonight, 426 Lindley, prof. E. A Stephenson and Prof. E. Drever on program. trong hua I.V.C.F. Missionary meeting, Friday 12-12:50 p.m., Danforth Chapel. Gordon Wakefield, speaker. Gordon Warnecker Deutscher Verein, keine versammung am Donnerstag sonnohr heute dem Weihnachtspiel. lolliffe Hall Entertains With Snow Ball Dance Jolliffe hall held its Snow Ball formal Dec. 15, at Jolliffe hall. The chaperones were Mrs. Lela Whiteford, Mrs. Dean Nite, Mrs. Lela Wilson and Mrs. Althea Galloway. The guests were Rae Ellen Hill, Tillen Gartell, Mary Thompson, Wilma Morton, Ann Smith, Rozanne Iskins, Ornine Gray,ella Maury, Virginia Isaacson, Ann Ivester, Vonne Godwin, and Sue Meyer. Marjorie Woolwine, Barbara Garberich, Joan Moherman, Karen Gerner, Natalie Goutbroad, Bernice Vodd, Ann Shellberger, Marilyn Jackson, Joan Markley, Suzie Kesar, Oral Smith and Jeanne Esch. or, Opa Lupine, Janelle Downing, Joan Bingam, anna Denning, M. J. Tison, Mr. and rs. Keith Lawton, Mr. and Mrs. awrence Woodruff and Mr. and rs. William Chestnut. COLLEGE REPUBLICANS Dec.20,1951 7:30 206 GREEN EVERYONE WELCOME Battenfeld Hall Holds Annual Formal Dance Battenfeld hall held its annual Christmas dinner-dance Dec. 15 The chaperones were Mrs. Lester Jeter, Mrs. Louis Stanley, Mrs. Kathleen S. Caughman and Miss Carolina Nellis. The guests were Chancellor and Mrs. Franklin D. Murphy, Dr. and Mrs. L. C. Woodruff, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Lawton, Prof. and Mrs. Albert Palmerlee, Mrs. Edna Ramage and Mr. and Mrs. William Chestnut. Susanne Plummer, Peggy Allison, Madelene Hodgson, Marianne Crossby, Ann Eylar, Virginia Robson, Mary Lathrop, Patricia Bowen Marion Clyma, Durian Swaffar Mary Jane Harder, Delores Martin Barbara Swisher and Carolyn McClain. Beverly Jennings, Francis Hanna, Anneliese Schnierle, Susanne Schmalhofer, Jo Ita Galloway, Kathleen Holthus, Barbara Shaw, Mary Joanne Schauvliage, Mary Lou Fischer, Delois Shade, Phyllis Noah, Earlene Lellery, Kallynry Watkins. Mary Louise Woodward, Twila Casterline, Patricia Buell, Jean Ann Scupin, Joyce Shank, Frances Henningsen, Geerte Van Oppen, Kay Lowis, Marilyn Sorem, Janet Lord, Gloria Baker, Janet Stewart, Dorothy Shade, Dorothy Taylor and Nancy Adams. Lee Miller, Donna Summers, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brown, Dixie Badg- well, Donovan Hull, Marshall Swain, James Bass, Ronald Greeson, Emily Enos, Donald Sieben, Mrs. Charles Sieben, William Patterson, Dana Denning and Leo Vanderweide. Tri Chi's Entertain With Christmas Party The guests were Darlene DeMeritt; Gertraud Kaps; Pat Means; Julia Bolz; Oliver Selfridge; Ernestine Dehlinger; Madelon Brunson; Betty Thoman, Topeka; Winifred Major, Kansas City, Mo.; Carol Browning, Centropolis; Mr. and Mrs. Daniel LaMaster and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Banks. Chi Chi Chi fraternity held a Christmas dinner-dance Dec. 15 in the English room of the Union. The chaperones were Mr. and Mrs. George Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Beamer and Mr. and Mrs. David Fisher. St. Louis, Mo., is limited to an area of 61 square miles. A woman holding a cell phone. Save Money On Laundry Bring It To RISK'S BARRY FISCHER UP-TO-DATE MEN at formal gatherings this winter will wear formal clothes featuring notable style changes over recent years. Highlighting 1951 tuxedo trends is the shawl collar and the swing to single-breasted, one-button models. The Hamburg hat, midnight blue like tie and suit, features 1951 style trends. Self-Service Laundry Alpha Kappa Lambda Christmas Formal 613 Vermont Call 623 Alpha KappaLambda fraternity entertained with a Christmas formal in the Crystal room of the Eldridge hotel Dec. 14. The guests included Peggy Long, Katherine Bowman, Carol Shipman, Jeanne Anderson, Ruth Elser, Julia Robohn, Norma Simmons, Lois Libby, Frances Meng, Anne Krehbel, Mary Beth Mullins, Ann Carlson' and Leta Fay Johnson. Jennette Bullis, Marjorie Hockennull, Bonnie Roberts, Paula Aronalt, Joan Salisbury, Terry Hanlon, Rita Hanlon, JoAne Marie Hynes, Mary Lou Allen, Kathryn Bauer-seld, Jacquelyn Canfield and Kay Graham. Helen Unruh, Vernie Theden, Jean Woodside, Donna Dyck, Norma Davison, Nancy Russell, Lee Calkins, Andrea Donnell, Jean Denny, Betty Wendler, Jane Sullivan, Delio Shade, Mary Jane Tissen, Ann Penix and Patty Steen. Don Park, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Spiegel, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Benham and Mr. and Mrs. Bill McClelland. Nice Clothes Are Important; Style And Color Count Most Ithaca, N.Y.—(U.P).-Clothes may make the woman but color and style make the mood. However, it's not the same mood for all women. More than 1,000 Cornell university coeds were questioned about clothes in relation to human behavior. Here are some of their answers. "Any shade of red or yellow makes me feel more alive," said one student. For a few, however, vivid colors were too conspicuous for comfort. were too young. Many of the students felt sophisticated and grown-up in black and dark colors. dark colors. "I'm more sedate and reserved when I wear black, because I feel ladylike and refined," one remarked. Others said drab hues made them sad, dull or uninteresting. Some of the coeds found poise, confidence and serenity in slacks, tailored clothes, old or informal togs, wools and rough textures. All sorts of moods were produced by dressy full skirts, flowing lines and silken textures. Some sample comments were: "In tafteta or velvet I feel fragile and delicate . . . When I wear soft textures such as angora and silk I try to be especially gracious . . . My white net strapless formal makes me feel like a princess. . . . A few of the girls said dreary clothes made them uneasy and strained in their actions. Whether they favored fluffy attire or tailored suits, the coeds generally agreed that a sense of being well-dressed was the important thing. The woman who knows she is suitably and attractively dressed can forget her clothes and turn her attention to other things, they said. 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"Coke" is a registered trade-mark. © 1951, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY montana mountain cooler Classified Advertising Phone K.U.376 Classified Advertising Rates One day Three days 25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00 Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c Flve days FOR SALE Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted understanding that the bill will be paid pro- grammed during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Uni- versity office for service. Journal bldg., not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. 25 FOOT 1947 trailer house in good condition, semi-permanently located, ready for immediate occupancy. See afternoons at 929 Conn. 21 1937 PLYMOUTH coupe, radio, heater. 1938 PLYMOUTH coupe, transportation 1940 Bill Hewitt, 144 Temp. 1951 CHEVROLET. 2-door green Fleetline model. Excellent condition. Must sell car. Make an offer. Call 3441J after 4 p.m. 21 A. S.F.C.—Wouldn't you like to receive a t-shirt for Christmas? Why not give you shirt you would like to receive? Reveals lands Books Stores, 1401 Ohio and 1237 Oread. RONSON LIGHTERS—The perfect gift for all smokers. We still have a large stock to choose from. Rowlands Book Stores, 1401 Ohio and 1237 Dearborn WE STILL HAVE attractive gifts for all Sportsmen. 1401 Ohio and 1237 Ordew. 20 Boines. YELLOW SCRATCH pads. We still have plenty at 20e a pad. Rowlands Book Stores, 140l Ohio, and 1237 Eread. 20e MONOGRAMMED napkins and matches make the gift more personal. We will give 24 hour service. Rowlands Book Stores, 1401 Ohio street and 1237 Oread. KANSAS Sweat Shirts, sizes from 4 to 44. Tee shirts from 1 to 44. Also cardigan jackets. Rowlands Book Stores, 1401 Ohio and 1237 Oread. 20 CHRISTMAS CARDS- It's not too late to have your cards personalized. One day service. Rowlands Book Stores, 1401 Ohio street and 1237 Eard. 20 BOOK-EASE IS THE collapsible book holder. Use it on a desk, in bed, anywhere. Put the pages from the in place. Now, only 98c at the University Union Book Store. 21 FINE ART REPRODUCTIONS! We now have a wide selection of reproductions of famous paintings in full color. Student Union Book Store. 21 GIFT IDEAS FOR CHRISTMAS! Give a magazine subscription for the ideal Christmas Gift. We take subscriptions and magazines. Student Union Book Store. CHEMISTRY MAJORS! We now have in stock three work study aids he has toward better grades. "How to Solve Problems in General Chemistry" by Babor. "How to Solve Problems in Qualitative Analysis" by Babor, and "How to Solve Problems in Intensive Literacy" by Arenson. See them at your Student Union Book Store. 2) TRANSPORTATION SEVERAL RIDERS go toward Utah. leaving Dec. 21, via route 30. See Jack Patton, 1825 Ls., or phone 3-271-L4, between 5 and 6 p.m. 21 AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether on behalf of a friend or Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Service, 1015 Mass. tf Ask us about family rates, sky coach and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book passage no. 1825-300. Call Miss Glesseman at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30- FOR RENT Page 7 SMALL HOUSE: living-bedroom, modern kitchen and bath. Furnished, suitable for young children. Couple, very comfortable. $45 cover. Write the Daily Kansan, DREED 12.5. RENTAL TYPEWRITERS. Both new and used, portables for $1.00 per week or $3.50 per week. Perfect to better, neat papers. Come in and try one at the Student Union Book Store. ROOMS FOR 3 men. No other roomers. Come or phone 3389, Gilkerson's Cafe 7 a.m. to 2:15 p.m. or 17834 at 942 Miss. 2:30 p.m. to 12 midnight. 21 BUSINESS SERVICE TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses, prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs. Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. TYING of all kinds done promptly and carried out by Christmas rates. Cs. Mrs. Merritt, KU 296. 21 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports and miscellaneous. Mrs. Mason, Apt. 4, upstairs. Ph. 2775J after 4 p.m. TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these typing experience. Mrs. Shields, 1290 Ohio. Pt. 161 RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ments and are sure assuring fast, efficient services. Boundary Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. tf STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. tt TYPING: Experience in theses term-papers, miscellaneous typing, and sten-cil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1852W, 1915 Tennessee. JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet store, but you buy one, one-stop pet shop that is interesting for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and PetShop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf GRYSTAL CHAEL serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malts, home-made pies and air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. to midnight. Crystal Chael, 690 Tt. BLUE PARKER 21 with silver cap. Sun- phone: 234-780-5670. Phone: 215-589- 5670. Sam Sebesta, 1234 Oreda. LOST WILL THE PERSON who took by mistake, my overcoat and scarf from the check room in the Student Union, Fri. March 18, 2014, please call MARIE DELmonico-1879. 1-3-52 LOST! Grey top coat at Dine-A-Mite Saturday night. I have wrong coat and want to trade for mine! Earl Merriman. Phone 84. 20 WILL WHOEVER found my bilfold please return it? The money is desperate and at least mail back bilfold and papers. H. Lorena Barlow, 1644 University Drive HELP WANTED WANTED: Part time receptionist. Hours working. Box 2 Day Karsan office. 1-3-52 MISCELLANEOUS ALLY=If you won't listen to me play you'll use your box and you'll understand. Fred. FREE GIFT WRAPPING on all gifts purchased from us. We will also be glad to wrap for mailing. Rowlands Book Stores. 20 February Graduates To Hold Christmas Party Tonight Senior class committee chairmen will be hosts this evening at a Christmas party for seniors who will graduate in February. The party will begin at 7:30 p.m. at the Delta Upsilon fraternity house. Seniors are asked to bring a gift, costing not more than 25 cents, to be put in the grab bag. The University of Michigan was the first state university. TWO TICKETS TO BROADWAY Color by TECHNICOLOR TONY JANEI GEOPHA MARTIN LEIGH DEHAVEN Matinee 2:30-Eve.7 and 9 Movietone News HELD OVER Thru Thursday Starts Friday "THE TAREAT" Granada PHONE 946 Wednesday, Dec. 19. 1951 Japanese-Built Railroads Help UN Cause In Korea University Daily Kansan Washington, D. C.-On the railroad that went to war in Korea, foxholes are the whistle stops and the fighting front is a freight yard, the National Geographic society reports Japanese military engineers, in the years before World War II, built one of the Far East's finest rail networks in Korea. In many ways it was better than Japan's own narrow-gauge system. Track and equipment in Korea are standard gauge, built to match the Manchurian railways. In the dark days of the Pusan foothold, an entire division was picked up and moved by train, 100 miles in less than 24 hours, to meet a Communist spearhead. Many another time rail transportation has spelled the difference between success and failure of United Nations operations. Railways have been used tactically to an extent not seen since the American Civil war. They have also carried 95 per cent of the U. N. supply load in some areas. Several dozen new diesel-electric locomotives have been shipped to Korea recently, the U. S. Army Transportation corps has disclosed. Unheralded in dispatches, they will be weapons as crucial as the grazing trainloads of tanks, guns, supplies, and troops hauled north thru the battered Korean countryside. Prior to the opening of hostilities in 1950 there were about 3,500 miles of standard-gauge lines and some 400 miles of narrow-gauge branches throughout Korea. But the Iron Curtain across the 38th parallel had already chopped the system in two. In South Korea, an area about the size of the state of Indiana, there were 2,730 miles of track, requiring 239 tunnels and 1,724 bridges. In the short span of 17 months, many parts of this network have Union Adds New Concessions Truck A new truck has been received by the department of concessions, L. E. Woolley, director of the Union, said The truck will be used to handle activities of the department at football games and other athletic events in the stadium. It will also be used to service coin-operated vending machines the department has on the campus. Food and refreshments from the catering service will be delivered by the truck. A snack troop service may be added later, to serve groups of students at intramural events, baseball games and the like, Mr. Woolley said. The department of concessions was organized the past spring. Kevin Remick is the manager. NOW Thru Tomorrow VIRGIL THOMSON COMPOSER AND CRITIC SAYS IN THE NEW YORK HALDR TIBUWE THE NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE "A historical document . . a first class execution of the decade. This is what Verdi's 'Rigoloetto' looks like when performed by the best contemporary artists." Shows 7:00 & 9:00 p.m. Tito GOBBI IN RIGOLETTO Features at: 7:15-9:15 p.m. Doors Open 6:45 p.m. New NEW PATEE PHONE 321 Continuous Shows Sat-Sun. been wrecked and rebuilt several times. Eattered rolling stock has been patched up by one part repair facilities and two parts ingenuity. The small Korean steam locomotives often did their jobs with bullet holes in their boilers plugged with wooden pegs. Members of the U. S. Third Transportation Military Railway service, who have supervised U.N. rail operations since the early days of the war, often hold the throttle in one hand and a gun in the other. Trains have been pushed through guerrilla-held country with sand-bagged gondola cars mounted with machine guns on the front and rear. Locomotives and ammunition-loaded cars have been snatched from beneath the noses of the Communists as the enemy advanced on burning yards and roundhouses. Head of track has stayed close behind the front lines. Today the main line ends at the demolished Han river bridge just above Munsan, advanced base of U. N, peace negotiators. Here, on top of the hottest spot in the world, newswise, a 10-car train is parked as the press headquarters for news correspondents covering the war and the current truce talks at Panmunjom. IFPC To Give Honors Cup Fraternity pledge classes have a new incentive to make good grades. The Inter-Fraternity Pledge council gave rules Monday concerning the awarding of a large scholarship trophy recently purchased. The pledge class with the highest scholarship average for this fall semester will be awarded a plaque which it may keep, and the trophy for temporary possession. The cup will be awarded each semester to the winning house. All house pledge class grades are to be turned in to the IFPC soon after finals. Burglar Welcomes Police Fort Worth, Texas— (U.P.)—Even the police were welcomed by this burglar. He was trapped for seven hours in a ventilator shaft of a cafe when he tried to escape before officers arrived. Comfort Convenience! JAY HARPER NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS LAST TIMES TONITE LAST TIMES TONIGHT 7:00 - 9:00 Ray Milland Gene Tierney "CLOSE TO MY HEART" VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD TONITE-THURSDAY Open 6:45 Show Starts 7:00 Nancy Coleman Margaret Lindsey Philip Reed "HER SISTER'S SECRET" —And— Brenda Joyce Donald Woods "STEPCHILD" —ADM.— 14c - 45c County Groups To Publicize KU In High Schools The various county clubs in the organization may purchase the Jayhawker yearbook to send to high schools for $1.50. The rest of the money is contributed by the University and Statewide Activities fund. County chairman of the Statewide organization completed arrangements for the sending of the Jayhawker yearbook, distribution and maintenance of bulletin boards, and the showing of publicity movies to high schools throughout the state in meetings held Monday in the Union Bulletin boards, depicting life at the University, will be distributed by the county clubs and will follow an established route throughout the state in reaching the various high schools. The boards will remain at each high school about two weeks. The county clubs will also show the movies, "Beyond The Towers, and "Your University." Immorality Shakes Faith, Murphy Says Young America's faith is being shaken by the "sad, disgusting spectacle" of immorality in government, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy told the Wichita Rotary club Monday. "We could teach American history eight hours a day," he said. "and we could put an American flag in every schoolroom in the country. But I am telling you that all that education can be set aside by one act of immorality such as we see in the highest forms of government today." SEASON'S Greetings FREE MOVIES SANTA From Your Hometown Merchants Get your tickets from These Firms Adelane's Lawrence National Bank Pickens City Service Logan Moore Lumber Norman Edmonds Grocery Beamans Radio-TV Rhodes Heating & Roofing Andrews Skelly Service Knapps Log Cabin Market Rankin Drug Store Gravitts Goodyear Guntert Plumbing-Wiring Union Cab 2-800 Lawrence Sanitary Dairy Turner Produce Rapid Transit Norris Bros. Wiley's Market FREE SHOW For Shoppers Thurs.-Fri. Dec. 20-21 At Your Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW YORK CUSTOMER CHAIRS Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 19, 1951 News Roundup Atrocity Confirmation Would Make UN Chief Mad Munsan, Korea—(U.P.)—The Chief United Nations armistice negotiator said today that he does not know what the Allies will do if they confirm that the Communists have murdered their war prisoners—"But I do know what we would like to do." Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy, USN, the man in charge of the UN team, accused the Communists of stalling throughout the armistice negotiations and of trying to whittle down the UN forces in Korea by refusing to agree to troop rotation during an armistice. Vishinsky Wants U.S. Fliers Tried Paris—(U.P.)—Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Y. Vishinsky said today he hopes that four American fliers held by Communist Hungary will be put on trial as spies. Vishinsky charged in the United Nations that the group's military transport plane, which Soviet fliers forced down in Hungary a month ago, was on an espionage mission. He scoffed at the United States explanation that the plane, bound from Munich, Germany, to Belgrade, Yugoslavia, lost its way and strayed over Hungary accidentally. Suspect Reds List Hero For Purpose Munsan, Korea—(U.P.)—UN officials said today they still were not entirely convinced Maj. Gen. William F. Dean is a Communist prisoner although his name was listed on a Communist prisoner report. The mystery over Dean, hero of Taejon, was caused by the Communist failure to report his Army serial number on the POW list. The Allies suspect the Communists listed Dean—the most famous American fighting man to come out of the Korean war—for pure bargaining purposes. Campaign By HST Against Corruption Washington—(U.P.)—President Truman's endorsement of an anti-influence peddling directive laid down by a top federal agency appeared today to be the first step in his campaign to rid the government of corruption. Mr. Truman's approval of the policy announced by administrator Raymond M. Foley of the Housing and Home Finance agency amounted to a virtual order to all government agencies to prohibit employees from receiving gifts or favors from businessmen and other outsiders. Foley ordered all employees of his agency not to accept from any person or organization "any favor, gift, unusual loan or discount gratuitous service, entertainment or other things of value." UN Rebuffs Russia On Major Issues Paris—(U.P)—The United Nations rebuffed Russia today on two major East-West issues-Germany and disarmament. In quick succession: 1. The special political committee voted 40 to 9 with 9 abstentions in favor of a western proposal to send a five-nation commission to all parts of Germany to see if it were possible to hold free elections. 2. The main political committee voted 44 to five with 10 abstentions to approve a western plan for an arms count and eventual reduction. The special committee also voted to set up the five man commission for Germany by a vote of 45 to 6 with eight abstentions. Middle Eastern Nations Are Protected Washington—(U.P.)—The United States, Britain, France and Turkey today accused Russia of trying to frighten Middle Eastern countries against joining the proposed Middle Eastern defense command. The charge was made in parallel notes delivered to the Soviet foreign office. The four western Allies unanimously rejected earlier Russian complaints that the proposed command would seek to cloak aggressive military strategy against the Soviet Union. The notes seized a Soviet charge that the four countries were interfering in the internal affairs of Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Israel and Trans-Jordan, and tossed it back at the Russians. The Soviets were told that their note of protest Nov. 24 amounted to "threats" and "pressures" against Middle Eastern countries. Dispute In Steel Sets Stage For Lewis Washington—(U.P.)The powerful figure of John L. Lewis hovered over the steel wage talks today as government mediators moved to avert a defense-crippling strike in the steel industry. Lewis, always adept at moving suddenly into a dramatic situation, scheduled a second session of his United Mine Workers policy committee and promised to announce some "conclusions." Russians Execute Alleged U.S. Spies London—(U.P.)—Moscow radio said today two United States trained and equipped Russian spies parachuted into Southwest Russia from an American plane last August and have been executed. The Soviet broadcast said the two Russian Nationals confessed that they had been recruited in an American zone displaced persons camp in Germany to carry out espionage, wrecking and terroristic activities in the Soviet Union in behalf of the U.S. The two men were identified as A. I. Osmanov and F. K. Sarantsav. Cafeteria Checkers Are Speedy, Seldom Wrong If you eat at the Union cafeteria you've probably noticed the speed with which the lady checkers add up your bill. By YUJIRO MAEDA speed with when they try "it it takes her only two or Usually it takes her only two or three seconds to glance into your plate and hand you a bill. Even when your plate is packed with a complex combination of quite a few different food items, it seldom happens that she needs more than five seconds. At present, Shirley Preston, education senior, and Phyllis Guthrie, business sophomore, are working as checkers together with Mrs. Bernice Winter. When Mrs. Winter is off duty, one of the two counts the bills, while the other works as cashier. The trio has been recently reinforced by Roberta Link, finance freshman, who, however, works only as cashier. At each mealtime, some 600 to 650 students rush to the cafeteria. All of the three checkers are so skillful, however, that miscalculation seldom takes place. A "maximum" of five or six students ask them to re-count their bills at each mealtime. Miss Gusthie said. "It all comes from practice," smiled Miss Guthrie, when asked how she became so skilled in her job. This, however, does not necessarily mean that the checkers commit so many errors. "We make few mistakes," Miss Guthrie said. She said, however, that she likes to have students come to her to correct the bills whenever they suspect any mistake on her part. NE Kansas Mapped By Geological Survey Twenty topographic m a p s of northeastern Kansas areas have been issued within the past 2 years in connection with the State and Federal Geological Survey's co-operative mapping program. The Topeka quadrangle, Shawnea county, recently has become available according to the State Geological Survey at the University. The Topeka map covers, at a scale of approximately 2% inches to the mile, about 60 square miles of surface which includes the city proper (shaded pale red) and vicinity. The contour interval is 10 feet. Much of the information on the map is presented in color—brown for the contour lines, blue for streams and other bodies of water, green for wooded areas, and red for township, range, and section numbers and for highways. Roads, railroads, benchmark and sea elevation data, buildings, and other information are indicated in black. Four KU Teachers Attend Entomologist's Conference Dr. C. D. Michener, professor of entomology, Dr. Robert E. Beer, assistant professor of entomology and Fred Truxal, and Richard Lyness, assistant instructors of biology, have returned from Cincinnati where last week they attended meetings of the Entomological Society of America and the American Association of Economic Entomologists. He also attended a special conference called by the National Research council, at the request of the armed forces, to consider the resistance of insects to poisons. The object was to determine lines of research that should be followed in investigations of resistance to insectides. Dr. Micheener was chairman of the session on insect taxonomy and presented a paper on the immature stages of bees. Dr. Michener reported on work being done at KU on this subject by Robert Sokal and Richard Lyness. The American Societies of mechanical and tool engineers will hold a joint meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Pine room of the Union. ASME And ASTE To Hear Kansas City Engineer Middleboro, Mass.—(U.P.) —M i s s Olive L. Bryant found a tax bill sent to her great grandfather in 1813. He was charged $3.84 for 60 acres of land, with buildings. Al Conn, manager-director of the La Salle Engineering corporation, Kansas City division, will speak. A Little Went A Long Way The majority of these "protesters" fear they are being overcharged, she mentioned, but there are cases in which students ask for re-counting because their bills are smaller than they expected. "I think students are pretty honest," she commented. An interesting thing, Miss Guthrie remarked, is to see a student, when shown the bill, return part of the food because it is more than his wallet can afford. Counting hundreds of bills every day is of course a tough job. "Mental strain" makes her tired, she said. "However it is interesting to be seated and meet students going through, whom I couldn't meet otherwise." Asked if she likes mathematics, the beautiful checker nodded, but added that there are other things she likes better. One of them, she said, is sewing. Nativity Play To Be Tonight "Die Heilige Nacht," a 16th century German Nativity play, will be presented by the German and speech departments at 8 p.m. today in the Little theater in Green hall. Thomas Shay, instructor in speech, will direct the play. In addition to the play there will be a musical program including: "Movement from Trio in G minor" (Brahms) played by Martha Heck, pianist; Donald Stewart, violinist; and Robert Stewart, cellist. "Virgin's Slumber Song" (Reger) will be sung by Jeanne Aldridge, graduate student. The Lawrence Junior High German club will sing two German Christmas carols. A German choir and a Russian choir made up of University students will take part in the program. There will be no admission charge. Rau Chosen To Head Women's Rifle Club Jappy Rau, College senior, has been elected president of the Women's Rifle club. Other officers are: Donna Rigdon, vice-president; Martha Combs, executive officer and Constance Hyre, secretary-treasurer. About 30 women belong to the club, which recently joined the National Rifle association. the club, coached by Master Sgt. Harold Swartwood and sponsored by the Air Force, is now entered in a program of postal matches with colleges throughout the nation. The club will also hold shoulder-to-shoulder, sitting, kneeling and off-hand matches among the individual members of the club. What's In A Name? Milford, Conn.—(U.P.)An automobile that left the highway and top-tailed over an embankment was owned by the New Milford Auto Wrecking Co. SHEAFFER'S TM Sheaffer's TM* STATESMAN Pen, $10.00; Pencil, $5.00 LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE 735 Mass. Phone 548 gleams as it cleans cleans as it gleams NEW Wildroot LIQUID CREAM SHAMPOO More than just a liquid, more than just a cream .. new Wildroot Liquid Cream Shampoo is a combination of the best of both. Even in the hardest water Wildroot Shampoo washes hair gleaming clean, manageable, curl-inviting without robbing hair of its natural oils. Soapless Sussy...Lanolin Lovely! NEW Wildavot LIQUID CREAM Shampoo LAVENDER Wildavot LIQUID CREAM Shampoo THREE SIZES: 29 59 98 P. S. To keep hair neat between shampoos use Lady Wildroot Cream Hair Dressing UNIVERSITY DAILY 49th Year No. 67 Thursday, Dec. 20, 1951 LAWRENCE, KANSAS hansan 1. The term "referendum" is often used to refer to a legislative or constitutional vote by members of a political party or group. 2. The term "proclamation" is often used to refer to a formal declaration made by a government or official. 3. The term "proclamation" is often used to refer to a formal announcement made by a government or official. Munns Elected Memorial Head Clarence Munns of Topeka has been re-elected president of the University Memorial Corporation board. James Logan, College senior and president of the All Student Council, has been elected third vicepresident. Other officers re-elected include L. C. Woodruff, dean of men, first vice-president; Leonard Axe, dean of the School of Business, second vice-president; Karl Klooz, bursar, treasurer; and Mr. Ellsworth, secretary. "It is traditional that the president of the Student Council become third vice-president of the board," Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the Alumni association, said. Changes in the board of directors of the Union include Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, and Miss Kathleen O'Donnell, instructor of math. The three student ex-officio members of the board include Paul Arrowwood, president of Student Union activities; Christine Johnson, secretary of the All Student Council, and Logan. Ice Covers Roads For 200 Miles Students should drive with extreme caution on their way home today and Friday, Joe Skillman, campus police chief, and the Douglas county sheriff's office warned today. A solid sheet of ice covers the highways today in a 200 mile area around Lawrence. Roads are dangerous, Chief Skillman said as far north as St. Joseph, as far east as St. Louis, as far west as the Colorado line and as far south as the Oklahoma border. If at all possible trips home should be delayed until conditions improve, Chief Skillman said. Students who must leave the campus while the roads are still icy are urged to equip their cars with chains. WEATHER Mostly cloudy tonight and Friday, colder east and south central tonight with cold wave southeast and extreme east. Temperatures to 10 below zero in northwest and zero to 5 below east and south by morning moderating west and north central Friday afternoon. Strong north to northwest winds 25-35 miles an hour this afternoon. Christmas Jayhawker To Be Out Friday The Christmas issue of the 1952 Jayhawker, will be distributed from 8 a.m. to noon Friday at the Union and the information booth. This will be the second of four issues which make up the annual. It will feature organized house pictures; a student opinion poll as to who will be U.S. president in '52; a full-page picture of the 1951 Homecoming queen; big wheels on campus; "Gridiron Reports," by Orval Swander, and a 4-page news roundup. Issues will be given only upon presentation of the Jayhawker receipt card. Subscriptions may still be purchased for $5.25 at the Jayhawker office, Union building. Geologist Doing Research Here Research work for the "Treatise of Invertebrate Paleontology" is being conducted by Dr. Curt Teichert, professor of geology at the University of Melbourne in Australia, who has temporarily joined the department of geology at the University as research associate. Dr. Teichert is an international authority in certain fields of paleontology. His treatise is expected to be highly authoritative in its field. The treatise is being compiled under the editorship of Dr. Raymond C. Moore, professor of geology here. The Geological Society of America is sponsoring the work by a $250,000 grant. Leading international paleontologists are contributing to the Dr. Robert Dreyer, chairman of the geology department, said Dr. Teichert would deliver a series of lectures here March 10-20 and will also give lectures at several other universities in the country before his departure for Australia in early May. Christmas carols will be sung by YWCA and YMCA members tonight on the campus and at several places in Lawrence. YWCA And YMCA To Sing Christmas Carols Tonight The group will meet at 7:30 p.m. at Henley house, 1236 Oread street. Anyone who wishes to come is invited. Transportation will be provided. Virginia Ann Ireland, College senior, and Raymond Thorsteinson, graduate student, are the 1951 winners of the Erasmus Haworth awards. 2 Students Win Haworth Awards The winners were announced Wednesday by Robert M. Dreyer, professor of geology at a joint meeting of the Geology club and the American Institute of Mining Engineers. Thorsteinson a Canadian, received his bachelor of science degree from the University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Sask., and his master of science degree from Toronto university. The Haworth awards are annually presented to the outstanding senior, graduate and distinguished alumni in the field of geology and related subjects. Thorsteinson is at the present time a candidate for a doctorate in geology at the University. Miss Ireland is the daughter of H. A. Ireland, professor of geology. She is secretary of the Geology club and was a candidate for Kansas Relays queen the past spring. Both were chosen on the basis of activity, scholastic achievement and general proficiency in geology. Carmon Studies Fiscal Operations A study of the budget and fiscal operations of the state of Kentucky is now being made for aid in reorganization of Kansas governmental operations, by Raymond Carmon administrative consultant of the KU department of government research. Mr.Carmon left for Frankfurt, Ky., last weekend. Final results of the studies will be turned over to the governor's commission for aid in the fiscal reorganization and will then be submitted to the next meeting of the state legislature for action. Three other Kansans accompanies Mr. Carmon on the trip: Roy Shapiro, assistant director of the Kansas division of administration: Lyle Kile, assistant director of the legislative council's research department, and Carl Nordstrom, research director of the Kansas Chamber of Commerce. Mr. Carmon is scheduled to return to the University this weekend Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks. Campus Parties Ask ASC Reorganization A proposal for the reorganization of the All Student Council was submitted to the Council by members of FACTS and Pachacamac, campus political parties, at a meeting Wednesday evening. By JACKIE JONES The play, directed by Thomas Shay, instructor in speech, was smoothly presented with the players skillfully acting their parts. This plan, if approved, would at- tempt to shift campus politics away from the present Greek-Independent lines. One of the major changes would remove voting districts from the schools of the University to voting by residence. The parking committee announced that traffic which now flows from east to west in the lane behind Strong and Bailey Chem. laboratory will be reversed. It recommended that the red paint on curbs in restricted areas be changed to yellow. Red city parking tickets will be issued now for parking violations in restricted areas. No action has been taken, but committees within the ASC have been appointed to study the various sections of the present Council laws and make recommendations. 200 Persons See Christmas Play The German and speech departments successfully reproduced the spirit of a 16th century German Nativity play in their production of "Die Heilige Nacht," Wednesday before about 200 persons in the Little theater in Green hall. Donna McCosh, education senior, moved that the ASC recommend In other action, Donald Dirks, chairman of the election committee announced that April 2 has been set for the next general student election. Outstanding scenes in the play were the dictatorial innkeeper telling Mary and Joseph they had to stay in the stable, and the battle between the poor shepherd and the devil ending with Lucifer escaping but without his tail. The background music by the German choir during the performance helped bring out the spirit of the play. The Council appropriated $200 to the YMCA and $10 to the Socialist Study club. Quill Club Names Dickinson President William Dickinson, College junior, was elected president of the Quill club, student writers' organization, at a club meeting Wednesday night. Other officers elected were: Sam Sebesta, education junior, vicepresident; Kay Peters, fine arts senior, secretary-treasurer; Wayne Knowles, College sophomore, assistant secretary, and Ada Storer, fine arts junior, publicity director. that no organizations or student groups hold any meetings during the last two weeks before final examinations. The Council approved, giving support to a request by Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women. The Council also approved the establishment of a student labor committee. This group will serve as a complaint board for students whenever they wish to present a complaint against working conditions or wages. New members sworn into the Council are; Joyce Wellborn, freshman representative, Jacqueline Bayliss, Negro Student association, and Wilbur Goodseal, Co-op representative. Members absent were: Arthur Kaaz, Dave Sailer and Dean Werries. County Groups Plan For Xmas A variety of programs over the Christmas vacation will be held by the Statewide Activities organization in Ford, Mitchell, Finney, McPherson, Morris, Norton and Brown counties. The Brown county club will have a dance Thursday, Dec. 27, at the Hiawatha Country club in Hiawatha. High school seniors and KU alumni from 10 high schools in Brown county are invited, William Smith, chairman of the club, said. KU movies will be shown. The Ford county club will give a dance, tentatively scheduled for Friday, Dec. 28. Seniors and KU alumni from Dodge City, Ford, Bucklin and Spearville will be invited. A Mitchell county club dance will be given Friday, Dec. 28, for seniors and KU alumni from St. John, Simpson, Glen Elder, Cawker City and Beloit. Other county clubs holding Christmas vacation activities are Norton, McPherson , Finney and Morris. They will show high school seniors in their respective counties movies of KU life and activities. Movies available to the county clubs at present are "Beyond the Towers" and "Your University." Condition Good After Fall Petty Soden, College sophomore, slipped on the icy steps of Fraser hall at 9 this morning. She was taken to Watkins hospital where authorities report she suffered a mild concussion and bruises. Her condition is not serious, hospital attendants said. TREASURE TROPHY ORBON TICE, JAYHAWKER OFFENSIVE LEFT END, (center) was presented the Ormand Beach trophy at the Downtown Quarterback football banquet Wednesday night. He was selected by the team as the most outstanding senior football player. A. C. Lonborg, KU's director of athletics, ((right) is shown making the presentation as J. V. Sikes, head football coach, (left), looks on. Photo by Gadliando-Clarkson. Foreign Students Featured In January Reader's Digest Eight University foreign students are featured in an article "The Way We Look to Them," by W. L. White, a student in 1918-20, which appears in the January issue of Reader's Digest. The article is a condensation of a piece which originally appeared in the United Nations World magazine earlier this year. White visited schools throughout the United States last spring gathering information for the article. He spent three days interviewing students here. Since that time several of the students mentioned have returned home. Those named in the article who are still in the University are: Eaager Shirazi, engineering senior, India; Erwin David, engineering senior, Holland, and Virginie Baroudjian, graduate student, Egypt. The students mentioned who have returned home are: Wolf Watnitz, Germany; Soey Bong, Indonesia; Richard Hubner wan Wyngarden, Holland; Edith Hagmeier, Germany, and Gisela Poch, Germany. In the article the foreign students expressed their opinions of American life and colleges. As a whole they were pleased with the democratic processes. They were particularly impressed with the dignity of labor. However, they said the American people, particularly college students, are immature and mentally lazy. The article ended with stress being placed on the foreign students being impressed by the many displays of kindness by the American people. Western Civ Opens Exam Registration Students planning to take the Western Civilization examination must register their intention to do so at the Western civilization office today and Friday. The examination will be given from 1:30 to 5:15 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 5. The place of examination will be assigned at the time of registration. The admittance card, received at the home of registration must be presented at the exam. --- Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 20, 1951 Daily Kansan Editorials We Have Slept Too Long, Much Too Long In his recent book, "While You Slept," John T. Flynn blames poor American leadership for causing the present-day disasters in China and Korea. The book is the story of how leftwingers in the U.S. influenced the press and persuaded our leaders "to support the Communist plan to turn China and Korea over to the Soviet." Falling along the same lines as Sen. Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin, Flynn lists many of our present leaders among the Reds and pinks who assisted the Kremlin in the Far East by poor and frequently mistaken decisions. He cites the failure of the U.S. to furnish aid to Chiang Kai-Shek as the first serious mistake. Flynn is correct in pointing out the lack of leadership after Roosevelt's death. The ship was sailing without a navigator. But there is reason for disagreement in at least part of what he says. In advocating our early support of Nationalist China, he fails to remember that Chiang's government was a corrupt dietatorship which opposed the basic principles Americans uphold. The American Friends Service committee offered a plausible solution several years ago, called "The Quaker Proposals for Peace." In the plan, reasons were given to show how it was then possible for the two opposing ideologies to co-exist peacefully in the world. It was advised, as an early step, that the U.S. recognize the Communist government of China, since there was no actual political connection with Russia at that time. Their point was to widen the gap between the Soviet Union and Communist China by helping the Chinese set up a better standard of living, including higher education, which would eventually lead to a democratic form of government. The U.S. did not recognize Communist China and, as a result, may have lost China's friendship for many centuries. Instead, America furnished only a smattering of aid to Chiang. The word "Communism" became treason in America, for it came to mean the opposite of democracy. Actually, in China the word Communism meant food and clothing for millions of hungry people, 90 per cent of whom were farmers. Competition meant very little to those people. They wanted to be fed and clothed, something that was not being provided under Chiang. And how could democracy hope to exist in China on such a low rate of public participation, when only 10 per cent of the people can read or write? Yet the U.S. policy was to defend the government of a corrupt dictator with the goal of making the nation "free." Today the chance to assist China is gone. Close Chinese-Russian tieups have been made as a defense against America's propaganda attacks, as Flynn said. Hundreds of thousands of Western sympathizers have been killed by Red leaders in China. The barrier between the U.S. and Russia has now moved to the China coast. If the Kremlin's ultimate purpose is to eliminate democracy from the earth, the U.S. will have to brace itself against the attack. Wouldn't it have been much better to have China on our side? Instead, if total war is avoided for 10 more years, it will be a fierce struggle to win back China to our point of view. By then there will be few Western sympathizers left in China, for even the youth will have been disciplined. Either they support the cause or die. Flynn was right about our leaders following W.W. II. They were extremely short-sighted. By their failure to see the tremendous influence their decisions would have on world progress, the cause of freedom has lost one more important friend. And there seems to be no return. We have slept too long, much too long. —Jim Powers. Should U.S. Business Finance Education? Irving Olds, chairman of the board of U.S. Steel corporation, gained the rapt attention of a Yale university audience last month by proposing that U.S.business go to the financial rescue of independent education. Olds was seconding a proposal made some months ago by Alfred P. Sloan, chairman of the board of General Motors. For a number of well-known reasons, including higher costs and dwindling income from investments, more than half of the country's 900 privately-endowed colleges and universities are operating in the red; some 200 are afraid of going under. Both men argue that free enterprise has a big stake in free universities. Said Olds, in part: "Every American business has a direct obligation to support the free, independent, privately-endowed colleges and universities of this country to the limit of its financial ability and legal authority. And unless it recognizes and meets this obligation, I do not believe it is properly protecting the long-range interests of its stockholders, its employees and its customers. "Every well-managed corporation, of course, Daily Kansan News Room Student Newspaper of the Adv. Room K.U. 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS K.U. 376 Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave. New York City. EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-In-Chief... Alan Marshall Editorial Association... Anne Snyder EDITORIAL STAFF NEWS STAFF Managing Editor Charles Price Assistant Mangating Editors Nancy Anderson Benjamin Holman, Lee Shepeard, Ellsworth Zahm City Editor Sports Editor Telegraph Editor Society Editor Martha Murray Victor J. Daniell Benjamin Holman, Lee Sheppeard, ELI BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager...Bob Sydney Advertising Manager...Dorothy Hedrick Assistant Adv. Manager... Dick Hale National Adv. Manager... Bill Tugger Circulation Manager...Elaine Blaylock Promotion Manager...Ted Barbera Business Adviser...R. W. Doores As Ruml and Geiger see it, high taxes have actually imposed an obligation on corporations to make such contributions. They point out how corporations, taking advantage of the five per cent deductions allowed for charity, can provide financial support at bargain rates. must preserve, improve, and develop the major sources of its raw materials; but if it is necessary for us to spend millions of dollars to benefit the ore which goes into our blast furnaces and to process the coal which goes into our coke ovens—then why is it not equally our business to develop and improve the quality of the greatest natural resources of all—the human mind? "I am not suggesting that we tailor our scholastic pattern to the self-serving specifications of any individual or any group, industrial or political. We might as well accept government subsidy and control and be done with it." "But I am suggesting that freedom of education and freedom of enterprise are part and parcel of the same thing—that they are inseparable—and that neither can survive without the other." Businessmen who agree with Irving Olds can read a pamphlet, "The Five Percent," prepared by Beardsley Ruml and Theodore Geiger for the National Planning association. They attack the same problem from another angle. If the only well-known colleges got donations, smaller colleges might end up worse off than ever. A study of gifts from all sources over the past 30 years shows that five universities (Yale, Harvard, Chicago, Northwestern and Columbia) got 46 per cent of total donations. There was the legal question that Olds himself raised. Could corporations spend stockholders' money on a department of Egyptology, for instance? This was Olds' main point—that corporations should support the liberal arts and the humanities, that they should help underwrite the pure business of developing and improving the human mind. The complicated legal aspect of the question was something for corporation lawyers to take up. Meanwhile, harassed college presidents asked, "When do we start?"—The Minnesota Daily. the Man On Campus by Bibler COACH Bibler 1907 "Drink it—It's compounded by the greatest sports-minded scientists in the University. It'll make you grow big an tall!" Hurry Up To Blair House President Truman recently returned to Blair House after cutting his Key West vacation short. Speculation has since been running high as to just what his reasons were for the hurried action. Truman says that action, drastic and far reaching, are soon to be initiated to bring about a general housecleaning in the national administration. It's a man-sized job and long overdue. There is little doubt that conditions have been rotten in various sections of the justice, treasury and internal revenue departments. Recent investigations have shown various branches of these departments to be overflowing with graft and corruption. The big thing that remains to be seen is how much abuse of public confidence has spread to other branches of the administration. These exposures are relatively recent. The causes of the misuse of official powers can be traced back, however, to the point where "I'm from Missouri" was the password for getting the right doors opened in Washington. One thing for sure—if the present administration is to withstand the charges of graft and corruption and prove themselves innocent of the unsavory affairs now being revealed, it must start tossing out the bad apples, big and small, that have raised all the stink. William Stanfill. Since the time those words started opening doors the rot and corruption has been spreading in the present administration. Just how bad and how far it has spread remains to be seen. The investigating committees are still grinding away at what looks like a badly decayed tooth that should have been pulled long ago. And now, finally, the national administration, for the sake of it's own continuation, is belatedly turning on its own backers. The protective shield of official sanction has been lifted by the investigating committees and the public is being allowed to see what has been going on for so long. An All-American? So What!! Last season, Bill Gable of the University of Wisconsin received: (1.) a vote as the nation's Lineman of the Week, and (2.) a place among the outstanding early-season performers observed by scouts for a national magazine's All-American list. It takes more than a dunde cap to discourage All-American team-pickers, says the current issue of the magazine People Today, in a sports article titled "Our All-American Farce." Someone gently suggested that something must be wrong. Due to a pre-season injury, Gable didn't participated in a single Wisconsin play. Another All-American selector once conferred first-team honors on a fullback before it was pointed out that the kid was only a third-stringer on his own team. When Casper Whitney, New York sportswriter, and Walter Camp in-augurated it in 1899, the idea was at least sane, says the article. In a season, the experts could get a look at all the candidates because all that were worth seeing were confined to a small geographical area occupied by the Big Three (Yale, Harvard, Princeton). Today's selector can see no more than a small detachment of the nation's players at major schools, much less worry about those who annually emerge from obscure schools. Therefore he is reduced to the absurdity of trying to compare a player he's seen with others he's only heard about. Circulation and promotion departments are partly responsible for perpetuation of a custom that even most selectors now privately admit is so much hogwash, the writer says. 10.17.15 3:06:05 Mall subscription: $ a semester, $450 a year, (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans. During the University year except holidays and Sundays. University holidays and Sundays. Periods. Entered as second class matter. September 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. Thursday., Dec. 20, 1951 University Daily Kansan Page 3 102 HOSSEIN FATEMI, spokesman for Iran's prime minister, warns that his country will not stand for any political or economic pressure from any nation. He says that economically Iran is as well off as England. Phi Sigma Initiates 23 Twenty-three new members have been initiated into Kappa chapter of Phi Sigma, national biological society. Dr. David Paretsky, assistant professor of bacteriology, was initiated as a faculty member. Other new members taken into the chapter with their departments include: Department of bacteriology: Vernon D. Foitz, Keith R. Long, Stanley L. Silberg, Joan McCamish. Department of botany: Eugene B Wittleman, Russell C. Keeeler, John N Perdew, John R. Reany, George E. Reed. Department of anatomy: Leland Keller. Department of entomology: D. A. Crossley Jr., Clarence C. Hall Jr., Wallace E. LaBerge, Roger D. Price, Paul J. Spangler. Department of zoology: Joseph D. Breazeal, Robert Russell Jr., Frank Dolyak, Kenneth L. Fitch, Charles W. Hall, John L. Hawken and Thane S. Robinson. Find Assorted Hardware Inside English Turkey Marilborough, England—(U.P.) The butcher's knife skidded with a screech in a plump young turkey which was being cleaned for Christmas sale. From the bird the butcher extracted a padlock, a rusty key, a pair of broken seissors and several bolts. Throw Away NICOTINE Switch to MEDICO FILTER PIPES When filter turns brown—in Medicine 110 Filters Box of Pipes or Cigarette Holders—throw it away, with the nicotine, juices, flakes and tars it has trapped Insert fresh filter for cooler, cleaner, dryer, sweeter smoke. Imported Briar. NEW: MEDICO CREST—$3.00 Medica's Finest Rich Burgundy finish. MEDICO V.F.O. — $2.00 MEDICO MEDALIST—$1.50 Wide variety of styles and sizes. Write S. W. Frank & Co, N.Y. for Booklet 0 MEDICO CIGARETTE HOLDERS $1 BAYTOWN CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY FOOD SERVICE HOURS HAWK'S NEST CLOSE SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22 AT 1 P.M. OPEN THURSDAY, DECEMBER 27 AT NOON CLOSE TUESDAY, JANUARY 1 AT 1 P.M. During Student Volunteer Movement, HAWK'S NEST Will Close Each Evening At 7:00 p.m. OPEN THURSDAY, JANUARY 3 AT 7:30 A.M. REGULAR HAWK'S NEST HOURS AFTER JAN. 3 CAFETERIA Saturday, December 22 to Noon Thursday, December 27 BREAKFAST ... 7:30 to 8:30 LUNCH ... 11:30 to 12:30 DINNER ... 5:15 to 6:15 Christmas Day ONLY 11:30 to 1:30 (No Food Service on Christmas for Breakfast and Dinner) Beginning Thursday Night, December 28 Beginning Thursday Night, December 28 AND CONTINUING UNTIL NOON JANUARY 1, THE CAFETERIA IS OPEN TO STUDENT VOLUNTEER MOVEMENT ONLY . . . ALL OTHERS DESIRING FOOD SERVICE DURING THIS TIME CAN OBTAIN A FIXED MEAL AT A FIXED PRICE IN THE HAWK'S NEST AT THE FOLLOWING HOURS: BREAKFAST 7:30 to 8 — 35c LUNCH 12:30 to 1 — 65c DINNER 6 to 6:30 — 75c All food services in Union will be closed New Years Night Snack Bar in Hawk's Nest will be open to all between meals until 7:00 p.m. from Noon, December 27 to Noon January 1. FOOD SERVICE KANSAS MEMORIAL UNION Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 20, 1951 Ninety-Eight Players ToReceiveGridAwards Ninety-eight Kansas football players will receive letters and numerals for playing this season, according to an announcement by A. C. Lonborg, director of athletics. Varsity Lettermen Varsity letters will be awarded to 39, reserve letters will go to 14 and 45 freshmen numerals will be granted. All players must meet the minimum academic requirements of the department or school in which he is enrolled to receive the award. Hugh Armstrong, Jerry Bogue, Robert Brandeberry, Tom Brannan, Frank Cindrich, Hal Cleawinger, Joseph Fink, Galen Fiss, Merlin Gish, Robert Antlia, George Helm- stadter, Charles Hoag. Morris Kay, George Kennard, John Konek, Henry Laughlin, Paul Leoni, Joseph Lundy, William Marshall, George Mronkin, Don Mudloff, Orville Poppe, Jerry Robertson. Richard Rossman, Frank Sabatini, Carl Sandefur. William Schaake, David Schmidt, John Simons, Oliver Spencer, Chester Strehlow. Jerry Taylor, Orbon Tice, Archie Unruh, Duane Unruh, M. Dean Wells, Ronald White, Wint Winter, Warren Woody. Reserve Lettermen Reserve Letter Donald Aungst, Clarence Bender Donald Feller, John Griesser, Keith Jensen, Robert Mayer George Michale, C. T. Murphy, Robert McMullen, Marvin Rengel, Clay Roberts, Jack Rodgers, Rex Smith, Wayne Woolfold. Freshman Numeral Winners Hap Adams, John Anderson, Charles Bangs, Ray Bower, Don Bracelin, Charles Breninger, Bill Brown, George Carter, Ben Dalton, Roy Dupree, Don Endacott, George Fisher, Borg Forsyth. Don Garrett, Ben Graybill, Nick Donson, Jim Hardy, Ken Harper, Don Hess, Merle Hodges, Bob Hubbard, J. R. Johnston, Bill Karras, John Kassin, Bill Kelce, Marvin Kinnett, Dick Knowles, Dick Kulich Charles Lane, Jim Lee, Charles McDonald, Loren Martin, Jim Morris, Al Mulliken, Bill Puliam, Dean Cage Scores East South Columbia 47, Fordham 46 Pennsylvania 55, Pittsburgh 52 Princeton 54, Navy 45 Penn. Mil. Col. 110, Rufgers 70 Villanova 97, Mt. St. Mary's 64 L.L. 99. St. Peter's Col. 73 Midwest Maryland 51, Wash. & Lee 43 Florida 58, Tennessee 47 Catholic 55, Towson St. Tch. 50 Akron 86, Western Reserve 75 Cincinnati 71, WM. & Mary 61 Millinik 77, Ky. Wesleyan 62 Wash. (Seattle) 58, St. Louis 53 Geneva 76, Youngstown 60 Loras 58, St. Mary's (Minn.) 56 Western Michigan 73, Loyol. (Chicago) Washington (St. Louis) 67, Cente- 51 Southwest SMU 61, Nebraska 55 TCU 68, Texas Tech. 48 Oklahoma A&M 58, So. Cal. 47 Recreation More Perilous Chicago—(U.P.)-Play kills more of the nation's labor population than work does. W. Dean Keefer, director of safety for the Kemper insurance company, pointed out that 15,500 workers were killed and another 1,950,000 injured in accidents on the job last year. Away from work, the toll was 32,000 killed and 2,550,000 injured. PRECISE WATCH REPAIRS Watch Repair Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed Ragon, Jim Robertson, Keith Ross Ron Sams, Dick Sandifer, Willard Schuldt, Rex Sullivan, Gene Vignatelli, Jerry Whetstone and Dick Wogan. Mary Ann Mahoney, a sharp shooting junior, broke this season's women's intramural basketball scoring record Wednesday night as she scored 36 points to lead Alpha Chi Omega to a 54 to 28 victory over Freshman KMM. Wolfson's Two games were forfeited and Chi Omega lost to Monchonsia and Alpha Omicron P1 lost to Freshman BA. In other games Pi Beta Phi defeated Delta Gamma 34 to 13. Freshman BH won over Theta Phi Alpha 28 to 9, and Freshman AA upset Watkins 22 to 13. By JACKIE JONES MahoneySets Scoring Mark The Alpha Chi's gave warning that they have a team strong enough to upset the division leaders, Foster hall. They held a commanding lead all of the way against KMM in both offense and defense. Call 675 743 Mass. The Pi Phi took an easy 34 to 13 win over Delta Gamma. At the half they led by only two points, but in the second period their offense became organized and went on to win by 21 points. Anne MacLaughlin took scoring honors for the winners with 26 points. Theta Phi Alpha was unable to cope with the BH team, losing by 19 points. Roberta Brandenbury and LaVena Vance led the winners with 11 and 14 points respectively. Freshman AA had an easy time in upsetting Watkins 22 to 13 in a low scoring game. They led by seven points at the half and were never stopped. Mary Demeritt scored 12 points for AA, and Allie Grove led Watkins with 8. Oread Hall Wins Close Tilt 23-18 A hard fighting Oread hall team held on to a slim five point margin to down the Aluminum Five 23-18 in the independent "A" games in Robinson annex Wednesday night. Leading the scoring for Oread were Bill Brown with 12 points and Ralph Raffolock with six tallies. Knox Jones, playing for the Aluminum Five, racked up 10 points for runner-up scoring honors. With three players out of the game on fouls, the Oread team was cut to four players who did some fancy stalling to stave off a belated attack by the Aluminum Five. The game was roughly played. Sterling-Oliver bowed before a superior AFROTC team, led by Jerry Whetstone, 29-32. Bud Walker with 12 points and A. G. Arnold paced the losers. Fraley Selects Giants' Drive New York—(U.P.) —Looking back on a year replete with good sports stories, this corner's vote for the best in 1951 goes to the battling New York Giants for their cinderella comeback to win the National League pennant. By OSCAR FRALEY From strictly a news standpoint, you can get an argument from the editors who hold out for the amateur sport scandals. But for sheer almost unbelievable drama nothing touched the moment when Bobby Thomson's home run blast in the last inning of the final playoff game capped the greatest comeback in baseball history. So the 10 best sports stories of the year are judged here in this order: 3. Ben Hogan's National Open triumph 2. The basketball scandal. 4. Army's cribbing scandal. 5. Joe Walcott winning the heavy-weight championship. 6. Randy Turpin's title upset of Ray Robinson. 8. Maureen Connolly winning the National Tennis championship at 16. 7. The World Series. 8. The Kentucky Derby. 9. Joe Dicaggio's retirement. 9. The Kentucky Derby. That's overlooking a number of fine stories, such as Allie Reynolds' two no-hitters and Happy Chandler's ousting as baseball commissioner to be succeeded by Ford Frick. But we'll stick with our 10. The sensational Giant finish wins top honors because it will go down in sports history not only as one of the top stories of 1951 but also as one of the best of all time. It was a performance which overshadowed even that of the 1914 miracle Braves. Hogan's retention of the open championship deserves its high spot. On the heels of his terrific 1950 comeback, Hogan once more proved master in dramatic fashion. Five strokes back of Bobby Locke at the start of the final round, he stormed through once again in the inimitable Hogan manner to thrill the sports world. Walcott's grit pursuit of the title, and his ultimate triumph at an age when most boxers are long since through, was a smash ending for one of the fight game's most sentimental odysseys. And Turpin's feat loomed large because of the Robinson reputation. Banana Pudding Binge Gafney, S. C. —(U.P.)—Magistrate James M. Bridges says he has now heard them all. A 25-year-old defendant told Bridges he got intoxicated eating banana pudding. YOUR EYES Eye should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. Lawrence Optical Co. Phone 425 1025 Mass. HAVE YOUR CAR CHECKED TODAY YOU MAY AVOID AN ACCIDENT! BEFORE DRIVING HOME FOR CHRISTMAS VACATION JACKETS - BRAKES CHECKED - LIGHTS CHECKED - ANTI-FREEZE CHECKED - MOTOR TUNED-UP - WHEELS ALIGNED SANDERS MOTORS 622-24 Mass. Phone 616 Too Bad It Couldn't Lost Salem, III.—(U.P.)—Astonished diners blinked at the prices on the Hanes Cafe menu. It offered such specials as a complete baked Virginia ham dinner for 35 cents. It was the way Mr. and Mrs. N. H. Hanes. Sr., chose to mark the 37th anniversary of the cafe's opening. The prices were the same as offered when the first customer entered. We Wish You A MERRY CHRISTMAS Start your vacation right. Stop at the Chateau for lunch or supper before you start home. Open 11 a.m. Curb Service After 4 p.m. CHATEAU DRIVE-IN MAISON 18E 17. Merry Christmas AND A WE WISH YOU A HAPPY NEW YEAR And thanks a million for your generous patronage Gibbs Clothing Co. 811 Mass. St. Christmas Gift CANDY Do Your HOLIDAY SHOPPING DIXIE'S at FANCY GIFT BOXES — CUSTOM PACKED WE WILL GIFT WRAP --- F R E E Dixie's Carmel Corn Shop Dixie's 812 Mass. --- Phone 1330 It was Hanes.anni-g. The offered red. Beach Trophy To Tice; Varsity Given Watches Approximately 300 persons, including the KU football squad and coaching staff, who were honored guests, sports writers, club members, and Bill Meek, K-State football coach also attended the affair at the Lawrence Community building. The awarding of the Ormand Beach trophy to Orbon Tice and wrist watches to 56 members of the varsity squad and the student manager, Frank Holefelder, highlighted the annual football banquet given by the Lawrence Downtown QuarterLack club Wednesday night. The trophy was presented to Tice by A. C. "Dutch" Lonborg, KU's director of athletics. Tice was selected by the team to receive the award, which goes annually to the most outstanding senior Kansas football player. The trophy is in memory of Or- Kansas To Face Tough Opposition Against Trojans The Kansas Jayhawkers probably will be facing their toughest opposition of the season when they take to the hardwoods against Southern California at Hoch auditorium Saturday night. The Trojans are currently holding a record of five victories, including one over Oklahoma A&M, and three defeats, counting Wednesday night's 58-47 Aggie win. They are currently on an extended road trip which will take them to the Dixie Classic tournament at Raleigh, N. C., Dec. 27, 28 and 29th. The Trojans won their first four games this season with 53-45 and 72-44 victories over Santa Barbara and San Diego State and a 65-39 trouncing of Los Angeles State. They also downed the San Francisco Dons, the team that dropped Kansas State from the beaten ranks, 50-43. Utah handed Southern California two defeats, however, on a two-night stand, losing 44-63 and 53-64. Coach Forrest Twogood is coaching his second varsity squad at USC after taking over the reins following the death of Sam Barry, former head coach. Although the Trojans lost their two star guards-Co-captains Bob Kolf and Tom Riach-from the 1951 co-champions of the southern division of the Pacific Coast conference, Coach Twogood has a team experienced at all positions as nine lettermen are on the soud. Bob Boyd, 6-feet, 6-inch, 220-pound center, was the team's top scorer last season with 248 points. He can be counted on to give KU's Clyde Lovellette a big battle under the backbards. Boyd has two capable replacements, Jerry Pease, 6-feet 6-inches and Al Lamont, 6-feet 5-inches. mand Beach, termed by Lonborg as "one of the greatest linebackers and all-around players KU has ever had." Beach was killed in an explosion in 1939 and the award was established by his wife. Wade Stinson received the trophy last year and Bud French was the recipient in 1949. This was the first year that watches have been presented by the Quarterback club since 1947 when they were given to the "Orange Bowl team." The selection of Charlie Hoag and Oliver Spencer as next season's co-captains was announced by Head Coach J. V. Sikes at the banquet. They were elected by the team. Laurence "Moon" Mullins, director of athletics at Kansas State, addressed the gathering and related many of his interesting coaching experiences. He amused the audience continually, especially when referring to his first coaching post as backfield mentor at KU in 1931. He played fullback on Knute Rocke's Notre Dame teams in 1929 and 1930 Mullins made light of the University of Missouri's plan of stressing the use of athletes only within home states and commented jokingly on that school's policy of publishing athletic scholarship lists. He also added that de-emphasiz- ing football was nothing new to him. "After my three years as coach at Loyola of the South in New Orleans, they not only abandoned football but they tore down the stadium," he humorously admitted. "Players must know the tradition of their school and try to contribute to it," Mullins said. "Every player must try to make the school a little better by helping each other and by keeping others from becoming discouraged and quitting." The K-State official also proposed that all college presidents meet to agree upon the purpose of an athletic program and then initiate a code with high ideals and standards. This would, he believes, help sports and the American public. "Football Highlights of 1951," a film showing the high points of the KU football season was shown for the first time. Plymouth Your . . . has a used car priced for you. Man Buddy University Daily Kansan GALLAGHER 634 Mass. Ph.1000 Give Records For Christmas The Gift That Keeps On Giving Bell's 925 Mass. Page Thursday, Dec. 20, 1951 Jayhawker 'B' Team Nudges Olathe Naval Air Five 64-62 The Kansas "B" team gambled—and won 64-62 in a basketball thriller against the Olathe Naval Air Station played in Hoch auditorium before 27 fans Wednesday night. Maintaining a five to 10 lead for 35 of the 40 minutes of play, the junior Jayhawks watched helplessly as the visitors suddenly caught fire and tied it all up with 40 seconds remaining in the game. Then, after Olathe had taken a time-out to regroup forces, the frog cagers gained possession of the ball and proceeded to hang on to it until the last two or three seconds. At that point, Larry Davenport passed off to Allen Kelley and set up a screen while the younger brother of varsity playing Dean Kelley coolly arched a long shot that swished through as the gun went off ending the game. Coach Phog Allen immediately nicknamed Kelley "Old Frank Merriwell Kelly." Merriwell was famous for his last second points to win games. Dr. Allen substituted for Dick Harp, freshman coach who was scouting the Oklahoma A&M- Kansas "B" (64) | | FGA | FG-FTA | FT | F | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Alberts | 6 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 10 | | Buller | 5 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 4 | | Davenport | 6 | 3 | 2 | 3 | 6 | | Fotopolus | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | | Franklin | 3 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | | Padgett | 3 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 1 | | Thompson | 4 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | | Keller | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 | | Nicholson | 3 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | | Born | 4 | 2 | 5 | 0 | 2 | | Forsyth | 4 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | | Anderson D. | 8 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 2 | | Anderson J. | 5 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 6 | | Bogue | 3 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 3 | | Guess | 5 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | | Kelley A. | 10 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 2 | | Wolfe | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | TOTALS 75 27 22 10 29 64 Olathe ((62) | | FGA | FG | FTA | FT | F | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Hunter | 20 | 4 | 14 | 9 | 2 | 17 | | Johnson | 12 | 2 | 5 | 2 | 3 | 6 | | Schmidt | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Simmons | 18 | 7 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 17 | | Brown | 7 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 5 | 3 | | Denono | 12 | 3 | 5 | 3 | 2 | 9 | | Draper | 6 | 2 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 9 | | Green | 10 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 3 | 5 | | Skeens | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | TOTALS 85 21 35 20 21 62 Haltime Score—Kansas “B” 38; Olathe 26 CHILL CHASER! + White, Brown, Black, Red. All kinds zipper galoshes and clear plastics. U.S. Gaytees Fashion Over the Shoe Haynes & Keene 819 Mass. Phone 524 Southern California game at Tulsa. Jerry Alberts was high scorer for KU with 10. He sank four of the six shots he attempted during the evening. But it was Olathe's Jim Hunger and Bob Simmons, with 17 points apiece, who stole the scoring show. KU's Don "Andy" Anderson played a hustling brand of ball and was used extensively by Coach Allen. All 17 players suited up by Allen saw action. The visitors could average only 24 per cent on shots, while the fresh maintained a 36 per cent average. COLLEGE REPUBLICANS Dec. 20,1951 7:30 206 GREEN EVERYONE WELCOME A&P Super Market 936 Mass. St. CANDIES For Christmas Season's Greetings 5 lb. box Dark And Milk Chocolates $2.43 Warwick 2 lb. box Dark And Milk Chocolates $1.17 Sophie Mae 1 lb. box Peanut Brittle 39c Worthmore-Chocolate 1 lb. box Cream Drops 31c Warwick 1 lb. box Thin Mints 39c Warwick 1 lb. box Chocolate Cherries 49c Box of 24 Hershey Bars 89c Prices Effective Through Mon., Dec. 24, 1951 NEW YEAR'S GREETINGS 1952 NEW YEAR'S GREETINGS 1952 — and every best wish for you, our friends and patrons. We look forward to serving you once more during the year to come. ... CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. 8th and N.H. Phone 4 Downtown—Near Everything CITIES SERVICE △ CITIES CITIES SERVICE Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 20, 1951 Women Use Greens, Ribbons In Inexpensive Xmas Decorations Bv CYNTHIA McKEE Women in boarding houses, sororities and private homes have found inexpensive ways to add a cheery atmosphere to their rooms. In several houses doors to individual rooms show persons entering that the Christmas spirit lives inside. Greens and a touch of ribbon are predominate in most of the decorations. These used with construction materials attractive and inexpensive display. A Christmas tree adorns one door. Made of green construction paper, it has painted ornaments of actual size on it. An angel decorates the ton. The traditional evergreen wreath hangs on another door. Made of a wire hanger twisted into a circle, it has greens wired onto it. The time required to make this decoration was 15 minutes. The cost was 17 cents for the wire and ribbon. Candy canes were placed on another door. Each cane has one of the room occupant's name under it with a Christmas greeting attached. A large Santa made of cotton and Official Bulletin Christian Science organization, tonight. Danforth chapel. No Psychology club until Jan. 10. KU Young Republican club, 7:30 tonight, 106 Green hall, Rep. Chas. D. Stough, speaker. Holy Communion, St. Thomas Day, 7 a.m. Friday, Danforth chapel, Episcopal students. Breakfast together at the Union. No Red Pepper meeting today, next meeting Thursday after vacation. During the Christmas vacation all parking regulations will remain in effect on Jayhawk Boulevard, zones I, UG, and LG. Other zones will be open to all, with or without permits. Regular parking rules start again 8 a.m. Jan. 3. Christmas Holiday Riders bureau Register for ride or for passengers UA office or hostess desk, Union. ASTE and ASME, 7:30 tonight, 1line room, Union, Al Conn, speaker. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship meets, 7:30-8:30 tonight, 32 Strong ball. IVCF Missionary meeting, 12- 2:50 p.m. Friday, Danforth chapel peaker, Gordon Wakefield. Education Fraternity Initiates 15 Students Phi Delta Kappa, honorary education fraternity initiated 15 students recently. They are Edwin L. Anderson and G. Irwin Gaston, seniors. Russell W. Annis, Ralph L. Bonerger, Ramon L. Charles, William A. Ferguson, J. Millard Fretz, Fred Henderson, Kenneth E. Lake, levin D. McCord, Wilbur E. Peter- ton, Floyd C. Scritchfield, Raymond Shaw, A. Odell Thurman and james W. Townsend, graduate students. Also, at the meeting Fritz W. Borbes and Robert T. Gray were chosen to represent the fraternity at the national convention Dec. 28, 29 and 30 in Chicago. CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY (Nationally Accredited) An outstanding service serving the community. a splendid profess... Doctor of Optometry degree in three years for students entering with sixty or more semester credits in specified Liberal Arts courses. REGISTRATION February 25. Students are granted professional recognition by the U.S. Department of Defense and Selective Service. Excellent clinical facilities. Athletic and recreational activities. Dormitories on the campus. metallic paper smiles down on each person who enters another room. CHICAGO COLLEGE OR OPTOMETRY 1845-H Larrabee Street Chicago 14, Illinois A snow scene decorates another door. Bits of cotton with a bank at the bottom of the door give a wintry effect. A large stocking in the middle of the door provides candy and a Christmas wish for whomever enters. Tiny jingle bells from the dime store strung on bright red yarn and combined with a green bough and a shiny red oilcloth bow make a merry twinkle as friends enter your room. Christmas cards tacked on in an attractive manner lend a note of gaiety to any door at no cost. Snowmen can add a distinctive air to any door. They are made of cotton glued on the door. Use a cranberry for a nose and black jelly beans for eyes. A scarf can be made of red ribbon and a hat of construction paper. Your originality at Christmas time may save you money and time which can go in on the "gifts to others." Sigma Kappas Have Christmas Party An informal Christmas party took place at the Sigma Kappa sorority house Dec. 14. Chaperones were Mrs. Mary Younkman, Mrs. Mattie Crimine, Dr. Elin Jorgensen, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Van Wert. Guests included Bill Daugherty, John Hamilton, Gerald Bourreze, John Davidson, Janine Becq, Andrea Drouart, Martin Ellenberger, Walt Calvert, John White, Ken Harris, Jay Smith. Jim Hotchkiss, Keaton Duckworth, David Bell, Ollin Jerring, Donald Tice, George Fraser, Row Draphorne, Leo Bird, Chet Fee, Norman Steanson, Clarence Chambers, Mike Wells, Paul Bartholow, Millard Kiser, Joe Cox, Dick Chiopetta, Court Ernest. Gene Allen, Louise Hoffman, Harry Newby, Marilyn Gow, Herb Rettig, Graydon Luthie, Anne Murphy, Mr. and Mrs. James Mason and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Howard. Mr. and Mrs. Fred A. List of Leavenworth announce the engagement of their daughter, Charlene, to Neal Morris, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Morris of Sunflower. Miss Charlene List To Wed Neal Morris Miss List is a fine arts junior. Mr.Morris is an education junior. No date has been set for the wedding. Party For Three Halls In Union Ballroom Sellards and Sterling-Oliver halls held a Christmas dance in the Ballroom of the Union Dec. 15. the chaperones were Mrs. Dana L. Anderson, Mrs. Joe H. Hope, Mrs. Mary Younkman, Mrs. E. R. Hooper and Mrs. R. H. Wilson. Guests were Mary Gayle Siebert, Pat Rupert, Jean Denny, Sally Adams, Margit Hauses, Marcia Hinger, Wilma Stith, Lois Edwards, Evelyn Delfs, Edith Nichols, Gracia Harris, Phyllis Hormel, Cathy Rising and Luella Mae Schalmzied. Shirley Bell, Lyndon; Maryanna Burger, El Dorado; Jean Halpain, K.C., Kan. and Jessie Westgate and Nancy Farrish, Topeka. Mary Betz, Charlene Collins, Shirley Walden, Jerry Ann Street, Grace Bogart, Nancy Russell, Barbara Moser and Shirley Summers. Mike Pronko, Lloyd Bjordwelt, Gerry Force, Jim Simmons, Eldon Haines, Charles Stubblefield, George Taylor, Bill Yonkey, Johnny Perry, Bill Foster, Merl Redford, Ray Allen, Carl Bilger, Jack Kellison and Burleigh Cook. Hans Peterson, Larry Christian, Jim Dahlke, Glenn Wilson, Cloye Wiley, Paul Arrowwood, Hugh McKenzie, Bill Thompson, Russ Yohe, Marvin Mog, Carl Jongil, Bill Smith, Don Duell, Harold Rinier and Dean Shade. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Pearson, Dr. and Mrs. Laurence Woodruff, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Lawton, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lanning, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Anderson and Mr. and Mrs. William Chestnut. The country's largest copper mines are in Montana. Travel Service THE THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Tel. 30 8th & Mass. TICKETS AND RESERVATIONS FIRST NATIONAL BANK Merry Christmas and Happy New Year From Your Travel Agent --- THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE TRAVEL AGENCY Miss Rose Gieseman, Manager 8th and Mass. St. Telephone 30 Pi Kappa Alpha Dance In Union Kansas Room Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity held its annual Christmas formal Dec. 14 in the Kansas room of the Union. Chaperones were Mrs. Edna M. Stewart, Mrs. Edwin B. Peet, Miss Julia Ames Willard, and Mrs. Frank M. Baird. Guests were Dolores Norton, Marilyn Button, Dotty Becker, Julia Oliver, Sue Beringer, Joan Taylor, Norma Norris, Dorothy Fay, Marcia Watson, Sally Glenn, Mary Lynn Updergraff, Roberta Mouser, Sue Solomon, Eula Skillman and Georgia Tipton. Letty Lemon, Marilyn Hanson, Millicent Morris, Barbara Sutorius, Shirley Samuelson, Barbara Swisher, Joyce Shank, Diane Howell, Jeanne Carter, Dot Taylor, Mary Ruth Anglund, Sue Smith, Barbara Barnett, Marilyn Roberts, Anne Phi Kappa's Elect Wimsatt Joe Wimsatt was recently elected president of Phi Kappa fraternity... Other officers include Robert Rebein, vice-president; Don Jensen, recording secretary; Richard McGonigle, corresponding secretary; Richard Verbrugge, treasurer; John Greeley, historian; Robert Duncan, editor; Marvin Weishaar, steward, and Eugene Koenigs, house manager. Iowa contains 25 per cent of all the grade A soil in the United States. FOR THOSE Hyde, Carol Kutina and Mary Sands. Jill Ogilvy, Shirley Snavely, Carolyn Krug, Thelma Sprout, Joan Hays, Wilma Stith, Arthur Wahl-stedt, Shirley Bailey, Norman Scott, Joyce Bryan, Tom Mahan, Dick Radcliffe, Mr. and Mrs. William Howard and Mr. and Mrs. Jim E. Grey. Last Minute Gifts! Juvenile Games Educational Toys Books ---- Bibles ---- Stationery By Eaton Sheaffer Pens Gift Wrappings Greeting Cards KEELER'S BOOK STORE 939 Mass. St. Phone 33 We aver 901 Mass. for everything under the tree best wishes fora merry Christmas and a happy New Year University Daily Kansan HopingForANameThat MayMeanALovedOne By UNITED PRESS The words "he's alive" echoed across the nation Wednesday. By telephone, radio and television the names of 3,198 American prisoners of war held by the Chinese Communists were carried into thousands of homes where relatives and friends had gathered, hoping, but almost afraid to hope. They struggled to express their emotion: Page 7 And then a name, a rank, a serial number, an address, stood out from among the thousands of others and with it came the joy that only those who experienced it could know. "Oh thank God." "This is too good to believe." "You never give up on me." One woman fainted before she could reply. All agreed it was "the best Christmas present we could have." But for every name on the list there were three missing—the difference between the American list of 11,042 missing in Korea and the number of names supplied by the Chinese. But it was hard to detract from the happiness of those who heard the good news. "I have never given up hope" sate Mrs. Cleeyc R. Bradford of Southern Fines, N.C., when she was told that her husband, Cpl. Henry E. Bradford, was on the list. She had not had word of him for more than a year. "I heard they were to release the names," said Mrs. George C. Bell of Santa Maria, Calif., "but I just didn't have the heart to listen to the radio." "Really," he screamed when he heard the news, then covered the telephone and told his wife. "My wife is standing here just shouting for joy," he said finally. In Los Angeles, Mrs. Frank R. Spencer broke down and sobbed. "Oh, God, is he really alive?" she said. "Oh, thank God, thank God." said. "Oh, thank God, thank God." She could say no more as the hours of waiting flowed forth in tears at the word that her son, Maj. James G. Daniel, was among those listed. "My husband . . ." she gasped. There was a pause then another voice said, "she just fainted." Ray E. Davis, father of Cpl. Floyd A. Davis of Edron, Ill., expressed the hopes of thousands of happy people who received the news that their men were listed. Mrs. Joe N. Black of Columbus, Ga., wife of M/Sgt. Joe N. Black, called radio station WRBL to see if there had been any word of her husband. She was told that he was on the list. Mrs. John Holton of St. Paul, Minn., was one of thousands who searched the list only to find it did not include that certain name. "Now we're just hoping and praying he'll be home soon," Mr. Davis said. There was a "James Holton," but no "John." She waited at a St. Paul radio station from 5 o'clock Wednesday until the alphabetical list got to the "Hs." Bv JAY BREEN Every Wife Is A Cleopatra New York—(U.P.)-World War II veterans Carl Resnick and Howard Kreiger said today their current jobs as nightgown salesmen in a Brooklyn department store produce as much peril and excitement as they ever met in uniform. To prove their point, the seasoned dealers in unmentionables slid a United Press reporter behind the counter to get a close-up picture of their task. The experiment also was designed to check charges by a midwestern department store that males were outstanding flaps as negligible salesmen. The opposite was true. "I could go from this department into the diplomatic service without batting an eye." Resnick said. "There just couldn't be a foreign delegate touchier than a fat lady looking over blue nighties." "Most guys will wave up a shape like Rita Hayworth," Kreiger cautioned. "But don't take their words for it. Usually the woman they have in mind is a trifle different." Both warned, in advance, that all men buying their wives lingerie at Christmas time are unaware of correct sizes and get this information over by waving their hands. Resnick recommended having the hand-waving husband point out a woman shopper in the store who resembles his wife in dimensions. This reporter's first male customer did exactly what both sales veterans had predicted. Thursday, Dec. 20, 1951 "I want something in nylon, make it black with lots of lace," he said, "and it ought to be about size. . ." His voice trailed off and his hands came from his pockets. They curved through the air, sketching a nebulous Lana Turner. Asked to pick out a feminine shopper pretty close to his wife's displacement, he singled a type closer to Mae West. "She's a trifle hefty for black," the reporter said, "how'd you like to look at something in peach?" Resnick swept in at this point with an armload of black mist and suavely took over. The gentleman finally bought a lacy creation that would make Whistler's mother look like Ava Gardner. The man's eyes glinted. Later experiences revealed such solid rules of the game as the prohibition against recommending blue nightgowns to a woman who first requests a look at something in pink. Red-heads, it was proven positively, beam when the man behind the counter recommends gold. Never mention white, however, unless the lady brings it up first. "Remember," he cautioned, "every man's wife is a 'Cleopatra here.' "I don't know why," Resnick said, "but a woman automatically thinks you're hinting she's old if you suggest white. She'll freeze you like an icicle." MERRY CHRISTMAS He was right. and We Wish You A HAPPY NEW YEAR Brown's Toggery 830 Mass. Classified Advertising Phone K.U.376 Classified Advertising Rates One day 25 words or less ... 50c Additional words ... 1c Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be delivered by the cashier during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univer- tertainment office, Journalism bldge, not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. 75c $1.00 2c 3c FOR SALE 25 FOOT 1947 trailer house in good condition, semi-permanently located, ready for immediate occupancy. See afternoons at 929 Conn. 21 951 CHEVROLET, 2-door *green Fleetline* model. Excellent condition. Must ell car. Make an offer. Call 3441J after 4 p.m. 21 A. S.F.C.—Wouldn't you like to receive a Sheaffer for Christmas? Why not give it up? You would like to receive *Rowlands* Book Stores, 1401 Ohil and 1220 Orend. RONSON LIGHTERS- The perfect gift for all smokers. We still have a large stock to choose from. Rowlands Book Stores, 1401 Ohio and 1237 Oread. 20 WE STILL HAVE attractive gifts for all members of the family. Rowlands Book Stores, 1401 Ohio and 1237 Oread. 20 GIFT IDEAS FOR CHRISTMAS! Give a magazine subscription for the ideal Christmas gift. We take subscriptions to our Store. Student Union Book Store. YELLOW SCRATCH pads. We still have plenty at 20 a pad. Rowlands Book Stores, 1401 Ohio, and 1237 Oread. 20 MONOGRAMMED napkins and matches make the gift more personal. We will give 24 hour service. Rowlands Store, 1401 Ohio street and 1237 Oread, CHRISTMAS CARDS-It's not too late to have your cards personalized. One day service. Rowlands Book Stores, 1401 Ohio street and 1237 Ingred. 20 KANSAS Sweet Shirts, sizes from 4 to 44. Tee shirts from 1 to 44. Also cardigan jackets. Rowlands Book Stores, 1401 Ohio and 1237 Oread. BOOK-ASES IS the collapsible book holder. Use it on a desk, in bed, any place. Holds the pages firmly in place. Not only 98c at the Student Book Store. TRANSPORTATION FINE ART REPRODUCTIONS! We now have a wide selection of reproductions of famous paintings in full color. Union Book Store. 21 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: term papers, note books, theses, medical and biologi- reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. J. C. Moss and A. P. upstairs. Ph. 27753 after 4 p.m. CHEMISTRY MAJORS! We now have in stock three work study aids to help you toward better grades. "How to Solve Problems in General Chemistry" by Bailey and "Solve problems in Qualitative Analysis" by Brown and "Solve problems in Quantitative Analysis" by Arenson. See them at your Student Union Book Store. 21 SEVERAL RIDERS go toward Utah, leaving Dec 21, via route 30. See Jack Patton, 1825 Lau, or phone 3-271-L4, between 5 and 6 p.m. AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steampath and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether on short or long intervals. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 610-8355, Downs Service, 1015 Mass. **tt** Ask us about family rates, sky coach, and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book a vacation package this summer. Call Miss Glessean at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30- TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses, prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs. Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. TYPING of all kinds done promptly and must have Christmas rates. Mrs. Merritt, KU 296 . . . . . BUSINESS SERVICE ROOMS FOR 3 men. No other rooms. Come or phone 3389, Gilkerson's Cafe 7 a.m. to 215 p.m. or 1788J at 942 Miss. 2:30 p.m. to 12 midnight. 21 SMALL HOUSE: living-bedroom, modern kitchen and bath. Furnished, suitable for family use. convenient location. $45 a month. Write to the Daily Kansen, RANDED 12 5. RENTAL TYPEWRITE. Both new and used, portables for $1.00 per week or $3.50 per week can be better, newer papers. Come in and try one at the ST21 denudion Book Store. FOR RENT TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these typing experience. Mrs. Shields, 1295 Ohio. IP 1601. RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip- ments that assure fast, efficient power. Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vernon Free pickup and delivery. CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, home-cooked patries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sandwiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. ff TYPING: Experience. In theses, term papers, miscellaneous typed and stenolic cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. ff CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malts, home-made pies and martinis for customers Air-conditioned. Open 9 a.m.-t.m. the midnight. Crystal Café, 609 Ft. V97 IAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet their needs are our business. Our one-step process allows for fin, fur, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. 718-950-3267 LOST FRIDAY. Dietzen LogLog Decitrig 1537% Tenn. out of case. Bob Austen 1537% Tenn. SILVER FRENCH broocade evening bag DE Nean Ankheroile at 375. DE Nean Ankheroile at 375. BLUE PARKER 21 with silver cap. Sunday, probably at Vespers. Phone 2129 Sam Sebesta, 1234 Oread. 21 LOST! Grey top coat at Dine-A-Mite Saturday night. I have wrong coat and mant want to trade for mine! Earl Merriman. Phone 84. WILL THE PERSON who took by mistake, my overcoat and scarf from the classroom at the Student Union later (14th) in please call Michael Delmonico* - 1879. 1-3-52 WILL WHOEVER found my billfold these receipts, the money is desperately needed, but it cannot be at least mail back billfold and papers. H. Lorena Barlow, 1643 University Drive MISCELLANEOUS FRED: I played your record in the Pink Elephant. For your answer I suggest you play G6. Regards, Sally. FREE GIFT WRAPPING on all gifts purchased from us. We will also be glad to wrap for mailing. Rowlands Book Stores. 20 Comfort Convenience JAYHAWK NEW Port-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS TODAY Free Merchant Show Get Your Free Ticket From Your Friendly Merchants —SEE— Robert Preston Martha Scott "WHEN I GROW UP" WARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD MANHATTAN STUDIO VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD LAST TIMES TONITE Open 6:45 "HER SISTER'S SECRET" "STEPCHILD" FRIDAY - SATURDAY Johnny Mack Brown "WHISTLING HILLS" —And-- Laurel and Hardy "SWISS MISS" Ch. 5 "Flying Disc Man From Mars" HELP WANTED WANTED: Part time receptionist. Hour 11:30 to 5:30. Doctor's office. Some typing. Box 2 Daily Kansan office. 1-3-5 Patronize Kansan Advertisers Polish Your GERMAN! Brush up on your FRENCH! Ask for TUTORING! ZOLTAN DIOS Phone KU 327 English speaking European Graduate Student will assist you with these languages. STARTS FRIDAY REAL ACTION! A KILLER BENT ON REVENGE! THE THREAT Starring MICHAEL O'SHEA • JULIE BISHOP - ALSO - Stan Kenton Color Cartoon Movietone News - ENDS TONITE - "TWO TICKETS TO BROADWAY" All Star Cast Color by Technicolor Continuous Shows On Sat. Sunday and Holidays Granada PHONE041 HURRY ... HURRY LAST TIMES TONIGHT A great opera spectacle at Movie Prices! Tito GOBBI in his glorious interpretation of RIGOLETTO THE OPERA IN 4 ACTS by GIUSEPPE VERDI WITH THE ROYAL CINEMA OF BRISTOL ORIGINALS ROYAL OPERA HOUSE OF BONE ORCHESTRA conducted by TULUO JADRAIN Released by SUPERFILM Shows 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Features at 7:15 and 9:15 Doors Open 6:45 p.m. STARTS TOMORROW IT HAD TO BE FILMED IN AFRICA! ADVENTURE'S MOST SAVAGE OUTPOST! OGAR RICE BUILDING TARZAN'S PERIL LEX BARKER VIRGINIA HUSTON Ten PATEE PHONE 321 Ex-Chancellor To Be Heard On KLWN Sunday The voice of former Chancellor Deane W. Malot will be heard for the first time here since he left KU when his talk "America the Profligate" will be aired by KLWN Sunday morning at 9:45 on the Sociology on the Air series. Mr. Malott will be the tenth speaker in the weekly series sponsored by the department of sociology and anthropology. Although the ex-KU chancellor will not appear in person, his speech has been tape-recorded especially for the KLWN broadcast. His talk will run a little more than 15 minutes. Speakers this semester have included Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, Dean Paul B. Lawson and such college faculty members as John Ise, Seba Eldridge, Esther Twente, Lawrence Bee, E. Jackson Baur, E. Gordon Ericksen, Nino Lo Bello, and Carroll D. Clark, chairman of the sociology department. The Sociology on the Air series has been going since last March when the program was inaugurated. It is the first time a college sociology department has sponsored a regular series of talks over a commercial station. After Mr. Malott's talk, the next two speeches in the series will be given by J. Eldon Fields, associate professor of political science, and Carlyle S. Smith, assistant professor of anthropology, during the new year. Offer $6,000 In Prize Money Two companies are offering cash awards totaling more than $6,000 to undergraduate engineering students for papers dealing with the design and practical application of arc welding. The James F. Lincoln ArC Welding foundation, whose objective is to encourage and stimulate scientific interest in research related to arc welding, is offering $1,000 first prize, $500 second prize and $250 third prize with $3,250 in minor cash awards. The Resistance Welder Manufacturer's association is offering a $300 first prize, $250 second prize and $200 third prize to students and instructors for a paper dealing with the same subject as the Lincoln program The foundation will give an additional $1,750 to the school in which the first three winners are enrolled. This money is to be used for scholarships granted at the judgment of the head of the department. Arrangements have been made with the English department to assist any student needing help in writing his paper. Dean T' DeWitt Carr of the School of Engineering and Architecture, said. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 20, 1951 Preparation of either of these ... FIFTH AIR FORCE crash and fire crews spray the burning engine of a B-29 superfort with a chemical foam after the medium bomber tangled with enemy jet aircraft and anti-aircraft guns over North Korea. The daring air crew brought the limping superfort back to this advanced air base without the use of flaps or rudder controls and with two engines out. None of the crew was injured. Arthur Capper, Ex-Senator, Dies After Extended Illness Topeka—(U.P.)—Arthur Capper, U.S. Senator from Kansas for 30 years and president of a vast publishing empire, died here last night at the age of 88. "Senator Capper will long be remembered for his distinguished and unselfish service to his state and nation," Landon said. "But he also will live long in the hearts of many people for his kindly thoughtfulness and his helpful work through the Capper Foundation to restore children to health. He loved people." Miss Julie McKee, his private secretary for many years, and Henry Blake, vice-president and general manager of Capper Publications, Incorporated, were present at the bedside in January 1980 when his wife's relatives also were nearby. Former Gov. Alf M. Landon, GOP presidential candidate in 1936 and still a leader in Kansas politics, paid tribute to his dead colleague. Capper, who built his political and publishing fortunes from a start as a printer's devil on a Topeka newspaper, lapsed into a coma in his suite at Hotel Jayhawk Wednesday afternoon and died at 9:29 p.m. Funeral arrangements have not yet been announced. Mrs. A. L. E. Eustice of Evanston, Ill., a sister, was his only survivor. His wife, Florence Crawford, died in 1926. papers will be accepted as a substitute for part of the English 50 course Capper began his newspaper career as a typesetter on the Topeka Capital in 1884. After a stint as a reporter in Washington and New York, he began buying newspapers in 1893. He purchased the Daily Capital in 1901 and always kept a large interest in the paper. Capper was elected governor in Persons interested in entering the contest should contact Paul G. Hausman, chairman of the department of shop practice. 1914. He was re-elected in 1916. 1914. He was reelected in 1916. His senate service began in 1918. During his stay in Washington Capper's influence was largely responsible for passage of the national 4-H club act and other agricultural legislation. He was a key figure in the farm bloc of the 1920's. Capper supported some emergency new deal legislation and served on the senate foreign relations committee during World War II. Scott And Walker To Direct 'Dove' Stanley Scott, college freshman, and Wendell Walker, graduate student, were elected editor and business manager, respectively, of the Dove, campus political magazine, at a staff meeting Wednesday. The two men will be in charge of publishing the next issue of the Dove which will appear sometime near the first of the spring semester. That issue will be the first one this year. It will include articles on the grading system at the University and race relations. The staff hopes to get students from Asiatic countries who are attending the University to write about Asia. The magazine will contain more sociological than political subjects. Police Believe In Psycholoav Portland, Me.-(U.P.)-Police here are firm believers in psychology. In the headquarters room where prisoners are questioned hangs a sign reading: "No man has a good enough memory to be a successful liar.- Lincoln." 19 Instructors To Attend Conferences Most of them will be traveling to the meetings on University travel grants provided by the school to enable its faculty to attend educational conferences. A total of 15 conventions will be attended. Nineteen members of the University faculty will attend national conferences during the Christmas holiday. The faculty members, conferences and conference dates are: Dean Leonard H. Axe of the School of Business, American Economic association and the executive committee session of the American Association of Collegiate Schools of Business, Boston, Dec. 27-29. He also is chairman of the council for professional education for business. Edward Robinson, associate professor of philosophy, Southwestern Philosophical conference, Houston, member of the program committee. Sarvadaman Chowla, visiting professor of mathematics from India, American Mathematical society, Providence, R. I., Dec. 26-28. Agnes Brady, associate professor of romance languages, and George O. Schanzer, assistant professor of romance languages, American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese, Chicago, Dec. 26-28. Rufus H. Thompson, associate professor of botany; E. Raymond Hall, director of the museum of natural history; Herbert F. Wright, professor of psychology; Kenneth E. Anderson, associate professor of education, American Association for the Advancement of Science, Philadelphia, Dec. 26-31 S. S. Shrikhande, visiting assistant professor of mathematics, Institute of Mathematical Statistics, Boston, Dec. 26-29. James C. Malin, professor of history, American Historical association, New York City, Dec. 28-30. Quintin Johnstone, associate professor of law, Association of American Law Schools, Denver, Dec. 28. G. B. Price, professor of mathematics, American Mathematics society, Providence, R. I., Dec. 26, 27 and 28. Phillip M. Mitchell, assistant professor of German, Modern Language association, Detroit, Dec. 27, 28 and 29. Henry G. Horak, assistant professor of astronomy, American Astronomical society, Cleveland, Dec. 26 through 29. Richard L. Schiefelbusch, assistant professor of speech, American Speech and Hearing association, Chicago, Dec. 27 through 31. William C. Young, professor of anatomy, American Society of Zoologists, Philadelphia, Dec. 27 through 30. Gilbert Ulmer, associate professor of mathematics, National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, Stillwater, Okla., Dec. 27, 28 and 29. -News Roundup Truce Talks Still Stalled Plan Airtlift For Prisoners Pammunjom, Korea—(U.P.)—Armistice negotiators turned over the deadlocked truce policing issue to staff officers today as the Eighth Army completed plans to airlift Allied prisoners to Japan when an exchange agreement is reached. Only seven days remain before the 30-day "ease-fire" period ends. In an effort to break the three-week deadlock on armistice supervision, the joint subcommittee instructed staff officers to draw up a set of principles acceptable to both sides. Steel Strike Appears Certain Washington—(U.P.)A New Year's day steel strike appeared almost certain today despite high-pressured government mediation efforts. Federal Mediation Chief Cyrus S. Ching scheduled his first mediation talks today with spokesmen of 10 big steel companies and President Philip Murray of the CIO steel workers. But the chances seemed remote for any agreement on the union's demand for an 18½-cent hourly wage hike and other benefits. More RFC Indictments In Offing Washington—(U.P.)—Additional grand jury indictments on charges of perjury, bribery, and fraud appear likely early next year as an aftermath to the Senate investigation of "influencing peddling" in RFC loans. A special grand jury, busy since last March investigating testimony given a Senate banking subcommittee, recessed Wednesday, after indicting four persons, including former RFC official E. Merl Young, on perjury charges. Assistant Attorney General James M. McInerney said the grand jury will meet after the Christmas recess, raising the possibility that future indictments might deal with charges of bribery and fraud in getting loans from the Reconstruction Finance Corp. May Complete Heartache List Today Washington—(U.P.)The Defense department hoped to complete today its heartache list of 3,198 U.S. servicemen reported by the Communists as prisoners of war in Korea. Pentagon officials cautioned anew that they do not consider trustworthy the list supplied by the Reds. The total of 3,198 names supplied by the enemy was a bitter contrast to the 11,051 American servicemen reported by the defense department as officially missing in action. Eighth Army Headquarters, Korea—(U.P.)—Allied infantrymen beat back a battalion-sized Chinese Communist attack in West-Central Korea Wednesday and killed an estimated 300 Reds, the Eighth Army announced today. Reds Resume Hostilities At High Cost The Communist attack, preceded by artillery, jumped off Northwest of the former "iron triangle" bastion of Chorwon Tuesday night and continued 13 hours until the following morning. By the time the Reds broke off contact, the Eighth Army said, their ranks were depleted to platoon strength. East Hartford, Conn.—(U.P.)-Three times since the rearmament drive started one of the world's chief aircraft engine manufacturers has been forced to cut back production schedules. Red Tape Delays Rearmament Drive Executives of the Pratt & Whitney aircraft division of United Aircraft Corp. place the bulk of the blame on the government's delay in helping to expand machine tool output and in fixing reliable priorities for materials. Dulles Refuses Japanese Envoy Post Tokyo—(U.P.)—United States Ambassador John Foster Dulles said today he turned down President Truman's offer to become the first American envoy to Japan following ratification of the peace treaty. Dulles spent 10 days here. He was briefed on conditions in preparation for the U.S. Senate consideration of the treaty ratification of next year. 11 Missing In Danish Ship Fire Astoria, Ore.—(U.P.)-Eleven persons from the burning Danish motorship Erria were listed by the Coast Guard as missing today and 103 others had been checked through the Tongue Point station The Coast Guard said the missing were three crew members and eight passengers. Those accounted for included 80 crew members and 23 passengers. Fire broke out in the No. 5 hold of the 650-foot Erria at 2:40 a.m. (PST) as she lay anchored in the Columbia river near here. The order to abandon ship was given five minutes later by Capt. M. Agge, master of the vessel. Greece Given Security Council Seat Paris—(U.P.)—Greece was elected to a seat on the United Nations Security Council today after a bitter fight in which Russia backed its White Russian republic (Byelorussia). The vote was 39 to 16 As a result, Greece will represent Eastern Europe on the council during 1952. The victory for Greece—and the United States, its sponsor—came on the 19th ballot. the north lands. er- up est es 's es n n -, y, d y e e r e MERRY CHRISTMAS MacArthur, Malott Top News Of 1951 The firing of General Douglas MacArthur was selected as the top national news event and the resignation of Chancellor Deane W. Malott was named as the outstanding campus news event, according to a poll taken among the students and faculty of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information. ASC Approves $$$ Books Of Jayhawker An examination of the Jayhawkner financial books by the All Student council has substantiated the yearbook staff's claim of added expenses. In a report to the Council, Lyle Anderson, chairman of the auditing committee, said, "Their books are in order and we are satisfied that they are trying to do a good job." The expense of producing the annual has risen sharply, it was explained. The major increase over 1950-51 is $971 for paper and printing. Photography has increased $510. The cost of covers is up $60 and there is an undetermined increase in stationery and office supplies. An open hearing is still planned with the date to be set as soon as possible after the holidays. At that time, the management of the Jayhawker will have an opportunity to appear before any interested University students and answer questions about the annual. In explaining the high picture rate, Richard Hackney, Jayhawker business manager, said in a letter to the ASC, "The Jayhawker felt it unfair to the students to increase the subscription price. Already, the present price of $5.25 for an annual works a hardship on many students. With these students in mind, the Jayhawker felt that this was not the proper source from which to secure additional revenue." Final Western Civ Registration Today Today is the last day to register for the Western Civilization examination. Students are to register at the Western Civilization office, Strong Annex C. The exam will be given from 1:30 to 5:15 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 5. The place of examination will be assigned at the time of registration. The admittance card, received at the time of registration must be presented at the exam. --- The choices were based on a poll conducted this week in the classes and staff meetings of the school. Votes were tabulated on the basis of 10 points for first choice, nine for second, eight for third, etc. The MacArthur dismissal in April, the subsequent inquiry by the Senate and the press disputes with Maj. Gen. George Willoughby over Korean leadership were combined to form the number one national news story of the year, according to the poll. Second place among the top events was the Korean War itself, which trailed in votes, 402 to 337. This includes the Red atrocities, total casualties and the general trend of the war. Another Korean story, the ceasefire proposal and talks, received 315 votes in the poll to rank third. The third place story was the news of the student elections last spring when FACTS swept to an amazing victory winning most of the major offices and securing a majority on the All Student Council. In the campus news poll, the resignation of Chancellor Malott was selected as the top story by a total of 203 votes. This gave it a nine vote margin over the number two story of Dean Franklin D. Murphy of the School of Medicine being named as Malott's successor. The rankings of the top news events in both the national and the campus categories are as follows: National News Events 1. Firing of Gen. MacArthur 402 2. Korean War 337 3. Cease-fire proposals and talks 4. Midwest floods 5. Kefauver crime investigations 6. British election and results 7. US income tax scandals 9. North Atlantic Treaty organization 10. Basketball fixes Campus News Events 1. Resignation of Chancellor Malott 2. Selection of Dr. Murphy as chancellor 3. Student election results 4. Memorial Campanile and drive 3. Student election results 5. No Homecoming decorations and flood clean-up 6. New campus buildings Lawrence 8. Ewert deaths and Ronnie 7. Midwest flood which hit Lawrence 8. Ewert deaths and Hollon Ewert campaign 9. Big Sword questions, 40. Bill's Car Likes To Roam All By Itself On The Open Range Of Marvin Grove overemphasis on athletic 41 10. Sabotage of radio tower 32 9. Big Seven reactions to Bill Lienhard's car likes to roam the open range all by itself only the range wasn't so open at that. Just a few minutes before 1 p.m. Thursday Bill's car, a 1941 blue Ford coach, was parked near the top of the building. It was right side of the Union. It was locked. tree at least $ 2 \frac{1}{2} $ feet in diameter. By MARION KLIEWER Students are cautioned by campus police chief Joe Skillman "not to leave anything of value in your room over the Christmas vacation. And lock your room!" For some reason not exactly determined, the car, with no one in it, started down the grade, hugging the icy curb. A campus policeman prevented its going over the embankment and down onto Mississippi street. Then it squeezed between two trees about 15 feet from the gully which runs through Marvin grove. There it stopped. Campus Police Chief Says To Lock Up Rooms The only damage was a dented radiator grill. The only casualty was a flattened bush. Explaining that every year some student "comes up missing items at the office," Chef Chef said that a regular check by either a friend or a landlord is advisable. Turning the curve at the bottom of the grade, the car crossed Mississippi street and went down the steps leading into Marvin grove. Continuing its flight, it narrowly missed a Santa Claus is in the background. He is wearing a red coat and white hat. He is standing next to a sleigh that has a star, moon, and tree on it. There are three deer in front of Santa Claus. One is black and brown, another is black and gray, and the third is black and white. SANTA AND HIS REINDEER, part of the Delta Chis' Christmas decorations, are among the many displays on organized houses. The Delta Chi house also sports colored lights outlining the roof and two 8-foot greeting cards inside the door. UNIVERSITY DAILY 49th Year No.68 Dec.21,1951 hansan Christmas Holiday Starts Tomorrow; Icy Roads Face Departing Students Icy highways and freezing temperatures are expected to put a damper on otherwise cheerful spirits as University students get set to spend the Christmas holiday with their parents. Engineering Societies Hear Managing Director Speak Water Sprinkler Floods Fraser About 50 persons were present. During the evening the two groups held a joint business meeting to transact routine affairs. Mr. Conn said that human relations are of equal importance with scientific know how in making a success of one's self in engineering. The automatic sprinkler system on the top floor of Fraser hall went off accidentally about 9 a.m. today, flooding parts of the building from top to basement. Tool engineering is a new field which has grown up in the last 15 years, Al Conn, managing director of the La Salle Engineering corporation, said at a joint meeting of the mechanical and tool engineering societies Thursday night in the Pine room of the Union. What set off the sprinkler is not known. No official estimate of the damage had been made this morning. R. H. Wagstaff, assistant superintendent of buildings and grounds, said heat in the building may have risen to the top floor and tripped the mechanism. It is the third time since the sprinkler was installed that it has been released and poured water into Fraser. Workers in the teachers' appointment bureau on the first floor and employees in the extension office in the basement were busy moving supplies away from the streams of water which poured through the ceiling. Spectators estimated that nearly five inches of water covered parts of the floor of Fraser theater within a few minutes after the sprinkler began operating. Workmen finished laying a new floor in the theater this fall. The official vacation will begin at 12 noon Saturday, according to L. C. Woodruff, dean of men, and classes will resume at 8 a.m. Thursday, Jan. 3, 1952. Joe Skillman, campus police chief, Thursday cautioned motorists to drive with extreme caution on their way home. Ice covers nearly every highway within 200 miles of Lawrence, so students should delay travel until conditions improve, he said. Those who stick around during the festive season will get an "extra" look at the Kansas Jayhawkers basketball team. Saturday the University of Southern California Trojans will be here for a game in Hoch auditorium at 7:30 p.m. E. L. Falkensein, athletic business manager, has announced that ID. cards will entitle any student, regardless of his ticket number, to a seat on the stage, since the game is not listed on either the No. 1 or 2 ticket schedule. All other downstairs seats will be reserved at $2, he said, with the lower half of the first balcony $2, the upper half $1.50 and the second balcony 50 cents a seat. There are Chancellor Extends Christmas Greetinas To the Students and the University Staff: The University of Kansas wishes you a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year in the vacation you have so well earned. Those of us who remain in Law- rence will miss you. We sincerely hope that we will not be missing you on Jan. 3. Drive carefully or ride with a driver who does. Everyone connected with the University can look forward to many more Merry Christmases. You have too much time to invest in time and money in education to risk blotting out the future in a fleeting moment of carelessness. Let no Jayhawker be among the first in the nation's second million of traffic fatalities! plenty of tickets available, he added. Wives of students may sit with their husbands if they bring their season tickets and purchase fifty-cent tickets, Mr. Falkenstein said. All food services in the Union will be closed New Year's night, Mr. Woolley announced. Parking regulations on the campus will remain in effect on Jayhawk Blvd., Zones H, UG and LG. All other zones will be open to anyone during the Christmas vacation, the campus traffic and parking committee announced. Food may be purchased on the campus every day during the holiday, according to L. E. Woolley, director of the Union. On Christmas Day, however, only one meal will be served in the cafeteria, from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. During the holiday a number of programs will be held by the Statewide Activities organization in Ford, Mitchell, Finney, McPherson, Morris, Norton and Brown counties. The cafeteria will be closed from Thursday night, Dec. 28, to 12 noon, Jan. 1, but three meals will be served each day during that time in the Hawk's Nest. Dances will be given for high school seniors in Brown, Ford and Mitchell counties, while movies "Beyond the Towers" and "Your University" will be shown at the other parties. SVM Conference To Meet Dec. 27 Over 2,000 students from 600 colleges and universities in the U.S., Canada and other nations, representing 40 denominations, will be on the University campus Dec. 27 through Jan. 1, for the 16th Quadrennial Student Volunteer Movement conference. "The students will consider the responsibility of Christians in a world in struggle," the Rev. Tracey K. Jones, administrative secretary of the conference said. Included in the program will be group singing, lecturers, panel discussions, mixers, firesides and other entertainment features, seminars, denominational meetings, interviews and various worship services. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, Dec. 21, 1951 Daily Kansan Editorials Reorganization For The Benefit Of All A plan for reorganizing student government was presented at the All Student Council meeting Wednesday night. It calls for Council representatives to be elected from and responsible to various housing units, such as the coops or Greek houses or dormitories. Two geographical districts would be set up for unaffiliated students. The theory behind this is that students are much more likely to be interested in the Council if they know and live with their representatives. The present setup, with the schools lumped into four districts, has both encouraged cut-throat party politics and been the reason for much student apathy. For instance, the School of Journalism and the College compose District 1. At present all seven of their representatives come from the College. The J-School student never sees his representatives, so why should he care about the ASC? This is true in all districts. Changing this setup is a good idea. But what is really good about it is that the idea for reorganization comes from both parties. FACTS and Pachacamac-NOW have awakened to the fact that petty Council politics for the past five years have been constantly hurting students. Members in both parties had seen this for a long time, but they felt that their party alone couldn't change things. In the last few months the two parties have gotten together. And congratulations are certainly due them for putting student welfare above their own tight-knit organizations. You will be hearing a lot more about the proposed plan for reorganization in the next month. If the Council puts it before the students, as it should, you will vote on it. Think about it carefully. Chancellor Murphy has said that if his administration makes any error, it will be because it gave students too much responsibility rather than too little. If we are to get this increased power in running our affairs, we must be worthy of it. And We'll Try It Once Again The house-cleaning by the administration is going a long way these days. Even Dick Tracy has been called on the carpet. The world's first atomic central heating plant has been installed in Britain. The British seem to know how to keep some sections of the world heated. A Boston high school full-back pounced on his own kick-off in the end zone for a touchdown. That's nothing. Senator McCarthy has scored more points than that by kicking. Chicago is undergoing a face-lifting for the visitors attend the nominating conventions next summer. The Sun-Times wonders why summer vacationers aren't considered visitors too. The U.N. eventually may create lasting peace. That is, if Britain will stop hanging on to a piece here and a piece there. Massachusetts must have set a new record for automobile pileups, when 14 cars were involved in the same crash. Now surely Californians will try to top that. Pity the poor bullfighter who was thrown and injured by a bull the other day. Next time he should get some politicians to help him. Margaret Truman's appearance in New Orleans caused a group of circus animals to be taken out so she could give a concert. There probably were no donkeys involved. A New York City manufacturer has developed a device which automatically guides machines hundreds of miles away. Maybe he could hook it up in the East, for some of the political machines there don't seem to be functioning. Truman left his Key West swim in a hurry when someone spotted a school of large fish 15 yards off shore. The New York Herald Tribune said that if they were honest fish, they would have to tell sorrowfully about the one that got away. The latest Communist proposal is for gradual withdrawal of troops from Korea. Judging by the northward movement of the battle line, the Reds are doing just that. Lawrence has installed containers downtown so that motorists can pay parking fines conveniently. The next thing they'll think of is license tag dispensers. the only way to be worthy is to have student government which can handle authority and represent all students, not merely the party in power. Politics on the hill have admittedly been a little thing in the past, a thing which the average student has shrugged off. But it is in little ways that we learn big things. If we take an interest in our University and run it democratically, we will have had the finest sort of training for running our country after we graduate. A.L.S. The task of removing snow from campus sidewalks was attacked with great dexterity Wednesday afternoon. The men with the shovels, employees of Buildings and Grounds, did an excellent job of clearing off the worst spots. And we thank them for it. Off With The Snow At Last This morning, after a freezing rain had undone their deeds, they returned undaunted and spread sand with an amazing furiousness. It was an effort which all students appreciated. Steps were well sanded and sidewalks were treated equally. All in all, it was an excellent job. They even went a little way off strict campus limits. Battenfeld steps, a continual sore spot, in more ways than one, were sanded from top to bottom. Several other main off-campus walks were also treated. Should a student still slip, despite these precautions, he has chiefly his own carelessness to blame. We hope that when the next storm hits, the same effort will be expended. Only this time, let's make it a little earlier. —A.G.M. An old question came up again this week: should we organize campus political parties on a Greek- Independent basis? Are Politics Necessary? It's a pretty good question, but we've got a better one. Should we have campus political parties at all? As it exists at Kansas State, the Greek-Independent arrangement is useful in preserving the identity of the parties when there are no real issues to keep them apart. It is of course a meaningless separation because your political views aren't, or shouldn't be, affected by where you happen to live. The idea of the two party system is to give the voter an alternative. If there is no difference between parties, there is no need for them. So if you have to separate parties into Greeks and Independents in order to tell them apart, why have them at all? If, as SPC has recommended, another way were found to divide campus political parties, each party would be forced to take up specific issues to maintain its identity; it would have to stand for something in order to exist at all. But to resort to the fictious Greek-Independent conflict is to admit that student politics is without genuine meaning. —Kansas State Collegian. Kansas is named by the American Automobile association as one of the safest states in the nation for pedestrians. Have any AAA representatives ever tried crossing Jayhawk drive at about 11:51 on a week day morning? Daily Kansan News Room Student Newspaper of the Adv. Room K.U. 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS K.U. 376 EDITORIAL STAFF Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn. Inland Daily Press Assn., and the Associated Collegate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York City. ELECTORAL STATY Editor-In-Chief ... Alan Marshall Editorial Associate ... Anne Snyder NEWS STAFF Assistant Managing Editors ... Nancy Anderson Benjamin Holman, Lee Shepeard, Ellsworth Zahm City Editor ... Joe Taylor Sports Editor ... Charles Burch Telegraph Editor ... Den Tetsunich Society Editor ... Katrina Swantz News Adviser ... Victor J. Danilov Managing Editor Charles Price Assistant Managing Editors Nancy Anderson Architecture Argument Rages BUSINESS STAFF Iowa State Chooses Theme News From Other Campuses Business Manager Bob Sydney Advertising Manager Dorothy Hedrick Assistant Adv. Manager Dirk Hale National Adv. Manager Bill Taggart Circulation Manager Elaine Blinder Promotion Manager Ted Barbera Business Adviser R. W. Doores "Our Strength for Years to Come" was chosen for the theme of "Religion in Life Week" at Iowa State college. The annual event will be held Monday, Jan. 7, through Sunday, Jan. 13, with a number of Ames, Iowa, ministers addressing the students. The argument over architecture rages loud and long at Kansas State college. Five more letters-to-the-editor appeared in the Dec. 12 issue of the Collegian concerning the students' right to give their opinions on the subject of architecture. Young Council Head Elected The student body at Kansas State Teachers college, Emporia, elected a sophomore as president of the Student Council. The youngest council president in history, Don Madole fills a vacancy caused when the former prey resigned. AP Misquotes A&M Senior? Alan Thomson, Oklahoma A&M senior recently charged with draft evasion, refuted statements attributed to him by the Associated Press. He was quoted as saying, "I will obey the laws of God rather than the laws of man." Thomson insisted he never said it. Debaters Arque By Mail Iowa State debaters participated in a debate by mail. Programs are recorded on tape and sent to the University of Illinois where they are judged against other college teams. The teams are judged on amount and quality of information, originality and accuracy of thought, organization, interest and delivery. Mall subscriptions: $a a semester. $4.50 a year. (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans. every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Received by the University in 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. CHRISTMAS Greetings CHRISTMAS GREETINGS To You From LAWRENCE Sanitary MILK AND ICE CREAM CO. Phone 696 202 W. 6th Merry Christmas TO ALL OF YOU FROM ALL OF US and a... Happy New Year THE KANSAS POWER AND LIGHT COMPANY CHRISTMAS Greetings To You From LAWRENCE Sanitary MILK AND ICE CREAM CO. Phone 696 202 W. 6th From LAWRENCE Sanitary MILK AND ICE CREAM CO. Phone 696 202 W. 6th Merry Christmas TO ALL OF YOU FROM ALL OF US and a... Happy New Year THE KANSAS POWER AND LIGHT COMPANY Friday, Dec. 21, 1951 University Daily Kansan Page 3 deeeetttt We extend our heartfelt wishes to you, our faculty, fellow students, and friends of Kansas University—that this may be a truly memorable Christmas and a Happy New Year! The University Daily Kansan Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, Dec. 21, 1951 Trojans Seek To Cut KU Win Skein At Six Southern California's Trojans, who dropped Oklahoma A&M from the unbeaten ranks this week, will attempt to snip the Jayhawkers' six-game win skein when they charge into Hoch audi- Kansas, K-State Big 7 Favorites The Kansas Jayhawkers and the Kansas State Wildewals will go into the sixth annual Big Seven basketball tournament in Kansas City Dec. 26 as co-favorites. Stanford university of the Pacific Coast, league is this year's guest team and must be given a top rating among the tourney's teams. Iowa State and Missouri should be rated beneath the two Kansas clubs and Stanford with Oklahoma, Nebraska and Colorado filling out the card in that order. Kansas goes into the tourney with the best record, having won six games without a setback. The Kansas team has looked mediocre part of the time but has also shown signs of being capable of capturing the Big Seven crown and national honors as well. Kansas State has a record of six wins and one defeat, suffered at the hands of an upstart San Francisco team. The Wildcats have an evenly balanced team which has shown tremendous ability. Coach Jack Gardner has again come up with a fine team though graduation cost him many of last year's top players. Stanford is the nation's most greatest scoring team with an average of 82.2 points in its five games, being undefeated thus far. The Indians have registered fourteen over California Polytechnical, 82-67; College of Pacific, 86-76; St. Mary's, 74-65; San Francisco, 92-78, and a 77-63 Kansas State has captured the tourney title more times than any other team, having taken it in 1947 and 1950. In 1949 the Missouri Tigers took the championship and the Oklahoma Sooners did the trick in 1948. Southern Methodist won the first year's tourney in 1946. 10. 16 Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa State and Colorado have not notched a tourney title. This year's play gets under way in Kansas City's Municipal auditorium Wednesday night, Dec. 26. Kansas meets Colorado in the opener at 8 o'clock, followed by Oklahoma and Stanford at 9:45. The second night will see Kansas State play Nebraska in the first game and Iowa State and Missouri in the second tussle. Losers of first round games will play the afternoons of Dec. 28 and 29, with games scheduled at 2 o'clock and 3:45 o'clock. The championship tilt will be Saturday night at 9:45 o'clock. Cage Scores Boston College 76, Harvard 63 Canisius 62, Dartmouth 48 Colgate 67, Buffalo 60 Manhattan 69, North Carolina State 50 New York University 87, Holy Cross 78 Georgetown (D.C.) 84, Princeton 62 Bradley 66, Colorado 58 Eastern Illinois State 86, Kentu Eastern Illinois State 86, Kentucky Wesleyan 76 Illinois 86, North Carolina 66 Iowa 59, Oklahoma 46 Pennsylvania 68, Michigan 63 Nebraska Wesleyan 52, Missouri Valley of Marshall 41 Cornell 51, Tulane 50 Kentucky 98, DePaul 60 Vanderbilt 63, Rice 56 SMU 50, Texas Tech 48 (Overtime). I YOUR EYES Eye The game will start at 7:35 o'clock and will be broadcast over the KU sports network by Max Fallenstein, WEN in Topeka, KFBI in Wichita and over WHB in Kansas City, Mo., by Larry Ray. should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. Lawrence Optical Co. Phone 425 1025 Mass. Kansas teams have a perfect record against the Trojans, having defeated them 43-42 in the finals of the 1940 Western NCAA tournament in Kansas City and 34-31 in 1936. In splitting a two-night stand with the highly rated Oklahoma A&M Aggies, USC showed considerable strength. The Trojans pulled an upset in the first game by nosing out the Aggies, 46-44. But Hank Iba's quintet squelched the uprising by smashing the visitors 58-47 Wednesday night. Coach Forrest Twogood has a fine pair of guards in Don Underwood, 6 feet 3 inches tall, and Ken Flower, 6 feet 1 inch tall. Both are smooth ball-handlers and good floor men. He also has tall but heavy men at forward with Bob Morton, a 6-feet 4-inch, 215 pounder, and Bruce Bennett, who is 6 feet 3 inches tall and weighs 185 pounds, holding down the starting berth. KU's All-American Clyde Lovellette is ripping the cords at an even faster pace than his two previous seasons. He has scored 167 points in six games for an average of 27.8 points per game. This is 5.5 points per game above the blazing trail he set his sophomore and junior years, The Jayhawkers have looked unimpressive in most of their games this season and will have to improve their play to down the USC team. Bob Kenney has been adding scoring punch to the Jayhawker attack. Dean Kelley has proved to be a fine running mate with Bill Houglain at guard and Bill Lienhard continues to play a fine game at forward. Coach Phog Allen is still without the services of Charlie Hoag, whose football injury is limiting him to light workouts. When he will be ready to play is still in doubt. Probable Starters Southern California Bennett F Morton F Boyd C Underwood G Flower G Illinois Drops North Carolina For Easy Win Kansas Lienhard Kenney Lovellette D. Kelley Hougland New York—(U,P)—Another easy victory went into the books today for the powerful basketball teams of Illinois and Kentucky, but the North Carolina State wolfpack was charged with a defeat that could drop it out of the nation's top 10. Illinois, ranked as the No. 1 court combine in the land, rolled to an 86-66 win over North Carolina at Champaign, Ill., while Kentucky, rated No. 3, cruised to a 98-60 triumph over DePaul, 101st straight win for the Wildcats on their campus at Lexington, Kv. But N. C. State, ranked No. 10, suffered a 69-50 upset at the hands of Manhattan college at Madison Square Garden, second loss for the Wolfback. Manhattan, scoring its fifth victory in six rickets, ripped off eight straight points near the end of the first half, walked off the court at intermission with a 36-26 lead, and never was seriously threatened again by the Wolfpack. Bill Doran led Manhattan with 15 points, while Mel Thompson of N. C. State had 16. Illinois, racking up its four win in as many starts, was held close for only five minutes by North Carolina and then pulled steadily away. No fewer than six of the Illini scored in double figures as John "Red" Kerr set the pace with 17 points. Al Lifson of the Tarheels was high man for the game, however, with 18 points. Kentucky's once-beaten Wildcats were held even by DePaul for eight minutes, and then turned the game into a romp. The hard-hitting Wildcats, fresh from their surprisingly easy win over St. John's, were led by Cliff Hagen with 21 points, Frank Ramsey with 20, and Bobby Watson with 18. Education Professor To Give Two Papers in Philadelphia Dr. Kenneth E. Anderson, associate professor of education, will be in Philadelphia Friday, Dec. 28, to present two papers. He will speak to the education section of the department for documentation for the Advancement of Science. The papers were written by Dr Anderson and two graduate students in education, Donald Harder and Norris Burke. Travel Service THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Tel. 30 8th & Mass. Follow the green and white stripes! Out-of-this-world holiday gifts always come in a box from Harzfeld's e Tennessee Coach Reverses Maxim To 'Best Offense Is Good Defense' Knoxville, Tenn.—(U.P.) —Gen. Bob Neyland who learned the soldier's maxim at West Point that the best defense is a good offense is making the reverse pay off with his Sugar Bowl Tennessee football team. Neyland, who served as an aide at the Point when Gen. Douglas MacArthur was its commanding officer, teaches his Volunteers — the nation's number one gridiron machine this season—that the best offense is a good defense. That strategy has paid off during 20 "Neyland years" with 163 victories, 24 defeats and 11 ties in 198 regular-season games. How well it works against the best ground-gainer the Vols face this season will be determined when they tackle Maryland in the sugar bowl Jan. 1. Neyland regards the Terrapins—Not the Vols—the nation's No. 1 team. And he thinks Jim Tatum is one of the country's finest young coaches. He said today that the Vols will have to play their best game to win. the nation's largest grain elevator is at Kansas City, Kan. Merry Christmas and HAPPY NEW YEAR Merry Christmas HAPPY NEW YEAR to you from DUCK'S TAVERN 824 Vermont MERRY CHRISTMAS MERRY CHRISTMAS ACME Bachelor Laundry and Dry Cleaning 1111 Mass. Phone 646 74 University Daily Kansan Page 5 By BOB NOLD SAE Edges Sigma Chi 25-23 In Well-Played IM Contest In what was perhaps the best played and most thrilling game of the young intramural basketball season, Sigma Alpha Epsilon defeated Sigma Chi 25-23 in a fraternity "A" encounter Thursday night at Robinson annex. Rick Lance sank a long shot with five seconds remaining to bring Sigma Alpha the victory. Just 10 seconds before, Dane Lonborg of Sigma Chi had connected with a long two hand push shot to deadlock the score. Sigma Chi managed to get a shot away in the last five seconds, but it was too hurried to be accurate. SAE led 13-8 at halftime, but the lead dwindled to 21-19 at the end of the third quarter, and the last quarter developed into a real dog-fight. Four minutes of the last frame went by without either team scoring, before Marv White of SAE finally broke the ice and gave his team a four point advantage. SAE tried to stall the ball at this stage, but finally lost it with 20 seconds left. All that remained to climax this thrilling encounter was the timely shooting of Lonborg and Lance. Sigma Chi's hopes were revived when Alan Marshall scored with a minute and a half left. Excellent floor play, rebounding, and teamwork featured the play of both teams. Paul Smith with nine points and Lance with seven took scoring honors for Sig Alph. The point making for Sigma Chi was well balanced. Delta Upson edged past Lambda Chi Alpha 32-30 in a tightly played fraternity "C" game at Robinson gym. The two teams were tied 20-20 at halftime. Alvis Stallard with 14 points and Charles Moon with nine paced the DU scoring. John Fulkerson and Darrell Kellegg led the Lambda Chi attack with nine and seven points, respectively. Although Roger Williams finished their game with three men, they still won handily from East Side -26 in an independent "B" game at Robinson gym. With Don Ament pouring in 14 points in the first half, Roger Williams built up a comfortable 25-16 score at intermission. Ament who led the victors with 18 points fouled out seconds after the fourth quarter began, and was followed a few minutes later by Howard Stringham, forcing Roger Williams to finish the game with three men. The East Side scoring was led by Richard Coffelt with eight points and Keith Nease with five. Thursday's Results Robinson Gym Fraternity "C" Phi Gamma Delta 24, Alpha Tau Omega. 20: Nu Sigma Nu 68, Delta Chi 25, and Beta Theta Pi 45, Sigma Alpha Epsilon 30. Independent "B" Oread "B" 40, MEN 23, and Jolliffe 53, AIA 25. Robinson Annex Independent "B" Varsity 43, Alpha Chi Epsilon 28; Rochdale 28, ASCE 24; Kappa Sigma 67, Acacia 7, and Lambda Chi Alpha forfeited to Kapl- Lambda Chi Alpha forfeited to Kappa Alpha Psi. Bucceroni Meets Lastarza Tonight Buceceroni, proud of the dynamite in his right fist, confidently declared he would make Lastarza the 26th knockout victim in his 37 professional fights. New York—(U.P.)-Lanky D a n Buceroni of Philadelphia predicted a knockout victory in tonight's television 10-round with stocky Roland Lastarza at Madison Square Garden, but the betting today favored Lastarza 3-1. However, no one yet has knocked out rugged Lastarza; not even Rocky Marciano, the Brockton slugger who belted out Rex Layne and Joe Louis. PRECISION WATCH REPAIRS Watch Repair Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed Wolfson's 1903 Mass. 743 Mass. Call 675 Merry Christmas from INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners Phone 432 740 Vt. Graham Selected 'Player Of Year' Friday, Dec. 21, 1951 New York—(U.R.) —Otto Graham the Cleveland Breward quarterback who looks like a movie star, talks like an insurance agent and passes like a champion, was selected National Football league "Player of the Year" today by United Press football writers. The handsome Graham actually is an insurance agent but for the last six years he has spent his falls helping to make the Browns the most successful team in professional football history. He led Cleveland to its sixth straight division championship this year and won the balloting in a walk. The only other players who received votes were Eilroy "Crazy Legs" Hirsch, the Los Angeles Rams' fine end, and Tackle Lou "The Toe" Groza, Cleveland's star placekicker. Graham leads the Browns against the Rams and passer Bob Waterfield for the world pro championship Sunday at Los Angeles. But, win or lose, the former Northwestern athlete already has proven his right to the "player of the year" title. The Browns played the toughest regular season schedule in the league and posted the best record, 11 victories against one defeat. Graham, as usual, was at his point-making best in the club's crucial games. "On the Banks of the Wabash" is the state song of Indiana. Tigers Tired Of Close Calls; Plan To Pulverize Gator Foe Clemson, S.C.—(U.R.)—Clemson's Tigers, in the Southern conference dog-house for accepting a bowl bid, have made a habit of barely squeaking through New Year's Day classics. This year, they aim to beat Miami in the Gator bowl at Jacksonville, Fla., by a decisive margin. The Gator Bowl venture represents Clemson's fourth bowl trip since 1940. The Tigers are unbeaten in three New Year's Day games, but their margin of victory in those contests totals only five points. Last year, Clemson came from behind in the last three minutes of the Orange Bowl game to edge this same Miami team, 15-14, on the margin of a safety. In the 1949 Gator Bowl, Coach Frank Howard's "Country Gentlemen" from the hills of South Carolina edged Missouri, 24-23, on the strength of a fourth period field goal. And in their first bowl appearance —against Boston college in the 1940 Cotton Bowl—Clemson won, 6-3. Jess Neely was the Tiger coach then, but Howard was an assistant. Youth Will Be Served The Southern conference fathers have frowned upon bowl games and forbade members from playing in them, effective this season. Clemson, along with Maryland, defied the ban to accept bowl bids and have been suspended from conference football for one year. Parkersburg, W. Va., (U.P.)—A 10-year-old boy here was held for juvenile authorities after admitting that he set fire to a vacant lot "to make a place to play football." HILL CO-OP CONTEST The Hill Co-op will give a prize to any person willing and able to develop a man-sized VENUS FLY TRAP Call 3691 These winter warnings can save your life! USE CHAINS! USE CHAINS! They reduce braking distances on ice and snow as much as 50%. That extra distance saved can save your life. Keep your windshield clean! Don't pass if you can help it On icy streets, it's almost impossible to get the speed and traction to pass safely. Keep a good distance between cars. Give hand signals well in advance. Get the feel of the road An efficient defroster and windshield wiper do the job as nothing else can. They're absolute necessities for safe winter driving. Don't speed! Practice pumping your brakes on snow or ice before you hit the heavy traffic. Jamming them on can lock the wheels and throw your car into a dangerous skid. Take it easy! If you skid, slow down even more. Always expect trouble in winter. That's the best way to avoid it—and stay alive. GREEN CROSS FOR SAFETY Be Careful-the life you save may be your own! SPONSORED IN THE INTEREST OF YOUR WINTER DRIVING SAFETY BY University Daily Kansan Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, Dec. 21, 1951 Holiday Social Events Inter-Dorm Caroling Party An Inter - Dormitories caroling party was held at Foster hall from 10 to 11:30 p.m. Monday. Loretta Cooley and Anna Jean Holyfield were the hostesses. Wesley Caroling Party Wesley Foundation held a caroling party Wednesday night from 7 to 9 o'clock. Chaperones were Helene Currier and Dr. and Mrs. Edwin Price. Watkins Hall Serenades Watkins hall held a serenade Tuesday and Wednesday nights from 10:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. Miss Julia Ames Willard was chaperon for the event. ISA Sells 360 Yule Cards Approximately 360 boxes of Christmas cards with scenes of the campus have been sold by the Independent Students association. This number is nearly the same as last year's sales. 100 Guests Attend Psychology Party The University department of psychology held a Christmas party Wednesday which was attended by more than 100 members of the department and guests. The program included talent from both the students and faculty. Dr Writz Heider and Dr. Alfred Baldwin, professors of psychology, played a piano duet, Dr. Marvin Scheerer, professor of psychology, and Mrs. Scheerer danced a tango, Dr. Erik Wright, professor of psychology, and Mrs. Wright danced folk dances. Elizabeth Sprague, graduate student, acted as mistress of ceremonies, Kelly T. Tooks, graduate student, sang in Spanish, and Pat Lock, graduate student, played the piano A group from Topeka sang barber shop songs. One of their group, Fiddling" Leventhal played gypsyirs, Len Ostlund led the Grand March, Kansas style, sang Kansas folk songs and called square dances. Dr. Roger Barker and Dr. Herbert Wright, Oskaloosa, attended the Aaron Herskowitz, graduate stunt, was in charge of the party. Campus Pinnings Lynette Leckron, College freshman, Abilene - Dwight Gilland, Sigma Phi Epsilon at Kansas State college, Abilene. Catherine Holt, Alpha Phi. Loado, Texas - Bob Hughes, Phil Delta heta, Topeka. Lois Fisk, Alpha Phi, Kansas City, o. - Johnnie Hilburn, Triangle, asnus City, Mo. Janice Horn, Chi Omega, Good-nd - Dale Ferguson, Sigma Alpha psilon, KU '50, Kansas City, Mo. Betsy Thomas, Chi Omega, Pittsburg - Bob Dring, Tau Kappa Epion, Lyons. Sharon Parker, Delta Delta Delta, hoenix, Ariz., to John Brose, Alpha au Omega, Wichita. ST. JOHN'S VENUE We Hope Your Vacation's Filled With Cheer . . . and May We See You Again Next Year Beta Turkey Pull Tonight NEW YORK CLEANERS Beta Theta Pi fraternity will hold its annual Turkey Pull dance at the chapter house from 6:30 p.m. to midnight tonight. Mrs. J. H. Kreamer, Mrs. Eugene Alford and Miss Veta Lear will chaperon. Theta Dinner-Dance Kappa Alpha Theta sorority entertained with a Christmas dinnerdance from 5 to 8 p.m. Thursday. Mrs. J. H. Kreamer, Mrs. Kenneth Whyte, Mrs. Ralph Park and Mrs. Eugene Alford were chaperones. Sigma Nu-Phi Gam Ski Party Sigma Nu and Phi Gamma Delta fraternities will entertain with a ski party at the Sigma Nu house from 8 p.m. to midnight tonight. Chapersones will be Mrs. Andrew McKay, Mrs. Dean Alt, Mrs. C. A. Thomas and Mrs. Thomas H. Stuart. Official Bulletin During the Christmas vacation all parking regulations will remain in effect on Jayhawk blvd., zones H, UG, and LG. Other zones will be open to all, with or without permits. Regular parking rules start again at 8 a.m. Jan. 3. Christmas Holiday Riders bureau. Register for ride or for passengers SUA office or hostess desk, Memorial Union. Alpha Phi sorority had its annual winter formal in the Crystal room of the Eldridge hotel Dec. 15. Alpha Phi Announces Formal Guest List Chaperones were Mrs. R. L. Blume, Alpha Phi housemother; Mrs. Ralph Park, Mrs. Violet Whitmore, Mrs. T. H. Stuart and Mrs. D. I. Denham. Guests were Dick Penfold, Dick Folck, John Hillburn, P. K. Smith, Kepler Johnson, Gene Cayot, Mike Lawler, Neil Walker, Jim Burgess, Stan Spencer, Bill Palmer, Sterling Waggener, John Eisele, Dallas Schulte, Jack Garrett, Don Creighton, Les Nelson. Bob Larzalere, Ken Beall, Jim Wheat, Louis Tommas, Bill Gearlock, Bill Blair, Ken Beardsley, Jim Ross, Dave McFarland, Edina Jones, Charlie Black, Bruce Hotchkiss, Mike Delmontico, Ray Gumm, Ray Brewer, Jerry Kerr, Fim Coulfer, Bob Wolfe, George Breckenridge, Bob Atteberry, Dick Milton, Farrell Shell Shirley Hillyer, Darrell Kellogg, Ben Phillips, Jack Willis, Ernest Rieger, Don Kimbrough, Van Gillespie, Pickie, Dick Chipetta, Dick Bucher, Steve Tkach, Bob Douglas, George Fraser, Esther Williams, Emory Williams, Barbara Zimmerman, Jim Selig, Bob Hughes, Lila Tessendorf, Kurt Grutzmacher, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Heckes, and Mr. and Mrs. William Pringle. Alpha Chi Omega Serenades Alpha Chi Omega sorority serenaded Monday and Tuesday nights from 10:30 to 1 a.m. Mrs. F. L. Mac-Creary was chaperon. Merry Christmas and 12 OUR BEST 12 TO ALL NEW YEAR WISHES Snooker • BRUNSWICKS • Pool Jayhawker's PROFESSIONAL Directory FORREST D. BROWN, D. D. S. 800 E. Massachusetts Phone 374 STOWITS REXALL STORE Prescriptions 9th and Mass. St. Phone 516 RANEY DRUG STORE Prescriptions 909 Mass. St. Phone 521 VAN'S PRESCRIPTION SHOP Phone 601 Residence Phone 3486-R 105 E. Eighth St. DR. C. R. ALBRIGHT Chiropractor - X-Ray and Physio-Therapy 1023 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Ph. 1531 HOLT PHARMACY 14th and Mass. Phone 234 Across from High School DR. M. L. BROCKWAY Chiropractor 10 E. 9th Street Telephone 4224 CRAIG - COLBURN Chiropractic Clinic 1024 Vermont St. Telephone 115 Miller hall's annual Christmas formal took place Dec. 15 at the hall. Chaperones were Mrs. Chaucey Edma Rumake, and Mrs. B. G. Robch Guests included Bill Cunningham, Stan Watkins, Paul Enos, Charles Kidwell, Orlin Musil, Paul Johnston, Gerald LeBlanc, Bill Stevens, Tom Murphy, Frank Murray, Jerry Jones, Jack Glick. Norman Wenger, Charles Moon, Roger Price, Bill Nance, Lee Johnson, Vic Rew, Wilbur Shoemaker, Jim Arthur, George Weiser, Henry Reed, Morris Kay, Ronald Sammons, Mike Quinn. Leonard Gerratzen, Gene Gallz, Ray Tietz, Neal Reooney, Wayne Woody, Dean Cole, Harley Oberhelman, Ron Evans, Clayton Comfort, Gill Enuck, John Olson, Wesley Modisest, Joyce Shank, Jean Rogers, Doris Kendall, Bob Payne, Jeanne Prichard, Bob Dunwell, Maridee Brownlee, Susan Tyler, Mr. and Mrs. Don Cayne, and Mr. and Mrs. Sid Anderson. Pi Beta Phi Serenades Pi Beta Phi, sorority serenaded Monday and Tuesday nights from 10:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. Mrs. Dean Alt was chaperon. Monchonsia Hall Lists Guests At Formal Monchorsia hall held its annual Christmas formal Dec. 14. The chaperones were Mrs. Astrid Dohner, Mrs. E. R. Hooper, Mrs. R. G. Roche, and Mrs. Edna E. Ramage. The guests were Eldon Haines, Will Adams, Joe Keeling, Bill Harjo, Leo Kruger, Ed Sarcione, Neal Morris, Harrien Unrul, John Kannenberg, Don Shrader, Charlie Satterfield, Alex Suenaga, Lee Duggan, Dick Sinclair, Kent Bowden, Marvin Butcher, Jim Rich, Bill Chance, and Erwin Kardos. Man Plymouth Your . . has a used car priced for you. Buddy GALLAGHER 634 Mass. Ph. 1000 Patronize Kansan Advertisers Now There Are Two! COLES FOOD CENTER and 2nd and Lincoln RUSTY'S FOOD CENTER 23rd and Louisiana TWO MODERN STORES READY TO SERVE YOU: LOW PRICES-COMPLETE STOCKS-FREE PARKING-SPEEDY SERVICE AND THEY ARE OPEN SUNDAYS AND EVENINGS TILL 8:30 P.M. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE MAKE ONE OF THESE FINE STORES YOUR STORE. Armour's Star, Pure 1 lb. Roll PORK SAUSAGE ... 29c Ohse's Famous Flavor 1 lb. Pkg. SKINLESS WIENERS ... 45c Fresh, Pan Ready, Avg. Wt. 1 3/4 Ibs. FRYING CHICKENS ... Each 89c Golden Ripe, Large Lb. BANANAS ... 10c Good, All Purpose 10 lb. Bag RED POTATOES ... 47c Colored Quarters, Good Value Ib. Ctn. OLEO MARGARINE ... 19c Country Fresh Doz. SELECTED EGGS ... 49c Plump and Meaty 11 oz. Ctn. SEEDLESS RAISINS ... 10c Folgers or Ib. Can FLEMING COFFEE 79c Kuner's New Pack No. 2½ Can PIE PUMPKIN 15c Prices and Items Effective thru Dec. 24 — Both Stores RUSTY'S Food Center 23RD. & LOUISIANA LOW PRICES EVERYDAY OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAYS IGA LOTS OF FIRST PARMING SPACE COLE'S Food Center 2ND. and LINCOLN EVERYDAY LOW PRICES RYS sandw cakes. Air-co midnig Lists annual s. Astrid r. Mrs. E. Ram Haines, Il harjo, al Morl Kannen- Satter, Megan Maggan ace, and Man riced R 1000 ers Page 7 410 Classified Advertising Phone K.U.376 Classified Advertising Rates one day Three days words or less ...50c Additional words ...1c 75c $1.00 2c 3c FOR SALE Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid by cash or in person during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Business office, Journals, 425 W. 16th Street, 3:45 p.m. the day before publication. 25 FOOT 1947 trailer house in good condition, semi-permanently located, ready for immediate occupancy. See afterneons at 929 Conn. 21 1951 CHEVROLET, 2-door green Fleetline model. Excellent condition. Must sell car. Make an offer. Call 3441J after 4 p.m. 21 BOOK-EASE IS the collapsible book holder. Use it on a desk, in bed, any way you want, on the pages or in place. Now, only 98c at the student Union Book Store. **21** CHEMISTRY MAJORS! We now have in coord. better grades. "How to, Solv- yard." GIFT IDEAS FOR CHRISTMAS! Give a magazine subscription for the ideal Christmas Gift. We take subscriptions to magazines. Student Union Box 21 Store. SVERAL RIDERS going toward Ushah, leaving Dec. 21, via route 30. See Jack Patton, 1825 Ls. , or phone 3-271-L4, between 5 and 6 p.m. *Sciences in General Chemistry* by Bayer and Haber, "A Comparative Analysis" by Babor, and "How to Solve Problems in Quantitative Analysis" by Scholars at your University Union Book Store. FINE ART REPRODUCTIONS! We now have a wide selection of reproductions of famous paintings in full color. Student Union Book Store. 21 TRANSPORTATION AIRLINE TICKETS, promp. confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange and international travel whether tours on land or by plane. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3611, Downs Service, 1051 Mass. t¹ Ask us about family rates, skype and round trip reductions. All expense hours. Fall and winter cruises. Book now! Summer. Call Miss Glesman at Financial Bank for information and res. relations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30. ALL HOUSE: living-bedroom, modern then and bath. Furnished, suitable for family use. Send in client location. $45 a month. Write to: Dally Kansan, REDD 12 5. 21 FOR RENT University Daily Kansan DOMS FOR 3 men. No other room-serve or phone number 3389, Gilkerson's Cafe, 7 a.m. to 2:15 p.m. or 1788J at 942 Miss. 230 p.m. to 12 midnight. 21 NTAL TYPEWRITERS. Both new and portables for $1.00 per week or $3.50 per month are easy way to better, new Compares one at the Stu- Union Book Store. TYPING of all kinds done promptly and accurately. Special Christmas rates. Call Mrs. Merritt, KU 296. 21 VPING: Themes, term paper, theses- prompt, accurate service. Callers: hanley, 1859J, or bring to 417 Rhode land. EXPERIENCED TYPEPI: term papers makes books, medical and biol- ogy books, and music books. miscellaneous. Mrs. E. Doscoe, 833 Ls. Apl. 4 upstairs, 27175J after I was born. RYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastry. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. ff TYPING: Thesex, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accumulate work prompt attention. 10 years thesex typing experience. M.S. Shields, 1209 Ohio. Phi RYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks sandwiches, maits, home-made ples and marmalade, spinning roasted custom- air-conditioned from 6 a.m. till midnight. Crystal Cafe, 609 Vt. STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and manicures--for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 404, 108 Mass. tf DIO AND TV repair service on all lakes. Largest stock of finest quality机. We have the finest test equipment in the nation, assuring fast, efficient service. Bowman and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont tree pickup and delivery. if **VIPING:** Experience in these, term papers, miscellaneous typing, and sten- l. cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone v. 1015 Tennessee; tt JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant antisease and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet shop, including our own furniture. Our one-stop pet shop has everything. Our fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. $ Friday, Dec. 21, 1951 BLUE PARKER 21 with silver cap. Sum. Phone 213-865-4700. Phone 213- Sam Sebesta, 123 Oredre. SILVER FRENCH brooch evening bag CAPTAIN CAMELTON return. Clot- DeNean Ankerholz at 3735 LOST WILL THE PERSON who took by mistake, my overcoat and scarf from the room, met the Student Union. Friday (14th) at 1879, please call Mr. Delmonico-1879. 1-3-52 MAN'S WRIST WATCH, white metal sand, round, on path from Union to Snow hall, Dec. 12. Chen gLiang. Phone KU 515. 21 WANTED: Part time receptionist. Hours required. Call 801-325-6791 or visit ing. Box 2 Day Kansas office. 1-d-52 HELP WANTED Daily Kansan No Exception To Newspaper Style Rules It is interesting to note that in the Kansan it is freshman pledges, not freshmen pledges, and that "a person was in charge of a meeting," not the "meeting was in charge of a person." Similarly a person is presented a gift, not presented with a gift. Every newspaper follows several rules which are peculiar to that newspaper, and the University Daily Kansan is no exception. Sports slang is discouraged on the sports page, especially such words as tyro, novices, pigskin, chasers, basketeers, aggregation and coed. Perhaps the one rule which runs most counter to common usage on the Hill, Mt. Oread, the campus, KU or, preferably, the University, is the rule which says it is Potter lake, not Potter's lake. This is quite logical, however, since we would not go 'Board of regents is never capitalized, but Council, when referring to the All Student Council is capitalized. Nebraska is always abbreviated Neb, instead of Nebr., while Colorado is Colo., never Col. Fort and Saint are Ft. and St., while Point and Port spelled out. He told a NATO committee in Paris that Moscow, too, has its troubles in maintaining and supplying a big army and air force. For the past year or so almost everybody has taken it for granted that the Russian army could sweep to the English channel within about two weeks after the outbreak of World War III. Features Tonight 7:34-9:34 p.m. - Doors Open 6:45 p.m.-Continuous Sat. and Sun. from 1 p.m. Like most publications the UDK has certain taboos. Students are always the Jayhawkers, never Jays or Hawks. Sometimes the rules seem contradictory. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower has taken a new line in his campaign to rally the Western European nations. He is trying to convince the leaders of the North Atlantic Treaty organization that the Russians aren't as tough as everybody seems to think. e" is one of the major Kansan rules—not down south that the Kansan prefers not to capitalize. TODAY THRU MONDAY NEW JUNGLE THRILLS Actually Filmed in AFRICA! But Eisenhower has precedent in his favor when he challenges the assumption that the Western nations' defenses would crumple that quickly. "TARZANS PERIL" starring LEX BARKER VIRGINIA HUSTON GEO. MACREADY Russia Not So Tough As We Think, Ike Says NEW JUNGLE THRILLS Actually Filmed in AFRICA! "TARZAN'S PERIL" starring LEX BARKER VIRGINIA HUSTON GEO. MACHEADY New PATEE PHONE 321 around saying Strong's hall, Bailey's lab, Chi Omega's flowerpot or Memorial's campanile. Although the Kansan style has remained fairly stationary through the years, a major change was recently made. The periods in KU, YMCA and other such abbreviations were taken out. Occasionally a student's name may appear in the paper without his or her mother's recognizing it. This comes from the policy of printing names just as they are in the student directory. Wilbur Thaddeus Alosius Jones may be better known as just plain Bill. There's No Place Like Home New Britain, Conn.—(U.P.)-Thaddeus Pomnickowski asked for a night's lodging in a cell at police headquarters. The officers obliged. When they tried to wake him up they found him drunk, and a bottle of liquor under the cot. He was booked on a drunkenness charge and taken back to the same cell. MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL! NOW! SATURDAY ENDS DEATH CROWDs CLOSE! THE THREAT V MICHAEL O'SHEA • JULIE RISHOP Features Tonite: 7:34 - 9:34 Continuous Shows Saturday Features: 1:54-3:54-5:54 7:54 - 9:54 Musical - Cartoon - News Starts Saturday Owl 11:15 SUNDAY ROBERT MITCHUM in WHERE DANGER LIVES NEW KOR RADIO FE1921 Color Cartoon - News Yranada PHONE 914 Continuous Shows Saturday Sunday and Christmas Day From 1 p.m. - Open 12:45 At the start of almost every war a lot of pre-conciliated ideas which have gone unchallenged for years are tossed on the scrap heap. In World War II, for instance, these assumptions turned out to be completely wrong: that the Maginot line would protect France indefinitely against German invasion; that the Japanese never could become good fliers because they had bad eyesight; that air power could destroy a city such as Berlin with two or three saturation raids; that Hitler would conquer Russia within a month. It is part of Eisenhower's job to talk a good fight; if he did otherwise he might as well pack up and come home. Eisenhower is confident about the ability of the Allies to stage at least a holding operation well east of the English channel. The weakness of the Russian army is, and always has been, lack of transport. The vast armies that Stalin threw against the Germans toward the end of World War II almost always moved at ox-cart pace. The Russians frequently lived off the land because they were unable to move supplies fast enough. There were long pauses between Russian offensives. Given control of the air—which isn't by any means certain—the Allies might be able to stabilize a defense line and win some breathing space. The big lesson of the Korean war is that an outnumbered army with superior fire power can hold off an army twice or three times its size and even go over to the offensive. The use of tactical atomic weapons ought to provide that firepower superiority. All this doesn't mean Russia could be defeated with what the NATO powers now have in Europe. It probably would be a long war. The point Eisenhower is trying to make is that it is just as dangerous to over-estimate the enemy as it is to underestimate him. Tot Wears 76-Year-Old Dress Hudson, Mass., (U.P.)—When Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Doyle's baby daughter was christened at St Michael's Church, she wore a 76-year-old dress which has served three generations of the family. One-third of New Hampshire is more than 2,000 feet above sea level. VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD. TODAY - SATURDAY Johnny Mack Brown "WHISTLING HILLS" —and Laurel and Hardy "SWISS MISS" Ch. 5 "Flying Disc Man From Mars" SUN. - MON. - TUES. Adm. 14c - 45c 2 ZANE GREY'S WESTERNS 2 Larry (Buster) Crabbe June Martel "FORLORN RIVER" —And— Robert Cummings Marsha Hunt "DESERT GOLD" Job Applications Due Feb. 2 Applications by civil engineering seniors for positions with the California state government are due Saturday, Feb. 2. A civil service examination will be held March 1 on a nationwide basis for Junior civil engineers. Facilities have been set up to give the examination on or near the KU campus. Such students should attach a letter to this effect to their applications. Civil engineering students graduating in the winter class may apply for immediate employment on a temporary basis without waiting for the examination. Because of the heavy demand for young civil engineers in an expanding highway program and other public works in California, prompt offers of employment may be expected by those who qualify, the California State Personnel board said. Seniors may qualify for the positions while still at KU, but mus submit evidence of graduation o its equivalent before actual ap pointment. Finds Economy Expensive The junior civil engineer class i. California starts at $235 a month. Mimeographed descriptions of the examination and application form are available from the campus placement officer of the state personnel board, Sacramento 14. Calif. Decatur, III— (U,P) — A 45-year-old man who refused to pay his tax. fare was arrested and fined $10.40 The fare would have been 35 cents Agency for Mixture No. 79 701 Mass. Phone 999 Eldridge Pharmacy Drugs, Sundries, Fountain, Pines. Comfort! Convenience! JATHAYER NEW PARK-BACK CUSHIONED CHAIRS Louis Hayward Patricia Medina "THE LADY AND THE BANDIT" TODAY MERCHANTS FREE MOVIE SATURDAY-SUNDAY 2-DAYS ONLY-2 1001 ADVENTURES FLAMING IN COLOR! THE MAGIC CARPET SUPER CINEMA COLOR MARVELSTERS LUCILLE JOHN BALL AGAR with PATRIGIA MEDINA A COLUMBIA PICTURE Plus Late News Events Color Cartoon "CHOW HOUND" MONDAY DEC.24 ONE DAY ONLY CARTOON CIRCUS 5—Cartoons—5 2—3 Stooges Comedies 1—All-Star Comedy 1—Laurel And Hardy Comedy 1 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Fridav. Dec. 21, 1951 Corbin Orphan Moves To Snow Hall By JOHNNY HERRINGTON The University biology department has taken on a new function. It is now the official home for all orphaned alligators. About a week ago, Sandra Dunlop, College freshman, received such a "critter" from a friend. He—or site as the case may be—became a problem. Friend alligator—affectionately named "Herman"—became increasingly hard to feed and care for. And besides, alligators—especially alligators named "Herman"—have no place in Corbin hall. So Miss Dunlap carted Herman over to Snow hall. There the biology department agreed to take care of him—we mean "it." Now Herman occupies a part of a tank along with some moss and fern—better known as bryophytes and pteridophytes to all connoisseurs of plant life. Herman is believed to be about one year old. It is 11 inches long. Alligators are said to increase their length one foot with each year of life during their early years. It's impossible to tell whether Herman is male or female—though the name would seem to prejudice an opinion. The sex of young alligators can be determined only by dissection. Alligators are meat-eating or carnivorous animals. Herman is fed meat scraps by his "caretakers" and every now and then feasts on a "chunk" of hamburger. Though some 'gators live up to 40 years, most "pets" seldom survive more than three or four years of life. This is due to lack of care by the owners according to biology officials. There are marked differences between Herman and his crocodile brothers. The alligator has a shorter and broader snout than the crocodile. And the teeth of the lower jaw shut into pits instead of into marginal notches. Plans Made For Institute Plans for the state's first institute for public relations personnel were announced today by Dean Frank T. Stockton, of University Extension. A planning committee of public relations directors met Tuesday with KU representatives to outline the problems with which the institute should deal. "The consensus was that both veterans and newcomers to the field would benefit most in a short institute from an analysis of the real functions of public relations," Dean Stockton said. Dates in February and early March are being considered. Dean Stockton said invitations will be sent not only to full time public relations workers in business, education, and government, but also to plant managers and association directors whose duties have many public relations aspects. KU members of the committee Dean Stockton, E. A. McFarland and David Bridethalid of KU Extention; Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, and Tom Yoe of the University public relations office. Therapists can also use this technique to help patients with a wide range of conditions. For example, a therapist may use a reflex training method to help a patient improve their handwriting skills. Another technique is the therapist's own reflex training method, which involves practicing specific movements and movements on the therapist's hands. This can help the therapist develop more precise reflexes and improve their overall reflexes. "HERMAN." a one-year-old alligator, turned out to be a problem child at Corbin hall and was deported to Snow hall, where he has a tank by himself with no girls around to bother him. Work For 126 KU Students Available In Tool-Designing Part-time work for 126 students at a pay-scale ranging from .90 to $1.50 an hour will be available in Lawrence after Wednesday, Dec. 26, according to Pete Chiarle, branch manager for LaSalle Engineering corporation. "We'll have 65 tables going fullblast by the first of the year," Mr Chiarle said. The firm is engaged in a tool-designing program for large and small aircraft companies over the United States. At present all work is handled by 11 full-time draftsmen, four of whom are women. One draftsman is Lawrence Allison, a 1914 KU graduate. When Mr. Allison was asked what he thought of this program whereby students can work less hours and maintain a modest standard of living, he said, "it's an excellent opportunity for students to receive practical on-the-job training." T. DeWitt Carr, dean of the School of Engineering, and Al Conn, president of LaSalle Engineering worked out details concerning the establishment of a branch-office here. Dean Carr said he explained to the LaSalle president the many benefits both parties could receive by letting students work part-time for the firm which is swamped with work. This discussion took place "around Sept. 15," Dean Carr said, "and by Oct. 1, LaSalle had an office here." All students may apply for fulltime employment with LaSalle Engineering upon graduation from KU. At the same time, stress was applied to the fact that "anyone who has a mechanical background of any kind is eligible for work." "We'll take the greenerest of the green and start them out at 90 cents an hour," Mr. Chiarle said. "An ability to print neatly is a great asset." The branch manager said that students are expected to work a minimum of 20 hours a week and that this summer "we'll be_working 10 hours a day." Interviews for the three main positions of director, producer and business manager will be continued at the committee's meeting Wednesday, Jan. 9. At present there are 45 KU students participating in the program. Mr. Chiarle expressed pleasure at the caliber of work turned out by the students and indicated that this experiment to "evaluate the student" is proving highly beneficial, both to his company and the University. College Daze Script Chosen The script for College Daze, 1552, has been chosen and the show will be given four nights, April 29 through May 2, Jack Campbell, College sophomore and the show's co-ordinator, announced today. "Love is Here to Stay" by Robert Longstaff, journalism junior; Rodger Vaughan, fine arts junior, and Dale Moore, fine arts sophomore, is the winning script for the all-student musical revue sponsored by Student Union Activities. Three faculty judges, Allen Crafton, professor of speech; Bertram Vogel, assistant professor of English, and Clayton Krehbiel, instructor of music education, and the Union board of directors made the final decision at a meeting Wednesday. "In order to make College Daze a truly all-student production, the board is extremely anxious to have more applications for these positions," James M. Burgoyne, SUA director, said. Interested persons are urged to call Campbell or Mr. Burgoyne before Jan. 9. You May Have Only One Day To Live "Victim X" went shopping today for Christmas. But he won't live that long. "Victim X" has only one more day to live. About noon on Saturday he will be killed in a traffic accident. The county morgue will list his death as a matter of routine, just like almost a million others. But "Victim X" will have one distinction. His will be the one-millionth traffic death in the United States since the first wheezing automobile marked finis to a horse-drawn era of comparative safety. It will be one of an expected record-breaking 600 traffic deaths during the Christmas holidays. As of midnight last night, the National Safety council estimated the nation's overall motor vehicle deaths The millionth victim could be almost anyone—a child darting across a street, a husband driving home from his day's work, a housewife doing the family shopping, or a college student driving home. since the turn of the century at 999, 750. It is estimated that 600 persons will die from 6 p.m. today until midnight Tuesday, Dec. 25, for the biggest holiday death toll in history. The million victim's death will occur just 51 years, three months, and eight days after a horseless carriage claimed the first traffic victim in New York City in 1899. He could be you. In that accident a man named H. H. Bliss stepped on a trollie and turned to help a woman step down. An automobile struck him and he died in Roosevelt hospital the next dav. "It has taken a little more than 50 years to kill the first million," said Ned H. Dearborn, safety council president. "But if traffic deaths continue at the present rate, it will take only 30 years to kill the second million." By way of comparison, the number of Americans killed in action and those who died of wounds in all the nation's wars since Paul Revere mustered the Minute Man in 1775 totals only about 520.460. However, the overall total of American military deaths, including those from causes other than enemy action, passed the million mark early the past September. Even so, it took 176 years to reach that total. -News Roundup UN Displays Skepticism On Red's Ability To Count Panmunjom, Korea—(U.P.)—The United Nations hinted today that the Communists may hold hundreds of American war prisoners in addition to the 3.198 they reported to the Allies. The U.N. demanded that the Reds explain why more than 1,000 UN officers and men—mostly Americans—announced previously by them as war prisoners were missing from the list submitted by the Communists three days ago. A sharp note from Rear Admiral R. E. Libby, UN member of the prisoner subcommittee, charged that the Communist list of 11,559 prisoners was full of "wide discrepancies" and was "wholly unbelievable." UN Offers Islands As Aid To Talks Pammunjom, Korea—U.R.P.)—The United Nations agreed today to give up all the islands it holds off the East and West coasts of Communist North Korea in a major concession to speed up an armistice. UN staff officers attached no strings to the offer, but a spokesman said it was made in anticipation that the Reds would yield later to other Allied demands—perhaps on the key issue of rotection of troops during a truce. Kansas City, Mo.—(U.R.)Two men shot and killed one policeman and wounded another here last night and officers have issued a general alarm for the slayers, one of whom they believe might be an 18-year-old double-murder suspect with an "uncontrollable temper." Kansas City Cop Killed--Maurer Suspect Patrolman Clyde Harrison, 47, was shot in the head and died en route to a hospital when he and his partner, Patrolman Richard Staab. 37, stopped a car after it made an illegal left turn. Detroit authorities informed local police who the car belonged to but they said the car may have been stolen or sold. It is suspected that one of last night's occupants was Kenneth Maurer, wanted in Michigan for the hatchet murder of his mother and 11-year-old sister. Maurer disappeared last Nov. 26 after the slaying. Rome—(U.P.)—Italy, with the blessing of the Western powers, proclaimed null and void today the provisions of its World War II peace treaty limiting its armed forces and forbidding it to produce atomic weapons. Italy Asks Revision Of Peace Treaty Eight nations—the United States, Great Britain, France, Belgium. The Netherlands, Greece, Nationalist China and New Zealand-first announced their "full acceptance" of Italy's request for revision the treaty. The department's apology, it was learned, was made to a Soviet embassy official who called at the department Thursday to protest that the fancy seal near the embassy's main door on fashion 16th street had been stolen Wednesday night. Washington— (U.P.) —The state department has expressed "regrets" to the Russian embassy over two incidents of vandalism now under investigation by District of Columbia police. Russian Embassy Protests'Vandalism' The protest followed delivery of a Soviet note Monday wl called on the United States to "apprehend and punish . . . unknow hooligans" who removed a sign Sunday night from the Embass Chancery building attached to the embassy. And Remember— "It's Drake's For Bakes" all through the New Year. Best Wishes For A HAPPY NEW YEAR Christmas Greetings and DRAKE'S BAKERY 907 Mass. Phone 61