Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
that ers in
niversity Daily Hansan
1,000 ly by d by
er of 11,559 unbe-
pay to
Com-
tistice.
boke-
yield
rote
onged selected in r-old
O F T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F K A N S A S
ued aht be illable
awers. War II produce
died chard
hursday, Jan. 3, 1952
STUDENT NEWSPAPER
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Returning KU Students Jam Lawrence Traffic Facilities
Some 6,500 returning University students gave the city of Lawrence one of its worst traffic jams in history Wednesday and early this morning.
Transportation facilities both within and to the city were overburdened to bring the University's population back in time for the resumption of classes at 8 o'clock this morning.
The rush at train and bus depots in Lawrence has slowed down, however, and the morning weather report offers clear skies today and tonight for late arrivals.
Officials at the Kansas highway patrol office said US highways 10, 24 and 40 are open but slick in spots. A safe driving speed was estimated at between 40 and 45 miles per hour.
Trains coming into both the Union Pacific and Santa Fe depots were crowded Wednesday. Students were still coming in at the Union Pacific depot this morning and the 5:20 a.m. Santa Fe train carried a heavy load.
A ticket agent at the Union Bus depot said extra buses were put on Wednesday to accommodate passengers who were not able to get on the crowded regular buses.
The Jayhawk taxi company received 336 calls for cabs Wednesday
Program For UN Conference To Feature Three Speakers
The tentative program for the fourth annual United Nations conference at the University on Thursday, Jan. 24 and Friday, Jan. 25, was announced today by Dean Frank T. Stockton of University Extension.
This is the fifth annual Christmas scholarship the Gamma Phi Betasave given.
night alone and carried an estimated 700 plus persons during that time. Persons at the company office said it was the busiest night on record.
"I checked with the police department and sheriff's office and no accidents have been reported," D. A. More, campus traffic clerk, said this morning.
No Students In Accidents
The Union Cab company received 391 phone calls for cabs Wednesday evening and took care of an estimated 500 calls that afternoon.
"As chairman of the committee of aids and awards, I am certainly grateful to the Gamma Phi's for awarding this scholarship annually," Miss Margaret Habein, dean of romen, said.
There will be three featured speakers. They are V. G. D. Stavridi, director of the reference and publi-
Campus police said today that "not a single accident" involving students at the University had been reported over the Christmas holidays.
Rozanne Atkins, College sophomore, has been awarded the $110 Gamma Phi Beta Christmas Gift scholarship.
Sophomore Wins Gamma Phi Award
According to the Daily Kansan files, one University student died as a result of an automobile accident Dec. 30, 1950. Another was seriously injured in the same accident.
Mrs. Reynolds will address the group at the closing luncheon on Jan. 25 on the subject, "Food and Industry Around the World."
Dr. Chakravarty will speak at the afternoon session on Jan. 24 on "New East Today."
The theme of the conference will be "Know Your United Nations Better." It is designed as a medium by which leaders of all types of organizations in the state may obtain information and learn techniques of better informing their home communities about the activities of the UN.
Emphasis will be placed on the
director of the reference and publication division of the UN department of public information; Dr. Amiya Chakravarty, visiting professor of humanities, former adviser to the UN delegation from India, and Mrs. Florence Reynolds, UN representative for the food and agricultural organizations.
Teachers, students, service and civic club representatives and other persons interested in the United Nations and its activities will be invited to attend the conference, which is sponsored by University Extension
Mr. Stavridi will address the opening session at 10 a.m. on Jan. 4 on "World Understanding." He will speak again that evening at the dinner meting on "New Patterns for World Affairs."
Special section meetings will be held on press and publicity, library services, UNESCO, non-governmental organizations, radio and television, high school students, film service and service clubs.
many activities of the UN which do not receive the widespread press coverage given the actions of the security council and the general assembly.
Fields To Speak On Radio Program
J. Eldon Fields, associate professor of political science, will be the 11th speaker in the Sociology on the Air series Sunday morning at 9:45 over KLWN. He will talk on "General Education and the Citizen."
His talk will deal with the extent of the individual's participation in citizenship. The program is sponsored by the department of sociology and anthropology.
Dr. Fields joined the University faculty in 1946 after teaching at Stanford, Syracuse and Chicago universities. He received his doctor of philosophy degree from Stanford in 1942.
Winter Jayhawker To Be Sold Jan. 7
Because of the transfer of the Jayhawker office, the winter issue of the magazine will not be distributed until Monday, Jan. 7, Richard Hackney, business manager, said.
The office, formerly on the second floor of the Union building, was transferred to the second floor of the new William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information during Christmas vacation. It is not yet open to the public.
The winter issue of the Jaya hawker will be available to students Monday, Jan. 7, at the information booth only.
Movie star Audie Murphy, most decorated veteran of World War II, and actors John Hudson and James Best will meet University students at an informal reception at the Union lounge tonight from 9:30 until 10:15.
All three appear in the movie "The Cimarron Kid" which opens in Lawrence Jan. 11. Murphy plays the lead in the movie which depicts the life of the Dalton gang and their raid on Coffeville.
The actors will be introduced at the reception by Capt. Bernard Turkla, assistant professor of military science, and will sign autographs and chat with students.
Engineer Exposition Chairmen Are Picked
Hudson and Best who portray gang members "Diamond Dick" and "Bitter Creek", arrived in Lawrence this morning for a busy round of activities. Murphy is expected to reach Lawrence about 6 this evening.
Hudson and Best became horsemen and trick riders in conjunction with movie roles which require "real" cowboys. They were taught by ex-rodeo men for six weeks in preparation for their roles in "The Cimarron Kid."
Chairmen for the 1952 Engineering Exposition, annual scientific show presented by the School of Engineering and Architecture, have been announced by Robert Kipp, president of the Engineering Council, the school's governing body.
The chairmen for the two-day event which is scheduled for Friday, April 4 and Saturday, April 5, are Vernon Johnson, engineering senior, and Gene Rogers, engineering sophomor.
BENCHMARK
COACH FORREST C. ALLEN, (left) happily accepts the Big Seven pre-season tournament championship trophy and a hardy hand-shake from Bruce Drake, Oklahoma mentor and head of the national basketball rules committee. It was the first time in the six-year history of the tourney that a KU team has captured the crown, having been
beaten twice in the finals.—Photo by Gagliardo-Clarkson
47 States Represented At Religious Conference
K-State Tickets To Arrive Soon
KU's share of the tickets to the K-State-KU basketball battle in Manhattan Jan. 26 failed to arrive during the Christmas vacation as scheduled, E. L. Falkenstien, athletic business manager said this morning. The tickets may reach Lawrence today however.
WEATHER
KU students lucky enough to be around the athletic office when the tickets arrive will be permitted to buy only one so that the thin supply can be made to go as far as possible.
Just how many tickets will be in the KU block is uncertain Mr. Falkenstien said, but the number will not be too large as only 2,600 seats in the K-State fieldhouse are available to the public this year. K-State students, faculty and season ticket holders have claim on the other 10,000.
Snow west and north, freezing rain or sleet in southeast tonight and Friday beginning in west and south this afternoon. Not so cold tonight, lows 15-20 west and north, 25 southeast. High Friday 22-25 west and north, 28-30 southeast. Accumulation of freezing rain and sleet likely will be heavy.
Nearly 2,200 students and leaders from 47 states and almost every foreign country outside the Iron Curtain were in attendance at the 16th quadrennial Student Volunteer Movement conference at the University from Dec. 27 through Tuesday.
Awards Presented At WAA Banquet
About 75 University women and faculty members attended the annual Women's Athletic association banquet held just before the Christmas holidays in the Union.
The high point of the banquet came when Vinita Bradshaw, association president, presented Miss Ruth Hoover, director of intramursals, with a KU blazer. This award is ordinarily reserved for students and is one of the highest which may be attained in intramursals.
The event, held each fall, following the volleyball and hockey season, pays tribute to the outstanding students in intramural. New members to the association are also initiated.
The award was made in appreciation of Miss Hoover's many years of service and devotion to the women of the University.
Miss Joie Stapleton, WAA faculty sponsor, awarded blazers to Sydney Ashton and Vinita Bradshaw.
Members of the honorary varsity teams in volleyball and hockey were presented to the group. The volleyball team includes: Ernestine Dehlinger, Helene Steinbuchel, Nancy Seaman, Sue Neff, Sydney Ashton, Margaret Black, Mary Snead and Nancy Hutton.
The hockey team includes: Sydney Ashton, Ernestine Dehlinger, Chloe Warner, Vinita Bradshaw, Betty van der Smissen, Sue Neff, Shirley Thomson, Mary Ann Mahoney, Shirley Wilkie, Jean Michaelss and
Carolyn Zimmerman, Rita Speckin,
Ruth Heilbrunn, Eloise Feuerborn,
Doraine Wiegel, Marry Anne Everett,
Mary Gale Loveless, Barbara Fordham,
Sue Baldwin, LaVon Skaropan, Virginia Mackey, Jance Moses, Carolyn Wahlberg, Catherine Petit, Marilyn Dubach, Jo Piller, Shirley Smith and Betty Collins.
New members initiated include Carole Davis, Carol Landis, Suzanne Plummer, Nancy Canary, Marilyn Kipp, Joan Leonhart, Nancy Hutton, Mary Demerter, Mary Snead, Caroline Torneden, Elva Sutton, Pattie Gillespie, Rosemary Cody, Marlene Moss, Margaret Black, Flavia Robertson, Frances Bibens.
Carolyn Wahlberg.
Ohio sent the largest delegation with 146 students from 25 colleges. Kansas was second with 138 from 18 colleges, Illinois third with 132 from 27 colleges, and Texas fourth with 112 from 28 schools.
It was the largest interdenominational Christian student gathering in the United States since the early 1930's, said Edward H. Johnson, SVM executive secretary.
The delegates represented nearly 40 protestant denominations and were almost all college students. The conference leaders were educators, missionaries and full-time church workers.
"The Barber of Seville" an Italian film with English titles starring Ferrucio Tagliavini, Italian tenor, will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 4, in Hoch auditorium.
The students were housed in University dormitories and organized houses, and took their meals at the Union. About 300 students who had not registered in advance were housed in the military science building and Robinson gymnasium. The eating schedule was set up with three shifts with each shift given one-half hour.
The international flavor of the conference was heightened by the attendance of about 180 foreign students who are now enrolled in North American colleges.
The University as the host school provided the largest individual delegation with 56 representatives. The University of Illinois was second with 37; the University of Texas, 31; the University of Minnesota, 29, and the University of Manitoba, 29.
To Show Italian Film At 7:30 p.m.Friday
The movie, which will be narrated by Deems Taylor, American music composer and critic, is taken from comic opera,"The Barber of Seville" by Rossini.
Major characters in the film are The Count of Almaviva, played by FerrUCCio Tagliavini; Figaro, the barber, Tito Gobbii; Rosina, Nelly Corradi; Don Bartolo, Vito de Taranto; Don Basilio, Italo Tajo; Berta, Natalia Nicolini, and Fliorello, Nino Mazziotti.
The orchestra and chorus of the Rome Opera house under the direction of Mario Costa will also appear in the film. All persons will be admitted free to the movie.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 3, 1952
Little Man On Campus
by Bibler
Daily Kansan Editorials
KU Music Suffers From Poor Attendance
The concert attractions given by the School of Fine Arts have been excellent. They have included such outstanding performers as Robert Shaw, Eileen Farrell and the Rodgers and Hammerstein troupe, not to mention campus organizations like the University chorus, which sang J. S. Bach's "Christmas Oratorio" on a high level. So the failure of the music to meet student wants cannot be given as a real reason for their staying at home.
The good attendance at both services of the Christmas vespers just before vacation was a welcome sight after the poor showings at University music events so far this year. Judging by the disappointing crowds at some of the best concerts, it appears that Fine Arts attractions are struggling for survival against such college giants as basketball and football.
One problem seems to be in finding enough room on the campus calendar for weekend dates. As a result, the oratorio was given on Wednesday, the orchestra concert on Thursday, the Robert Shaw chorale on Monday, and so forth.
Many students claim they don't attend because the music is too heavy. That is not a legitimate excuse. If they honestly dislike classical music, they might not be expected to attend, but very few people can truthfully say they do not enjoy a good symphony.
It is true that the University must "fit" into
the schedule of professionals like Robert Shaw, who are on tour, but, for the most part, better nights could be used were they available.
Fine Arts programs have already been reduced in number. Students no longer give full-length music recitals. Although professional artists brought in have been among the finest anywhere, there is a possibility that the total number could be reduced. With the concert course and the chamber music series, the calendar is pretty full even before adding the many faculty recitals and campus ensembles.
One music instructor, Clayton Krehbiel, has offered a good suggestion for lightening the student's load. He recommended limiting all campus recitals to one hour and starting them early, which would enable students to attend without losing their entire evening. This would not include the professional events, which should be scheduled on weekends if at all possible.
The University can either keep its over-loaded calendar with continued poor attendance or seek a lighter calendar with important events scheduled for the end of the week.
It sounds like a good idea. An alternative might be to allow students to leave between numbers if they have studies which beckon.
It is too bad such fine music goes to waste when more people would come if they could.
Jim Powers.
What's Happened To College Amateurism?
The committee of ten college presidents commissioned to study unwholesome conditions in intercollegiate sports has reached for a lion and come out leading a pussy cat. Their mild recommendations are never even going to come close to correcting the very serious evils in college athletics.
These college heads would do away with postseason football bowl games, keep freshmen off varsity teams, regulate athletic scholarships more carefully, outlaw lavish entertainment of high school athletes and require them to keep up with their classes in college and work steadily toward degrees. The American Council on Education will consider adopting these half-way measures of control as a national academic policy.
The fault of these recommendations is that they preserve to a large degree the system of subsidizing from which stems so much that is wrong with college athletics. The investigating college heads would have done much better to urge an entirely different approach along the lines of the sports program that is being carried out so impressively at Washington university in St. Louis.
Distressed by the evils of a system financed by semiprofessionalism and large stadium crowds, that university gave up big-time competition several years ago. Athletic subsidies were abolished. The coaches at Washington don't go in for recruiting at all. They have to manage with whatever sports-minded students turn out for the teams.
But this works out all right since Washington, although a large institution, schedules its games for the most part with small schools that don't pay their players either.
Washington recently completed its football season with a record of five victories and four defeats. However, the coach probably wouldn't worry about holding his job even if his squad had lost every game.
The crowds at Washington's games are seldom much over 6,000 or 7,000 but this doesn't seem to bother the players, the student body or the school administration. We even hear that they're verbally proud of the rare spirit of amateurism that keeps their athletic program free of any possible taint.
This nonprofessional approach has worked extremely well at Washington. It represents the middle course between dropping intercollegiate sports as the University of Chicago has done and the play-for-pay conditions that prevail at so many universities and colleges. It offers one way out of the mess of sports overemphasis now bringing
shame to so many otherwise fine institutions
The American Council on Education will have contributed little to solving the problem if it merely places its approval on the too lenient recommendations of the special committee that has just filed its unimpressive report.
—Kansas City Star.
Short Ones
"Spec" Tater, KU's All-American sports fan, says he is doubtful about giving the North Koreans a truce during the peace talks. After all, look what the Yankees did to the Giants in the World Series after that one day rain-out.
The tension built up on Saturday afternoon while listening to the radio account of the big game is terrific. The game goes into the final minutes with the score tied, the championship at stake, and only 9 minutes and three commercials to go.
A Communist publication in Hungary says that the government is considering setting up a youth movement which would be similar to our Boy Scouts. Presumably the members would be required to be trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous, kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty, brave, clean and Soviet.
As we look back at the summer flood we can think of only one guy who respecied any benefit from it. A student from back in New York says that it was the first time he was able to convince his friends back home that Kansas really existed.
The news that science has developed a radar outfit which can be used to pilot boats on the Mississippi may be grand to some folks but it leaves some of us pretty cold. Do you think that a machine could ever have written "Tom Sawyer" or "Huckleberry Finn"?
Our favorite coed, Iva Latepaper, says that she really didn't care too much about missing the Robert Shaw Chorale. She never did go much for western music.
The way some people seem to enjoy getting into trouble makes one think they do it because the excitement keeps their minds off the trouble they already have gotten into.
"I thought it was odd that that deer had a load of wood under his arm," said the hunter as he apologized for shooting a farmer.
A-35
BiBige
"Honestly, Worthal. I don't think I could sit through that 'Marriage & Family' film one more time!"
On the Republican side of the fence the division between the Darby and Landon forces still remains. Although the latter group has come out on the short end following most of the recent elections, it still has a lot of fight left. It is likely that this will cause another stiff primary battle for possession of party leadership.
With primary campaign time in Kansas less than six months away, political talk is beginning to center on factional alignments and possible candidates.
Since neither Senate seat comes up for election in 1952, the only major contest will be for the governorship. Although no one has officially announced his candidacy, there are several names already receiving consideration.
Kansas Politics Shape Up
His political fortunes took a tumble following his loss to Arn in 1950 but since then he has made a comeback with his work on Kansas flood damage. He has been making speeches throughout the state condemning the state legislature for its inaction on flood relief. Many remember the aggressive campaign he made before and hope that armed with better issues, he might be able to make the grade.
The first definite information on these matters will come at the end of January and in February when the annual party celebrations are held. At that time will probably come the first announcements of candidacies and supporters.
If Governor Arn is successful in becoming the Republican nominee for governor, he may find a familiar opponent at election time. Most frequently mentioned person at the present time is the 1950 governorial nominee, Kenneth T. Anderson. He is a former state legislator from Emporia.
There has been a wide range of speculation on other possible candidates with the names of at least a half dozen other prominent GOP leaders being mentioned. As yet, however, none has gone any further than to sound out sentiment.
The most prominent is that of the Republican incumbent, Go Edward F. Arm. He is a former attorney general and state suprem court justice. His administration has received heavy blasts from Democrats but it is generally recognized that he has done a satisfactory job during his first term.
But between now and then its open season for political gue work. —Joe Taylor,
Daily Hansan
Room Student Newspaper of the Adv. Room
KU51 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 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 Doore
Page 3
Marvin Heads New Englanders
Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information was elected president of the Sons and Daughters of New England, organization of persons of New England background, Dec. 21.
Dean Marvin succeeds the Rev. Dale Turner of the Plymouth Congregational church who presided at the dinner meeting.
Other officers elected at the 55th annual reunion of the organization were vice president, Willis Colman, Kanwaka; secretary, Mrs. Floyd Rankin, Lawrence; and treasurer, Charles Oldfather, assistant professor of law.
Speaker of the evening was John Pike, Lawrence, a past president of the organization. He gave an illustrated survey of the New England states and compared each with Kansas.
The annual roll call of the states was held and Massachusetts had the most representatives with 21 persons present from that state.
Bowdish Gives Salt Report
A relatively white salt with market appeal is the end product of a shale-containing salt (industry's No. 4) that has been "taken for a cleaning."
"Beneficiation of Kansas Number Four Salt," by Frank Bowdish, a publication just issued by the State Geological survey at the University, tells how this less attractive salt can be upgraded into a salable product.
The purpose of the study upon which the report is based was to find how to benefitic this low grade of salt so as to improve its market- ability.
In the laboratories of the State Geological survey and of Mining and taliwe of the University, Ms
Jewish workers on relatively simple beneficiation tests, include washing, screening, and fluid processes to remove the silt clay, and fine dirt which give the rock salt in question its gray appearance. The report describes in detail these tests and laboratory procedures.
According to the report, the treated salt, which is chemically as pure as table salt, is particularly suited for use as domestic water softener, meat-curing brines, food pickling brine, as well as for purposes served by the coarser grades of rock salt.
Copies of the publication, Bulletin 90, Part 8, may be obtained free from the State Geological survey, University of Kansas, Lawrence, or by mail for a mailing charge of 10 cents.
Faculty Club Diner Reopens Service Today
University Daily Kansan
The University Faculty club resumed meal service at noon today, Prof. James Nickerson, club president announced today.
The Faculty club dining room is reported to have operated at near capacity during November and December after getting off to a slow start early in September.
Nearly three hundred members of the University, faculty and administrative staff have joined the club since its organization last spring when the club was made possible through a gift by Roy A. Roberts, '08, president of the Kansas City Star.
Mall subscription: $5 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence aid) a semester of study, or a semester every afternoon during the University hours. The university's varsity holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 12. Rejected by action Oct. 31. Rejected by action March 3, 1879. Kens., under act ofMarch 3, 1879.
YOUR EYES
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
KU Bureau Gets $4,500 Contract
The bureau of business research at the University has been awarded a $4,500 contract by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation for a study of the future industrial and municipal water requirements in the Hutchinson-Wichita trade area.
Paul Malone, director of the research bureau, said that Richard Pfister, research economist with the bureau, will direct work on the project.
Bion Moore, regional planning economist of the Bureau of Reclamation, and the sanitation division of the state board of health headed by Dwight Metzler, assistant professor in civil engineering, will work with the bureau at intervals on the project.
He has held one of the four Democratic seats on the 9-member bipartisan board since 1940.
Willis N. Kelley, of Hutchinson,
was reappointed to a 4-year term
on the Kansas Board of Regents
Dec. 21 by Gov. Edward F. Arm.
Kelley Reappointed To Board
A conference on the pre-school child will be conducted on four Saturdays in January and February at the University Nursery school, 1100 Missouri street.
The dates of the sessions will be Jan. 12, 19 and 26, and Feb. 2.
'Child' Confab To Be Held Here
The conference will have both morning and afternoon sessions. The program will include a discussion of the needs and guidance of the pre-school child and creative experiences in art, music, nature and literature of the pre-school child.
An opportunity will be provided at the conference for private sessions with the consultants and viewing of the exhibits at the school.
Those attending the meetings will include play ground directors, nursery school and day care centers, church centers and parents of preschool children.
Co-sponsors of the conference with the University department of home economics are the Kansas
TIME IKE
MEMBERS OF THE AMERICANS-FOR-EISENHOWER committee cluster about a big photograph of the popular general as they met in Philadelphia to start the Eisenhower boom in the city of brotherly love. In the rear are Raymond Pitcairn (left) and Elkins Wetherill. In front (from left) J. R. Kintner, Rep. Hugh Scott Jr. and Rodney Synnestvedt
A&P
SUPER MARKET 936 Mass. St.
FOOD VALUES
Sultana 12 oz. glass
Strawberry Preserves 29c
Ann Page 16 oz. can
Pork and Beans 2 for 23c
Ann Page 1 lb. pkg.
Macaroni or Spaghetti 18c
Fresh New Low Price Dozen
Country Eggs 39c
NBC-Premium 1 lb. box
Soda Crackers 29c
Campbells—Vegetable & Celery
Soup 2 for 25c
Sunkist 6 oz. can
Orange Juice 2 for 29c
Thursday, Jan. 3, 1952
Poplar Lane Traffic Is Reversed Today
Traffic on Poplar Lane in back of Strong hall and Bailey Chemical laboratory was reversed at 7 this morning.
Traffic is one-way from west to east. Motorists will enter the street only at the intersection between Strong and Snow. The exit will be east of Bailey on Mississippi street.
Parking will be on the left side of the street only with the exception of the area between Strong and
board of health, the Kansas department of social welfare and the Lawrence pre-school association.
Bailey where cars will be angle parked facing the southeast.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Your
Plymouth
Man
... has a used car priced for you.
Buddy
GALLAGHER
634 Mass. Ph. 1000
MOVING
Local & Long Distance
LARGE OR SMALL
We are equipped to move your household goods and personal effects at the lowest rates obtainable.Call us for our free estimates on your moving here in Lawrence or across the nation.
PHONE 46
MOVING AND TRANSFER CO.
ETHAN A. SMITH
11 East 9th St.
GOOD
HEALTH
IN EVERY
GLASS
FULL!
DRINK MILK TODAY
GOLDEN CREST DAIRY
2016 Learnard
Phone 3162
W
BOLTON
A
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Jan. 3, 1952
Jayhawkers Rated First In Nation By AP Poll
The Kansas Jayhawkers, undefeated in 10 games this season, have been rated the nation's top basketball team this week by a poll conducted by, the Associated Press.
The Kansas team received a tota of 751 points in the balloting done by 107 sports writers and broadcasters from over the nation to midpass with 688 points. Kansas received 31 first place votes and the Duni got 23.
Kansas was rated fourth in last week's AP poll but exchanged position with the Kentucky Wildcats who slipped from the top rung to fourth place with a 6-2 record.
Coach Phog Allen feels that the selection is a great honor for the team but hopes that the rating won't act as a jinx on the somewhat erratic Jav Hawkers.
Oklahoma, KU's next opponent, is always full of surprises and takes pride in its ability to pull upsets.
The Jayhawkers' last three wins came in the Big Seven pre-season tournament at Kansas City which they won.
Against the Kansas State Wildcats who were rated ninth in this week's AP poll, the KU quintet played great ball, especially during the first half when they built up a 49-35 halftime score.
Other teams to receive first place votes were Kentucky and Indiana with six each, New York university, undefeated in 12 outings, with five, Kansas State four, St. Louis and St. Bonaventure three and Seton Hall, Murray State and West Virginia two each.
Kentucky led the first week's poll.
Services for W. O. Hamilton, 75-year-old former director of athletics and basketball coach at the University, who died Dec. 30, were held Wednesday at the Funk chapel and at the graveside in Liberty. Mo.
Former Coach Was Buried Wednesday
Mr. Hamilton died at the Lawrence Memorial Hospital after an illness of about three weeks.
As one of the first basketball coaches, he took the University team to win four championships and tied for the national title. He led the conference in his 10-year stay.
He came to the University in 1900 as basketball and track coach and became director of athletics in 1910. He then moved to New York where he resigned to go into private business.
In 1902 he was married to Miss Annie Corbin, of Liberty, who survives him.
From 1902 to 1909 he was in charge of physical training at the old Central High School in Kansas City, Mo. He came to the University in 1909.
Mr. Hamilton was a member of Phi Delta Gamma fraternity.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Annie Hamilton of Lawrence, a daughter, three sons, and a brother.
lost out to St. John's of Brooklyn the second, only to regain the top place last week.
Team standings with points figure on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis (first place votes in parenthesis):
Points
Points
1. Kansas (31) 751
2. Illinois (23) 739
3. Washington (20) 688
4. Kentucky (6) 594
5. Indiana (6) 588
6. New York U. (5) 545
7. St. Louis (3) 459
8. St. John's 391
9. Kansas State (4) 381
10. St. Bonaventure (3) 186
LAHORE
Tongue-Twisters Selected For 'All-American' Honors
SHERMAN NORTON, 6-foot, 4-inch senior, was Oklahoma's leading scorer in the Big Seven tourney with 65 points and is one of Bruce Drake's leading players.
By JOE TAYLOR
On Jan. 1 the curtain came down on the 1951 college football season. Therefore, in keeping with the great American custom, I would like to present my nominations for the names to be recorded in football history. $ \textcircled{4} $
Just to make my team different from the run-of-the-mill squads selected by others, I'm going to dedicate mine to the hundreds of sports writers, telegraph men and linotype operators who had to prepare the stories, transmit the lineups and set them in type.
In this age of football specialization, I have chosen to kick the points-after-touchdown Nix of Arkansas and Mars of Virginia Tech. Passing chores will be handed to Szaina, Penn State's star passer.
Lined up in my starting backfield are Yewcic and Mioduszewski of William and Mary, Swartzendruber of Iowa and Manglialiardi of Notre Dame. Matched up with these tongue-twisters are a line composed of Mavropoulos of Boston university, Grabko of Houston, Van Haverbeke of Oklahoma A&M, Boerio and Gdinovic of Illinois and Jaffurs and Shannafelt of Penn.
Bills Narrowly Avert Upset
Then I also include Assiff of Penn,
pronounced with the rising intonation of a stenographer during
the lunch hour squawking, "Assiff
I would go out with that jerk . . ."
At any time in the game when the goes gets tough I can send in Guess of Army who certainly would be a puzzler at half. Michigan State can give the team strength with its line combination of Kush and Kuh, while Bobo and Piano of the same eleven cannot be overlooked.
Looking around the huddle of my dream team are more nightmares for copyreaders. We have Purina and Zupicich of Virginia Tech, Preziosi of South Carolina, Giezwic and Podlucky of Buffalo, Rechicar of Tennessee, and Kerkorian and Hugasian of Stanford.
In the 34 years Phog Allen has been basketball coach of the Jay-hawkers, his teams-prior to this year have won 502 games and lost 186 for a .729 percentage.
New York—(U.P.)—The swift St. Louis Billikens, who rudely upset Kentucky in the Sugar Bowl tournament, came within an eyelash of getting a dose of the same bitter medicine from unheralded Houston.
Ray Stiner was high scorer for the Bills with 15 points, but the surprising Cougars produced two heroes in Jack Bell, who sank a free throw with 40 seconds remaining to send the game into overtime, and Royce
St. Louis, ranked the nation's No. 6 team, rose brilliantly to the occasion, however, and poured 11 points through the basket in the overtime period to score a 64 to 57 win, their eighth victory in 10 starts.
While St. Louis narrowly averted an upset, two other highly-ranked teams were not so fortunate. North Carolina State, ranked No. 10, was stopped by tall, rugged Fordham, 62 to 59, while Notre Dame, ranked No. 15, was soundly beaten by Michigan State, 66-52.
Kentucky will make its first attempt to bounce back from the St. Louis loss tonight when it faces Mississippi at Owensboro, Ky. This game was originally scheduled for last night, but was postponed when Mississippi's plane was grounded by bad weather at Memphis, Tenn.
Ray, who scored 23 points.
Dr. F. C. Allen has been basketball coach at the University since 1920.
Cuumo, Bleir, Kohanowich and Totura of Hofstra are sure-fire material for my team along with Agganis, Nunziato, Interbarbalo and Plomeritis of Boston. Teamed with them are Mavraides, Szymawski, Varriscione and Bardash of Notre Dame
Assiff is one of the most promising boys I have seen since the days of Ojai, Minnesota, pronounced the way a traffic cop writing out a ticket responds to your story with "Oh yeah?"
Attaya of Army, Glagola of Pitt, Yazejan of Harvard, Carnanozo and Kessaris of Brown, Mauir, Barbagallo and Szerapowicz of Boston U., Papantones of Dartmouth, and Yanochik, J. Morog and M. Morog, Palka, and Nestvogl of Colgate must not be left out although they might lose a few syllables in the shuffle.
Cornell is rich with candidates for my squad: Taspis, Micklavina, Scazzero (admirable adapted for scat-back purposes), and Bool, evidently a fugitive from an unfinished Yale football song. Syracuse also has a wealth of talent with Browchuck, Zombathy, Yapo, and Jaso, all ends, and E. Dombrowski, R. Dombrowski and Karilivac in the back field.
Listed as honorable mentions on my squad are Eaia of Tulane, E. and J. Kozdeba, Kaluzynski, Paurowski and Yalch of Fordham, and Tutko and Triantafilou of Temple.
Others which are bound to bring terror to radio announcers are Colteryahn and Ladygo of Maryland, Zanfagna of Michigan, Binswanger of Wesleyan, Chengiss Mamajek of Citadel, Yackanicz of Bucknell and Vranjes and Kalaka of NYU.
Daddario, Duda, Sherengos and Firkser of Rutgers, and Pivitroto and good old McGillicuddy of Princeton complete my roster.
Other standouts from my squad are Daffer of Tennessee who held them daffy at guard, Wuzzardo of Temple who was a wizard in the open field, and Kachuturoff of Northwestern, the well known composer, who wrote so many good scores during the past season.
Now if any of you want to argue with me on my choices you're first going to have to learn how to pronounce them. I can't.
PRECISIVE
WATCH REPAIRS
Watch Repair
Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed
Wolfson's
743 Mass.
Call 675
Jayhawkers Prepare To Meet OU In Opener
Coach "Phog" Allen is continuing to stress fundamentals as the Kansas Jayhawkers, currently rated the nation's top team, prepare to open their 1951-52 Big Seven conference season against the Oklahoma Sooners at Hoch auditorium Saturday night.
The Jayhawkers, winners of the pre-season Big Seven tournament in Kansas City, are currently sporting a 10-game winning streak compared to a record of two wins and seven losses for the inexperienced Sooners.
Charlie Hoag, ailing speedster, rejoined the squad Monday after going to his home in Oak Park, Ill., during part of the vacation. The condition of his injured groin muscle is believed to be improved, allowing him to regain much of the speed which he demonstrated last season.
Final decision as to whether Hoag will be able to return to action Saturday night rests with Dr. M. E Gross, team physician, who will examine him today.
Coach Allen, though happy with his team's conquest of the Big Seven tourney crown, wasn't entirely satisfied with their play. He is stressing the fundamentals and drilling his charges on ball handling, the thing which cost them a big lead over the Kansas State Wildcats in the second game of the tourney.
The Jayhawkers, however, demonstrated considerable ball control when they maintained possession of the ball during the closing minutes of the thrilling overtime tussle to
Cage Scores
Lafayette 58, Scranton 57
Yale 96, Puerto Rico 46
Duke 62, Pennsylvania 52
LSU 77, Loyola (LA) 60
Tennessee 59, East Tennessee
52
Fordham 62, No. Car. State 59 (overtime)
(overtime)
Youngstown 83, Akron 75
Bowling Green 76, Dartmouth 68
Detroit 63, Marquette 61
Kent State 72, John Carroll 69
College of Emporia 58, Rockhurst 57
Hamline 67, Drake 46
St. Louis 64, Houston 57 (overtime)
TCU 58, So. Methodist 43
Oregon 55, San Francisco 49
St. Mary's (Cal) 54, Santa Clara
53.
nudge past Jack Gardner's crew 90-88.
In addition to working the squad on every phase of the game, Coach Allen is trying to get the players to chatter more while playing. He points out that it's not just a matter of keeping keyed up and harassing the opponent but a yell at the right time might get the ball to an open player or make a strategy switch a point getter.
The Jayhawkers will be facing a team which is inexperienced but has considerable speed and potentiality. Coach Bruce Drake has only one returning starter from last year's fourth place club. He has seven other lettermen on his squad which is dominated by freshmen and sophomores.
Dr. F. C. Allen coached basketball teams at Baker university in 190 and Warrenburg Teachers college in 1913 and 1915 that were undefeated.
CLEARANCE SALE
400 Pair of WOMEN'S Shoes Dress and Casuals
LEON'S SHOE STORE
815 Massachusetts
PROFESSIONAL
Jayhawker's
Directory
FORREST D. BROWN,
D. D. S.
800 E. Massachusetts
Phone 374
RANEY DRUG STORE Prescriptions
909 Mass. St.
Phone 521
STOWITS REXALL
STORE
Prescriptions
9th and Mass. St.
Phone 516
DR. C. R. ALBRIGHT Chiropractor - X-Ray and Physio-Therapy
VAN'S PRESCRIPTION SHOP
Phone 601
Residence Phone 3486-R
105 E. Eighth St.
1023 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Ph. 1531
DR. M. L. BROCKWAY Chiropractor 10 E. 9th Street Telephone 4224
HOLT PHARMACY
14th and Mass.
Phone 234
Across from High School
Across from High School
CRAIG - COLBURN Chiropractic Clinic
1024 Vermont St.
Telephone 115
Page 5
University Daily Kansan
Big Seven Tourney Title Captured By Jayhawkers With Three Victories
By CHARLEY BURCH Daily Kansan Sports Editor
The Kansas Jayhawkers continued their winning ways to capture the sixth annual Big Seven pre-season tournament championship at Kansas City with victories over Colorado, 76-56; Kansas State 90-88, and Missouri. 75-65.
Lovelletti scored only five points in the first two periods as he picked up four personal fouls. He amazed the 10,500 fans by remaining in the game until the final two minutes of the overtime before picking up his final foul. He also found the range and sank 22 more points to make his evening's performance total 27 points, the last two of which put the Jayhawkers ahead to stay.
The victory put Kansas in the finals for the third time. In its previous attempts at annexing the title, KU was mudged by Southern Methodist in 1946 and by Oklahoma in 1949 by three-point margins.
Big Clyde Lovellette continued to lead the way in scoring as he ripped the nets with 31 field goals and 14 free throws for 76 points. He closed out his tourney career with 222 points, an average of 24.7 for nine games, to establish an all-time tourney record.
Bob Kenney also found the scoring range as he pumped the ball through the hoop for 55 points, followed by Bill Lienhard with 32 and Bill Houglou with 29 points.
KU's victory over a stubborn Missouri five in the finals was marred by an incident involving Lovellette and Winfred Wilfong, MU freshman star.
The Kansas team looked only average as they downed Colorado in the first round but redeemed themselves against Kansas State. Coach Phog Allen's crew turned on the speed to race to a 49-35 half time lead over the tough Wildcats.
The affair occurred with three minutes remaining in the final quarter. Lovellette and Wilfong were battling for a loose ball and Wilforg fell to the floor. Lovellette turned and his foot came down upon the stomach of Wilfong.
Dean Kelley, who scored 26 points, was a standout throughout the tournament, especially in the overtime thriller with Kansas State which sent Kansas to the meet finals. His speed, ball-handling and coolness helped to keep the Jayhawkers on an even keel.
Lovellette was ejected from the game by Referee Jim Enright, who later was quoted as saying he believed is was an accident. The 10,500 fans continued to boo long after the game was over and the trophy presentation had been attempted.
Bothe teams goth together immediately following the hard-fought game and the friendliness shown removed all signs of any poor sportsmanship on either team.
The incident was obviously overrated by the audience. It was an unintentional foul and not a deliberate attempt to foul a player as many persons falsely believed.
Iowa State, who was defeated in the first round by MU 49-42, suffered its second loss in a hairraising tussle that set a tourney scoring record. Shanford won in an overtime 103-102.
The Oklahoma Sooners proved to be the surprise team of the meet as they upset the previously undefeated Stanford club 77-71 in the first round of play.OU was quickly slowed down by the Missouri Tigers, who won in the semi-finals. 61-49.
A new foul rule was tried in the Stanford-Iowa State game which inflicted a stiffer penalty for fouling. The team fouled received one or two free throws and then was awarded the ball opposite the free throw circle in the opposing team's territory. All free throws had to be taken.
Colorado hit the win column by defeating the hapless Nebraska Cornhuskers 68-63 in the first consolation game.
Travel Service
THE
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
TRAVEL AGENCY
Tel. 30 8th & Mass.
Team Scoring
W X
Kansas 3 0
Missouri 2 1
Kansas State 2 1
Stanford 2 1
Oklahoma 1 2
Colorado 1 7
Iowa State 1 7
Nebraska 0
Tournament Standings
G F'T F MFT
D. Kelley 9 8 10 2
Smith 0 3 1 2
Johnson 0 1 2 0
Lienhard 14 4 8 2
Heitholt 2 4 5 3
Alberts 0 1 2 0
Lovellette 31 14 12 8
Born 2 2 3 0
Squires 2 0 1 0
Hougland 1 2 5 11 2
Dye 0 1 1 0
A. Kelley 0 0 3 1
Kenney 21 13 11 2
Davenport 0 1 0 0
Keller 0 0 0 1
Total — — — — —
Totals ... 92 57 70 23
From 1922 to 1927, University basketball teams coached by Phog Alen either won or tied for the conference title. He accomplished the same thing with the Jayhawker teams from 1931 to 1935; repeated the feat from 1936 to 1938; and again finished first from 1940 to 1943.
Phog Allen has been coaching basketball since 1908.
Clyde, Kenney Named All-Stars
Clyde Lovellette and Bob Kenney were named on the Big Seven conference tournament all-star team by sportswriters who covered the event.
It was the third straight year that Lovellette had been nominated to the stellar squad.
Dean Kelley, junior guard who contributed much capable ball handling and speed throughout the tourney, received honorable mention.
Other players receiving honorable mention besides Kelley were Bob Rousey and Jim Iverson of Kansas State, Art Bunte of Colorado, Jim Stange and George Hess of Iowa State and Sebron Tucker of Stanford
Sharing first team berths with Lovellette and Kenney were Jim Buchanan, potent Nebraska scorer who was named for the second year, Bill Stauffer of Missouri, and Dick Knostman of Kansas State.
Picked for places on the second team were Jim Ramstead of Stanford, Jesse Prisok and Jack Carby of Kansas State, Sherman Norton of Oklahoma and Winfred Wilfong of Missouri.
Dr. F. C. Allen came to the University as basketball coach for the first time in 1908. He returned in 1909 after spending part of a year at Baker university. He came back to the University in 1920.
Official Claims PCC Will Not Drop Rose Bowl Agreement With Big Ten
The post-mortems on the Stanford-Illinois game offered no solid explanation for the Indians' fold-up in the final quarter when the Illini scored 27 points. Coach Chuck Taylor of the losers says he has no alibis.
would make a 5-5 deadlock.
Taylor went on record when he first took the Stanford coaching job that he was opposed to post-season games. He still holds that opinion—probably more deeply ingrained now.
He said that his team was in tipot condition. His team followed the same training pattern that California used here for the last three years. That allowed Southern California members of the team to fly down ahead of the rest of the squad to spend Christmas Day with their folks. But he said that did not interfere with their training.
Los Angeles—(U.P.)—The long-suffering Pacific Coast conference has no intention of calling "quits" its Rose Bowl pact with the bruising Big Ten when the agreement expires in two years, conference commissioner Victor O. Schmidt indicated today.
In fact, there is a far greater possibility that the Big Ten would end the pact in two years, rather than the PCC.
When the renewal of the contract came up last time, it was barely approved in the Big Ten by a reported vote of 5-4. When the next pact comes up, Michigan State will be eligible to vote and it is understood the Spartan regime is opposed to post-season football games. If all the earlier opponents stood pat, that
Having lost all six games since the post-season pact was first signed between the two big conferences, including Stanford's stunning 40 to 7 loss to Illinois on Tuesday, the PCC couldn't be blamed much if it were starting to think of pulling out.
But Commissioner Schmidt said today, "As far as I know, every school in our conference likes the pact with the Big Ten and wants to continue it."
PICTURES IN 24 HOURS
Thursday, Jan. 3, 1952
24 HOUR
Let Our
Get Your
Skilled technicians process your prized pictures.
24 Hour Service at Low, Low Prices.
MOSSER WOLF
MOSSER-WOLF
High-Flying Minister Cops Nation's Top Amateur Award
New York—(U.P.)—Bob Richards, the pole vaulting parson from Chicago who is one of America's leading hopes for the forthcoming Olympics, today was named winner of the 1951 Sullivan trophy, the nation's most coveted amateur award.
A panel of 487 sports authorities chose the 25-year-old Richards for the trophy from a slate of nine outstanding amateur athletes.
The award is made each year by the National Amateur Athletic union to the athlete, "who by performance, example, and good influence, did most to advance the cause of good sportsmanship during the year."
Richards, an ordained minister and an instructor in religious philosophy at LaVerne (Calif.) college, cleared 15 feet in the pole vault nine times during 1951, in addition to winning the national decathlon championship in his first serious try at the gruelling test.
The stocky, curly-haired preacher, who was runnerup in the 1948 Olympics and has won the U. S. National pole vaulting championships, indoors and outdoors, every year since then, is regarded almost a sure bet for a gold medal in the 1952 Olympic games at Helsinki.
In the nationwide poll conducted by the AAU, Richards received 174 first place votes and a total of 1,283 points to win the award by a comfortable margin.
Maureen Connolly of San Diego, Calif., the 17-year-old national women's tennis champion, was second in the voting with 115 first place votes and 903 points, while Air Force sergeant Mal Whitfield, national 809-meter running champion, was third with 59 first place ballots and 754 points.
Following them in the poll came: Mrs. Patricia Keller McCormick of Los Angeles, the national women's diving champion, with 32 first place votes and 335 points; John Davis of Brooklyn, Olympic, world and national heavyweight weight-lifting champion (35 firsts and 294 points); swimmer Wayne Moore of Yale (17 firsts and 263 points); swimmer Jimmy Thomas of the University of North Carolina (26 firsts and 191 points); basketball star George Yardley of the national AAU championship Stewart Chevrolet team of San Francisco (18 firsts and 156
points), and Carol Pence of Lafayette, Ind., women's national breast-stroke swimming champion (11 firsts and 117 points).
SHOP BROWN'S First
NAVY
PEA COATS
32 oz.-100% Wool
Sizes To 46
$12.98
B 15
BOMBER
JACKET
Knit Wrist and Band
Fur Collar
Sizes To 46
$14.98
B 9
PARKA HOOD
COATS
Quilted Lining
Fur Hood
Sizes To 46
$24.98
TUXEDO
RENTALS
First Door South Of The Patee Theatre Brown's TOGGERY 830 Mass.
M
C
Call 38
for the
best cleanin
in town!
LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Jan. 3, 1952
JACK HARRISON
THIS GOOD-LOOKING, button-front all-wool sweater combines the natural warmth of wool with the 'casual look' most men seek during their leisure hours. Roomy pockets provide space for cigarets or pipe.
Four January Events At University Club
The University club will hold four vents in the club rooms during anuary.
The first will be a Juke Box dance friday at 8 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Girkpatrick and Mr. and Mrs. G. K. Whitenight will be hosts for the evening.
On Jan. 12, Mr. and Mrs. R. L. mith and Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Caste ill be hosts at an informal bridge arty at 8 p.m.
A "South of the Border" costume party, Jan. 19, will include a dance demonstration by three Latin American couples, instruction in Latin American dancing and a covered fish supper. Hosts for the dinner will be Dr. and Mrs. A. A. Mailhoit, Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Dean and Mr. and Mrs. J. Crown. Hosts for the party will be Mr. and Mrs. Richardesenis, Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Baer and Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Young.
Another covered dish supper Jan.
I will be followed by an evening of
judge. Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Smith,
m. and Mrs. J. N. Carman andMr.
and Mrs. W. B. Ville will be hosts
of the supper. I am sure that party
will be Mr. and Mrs. R. T.
Arms and Mr. and Mrs. E. D.
label.
Nancy Anne Seaman To Wed Ens. Newton
Mrs. Robert William Seaman, ansas City, announces the engagement of her daughter, Nancy Anne, Ens. George A. Newton who is son, son, son P. Minterever Park, and Mr. Sylvester Boulder, Colo.
Miss Seaman is a College senior the University and a member of appa Alpha Theta sorority.
Ensign Newton was graduated from the University in 1951. He is a member of Sigma Chi fraternity.
Allen-Luckfield Engagement Told
Mr. and Mrs. George R. Allen
Dr. Kansas City, announce the engagement of their daughter. Janet Louise, to William R. Luckfield III, son of Mr. and Mrs. William R.
Luckfield, also of Kansas City.
Miss Allen is a College sophomore at the University and a member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority.
Official Bulletin
Deutscher Verein, 5 p.m. 502 Fraser, Alte deutsche Staedt ein Lichtbildern. Alte Weisen und Tauenze.
Lutheran Student association, 6 p.m. Sunday, cost supper and program, Trinity Lutheran Church Miss Bernice Fjellman, speaker, "Christ in Intellectual Development."
Mr. Luckfield is an engineering junior and a member of Sigma Nu fraternity.
Engineerettes, 7:30 p.m. Monday,
East room, Union. Cards and election
of officers.
Christian Science organization, 7 tonight, Danforth chapel. Business meeting and election of officers.
Teacher-Designer Advocates Fashions With A 'One World' Air
By GAY PAULEY United Press Staff Correspondent
Carolyn Schnurer, a teacher turned designer, is out to give fashion a "one world" education.
Mrs. Schnurer, who taught music and art in New York public schools before she turned to designing, has circled the globe twice in her search for new style ideas.
"Clothes reflect what people are," the tall brunette designer explained. "If we designers did more traveling for our ideas, we'd be doing a lot for closer understanding between peoples."
Mrs. Schnurer's latest trip was to Japan, Hong Kong and Burma, where she picked up ideas for her spring and summer collection of sports and casual wear.
The oriental influence, which she predicted others would copy, shows both in fabric and cut of dresses, play and bathing suits and beach coats.
A rice paper design is copied on a white cotton washable print. A wrestler's home-spun cloth coat is "translated" into a beach coat. A kimono becomes a dress and chopsticks are turned into decorative hatpins, worn tucked "x" fashion through a lady beachcomber's chignon.
Mrs. Schnurter copied the kimono neckline and sleeve throughout her collection. The kimono collar, she explained, is worn dropped about three inches below the nape of the neck to show "the part of the anatomy which the Japanese women consider the most beautiful."
Mrs. Schnurer's version also is dropped in the front. Most of the necklines are bordered at back and sides in a narrow, upright cuff.
Several of her dresses and play suits are belted with a modified "obi," the wide Japanese belt through which peasant women often stick an upright branch, to provide shade.
"In tis country, I'd just recommend a small spray of flowers," Mrs. Schnurer said.
Mrs. Schnurer introduced boning from waistline to hem in paneled skirts as "a substitute for all that crinoline they're wearing now." The bonework, which is washable, gave the same standout effect as a crino-
line petticoat and Mrs. Schnurer said it was flexible enough for easy sitting.
The most elaborate costume with the oriental touch was in her white cotton brocade "lantern dress." The dress, sleeveless with a v-neck, boasted a skirt shirred in row after row, to make it bell out to the shape and appearance of a Japanese paper lantern.
Miss Elliott To Wed Lt. John F. Huber
Major Arch Cecil Elliott, USAF (MSC) and Mrs. Elliott, Washington, D.C., announce the engagement of their daughter, Patricia June, to Second Lt. John Francis Huber, USAF, Fort Benling, Ga. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Huber, Texarkana, Texas.
Miss Elliott is a College sophomore at the University and a member of Gamma Phi Beta social sorority.
Lt. Hucker attended the University in 1950. He is a member of Tau
Stars Currently Starring
OPEN HOUSE Tonite 9:30 p.m. UNION BUILDING LOUNGE
IN
"The Cimarron Kid"
James Best - John Hudson Universal-International
WALK ON LEFT
FACING TRAFFIC
PATEE THEATRE
COMING SOON TO YOUR
Kappa Epsilon fraternity. In Janu-
ary, he will be graduated from the
Infantry School at Fort Benning.
The wedding will take place in
February.
(Most Decorated Soldier of World War II)
Audie Murphy
TO MEET
LAST TIMES TONITE
"GUNNER' McNEIL... BLASTING AT
FORTY FATHOMS TANCLING
WITH A WILDCAT BLONDE
IN THE STRUGGLE
FOR SUNKEN GOLD!"
THE SEA HORNET
ROD CAMERON · ADELE MARA
ADRIAN BOOTH · CHILL WILLS
Features Tonite 7:32-9:34
Added: Color Cartoon-News
STARTS TOMORROW
Actually Filmed
In The Spectacular
Depths Of Carlsbad
Caverns !!!
One Man Knows the SECRET
OF
THE MYSTERY
OF THE GREAT
WELLS FARGO
ROBBERY!
CAVE OF OUTLAWS
technicolor
MACONARD ALEXIS
CAREY-SMITH
EDGAR BUCHANAN · VICTOR JORY
Matinee Friday 2:00 p.m.
Show Starts 2:30 p.m.
Evening Feat. 7:30-9:30
Continuous Sat. & Sun.
"GUNNER' McNEIL... BLASTING AT
FORTY FATHOMS, TANGLING
WITH A WILDCAT BLONDE
IN THE STRUGGLE
FOR SUNKEN GOLD!
THE
SEA HORNET
ROD CAMERON • ADELE MARA
ADRIAN BOOTH • CHILL WILLS
Features Tonite 7:32-9:34
Added: Color Cartoon-News
Always Trust in the
Compton Public Library
CART LOAD GARVANS
THE MYSTERY
OF THE GREAT
WELLS FARGO
ROBBERY1
CAVE OF
OUTLAWS
Technicolor
MACDONALD ALEXIS
CAREY-SMITH
New PATEE
PHONE 321
Welcome Back K.U.
May 1952 Give You The Best In Everything!
NOW, LET'S TAKE A PEEK AT JUST A FEW OF THE MANY FINE MOVIES WE HAVE COMING YOUR WAY THE NEXT FEW WEEKS!
- "The Cimarron Kid"
- "Decision Before Dawn"
- "Model And The Marriage Broker"
- "Weekend With Father"
- "The Lavender Hill Mob"
- "Double Dynamite" - "Kon-Tiki"
- "The Wild Blue Yonder"
- "Kon-Tiki"
* "Quo Vadis"
- "The Blue Veil"
THIS IS JUST A FEW OF THE MANY COMING YOUR WAY SOON...
WATCH FOR THEATRE AND DATES
Granada-New Patee
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Jan. 3, 1952
Page 7
Classified Ads
Phone K.U.376
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five day days days
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be received during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University office, Journalism bldge, not later than 4 p.m. the day before publication date.
TRANSPORTATION
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steampain and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange international travel whether tours or inductions. Phone Mrs. Lois Oaffer, 3661, Downs Travell Service, 1015 Mass.
Ask us about family rates, sky coach,
and round trip reductions. All expense
tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book
weekends at Gleeson summer.
Call Miss Gleeson at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30.
BUSINESS SERVICE
TYPING: Themes, term papers, these-
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs.
Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode
Island. tt
TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these types writing. M. Shields, 1209 Ohio. Prf 1601.
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ment in the area as fast, efficient service. Bowman and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. tt
CRYSTAL CAFFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastry.
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, 1094 Mass. tt
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
Continuous Shows Sat.-Sun. 1:00 p.m. On MON. Thru FRI.
Box Office Opens 6:45
Last Times Tonite Randolph Scott "Fort Worth" Color by Technicolor Co-Feature Mark Stevens "BETWEEN MIDNIGHT AND DAWN"
FRIDAY - SATURDAY
REX ALLEN
The Arizona Cowboy
in KOKO
The Miracle Horse
of the Movies
UTAH
WAGON
TRAIN
A REPUBLIC PICTURE
Co-Feature™
Palooka Outslugs Gangland!
Joe Palooka
in
TABLE CROSS
REX ALLEN
The Arizona Cowboy
and KOJO
the Minnie Horse
of the Movie
UTAH
WAGON
TRAIN
A REPUBLIC PICTURE
Co-Feature
A MONOGRAM PICTURE JAMES GLEASON
Murphy Named To VA Group
MONOGRAM PICTURE JAMES GLEA
Ch. 7 "Flying Disc Man From Mars" Late News Events
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy has been named vice chairman of the Veterans Administration's special medical advisory group.
Also named to serve with the group were Dr. Derrick T. Vall, chairman of the department of ophthalmology at Northwestern university, chairman; and Dr. Brian Blades, professor of surgery at George Washington university, secretary.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malts, home-made pies and air-conditioned. Open from a.m. till midnight. Crystal Cafe, 699 Vt.
TYING: Experience in theses, term papers, miscellaneous typing, and stenil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 925W, 1915 Tennessee. tf
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-stop service includes fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf
SILVER FRENCH brocade evening bag
CONVERTED to return. C-Clas
DeNeus Ankhelker at 3735
LOST
BLUE PARKER 21 with silver cap. Sun-
phone 21. Phone 21. Phone 21.
Sambesta, 1234 Eread.
WILL THE PERSON who took by mistake, my overcoat and scarf from the student at the Student Union day (14th), please call Michael Delmonico--1879. 1-3-52
WANTED: Part time receptionist. Hours
required. Send resume to:
ing. Box 2 Delyan Kanson office. 1-35-82
HELP WANTED
Pope Gregory In 1582 Set Us Straight About Shifting New Year's Day-Or Did He?
"Happy New Year," said in one way or another, is probably the world's oldest and most universal holiday greeting.
The coming of the new year has been marked and celebrated since prehistoric times. It has not always been Jan. 1, however, and even now many peoples celebrate some other date as New Year's Day, the National Geographic society says.
Jan. 1, in fact, is an arbitrary date set by Romans before Julius Caesar established the calendar that is the basis for the date used in most Western countries. Jan. 1, in ancient Rome, marked the day that consuls and other officials took office, and until Caesar set things straight it was sometimes juggled considerably for the political benefit of one officeholder or another.
An error in Caesar's calculation (365 $\frac{1}{4}$ days), however, allowed Jan. 1 to creep away from its original astronomical place, and by 1582 when Pope Gregory XIII instituted the reformed Julian calendar in use today, spring's first day had gained 14 days on the stars. Gregory in 1582 ordained that Oct. 4 be followed by Oct. 15, thus adjusting the calendar to A.D. 325, the year of the Church Council of Nicea.
The Gregorian correction of the Julian calendar is close to mathematical accuracy. It makes allowance for the fact that a year is about 11 minutes less than $365\frac{1}{4}$ days long by not only inserting leap years—such
A WHISTLE, A WINK,
A SMILE —
And You've Started Something
You Can't Stop!
Starring The Blonde Bombshell BEVERLY MICHAELS Hugo Haas - Allan Nixon
"PICKUP"
ADDED
For Adults Who Appreciate Honest Maturity in Movies!
Joe MacDoakes
"SO YOU ARE GOING TO HAVE AN OPERATION"
OPERATION"
Sports: "Grand Dad Races" - News
Comfort! Convenience!
JAYHAWKER
Park-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
as 1952—every four years, but also by omitting “leap days” in the even century years divisible by 400, such as 1600, 2000, 2400, etc.
NOW thru SAT.
Shows Today-Friday
2:30-7:00-9:00
Continuous Sat. 1 p.m.
FUNNIEST CHASE IN MOVIE
HISTORY!
Hope's An Under-Cover Agent With Orders To Keep His Eyes On Hedy —And His Hands Off!
MY SPONSOR SHOULD SEE ME NOW!
BOB HOPE
HEDY LAMARR
in
MY FAVORITE SPY
Practical as it is, the Gregorian calendar gained slow acceptance. The British empire, including its American colony, did not adopt it until 1752. Young George Washington, who had turned 20 on Feb. 11, 1752, had to wait until Feb. 22, 1753 to attain his majority.
Comfort! Convenient!
JAYHACKER
NEW Push Rock CUSHIONED CHAIRS
Calendar reforms are frequently proposed. The Gregorian calendar is so widely used, however, that even the Chinese, who celebrate their next recent decades February, have in recent decades opposed business and governmental imposes
Comfort! Convenience
JAYHAWKER
NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
PREVUE SATURDAY
NITE 11:15 P.M.
FOR 4 DAYS
SUNDAY
A change of the Western world's Gregorian New Year's day would involve considerable difficulty. Race
The Jewish New Year in 1952 will begin at sunset Sept. 19, and the Mohammedan year starts just 24 hours later. In both cases the celebration is largely religious.
Celebrations probably would remain the same regardless of the day New Year's Day is celebrated all over the world, no matter whether it is Jan. 1, Sept. 19 or the vernal equinox. All religions observe the start of a new year with prayer and services.
Find Fossils After 30 Years
horses would change their birthday because they always add a year or Jan. 1. Accountants and tax collectors would have to reshuffle the fiscal calculations; schools would lose the convenient Christmas-New Year vacation schedule, and greeting card makers would have to revise the plates saying "Merry Christmas and Happy New Year."
Los Angeles—(U.P.)—Geologists at the University of Southern California have made a valuable discovery. They found a $7,000 collection of fossils of the Paleozoic period 200,000,000 to 600,000,000 years old. It was in the basement of a campus building where it had been forgotten for 30 years.
NOW!
Start The New Year Off Right With This Comedy Delight!
In all the annals of love there's never been a chaperone like CLIFTON WEBB ELOPEMENT LET'S ALL GO ALONG FOR THE FRANCIS
WILLIAM LUNDIGAN Features Tonite: 7:34 and 9:34
CHARLING BICKFORD
ADDED: "Touchdown Town" Color Cartoon News
News
STARTS SATURDAY OWL SUNDAY 11:15 p.m.
HAVE MERCY ON US!
AFTER YOU'VE SEEN THIS ONE YOU'RE
GONNA BE A HOWLING WRECK!
MEY, PODNER
Thisaway
For LaFFS!
Fred
MacMURRAY
Dorothy
McGUIRE
Howard KEEL
CALLAWAY WENT
THATAWAY
Continuous Shows Saturday and Sunday From 1 p.m.
Granada PHONE 946
WHY SURE . . . WE'LL HAVE "QUO VADIS," TOO!
Page 8
University Daily Kansart
Thursday, Jan. 3, 1952
Extension Library Offers Many Services To Students
By LORENA BARLOW
"How I wish I had known about this service." is one of the most frequent remarks Mrs. Virginia Maddox hears. She is the director of the University Extension library.
Although the library does not serve University students, it will provide them with many sources of information after graduation. "Today we send out approximately 5,000 loans each year and answer many other inquiries and requests by letter," Mrs. Maddox said.
Annually an average of 500 towns and communities located in all of the counties of Kansas and in a number of other states are served by the library.
The service is designed to supplement community library facilities through loans of educational materials not obtainable locally.
The development of the library service began in 1909 with the loan of books and package libraries of periodical clippings and pamphlets. In 1913 this service was organized within the University Extension division as the bureau of general information.
The unit by which the majority of requests is answered is called a package library. It is a collection of reference materials dealing with a single subject. Usually it is composed of a dozen or two magazine clippings, several pamphlets or bulletins, and possibly a book or two.
Program planning aids are also available from the library service. It has materials which are helpful in planning programs either for the entire year or for special occasions.
Each request is considered an individual reference problem. Each package library is assembled with consideration for the particular interests and needs of the borrower.
Complete programs are not outlined for an individual group, but special attention is given to each group's particular need, as they had been made known, in preparing their package of aids.
The loan collection of art prints consists of approximately 3,500 reproductions. They are mainly color prints of famous paintings and representative works of prominent painters of various nations and periods.
perlons. The average size of the mounted
prints is 11 by 14 inches. A package library of reference material may accompany a loan of art prints. An art subject package may also include a few prints to be used as illustrations.
The drama loan collection contains some 6.000 plays, texts on dramatic and theatrical techniques and supplementary entertainment materials. They are all selected from the offerings of major play publishers.
Another service offered by the Extension library is the reading program for children. It has grown from the conviction that reading for pleasure is an essential element in the life-long process of education.
Books from the University library may be sent on Extension loan whenever they are not needed by resident students and faculty. Certain volumes and collections have a restricted circulation because they are unusually valuable or are not replaceable.
Plays may be borrowed for reading purposes only. Production copies must be ordered directly from the publisher, who must also be consulted concerning royalties.
Book loans may consist of specifically requested titles or of a selection by the reference staff dealing with a given subject.
The program is designed to stimulate the reading of good books by children in elementary school. Through it local communities may extend their efforts to bring more good books to the children of Kansas.
The program furnishes a simple working plan to stimulate reading by affording a means of recognizing the accomplishment. An attractive certificate, signed by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, is awarded to each child fulfilling the requirements.
Mrs. Maddox said she will be happy to talk with any student concerning the library and its services
Kansas Dust Bowl Farms In Beef Production Again
Elkhart—(U.P.)-Fifteen years ago, farmers in what was then a wasteland of Morton county sold their land for $4 an acre and moved from the dust-blown area.
Today 110,000 acres along the Cimarron river in that county is pasture land and this year it will produce about a million extra pounds of beef.
The pasture is owned by the soil conservation service of the federal government. The service started work to reclaim the land in 1936, buying the land from farmers who broke in the drought and dust-bowl years.
Lewis Essay Contest Open To KU Students
The service poured pasture grass seeds into the depleted, sandy soil. By 1434, a small part of the area was ready for grazing and farmers and ranchers in the region formed the Morton County grazing association.
Any farmer in the county can belong to the organization. It's a cooperative system, with everybody interested benefiting from the government grass.
This last year 60,000 acres were grazed. Another 20,000 acres will be ready next year. Cattleman figure that more than 6,000 head of stock grazed on the 60,000 acres this year and gained a million pounds of beef.
In 1943 there were 475 head of cattle on the pasture that was opened for the first time.
Stockman pay $1.75 a month per head for use of the government grass. The government's fee is $1. The other 75 cents goes to the association to defray its expenses.
One fourth of each dollar paid the government returns to the county in lieu of taxes. That means about $10,000 for the county treasury this year.
All regularly enrolled students at the University may enter the annual Hattie Elizabeth Lewis Memorial Essay contest which is open now.
When it's roundup time on the pasture each fall, about 100 cowboys join forces to rope the different brands and separate the calves.
In preparing the book, Dr. Hall studied weasels in the wild state and preserved specimens in zoological collections of more than 100 universities and museums in North and Central America and in Europe.
The land worth $4 an acre 15 years ago now is figured from $30 to $100.
The first place winner will receive $100, the second best essay writer will receive $75 and the third place winner will receive $50.
Questions about American weasels were answered recently for members of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, meeting in Philadelphia. Supplying the answers was Dr. E. Raymond Hall, director of the Museum of Natural History.
Most of the book is technical. Chapters relate to paleontology, skeleton and teeth, seasonal changes in color of fur, geographic distribution and speciation, technical accounts of four species and 68 subspecies, and habits of weasels.
Hall Speaks At Science Meeting
The general theme of the essays is "The Application of the Teachings of Jesus to the Practical Affairs and Relations of Life—Individual, Social or Political," but each essay must deal with a single definite subject, or a single phase of life.
Essays must be not less than 3,000 nor move than 10,000 words in length. They must be typewritten and double spaced, have a table of contents, footnotes giving reference to authorities cited, and bibliography.
The museum has also released a 488-page book by Dr. Hall giving findings in a quarter century of research on weasels.
All essays should be turned in to the Chancellor's office not later than May 1, 1952, and be in a sealed envelope superscribed with the exact title of the essay and the writer's assumed name and containing the contestant's real name.
The memorial was established at the University in 1911, in memory of Hattie Elizabeth Lewis, a former K.U. student, by her husband, Prof George Edward Patrick, a member of the University faculty from 1874 to 1883.
Coach Phog Allen had a .938 won lost percentage at Warrenburg Teachers college in the seven year he was basketball coach there.
The memorial is maintained out of funds put into the hands of the Chancellor of the University a few months before Professor Patrick's death, which occurred in 1916.
Mattie Crumrine, assistant professor of romance languages; Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism, and James E. Seaver, assistant professor of history, are the members of the Lewis Memorial committee.
Analysis Given On Agriculture
A 202-page analysis of agriculture and its contribution of the "Economic Development of Southwestern Kansas" has been released by the Bureau of Business Research of the University. The study titled "Agriculture" is Part V of the larger study named above.
The text, dealing with one of the most crucial sections of the economy of southwestern Kansas, is liberally illustrated and clarified with charts and tables.
The authors are Dr. Robert S. Eckley and W. James Foreman, Dr. Eckley, now industrial economist for the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, was formerly assistant professor of economics at the University. Mr. Foreman was a research assistant in the KU Bureau of Business Research and is now research assistant in agricultural economics at the University of Illinois.
"This work is presented with the hope that it will provide both agriculturists and businessmen with a tool for forming judgments about agricultural policies advantageous to themselves and the area." Prof. Paul Malone, director of the KU bureau, said.
Newcastle, Australia—(U.P.)—Crew members of the Norwegian ship Templar claim the ghost of a headless Nazi soldier walks the decks at night.
Copies of "Agriculture" may be obtained upon request from the Bureau of Business Research, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas.
Sailors Claim Ghost Walks Decks At Night
They said the uninformed ghost has been seen in the sick bay and forecastle. It speaks to them in the dead of night, then turns and marches away.
News Roundup
Bo'sun Johansin said: "I heard a German voice and then a headless soldier in a green German uniform walked into the sick bay from the bathroom."
Johansen said the ghost was that of one of the Germans who died aboard the ship during the war. The ship had been seized by the Germans.
Russia Asks Security Council To Snap Truce Talk Deadlock
Paris—(U.P.)—Russia proposed today that a United Nations Security council meeting be called immediately to attempt to break the deadlock in the Korean armistice talks.
The surprise proposal also would call on top-level delegates—perhaps foreign ministers—to survey all phases of the cold war to determine if tension could be eased.
The resolution was submitted before the UN General Assembly's main political committee under a special UN charter provision authorizing "periodic" security council meetings attended by high government officials and specially-designed delegates.
Big Task Faces HST And Reform Program
Washington—(U.P.)—Chairman Robert L. Doughton of the House Ways and Means committee predicted today that President Truman's reform plan for the Internal Revenue bureau will run into "much opposition" in congress.
The North Carolina Democrat, who appointed the subcommittee which has been exposing nationwide tax scandals, told a reporter he "buckles" whether the reorganization proposals will go through.
Despite the rumblings of opposition from Capitol Hill, internal revenue commissioner John B. Dunlap said he is confident that congress will not block the reorganization plan just to keep from losing "patronage." The present 64 collectors of internal revenue, who would be eliminated by the proposed overhaul, are political appointees in whose selection congressmen usually have a big voice.
Washington—(U.P.)—The State department today dismissed Josef Stalin's unprecedented New Year's message to the Japanese as a "propaganda flop."
The White House at the same time disclosed that President Truman declined an invitation to send a similar message.
State department officials said his declaration of "deep sympathy" for Japan falls very flat while Russia continues to demand the Emperor's death, fails to account for 300,000 Japanese war prisoners, and occupies two Japanese islands.
Indo-China Seen As Next Battleground
Stalin's Japan Message Termed 'Flop'
Washington—(U.P.)The United States is seriously concerned over the danger of an early Chinese Communist attack on Indo-China, government officials revealed today.
The ominous situation in Southeast Asia is scheduled for top level review here in the next few days in the global strategy talks between President Truman and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill.
The United States at this time is unwilling to say exactly what it would do if the Chinese Reds send "volunteers" into the three associated states of Indo-China or commit formal aggression with Red troops. A precedent for armed United Nations resistance was set when North Korea invaded South Korea 18 months ago.
Captain Still With Floundering Ship
London—(U.P.)—Capt. Henrik Kurt Carlsen clung to his floundering freighter "Flying Enterprise" today while an American destroyer stood by to save him if the ship sinks and a British tug raced through boiling seas to aid.
The Flying Enterprise is listing as much as 80 degrees as it wallows in heavy seas, and its decks at times are nearly vertical.
Kansas City, Kan.—(U.P.) The episode of the microphones planted beneath the desk of a Democratic police judge, allegedly by an employee of the state's Republican attorney general, developed added ramifications today.
Atty. Gen. Harold R. Fatzer said he would seek Supreme Court ouster of Police Judge J. Earl Thomas.
Meanwhile, the chief of the Kansas City, Kan., police department, Earl Swarner, indicated two city detectives who lay in wait in Thomas' office after the judge discovered the microphones Sunday acted without his knowledge.
Propaganda War Has New Commander
Washington—(U.P.)—Dr. Raymond B. Allen took over Wednesday as director of the National Psychological Strategy board, with the goal of defeating Russia in the world-wide battle for men's minds.
Allen, former president of the University of Washington, succeeded Gordon Gray, one-time army secretary. He faced the task of winning a propaganda fight in which the Kremlin spent about $1,400,000,000 last year, compared to $200,000,000 by the United States.
1951 Kansas Traffic Toll Highest
Topeka—U.P.—The traffic death toll in Kansas during 1951 shattered all records, the Kansas Highway commission reported today.
Incomplete figures showed that 595 persons were killed during the year. The previous record number of deaths occurred in 1936 when 588 persons were killed.
During 1950 there were 534 traffic fatalities.
Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 4, 1952
STUDENT NEWS PAPER
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Band To Give Winter Concert At 8p.m. Tuesday
The University Concert band, under the direction of Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra, will presents its annual concert at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 8, in Hoch auditorium.
Three education seniors will be featured as solistons on the program. They are Tommy Lovitt, cornet, Robert Ausherman, clarinet, and a vocalist, James Ralston, baritone.
Galston will sing three numbers from "Oklahoma" by Richard Rodgers, "Oh What a Beautiful Morning," "People Will Say We're in Love," and "Out of My Dreams." Lovitt will play Edwin Franko Goldman's Scherzo and Ausherman will be soloist in the first movement of von Weber's Concerto No. 2.
Identification cards will admit students, Mr. Wiley said. Other tickets will be available at 50 cents at the box office.
The concert will open with the ever-popular overture to "Die Fleddermaus" by Johann Strauss and will conclude with the rolling finale from Tschaikowsky's Symphony No. 4 in F Minor.
The 120-piece band will play five movements from the "Water Music Suite" by Handel, who conducted the suite for George I of England from a barge on the Thames river. The music was well-received at a University vespers program early this season.
Alexandre Guilmant's allegro vivace from "Organ Sonata in D Major" will be played by the band for the first time. Written for organ, the music has been newly arranged for concert band by Albert D. Schmutz.
State Minerals Shown On Map
"Kansas Mineral Resources," a six-color map prepared by the State Geological Survey at the University presents an up-to-date general picture of the state's minerals and their industrial applications.
The survey presents a close-up of "resource-full" Kansas and brings into focus a wide range of industrial minerals.
One of the top 10 mineral producing states, Kansas now produces more than $370,000,000 worth of raw materials annually. More than 100 plants currently are processing or preparing from native raw mineral substances first marketable products valued at about $630,000,000 annually. These plants are located on the map.
Oil and gas, the number one mineral industry, adds more than $300,000,000 yearly to the state's economy. Ceramics and cement, combined, represent a growing industry which at present is in the $25,000,000-a-year class.
Outcropping rocks and known industrial minerals in a 26 to 30 mile area in the heart of the Flint Hills also have been mapped for reference, study or wall display.
Chase county geology in published form consists mainly of three maps which present in color the stratigraphy, economic geology, and ground - water resources of the county.
The publication is the first in a series of similar eastern Kansas county reports being prepared by the State Geological Survey.
Two Students Hurt In Holiday Wrecks
Two students were injured in holiday accidents it was learned today. Previously it was believed there had been no holiday casualties.
Wanda June Denney, education senior, received a broken pelvic bone in an automobile accident Dec. 28. She is in the hospital at Liberal and is expected to return to the University next semester.
Joe Allen Compton, engineering junior, was injured Wednesday when the car in which he was riding struck the back of an automobile spinning on the slippery roads near Emporia.
Compton suffered facial bone fractures and cuts and bruises. Hospital authorities at Emporia report his condition as "fair."
Engineers Win $75 In Contest
Ronald Blomberg and Charles Steele, engineering seniors, won first prizes of $75 for their prefabricated housing plans in an architecture contest.
Awarding one first prize, as originally planned, would have been unfair to the two men, the judges stated. Consequently, the prize money for second place was given to the first class winners.
"The objective of the contest was to demonstrate the flexibility and wide variety possible in prefabricated housing units." Prof. George Beal, head of the department of architecture, said.
1nrd prize winners who received $25 each were engineering seniors James Amend, Richard Bills, Keith Cloepflil, William Hayward and Frank Walter.
Winners of the $10 awards were Earl Harper, John Hipp, Max Simpson, engineering seniors, and James Madolin, engineering junior.
Neal O. Reyburn, president of the Home Building corporation of Sedalia, Mo., which sponsored the contest, increased the third class prize money to include an additional award in that category which the judges felt necessary.
Judges for the contest were architectural professors J. M. Kellogg, Verner Smith, Alton Thomas and Mrs. Helen Beal, wife of Professor Beal.
WEATHER
Fair west, clearing east. Colder tonight except extreme northwest. Low 5-10 west, 10-15 east. High Saturday middle 30's.
Largest Rebate Declared By Bookstore
The Student Union Bookstore committee has declared a 15 per cent rebate on all cash sales made by the store in the six-month period July 1 - Dec. 31, 1951.
Cash sales receipts for the period—or for any time between Jan. 1, 1947 and Dec. 31, 1951—may be redeemed at the book store for cash at the 15 per cent rate, Woolley said. If the holder cannot come to the store, he may mail them and a check will be sent.
The rebate, which amounts to $21., 537.99, is the largest ever made for a six-month period, according to L. E. Woolley, Union director. It brings the total for the 1951 calendar year to $42,507.28.
For the past five years during which 15 per cent rebate has been in effect the total is $158,115.54.
Eight KU army ROTC cadets have been selected to receive appointments to the regular army in June, Col E. F. Kumpe, professor of military science announced today.
Eight ROTC Cadets To Get Appointments
They are Olaf C. Anderson, Jr., Chapin D. Clark, Kendrick C. Davidson, John N. Ivie, Keith S. Kelly, Hillel Samich, Jr., Roger L. Tuttle and George T. Weiser.
The men were selected in a nation wide competition of distinguished military students. They will receive their commissions at the same time as the 1952 graduates at West Point.
Prof Named Committee Head
Dr. M. Erik Wright, professor of clinical psychology, has been named to the executive committee of the Kansas Council for Children and Youth. He also is a member of the Kansas Council's visiting committee, which makes recommendations on the state hospitals and training schools.
Burton W. Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, will speak before the Shawnee county Medical Auxiliary Monday, Jan. 7. He will speak on "Facts or Fetishes in '52?" at the regular meeting of the group at St. Francis hospital in Topeka.
Dean To Speak In Topeka
'Barber Of Seville To Be Shown Today
"The Barber of Seville," an Italian film with English titles based on a comic opera by Rossini, will be shown at 7.30 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium.
Herbert B. Hungerford, professor of entomology, was elected president of the Society of Systematic Zoology, an international organization, at its annual meeting in Philadelphia. Pa. last week.
Ferruccio Tagliavini, Italian tenor, will star in the production as the Count of Almaviva. Tagliavini has been acclaimed by critics as the "modern Caruso."
Elect Professor Head Of Society
Dr. Hungerford, a member of the KU faculty for 40 years and chairman of the entomology department for 25 years, will assume the duties of the presidency at the beginning of the 1952 annual meeting.
Deems Taylor, American music composer and critic, is narrator for the film. All persons will be admitted free to the movie.
The Society of Systematic Zoology promotes the interests of classification of animals. This includes taxonomy, systematic zoology, and related fields for invertebrate and vertebrate animals, living and fossil.
Dr. Hungerford is internationally known for his teaching and research, principally in regard to aquatic insects. He has published 170 papers, and his graduate students have published more than 75 papers on aquatic insects alone.
Dr. Hungerford was also president of the Entomological Society of America in 1936.
Ceramist To Give Lecture Series
More Men Than Women See Audie
Harold Riegel, nationally-known ceramist from Mill Valley, Calif., is at the University to give a series of informal demonstration-lectures from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today and Saturday in 308 Strong hall.
J. Sheldon Carey, associate professor of design, said the demonstrations would be open to both beginning and advanced art students but that any students interested in ceramics are welcome.
Mr. Riegger is now doing some designing for the Miltonvale Potteries, Miltonvale, Kan.
By JEANNE LAMBERT
men are supposed to swoon over movie stars according to tradition. It didn't happen that way last night, however, at the open house in the Union for Hollywood star Audie Murphy and actors John Hudson and James Best.
The three men who are in Kansas publicizing their latest movie, "The Cimarron Kid" found that they had last night more male than female admirers among KU students.
For half an hour the three stood in the center of the lounge and signed autographs on students' old hats, scraps of paper and assorted class notebooks.
L. E. Woolley, Union director, estimated that approximately 500 persons came in during the 30 minute period for a look at the Hollywood stars. No more than 50 persons surrounded the men at one time however and there was no pushing, shrieks or swooning.
KU women missed a good thing by not attending the open house in larger numbers. All three, even without padded shoulders, built up
shoes and nose flatteners, were better than average in looks.
Murphy, shortest of the three, was dressed in a light brown plaid suit. He has medium brown, wavy hair
AUDIE MURPHY
and blue eyes and a quick, pleasant manner which sold him with the students.
Best and Hudson, many students commented, looked enough alike to be brothers. Both are about six feet in height with dark hair and blue eyes. They were dressed similarly in navy blue suits, white shirts and maroon ties.
THE GREAT SMITH
All three talked freely with the students, answered questions about Kansas weather, Hollywood and Kansas women, and displayed no affectations commonly associated with the Hollywood clan.
At the conclusion of the open house the trio retrieved top coats which they had placed among those of the students at the check stand. Murphy's trench coat, one ROTC man remarked, must have been a relic from the earliest years of World War II and looked very un-Hollywood.
The three left in the best Hollywood tradition—in the midst of a snow storm riding in a high powered Cadillac and escorted by two cars of Highway patrolmen.
Faculty Recital To Be Given 8 p.m. Monday
The first concert of the new year at the University will be a faculty recital at 8 p.m. Monday, Jan. 7. by Raymond Cerf, violinist, and Thomas Gorton, pianist.
The recital in Strong Auditorium will be open to the public without admission charge.
Professor Cerf, who is chairman of the string department, is a native of Belgium. He studied at the Royal Conservatory in Brussels where he won first prize in violin.
He later studied at the National Conservatory in Paris and then returned to the Royal Conservatory to graduate in 1920. For several years he played in Belgium chamber music groups and was a member of the famous Ysaeye orchestra of Brussels.
He made an around-the-world tour as concert master of the orchestra for Anna Pavlova, the great ballerina. He came to the United States and joined the faculty at the Oberlin Conservatory in 1927.
For a number of years before coming to Lawrence, Professor Cerf played in orchestras in Hollywood movie and radio studios.
Monday will mark the first appearance in Lawrence as a pianist of Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts. He has appeared as piano soloist with the St. Louis Symphony, the Houston Symphony, the Rochester Civic, and several other orchestras.
He has given concerts in many sections of the country and has been a member of various chamber music groups.
Upperclassmen To Give Recital
A new type of program will be presented by the School of Fine Arts at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 9, in Strong auditorium. This will be an honor recital given by advanced students of the school.
Those taking part in the program include Fred Palmer, violinist, Eugene Johnson, flutist, Phyllis McFarland, soprano, Lois Bradfield Palmer and Delores Wunsch, pianists. Accompanies will be Carolee Eberhart and Jerald Stone.
Participants were selected by vote of the faculty as-having given the outstanding performances in a series of informal student recitals during the Spring semester.
The public is invited to attend.
ROTC Blood Donors Held Up By Parents
Parental releases are holding up 100 per cent participation in the Bloodmobile donations, Lt. Col. Bayard Atwood, assistant professor of air science and tactics, reported today.
Colonel Atwood said that both parents of any AFROTC student under 21 years of age must give their consent for him to donate to the Bloodmobile when it is here Jan. 8, 9, 10 and 11.
"So far." Colonel Atwood said, "only about 500 men are ready."
It is not certain now whether the ROTC units will make their quotas, the colonel added. Their quota is 900. One hundred sixty-eight of the 200 NROTC men are ready. About half of the 600 AFROTC men are ready. And half of the 110 Army ROTC men are ready.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 4,1952
Daily Kansan Editorials
'Saturday's Hero': True Hollywood Style
Editor's Note: The following review is perhaps a little late for most KU students. It was only recently syndicated by the Associated Collegiate Press. Unfortunately, "Saturday's Hero" played in Lawrence some time ago. Doubtless, though, the movie is still sticking in the minds of many.
We run it on the editorial page not as a movie review but as proving a point. Hollywood has been going overboard lately to expose what it considers to be scandals. There's some sort of a ballyhoo involved which must be watched carefully lest too many people go overboard also.
Admittedly, the movie had its good points. But the bad points, isolated in the following editorial, were far too numerous. Football may be too big, but only an honest and direct attack will clear it.
Apparently Hollywood this year has declared open season on some of college life's more vulnerable components. First it was the Greek-blaster "Take Care of My Little Girl," and currently it's Columbia with "Saturday's Hero."
This picture centers around Steve Novak, the son of Polish immigrants, who is a real nice kid despite the head-swelling distinction of being a high school football star.
As numerous college offers come rolling in, Steve overcomes the temptation to stay home and help support his aging father and war disabled brother, finally accepts his football scholarship at Jackson university, Va. (a safe distance from Hollywood).
It is made clear that the only reason he accepts is to get an engineering education.
At school Novak is troubled to find that he must work for his keep several hours a day on the practice field, a schedule which naturally interferes with his studies. As time passes, Novak doesn't. But this is a mere detail to a school with ambitious football hopes, and the marks are doctored to a healthier status.
Our boy finds no trouble in making the team—everybody's crazy about him. But as the seasons roll by and his name gets bigger and bigger, Novak's conscience begins to bother him.
To complicate matters, he falls in love with the niece of T. C. McCabe, his alumni benefactor, who is carrying the financial load of building alma mater's football reputation.
Finally, after permanently injuring a shoulder, Novak decided it's a bad deal, takes the girl away from jealous guardian McCabe and goes home to get an education at night school.
"This is how one man beat the Saturday afternoon racket," according to the buildups given this movie.
The less said about the acting the better. John
Derek lets his expressive eyebrows do most of the work as he furnishes a dozen soulful scowls per reel. Donna Reed, as the poor-little-rich-girl heroine, appears to have more frustrations than a tap dancer whose shoes are-soled with bubble gum.
The football actions scenes were well done, but would have been better had they included a few feet of film showing the other team on offense. (Anyone can win if the opposition isn't allowed to have the ball once in awhile).
The film's approach to the ills of football keeps it from being really effective. In true Hollywood style, it insists on centering its theme on a good looking hero who inevitably must live happily ever after. Further, it takes the easy way by blaming everything except the second war on a single monster called "football."
Another hanky-dampening scene comes when Novak's teammate admits through sobs that he swiped a handful of coin from the chapel collection box. He was made out to be a real nice kid who had been corrupted by the Big Game.
For example, when the hero's father dies. Novak's brother reads him off, saying something to the effect: "You were too busy playing football to bother with pore ol' paw!"
We'll go along with the film in its shaming the fans, the coaches (the one in this movie looks more like a bookie), the alumni and the sports writers. But the point has been missed.
The players are portrayed as good, clean, :ed-blooded, 100 per cent rah rah, American boys who are unfortunate enough to be able to play football. Not a word is offered about the school administrators who hypocritically turn their heads from the questionable activities within their colleges.
In fact, the deepest single impression made by this film—if accepted at face value—is that college athletes must be enormously stupid. Who can sympatize with these "kept men" who play a dangerous game for a paltry $100 per month?
In short, this film has too many weak spots. It was heralded as "The story never before told." We won't argue that, but we wish they had told it better.
Princess Elizabeth has returned home now and all America is thinking how different this world is in some countries a girl can hope to be a queen without having to pose for cheesecake.
Of course Elizabeth's sister Margaret Rose, a high-flying member of London's night life, may consider this an unfortunate consequence of being born into royalty.
Letters To The Editor
Universal Military Training-- To Be Or . . . ?
Dear Editor:
Congressmen will be heading for Washington, D.C., Jan. 8. They will be faced with the legislation of the proposed Universal Military Training bill prepared by the national security training commission which Carl Vinson, chairman of the House arms service committee, says he will introduce the first day the House convenes. By its nature, the bill will be referred to his committee and he promises immediate hearings beginning Jan. 9 in order to bring the bill to an early final vote.
What is UMT? Some people have the conception that UMT is providing manpower for the armed forces, but the present draft takes care of that. The proposed UMT plan is permanent peacetime conscription of 18-year-old boys. It provides six months military training.
UMT is not an emergency measure although it is using the guise of emergency and the present crisis to be pushed through Congress.
A few of the real issues, whether
enacted in the present or in peacetime, are these:
1. Cost. The cost for one year is staggering. Publicly controlled educational institutions spend about $700 per student annually while UMT costs are estimated to be for six months $2,700 per trainee.
The total approximate cost of three billion according to Dr. Donald Dushane, secretary of one of the commissions of the National Education association, would give every county a 10-room school building, a library, a hospital, employ 10 public health doctors and 10 nurses, maintain a psychiatric and behavior clinic, provide 10 full time recreational and juvenile guidance workers, meet the payroll of one junior college with 10 instructors, plus providing all expenses of a three year postgraduate course for 10,000 selected students each year and erect a $750,000 trade and technical school in each congressional district each year. All this and there would still be an unexpended sum of about 30 million dollars.
by Bibler.
3. Morals. The UMT report has nothing to offer on dealing with what it agrees is an immense moral problem.
2. Security measures, UMT would not provide an immediate armed force in time of emergency because of the need of extensive re-training. The present draft takes all available men now and UMT would add no additional manpower during this present crisis.
If you want UMT, simply do nothing.
Students, now is the time to voice your opinion.
If you don't want UMT, write your representative now.
The following are the represent-
tives from Kansas with their respe-
tive districts and home.
1. Albert M. Cole, Holton
2. Errett P. Scrivner, Kansas City
3. Myron George, Altamont
4. Edward H. Rees, Emporia
5. Clifford R. Hope, Garden City
6. Wint Smith, Mankato.
Harold C. Lohrentz,
Education Junior.
Little Man On Campus
SNARE
"Well, we've simply got to flunk someone! Get me a list of the students who are taking this course as an elective!"
Everybody's In Step, Even Us
The staff members of the Daily Kansan appear to have been as well informed on what made the big news last year as were the editors of the nation's newspapers.
A comparison of the polls taken by the Daily Kansan, the Associated Press and the United Press on the top news events of 1951 shows the three groups were almost unanimous in their selection of the top 10 stories.
There was complete agreement on the choosing as the No.1 story the firing of Gen.Douglas MacArthur and the subsequent foreign policy debate. In naming the other choices the three polls showed similar results.
On several of the events there were different divisions of the topics. For example, the AP grouped the Kefauver crime investigations, the RFC disclosures and the tax probes under the single heading "decay of public morality." But the Daily Kansan and the UP separated it into several individual events.
An indication of how important in students' minds are the problems of inflation and atomic warfare may be found by examining the polls. Both of these topics were included in the lists of the press associations but neither made the grade in the Daily Kansan survey.
Apparently the closeness of the Midwest floods influenced the students' voting on that subject. While the Daily Kansan listed it as No. 4, the Associated Press rated it No. 6 and the United Press named it No. 9.
The biggest surprise found in a comparison of the ratings is that the news of the college sports scandals rated Nos. 5 and 6 in the press association polls but just barely got aboard the first 10 of the Daily Kansan. It would seem that this story was considered more important outside the college area in which it occurred.
A complete comparison of the rankings of the events in each of the three polls is as follows:
| | DK | AP | UP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Firing of Gen. MacArthur | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Korean war | 2* | 2* | 2* |
| Cease-fire talks | 3 | 2* | 2* |
| Midwest floods | 4 | 6 | 9 |
| Kefauver investigations | 5 | 3* | 3 |
| British elections | 6 | 4 | 8 |
| Tax scandals | 7 | 3* | 7 |
| Middle Eastern tension | 8 | 8 | x |
| NATO | 9 | 10 | x |
| Sports scandals | 10 | 5 | 6 |
| Battle against inflation | x | 7 | 4 |
| Atomic developments | x | 9 | 10 |
| Korean war atrocities | 2* | 2* | 5 |
News Room Student Newspaper of the Adv. Room KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU 376
- indicates more than one category.
Daily Kansas
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., and the Nationally Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10017.
Editor-in-Chief Alan Marshall
Editorial Associate Anne Snyder
EDITORIAL STAFF
NEWS STAFF
Managing Editor ... Charles Price
Assistant Managing Editors ... Nancy Anderson, Benjamin
Holman, Lee Sheppeard, Ellsworth Zahn
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
Page 3
Balkan Defense Alliance Probable
Athens. (U.P.)—The idea of a Yugoslav-Greek-Turkish defense alliance, first broached after Tito's break with the Cominform in 1948, has moved from the realm of possibility to probability.
Such an alliance would be a major step toward Yugoslavia's entry into the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
With Yugoslavia in NATO, the West would have an unbroken chain of states allied against Russian aggression stretching from the Arctic to the Aegean.
Chances for such developments improved with:
1) Increased American and British pressure on both Athens and Belgrade for a military understanding.
2) Yugoslav intimation that Tito might soon send a military attache to Athens.
3) Persistently circulated reports of an impending meeting between Greece's premier, Gen. Nicholas Plastiras, and Tito.
The arrival of Sir Charles Peake, new British ambassador to Greece, emphasized Britain's understanding of the mutual problems affecting both Greece and Yugoslavia.
Sir Charles served the previous six years as ambassador to Belgrade and was regarded as one of the prime movers in Tito's break with the Cominform.
Chinese Doctor Wins Fellowship
A fellowship has been awarded to Dr. T.K.Lin by the National Heart institute for further study of cardiovascular disease at the KU Medical center. This is the first such fellowship to be awarded for postgraduate study at the Medical center.
Dr. Lin, native of Shanghai, China, received his medical degree from National Central University Medical college in 1947. His first two years of
instgraduate training were spent in Banking, China. He has completed three years of resident training at St. Luke's hospital, Kansas City, Mo.
The National Heart institute is a unit of the U.S. Public Health service, Bethesda, Md. It has the dual purpose of stimulating clinical training and research in heart disease.
The Goose Came To Dinner
Oxford, Mass.—(U.P.) A 30-pound goose cooked its own goose when it crashed through the windshield of Philip Black's automobile. Black took it home for Sunday dinner.
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 Saturdays and Sundays. Mail postmaster: Lawrence. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans. under act of March 3, 1879.
WALK
ON
LEFT
FACING
TRAFFIC
John E. Peurifoy and George Allen, respectively U.S. ambassadors to Greece and Yugoslavia, have consistently urged Greco-Yugoslav law proachement, as well as closer cooperation between Greece and Albania, followed till developments leading toward better understandings.
Plymouth
Although they have refrained from public statements, Yugoslav representatives in Greece recently have given informed quarters to understand that Tito was seriously considering sending a Yugoslav military attacke to Athens.
Your
. . . has a used car priced for you.
When normal diplomatic relations between Greece and Yugoslavia were renewed last year, the agreement called for both nations to exch-
change military attaches.
Buddy
GALLAGHER
634 Mass. Ph. 1000
Greece took advantage of the arrangement and soon sent a military representative to Belgrade. A similar reception had yet to arrive in Athens.
Meanwhile Tito has also reconsidered his military views about Greece. When the Yugoslav minister had his first press conference in Athens last year, he said Yugoslavia would expect help from Greece in event of an attack by Cominform states. He refused to comment on whether Greece could expect the same aid from Yugoslavia.
London—(U.P.)—The Polish and Czechoslovak Communist regimes are preparing a series of political trials comparable in importance to the notorious Moscow trials and purges in the late thirties, informed sources said here.
A former prime minister, two deputy premiers, a marshal of Poland, several generals and ministers and other prominent Polish and Czech government and party officials, now under arrest under charges of espionage and antistate activities, are expected to appear at the trials.
Recently, Tito said he would assist Greece if she were attacked.
Poles And Czechs Schedule Significant Political Purge
According to unofficial reports from Warsaw, Edward Osubka-Morawski, prime minister of Poland from 1945 to 1947, and Michael Rola-Zymierski, marshal of Poland and commander-in-chief of the Polish Army until November 1949, have been arrested and are expected to be tried shortly.
In Czechoslovakia, the recent official announcement of the arrest of Rudolf Slansky, vice premier and until three months ago, secretary general of the Czechoslovak Communist Party, added another name to the long list of Czechoslovak party and government bosses arrested in February this year and late last year.
Warsaw officially announced the arrest and impending trial of Wladyslaw Gomulka, former deputy premier and secretary general of the Polish Communist Party from 1944 to 1948, and Gen. Marian Spychalski, a former deputy minister of national defense.
University Daily Kansan
The most prominent among them were Dr. Vladimir Clementis, minister of foreign affairs; Maria Svermova, assistant secretary general of the party; Josef Smrkovskoy, minister of agriculture, Otto Sling, party secretary for the Brno region; Deputy Defense Minister Bedrich Reicin and Deputy Foreign Ministers Arthur London and Vavro Haidu.
The mounting wave of arrests in Moscow's two main satellite countries have caused widespread speculation as to their significance and any possible connection between them.
One theory, advanced by emigre Czech circles in Paris, said certain facts pointed to the existence of an "alliance" between Warsaw and Prague, aimed at creating a united anti-Moseow front of East European states backed by Yugoslavia and the West.
Observers here believed that while it was probable that the arrested leaders would be accused at the coming trials of having plotted the overthrow of the Polish and Czech Communist regimes with the help of Yugoslavia, the real reasons for the purges lay elsewhere.
They pointed out that since the expulsion of Yugoslavia from the Cominform in 1948, the eastern European "people's democracies" have been subjected to a growing political pressure from Moscow. Drastic economic demands connected with the satellites' rearmament have been added in the last 18 months.
Polish Your GERMAN!
Brush up on your FRENCH!
Ask for TUTORING!
English speaking European Graduate Student will assist you with these languages.
ZOLTAN DIOS Phone KU 327
Friday, Jan. 4, 1952
Bakery Treats
Name Your Favorite
.. you'll be sure to find at DRAKE'S. Eclairs, cookies, donuts, cakes, and breads . . . you'll relish their deliciousness. Perfect for any dinner or between meal snack.
DRAKE'S BAKERY
Phone 61
907 Mass.
Go To The Church Of Your Choice Every Sunday.
Christmas Village
Church Services
削叶
Church Of Christ 1501 N. H
W. Taylor Carter, Minister Kieth Barnhart, Music Director
10:00 - Bible Study
11:00 - Sermon
6:30 - University Class
11:55 - Communion
7:30 - Evening Service
Plymouth Congregational Church
925 Vermont St.
Dale E. Turner, Minister
SUNDAY SERVICES
10:00—Church School Class for University Students
11:00—Morning Worship
5:30 p.m.—University Discussion Group
Trinity Episcopal Church
9 a.m. - Holy Communion for collegians. Breakfast and Canterbury meeting follows in Recory. Films will be shown on Seminaries of the Church
11 a.m. - Holy Communion and sermon.
Jan. 10 - Holy Communion at Danforth Chapel.
MEMBER ASSOCIATION
CANTERBURY CLUBS
8th and Kentucky
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
George C. Fetter, minister Gus Ferre, minister to students
11:00 Morning Worship. Subject-"The Heavenly Vision"
9:45 University Class led by Gus Ferre'
5:30 Roger Williams Fellowship. Candle Light Service. Installation of Officers. Fellowship Supper.
7:30 Evening Worship and Song Service.
First Methodist Church Tenth and Vermont Oscar E. Allison, Minister Edwin F. Price, Minister to Students
9:45 a.m. Wesley Foundation Church School Class
10:50 Morning Worship
Sermon: "The Great Hunger"
5:30 - 7:30 Wesley Foundation Fellowship. Student led discussion on "Should Christians be Propagandists".
First Christian Church
1000 Kentucky St. H.M.Sippel, Minister
9:30 - Sunday School—Class for single students taught by Mrs. Harold G. Barr—Class for married students taught by Dr. Carroll D. Clark
Sunday Services
10:45 - Morning Worship
5:30 - K.U. Disciples Fellowship evening meeting in Myers Hall on Campus. Mrs. Carroll D. Clark, Student Director.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Jan. 4, 1952
Hoag Ready For Action Against Pesky Sooners
Jayhawker cage stock has risen even higher as Dr. M. E. Gross, team physician, announced Thursday afternoon that Charlie Hoag would be able to see limited action when KU opens its conference schedule against Oklahoma at Hoch auditorium Saturday night.
Coach Phog Allen intends to use Hoag some against the Sooners but plans no change in his starting lineup. Hoag has been hindered with an injured groin muscle since early in the football season. The slow healing injury forced him to miss KU's first ten basketball games and he has had to workout only lightly for weeks.
Tipoff time will be 7:35 o'clock for the game which will be broadcast by radio station WREN of Topeka.
KU has beaten Colorado, MU and K-State and on the basis of comparative scores should have little trouble with the young Oklahoma team coached by Bruce Drake.
Coach Phog Allen and his squad, however, are still mindful of last season's the OU team. KU has considerable prestige at stake in addition to the Big Seven conference race. Kansas is currently rated the Nation's top team by the Associated Press and has a string of 10 victories this season.
The Sooners, who opened their conference play Thursday night with a 61-52 win over Colorado, will be out to pull their second major upset of the season. They downed a previously undefeated Stanford club 77-71 in the Big Seven pre-season tournament at Kansas City. It was only the second victory of the season for OU who took fifth place in the tourney.
Sherman Norton has been spea- heading OU's scoring attack, along with Bob Waller and Del McEacherm.
The OU club was measured by the Missouri Tigers 61-49 and in their final tourney match, they were trounced by Kansas State 86-69.
Sterling Jones and Ron Blue, both sophomores, add considerable speed to the quintet which is not especially tall.OU's Coach Drake will probably have his charges try to control the ball to force a low scoring tussle.
Clyde Lovellette, KU's giant center, is currently the nation's top scorer with a 27.3 average. Teammate Bob Kenney is also ripping the cords with a 14.5-point average. Bill Lienhard is traveling at an 8.2 pace against 6.5 last season. Bill Houglund, has a 7.2 average compared to a 5.4 average over the route last season.
Probable Starters
Oklahoma (3-7) Kansas
McEachern F Kenney
Norton F Lienhard
Waller C Lovellette
Cummins G Hougland
Grossman G Kelley
West Virginia 100 New York U. 75
Seton Hall 77 Western Kentucky
Cage Scores
Bradley 98 Arizona 59
Missouri 76 Ft. Leonard Wood 47
Oklahoma 61 Colorado 52
Kentucky 116 Mississippi 58
Florida 64 Auburn 63
North Carolina 51 Maryland 47
Louisville 90 Villanova 68
Utah 59 New Mexico 47
Seattle U. 82 Los Angeles State 69
Los Angeles City College 59 Grant
Tech College 45
San Jose State 51 Oregon 49
PRECISE
WATCH
REPAIRS
Watch Repair Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed
1982
SPEEDY STAN Grossman, 5-foot 11-inch senior, is the only returning starter from last year on the Oklahoma Sooners' basketball team, coached by Bruce Drake.
Vejar To Meet Bolanos Tonight
Wolfson's 743 Mass. Call 675
New York —(U.R.)— Young Chico Vejar's scramble up the stairway to the stars may be blocked tonight at Madison Square Garden by the descending Enrique Bolanos.
Vejar, university freshman and welterweight rookie, faces the stiffest test of his brief, brilliant fistic career in the television 10-room with veteran Bolanos, a slick Mexican from Pasadena, Calif.
At 27 Bolanos is regarded as "shipping" because of his spotty routine in 1838 when he won but three of nine bouts and had two draws.
At 20, Vejar of Stamford, Conn., is rated a "comer" because he won 36 of 37 bouts in less than two years of professional fighting, and his only loss was on a widely disputed split decision to Eddie Compo. Sept. 21.
However, the Mexico-born boxer-puncher from Pasadena has been a top-flightier who campaigned very successfully as a lightweight and hopes to do likewise as a welter-weight.
Five hundred tickets to the KU-
Kansas State basketball game Jan.
26 at Manhattan will go on sale at
3 p.m. Monday at the athletic office,
according to E. F. Falkensteh, athletic department business manager.
500 K-State Tickets On Sale Here Monday
Students must present their ID cards and each person will be limited to one ticket, which costs $2.
Kentucky Sets Scoring Record
New York —(U.P.) A raging, angry pack of Kentucky Wildcats clawed its way back toward the basketball heights today with the greatest scoring spree in its colorful history.
Smarting from their one-point upset at the hands of St. Louis in the final round of the Sugar Bowl tournament last week, the Wildcats made their "comeback appearance" at Owensboro, Ky., a rousing success last night by crushing Mississippi, 116 to 58, in a Southeastern conference game.
In addition to setting a Kentucky basket-banging record, the 116 point barrage also set a new record for the conference.
Cliff "The Cat" Hagan, who is filling in at center in the absence of seven-foot Bill Spivey, led the assault with 37 points on 10 goals and 17 free throws. Bobby Watson was the next high scorer with 18, and that was the most fitting, for the mayor of Owensboro had declared Thursday "Hagan-Watson day" to honor the two local athletes.
Mississippi, which had the misfortune to catch Kentucky in its angriest mood, found itself behind by 30-17 at the end of the first period. And then it was 62-23 at the half. Wildcat subs started appearing in the second half but still Ole Miss couldn't stem the tide.
The amazing Wildcat win stole last night's show from a thundering upset—West Virginia's 100 to 75 conquest of previously unbeaten New York U. at New York's Madison Square Garden.
The NYU Violets went into the game with a 12-game winning streak, longest in the nation, and a ranking as the No. 7 team in the nation. But West Virginia zoomed to a quick 13-1 lead and from then on the game was strictly "no contest."
After the game
9
REFRESH YOURSELF
at the
HAWK'S NEST
COFFEE - ROLLS - SANDWICHES
CANDY - CIGARETTES
FRENCH FRIES - FOUNTAIN ORDERS
North, South Squads Practice For 3rd Annual'Money'Bowl
Mobile, Ala.—(U.P.)—The North and South squads went through their final workouts today for the third annual "pay-for-play" senior bowl game here tomorrow.
This is the only bowl game in which the competing players are paid for their services, with members of the winning team each receiving $500 and the losers $400 each.
A crowd of 20,000 is expected for the game, and the most interested spectators will be professional football scouts assigned to line up potential stars for the National Football league.
The South has won the previous two games, but the North, boasting a well-coordinated running and passing attack, was favored by one touchdown in tomorrow's tilt.
Ed "Mighty Mo" Modzelewski, the hero of Maryland's victorious Sugar Bowl team, spearheads the Northerners' ground game, while Fred Bennens, from Southern Methodist, will handle the passing.
Campus WEST
AFTER INVENTORY SALE
| | Original Price To | NOW |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Rayon Lace Trimmed Slips | $5.95 | $2.00 |
| Corduroy Jackets | 14.95 | 7.00 |
| Wool Skirts | 16.95 | 9.85 |
| | 12.95 | 7.00 |
| | 9.95 | 5.00 |
| | 7.95 | 3.00 |
| Skirts | 8.95 | 5.85 |
Substantial reduction on limited number of sweaters, (including cashmere)
All Sales Final
Store Hours 9 Until 5
YOU'LL SAVE AT CARL'S
STOCK BALANCING SALE
SUBSTANTIAL REDUCTIONS ON THESE ITEMS
SUITS
SPORT COATS
JACKETS
TOPCOATS
WOOL ROBES
CORDUROY COATS
SHIRTS
SWEATERS
RAINCOATS ENTIRE STOCK NOT INCLUDED
Mass. St.
905
CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES
Phone
905
51
Kentucky Asks Schools To Follow Player Plan
Lexington, Ky.—(U.P.)—The University of Kentucky called on other major athletic powers today to strike at "the evils attendant upon recruiting" of players by following its example in banning out-of-tackle recruiting.
Kentucky, a national power in both football and basketball, announced Thursday night that no longer would it seek non-Kentucky players for its teams.
Football Coach Paul "B e a r"
Football Scribes Choose Bright Area's Top Back
Johnny Bright, star ground-gainer of Drake university, was voted the "outstanding back" in the Big Seven-Missouri Valley area by the Mid-West chapter of the Football Writers Association of America.
The great Negro halfback was the top ground-gainer in the nation until his jaw was fractured in the Oklahoma A&M game. He received 55 votes, far front in of his closest competitor for the title, Buck McPhail, Oklahoma fullback.
Secretary Don Pierce, KU's sports publicity director, announced that others finishing in order behind Bright and McPhail were Bud Laughlin of Kansas, Veryl "Joe" Switzer of Kansas State and Howard Waugh of Tulsa.
A trophy will be presented jointly to Bright by 12 newspapers in the area. The newspapers were Columbia, Mo., Tribune, Topeka Daily Capital, Oklahoma City Daily Oklahoman, Tulsa World, Tula Tribune, Denver Post, Lawrence Journal-World, Boulder, Colo., Camera, Lincoln, Nebr, Star, Omaha World-Herdal, Des Moines, Register, and the Kansas City Star.
Ex-KU Stars To Be Guests
Forrest Griffith and Johnny Amberg, both former KU fullbacks, now with the New York professional football Giants, will be guests of the Junior Quarterback club of Greater Kansas City Saturday.
Griffith has completed his second year with the Giants, Amberg his first. Both of the men figure highly in Coach Steve Owen's plans for 1952.
Amberg had an outstanding first year in the play for pay ranks and assured himself of a fine future in the pro sport.
While at KU, Griffith gained a total of 1,379 yards, to rank third in all-time statistics at the University. His best year was 1947, when he gained 483 yards and was one of the top offensive stars in the 14-20 loss to Georgia Tech in the Orange bowl.
Amberg's best season was 1950, his last, when he gained a total of 441 yards.
Jay Barrington, sportscaster of WDAF-TV, will be master of ceremonies of the program. The meeting will be held at the club headquarters, Macy's seventh floor.
Eye
YOUR EYES
Eye
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
Eldridge Pharmacy
Drugs, Sundries, Fountain,
Pines,
Agency for Mixture No. 79 701 Mass. Phone 999
Bryant, who made the surprise announcement immediately after his return from Kentucky's 20-7 win over Texas Christian in the Cotton bowl game, said the action was taken because Kentucky's out of state recruiting had been widely criticized by other colleges.
"We have confidence in the ability of Kentucky boys to stand toe-to-toe with those of neighboring states," said Bryant. "We are confident that if other institutions will follow, the evils attendant upon recruiting will be ended."
Bryant's football squad of 75 men includes 36 non-Kentuckians—almost 50 percent—including star passer Vito "Babe" Parilli of Rochester, Pa.
The Wildcat basketball team, currently rated No. 2 in the nation by the United Press Board of Coaches, includes seven non-Kentuckians on its 20-man roster. That figure does not include seven-foot All-American Center Bill Spivey of Warner-Robbins, Ga., who is under temporary suspension from the squad at his own request.
Despite Kentucky's new policy, however, a handful of out-of-state players will make Wildcat teams in the future. That's because the school will permit as many as five football scholarships per year to be given to non-Kentuckians.
“This provision is to include sons and brothers of Alumni,” Bryant explained. “But in all instances, these out-of-state students must seek us out and apply for the scholarships.”
Scoring Mark Set By MU
Columbia, Mo. — (U.P.)— Missouri university's basketball team went on a scoring spree in the final half to pull away from Fort Leonard Wood, 76 to 47, and set a new school scoring record.
University Daily Kansan Page 5
Missouri's 76 points topped the 74 against Iowa State two years ago.
Fort Leonard Wood held a slim margin throughout most of the first half but Missouri went ahead 33-32 at the intermission and started hitting in the third quarter to march away from the soldiers.
Gene Landolt was high for Missouri with 15 points, followed by Bill Stauffer and Don Dippold with 13 each. "Sour" Anderson led the Fort team with 10 while Bill Garrett, All-American from Indiana last year, was held to eight points.
Englewood, N. J.—(U.P.)—In the neatly-furnished parlor of his home, bedecked with the trophies of his many triumphs, world figure skating champion Dick Button enthusiastically demonstrated two new maneuvers he has dreamed up in his quest for a second Olympic medal.
Button Prepares To Defend Titles
"They've never before been tried in actual competition," explained the handsome 22-year-old Harvard senior, who leaves today for Europe where next month he will defend his Olympic and World championships. "And they're the toughest I've tried yet."
the maneuvers, Button disclosed, were the "triple loop" and the "triple double-axle," and he smiled as his interviewer evidenced bewilderdment.
"On the triple loop, I start off on my left skate, do three complete spins in mid-air, and come down again on the same skate." He outlined with a hop and the gracefully-executed spin of a ballerina.
"Now, the other one is harder," he continued. "For an ordinary double-axle, I start on my left skate, do 2½ spins, and come down on my right foot skating backwards. On my new triple double-axle I do that three times in one series."
The clean-cut New Jersey youth then retreated to an easy chair, smiling with satisfaction at having "sold" his talent to a new audience.
"I couldn't tell you how or why I ever got started in figure skating," he confessed. "When I first began skating at 12, I was pretty chubby and could hardly stand on skates. But as I grew older figure skating appealed to me. I've just always gone in more for sports that require skill and co-ordination rather than sheer speed or stamina."
Today Button is acknowledged the greatest in the world. Besides his Olympic gold medal—the first ever won by an American in figure skating, he has won four world titles, three North American crowns, six U. S. championships, and one European title (Americans have been barred from the European championships since Button won in 1948.)
At Harvard, where he is majoring in political theory. Button is an outstanding student. He has just won a Burr scholarship as the senior "who best combines the qualities of character, leadership, scholarship and athletic ability."
Because of his fine scholastic record, Button has been granted time off from his studies to compete in the Olympics. He left Thursday by plane for Germish, Germany, where he will launch a strenuous five-week program of eight to 10 hours of daily practice.
DINE AT DUCK'S
We offer you a wide variety of choice Sea Foods and other fine dishes to satisfy every taste.
- French Fried Jumbo Shrimp
Sea Food Of All Kinds
DUCK'S
- Rainbow Trout
-Enjoy A Sea Food Dinner Tonight-
- Choice Tender Steaks
824 Vt.
- Deep Sea Scallops
Friday, Jan. 4, 1952
D
DiMag's Absence Causes Yanks, Indians To Argue
New York—(U.P.)The question of what Joe DiMaggio's retirement will do to the New York Yankees loomed today as the biggest argument of the hot stove season—and one which already involved the world champions and the challenging Cleveland Indians.
Disregarding the fact that he often has been caught with his predictions down. Cleveland General Manager Hank Greenberg teed off the controversy when he labeled the Yanks a second division club without the Clipper.
The touchy Yankees immediately blew a fuse, insinuated that Cleveland still deserved the "cry baby" nickname it won in 1940 and sarcastically thanked Greenberg for his prophecy—on the grounds that he never called 'em right anyhow. As proof the Yanks pointed to Greenberg's prediction that the Indians would win the 1951 pennant by seven games, and bleit it by five.
Yet this quick response indicates that even the Yankees are wondering to a certain extent just what effect the loss of DiMag will have on the club. But when they talk about the "Luck Of The Yankees," they aren't kidding.
For if DiMaggio had stepped down two years ago, after that sensational comeback in 1949, it might have had a marked effect on the team. He had been out half the season when he stepped back into the lineup against the roaring Red Sox. All Joe did was win three straight games in a crucial series with homers and spark the Yanks to the flag.
After Your Drive Home
For Christmas Vacation It's
Stop At Sanders Today For
- Radiator Check
- Oil Change
TIME FOR THAT CHECK-UP!
- Chassis Lubrication
- Brake Adjustment
- Body and Fender Repair
RECORD CHART
W 1 W 2 W 3 W 4 W 5 W 6 W 7 W 8 W 9 W 10 W 11 W 12 W 13 W 14 W 15 W 16 W 17 W 18 W 19 W 20 W 21 W 22 W 23 W 24 W 25 W 26 W 27 W 28 W 29 W 30 W 31 W 32 W 33 W 34 W 35 W 36 W 37 W 38 W 39 W 40 W 41 W 42 W 43 W 44 W 45 W 46 W 47 W 48 W 49 W 50 W 51 W 52 W 53 W 54 W 55 W 56 W 57 W 58 W 59 W 60 W 61 W 62 W 63 W 64 W 65 W 66 W 67 W 68 W 69 W 70 W 71 W 72 W 73 W 74 W 75 W 76 W 77 W 78 W 79 W 80 W 81 W 82 W 83 W 84 W 85 W 86 W 87 W 88 W 89 W 90 W 91 W 92 W 93 W 94 W 95 W 96 W 97 W 98 W 99 W 100
SANDERS MOTORS
BANK
TO THE ORD
ent jones
You Get GREATER VALUE for Your Dollar BECAUSE OF ADVERTISING
Because Advertising
... brings you news about better products you need
... tells you where to get what you want when you want it
... makes lower prices possible through mass production and mass selling
ORANGES
Yet picture how little all this costs
For instance, it costs less than 1/3¢ a dozen to advertise the big-name brand of oranges.
Any other method of selling would cost the growers more and therefore raise the price. Otherwise they wouldn't use advertising.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
A woman in a swimsuit reclines on a floatation device, floating in the water.
THIS TWO-PIECE CREATION, combining a snug-fitting bathing suit and a full-cut, flowing skirt, has been created for spring, 1952. It brings together three of the season's new "wool in California" colors—prospector gold, Romanoff green and patio rose
Hollywood Hoofers Now Need Knowledge Of Hoofing For Job
Hollywood—(U.P.)—A girl has to know how to dance to get a job in a Hollywood chorus line these days.
That may not seem so remarkable, but to LeRoy Prinz, a dance director who has been telling film cuties where to put their feet for some 30 years, it shows how things have changed in the flicker business.
"Even to be considered for a job in a film musical, a girl has to know more than Crawford, Stanwyck, heridan or Wyman ever did in their early chorus days." Mr. Prinz said.
It is not that he bellittes the dancing of these four ex-chorus girls. He says they had no competition.
"They had more talent than the others and were able to make the imb to stardom that every chorus girl hopes for," he said.
The competition is stiffer now. Mr. Prinz says the day is past when all a girl needs to get a spot in a musical is a pair of legs and a friend in the casting office.
"They've got to have beauty and brains and know a lot about dancing—not just a time step and a wiggle," he said.
One of Prinz's recent assignments is a dance director was in "I'll See You in My Dreams," a Warner Bros. musical starring Doris Day, Danny Thomas, Frank Lovejoy and Patrice Yymore. Mr. Prinz said Miss Wyatt is a good example of the high quality of today's dancing girls. He explained:
"She is a fine, intelligent girl with great dancing talent. She started dancing on Broadway and then came to Hollywood, where she is making success of herself both as a dancer and as an actress."
Mr. Prinz said the fact that Hollywood is always busy making musical pictures is no reason for every dung woman who can keep time to think she can get a dancing job on the screen.
They've got to be high class ir
every department—talent, beauty and brains—or otherwise they might as well stay home and dance to the victrola," he said.
Baptist Organization To Have Installation
Installation of officers and a candlelight service will take place at the meeting of the Roger Williams foundation fellowship of the First Baptist church from 5:30 to 8 p.m. Sunday.
The University Sunday school class led by Gus Ferre, minister to students, will be at 9:45 a.m. in the church, eighth and Kentucky streets.
The new officers of the Roger Williams fellowship will hold office until the spring semester in 1953. The new officers are: Carrol Smith, president; Jim Gleason, first vicepresident; Bill Arnold, second vicepresident; Kathleen Dougan, secretary; Reta Hudson, treasurer; Karolyn Holm and Howard Stringham, co-social chairman and Annette Smith, student religious council representative.
Kappa Phi, Methodist club for women students, will meet tonight in Danforth chapel to see colored slides which show how "The Artist Interprets Christ's Way." Pledges of the club will be in charge of the meeting.
Methodist Women's Club To Show Slides In Danforth
Four Methodist students who attended the Student Volunteer Movement conference will lead a discussion "Should Christians Be Progagandists" at the Wesley foundation fellowship meeting from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. in the church, at 10th and Vermont.
Forty-four hundred pounds of clothing collected in Lawrence by the KU Westminster fellowship chapter of Presbyterian men are on the way to Korea.
Three hundred groups in Lawrence contributed to the local drive which was part of a nation-wide drive by the Westminster organization.
Westminster Sends Clothing To Korea
In addition to clothing, $235.15 was donated. Long underwear was purchased wholesale with a portion of the money. The remainder was used for CARE packages.
Cotton goods donated to the drive will be sent to the Philippine Islands by the Methodist church since it cannot be used in Korea.
cannot be used in labor. The clothes were packed in uniform, water-proofed boxes by the Lawrence Paper company.
Lawrence P. Robert Ball, Donald Tice, Frank Exter, Myron Click and Donald Kerle were in charge of the drive.
Carry-In-Supper For Mariners Club
The Mariners club, Presbyterian organization for married students, will have a carry-in-supper meeting and recreational program at Westminster house tonight.
After the dinner will be a fireside discussion of the Student Volunteer Movement conference.
Saturday morning a work fellowship will take place at Westminster house to straighten up the house from the Student Volunteer Movement conference and to move furniture and do some cleaning.
The regular fellowship supper and commission meetings will be held from 5:30 to 8 p.m. Sunday at the house. Door hosts will be members of the Bible history commission, and dining room hosts, members of the outreach commission.
Tuesday, Jan. 8 a council meeting of officers of KU Westminster fellowship will be held at the house with Marvin Reed, moderator, presiding.
Sigma Pi Elects Beydler
William Beydler, College senior, was recently elected president of Sigma Pi fraternity.
Other officers are James Tolle, engineering junior, vice-president; Harry Hunt, fine arts sophomore, secretary, and Roger Beth, College senior, herald.
Danforth Chapel service, 8:30 a.m.
Sunday. Sponsored by Gamma Delta
Lutheran Student association, cost supper, 6 p.m. Sunday, Trinity Lutheran Church. Miss Bernice Fjellman, speaker, "Christ in Intellectual Development."
Engineerettes, 7:30 p.m. Monday, cards and election of officers, East room, Union.
KU Disciple fellowship. 5:30 p.m.
Sunday, Myers Hall. Prof. John E.
Hankins, "The Problem of Doubt."
Mathematics Colloquium, 5 p.m.
Monday, 203 Strong Hall.
New entrance to parking zone H, back of Strong, is located east of Snow Hall. Park on the left side of the street only, with the exception of the area between Strong and the Chemistry building where cars are to be angle parked in two rows facing southeast.
Working Girls Too Scantily Clad, Survey Shows
White collar workers are wearing lower and fewer clothes "almost to the extreme of shocking exposure," fashion survey reports.
Working girls "under-dress," the American Women's Institute said. Small town girls under-dress even more than their big-city sisters, the report added.
"They wear off-shoulder blouses, deep-cut necklines, skirts with long lits, transparent blouses and thin sweaters almost to the extreme of shocking exposure," the organization said.
The men weren't overlooked.
In the nation as a whole, the survey revealed that "less than five per cent of the males wear gatters" and only three per cent wear gloves with an overcoat. The investigators apparently were relieved to note, however, that 35 per cent of the men report for work with ties on.
It rated Boston's women the best dressed in the nation, followed by Washington, Kansas City, Atlanta and Detroit. Rated lowest in the survey was Chicago, where the girls wear "too many sweaters, too few hats and many go without handbags."
"The chief fault of men is that they clutter every pocket with miscellaneous objects from paper notes to screw drivers," the group reported.
[Lutheran Council Secretary To Speak To Local Group
It said 79 per cent of the women wear hats to the office, while only 63 per cent of the men do so. Sixty-one per cent of the women were found to work without stockings in the summer.
Miss Bernie Fjellman, program secretary of the Division of Student Service of the National Lutheran council will discuss "Christ in Intellectual Development" at the Lutheran Student Association meeting at the Trinity Lutheran church Sunday evening.
bove Chicago in the best-dressed survey.
New York, Los Angeles, Miami and Philadelphia rated barely a-
Devotions will be led by Charles Satterfield who has just returned from a Lutheran study conference which was a follow-up of the Student Volunteer Movement conference held at KU during the vacation.
Inter-Fraternity Council Party
The Inter-Fraternity Council will entertain with a formal dance at the Community building from 9 p.m. to midnight tonight. Chaperones will be Mr. and Mrs. M. N. Ingrisano, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. John Cannon and Mr. John Forman.
Miss Fjellman's talk will follow the cost supper to be served at 6 p.m. in the church at 13th and New Hampshire.
Campus Pinnings
Inter-Fraternity Council Party
Dorothy Hedrick, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Newton to Jim Moorhead, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Atchison.
Sally Dial, North College, Kansas City - Jack Billingsley, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Kansas City.
Martha Whitten, Templein, Marysville - Kenneth Ehrlich, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Russell.
Lambda Chi Pledge Dance
Mined Pledge Dance
The pledge class of Lambda Chi Ai Academy, the chapter house from 8 to 11 p.m.
Saturday. Maj. and Mrs. Arthur H.
Wilson and Mr. Mrs. Philip A.
Dergance will be chaperones.
Travel Service
THE
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
TRAVEL AGENCY
Tel. 30 8th & Mass.
HOW TO GET THAT EXTRA WINTERTIME PEP
Skiing
Try a tall glass of delicious creamy-fresh milk after meals and as a between-meal "pick-me-up."
MILK provides all the necessary elements for extra pep.
Order Today
LAWRENCE Sanitary MILK ICE CREAM Phone 696 202 W. 6th
GO
1952
Start the year right. Send your laundry to:
ACME Bachelor Laundry and Dry Cleaning
I.
1111 Mass.
Phone 646
Classified Ads
Phone K.U.376
Classified Advertising Rates
TRANSPORTATION
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted
understanding that the bill will be paid
before understanding that the bill will
be paid during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
(except Saturday) or brought to the Univer-
sal office, Journalism bldg., not later than 3:45 p.m.
the day before publication date.
ARLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange international travel whether tours or Indian interiors. Phone Mrs. Leois Odaffer, 615 Downs Travelf Service, Lois 105 Mass.
Ask us about family rates, sky coach, and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book a European travel next summer. Call Miss Mae. At National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30.
BUSINESS SERVICE
TYPING—Theses, term papers, matchbooks, letters, etc. Prompt and academic service. Mrs. Hall. 1344W. 506 West Sixth. tt
TPING of all kinds done promptly and accurately.
Mrs. Merritt, KU 296
16
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses—prompt, accurate service Call Me Stanley, 1839, or bring to 917 Rhofe Island. **tf**
TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term
papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work,
attention. 10 years these theses
experience. Mrs. Shields, 1299 Ohio. Pa-
ron 1601.
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ment and area we assure fast, efficient area rooms. Ravi 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 am. until midnight. tf
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 stenched cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1952W. 1915 Tennessee. ff
CRYSTAL CAST FOAM serves choice steaks, sandwiches, mals, home-made plies and air-conditioned furniture for customers. Air-conditioned, Open, a.m. a.t. midnight. Crystal Cake, 690 Vt.
University Daily Kansan
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our
Comfort! Convenience!
AYHAWKS
NEW Park Beach CUSHIONED CHAIRS
Continuous Shows Every Saturday-Sunday 1:00 p.m. On
MON. THRU FRI.
Shows At 2:30-7:00-9:00
NOW THRU SATURDAY
Cosmopolitan
Citation
'Most Unusual
Movie'
For Adults Who
Appreciate Honest
Maturity In Movies!
Beverly Michael
Hugo Haas
Allan Nixon
"PICKUP"
Cosmopolitan
"PICKUP"
Editor To Address County Clerks
—Plus—
"SO YOU ARE GOING TO HAVE AN OPERATION"
Joe MacDoakes
Sports - "Grand Dad Races"
Late News Events
What a newspaper man expects from his county government will be discussed by Dwight Payton, editor of the Overbrook Citizen, Jan. 16-17 at the third annual County Clerks' school program to be held here.
Two other guest speakers for the short course are also scheduled, according to Dr. Ethan P. Allen, director of the Bureau of Government Research.
Dr. Hugo Wall, professor of government at Wichita university, will lead a period on training programs. Dr. Wall is a nationally known authority on administrative procedures in government.
J. D. Morgan, associate professor of economics, will discuss the quality of property assessment, a field in which he has done considerable research since World War II.
one-stop pet shop has everything for
Pet and Gift Shop 1218 Comm. phone 418
FOR SALE
TRAILER HOUSE: 25 feet, 1947; in good condition; semi - permanently located. Medical school, Medical education. Medical student wishes to sell to esteem. 19th 929 Connecticut, Phone 25658M.
SILVER. French broche evening bag, lost Saturday, Dec. 15. Reward will be given. Phone DeNean Ankerholz, 3735.
LOST
DOUBLE ROOM vacant for one student.
DOUBLE ROOM, $12 a month. Call
495, 1222 Miss
FOR RENT
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
VARSITY
THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
Continuous Shows
Sat.-Sun. 1:00 p.m. On
MON. thru FRI.
Box Office Opens 6:45
TODAY - SATURDAY
REX ALLEN
UTAH
WAGON
TRAIN
The Arizona
Cowboy
KOKO
The Miracle
Horses of
the Movies
A REPUBLIC
PICTURE
Co-Feature
Joe Palooka IN TRIPLE CROSS A MONOGRAM PICTURE
Ch. 7 "Flying Disc Man From Mars" Late News Events
Gene's
carrying
the mail
in
COLUMBIA PICTURES presents
GENE
AUTRY
and
CHAMPION
WHIRLWIND
BEATRICES
SMILEY
BURNETTE
SUN. - MON. - TUES.
Co-Feature-
Interviews
COLUMBIA PICTURES
presents
PAY
JANE
O'BRIEN-WYATT
Criminal Lawyer
Friday, Jan. 4, 1952
Personnel representatives from five companies will interview February and June graduating engineers in Marvin hall next week.
with CALL RECOVERY REMOT MASK • CALL RECOVERY REMOT
Balloon to Phone • Event Recover • Event Removal • Event Recovery
Late News Events
Screen Snapshots
January 7
E. I. Du Pont de Memours & company. This company is interested in men regardless of draft status.
January 8
Bendix Aviation corporation.
January. 9.
Standard Steel Works, Kansas City, Mo.
Chance Vought Aircraft, Dallas.
January 10.
page ;
Timken Roller Bearing company. Interested persons should sign schedule in the engineering office.
Sun, Moon Keep Earth Out Of Shape
Cincinnati—(U.P.) Everyone knows about the moon causing tides on the seashore but at Xavier university here a California scientist has been measuring tides on the earth.
Dr. John T. Pettit, research associate at the University of California at Los Angeles, says the earth responds to the attractions of the sun and moon just as the sea does.
Comfort Convenience!
JAYHAWKER
NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CRABS
Comfort! Convenience!
JAYHAWKER
NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
Prevue Saturday
Box Office Opens 11:15
SUNDAY
For 4 Days
You'll tingle when
BOB
HOPE
tangles with
NEDY
LAMARR
in Tanqier...
You'll tingle when BOB HOPE
You'll tingle when
BOB
HOPE
tangles with
MEDY
LAMARR
in Tangier...
tangles with
MEDY
LAMARR
in Tangier...
TOM SCHULTZ
FRANCIS L. ARNOLD JOHN
SULLIVAN-MOSS-ARCHER
- Plus
Late News
Color Cartoon
"Chorus
Girl"
MY FAVORITE SPY
SCHEDULE SUNDAY
Box-Office Opens 12:45
1st Show Starts 1:00
Feature At
1:20-3:15-5:15-7:10
and 9:10
SHOWS
MON. THRU WED.
2:30-7:00-9:00
Under the attractions of the sun and the moon, the earth changes, or heaves, as much as 11-inchs a day. The doctor said that at any given time, a part of the earth's surface resembles the bulge in a squeezed balloon.
The fluctuation is due to changes college.
Phog Allen-coached basketball teams won 107 and lost seven while he was at Warrensburg Teacher roles.
in gravity, which varies accordi to the earth's distance from the sun and the moon.
ACTUALLY FILMED IN THE SPECTACULAR DEPTHS OF CARLSBAD CAVERNS.
NOW
One Man Knew the SECRET or... THE GREAT WELLS FARGO ROBBERY!
CAVE OF OUTLAWS
Actually Filmed in the Spectacular Dugout of CARLSBAD CAVERNS!
COLOR BY Technicolor
MACDONALD ALEXIS
CAREY·SMITH
EDGAR BUCHANAN · VICTOR JORY
Evening Features: 7:30 - 9:30 p.m. Continuous Saturday and Sunday From 1 p.m.-Doors 12:45 p.m.
New PATEE PHONE 321
HELD OVER!
THRU SATURDAY
Continuous Shows
Saturday From 1 p.m.
Features at 1:33-3:33-5:33
7:33-9:33
STARTS SAT. OWL 11:15 SUNDAY
CLIFTON WILLIAM ANNE
WEBB • LUNDIGAN • FRANCIS
Elopement
20th Century Fun Nature
HEY, PODNER!
This Ain't No Western! . . . Don't Let His Cowpoke Getup Fool You . . .
...Thisaway for Laughs— with the $100 a Month Cowboy Who Hit Fame and Fortune in Hollywood!
R!
Fred MacMURRAY
Dorothy McGUIRE
Howard KEEL
CALLAWAY WENT
THATAWAY
Granada PHONE 946
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Jan. 4, 1952
Postman Rings Thrice In Britain
London—(U.P.)-The only red in the British post office is Santa Claus.
The postman rings three times a day at most British homes, yet the post office is making money.
Politely ignoring the red ink around Uncle Sam's letter headquarters, postal officials here were disturbed by the announcement that their surplus of income over expenditure in 1950-51 was only £12,-600,000 ($322,280,000).
There was some horror at the "G.P.O." (general post office) that it was a drop of $2,000,000 ($6,150,-000) from the previous year's profit.
In the business section of London, there are four or five deliveries a day. In residential districts in all major communities, there are always three deliveries—one at breakfast time, another before lunch and another in mid-afternoon. In the small towns, there are two deliveries; on the farms, one.
Those are sometimes increased, according to the load, during the Christmas rush.
There are very few of those exasperating jams inside the post offices themselves, which are small and scattered over many neighborhoods inside cities. Letters mailed in the morning in London sometimes reach their destination before nightfall.
A two-and-one-half penny (three cents) stamp will take a letter anywhere in Britain.
Britain's post office is a hydra-headed business. It handles the nation's telegraph and telephone systems, dispenses social security payments and pensions, issues drivers' licenses, and collects compulsory radio and television receiver license fees.
Only the postal, telegraph and telephone systems figure into the accounts. The postal system alone showed a profit of £6,800,000 ($19,-040,000) in 1950-51. There was a profit on telephones too but the telegraph system ran in the red £4,200,000 ($11,700,000). A spokesman explained that Britain is small and all telegraph systems lose money when operating over short distances.
One key factor in Britain's profit-making at postmastering is the small size of its operation compared to the United States—8,500,000,000 letters and parcels are handled here annually, compared to much more than that in the United States.
AMIGOHOME
ALL OVER WESTERN EUROPE, the Communists, inspired by the Kremiln, are trying to get rid of the Americans so Communism can take over without a fight. They use every propaganda measure they can think of to make the Americans feel unwanted. Communists, trying to encourage Americans to leave Vienna and return to the United States, recently painted signs on pavements and billboards reading, "Ami, go home" such as this one.
reading, "Ami, go home," such as this one.
Lab Theater Will Open1952 Season With Plays Jan. 9
The first Lab theater program of 1952 will present two plays at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 9, in the Little Theater of Green hall. The plays will run for three days.
Both plays are cast of students in the acting class of Frances Feist, instructor in speech.
The first play each evening will be "Irish Fantasy," a brief one-act play by Robert Ziesenis, College senior. The play was a prize-winner in the recent Quill club contest.
The second play will be "The Marriage of Sobeide" a German poetic drama by Hugo von Hoffman-stahl.
Gerhard Herm, exchange student from Germany will appropriately direct the play.
Each student will play two "widely differing roles," according to Mrs. Feist. "This will give the students good experience as well as serving
ALEXANDER
LARRY JIM ROSS, 1952 March-of-Dimes poster boy, makes friends with a dog on his arrival in New York by plane from Wiesbaden, Germany. He came to the U.S. for the opening of the polio fund campaign on his seventh birthday, Jan. 2. The lad, who has been battling polio for more than five years, has lived around army camps his whole life. His dad is attached to Air Force.
as a test of their stage versatility in acting in both plays," she said.
Members of the class are: Jonell Ashcraft, College junior; James Claussen, College junior; Barbara Donovan, College senior; Herm, special student in the College; Mary Beth Moore, College junior; Shirley Strain, College junior; Barbara Orendoff, College junior; Kirt Walling, College junior; John White, College senior and Ziesenis, College senior.
Tickets will be on sale at 25 cents each at the ticket office in Green hall each night of performance.
Intramural
Round-Up
Saturday's Schedule Robinson Annex Independent "A"
2 p.m. Kappa Eta Kappa vs. Alpha Kappa, Psi
4 p.m. Delta Sigma Fi vs. Jolliffe Robinson Gym
Fraternity "C"
3 p.m. Coffeyville Cats vs. Care-frees
3 p.m. Phi Kappa Psi vs. Phi Kappa Tau and Alpha Tau Omega vs. Alpha Epsilon Pi
2 p.m. Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs.
Delta Chi and Beta Theta Pi vs.
Lambda Chi Alpha
4 p.m. Phi Delta Theta vs. Delta Tau Delta and Sigma Phi Epsilon onvs. Phi Kappa Sigma
Sunday's Schedule Robinson Annex Independent "A"
2:30 p.m. Dark Horses vs. Bounce-
ing Bones
4:30 p.m. Phi Kappa Sigma vs.
Sigma Pi M
Fraternity "A"
3:30 p.m. Beta Theta Pi vs. Delta . Chi
5:30 p.m. Phi Psi vs. Phi Kappa
Robinson Gym
2:30 p.m. Triangle vs. Alpha Kappa Lambda and Delta Upsilon vs. Sigma Nu
Fraternity "B'
3:30 p.m. Kappa Sigma vs. Ph.
Kappa and Pi Kappa Alpha vs.
Chi Chi Chi
4:30 p.m. Phi Gamma Delta vs.
Sigma Chi and Sigma Alpha
Epsilon vs. Alpha Phi Alpha
Fuseliery "C"
5:30 p.m. Delta Chi vs. Tau Kappa Epsilon and Alpha K. Lambda vs. Phi Psi
Miss Loda Newcomb, assistant secretarial training professor, and Donald A. Boege, secretarial training instructor, attended the National Business Teachers' association convention in Chicago Dec. 27.
News Roundup
Latest Russian Proposal May Delay Truce Talks
Paris—(U.P.)—The United States said today it feared the Soviet move to switch Korean armistice negotiations to the United Nations Security council might seriously delay or even torpedo the Panmunjom talks.
American Delegate Benjamin V. Cohen called a special news conference here to serve notice that the United States is decidedly and unqualifiedly opposed to the whole Russian resolution.
The surprise proposal unveiled Thursday calls for a high-level security council meeting to attempt an easing of world tension, starting with the Korean armistice negotiations deadlock. It also proposes abolition of the Acheson-plan program for bolstering vetose free UN collective security machinery.
UN Accuses Reds Of Plane Smuggling
Panmunjom, Korea—(U.P.)—The United Nations accused the Communists today of bringing crated war planes into Korea for assembly at secret airfields within range of the Allied lines during an armistice.
The Reds tactily admitted that "large masses" of Chinese-trained Korean troops were sent back to North Korea before the outbreak of war. However, the enemy delegates said, they saw "nothing wrong with that."
Philippine Typhoon Ravages Islands
St. Paul, Minn.—(U.P.)-The Dec. 9 typhoon that swept the Philippines resulted in more than 1,000 deaths and laid waste to about one-third of the entire island area, information reaching here disclosed today.
Arcand said the typhoon destroyed the homes, farms and possessions of about 6,500,000 persons. Damage to property and crops totalled several hundred millions of dollars, he added.
"The scene of Guiuan now is like that of Manila after liberation all in ruins," Sister Maria wrote. "The sight of all the debris is very sickening."
Flood Control Talks Start New Battle
Washington—(U.P.)—President Truman's creation of an 11-member survey commission to tackle the whole problem of harnessing Missouri basin water resources today set off a fresh congressional battle over flood control.
Some members, Democrats and Republicans, applauded Mr. Truman's action which he said was prompted by last summer's floods, costliest in U.S. history.
But Rep. Myron V. George (R.-Kan.) eyed the President's commission as another pitch for support of his TVA-patterned Missouri Valley Authority. George said the study commission would only serve to delay badly-needed flood control projects in the area.
Washington—U.P.)—Evidence mounted today that Attorney General J. Howard McGrath is being groomed for resignation.
McGrath Resignation Is Expected Soon
What appeared to be a White House chill toward McGrath started when the President fired T. Lamar Caudle as head of the justice department's tax division without even consulting McGrath,
Much of the evidence, indirect as it was, came from President Truman himself, and his non-committal attitude toward McGrath's continuance as head of the justice department.
England Concerned Over U.S. Air Bases
Washington— (U.P.) —President Truman is prepared to assure Prime Minister Winston Churchill that the big American atomic bombers based in England never will take off on attack missions without Britain's knowledge and approval, it was learned today.
Churchill has indicated he will raise the issue when he arrives here Saturday for world strategy talks with Mr. Truman. He has said publicly that British views rate consideration because the U.S. bomber bases would turn England into a prime target for Soviet "vengeance" in event of atomic war.
Hoodlums Nailed By Treasury Agents
Washington—(U.P.)—Treasury agents have tapped 5,000 smalltime racketeers for almost $50,000,000 in unpaid taxes since last August and now are closing in on some of the nation's most notorious hoodlums, it was disclosed today.
A top official of the Internal Revenue bureau said the drive against racketeering tax-dodgers, coupled with enforcement of the new stamp tax on gamblers, may well break the back of organized gambling.
Simultaneously with the highly-publicized cleanup of the bureau itself, Internal Revenue Commissioner John B. Dunlap has assigned 2,300 agents to the racket squad under James J. Gutherie to dig into the tax records of every known or suspected racketeer in the country.
Truman Says Murphy Changed Mind
Washington—(U.P.)—President Truman finally has confirmed that Federal Judge Thomas F. Murphy of New York accepted and then rejected his invitation to head a commission to wipe out corruption in government.
Mr. Truman told his news conference late Thursday he didn't care about answering questions about Murphy and the commission, but that the judge accepted the appointment and later changed his mind.
Kansas State Historical Society
UNIVERSITY DAILY
200 Blood Donors Urgently Needed
49th Year No. 7
Monday, Jan. 7, 1952
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
hansan
Two hundred more blood donors are needed Friday for the Red Cross bloodmobile, Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of Watkins hospital, said today. Dr. Canuteson said the donors must be over 21 years old.
To register to give blood, prospective donors should either call Watkins hospital, 890, or the Red Gross, 405.
The bloodmobile will be in Military Science hall Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.
Colonel Atwood said the bloodmobile schedule will be as follows:
Donations at first were to be taken from ROTC students only, Lt. Col. Bayard Atwood, assistant professor of air science and tactics, said. But a failure of ROTC personnel to return parental release blanks caused the donations to be open to the student body.
Colonel Atwood said Tuesday is fairly well filled. Wednesday at 11 am. about 15 honors are needed. There will be room for more Wednesday afternoon. The schedule has not been completed for Thursday.
The collection is strictly for the armed forces, Colonel Atwood said, and will be overseas in the form of liquid or plasma immediately.
Tuesday: 9:30 a.m. to noon and
1:30 to 5 p.m.; Wednesday and
Thursday: 8 a.m. to noon and 2 to
4 o'clock; Friday 9 a.m. to noon and
1:4, 4 p.m.
Red Cross officials stated that such a diet must be followed if the blood given is to be usable.
A Red Cross diet bulletin issued to prospective donors says that "to ensure usable blood, donors must always be available at least four hours before donating."
These foods include fat meat, milk, peanut butter, ice cream, fried foods, cheese, nuts, salad oil, butter, eggs and pie.
A suggested breakfast for a blood donor would be fruit or juice, black coffee, toast with jelly but no butter. For lunch, lean beef, potatoes with cheese, potato salad, jelly but no butter, fruit or juice, black coffee and cake but no pie.
The colonel added that any student can probably be squeezed in at any time during any of the four days.
Faculty Recital To Be At 8 Tonight
Raymond Cerf, violinist, and Thomas Gorton, pianist, will give the first faculty recital of 1952 at 8 p.m. today in Strong auditorium.
Mr. Cerf is professor of violi and chairman of the string department. Mr. Gorton is dean of the School of Fine Arts.
The program will be open to the public.
Papers were graded Pass or Fail. Two passes were required for final passing; three fails were required for final failing. The papers were graded and corrected by department of English faculty.
the next examination will be given on Saturday, March 8.
Names Appear on Page 8
Eight students received honorable mention for their superior work in the English Proficiency examination given Dec. 8. Their essays were cited as being exceptionally mature in thought, lucid in style, and accurate in mechanics.
Proficiency Test Scores Released
Names Appear on Page 8
The students were: Julia Bolas, College junior; Donald Decker, College junior; Myron George, College junior; Charles Henson Jr., College senior; Win Koerper, College senior; James Logan, College senior; Charles Satterfield, College senior; and Esther Storer, College junior.
Three hundred and thirty-two students took the examination. Each paper was read and graded at least five times, and were read as many as five times.
TOWER
A SKATING FAN is held up on her way to Potter lake for some skating practice by two sledding enthusiasts. The sliding hill on the west side of the Campanile got a little crowded, so the youngsters moved over to the north side.—Kansan photo by Don Sarten.
Journalism Building Dedication February 22
The new Journalism building will be dedicated Friday, Feb. 22, with Erwin D. Canham, editor of the Christian Science Monitor, as principal speaker, Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information announced today.
Mr. Canham's address at an all-University convocation in Hoch auditorium at 9:20 a.m. will begin a day-long series of events.
The building, formerly old Fowler shops, has been remodeled.
At 11 a.m. in the William Allen White Memorial reading room of the new building, mementoes of Mr. White's journalistic career will be presented to the school. An oil portrait of Mr. White, a collection of first editions of books written by him, a collection of biographies and other books on journalism and a collection of original cartoons by the nation's leading cartoonists will be given also.
The cartoons and other mementoes of a long career in Kansas and American Journalism are gifts from Albert T. Reid of New York City, former publisher of the Leavenworth Post and for many years a famous cartoonist.
Harry Scherman, president of the Book-of-the-Month club, for which Mr. White was a judge for many years, is donor of the painting. The first editions of Mr. White's books, a personal collection with hand-written notes from the Emporia editor on many of the fly-leaves, are held in the Library of Matthew Adams, head of the George Matthew Adams newspaper syndicate in New York City, a former Kansan and for decades a close friend of Mr. White. Mr. Adams also is presenting the library books on journalism.
A luncheon for members of the William Allen White Foundation board and Kansas editors will be held at 1 p.m. at the Eldridge hotel with Rolla Clymer, editor of the El
These mementoes of the Emporia editor are given from his son W. L. White, author, magazine writer, and present publisher of the Gazette.
Dorado Times, principal speaker. Mr. Clymer, who started newspaper work on Mr. White's Emporia Gazette staff, has been editor for many years in El Dorado, Mr. White's native town.
At 3 p.m. the board of the William Allen White foundation will hold its annual meeting with John P. Harris, publisher of the Hutchinson News-Herald and president of the foundation, presiding. Dean Marvin, director of the foundation, will make his annual report, action will be taken on work and objectives of the organization, and officers will be elected.
In addition to the Friday dedication program, open house will be held in the new building, Dean Marvin said. Plans for this event will be announced later. Old Fowler shops, in the center of the University campus, has been completely remodeled for use by the School of Journalism and the University of Kansas Press.
He joined the staff of the Monitor in 1925 and covered the annual sessions of the League of Nations Assembly in 1926, 1927 and 1928. He headed the newspaper's Washington bureau from 1932 until 1939, was news editor from 1939 until 1941 and managing editor from 1941 to 1944. He is a charter member of the William Allen White Foundation board.
Mr. Canham, principal dedication speaker was president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors in 1949 and since the war has served in various official capacities in the struggle for world freedom of information. He was born in 1904 in Maine and received degrees from Bates college and Oxford university, England, which he attended as a Rhodes scholar.
Facilities for training in photography, editing, writing, advertising copy and layout and, typography have been greatly expanded over those in use for years in the old Journalism building. Classes will be held in the new quarters starting with the Spring semester.
Enrollment Begins Monday, Jan. 28
Schedule on Page 8
Registration, payment of fees and enrollment for the spring semester will begin on Monday, Jan. 28 and end Wednesday, Jan. 30. Orientation of new students will be held on Monday and Tuesday, Jan. 28 and 29.
Classes will begin in all departments on Thursday, Jan. 31. Enrollment on or after this date will be permitted only after payment of a late fee of $2.50 in addition to the regular fees.
Students enrolled in the University for the fall semester (except those transferring from one school of the University to another) are
Paris—(U.R.)-Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower gave his Republican supporters the green light today to go ahead with the "Ike for President" campaign, but said he would become a candidate only if he got "a clear cut call to political duty."
Eisenhower Gives GOP Green Light On Nomination
"I would not seek nomination for political office."
Apparently the general plans to continue his activities as head of Western European armies until he is convinced there is a strong movement in the United States to draft him.
In a statement read to reporters, Eisenhower said that Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge (R.-Mass.) gave "an accurate account" Sunday of his political feelings but added:
"Of course there is no question of the right of American citizens to organize in pursuit of their common convictions.
"Under no circumstances will I ask for relief from this assignment (his Supreme Allied command) in order to seek nomination for political office and I shall not participate in the pre-convention activities of others who may have such an intention with respect to me." Eisenhoower said.
"I realize that Senator Lodge and his associates are exercising this right in an attempt to place me before next July a duty that would transcend my present responsibilities.
"In the absence, however, of a clear-cut call to political duty, I shall continue to devote my full intention to the performance of the vital tasks to which I am assigned."
Eisenhower made his statement, which was read for him by Brig. Gen. Charles T. Lanham, his press chief, in response to the announcement by Senator Lodge at a Wash- ington meeting. The day he was going to enter Eisenhower in the New Hampshire primaries in March as Republican candidate.
"Senator Lodge's announcement of Sunday as reported in the press gives an accurate account of the general tenor of my political convictions and of my Republican voting record," Eisenhower said.
Amplifying Eisenhower's own statement, his press chief General Lanham said to correspondents:
"General Eisenhower does not intend to say anything further on this matter. He hopes that this statement will demonstrate his concern as an American citizen in problems that the American people must solve. He hopes also that it will convince all Americans and those of the other North Atlantic treaty organization countries that he views with the utmost seriousness the responsibilities of the post to which he is presently assigned."
not required to register for the spring semester, but must pay their fees before they will be allowed to enroll.
Students entering the University for the first time, former KU students not in school during the fall and students transferring from one school of the University to another must register for the spring semester.
Students who wish to transfer from one school of the University to another at the beginning of the spring semester must notify the registrar before the close of the fall semester.
Students who must register should enter Strong hall by the center door, according to Schedule A. Fees will be collected as a part of the registration process and students must be prepared to pay them at this time.
New graduate students should go first to the Graduate office, 227 Strong, secure registration permits and then register by entering Strong hall by the center door according to Schedule A.
New undergraduate students will register, pay fees and enroll on Wednesday, Jan. 30. They will follow Schedule B, entering Strong hall by the center door.
All graduating seniors will be allowed to enroll on the first day, Monday, Jan. 28, according to Schedule B appearing on this page. They will enter Strong hall by the south door of the east wing. College seniors must identify themselves by presenting their "Record Analysis for College Seniors" sheets. Seniors in other schools may secure early permit cards from their deans' offices before Saturday, Jan. 26.
Enrollment hours will be from 9 to 12 and 1:30 to 5 on Monday, Jan. 2, and 8:30 to 12 and 1:30 to 5 on Tuesday and Wednesday, Jan. 29 and 30.
College students will enroll at Robinson gym; Business school in 210 Strong; Education, Robinson gym; Engineering, Robinson gym; Fine Arts, Robinson gym; Graduate school, 227 Strong; Journalism, Robinson gym; Law, 108 Green hall; Medicine, 104 Haworth, and Pharmacy, 211 Bailey.
Correspondents To Hear Habein
County correspondents of Statewide Activities will hear Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, speak at a meeting at 4 p.m. Tuesday in 200 strong hall.
Dean Habein will discuss the service that correspondents are giving the state and the University.
The correspondents may ask questions concerning problems they have encountered in obtaining news stories about University students for publication in the students' home-town newspaper.
They may discuss problems con-
cerning publication of their
news stories.
Informal verbal reports will be made by the correspondents about the progress they have made in their stories for hometown publication.
The duty of the county correspondents is to provide hometown newspapers of the state with news about activities of students attend-KU.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday, Jan. 7, 1952
by Bibler
Daily Kansan Editorials
It Isn't Whether You've Won Or Lost . . .
In our own way, we want to pay tribute to the men who have earned a big honor the hard way—the two outstanding Kansas basketball teams. The Associated Press rated them in the first ten in the nation last week. Kansas was first, Kansas State was ninth.
State was minor. Together, these two teams have put the state of Kansas in the national limelight. Just as Big Ten conference football teams are feared, so is Big Seven basketball gaining well-earned recognition.
When KU went into the Big Seven pre-season tournament in Kansas City, they had won seven straight. But in previous years that tournament had always been their downfall. Twice defeated in the finals, the Jayhawkers had never able to carry off the crown.
o carry on the crown.
But now it belongs to us, together with a share
of national recognition as what the experts believe is the best team in the nation. The load is not an easy one to bear. Now every team that plays KU will be "up" for the game.
Basketball has had its ups and downs in the last year. Collegiate athletics as a whole have been attacked, persecuted, and condemned. But when teams such as Kansas and Kansas State can earn the recognition of fans all over the country as they have this year, it is doubtful that the game will suffer much from its attackers.
And so, you men who have won this honor for Kansas, we fervently hope you can prove yourselves worthy of carrying such a load. It will not be easy. But if you continue in the future as you have done in the past, the job should be in good hands. A.G.M.
What has happened to that "big stick" which we Americans used to be so fiercely proud of? Have we lost it or is it just that we have forgotten about it? One or the other must be true, if we are to take the recent case of Hungarian blackmail as any criterion.
It used to be that we realized our strength and weren't afraid to display it. Maybe it was a bluff, but it made people, both friend and enemy, aware of what we as a nation could do.
But no longer. Hungary demanded and got $120,000 in fines for four American airmen forced down in their territory. "Spies" they called the Americans.
Hungary, dear Hungary, simply grabs four Americans, calls them spies, and we pay for their release. Were the situation reversed, we would have given them a lengthy trial, costing thousands upon thousands of dollars, and then, if found guilty, deported them with the warning never to return again. My, my.
What's Happened To Our 'Big Stick'
This has gone far enough. Let's show the world who's boss and play tit for tat. "We can do anything you can do better." The Iron Curtain has dared us to prove it. So far we haven't, but we can. So let's dig up the "big stick" and use it.
The longer we wait, the more we lose. Let's not let the American lives lost in Korea be for naught. We're fighting for our heritage today. Let's earn it, not try to buy it. Money can't buy freedom for a nation.
We must show the world that we want peace. But we must also show them that we are not afraid to use force to attain that peace. If we continue to let them run over us, they will continue to use bigger and bigger trucks until at last we cannot get up.
Just how much effect upon dependent nations does it have to close two Hungarian consulates in the United States and to forbid our citizens further travel in Hungary? Isn't it sort of like telling Johnny to get out of our yard because his mother cheated in a bridge game? The place to stop the cheating is at the source. And a display of the "big stick" would do much to that end.
-A.G.M.
Parkersburg, W. Va.—(L.P.)—A local laundry official reports that the White Star laundry used the back of Confederate $100 bills for laundry tickets in 1898.
Confederate Money Useful
Charleston, W. Va.—(U.P.)—Three thousand pounds of bacon was Heretally "burned to a crisp" when fire swept a meat curing room of Armour and Co.
Bacon Overdone
Getting Back Into The Groove
52
DOOR OF DOOMS
Tom Schleiterbach
Jan 1952
Question: Do you find a difference in the reaction of college men to your act than the older generation?
The Los Angeles Collegian at L. A.
City College recently interviewed stripeaser Tempest Storm:
Tempest Storm
Answer: Even though the majority of the audience is made up of older men, the college boys certainly go for the girls more than the older type.
Q: Do you believe a girl should let a fellow kiss her on the first date?
Q: Do you believe that college kids should go steady?
A: Well, it certainly depends on the guy. Yes—if the girl likes him.
"The colonel advised the use of manure to block the entrance to the steam tunnels, and Wood says it's proving very effective in keeping the tunnels dry."
From the Minnesota Daily, University of Minnesota, comes this gem:
A: I most definitely do.
Ingenuity ...
Editor's Note: We shouldn't wonder.
First stanza of a poem printed in the Stoutonia, Menomonie, Wis.: "Twas the night after Christmas"
Longfellows . . .
and, boy, what a house!
I felt like the devil, and so did the
The eggnog and candy and turkey were swell
But ten hours later they sure gave me H---!!"
Little Man On Campus
Bibuie
"Consider yourself lucky--Marian says your blind date has a wonderful personality—wonderful personality!"
Inside The Student ...
I
Arthur G. Phillips, associate professor of English at the University of Miami, Fla., recently wrote a guest editorial for the Miami Hurricane, in which he made the following observations about the species Freshman and Sophomore:
1. Freshmen believe that all of their professors are smart; sophomores believe that one or two of their professors are smart—the ones that give them A's.
2. Freshmen are in college to get an education; sophomores are in college because their fathers refuse to pay their fare to Las Vegas.
3. Freshmen aren't dry behind the ears; sophomores are always dry.
4. A freshman will take a wooden nickel; a sophomore will take a wooden nickel too, and five minutes later put it in the slot machine.
5. Freshmen write home once a week; sophomores write whenever they're broke.
6. A male freshman is looking for a girl like his mother; this is also true of the sophomore, if his mother happens to be Jane Russell.
7. A freshman believes the way to get good grades is to study hard; the sophomore has decided that a better way is to sit next to someone who studies hard.
8. A freshman's ambition is to get into "Who's Who;" a sophomore just wants to get called before the Kefauver committee.
9. Freshmen suspect that professors aren't human; sophomores know it.
10. Freshmen kiss their dates goodbye; sophomores kiss them hello.
Concludes the professor: "Everybody loves a freshman makes life so disillusioning to a professor is the thought that this year's freshmen will be next year's sophomores. Sie transit gloria mundi."
Moll subscription: $$ a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence buildup) $1.00 a semester every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods.
Entered as second class matter September 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
Daily Hansan
News Room Student Newspaper of the Adv. Room KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANASAS KU 376
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press, President of the Association, Represented by the National Advertising Service, Inc. Avenue East, New York.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief...Alan Marshall
Editorial Associate...Anne Snyder
Managing Editor Charles Price
Assistant Managing Editors Nancy Anderson, Benjamin
NEWS STAFF
City Editor ... Joe Taylor
Sports Editor ... Chorles 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
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Jan. 7, 1952
Page 3
France Makes Graduate Offers
The French government is offering 40 teaching assistantships, a limited number of lecturers and "35 graduate fellowships to American graduate students who are unmarried, preferably under 35 years of age, who have a good academic record and a bachelor's degree.
The teaching assistantships involve teaching conversational English about 12 hours a week in French secondary schools and teacher training institutions.
The applicant must have a good knowledge of French and correct usage of the English language. Attached to all applications will be a form which must be filled out in French.
Application forms are available at the German department office, 304 Fraser hall, and must be in the New York office of the Institute of International Education by Friday, Feb. 15.
The lectorates are similar to the teaching assistantships with the lecturer usually receiving higher pay
French Club To Hold Festival Of Kings
The French club, Cercle Francais, will observe the festival of the kings, or twelfth night, with a dinner at 6 p.m. Tuesday in the English room of the Union building.
The festival of the kings commemorates the visit by the three Wise Men to Bethlehem 12 days after the birth of Christ.
A special cake containing a little figure inside it will be served as the person getting the piece with the person in it will be the king of the feast.
The little figure to be used in the cake has been sent from France in order that the French festival custom can be followed as nearly as possible.
The fellowships are open to graduate students in all fields of study. In the field of medicine candidates must have the doctor of medicine degree.
and having a lighter teaching schedule.
Jayhawkern basketball team coached by Phog Allen have won 14 conference titles and tied for seven others.
World Has 30 To 60 Million Refugees Today
There are in the world today between 30 and 60 million refugees, population experts estimate.
Early in the 1930's, Japan marched into Manchuria, touching off a period of strife for China that has displaced as many as 50 million people, with the end not yet in sight. The buildup of Nazism and Fascism and the Spanish civil war, in the 1930's, put European masses to flight.
"Nansen passports," named for a pioneering League of Nations statesman, were familiar at the borders of
Many are searching for new homes. In a world of uprooted peoples, the part three decades constitute an age of great migrations.
The homeless and the hunted have moved—and are moving—across continents and seas, the National Geographic society says. They Include victims of war, political persecution, natural catastrophes, and overcrowded lands.
The phenomenon of "statelessness" assumed large proportions in the wake of World War I. More than a million White Russians and Armenians became refugees. Greece and Turkey exchanged other millions.
Europe. They marked an effort by the League to provide legal status for people of lost nationality.
World War II displaced 10 for every one person left homeless before in Europe. When it was over, entire racial, religious, and national groups had been uprooted and moved, many for slave labor.
In the first two years after the war, about seven million went home again. But since 1947, the International Refugee organization, which went out of existence on Dec. 31, 1951, has been responsible for welfare of more than a million other DP's and refugees who could not go home. Many have been sent instead to Canada, the United States, the countries of Latin America, Australia, New Zealand, Israel and many nations of Western Europe. The U. S. has taken nearly 300,000.
More than 12 million Hindus and Moslems took part in one of history's greatest population exchanges following the partition of India and Pakistan in 1947. Other millions have been made homeless by the Korean war. A steady stream of refugees still pours through cracks in the Iron Curtain.
When a family of three Kalmucks landed in New York recently on a refugee ship, a footnote was written to the history of a people who have been displaced persons for 700 years. As horsemen under Genghis Khan, Kalmucks first moved west across Asia. Others came in the 1600's. Wandering through the centuries, virtually the only group left today west of the Iron Curtain are some 700 in DP camps in Germany, soon to come to this country. The rest have disappeared, somewhere in Russia.
Mennonite farmers from Europe and Canada have followed a mass migration since the war, going to the swampy wilderness of the Paraguayan Chaco. Moving because of war or overcrowding, they have established colonies where men have never succeeded before.
Even in the lonely Pacific, there have been migrations. The inhabitants of Bikini Atoll were moved, with all their belongings, to another island to make way for the atom bomb experiments in 46. They were victims not of war, but of a test of war.
CHESTERFIELD —LARGEST SELLING CIGARETTE IN AMERICA'S COLLEGES
AT—MISSOURI
The Bengal Shop
We certify that Chesterfield is our largest selling cigarette by...2...to1
SIGNED.. W.C. Harris
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!
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Jan. 7, 1952
KU Ranks 3rd Among Top Cage-Grid Powers
KU, with an 8-2 football record and undefeated in basketball. ranks third among the nation's major college grid-cage powers, according to standings compiled by Don Pierce, University sports publicity director.
The rankings are based on this school year's records in football and up to Jan. 4 in basketball.
Going into the Oklahoma game Saturday night, Jayhawker teams have lost only two of their first 20 contests in these two sports.
Only Michigan State, unbeaten in 15 combined starts through Jan. 4, and Illinois, with a 16-0-1 record, top the Jayhawkers in the unofficial national tabulations.
Kansas is the only member of the Big Seven among the top 20 in the survey. Each of the schools involved, except Texas Christian university, has dropped less than six games in the two sports.
billed table.
This is KU's best record in school athletics since 1909-1910 and the third best all time. Bert Kennedy's 1909 grid team won eight of nine games while the basketball team, coached by the late W. O. Hamilton, won its first 11 games.
The Horned Frogs lost five football games and have won 11 of 12 basketball games to rank 18th on the combined table.
This year's mark also surpasses ones established in 1923-24 and 1930-31. In the latter years Coach Bill Hargiss's Jayhawkers won six of eight games as they took the Big Six football championship and Coach Phog Allen's basketball team, also conference champs, won 11 of their first 12 starts.
KU went on to win the 1931 outdoor track crown to become the only school in either the old Big Six or the present Big Seven to win all three major championships in a single scholastic year.
This year's Jayhawk two-milers defeated four foes in dual meets, captured their fifth straight conference championship and placed second in the NCAA two-mile race.
Jayhawker athletic teams have dropped only three contests in 28 outings as the basketball team opened its conference campaign against Oklahoma Saturday night.
Intramural
Round-Up
Weekend Results Fraternity "A"
Beta Theta Pi 52, Delta Chi 21
Phi Kappa Sigma 64, Sigma Pi 4
Phi Kappa Psi 58, Phi Kappa 29
Alpha K Lambda 44, Triangle 19
Delta Upsilon 42, Sigma Nur 38
Kappa Sigma 50, Phi Kappa 26
Pi Kappa Alpha 34, Chi Chi 22
S.A. Epsilon 32, Alpha P. Alpha 23
Chi Gamma Delta 55, Sigma Chi 23
Fraternity "C"
Fraternity C
Delta Chi 55, T.K. Epsilon 38
Phi Kappa Psi 38, A.K.L. 25
Purdue, Schedule
Today's Schedule
Robinson Gym
Independent "B"
Chi vs. Oread
Independent B
6:45 E: Phi Chi vs. Oread
Facility "C"
6:45 W: Phi Delta Theta vs. Pi Kap-
Clyne
7:45 E: Sigma Chi vs. Lambda Chi Alpha
W: Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. Delta Upsilon
8:45 E: Phi Gamma Delta vs. TKE
W: Kappa Sigma vs. Sigma Nu
9:45 E: Delta Tau Delta vs. ATG
W: AKL vs. Nu Sigma Nu
Robinson Annex
4643
Robinson Annex Independent "A"
4:00: Jolliffe vs. Carefrees
4:00: George Club
6:00: Last Chance vs. Geology Club
7:00: Gamma Delta vs. Feather Merchants
8:00: Delta Sigma Pi vs. Phi Beta Digit
Fraternity "A"
5:00: Kappa Sigma vs. Sigma Alpha Epsilon
9:00: Delta Upsilon vs. Alpha Kappa Lambda.
Old Age Depends On Safety
Jacksonville, Fla.—(U.P.)-An 88-year-old retired jeweler, figurining his chances of living to an "old age" depends on his neighbors' safety-mindedness, has launched a one-man safety campaign. Instead of answering his telephone with "hello," he says "safety always."
National Standings
(combined football and basketball
Teams W L T Pct.
Michigan State 15 0 0 1.000
Illinois 16 0 1 968
Kansas 18 2 0 980
Maryland 15 2 0 888
Georgia Tech. 14 2 1 852
Holy Cross 17 3 0 850
Stanford 19 4 0 826
Tennessee 14 3 0 823
Villanoa 12 3 0 800
LSU 13 3 1 794
Cincinnati 14 4 0 777
Cornell 14 4 0 777
Mississippi State 13 4 0 764
Xavier 14 4 1 763
Notre Dame 14 3 1 761
Princeton 14 2 4 750
Wyoming 15 5 0 750
Texas Christian 17 6 0 739
Tulsa 14 5 0 736
Fordham 13 5 0 722
Conference Standings
Teams W L T Pct.
Kansas 18 2 900
Iowa State 9 7 1 559
Oklahoma 11 9 1 559
Colorado 10 10 0 500
Kansas State 9 10 1 475
Missouri 7 12 0 368
Nebraska 4 16 1 214
Wide Margins Mark IM Play
Kappa Eta Kappa smothered Alpha Kappa Psi with a 44-17 triumph. The Carefrees dropped the Coffey-ville Cats 42-24 with a second half outburst. And Jollie edged Delta Sigma Pi 28-25 in the only close game of the day.
Lop-sided scores were the rule instead of the exception in intramural contests Saturday.
Larry Kravitz led the attack for KHK with 23 points. He dunked in 11 field goals and one charity toss for the pointage.
Harold Beinrich was the big-and practically only—noise for Alpha Kappa Psi. With six field goals and three free throws, Heinrich scored 15 of the 17 AK Psi points.
All the KHK team members broke into the scoring in the rout. Myron Click looped in four fielders for an eight point performance and second place honors for KHK.
Kappa Eta Kappa held a slim 17-13 lead at the half but put up a stiff defense to hold the losers to four lone second half scores.
The Coffeyville Cats held the Carefrees to a 14-14 deadlock at halftime, but slowly dropped behind the Carefree onslaught.
Bob Meier put on a second half splurge for 12 points on six field goals after being held to one lone -two-pointer during the first half.
Bill Toohey carried the load for the Carefreees in the first half with four field goals eight-point showings. He scored five counters in the second half.
The Carefrees started pulling away early in the third quarter after trailing the Cats all during the first game and then Carefrees drove to an easy victory.
George Chaney and Charles Johnston provided most of the punch for the Cats. Chaney scored 12 and Johnston eight points.
Man
Jolliffe edged by Delta Sigma Pi after holding a slim 13-11 halftime lead.
Plymouth
Your
. . . has a used car priced
for you.
GALLAGHER
634 Mass. Ph.1000
Buddy
Kansas Leads Unbeaten Clubs
Kansas with an 11-0 record leads the nation's list of undefeated teams which was cut to 10 over the weekend.
The other unbeaten clubs include Florida 10- 0, Tenon Hall 10- 0, Illinois 9- 0, Iowa 8- 0, Illinois 8- 0, Indiana 8- 0, Duquesne 8- 0, St. Bonaventure 7- 0 and Syracuse 6- 0.
Michigan State, LaSalle and Murray (Ky.) State were beaten Saturday night.
--showed in solving the intricate and somewhat unorthodox zone defense that the Sooners employed.
- Gene Smelser, assistant coach at Oklahoma A&M, was highly impressed by the performance of the Jayhawkers when they trounced the Oklahoma Sooners 71-48 in their league opener Saturday night.
KU Impresses Aggie Scout
Smelser was scouting the all-victorious Kansas team in preparation for the KU-A&M battle slated for Jan. 30 at Stillwater.
After the game Smelser said, "Kansas really looked sharp to me. The Jayhawkers have depth, balance and above all fine poise. I didn't think they were too poised last season."
He also added that he was impressed with the ease which Kansas
Lovellette was literally boxed in but he continued his torrid scoring pace by pouring in 25 points before being relieved by B. H. Born.
Kansas also held the Sooners to 48 points. Previously KU's opponents had been averaging 56.6 points per game. The defensive minded Hank Iba, A&M'S head coach, has his team leading the nation in defense by limiting the foe to an average of 44.1 points.
The Aggies play OU Tuesday night in a game which will be marked by strong rivalr
HUGHES COOPERATIVE PLAN
for
MASTER of SCIENCE DEGREES
To assist outstanding BS graduates in obtaining their Master of Science Degrees while employed in industry and making a significant contribution to important military work.
PURPOSE
ELIGIBILITY
June 1952 graduates receiving BS Degrees in the following fields:
Electrical Engineering
Electronic Engineering
Physics
Mechanical Engineering
Aeronautical Engineering
Those chosen to participate in this plan will be from the upper portion of their graduating classes or will have evidenced unusual technical ability. They must also have evidenced imaginative ability and possess personality traits enabling them to work well with others.
CITIZENSHIP
Applicants must be United States citizens who can be cleared for "Secret," due to their work at Hughes Research and Development Laboratories being of a classified nature.
PARTICIPATING UNIVERSITIES The University of California at Los Angeles and the University of Southern California will participate in this program, and candidates for Master of Science Degrees must meet entrance requirements for advanced study at these schools.
PROGRAM
Under this Cooperative Plan, starting June 1952, the following schedule of employment at Hughes is arranged:
Full time—from June 1952 to Sept. 1952
Half time—from Sept. 1952 to June 1953
Full time—from June 1953 to Sept. 1953
Half time—from Sept. 1953 to June 1954
Under this arrangement it is possible for a recipient to receive $ \frac{8}{7} $th of a normal year's salary each year and to attend
SALARIES
TUITION
a university half time during regular sessions working on his Master's Degree.
Tuition at either UCLA or USC, covering the required number of units necessary to obtain a Master's Degree, will be paid by Hughes Research and Development Laboratories.
Salaries will be commensurate with the individual's ability and experience and reflect the average in the electronics industry. Salary growth will be on the same basis as full-time members of the engineering staff. In addition, the individuals will be eligible for health, accident, and life insurance benefits, as well as other benefits accruing to fulltime members.
NUMBER OF AWARDS Approximately one hundred Cooperative Awards shall be made each year, if sufficient qualified candidates present themselves.
TRAVEL AND MOVING EXPENSES For those residing outside of the Southern California area, actual travel and moving expenses will be allowed up to 10% of the full starting annual salary.
SELECTION OF CANDIDATES Candidates will be selected by a committee of representation composed of two each from the University of California at Los Angeles, the University of Southern California,and the Hughes Research and Development Laboratories.
DATES FOR APPLYING Informal applications should be mailed prior to January 30, 1952. The Laboratories will then forward formal applications, which should be returned, accompanied by up-to-date grade transcripts, by February 15, 1952. Selections will be made during the month of March.
ADDRESS CORRESPONDENCE TO Hughes Research and Development Laboratories Engineering Personnel Department Culver City, California
Monday, Jan. 7, 1952
University Daily Kansan
X 2
Page 5
12
81
Only four games are scheduled this week in the Big Seven with all of the teams being idle until Saturday night except the Oklahoma Sooners. They will step out of the loop to play the Oklahoma A&M Aggies Tuesday night.
WELCOME BACK! Charlie Hoag (21), ace Jayhawk cager, goes up for a lay-up shot in the fourth quarter of the KU-Oklahoma game on day night in Hoch auditorium. Kansas won, 71 to 48. Hoag, in his first appearance this season, managed to score only two points but turned in a blazing floor game. He had been hampered with a football-incurred groin injury.—Kansan photo by Al Marshall.
Only Four Games Scheduled In Conference This Week
KU, unbeaten in 11 outings, is slated to play the Missouri Tigers, 6-5, at Columbia, Mo., Saturday night in the conference's most important game. The Tigers were beaten by Iowa State 57-55 in an exciting game Saturday night at Ames, Ia.
Iowa State, 6-3, will journey to Boulder for a tilt with Colorado.
League
All Games
| W | L | PF | OP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas | 1 | 0 | 71 | 48 |
| Iowa State | 1 | 0 | 57 | 55 |
| Nebraska | 1 | 0 | 63 | 61 |
| Oklahoma | 1 | 1 | 109 | 123 |
| Missouri | 0 | 1 | 59 | 57 |
| Colorado | 0 | 2 | 113 | 124 |
| Kansas State | | | | |
All Gateways
| | W | L | FF | OP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas | 11 | 0 | 794 | 614 |
| Iowa State | 6 | 4 | 560 | 547 |
| Nebraska | 4 | 8 | 753 | 759 |
| Oklahoma | 3 | 8 | 605 | 698 |
| Missouri | 6 | 5 | 598 | 548 |
| Colorado | 3 | 9 | 689 | 746 |
| Kansas State | 9 | 3 | 906 | 753 |
SALE
Skirts --- $3 and $4
Wool, Corduroy, Gabardine
PLEAT SKIRT
Dresses ---- $4.00
2 for $7.00
Wool, Corduroy, Gabardine
Wool, Corduroy, Gabardine
Dresses ---- $6.88
2 for $13.00
Better Dresses $9.88
Sweaters ---- $3.00
Assortment of colors.
TERRILL'S
owner of a 3-9 record after being defeated 63-62 by Nebraska Saturday night.
Kansas State's Wildcats, who trounced a tired Arizona team 78-52 Saturday night at Manhattan, will play the Nebraska Cornhuskers at Lincoln, Neb., Saturday. Kansas State has a 9-3 record compared to UN's 4-8.
803 Mass.
Phone 325
The Jayhawkers have registered one victory over the MU team this season. The stormy tussle was in the finals of the Big Seven pre-season tournament at Kansas City which saw Kansas win 75-65.
Missouri kept the Iowa State Cyclones from making a field goal in the final quarter but nevertheless lost the battle 57-55.
Nation's Top Team Cops Conference Opener 71-48
By CHARLEY BURCH
Daily Kansan Sports Editor
An aggressive squad of Kansas Jayhawkers, rated the nation's top cage team by the AP, successfully opened the Big Seven season by breezing past the Oklahoma Sooners 71-48 before 3,000 fans at Hoch auditorium Saturday night.
It was the 11th consecutive victory for the undefeated Jayhawkers and was the widest win-margin a KU team has chalked-up against OU since 1936. The score also was a new high between the schools.
The speedy Jayhawkers rushed to a 21-2 lead at the end of the first quarter as Bob Kenney led the way with his deadly set shots. He netted half of his game total of 16 points in the first period.
With four minutes left in the second quarter the Sooners had narrowed the gap to six points with the score 28-22. But a quick setup and a free throw by Kenney, who had stolen the ball, coupled with buckets by Lovellette and Bill Heitholt widened the margin to a 36-25 half time count.
All-American Clyde Lovelle continued his sensational scoring pace as he canned 25 points. His performance leaves him with a 27.1 average which is the best in the nation. He has scored 29 points in 11 games and is hitting 52.3 per cent of his shots.
Defensively KU played well throughout most of the game with close guarding and ball-hawking sparking the Jayhawkers. Kenney
The Kansas offense, however, continued to shift from a one-man effort to more of a balanced attack as nine of the 16 men used by Coach Phog Allen, who cleared the bench, hit the scoring column.
Meriden, Conn.—(U.P.)—Calvin J. Hubbard, perhaps the nation's oldest baseball fan, has lost his patience with the Boston Red Sox. "I've been a Red Sox rooter all my life," Hubbard said on his 100th birthday anniversary, "but I'm tired of waiting for them to win again. From now on, it's the New York Yankees for me."
It Took Five Years
Cured Of Red Sox
Nashua, N. H. —(U.P.)— Edward George, 13; bagged his first deer with a 13; bagged and arrow after five years of hunting.
or
and Dean Kelley were especially sharp.
MOVING soon? LONG
The KU defense prevented the Sooners from working the ball in for close shots, making them rely on hurried long shots. OU's Coach Bruce Drake sent in John Rogers, the long shot artist whose sinker in the last seconds of the second OU-KU game last season edged KU 61-59, but he proved ineffective. He fired six times and swished the nets only once.
SMALL AMOUNTS?
or SHORT DISTANCE?
We are equipped to move your household goods and personal effects at lowest rates obtainable
Sherman Norton, 5-foot 11-inch forward, led the Sooners' scoring He was followed by Bob Waller, 6-5, with 11 and 12 Les Lane, with eight.
LARGE
Hong showed some of the speed and fine aggressive play that he displayed last season. He did well considering it was his first appearance on the courtation since last season. Continued practice will round him out quickly.
Phone 46 for Free Estimates Ethan A. Smith Moving and Transfer Co.
KU's greatest weakness was in rebounding, particularly in the third quarter, as the Chamains took 14 offensive - rebound - while KU gathered in only five.
Charlie Hoag, who played several minutes, made his first appearance after seven minutes had elapsed in a period. He replaced Bill Lienhard, who scoredless in the first half but canned 10 points in the last two periods.
Kansas shot 71 times from the field and connected 30 times for 42 per cent compared to only 29 per cent for OU. The Sooners managed to hit only 18 times in 62 attempts.
11 East 9th
Waller, OU's tallest player, scored seven of his team's first 12 points and uped four fouls the first half. He fouled out late in the fourth stanza.
Kansas (71) g- ga f- fa pf tp
Alberts 0 2 0 0 1 0
Davenport 1 1 0 0 0 2
Kennedy 6 14 4 5 2 16
Lienhard 5 13 0 2 4 10
Squires 0 0 0 0 2 0
Smith 0 0 0 0 0 0
Lovellette 11 21 3 4 1 25
Born 0 0 0 0 0 0
Keller 0 1 0 0 0 1
Hougland 2 4 2 2 5 6
D. Kelley 1 5 1 1 2 3
Hoag 1 3 0 1 0 2
Heitholt 2 4 1 2 1 5
Dye 0 1 0 0 1 0
Johnson 1 1 0 0 0 2
A. Kelley 1 0 0 0 0 0
Totals ...30 71 11 17 20 71
Oklahoma (48) g - ga f - fa pf tp
Lane 2 10 4 4 3 8
Blue 2 6 0 1 2 4
Norton 2 6 1 2 3 2 12
Jones 0 1 1 4 1 1
Waller 5 14 1 2 5 11
Churchill 2 4 1 1 1 5
Grossman 0 1 0 0 1 0
Rogers 1 6 0 0 0 2
Cummins 0 1 0 0 1 0
Fleshman 0 1 0 0 1 0
McEachern 1 3 3 4 1 5
Totals 18 62 12 19 18 48
Officials - John Lloyd, Ron Gibbs
YOUR EYES
E
EYE
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
Travel Service
THE
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
TRAVEL AGENCY
Tel. 30 8th & Mass.
MAKE THIS NOSE TEST!
TOMMY'S LABORATORY
Properly Cleaned Clothes
HAVE NO ODOR!
LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS Call 383
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Jan. 7. 1952
Woman Of The Year' Was Guest Speaker At KU Last Spring
Marguerite Higgins, New York Herald Tribune correspondent, has been named 1951 "Woman Of The Year" in the annual poll of women's editors of Associated Press newspapers.
Miss Higgins, who spoke to students at the University last spring, won the Britizer prize for distinguished reporting on international affairs in 1951.
Since then the attractive young reporter has completed a series entitled "Around Russia's Curtain," which took her on an extensive tour of Russia. She is also author of the best-selling book "War in Korea."
Miss Higgins was born in Hong Kong, daughter of an Irish-American military man and his French wife. She was educated in France and England, she later attended the University of California and Columbia University and joined the Herald Tribune staff in 1942.
Her most recent honor was the award of the "Poor Richard Citation by Philadelphia's Poor dichard" club to a first ever awarded to a woman.
The AP poll of women's editors pecifies that selections be based on he news interest of the various personalities, and does not attempt o indicate any awards of merit.
Others voted outstanding in their respective fields are;
Sports--Maureen Connolly, 16 - year-old winner of the National Women's Tennis Championship.
Literature - Rachel Carson, author of the best-selling "The Sea around Us."
DARLENE GREER
Miss Darlene Greer To Wed G. R. Stearns
Dr. and Mrs. Richard Greer, Tooleka, announce the engagement of their daughter, Darlene Doubleday, Gary R. Stearns, son of Mr. and Ms. Harvey R. Stearns also of Tooleka.
The announcement was made at
Public Affairs-Anna Rosenberg assistant Secretary of Defense.
Radio—Talulah Bankhead, star of NBC's "big秀." Show.
Music — Dorothy Kirsten, opera and concert star, who played in MGM's "The Great Caruso" this year and has just given a command performance in London on the occasion of the wedding anniversary of Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip.
Theater—Judy Garland, who has made history this year by reviving the old two-a-day vaudeville on Broadway.
Education — Margaret Clapp,
president of Wellesley College, and
winner of a 1948 Pulitzer Prize for
her biography, "Forgotten First
Citizen: John Bigelow."
Movies—Judy Holliday, who won the Academy Award for her performance in "Born Yesterday."
Business--Tillie Lewis, president of one of the country's largest canning companies, who made a fortune out of Italian tomatoes.
Science—Dr. Florence Sabin, director of health for Denver, Colo., and winner of the annual Lasker award given by the American Public Health Association for "outstanding accomplishments in Public Health Administration."
PETER MAYOUNT
CYNTHIA ANNE McKEE
Cynthia Anne McKee To Wed Vern Sutton
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Wallace McKee of Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Cynthia Anne, to Vernon Lee Sutton Jr., son of Mrs. Della Grotz of Wichita and Vernon Lee Sutton of Alameda, Calif.
Miss McKeen is a journalism junior and a member of Delta Gamma sorority. She is a pledge of Theta Phi, honorary journalism sorority.
Mr. Sutton attended the University in 1951 and is a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity.
The wedding will take place Feb 16.
'Deadline-USA' Portrays Life On Newspapers-Without Music
Hollywood—(U.P.)—Very little music ever is heard around a newspaper office. There is even a superstition that decrees no one shall whistle in the city room.
That is why about the only music anyone will hear in the sound track of "Deadline—U.S.A." is the music of a roaring press or a clacking typewriter.
The director, Richard Brooks, who is making this newspaper drama for 20th Century-Fox, says he wants his picture to be a realistic portrait of newspaper life. He permitted the use of a musical background but he decreed that it be subordinated to the normal noises of newspaper production.
Brooks knew how it ought to sound, because he has been a reporter for daily newspapers in New
a dinner at the Greer home in Topeka over the holidays.
Miss Greer is a graduate of Bradford Junior college and is a college senior at the University.
Mr. Stearns is a senior at Kansas State college and a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity.
I will do my best to ensure the accuracy of the text found in the image. If you have any questions or need further information, please feel free to contact me.
A summer wedding is being planned.
JUNE MEYER, CHICAGO, relaxes amid a crop of broom corn, from which is made the housewife's best friend—the ordinary house broom (oh, my aching back!). June was awarded the title, "Miss Broom Corn of 1952," at the convention of the national broom manufacturers in Chicago. Now all we are waiting is for some sharply miss to win the title of "Miss Vacuum Cleaner Bag," or for a skinny lass to be called "Miss Mop Handle."
Vork, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and Kansas City.
"Our prime ambition is to see that the picture winds up as the most 'honest' and realistic newspaper story ever put on film," he said. "It will be authentic in every detail. To add to the realism we are using these sounds, which are usually associated with a newspaper plant, instead of 'mood music.'"
To get the right noises, Brooks spent four weeks in New York last year with a special crew recording newspaper sounds.
“it's not good music,” said Bogart, who plays the role of the managing editor, “but it's loud. I manipulate the keyboard like a lot of my reporters on the paper pound their typewriters—with two fingers.”
There will be one piece of realistic music in the film. It comes from a special jukebox which the actors feed with real nickels during a beer-hall scene.
He won't guarantee it's music but another of the realistic noises in the film is Humphrey Bogart's piano playing.
English speaking European Graduate Student will assist you with these languages.
Polish Your GERMAN!
Brush up on your FRENCH!
Ask for TUTORING!
ZOLTAN DIOS
Phone KU 327
PRECISE
WATCH
REPAIRS
Official Bulletin
Watch Repair
Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed
Wolfson's
Mathematics Colloquium, 5 today;
203 Hall.
743 Mass.
Engineerettes, 7:30 tonight. East room, Union. Cards and election of officers.
Call 675
The following are to attend Student Court in the court room of Green hall, 7:30 p.m., Thursday: Don T. Tettler, Ronald M. Waller, Gueford W. Moore, Kenneth W. Philo, Marvin S. Ligett, Truman D. Francis, Kenneth O. Hoffman, Carl Jusseon W. Zikilezzo, Ruth Smitherman, Donald W. Smitherman, Erwin David, Gene E. Davidson.
IFC meeting tonight, 9 p.m., Pine room. Union. Important, all representatives attend.
Alpha Phi Omega, 7 p.m. Tuesday,
English room, Union.
New entrance to parking Zone H, back of Strong, is located east of Snow hall. Park on the left side of the street only, with the exception of the area between Strong and the Chemistry building where cars are to be angle parked in two rows facing southeast.
Home Ec. club, 7:15 p.m. Thursday, 110 Fraser. Be prepared to work on Red Cross layettes.
Miss Clara Childers To Wed Naval Office
Mrs. Clara A. Childers of Lawrence, announces the engagement of her daughter, Clara Ethel, to Petty Officer, second class Hugo L. West-phal Jr., USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugo L. Westphal, Isabel.
Miss Childers was graduated from the University in 1951 and is music instructor at Isabel. At present, Petty Officer Westpal is stationed at the Naval Air base, Whidbey Island, Washington.
The wedding will take place in June.
Eldridge Pharmacy
Psychology club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 9 Strong, Movie, "The Silent One" at last meeting of semester.
Drugs, Sundries, Fountain,
Rines,
Village Hall
Pipes
Agency for Mixture No. 79
701 Mass.. Phone 999
- 'round the clock
- 'round the town
- 'round the year
CHEMISTRY
Camel Tan
Antique Red
Antique Brown
2
The shoes that know no season . . .
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.
$9.95
Antique Red
Antique Brown
OLDMAINE
Trollers
HANDSCHMITT WOOD CRANCHALS
Royal College Shop
837-839 Mass.
Phone 648
p t
I from music present,
tionedey Is-
Law-
ent of
Petty
West-
l Mrs.
ce in
Classified Ads
hurs Silent er.
Classified Advertising Rates
1688 ... 50c $1.00
Additional work: 2c $2.3
Terms: Cash. Phone orders accept with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in for hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) at the University Daily Kansan Business Office. Journalist bldg. not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date.
TRANSPORTATION
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national international travel whether tours or individual libraries. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass.
BUSINESS SERVICE
Ask us about family rates, ski coach,
and round trip reductions. All expense
passage now on and winter cruises. Book
passage now to travel next summer.
Call Miss Gleeson at National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30-
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers note books, theses, medical and biologi reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. J. Rauhner 4. upstairs. P. 3775J 4 p.m. Ph-27
TYPING of all kinds done promptly and accurately. Mrs. Merritt, KU 296 16
TYPING: Themes, term papers, Gloss Mpz,
prompt, accurate information to Gilt MRs
Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode
Island.
LANG-Theses, term papers, matchbooks, letters, etc. Prompt and accurate service. Mrs. Hall. 1344W. 506 West Sixth. ff
TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these typing papers. Shields. M. Shields. 1299 Ohio. 1601.
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ment we are the most assured fast, efficient service. Broadcast and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. tt
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade potries.
Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6
am. until midnight.
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. **tt**
TITLE: Experience in theses, term press, miscellaneous typing, and stencil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. £f
CRYSTAL CAFE serves. choice steaks sandwiches, malts, home-made ples and baking space for customers air-conditioned. a.m. till midnight. Crystal Café 609. Vt fm
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our staff is friendly, helpful, fun, fin, and feathers. Gift Shop, 1218 Conn, Phone 418. **tf**
FOR SALE
Schaum's "OUTLINE OF COLLEGE PHYSICS" and "OUTLINE OF COLLEGE CHEMISTRY" are here now! These books will give you the help you want in making an "A." See them at your Student Union Book Store. 11
NEW AND ATTRACTIVE STATIONERY for residents of Corbin and North College Halls. Forty-eight sheets and twenty-four envelopes in each box for only 98. Get yours today at the Student Union Book Store. 11
NEW SHIPMENT OF POCKET BOOKS
just in. Come in and look them over.
Student Union Book Store. 11
DAFTSMEN AND ARTISTS! Pelican
drawing, lettering, and sketching. Get
yours from the large selection now
available at the Student Union Book
TRAILER HOUSE: 25 feet. 1947; in good condition; semi - permanently located. House has large front office and college student wishes to sell before 19th, 929 Connecticut, Phone 2568M. 10
LOST
SILVER, French brocade evening bag,
*ost Saturday*, Dec. 15. Reward will be
given. Phone DeNean Ankerholz, 3735
FOR RENT
DOUBLE ROOM vacant for one student,
as lasleep porch, $12 a month. Call
(864) 555-1234.
RENT A TYPEWRITER and start the new year with higher grades. Only $1.00 for a typewriter. $3.50 per month for portables ad standards machines. Student Unior Jock Store.
FOUND
AN'S WRIST WATCH before Christmas.
Call Gerry WORC'Connell, 366.9
Radio Schedule
Page 7
The Flying Carpet 2:30 p.m.
(Dreamland Reading: "Romeo
and Juliet")
The week's schedule of programs to be heard on KFKU, University radio station, 1250 on the radio dial. Monday
Broadway Rhapsody ... 2:45 p.m.
(Tunes from Show Business)
Great Symphonies ... 7:00 p.m.
("Symphonie Fantastique" by Berlioz)
Tuesday
Art By Radio ... 2:30 p.m.
(Drawing Lesson by Maud Els-
worth, associate professor of
education)
KU Cavalcade of Hits ... 7:00 p.m.
(Harold C. Lohren, engineering junior, "Universal Military Team" featured speaker of the week)
Memo Pad 7:25 p.m.
(What's New in Cultural Events
in Lawrence, Topeka, Kansas
City area)
Wednesday
Music from Mt. Oread...2:30 p.m.
(Featuring the University Symphony Orchestra)
KU in the News ... 2:45 p.m.
(Tom Yoe reporting University
News of the Week)
Monday, Jan. 7, 1952
University Daily Kansan
Concert 10 p.m.
(A Special New Year's) Rev. of
the Music of the past year)
Thursdav
Adventures in Music Land ..2:30 p.m ("Revolution in Music Land: Beethoven")
Brain Busters ... 7:00 p.m.
(Featuring Emil L. Telelf, associate professor of journalism, Katie M. assistant professor of speech, M. D. Club, sor of English, and Mrs. Rachel Vanderwerf, wife of the chemistry professor, as guest contestant.)
Friday
Story Book Train ... 2:30 p.m.
("Spinn," Spann, and "Spurr").
Museum of Art Organ ... 2:45 p.m.
Gerald Hamilton at the Con-
门er
Chamber Music ... 7:00 p.m.
Danny's Serenade in C
Major
New Upstream On Sale Soon
The Quill club prize play by Robert Ziesenis, College senior, and a lecture on war economy by L. J. Pritchard, professor of economics, will be featured in the next issue of Upstream, politics and humanities magazine.
"An Irish Fantasy," by Ziesenis, won the $10 first prize in the Quill club fall literary contest. "Problems on the Home Front," a lecture given by Professor Pritchard for the World in Crisis series, will appear in adapted form in the magazine.
Eight examples from the work of Leo Mallet, German-French painter now living in Switzerland, will also appear in the issue. Mallet has illustrated several of the works on Franz Kaska, a German novelist.
Members of the Upstream staff plan to have the next issue on sale for the information booth and the Union lobby sometime before final week.
Several of Maillet's paintings have been hung in the museum of modern art in New York City.
Pedestrian Protection
INTOXICATION
"Wobbly" pedestrians don't always
"Wobbly" pedestrians don't always get home! Two out of five pedestrians killed had been drinking, according to coroner's reports. Stav out of traffic when you drink!
AAA Safety Features.
U.S. Alien Property Office Stuck With $295,600,000
Since this represents a sizable chunk of money—even as the federal government counts money—Congress has interest in how it is being handled.
Washington—U (P,) —The U.S. Government still has some $295,000,000 worth of alien property and no immediate prospect of getting rid of it.
Some of the property ($97,300,000) is in the form of cash yet to be distributed where it belongs. Some is property bearing a "for sale" tag. Some of it is in the shape of going industrial concerns operated for Uncle Sam at a profit.
In sum, it is what is left in government hands of about $505,000,000 worth of enemy property—lands, businesses, cash — seized by the United States in World War II.
To date, the government has disposed of property worth about $209,-400,000. Why hasn't it got rid of the rest?
Because disposal of property wort millions isn't simple. As of now some 1,400 lawsuits and $3,000 claims arise from the operation a lawyer's paradise.
About 40 of the firms involved, located in this country or its possessions, are doing business under Uncle Sam's direction as chief stockholder.
Seventeen of these 40 companies have assets of more than $1,000,000 each. That kind of money is what prompted Sen. Alexander Wiley (R-Wis.) to demand a congressional investigation of the alien property office, which operates under the justice department.
Wiley contends that the payrols of these government-controlled firms have become a "gravy train" for administration hangers-on.
There's nothing strange about the businesses in which the government is chief stockholder. They make beer, machinery, medicines, and chemical products, and those fancy detergents that ease dishwashing for U.S. housewives.
The alien property office already has turned over about $120,000,000 of its income from its holdings to the government's war claims fund, which pays the claims of prisoners of war and the like.
Until the Supreme Court decides ownership, as it probably will have to do, the United States will retain ownership of General Aniline, and nearly 99 per cent of the company's profits will go to the U. S. government.
Official peace treaties won't get Baynton off the hook. The "trading with the Enemy" act, which makes the rules for the alien property office, provides that the properties seized will not be returned to the original owners.
The United States contends that General Aniline was owned by the giant I. G. Farben interests in Germany. But a Swiss company, I. G. Chemie, has been claiming neutral ownership and the legal battle has even lapped over into Swiss courts
Profts also go to pay claims brought against the alien property office by U. S. citizens and neutrals who contend their rights were violated by the enemy. That phase of the problem promises to take as long as disposal of seized properties. Maybe longer.
Biggest of the "Going" concerns is General Aniline and Film corporation—manufacturer of chemicals and camera supplies—with assets of about $123,000,000. Its troubles are typical of the alien property office's problems.
Winter Cold Got You Down? Here's One Doctor's Advice
Some similar claims from a somewhat similar operation in world war I still are hanging fire.
New York—(U.P.)—The common cold "season" is here and a doctor has some tips on what to do about it.
"Avoid lowering your resistance by exposure to bad weather, wear clothing suitable to the climate, keep dry and don't sit or sleep in a draft.
In the first place, the physician, Dr. Arthur Palmer, recalls that colds cost the American people $2,000,000 a year—one billion for drugs and doctors' services and another billion dollars in lost wages.
"That," he said, "results in spreading the virus to others and they themselves become infected by more bacteria from others when they are most susceptible."
He also has no sympathy for those cold sufferers who consider themselves "good sports" when they remain at work instead of going home and to bed.
"Try to maintain a cheerful attitude and don't exaggerate your trouble. Be careful of your diet, as colds may soon follow some disorder of the digestive organs. Avoid excesses in food and drink."
"We may compare the virus with a spark plug which starts the activity of bacteria commonly present in the mucous membranes of the individual. Head colds have been transferred from one anthropoid ape to another and from human individuals to the apes by transplanting this virus.
One of the best ways to combat the common cold, according to Dr. Palmer, is to keep your resistance at high level. He said:
Dr. Palmer said the causative agent of the common cold has been shown to be a filterable virus. He explained it this way:
in sight.
"As far as possible, avoid contact with people with acute head colds, especially those who sneeze and have the mouth and nose uncovered. Have your own bodily cleanliness and use clean eating and toilet articles."
Get the sleep you seem to require to keep up with your engagement suitable to your level of strength.
"The bacteria are more resistant, but now, most of them can be destroyed by modern drugs, such as sulpha compounds, penicillin and others."
Comfort! Convenience
JAYHAWKER
NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
NOW Thru WED.
BOB and NEDY
HOPE·LAMARR
in
MY
FAVORITE
SPY
Late News - Cartoon Shows At
2:30-7:00 9:00
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
NOW THRU TUES.
Box-Office Open 6:45
Gene Autry
"Whirlwind"
—And—
Pat O'Brien
"Criminal
Lawyer"
Interviews
Personnel representatives from 10 companies will interview February graduating business students this week.
Tuesday
Sinclair Refining company
Witte Engine Works
Battenfield Grease and Oil com
-ney
Thursday
Wednesday
Montgomery Ward Farm Journal
Household Finance company Staley Milling company
Fridav
Western Auto Supply company
The Kansas, Ruger, and Litchi
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
NOW!
Supply company The Kansas Power and Ligh company.
Westinghouse Electric corporation. Interested persons may sign the interview schedules in the Schoc of Business office, 214 Strong.
LAUGHAWAY AT CALLAWAY!
The Laffs Are Thisaway!
FRED DOROTHY HOWARD
MACMURRAY · McGUIRE · KEEL
CALLAWAY WENT
THATAWAY
The Laffs
Are
Shows At 2:30-7:00-9:00
— SPECIAL —
"Football Highlights"
GRANADA
CAVE OF
OUTLAWS
TECHNICOLOR
Macdonald CAREY
A UNIVERSAL INTERNATIONAL
Last Times Today Actually Filmed In CARLSBAD CAVERNS!!
Features Tonite 7:38-9:34
STARTS TOMORROW
Matinee Today 2:30 p.m.
Doors Open 2:00 p.m.
Evening Shows-7:30 & 9:30
TREACHERY...VIOLENCE...HATE
SAVAGE
PARTITION BROAD
THE NORWICH ATLANTIC!
DANA ANDREWS
CARLA BALENDA
CLAUDE RAINS
SEALED CARGO
PHILIP UORM
Plus: Cartoon - Late News
CLAUDE RAINS
SEALED
CARGO
NEW PATEE
PHONE 321
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Jan. 7, 1952
Proficiency Results
Students passing the examination according to schools, were:
School of Medicine: Ann Beelman, Retha Carswell, Estella Davis, Georgia Dierking, Marilyn Groom, Shirley Hilyer, Jean Johnston, Donna Lee Knapp, Barbara McCrystal, Ardye Pearson, Marguerite Schonholtz, Josephine Van Petten, Jeanne Willis, W. W. Woodward.
Nealda Erickson, Mary Everett,
Milo Farnham, Phyllis Fink, Margaret Fisher, Barbara Florian, Josephine Ford, Susan Forney, Coriile Fullerton, Patricia Garrett, Keith Crawford, Katie Hunt, Leslie Hallmack, Esther Harms, Darlene Heberling, Ruth Hobbs, Donna Hobein, Karolyn Holm.
Anna Holyfield, Iain Horn, Joyce Hutchinson, Sue Ihinger, Shirley Jarrett, Earl Kelley, John Kiley, Betty Knudson, Carolyn Lacey, James Lewis, Mary Marhofer, William McClelland, Lisa Merco, Marc Morris, John Newell, William Oldham, Janet Padgett, Marlene Peterson.
School of Journalism: Lorena Barlow, Mary Cooper, Paul Dring, William Emory, Alan Frame, Marcia Horn, Bessie Humphrey, Joan Lambert, Virginia Mackey, Elaine Roney, Lee Shepardpee, William Stanfill, Robert Staples, Max Thompson, Philip Wilcox, and Jack Zimmerman.
Barbara Quinn, Vada Reida, Jack Rein, Thomas Ridder, Shirley Rosenau, Rosemary Scheuerman, Georgia Schrader, Sammy Sebesta, Marlene Shaw, LaVon Skorupan, Charlene Smades, Rolland Smith, Charles Snethen, Arlie Spencer, Joan Squires, Joanne Sterrett, Georgia Story, Jerry Taylor, Mary Todd.
School of Education: Sally Ann Adams, Margaret Allison, Elizabeth Banker, Velma Barngrover, Susanne Beringer, Eugene Brubaker, Kenneth Carroll, Dennis Dahl, Hazel Meritt, Jean Denney, Wanda Denney, Mary Deschner, Frances Douglass, Hugh Eberle.
Roy Toulouse, Barbara Tucker,
Joan Toglem, Dorothy Twente, Nancy
Watson, Donald Weekley, Kenneth
Wesley Whitney, Patricia
Williams.
College of Liberal Arts: Dwight Adams, Richard Altman, J.R. Amick, Richard Anderson, Gloria Angotti, John Ashley, Paul Bartholow Jr, David Belzer, Walter Bins, Sara Black, Iene Bodge, Steve Givens, Gregald Boyd, Robert Bradsweet, Barbara Brown, John Brown.
Larry Brunk, Louise Brunk, Gary Buehrer, Mary Cadwalader, Beric Chade, Marilyn Champion, William Chance, Oscar Chowning, Jr., Peter Chaplivy, Mary Cole, Esther Conner, Bergy Croyle, Heywood Davis,
Dolores Dean, Donald Decker, Charles
Deeds, Manohar Deosarsangh,
Milford Desenberg.
Max Embre, Calvin Engelmann,
Virginia England, Virginia Ferguson,
William Fitzsimmons, Geraid Fleener,
Shirley Friedman, Madeline Frogue,
R Garr, John Garrett,
Genneh R Gerr, George N
George N. Glenn, Emalene Good
ald Gould, Harvey Grandle, Frances
Gray, Jimmie Grey
David Grimes, Marilyn Hanson,
Curtis Harris, Elda Hawley, Charles
Heller, Elizabeth Helsey, Charles
Henson, Jr., Robert Hettinger, Richard
Hettinger, Richard Higgins, William
Hoadley, Frank Holefeleder,
Mary Holte, Robert Howard, William
Howell, William Humbert,
Esther Hund, Grace Ivester, Oliver
Johnson Jr.
Charles E. Jones, Constance Kagey, Clarara King, Carol Kendall, J. E Kendrick, Robert Kennedy, Harry Khrsner, Winker Koerper, Donald Landfried, Robert Larzalere, Bernard Lewis, Bernie Livingston, Logan Betty, Longworth, John Long, Anne Longsworth, James Loveyt
Melva Lutz, Douglas Lyle, William Maden, William McLaughlin Jr. Harold Malone, Robert Maths, Mary McCormick, Theodore McDonald, John McGilley, Tom McGuire, Patricia McNabney, Murray Meador, Bruce Meeker II, Kenneth Meinen, Marilyn Metz, Kenneth Metzger, Lindsay Milne Jr.
Jeanne Mitchell, William Moe, Janet Morrison, Marvin Murphy, Sherman Nichols, M. Patricia Oliver, John Olson, Barbara Orendorf, Joanne Perry, Thomas Peters, Catherine Petit, Janice Pfeffer, Roderick Phillips, Edward Plant, Mary Pretz, Jappy Rau, Marvin Rausch, Jane Rawlings.
Jean Richter, William Rinehart, Mary Robinson, Suzanne Roop, Rae Rosenberg, Kenneth Rudeen, John Rummans, Hillel Samisch Jr., Charles Scatterfield, Alfred Scherer, George Schulte, Myron Seeley Jr., Florence Shelley, Jacqueline Shivers Ronald Simmons, K. J. Simpson, Jay Smith.
Anne Snyder, Wilson Speer, Suzanne Springer, Ann Sproul, Kenneth Stanley Jr., Kenneth Steele, Cynthia Stephenson, Don Stephenson, Janet Sites, Esther Storer, Joseph Struzco, James Tabor, George Taylor.
Murray Trelease, A. Joan Turner Roger Tuttle, Max Valentine, Shirley Want antwerp, Loretta Vorse Amelia Wahl, Robert Walden, Charles Waugh, Harry Westherhaus Jr. Evelyn Westhoff, John White Jr. Patricia White, Mary Wiltse, and Gretchen Formhoult.
Kansas College Enrollments Show 12 Per Cent Decline
Total enrollment in Kansas colleges and universities has dropped 12 per cent below that of a year ago, Robert Taft, professor of chemistry, said recently in a study of Kansas school enrollments which he made for the Kansas Academy of Science.
The University of Kansas has more students enrolled than any other college or university in Kansas. But even with 6,512 students its enrollment is down.
Kansas State college is the second high in enrollment with 4,947 students enrolled. Wichita university follows with an enrollment of 2,915 students.
The report shows that the 22 four-year schools have 24,706 students and the 21 junior colleges have 3,613. The total (28,319) shows a 12 per cent decline from the number of students enrolled a year ago.
Exceptions to the trend toward fewer students were Marymount college of Salina, a women's school which showed the only increase in senior colleges, going from 232 to 253; the junior colleges at Dodge City and Garden City, Hesston Bible college and Miltonvale Wesleyan college.
"Apparently continued decreases are still to be expected until 1957 or 1958, when the first of the present bulging enrollments in the lower grades — 'World War II babies' — will reach college age," Professor Taft said.
Marvin To Speak At KPA Meeting
Burton W. Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, will be a guest speaker at the annual Kansas Press association convention in Kansas City, Kan., this weekend.
Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism, and Emil L. Telfel, associate professor of journalism, will represent the School of Journalism at the convention, which will be held in the Town House hotel.
Dean Marvin will tell convention delegates at 11 a.m. Friday about the new journalism building, plans for School of Journalism curriculum and services for newspapers in Kansas offered by the school.
Thomas C. Ryther, superintendent of the University Press and assistant professor of journalism, plans to attend the convention as a representative of the University Press.
Phog Allen has coached basketball teams to 28 conference wins or ties.
UP208410 JP101010 KC6000
Author-Editor To Teach Writers' Workshop Class
William M. Reddig, former literary and feature page editor of the Kansas City Star from 1936 to 1947, will give the Writers' Workshop course, English 201, during the spring semester.
Reddig is the author of "Tom's Town: Kansas City and the Pendergast Legend," published in 1947, and numerous reviews and feature articles in the Saturday Review of Literature, New York Herald Tribune, Baltimore Sun, and other publications.
He was on the staff of the Baltimore Sun in the days of H. L. Mencken. He edited the Trenton, Missouri, Republican-Times before going to the Kansas City Star. He became editor of the Charlotte, North Carolina, News in 1947. In 1948 he became managing editor of the Johnson County Democrat in Olathe.
The Writers' Workshop course is open to seniors and graduate students. It is scheduled for Thursday evenings.
Ex-Cheerleader Dies In Wichita
Carl I. "Sandy" Winsor, law "22 one of KU's best known cheerleader." died at his home in Wichita Saturday. He recently completed his fifth year as a member of the Alumni association board of directors and served as president of the association in 1946 and '47.
News Roundup
Winsor was awarded a "K" sweater by the 1920 football squad for his work at the KU-Nebraska game that year. KU, trailing by 20 points at the half, came back to tie favored Nebraska 20-20.
Paris — (U.P.) — Premier Rene Pleven's government has been defeated on a vote of confidence involving the budget. Political quarters expected Premier Pleven to resign.
BULLETIN
Man Found Frozen To Death On Bank Of Kaw River Here
Noted for his "expressive vocabulary" and "boundless energy" Winsor referred to the students as the "thundering thousands" and screamed at them to "bust a lung" whenever the volume of cheers did not meet his expectations.
Survivors include his wife, the former Ruth Miller, '22, and twin sons Lt. Earl Patrick Winsor, '51, and Lt. Alfred Michael Winson, '50, serving with the Air Force.
Funeral arrangements have not been announced.
Lawrence, Kan.—(U.P)—Charles Lowe, about 80, a retired rail city road employee, was found frozen to death today on the south bank of the Kaw river here.
Officers believed he had crossed river ice after leaving his home north of the river. He was clad only in long underwear.
A daughter, Mrs. Lawrence Pine of Lawrence, visited her father last night. When she returned this morning, he was missing from the home where he lived alone.
Other survivors included two sons, L. S. Lowe of Olathe and William Lowe of Topeka.
'Ike' Sounds Defense Warning Note
Supreme Headquarters, Allied Powers in Europe, Rocquencourt, France—(U.P.)In a statement marking the first anniversary of his arrival to command Western Europe's defenses, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower said today that "many advances have been made during the past year" in building the force to stop any Soviet aggression.
However, the Supreme Allied Commander added the Korean and Indo-Chinese wars had an "adverse effect" on Western Euro-pean rearmament. He also warned that "national economies have been seriously stretched" by the defense effort of the past year.
Eighth Army Headquarters, Korea—(U.P.)—U.S. Sabre Jet fighters, outnumbered more than five to one, brought their two-day bag of Russian-made Communist jets to 19 destroyed or damaged Sunday. They shot down two MIG-15's to bring the two-day total of enemy planes destroyed to seven, and damaged three for a total of 12 in two days.
Fighting Flares Along Korean Front
In savage fighting, Allied infantrymen, numbed with cold and fatigue, failed again Monday to recapture a Western front mountain which Chinese Reds took 11 days ago.
Before leaving Taipeh the New York Archbishop disclosed that 300 Chinese troops captured by the Allies in Korea have tattooed on their backs that they are "anti-Communists."
The prisoners, all Roman Catholics who had been impressed into the Red army, thereby wrote "their own death sentence" if ever again they came into Communist hands," the New York Archbishop said.
Archbishop Honors Chiang Kai-Shek
The Cardinal paid tribute to Chinese Nationalist President Chiang Kai-Shek as the man who millions of Chinese "acknowledge as their president and around whom they rally hopefully as the one who has saved them before and whom they trust will save them again."
Manila, P.I.—(U.P.)—Francis Cardinal Spellman arrived in the Philippines today from Taipeh, Formosa, to be the guest of President Elpidio Quirino.
Board Of Regents Dispute Closed
Topeka—(U.P.)—The Kansas Supreme court today denied Jerry E. Driscoll's petition for a rehearing, thus ending the Russell, Kan., attorney's attempt to regain his seat on the state board of regents.
The Supreme court decision, in effect, confirmed for the second time that A. W. Hershberger, Wichita lawyer, is the rightful possessor of the disputed ninth seat on the board.
Ea-Elz ... 8:00
Ema-Ez ... 8:30
Fa-Fin ... 9:00
Fio-Frd ... 9:30
Fre-Gar ... 10:00
Gas-Glh ... 10:30
Gli-Grd ... 11:00
Gre-Hag ... 1:30
Hah-Haq ... 2:00
Har-Hax ... 2:30
Hay-Hes ... 3:00
Het-Holk ... 3:30
Enrollment Schedule
SCHEDULE A (Former students and new graduate students)
Tuesday, January 29
Holl-Hr ... 8:00
Hs-Iz ... 8:10
J-Jog ... 8:20
Joh-Kam ... 8:30
Kan-Kes ... 8:40
Ket-Kn ... 8:50
Ko-Kz ... 9:00
L-Lau ... 9:10
Lav-Lh ... 9:20
Li-Lov ... 9:30
Low-Mak ... 9:40
Mal-Mas 9:50
Mat-McE 10:00
McF-Meh 10:10
Mei-Milm 10:20
Miln-Moq 10:30
Mor-Mur 10:40
Mus-Nic 10:50
Nid-Ol 11:00
Om-Par 11:10
Pas-Per 11:20
Pes-Plm 1.30
Pln-Prt 1.40
Pru-Rec 1.50
Red-Rid 2.00
Rie-Rom 2.10
Ron-Rz 2.20
S-Schl 2.30
Schm-Seo 2.40
Sep-Sij 2.50
Sik-Smh 3.00
Smi-Sot 3.10
Sou-Steq 3.20
**Wednesday, January 30**
Ster-Stz 8:00
Su-Td 8:10
Te-Tol 8:20
Tom-Us 8:30
Ut-Vor 8:40
Vom-Was 8:50
Wat-Whh 9:00
Whi-Wil 9:10
Wim-Wq 9:20
Wr-Z 9:30
A-Am 9:40
An-At 9:50
Au-Baq 10:00
Bar-Bec 10:10
Bed-Bic 10:20
Bid-Bol 10:30
Bom-Boy 10:40
Boz-Brot 10:50
Brou-Brt 11:00
Bru-Bur 11:10
Bus-Carl 11:20
Carm-Che 1:30
Chf-Clt 1:40
Clu-Coo 1:50
Cop-Crn 2:00
Cro-Dau 2:10
Dav-Dh 2:10
Di-Dt 2:30
Du-Dz 2:40
SCHEDULE B
Graduating seniors, Monday, January 28; new undergraduate students, Wednesday, January 31
Graduating seniors, Monday, January 28; new undergraduate students, Wednesday, January 3
E, F, G ... 8:15 N, O, P, Q ... 10:15 A, Baa-Ber ... 1:
H, I ... 8:45 R, Saa-Sij ... 10:45 Bas-Bz ... 2:
J, K, L ... 9:15 Silk-Sz, T, U ... 11:15 C, D ... 2:
M ... 9:45 V, W, X, Y, Z ... 1:15
Broadway Band
THE UNIVERSITY CONCERT BAND. RUSSELL L. WILEY. DIRECTING. WILL GIVE ITS ANNUAL WINTER CONCERT AT 8 P.M. TODAY IN HOCH AUDITORIUM
UNIVERSITY DAILY 49th Year No.72 Tuesday, Jan.8,1952 NASAN
ID Cards Admit To Passion Play
Student identification cards will admit students to the Thursday and Friday matinee performances of the Black Hills Passion play, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the university, said today. The matinees in Hoch auditorium will begin at 2 p.m.
The cry goes out today for 55 more University students willing to take part in the Black Hills Passion play which will be presented in Hoch auditorium Thursday and Friday.
Any student willing to take part should attend rehearsal at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Hoch and also notify Allen Crafton, professor of speech, as soon as possible.
Rehearsal was held last night under the direction of Clayton Krebiel, instructor in music education, and Michael Entemann, entertainer for the show in the play.
Professor Crafton would like for seventy students to be in the play as the mob and crowds. So far fewer than 20 students have volunteered.
No acting ability is required of the students and there will be no lines to learn. Appropriate costumes will be provided.
The Passion play will be given in four performances in Hoch. Thursday and Friday afternoons and evenings. I-D cards will admit students to the matinees but student admission is 50 cents for the evening performances. Tickets are on sale in the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce office in the WREN building.
In 22 scenes, the play dramatizes the life of Christ from his triumphal entrance into Jerusalem through his crucifixion and ascension. Colorful authentic costuming and mammoth settings enhanced with modern stage effects will be included in the presentations.
The Passion play originated in 1242 in Leuen, Germany. When it comes to the University it will be beginning its 710th year.
peka, Ks.
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 military officer from Germany, but Hitler's rise forced him to flee to the United States.
In 1938 the Passion play members chose the Black Hills section near Spearfish, S.D., as the permanent home for the production. There the show is produced in a natural outdoor amphitheater on a stage the length of three average city blocks.
Mr. Meier has appeared in this part in more than 9,000 performances throughout the U.S., Canada and Europe.
Passion Play Actor To Hold Conference
Josef Meier, the Christus of the Passion play to be given Thursday and Friday, will give a press conference at 5 p.m. Wednesday, in the Big Seven room of the Hotel Eldridge.
Poplar Lane Rule Will Be Enforced
University police will begin enforcing the new west to east flow of traffic on Poplar lane Thursday by issuing tickets to violators, Donald K. Alderson, chairman of the parking committee, said today.
Since last Thursday when the one-way flow of traffic was reversed, patrolmen have only issued "courtesy" warning notices.
Poplar lane is now to be entered only between Snow and Strong halls. The new exit is east and in back of Bailey laboratories.
Parking also is restricted to the left side of the street except for the area between Strong and Bailey, where angle-parking facing southeast is allowed. The parking area is known as Zone H.
Sticky fingered student fag filcher have pocketed so many packages or cigarettes from the food counter in the Hawk's Nest during the past four months that it has become necessary to lock the cigarets back up in machines.
Students Steal Too Many Fags
L. E. Woolley, Union director, said he regretted stopping the sale of cigarets in the Nest but pointed out that the Union could not afford the loss of from 12 to 30 packs daily just for the sake of convenience to the students.
There will be no fine arts convoction this week, as previously announced in the calendar. The convoction was held Jan. 3, in Strong auditorium with the showing of the film, "Dreams Money Can Buy."
Until this week cigarettes had been placed in boxes on the coffee counter and students were allowed to pick up a package and carry it to the check stand for payment. Because too many persons omitted the stop at the check stand all students who want fags with their coffee must now purchase them from the locked vending machine outside the door of the Hawk's nest.
Cancel Fine Arts Convocation
Gift Of $7,500 For Scholarship
A gift of $7,500 to the University Endowment association for a scholarship in engineering was announced today by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. The donor has requested anonymity.
The donor established the fund a year ago with an original gift of $5,000. With the new addition the principal is now $12,651.50.
The scholarship will be for male high school graduates who wish to attend the School of Engineering and Architecture at KU. It will be renewable so the holder may have the award for four years. The bases for the award shall be financial need, character, scholarship and promise of future usefulness to society.
In amending the terms of the gift, the donor specified that Dean T. DeWitt Carr of the School of Engineering and Architecture; Irvin Youngberg, secretary of the KU Endowment association, and he would be the scholarship selection committee.
The annual amount of the scholarship is to be the income from the principal of the fund.
Blood Donors Still Needed
The bloodmobile began operation today in the Military Science building with the commanding officers of the ROTC units first to donate their blood.
By 10:30 more than 30 pints had been donated and 60 men were waiting in line.
Because of a legal technicality students under 21 must have the written permission of both their parents. Many ROTC men failed to bring back this consent from Christmas vacation. Consequently, the schedule for Friday was left unfulled.
About 50 students have volunteered to give blood Friday. This is still 150 short of the needed 200 donors. Twenty men from Beta Theta Pi fraternity have volunteered to donate blood. It is hoped that students from other houses will volunteer.
Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director
ROBERT AUSHERMAN
Concert Features Student Soloists
JOHN S. HOWARD
PETER H. KOLE
JAMES RALSTON
Three education seniors will be soloists in the annual winter concert of the University Concert band tonight. They are Tommy Lovitt, cornet, Robert Ausherman, clarinet, and vocalist James Ralson, baritone.
of Watkins hospital, urges every student who can to volunteer for Friday.
"I hope that students will sign up today and tomorrow either by calling Watkins hospital, city 890, or the Red Cross, city 405, so we will know how many to expect," he said.
1834
PART OF THE CROWD waiting in line outside Robinson gym Monday afternoon for an opportunity to purchase tickets to the Kansas, K-State basketball game in Manhattan Jan. 26. The line extended west to the east side of Hoch auditorium. Only 500 tickets were offered for sale, and 45 minutes after the window
in the athletic office opened, all were gone. Kansan photo by Don Sarten
The concert, directed by Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra, will start at 8 p.m. in Hoch auditorium. Students with identification cards will be admitted without charge.
Ausherman will play the first movement of von Weber's Concerto BWV 204. Baerman, the leading clarinetist of the early eighteenth century.
Lovitt is to be soloist in Edwin Franko Goldman's Scherzo, an arrangement which has never been published.
Goldman, conductor of the Goldman band for the past quarter of a century in New York, made the arrangement for his own band. Through his personal friendship with Mr. Wiley, a photographic copy of the original manuscript was obtained for use here.
song, verses to "Die Fledermaus"
Overture to "Die Fledermaus"
(Strauss), "Water Music Suite"
(Handel), Scherzo (Goldman),
"March for Band" (Beecham), "Virginia,
a Southern Rhapsody"
(Wood).
Goldman has been guest conductor at the University on past occasions.
Ralston will sing three songs from "Oklahoma," a Broadway musical which reached its peak of popularity about 10 years ago. Many of the melodies have since been popularized.
"Students hear the band at football games when conditions are unfavorable or at basketball games when, at least part of the time, they want the band to be quiet." he said. "Too many think they have heard the band at its best, which is not true."
This will be one of the few occasions to hear the band in formal concert this year. Mr. Wiley said.
The melodies sung by Ralston will be "Oh What A Beautiful Morning," "Out of My Dreams," and "People Will Say We're In Love." The songs are by the famous writing combination, Rodgers and Hammerstein.
usas State Historical Society
All three soloists have been members of the University band for the past few years. Lovitt, has appeared as cornet soloist before.
The program will include:
First movement of Concerto No. 2 (von Weber), "Marche Militaire Française" (Saint - Saens), love scene from "Boris Godouonv" (Moussorgkys, three songs from "Oklahoma") (Rodgers - Hammerstein), allegro viface from Organ Sonata in D Major (Guilmant) and finale from Sphmphony in F minor No. 4 (Tschaikowsky).
Students and staff members who are not United States citizens must, under a new requirement of law, register with postal officials by Friday.
Foreign Students Must Sign By Friday
A recent letter from the department of justice to city officials instructs aliens to obtain forms at the post office, fill them out and return them to a postal official.
Registration last year does not exempt persons from registering this year as the law requires registration the first 10 days of each year.
.
年
1
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 8, 1952
by Bibler
Daily Kansan Editorials Let's Face It--We're In College Now
It is indeed a sad commentary on college life when the Student Union finds it necessary to safeguard its cigarets from student thieves. L. L. Woolley, director of the Union, explained that he has been forced to re-install a vending machine. It is due, Mr. Woolley says, to the constant filching from the counter in the Hawk's Nest.
Previously the cigarettes were displayed on an open counter. Students were allowed to choose their brand, pick them up, carry them to the cash register, and pay for them there. But no longer.
Mr. Woolley figures that from one to two and a half dozen packs were stolen every day. Obviously, a non-profit organization cannot stand such a loss.
Now the cigarets will be placed in a machine outside the Hawk's Nest. Once again, because of a few dishonest students, the Union is forced to discontinue a policy it was hoped would please and benefit their customers. It is doubtful if the machine will sell cigarets as cheaply as the Union did.
The Union is for us students. We use its services either free of charge or at the lowest rate feasible. And still a few of us take advantage of it.
Nevertheless, to increase its services to KU, the Union is building a huge addition. We help pay for it, and so those who steal from it are actually taking money from their own pockets. When it costs them more to operate, we are the ones who have to pay the resulting increased prices.
Of course, the thieves don't see it that way. They feel that the need for a cigaret is greater than their need for self-respect. How could anyone have such a distorted view?
Let's face it. We're college students. Supposedly we're above petty thievery. But if we can't even be trusted around cigarets, what can be expected of us upon graduation?
Certainly a cigaret thief is not of the caliber expected in college. He (or she) isn't old enough to be here, at least mentally.
Stealing cigarets is a kid's trick. Just how many of us are kids? —A.G.M.
At last! Ye Ed has received some tangible assets to serve as a remembrance of his days on the Daily Kansan editorial desk. Decca records sent an entire album of Jerry Gray records, designed as a memorial to the late Glenn Miller. And there were no strings attached.
Of course, in writing this editorial, we are playing directly into Decca's hands. The idea was to gain advertising and certainly this is it.
But we were so thrilled we couldn't resist. The records themselves are the usual run of modern-day music. But they have an appeal to most record lovers, particularly those who admire the Glenn Miller style.
To us, though, the big thing is not the album, it's the thought. We can imagine the Decca publicity director's countenance as his mind evolved this startling plan. Basie in our enjoyment is the fact that this guy was willing to pay for whatever
From The Editorial Desk Comes Music
Most college editors will probably take the records home, listen to them, and forget the advertising. But not us. It was much too breathtaking to have someone send us a free album of records. We half-way expected a plug for Taft (long a Decca fan, we understand), but happily it was not forthcoming.
notice he might get.
In fact, from the records there was nothing forthcoming except music. No commercials halfway through the mellow strains, no captivating repartee about the producer. Just music.
Our benefactor, in a short note, merely asked us to listen to them, and "maybe" let the students know about them. So be it.
In our opinion, the records are perhaps somewhat above average (having been a Miller fan), but they aren't exactly world beaters. Still, they're a tangible reward. —A.G.M.
None But The Lonely Hearts
Dear Editor:
This letter may not be of any interest to you, but will appreciate if you will continue reading. This letter is coming to you from five lonely GI's that have very little correspondence from the opposite sex.
We have heard through a good source that your paper has a wide distribution, at least among the students. Knowing you haven't a lonely hearts column we would appreciate an exception in this instance. We would like very much if you would print this.
We are looking forward with the utmost anxiety to corresponding with many of your beautiful co-eds.
Pfc. Leonard A. Mroczkowski
US-55053233
Pfc. David R. Lowther
NG-2539274
Pfc. Loren A. Gard
PFc. 52054950
Pfc. Larry R. Edwards
US-55090703
Sgt. Paul Lee
1330 16th Ave.
Honolulu, T. H.
(For first four addresses, add following three lines:)
Co. E 17th R.C.F.
A. P.O. 7 c o P.M.
San Francisco, Calif.
Editor's Note: The first sentence almost made us drop this letter in the box labeled "Letters-we-never-finished-reading."
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 Dail Press Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the Nationa 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
At the University of Colorado fraternities are daily grabbing freshmen girls dressed in jeans and applying paint with a brush to "various points on the jeans."
Fine Arts...
Editor's Note: Ah, sweet mysteries of life.
The Drake Times-Delphic, Drake university, Iowa, was fed up with the Missouri Valley conference's handling of the "Bright incident." John Bright, Drake's star football back, had been assaulted during a game with Oklahoma A&M.
Understatement . . .
Said the Times-Delphic: "It took the conference 41 days to decide that three intentional attacks on a player (recorded for history by photographers) is just one of those unavoidable things.
Office clerks at Otterbein college, Ohio, have quite a sense of humor. The Admissions office discovered they had sent invitations to attend high school day to Barney Google, Jane Russell, and Gypsy Rose Lee.
Sense Of Humor...
Hands Off...
At Turfts college, Mass., the Turfs Weekly asked freshmen what they wanted most in their fraternities. Most frequent answer was "a good chef." Second was "access to the exam files."
Editor's Note. The hell with you.
Little Man On Campus
ANATOMY
ASSIGNMENT FOR TOM
B-10
"As you may already know there's a carnival in town, and we are fortunate to have with us this morning—!"
Wre$tling Make$ Money
The Wall Street Journal reports that while baseball, opera and other amusements are fighting to stay in the black, wrestling grossed $15,000,000 this year. Three hundred arenas lured 12,000,000 fans to their men and muscle exhibits.
Gorgeous George, Gypsy Joe, Strangler Lewis—no, this isn't a page out of the Rogue's Gallery, but names of professional wrestlers who have rewritten the mat books.
Many of these professional wrestlers will pay income tax on salaries of $100.000 or more.
Television's use of the professionals earned the sport new fans. Women began to take an interest in the manly art. Sharp promoters found that men like to see female wrestlers pull hair in the ring.
Thus the wrestling heroes of today were born. Grunt and groan artists like Gorgeous George, who has golden curls and sprays perfume about the ring before he wrestles; Gypsy Joe, who usually plays the role of the "bad" man who doesn't abide by the rules; the Scholar, who enters the ring wearing a cap and gown and others, just as colorful and just as great at packing arenas as is Joe Di-Maggio.
Today athletic directors ponder whether video will hurt its crowds, and leave its stadium empty. Semi-pro baseball's asking the same question. Maybe TV isn't good for these sports, but one thing's sure. It put wrestling into the high income bracket in the amusement field, both for the wrestler and the promoter.
Just a few years ago, wrestling was considered as obsolete as the horse and buggy. Then along came television. When production heads searched for programs to fill with, wrestling was a logical choice.
Ground has been cleared and foundations are being laid for construction of three new buildings to house six low-cost women's co-op units at the University of Texas. Plans for three more such structures have been added to the list of contemplated university buildings.
Coeds in nighties were seen dancing, recently at Kalamazoo college on dormitory porches while male students gathered on the campus green to watch. Police ended the performance.
News Buildings Going Up
-Iowa State Daily.
Coeds Put On A Show
New Chancellor Elected
News From Other Campuses
Dr. Raymond A. Allen, recently resigned president of the University of Washington, has been elected chancellor of the University of California. He will assume the post before the beginning of the next academic year.
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a semester and $1 a semester postage). Publication rate: every afternoon during the University weekends. University holidays and examination periods Entered as second class matter Sept. 17. Undergraduates receive university holidays and examination periods
Kans., under act of March 3, 1879
Cars found violating the new 10 parking regulations at the University of Texas are being impounded by campus police and a $4 charge is made before they can be reclaimed. A week after the new regulations went into effect 33 cars were impounded.
New Rule Takes Toll
A group of men at Yale university have compiled a handbook called "Going Places," which lists phone numbers, curfews and other pertinent information about 20 Eastern women's colleges. Officials and girls from the colleges provided the inside information.
Handbook Gives The Done
Washington Dogs Get Help
A group of fraternity men at the University of Washington are organizing a "Marshall Plan for Mongrels." Their first step was an appeal to the governor of the state to declare an immediate stay of execution for all dogs condemned to die that week. The plan is to place the dogs in homes with children.
As coach of four basketball teams, Dr. F. C. "Fhog" Allen has won 682 games and lost 200 in 44 team-years.
Page 3
Belgium Fears Schuman Plan Might Ruin Its Coal Market
Brussels - (U-P) - Tiny Belgium still thinks it might have more to lose by the Schuman Plan than any other country in Europe.
Belgium does not plan to ratify it just because the French have done so.
The plan for a European coal and steel pool is still in committee. There is no sign that it will be brought before the full parliament before the middle of January, at least. Holland as well as France has already ratified the plan.
Bulgium has the most expensive coal on the continent and would not even initial the Schuman treaty earlier this year until special protection was given her industry. Now there is a widespread feeling that the protection clauses were not made watertight.
2. The Schuman Plan is unconstitutional
1. High-cost Belgian coal would be unable to compete in the market and the nation would be swamped with cheaper coal from Germany and other countries.
Attacks against the Schuman Plan have centered around two major arguments:
In an attempt to meet the first objection, the Schuman Plan treaty gives Belgium certain privileges for the first five years.
Family Lives Long
Belgium may subsidize its coal
Millis, Mass.—(U.P.) The ages of the eight brothers and sisters of the Russell family total 655 years, making their average age 82 years. They are: Eli Russell, 94, Syracuse, N. Y.; George Russell, 88, Medford, Mass; Mrs. Amelia Clark, 86, Millis; Mrs. Mary Badger, 84, Boston; Mrs. Angelina Amlott, 80, Malone, N. Y.; Miss Ella Russell, 77, Taunton, Mass; Edward Russell, 74, Boston, and Charles Russell, 72, Gabriels, N. Y.
industry to a certain extent and will receive the guaranty that net Belgium output would not have to be reduced by more than three per cent during any one year.
East Sandwich, Mass.—(U.P.)—When Mrs. Clara Marchant found herself with 12 children and a disabled husband on her hands nearly 25 years ago she didn't have time to wait for her ship to come in.
She just went ahead and built her own ship. In fact, this winter the 66-year old grandmother expects to build 500 clippers, barkentines, schooners, or about any sailing ship you can name.
Many observers here feel that the three per cent restriction would not work in practice. One of the top members of the coal industry also charged recently that 75 per cent of Belgian mines would have to close down under the Schuman Plan.
Paris Foundation Offers Scholarships To American Students In Art, Music
They're models, of course, but they have made her world famous. Her roadside shack with the swinging sign "Clara Marchant—Ship Models" is besieged through the summer by Cane Cod tourists, in quest of her bottled clipper ships. Her scale models have "made port" in as far-off places as South Africa.
Grandma Makes Whittling Pay
Back in 1927 it was sink or swim, so she took an old jackhive and a piece of soft pine and set up shop. It paid off to the extent that she raised her 12 children and can now boast a brood of 30 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
University Daily Kansan
The United States House of the Cite Universitaire in Paris is offering to American graduate students four Woolley Foundation scholarships for the study of art and music in Paris for the academic year 1952-53.
Application forms are available at the German department office, 304 Fraser hall, and must be filed with all supporting documents at the New York office of the Institute of International Education by Friday, Feb.15.
The scholarships carry a stipend of $1,000 each, payable in quarterly
installments over the period of a year beginning Oct. 1 at the current rate of exchange. Appointees will need funds of their own to pay passage to and from Europe, travel during vacations and incidental expenses.
A student must meet the following eligibility requirements: graduation with high academic standing from an American college, university or professional school of recognized standing by the date of departure; good working knowledge of French; capacity for independent study, and artistic or musical accomplishment.
EISENHOOWER BIRTHPLACE
TEXAS FOR
EISENHOOWER
CHAIRMAN ROBERT DOSS (center) points to a "Texas for Eisenhower" sign at the Eisenhower birthplace in Denison, Texas, after launching the non-partisan movement in a state-wide broadcast. The broadcast was the opening gun in the campaign to get Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower to announce his candidacy for nomination for president of the United States by one of the parties.
Murphy To Speak On Farm Problems
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will be one of the guest speakers at the 81st annual convention of the American Association of Topeka Wednesday through Friday.
Tuesday, Jan. 8, 1952
Dr. Vincent J. Schaefer of the General Electric Research laboratories will be one of the headline speakers. He was the first man to explore the possibilities of man-made rain.
Students To Appear In Court Thursday
Present-day problems of agriculture will be the subjects discussed at the convention.
Among other speakers appearing during the three-day meeting will be Gov. Edward F. Arn and President James A. McCain of Kansas State
The Student Court will hold a regular session at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the court room of Green hall.
Thirteen persons have been notified to appear. Most of the charges are parking violations.
Other Schools Have Name Trouble Too
Those to appear include: Donald T. Mettler, Ronald M. Waller, Guelford W. Moore, Kenneth W. Philo, Marvin Liggett, Truman Francis, Kenneth L. Hoffman, Carl Kruse, Paul Zickeefoose, Ruth Sitherman, Donald Smitherman, Erwin David and Gene Davidson.
Lincoln, Neb.—(U.P.)=Student record-handlers at the University of Nebraska have plenty of headaches.
However, there are six men named Robert Johnson and three Kenneth Johnsons.
This year is no exception, even though there's only one John Smith among the 7,000 students attending the school, and only one Mary Jones.
Last year, a graduate student from India enrolled and they couldn't get his name on the registration forms. It was Canjeevaram Rajasikamani Krishanamurthi.
Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests No.31...THE MOUNTAIN GOAT
"They can't kid me!"
He thought they were trying to make him the butt-end of a joke when he was asked to judge cigarette mildness with a mere puff of one brand and a quick sniff of another. The fancy foot-work didn't dazzle him! He knew that the pinnacle of pleasure comes from steady smoking...and that there is only one test that gives you enough time to permit conclusive proof. Smokers throughout America have made the same decision!
It's the sensible test...the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test, which simply asks you to try Camels 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
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Jan. 8, 1952
NCAA Action Could Leave Big 7 On Limb
Action taken at the NCAA convention in Cincinnati Wednesday through Saturday will either leave the Big Seven out on a limb or create a quite different picture in college athletics.
If the various college conferences do not follow the Big Seven in emphasizing athletics, the conference will be placed at a disadvantage in recruiting athletes and building strong teams. Among other things, the rules prohibit excessive recruitment practices, ban post-season bowl games and limit spring and fall football and basketball practice.
T. DeWitt Carr, dean of the School of Engineering, left by train today for the convention. He will arrive in time for the first session at 8 a.m. Wednesday. Arthur C. Lonborg, director of athletics, Jules V. Sikes, football coach, Clifford C. Kimsey, assistant football coach, and Hubert Ulrich, baseball coach, will fly to Cincinnati Wednesday morning.
Dean Carr, as the University faculty representative, will discuss with other faculty representatives of the Big Seven the proposals brought before the convention. They will vote on each issue to determine how the conference will cast its vote. As usual the other college conferences will each vote as a block in the final balloting on the issues Saturday.
Coach Sikes believes the convention will take much milder action than that recently taken by the Big Seven in the conference in Kansas City. Dean Carr expressed hope for a constructive program to come out of the convention and pointed out the demand on the part of the public for a clean-up of college athletics.
Among the points which will be considered at the convention are: the 12-point de-emphasis plan, some decision on the televising of sports games, and whether bowl games will be banned or allowed to continue.
The delegates will consider legislation to give the NCAA more strict control over athletics, a rule limiting or banning out-of-season practice sessions for both football and basketball, methods of controlling excessive financial aid to athletes and high-pressure recruiting. They will discuss the platoon system and its effects upon college athletics.
Besides the NCAA, the American
Kansas Cagers Prepare For MU
No games are scheduled for the Jayhawkers until Saturday night when they will journey to Columbia, Mo., to battle the unpredictable Missouri Tigers but the Kansas squad is continuing to practice hard in an effort to keep its unbeaten record intact.
The Tigers, coached by colorful Wilbur "Sparky" Stalcup, opened their conference season with a 55-57 loss to Iowa State's Cyclones Saturday but had defeated them previously in the Big Seven tournament 49-42. Kansas downed the Tigers in the finals of the tourney 75-65.
MU's Bill Stauffer, 6-foot 4-inch senior center, and Win Wilfong, 6-foot 2-inch freshman guard, were named to the tourney all-star and second teams respectively. They have been sparking the MU team which has a 6-5 record.
Coach Stalcup has a "top fifteen" consisting of six lettermen, two returning squadmen, three sophomores and four freshmen.
In Stauffer, Missouri has one of the conference's best rebounders. The big boy will give Clyde Lovelier tough battle under the backboards.
Lovellette has averaged 24 points a game against the Show-Me team in four conference contests. His sophomore year he set a record of 39 points which lasted until he blasted away with 42 while playing Southern Methodist this year.
Last season Kansas and Missouri shared second play in the -league with 8-4 records. MU gained the tie by upsetting KU at Columbia 38-39.
Football Coaches association, American Association of College Baseball Coaches, the sports division of the American College Public Relations association and directors of the new football hall of fame are meeting this week in Cincinnati.
Cage Scores
Washburn 63, Southwestern 62
Rockhurst 90, Baker 66
Col of Emporia 63, Wm. Jewell 6
McPherson 80, Kans. Wesleyan 6
Tulsa 74, Wichita 46
Iowa 54, Michigan 46
Ohio State 73, Indiana 72
Wash. & Lee 81, Richmond 65
Kentucky 83, Xavier 50
Tulane 71, Tennessee 65
Noyau 84, Kansas (Ky.) 65
Illinois 53, Wisconsin 49
Vanderbilt 58, LSU 47
Seton Hall 84, St. Peter's 61
Drake 68, Detroit 61
DePaul 93, Milwaukee State 44
Mich. State 82, Northwestern 49
Second Half Scoring Drive Beats Last Chance Five 32-34
By Wilbur Larkin
The Geology club came from 15 points behind at the half to defeat the Last Chance five 32-34 last night at Robinson annex in an evening highlighted by comebacks.
The Feather Merchants handed Gamma Delta a 52-31 loss. Reich and Krueger led the Merchants with 21 and 14 points respectively. High scorer for Gamma Delta were Wegher and Croyle, tied with 7 points apiece.
Delta Sigma Pi bowed to Phi Beta Digit 28-45. High scorer for the winners was Payne with 16 points followed by Powers with 11. High point man for Delta Sigma Pi was Love with 10 points.
Jolliffe Hall defeated the Carefreees 41-22. The scoring was evenly spread between both teams. Scoring for Jolliffe were Bordens 11, Dinnigan 9, Duncan 8. Bob Meier and Bill Toohey were tied for scoring honors for the Carefreees with 7 points apiece.
The Last Chance club, holding a 23-8 margin at halftime, wilted as the Geology club turned on the steam. Leading the victors in the second half were Tice, with 8 points, McCrae with 9 points and Sheffer with 6. High scorer for the two teams was Manson of the Last Chance five, with 13 points. Also scoring for Last Chance were VanDorn and Noah with 8 and 6 tallies apiece.
In the Fraternity "A" division Kappa Sigma tripped Sigma Alpha Epsilon from behind, 44-27. Trailing 9-2 at the first quarter, the Kappa Sig's tied the score at 16-all at the half and were ahead 30-21 at the end of the third period. High scorer for the Kappa Sig's was Chestnut with 14, followed by Ochs with 8, and Scultd with 7. Leading scorers for the Sig Alph's were White with 7 points, Robertson with 6, and Lance with 5.
Also in the fraternity "A"', s' Delta Upsilon trounced Alpha Kappa Lambda 52-27. The leading scorer for DU was Taylor with 13 points, followed by LaGree with 10, Konek with 9, and Henson and Stonecrest with 6 each. Leading scorers for AKL were Davis, Roberts, and Jenkins with 8, 7 and 6 points respectively.
In the fraternity "C" division Sigma Phi Epsilon edged past Delta
Phi Chi downed Oread 69-37 in the only Independent “B” scheduled. The Phi Chi were paced by Petersen with 22 points followed by Rader with 14, Woods with 10, and Kihm with 9. Raftelock and Koog tied for scoring honors for the Oread five with 11 points apiece.
Save Time Save Money Bring Your Laundry
RISK'S
Upsilon in a low scoring contest 26-24. High scorer for the two teams was Jack Scott of Sig Ep with 10 points. Leading scorers for DU were Moon. Stallard and Hallman with 8, 6 and 5 points each.
Self-Service Laundry
613 Vt. Call 623
Pi Delta Theta rolled over Pi Kappa Sigma 59-18. Heading the scoring parade for the Pi Delti's were Scheideman with 18 points and Ryther with 14, High scorer for Pi Kappa Sigma was Miln with 9.
TO
Lambda Chi Alpha outclassed a Sigma Chi five 59-21. Top scorers for Lambda Chi were Fulkerson with 18 points and Kay and Kellogg tied for second honors with 12 points each. Shumaker paced Sigma Chi with 8 points.
In the other games in the fraternity "C" division, Kappa Sigma beat Sigma Nu 44-17, Nu Sigma Nu defeated Alpha Kappa Lambda 33-22. The Phi Gami won easily over the TKE's, and Delta Tau Delta bowed to Alba Tau Omega 44-42.
**TODAY'S SCHEDULE**
Independent "A"-Robinson Annex
4:00 Oread vs. Alpha Kappa Psi
5:00 K H K vs. Aluminum 5
6:00 AFROTC vs. Flying 5
7:00 AXE vs. Misfits
8:00 Varsity vs. ASCE
9:00 Rochdale vs. Twin Pines
Kansas 'B' Team Game Postponed
R
Tonight's Jayhawkner "B" team basketball game with Forbes Air Force base has been postponed indefinitely.
The game was scheduled to be played in Topeka.
The "B" team, coached by Dick Harp, defeated the service team previously 81-53 at Hoch auditorium Dec. 5.
Twenty members of KU basketball teams have been selected for All-American honors since 1922.
Kansas Rated First By AP, Second By UP
Undefeated Kansas has been named as the nation's top team for the second consecutive week by an Associated Press poll but ranked only second by the United Press's board of coaches.
Kansas drew 38 firsts on the 102' AP ballots casted by sports writers and sportscasters. Illinois received 21 to finish second and Kentucky, the No. 3 team, got 12.
In the UP's ratings Kansas finished behind Illinois, who was named the nation's best cage team for the fourth straight week. Kansas received 11 first place votes compared to 17 for the Illini, who retained second place.
Both polls agreed on Kentucky's place. The Wildcats climbed a notch to third in the AP rankings on victories over Mississippi and Louisiana State. Indiana's victory over Michigan for its eighth win earned fourth place for the Hoosiers.
Six of the first ten AP teams have perfect records. They are Kansas 11-0, Illinois 8-0, Indiana 8-0, St. Bonaventure 7-0, Seton Hall 10-0 and Iowa 8-0, Games through Jan. 6 were included.
The AP advanced St. Louis up to fifth position with Washington following at sixth.
Kansas State was moved up to the No. 7 spot by the AP while St. John's dropped from eighth to 12th and New York University fell from sixth to 13th.
Team standings with points figured on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis (first place votes in parentheses.)
AP's Top Ten
1. Kansas (38) 812
2. Illinois (21) 774
3. Kentucky (12) 627
4. Indiana (12) 553
5. St. Louis (3) 456
6. Washington (1) 293
7. Kansas State 250
8. St. Bonaventure (4) 203
9. Seton Hall (5) 201
10. Iowa (2) 195
Kansas tied for the Big Seven conference title in 1950 with Kansas State and Nebraska.
In the four years of the Big Seven conference from 1948 to 1951, Kansas State teams have either won or shared the conference title.
PRECISIVE
WATCH REPAIRS
Watch Repair
Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed
O
Wolfson's
743 Mass. Call 675
PENING
Friday, January 11
At The
SKYLINE CLUB
and the
Jim McCaiq
Varsity Crew Combo
FEATURING.
- JACK ZIMMERMAN - Trombone
* JIM RALSTON - Vocal
He had no wish but—
to be glad
Nor want but—
when he thirsted
The Jolly Beggar
Each frosty bottle of Coke is the answer to thirst...each frosty bottle is a bargain, too. Robert Burns would like that!
DRINK
Coca-Cola
5¢
BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY
LAWRENCE COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.
"Coca" is a registered trade-mark. © 1952, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY
5¢ DRINK Coca-Cola REG. NO. PAT. OYE
Whiteboard
Arms
Page 5
British Paper Reports Reds Have Seized Control In Tibet
Calcutta, India—(U.P) —Communist China has completed the military seizure of the Himalayan Lama Kingdom of Tibet, according to the British-owned newspaper, The Statesman.
The paper was commenting editorially on a published dispatch from its special correspondent in Kalimpong, West Bengal frontier town on the southern boundary of Tibet. He quoted reports that a further 2,000 Chinese troops had entered Lhasa to bring the total of the Communist Chinese garrison in the Tibetan capital to 8,000 troops.
The correspondent reported that Lhasa citizens were struck by the appearance among the large camel and mule caravan driving through the town of a speeding jeep, the first mechanized vehicle to enter the capital with Chinese troops.
The jeep, according to the dispatch, traveled overland from the eastern Tibetan frontier, being taken to pieces and carried by mules over difficult mountain passes and reassembled later to be put on the road leading into Lhasa.
The editorial said the pattern of events in Tibet was clear. It declared:
"Key towns have been garrisoned by either Chinese or satellite troops, strategic roads are being built, aerodromes laid down and a radio network established. Militarily, traders (Tibetans who travel between Kalimpong and Lhasa) say, Chinese control is complete."
The correspondent said the Chinese are expected to bring more mechanized vehicles to Lhasa.
Observing that seizure of the administrative reins has been more subtle, the paper said in Lhasa Chinese "advice" is "tendered" and "accepted" by the Dalai Lama and his cabinet.
The appointment of the Dalai Lama and his cabinet and the Panchen Lama to China's Consultative Conference has been regarded abroad, the editorial said, as indicating the Chinese intention to integrate Tibet in the Chinese Republic.
University Daily Kansan
Nickel Beer Comes Back
Norwalk, Conn.—(U.P.)The five cent glass of beer put in at least a temporary appearance in Norwalk. Michael J. Demato started selling the nickel beer as protests against a move to hike the price of beer to 15 cents a glass. Five pennies buy a six-ounce glass of suds in Demato's tavern, one-ounce under what you get for 10 cents elsewhere in the town.
Naples—(U.P.)—For the first time in history, American naval power in the Mediterranean exceeds that of the British, who traditionally have controlled this vital water link between East and West.
U.S. Assumes Naval Lead
The realities of the situation are not yet reflected in the organizational and operational set-up at the headquarters here of Admiral Robert B. Carney, commander in chief of allied forces in southern Europe.
Officials here hope that the visit to Washington of Winston Churchill, British prime minister, may result in "clarification" of the command structure which will make for more tightly-knit and tougher organization of the southern flank.
The British have withheld their Mediterranean naval units, as well as the Gibraltar and Malta bases, from the over-all Allied control plan.
Although supposedly in charge of all allied forces—land, sea and air—on the southern flank of the anti-Communist front in Europe, the U.S. admiral actually has control over little more than the American Sixth Fleet.
However, they realize the "political difficulties" in the way of putting the British in the western Mediterranean entirely under Carney's command.
In addition to the U. S. Sixth Fleet, Carney now commands Italian land forces—exclusive of the northern "covering force" guarding the Italian frontier—the American air bases in North Africa and elements of the Italian and French fleets.
His area of command extends from Gibraltar eastward to a line drawn from the heel of the Italian boot down to Tripolitania on the North African coast, with immediately adjacent land areas. British vessels in this area and the Malta and Gibraltar bases are specifically excluded.
That does not mean, however, that the American Sixth Fleet is restricted to the western Mediterranean.
JACK GRAFMAN
THESE THREE PILOT HAVE EDESTROYED $14\frac{1}{2}$ enemy planes and damaged six. Maj. George Davis (left), Hale Center, Texas, is leading jet ace of 4th fighter wing with six enemy craft destroyed. Col. Benjamin Preston (center), Hollywood, Fla., group commander, has destroyed three, damaged two, while Maj. Winton Marshall (right, Raleigh, N.C., has destroyed $5\frac{1}{2}$ and damaged four Russian-built fighters. They met here to tally scores.
San Francisco—(U.P.)—An experimental method of stimulating growth of leg bone by inserting a unique electrical "battery" into the bone itself may one day solve the difficult problem of correcting a congenitally short leg in children, a Canadian surgeon reports.
'Battery' Corrects Short Leg Growth
Dr. C. Laird Wilson of McGill University, Montreal, explained the startling new experiment to the clinical congress of the American College of Surgeons.
To produce increased growth, Dr. Wilson said, he inserted twisted wires of nickel and of constantan (an alloy of nickel and copper used to create electrical resistance) into a hole drilled in the shaft of the skin bone next to the epiphysis, the end-most piece of bone which demarks the growing line.
Tuesday, Jan. 8, 1952
In the case of one child, he said, the affected leg grew half an inch in six months, or 100 per cent more than the normal leg. The child experienced no infection, pain or limping as the result of the operation.
KU center Clyde Lovellette scored 548 of the Jayhawkers' 1,331 points last year.
Aviation
W. R. CUSTER, president of Custer Channel Wing corporation, Hagerstown, Md., stands beside his invention, a channel wing plane which was demonstrated in Pittsburgh. Custer says his plane can take off in a few feet, rise vertically, hover in the air, land vertically and attain speeds of conventional aircraft. He claims that jet planes with the wing will be able to take off from a battleship.
Rich Middle East Oil Fields Found By French Geologist
Paris—(U,P)—Vast oil deposits have$ been discovered hidden beneath the barren, volcanic Harran plateau, between Syria and Turkey.
If exploited, they might greatly influence the strategic and economic position of the Middle East.
For years, no one suspected the desolate plateau in high Mesopotamia was anything but useless stone and sand. Oil prospectors used to detour around it on their way to the rich oil country of Saudi Arabia and Iran, farther to the south and east.
Today it seems they were bypassing riches which might set off fresh flows of oil in the two Middle Eastern countries and flows of dollars into their government coffers.
The oil resources, locked in the Harran desert, may run to millions of barrels, informed sources here said.
A great advantage for any future exploitation is their geographical location. The future wells would be only a few dozen miles off the nearest Mediterranean port, eliminating the need for extensive pipelines.
The discovery was made by Jean Mercier, a noted French geologist just back in Paris from an extensive geological survey of the Middle East. He announced it in a report to the French Academy of Sciences.
Mercier, who has been tramping the Middle Eastern deserts for months, traced the deposits through Utah and across the Syrian and Turkish borders.
CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY
Mercier said his soil survey led him to the intriguing discovery of chains of "mud volcanoes," small moulds of volcanic stones and earth between 150 and 900 feet in circumference and 20 to 200 feet high. The earth and stones, when ground, gave out a strong oil odor.
"These volcanoes are an unmistakable sign of important oil resources, since they can be found in all tropical and sub-tropical oil areas.' Mercier reported.
(Nationally Accredited)
(Annually serving a splendid profession)
(Nationally Accredited)
REGISTRATION February 25.
Students are granted professional recognition by the U.S.
Defense and Selective Service.
Doctor of Optometry degree in three years for students entering with sixty or more semester credits in specified Liberal Arts courses.
Excellent clinical facilities. Athletic and recreational activities. Dormitories on the campus.
Man
CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY
1845-H Larrabe Street
Chicago 14, Illinois
In the Urfa district alone, Mercier said, he has mapped 145 such volcanoes over an area 22 miles wide and 70 miles long. They are an outward sign of oil resources, formed by pressure of oil gases pushing against the earth crust, he wrote.
Subway Aids Boston Airport
Boston—(U,P)—Boston has the most accessible airport of any metropolis in the nation, a subway extension, which cost $17,000,000, provides rapid transit service to Logan airport and brings that field within 10 minutes of downtown Boston.
Your
Plymouth
. . . has a used car priced for you.
Buddy
GALLAGHER
634 Mass. Ph. 1000
Travel Service
THE
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
TRAVEL AGENCY
Tel. 30 8th & Mass.
JET DESIGNERS
D
use the New
-the Absolutely Uniform DRAWING PENCIL
MICROTOMIC
**nonsuit uniformity means drawings without**
*weak spots* clean, *cleanlieface*. Digness for smooth, long-wearing leads. Easy distance
for standing on one foot on 3 sides of pencil. At your campus店
EBERHARD FABER
TRADE MARKS REG. U.S. PAY, OPP.
DINNERS
For Every Taste
SEA FOODS STEAKS FRIED CHICKEN
Open From 11 a.m. To Midnight
Enjoy a
Dinner
Tonight At
DUCK'S Sea Food CAFE 824 Vt.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Jan. 8, 1952
Take Grooming Precautions Before Final Week Gets Here
Bv KATRINA SWARTZ
With final week just around the corner and cold winds and snow taking the oil out of skin and hair, no one should neglect necessary beauty hores.
Only a select few live up to New Year's resolutions during the year, but if we make an effort to do our best, at least we will be aware from time to time that we are breaking a beauty rule when we slip up on our rooming rituals.
Here are some reminders so that you will not have to start from scratch after the rigors of exams and winter sports. Put the list under your vanity table glass where it will be within eye shot often.
1. Inspect your finger nails every day. Do they need new polish? Are they chipped or peeling?
2. Do you need a shampoo?
Don't let it go another day. If you have a cold or just can't get around
o the real thing, use a dry shampoo
o clean your hair and keep it looking neat.
3. Is your makeup right for you?
Never use any that does not flatter
you, if it doesn't what is the point?
4. Inspect your shoes each week Saturday morning is a good time Polish them for the following week. If you need repairs or heel lifts get them to the shoemaker.
5. If clothes need cleaning, don't make them do another week. It is hard on the clothing and it is hard on your morale.
6. A daily bath or shower will start you off feeling fine. When studying is taking most of your time, a morning bath will help you start another day feeling great again.
7. Avoid the bushy brow look by keeping eyebrows plucked.
8. Watch your weight. If you are tempted into a session of fattening foods and can't resist, make a point of eating less than usual the next day. Remember this, it is easier to take care of your weight as you go along. Correcting is painful and unnecessary.
Joan Stewart, Gamma Phi Beta,
Pittsburgh - Richard Comstock, Delta
Tau Delta, attended University and
is now at Annapolis.
Marinae Voiland, Gamma Phi Beta, Topeka - Ted McDonald, Kappa Sigma, Enterprise.
Campus Pinnings
Joyce Ristine, Gamma Phi Beta, Maple Falls, Wash. - George Rosser, Phi Sigma Kappa, Bellingham, Wash., attends Washington State university.
Shirley Broady, Gamma Phi Beta,
Schenectady, N. Y.- Richard Spiedel,
Phi Delta Theta, Troy, N. Y.
attends Union college.
Clodfelter Named President
Louise Swigart, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kansas City, Mo. - Heywood Davis, Phi Gamma Delta, Kansas City, Mo.
Dr. Harve M. Clodfelter, '30, this week became president of the Ohio State Medical association. Dr. Clodfelter is a brother of Miss Mildred Clodfelter of the Alumni association office, and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Scott Clodfelter, 945 Illinois street.
Hasek-MacLaughlin Engagement Told
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin A. Hasek, Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Anne Elizabeth to William Henry MacLaughlin Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. William Henry MacLaughlin.
Miss Hasek is a graduate of Bennett Junior college and attended the Neighborhood Playhouse in New York City.
Mr. MacLaughlin is a College senior at the University. He also attended the university of Pennsylvania where he was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity.
Phillabaum-Gugler Engagement Told
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence H. Phillabaum, Aurora, Ill, announce the engagement of their daughter, Donna Jeanne to Clark L. Gugler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Gugler, Woodbine.
Miss Phillibaum is a fine arts sophomore. Mr. Gugler was graduated from the University in 1951. He is employed in Kingsport, Tenn.
Miller-Lowder Engagement Told
Mr. and Mrs. Loren Miller, Mt'ernon, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Arlene, to ee Lowder Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. ee Lowder Sr., Allen.
Low TV Necklines Are On Their Way Up
Mr. Lowder is a business junior at the University and a member of delta Tau Delta social fraternity.
Miss Miller is a sophomore at Emoria State college and is a member! Alpha Sigma Alpha social sorority.
Washington — (U,P) — The television board of the National Association of Radio and Television Broadcasters has given final approval to a code of self-regulations designed to raise necklines and eliminate obscenity and profane language.
The code, effective March 1, applies to 72 TV stations and two networks which are members of the association. The other 36 TV stations and two networks are free to adopt the new code if they wish.
The code provides that costumes stay within the bounds of propriety and "avoid such exposures or emphasis on anatomical detail as would embarrass or offend home viewers"
As examples of outlawed smutty or vulgar language, the code bans
In addition, the code specifies that movements of dancers and actors shall be within the bounds of decency, and "liewdness and impropriety shall not be suggested in the positions assumed."
such words as "broad" or "bat" to describe a woman, or "tom cat," a man.
The code also limits the length and use of commercials.
Telecasters who abide by the new code will be allowed to display a special emblem. If they violate the regulations, they will lose the privilege.
Code violations will be handled by a special review board, but final decisions will rest with the association's television board.
Abbott And Costello Movies Like A Madhouse, Actor Says
Hollywood—(U.P.)—When someone asked Tom Ewell what it was like to make a movie with Abbott and Costello, he was not lost for an answer:
"I was in a madhouse in Wisconsin once for a visit. It's something like that."
Ewell normally is a Broadway actor who comes to Hollywood only or occasional special assignments.
his latest suit was Win About all and nostelle in Universal-International's cost in Alaska." He said it was like taking into a different world.
"In the first place, doing dialogue
with those two wild men is like getting hit with a buzz saw," he said. "I'm sure there must be two scripts on this picture, one for Abbott and Costello and another for the rest of the cast. In rehearsal I get the lines just as they are written, but comes the take and I'm the victim of the surprise ad lib."
He said the boys couldn't be more thoughtful of their fellow-actors,
1950
FOLLOWING A CUSTOM which originated in High Wycombe, England, in 1066, the newly elected mayor of Minneapolis, Minn., Eric C. Hoyer, is weighed in before taking office. He will be weighed again when his term is up, and if it is found that he has grown fat, it will generally be believed that he has grown wealthy, thereby jeopardizing his chances for re-election. Actual weighing was done with scales flown in from High Wycombe.
however. They came to him when "Lost in Alaska" started and told him to do anything that came into his head. The only trouble was that they knocked everything out of his head with their own anties.
Ewell said that after four weeks on this picture he will be glad to go back to Broadway to a nice, quiet melodrama where all he has to worry about is losing the girl in the second act and dodging bullets in the third.
"They know every piece of business that has been used for laughs since the days of Tony Pastor, Ewell said. "I'm sure they use every bit in every picture."
Phog Allen has coached basketball at Baker university, Haskell Indian institute and Warrensburg Teachers college.
He said this sort of a life is a liberal education for anyone who has the strength to stand up under it.
EYE
YOUR EYES
EYE
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 425 1025 M
Kappa Alpha Psi Installs Senior
Benjamin Holman, journalism senior, was installed as president of Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity Monday night.
Other officers are Freddie Anderson, fine arts sophomore, vice-president; Adolphus Toliver, College sophomore, secretary; Solomon Pleasant, College junior, treasurer; Harold Piper, graduate, steward; Cornelius Reed, College junior, sergeant-at-arms, and Thomas Fox, pharmacy senior, dean of pledges.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Motor, bicycle, rail, floatab and study tours for students and teachers from $500 (60 days). Year round Economy Tours by student with no deposit. STAY FOR SPEND LESS ON A SITA TOUR 19th year!
SEE "UNSPOILED" EUROPE
SITA Students International Travel Association WRITE OR PHONE FOR FREE FOLDER PHONE 3661 "your midwest SITA representative"
DOWNS Travel Service Lawrence, Kens
CAMERA MONKEY
Picture the fun . . .
you could have with a camera . . . come in and let us help you select a camera . . . at a price suitable to YOU . . .
Convenient Payment Plan
MOSSER WOLF
MOSSER WOLF
24 Hour Photo-finishing
Official Bulletin
Deutscher Verein, Zusammengunft,
Donnerstag, 5 p.m. Fraser 102
Psychology club, 7.30 p.m. Thursday, 9 Strong.Movie,"The Silent One" last meeting of semester.
Home Ec club, 7:15 p.m. Thursday, 110 Fraser, will work on Red Cross layettes.
New entrance to parking Zone H, back of Strong, is located east of Snow hall. Park on the left side of the street only, with the exception of the area between Strong and the Chemistry building where cars are to be angle parked in two rows facing southeast.
Alpha Phi Omega, 7 tonight, English room, Union.
The following are to attend Student Court in the court room of Green hall, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.: Dont T. Mettler, Ronald M. Waller, Guelford W. Moore, Kenneth W. Philo, Marvin S. Liggett, Truman D. Francis, Kenneth L. Hoffman, Carl W. Kruse, Paul W. Zickefoose, Ruth Smitherman, Donald W. Smitherman, Erwin David and Gene E. Davidson.
ASTE 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Fowler Shops, Election and installation of officers. Movie and refreshments, Visitors welcome.
CQ code practice, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, E.E. lab.
Chess club, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday, Pine room, Union. Trophies to be given tournament winners.
QST KU amateur radio club, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, E.E. lab.
Women's Rifle club, 7:30 tonight,
Rifle Range Military Science building.
New members urged to attend.
QST KU amateur radio club, 7:30
Quill club, 4 today, East room, Union.
AFROTC, Rifle club, 1915 tonight.
Please be prompt.
Effective Thursday, January 10, campus police will issue tickets for violation of the one-way traffic flow on Poplar Lane and of parking rules in Zone II. The flow of traffic is to be west to east. Parking is on the left side of the street except for the angle-parking area between Strong and Bailey.
Jay Jones, 5 p.m. Wednesday, Pine room, Union.
Tau Sigma, 7:15 tonight, Robinsor gym.
KuKu's, Jay James, Red Peppers and Froshawks please pick up K-State tickets at Athletic ticket office before Wednesday noon.
Kuku meeting, 7:15 p.m. Thursday, very important.
No SRC meeting today
KARLOS
Smith-Corona
World's Fastest
Portable Typewriters
Smith-Corona World's Fastest Portable Typewriters
They're hard to get but we've got 'em!
Demand for these Smith-Coronas is high—they're the fastest and most popular portables ever built. But we now have a few for immediate delivery,38 features plus full-size professional keyboard. Come in now-first come,first served!
STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE
Page 7
Fields Cites Political Apathy
The meager activity of the citizen in the political realm was cited Sunday by J. Eldon Fields, associate professor of political science, in a talk over KLWN.
A survey of the cross-section of the public shows, Dr. Fields said, that nearly three-fourths of the adult population show a lack of participation in the political process.
"The major areas of personal success and expression in this country are outside the area of the political," he declared. "This holdover attitude on the non-essential character of political activity is carried over to the schools," often a place of preparation for future jobs and not for citizenship.
Dr. Fields said that there is a growing recognition in the social sciences, and today many students should learn how to participate in their community life.
His talk entitled, "General Education and the Citizen," was heard on the Sociology on the Air program sponsored by the department of sociology and anthropology.
Dr. Frank C. Fowler, chemical engineer from Kansas City, will be the speaker for the January meeting of the University of Kansas section of the American Chemical society.
Chemical Society To Hear Engineer
Dr. Fowler will speak on "Retrograde Condensation, or Phase Behavior of Hydrocarbon Systems" at 7:30 p.m.today in Bailey Chemical laboratories.
Before coming to Kansas City Dr.
Fowler was a full professor at the
Students passing the business office in Strong hall, might get the impression that it is moving out, but it's just a long awaited remodeling job.
Business Office Gets Face Lifting
Senior To Paint Large Union Mural
As winner of the contest, he will be commissioned to paint a mural 46 feet long and 56 inches high, by far the most ambitious one ever attempted here by a University student.
R. H. Wagstaff of the department of building and grounds, said that the floor of the office is being refinished and the inside is to be remodeled. Business will continue as usual.
Non-Stop Highway Planned From Atlantic To Chicago
Harry Crain, fine arts senior, has won first place among 40 entries in the Kansas Memorial Union mural competition.
Of the two other states that are planning the pay-as-you-drive highways, Ohio appears to be nearest construction. However, the state's turnip commission is still trying to get a 75,000-ton steel allocation from the federal government and the exact plan for tundra-raising has not been disclosed. The first steel request was turned down by defense Production Administration—a decision which the commission is appealing.
The final section of the eastwest super-road in Pennsylvania is still on the designing boards. It is expected to connect the present eastern terminus, 12 miles from Philadelphia, with the New Jersey turnipvia a new bridge at Morrisville—on the Delaware.
Several Ohio communities have let it be known that they will challenge the commission's right to route the Ohio toll road through their suburbs, among them Cleveland and Toledo.
Tuesday, Jan. 8, 1952 University Daily Kansan
The murat is to be for the Trail room, or what has been the fountain and grill on the basement floor of the Union building. Crain's winning design shows the various means of conveyance used on the historic Kan-sas trails with the head of Coronado shown in a mass of clouds in the distant sky.
Indiana authorities have started a court case to test constitutionality of the enabling legislation for the toll road the state has in the planning stage. Ohio courts upheld the legality of the Ohio law which was the model for the Indiana statute.
Since the south wall of the Trail room isn't ready for painting, Crain will paint the mural on canvas, which later will be cemented to the Trail room wall.
Almost 500 miles of state turnpikes in Pennsylvania and New Jersey will be open to traffic early this year, with plans for another 500 miles of similar super-roals well under way in Ohio and Indiana.
University of Oklahoma for four years. He previously was with the Phillips Petroleum company. He holds the B.S. degree from the University of Illinois and the Ph.D. from the University of Michigan.
Harrisburg, Pa.—U.P.) Within the next few years motorists may be able to travel almost 1,000 non-stop miles on a concrete, four-lane concrete ribbon stretching from the east coast to Chicago.
Pennsylvania, which opened the first turnipke in the country in 1940, now has a 327-mile toll highway stretching east and west from a point near Philadelphia to the Ohio-Pennsylvania line. The original Pennsylvania toll road — a "guinea pig" for the others — was 160 miles long. The latest section, a 67-mile stretch from Pittsburgh to the Ohio boundary, was dedicated in late November.
Earlier in the month New Jersey cut the tape on the first 60-mile section of its new 118-mile "dream road" which will run from the Washington Bridge at Fort Lee in the north to the new Delaware River Bridge connecting New Jersey-Pennsylvania at Deepwater, N. J. in the south.
Tentative plans for the Indiana super-highway to be built across the northern part of the state to link with the Ohio road in the east and the tri-state highway in Hammond, Ind., in the west. The latter is a free highway running direct to downtown Chicago.
--with
STARTS
TODAY
CARGO...THAT
BLASTS THE SEA
WIDE OPEN
DANA ANDREWS
CARLA BAENDA
CLAUDE RAINS
SEALED
CARGO
Added: "Battle of Bulge"
Two's A Crowd and News
STARTS FRIDAY FOR 1-BIG WEEK
James Best — John Hudson
"The CIMARRON KID"
color by TECHNICOLOR
Starring
AUDIE MURPHY-YVETTE DUGAY
- Coming Soon -
"The Lavender Hill Mob"
New PATEE PHONE 321
Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone K.U.376
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Fives
dive
Phone R.N.578
Classified Advertising Rates
25 words or less ... 50c
Additional words ___ 1c
75c $1.00
2c 3c
Additional Work:
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. (excuse daily business). Journal Daily Kansan Business office, Journal bldg., not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date.
TRANSPORTATION
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether for business or other purposes. Phone Mrs. Lois Odafter, 610-5355, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass.
BUSINESS SERVICE
Ask us about family rates, sky coach, and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book a holiday camp this summer. Call Mass. Gosseman at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30-756-1280.
TYPING of all kinds done promptly and accurately. Mrs. Merritt, KU 296 16
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biolog- and miscellaneous. Mr. J Roscoe, 838 Apt. 4, upstairs. 3775J after p. 4 mpn. 2-7
TYPING: Themes, term papers, these-
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs.
Stanley, 1859J, or bring to @17 Rhode
Island. tf
TYPING—Theses, term papers, matchbooks, letters, etc. Prompt and accurate service. Mrs. Hall. 1344W. 506 West Sixth. tf
TYPEING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these types typing Mrs. Shields, 1299 Ohio. Prf 1601.
Woman Grateful For Help
Gainesville, Fla.—(U.P.)—A freshly-baked pie and a nickel for a cup of coffee were delivered to the police station here by a thankful woman to express her appreciation for a policeman's helping hand when she became ill downtown.
ALL THE WIDE WONDER OF THE HIGH SIERRA IN COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR
Ten Thousand Feet Above The Sea Owen Merritt Fought The Fight That Had to Come!
RANDOLPH SCOTT
MAN IN THE SADDLE
CLUB BY TECHNICOLOR
A COLUMBIA PICTURE
with JOAN LESLIE · ELLEN DREW · ALEXANDER KNOX
HEAR TENNESSEE ERNIE SING MAN IN THE SADDLE'
-ADDED
Late News Events Color Cartoon "Leghorn Swagged"
Prevue Saturday Night
Box-Office Open
11:15 p.m.
SUNDAY
Comfort! Convenience!
JAYHAWER
NEW Pork Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ments are the easiest fast, efficient service. Bowman Vermo and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermo Free pickup and delivery. tf
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastry.
Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m.
until midnight. ff
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 stenic cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. tf
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malts, home-made pies and air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. till midnight. Crystal Café, 699 Vista.
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet store. Our Gift Shop has our one-stop pet shop but everything fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Conn. Phone 418. **tf**
FOR SALE
MUST SACRIFICE! Graduating senior must part with top shape 1946 Indian motorcycle. Yours for only $175.00. Call broke Dick Brecko at 1922.
MECHANICS DELIGHT. Cail 5Plymouth
CALL FOR BILLS. Cail 603714 M
see any numbers 6038 Elm
Schaum's "OUTLINE OF COLLEGE PHYSICS" and "OUTLINE OF COLLEGE CHEMISTRY" are here now! These books will give you the help you want in making an "A." See them at your Student Union Book Store. 11
NEW AND ATTRACTIVE STATIONERY for residents of Corbin and North College Halls. Forty-eight sheets and twenty-four envelopes in each box for only 98c. Get yours today at the Student Union Book Store. 1
Comfort! Convenience!
JAXHAWER
NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
Phone 10 For Sho Time
-NOW-
BOB HOPE
HEDY LAMARR
"My Favorite
Spy"
Late News - Cartoon
1234567890
VARSITY
THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
Last Times Tonite
Open 6:45 p.m.
"WHIRLWIND"
"CRIMINAL LAWYER"
WED. - THURS.
ADM. 14c - 50c
DORIS GORDON
DAY MACRAE
WARNER BROS. "On"
Moonlight Bay COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR
Co-Feature
THE BOGART
SUSPENSE PICTURE
WITH THE SURPRISE
FINISH!
PATRICK WILSON
COLUMBIA PICTURES
Humphrey BOGART In A Lonely Place
GLORIA GRAHAME
Frank LEVENY - Cedar Bell BROTHERS - Art SMITH - Helff DORNELLE
Martha STEMMA - Screenwriter by Andrew Sole - A Rant Production
produced by ROBERT LORD - Director by NICHOLAS RAY
SET OF FIRST FLIGHT custom bus
to AT 120 LOUISIANA or call 383R EWERS.
Plus: Candid Mike
NEW SHIPMENT OF POCKET BOOKS
Student Union Book Store.
Student Union Book Store.
DRAFTSMEN AND ARTISTS! Pelica Graphos instruments are here. For drawing, lettering, and sketching, Go yours from the large selection now available at the Student Union Book Store. 1
LOST
TRAILER HOUSE: 1947, 1947; in goc-
condition; semi - permanently located
in the school. Mail student wishes to sell before 19ti
929 Connecticut, Phone 25683. 1
FOR RENT
SILVER. French brocade evening bas lost Saturday, Dec. 15. Reward will b given. Phone DeNean Ankerholz, 3735
DOUBLE ROOM vacant for one student Has sleeping porch, $12 a month. Cal 495, 1222 Miss. t
FOR SECOND SEMESTER large we furnished room in quiet home to youn man student. No smoking $20 a month convenient to RU and downtown. Pho 127.
RENT A TYPEWRITER and start the new year with higher grades. Only $1.00 for one. $3.50 per month for portable and desktop machines. Student Unit Book Store. 1
FOUND
MAN'S WRIST WATCH before Christmas vacation. Call Gerry O'Connell, 366.
NOW!
Laughs! Laughs! Laughs!
You'll be 'thataway' about Callaway!
Fred MacMURRAY
Dorothy McGUIRE
Howard KEEL
MGM'S CALLAWAY
WENT THATAWAY
Features Tonite: 7:39-9:39
ADDED "Football Highlights Of 1951" Movietone News
Starts Thursday
TEEN-AGE GIRL... WITH AGE IDEAS
THE FILMAKERS present
On the Loose
starring
JOAN EVANS
MELVYN DOUGLAS
LYNN BARI
Granada
PRONE 946
A 8
Granada PHONE 94.6
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 8, 1952
Machine Designed By KU Professor Does Double Duty With Sun Rays
By JERRY RENNER
The heliodon is a machine architects use to trace the pattern of sunlight through a house from sunrise to sunset in a matter of seconds.
Prof. George Beal, head of the department of architecture, designed an inside-outside heliodon in 1939 which enables one to see, simultaneously, the rays of the sun on the outside of the house as they travel over the roof and the sunlight paths inside the house.
"The machine can be set for any latitude within 2 degrees from the north to the south pole." Professor Beal said. "It can be set for a specific hour any day or any month.
"One can contrast the amount of light in a building and the angle of the sun overhead at 11 o'clock on the morning of May 22 in Nome, Alaska with the same time of the same day in Miami, Fla." he said.
This enables an architect to see the difference in latitude which must be accounted for in designing a building.
the architecture department is one of the 38 out of a total of 75 in the country which is accredited," Professor Beal said.
be enlisted By designing a model and placing it on the heliodon, light aspects can be carefully checked.
An architecture student begins his training with a study of the wide open spaces and a structure, maybe a house. He next learns how to orient that house for the best weather and light conditions.
THE RESPONSE TO THE NEW REFERENCE IN THE USE OF HYDROGEN-CHROMATOSIS METHODS IN SOLID WATER IS GRANTED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF METALLURGY AND ENGINEERING, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BARRIE, CA.
In his advanced years he learns of the human space requirements within this building, the mechanical furnishings and ornamentation which involves the art and sculpture of his early semesters.
He learns about the different types of structures and is familiarized with the strength and types of materials that go into a particular building.
The staff members of the department designed North College hall and drew up the plans for the remodeling of the University's radio studios. They participated in the renovation of Fraser and Green halls.
I will do it.
GEORGE M. BEAL, professor of architecture (right), and Robert Stearns, engineering senior, discuss lighting effects as they observe the heliodon. The heliodon is a sun machine used in studying the problems of orientation of a building as a whole with natural light, and was designed by Professor Beal.
Modest Senators Pop Buttons Giving Stories For Directory
Washington—(U.P.)—This is the season when our lawmakers have a chance to pop their vest-buttons by writing their autobiographies in the Congressional directory. ◇
Examination Schedule Fall Semester, 1951
Thursday, January 17, 1952, to Thursday, January 24, 1952, inclusive.
Classes meeting at:
Will be examined at:
Classes meeting at: Will be examined at:
8 A.M., M W F sequence* ... 10:00-11:50 Monday January 21
8 A.M., T T S sequence** ... 8:00-9:50 Wednesday January 23
9 A.M., M W F sequence* ... 10:00-11:50 Friday January 18
9 A.M., T T S sequence ** ... 1:30-3:20 Thursday January 17
10 A.M., M W F sequence* ... 10:00-11:50 Saturday January 19
10 A.M., T T S sequence** ... 3:30-5:20 Thursday January 17
11 A.M., M W F sequence* ... 8:00-9:50 Thursday January 24
11 A.M., T T S sequence** ... 3:30-5:20 Friday January 18
12 Noon, M W F sequence* ... 3:30-5:20 Thursday January 24
1 P.M., M W F sequence* ... 10:00-11:50 Wednesday January 23
1 P.M., T T S sequence** ... 1:30-3:20 Monday January 21
2 P.M., M W F sequence* ... 10:00-11:50 Tuesday January 22
2 P.M., T T S sequence** ... 1:30-3:20 Wednesday January 23
3 P.M., M W F sequence* ... 1:30-3:20 Tuesday January 22
3 P.M., T T S sequence** ... 3:30-5:20 Wednesday January 23
4 P.M., M W F sequence* ... 10:00-11:50 Thursday January 24
4 P.M., T T S sequence** ... 1:30-3:20 Thursday January 24
4 P.M., T T S sequence** ... 1:30-3:20 Thursday January 24
French 1
French 2
German 1
German 2
Spanish 1
Spanish 2
(All Sections) ... 8:00- 9:50 Saturday January 19
General Biology Zoology 2 Physiology 2 } (All Sections) ... 1:30- 3:20 Friday January 18
Chemistry 2, 2E, 3, 3E, 48 (All Sections) 8:00 - 9:50 Monday January 21
Physics 5 and 6 (All Sections) 8:00 - 9:50 Friday January 21
Psychology 1 & 1a (All Sections) 8:00 - 9:50 Tuesday January 22
Economics 9 & 10 (Acctg. I & II) 3:30 - 5:20 Monday January 21
Upsurge in Asia 3:30 - 5:20 Tuesday January 22
- The one asterisk after the Monday, Wednesday and Friday sequences indicate that three and four hour classes which hold classes on some or all of those days are to take their finals also at that time scheduled for the three hour course. Two asterisks after the Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday sequences indicate that two and one hour classes meeting Tuesday, Thursday or Saturday also are to take their examinations at the time scheduled for the three hour course.
The newest directory is a who's who of the second session of the 82nd Congress.
Our leader, Mr. H.S.T., for example writes his life history in 19 lines, winding up with "local residence, Independence, Mo." He doesn't mention a word about being a mother and a father, and as a kid, he "piled a straight furrow" through the rich loam in Barton county, Mo.
The biggest men in the land must tighten up in front of a writing machine, for mostly they are pretty modest.
Another among the shy is Democratic Sen. Blair Moody. He was appointed by the governor of Michigan to succeed the late Arthur Vandenberg.
On the "hill" they call him the "ink-propelled" senator because he was a working newsman before he fell heir to one of the 96 leather chairs on the floor of the Senate. In his biog he forgets all that; also that his colleagues on the Detroit News presented him with a miniature pair of roller skates, indicating that here was a man who never wastes much time getting from one place to another.
A couple of the congressmen were so modest that they cut their life histories to one line. Like:
"Fred L. Crawford, Republican, Saginaw, Mich."
"Dewey Short, Republican, Galena, Mo."
C. W. Bishop of Illinois mentions the fact that back home in Carterville he learned how to sew on buttons and tailor a suit. But he fails to learn how to sew clothes that he keeps a sewing kit handy in his office in the house office building.
It is not unusual for him to drop weightier matters and do a job of hestitching on a torn skirt or blouse for one of his secretaries.
News Roundup
Bridges Succeeds Wherry As Senate GOP Leader
Washington—(U.P.)—Sen. Styles Bridges (R.-N.H.) today was elected Senate Republican leader by a 26-15 vote to succeed the late Sen. Kenneth S. Wherry (R.-Neb.)
Bridges defeated Sen. Leverett Saltonstall (R.-Mass.) who was returned to his post as party whip.
Bridges, 53, has been serving in the Senate continuously since early 1937 and is the top ranking Republican in seniority.
GOP Senator Claims'Ike' Conservative
Washington—(U.P.)A key figure in the drive to place General Dwight D. Eisenhower in the White House described the general today as a "Conservative" who follows the Republican line.
"He thinks like the rest of us Kansas Republicans think," U. S. Sen. Frank Carlson told William P. Helm, Washington correspondent of the Wichita (Kan.) Eagle, in a special interview.
Carlson said Kansas' 22 votes would be cast "solidly" for Eisenhower at the Chicago Republican national convention in July, "though there are some in Kansas who favor Sen. Robert Taft for the nomination."
Maritime Board Has'Excessive' Subsidies
Washington—(U.P.)—Congressional investigators today accused the Maritime board of "dragging its feet" more than two years in cutting millions from "excessive" subsidies for passenger liners.
A subcommittee said 26 months ago that at least $25,000,000 in subsidies for six ships were "excessive" and ordered the board to readjust its figures. The subsidies were blamed on irregular procedures, bad arithmetic and over-liberal interpretations of the law.
RFC Director Pledges 'Full Disclosures'
Washington—(U.P.)—Harry A. McDonald, new administrator of the Reconstruction Finance Corp., today pledged a program of "full disclosure" in the huge government lending agency.
McDonald, now chairman of the Securities and Exchange commission, was named by President Truman late Monday to succeed W. Stuart Symington as RFC head Jan. 15.
Symington said in his letter of resignation that the RFC is "in good shape."
The President accepted Symington's resignation "with utmost reluctance" and told him "it is a great satisfaction to me to have your assurance that the agency is in good shape and functioning properly."
If 'Ike' Runs -- He Loses Army Salary
Washington—(U.P.)—Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower would have to retire or resign his five-star general's commission if he takes an active part in the campaign to nominate him as Republican presidential candidate.
A five-star general draws the same pay, $18.761 a year, whether on active duty or retired. But he gives up all Army pay if he resigns.
M-160
SEQUENCE SHOWS LANDING of jet pilot Robert Lawrence on flight deck of carrier Bon Homme Richard after landing wheel was damaged by Communist flak. His radio was out of commission and he came in on hand signals. At top, he touches deck with one wheel and nose wheel. In center, hook engages arresting wire and left wing dips. At bottom, he is safe and sound at stop.
UNIVERSITY DAILY
Kansas State Historical Society
49th Year No.73
Topeka, Ks.
Wednesday, Jan. 9, 1952
Still Need More Blood Donations
hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
With 265 pints of blood already donated by 10:30 this morning, donors were still needed to fill Thursday and Friday bloodmobile
Fieldhouse Delay Unnecessary-Phog
A charge that there has been unnecessary delay in the construction of the new University fieldhouse was reiterated today by Dr. Forrest C. "Phog" Allen, head basketball coach.
"I told the Topeka Lions club yesterday," said Dr. Allen, "that I thought there had been unnecessary delay in the construction of the KU fieldhouse and I still think so. The explanation by the state architect just doesn't make sense."
The reference to the statement by the state architect was in regard to an answer made by Charles Marshall on the cause of the slowness of the construction of the million-dollar building. Marshall said the delay could not be avoided.
Dr. Allen began his charges by admitting that this was the same contractor who did the job at K-State but contended that this is just another sign that something is wrong.
"The construction contract is held by the Bennett Construction company of Topeka," he explained, "the same firm that built the excellent fieldhouse at Kansas State college. The building and other essential materials are not immediately available. That is nobody's fault in a war crisis."
"This is the same contractor who built the fieldhouse down at Kansas State University, and that he is showing the same enthusiasm for us that he showed for them."
Dr. Allen stated that although the contract for the fieldhouse was let go, construction was to begin immediately with knowledge nothing was done until fall.
"This delay is blamed on a lack of steel but this just isn't so. We had the steel and then we lost it. If the contractor had been alert this wouldn't have happened. It couldn't have been taken away if the wont be locked up because the building is both an armory and a fieldhouse. But because there was no progress it was allotted elsewhere."
In his reply, Marshall said the work is moving along rapidly and that he wondered about the basis for Dr. Allen's remarks. Workmen had not seen that they had never seen the coach at the site of the construction.
"When the K-State fieldhouse was going up, Jack Gardner, K-State basketball coach, went nearly every day to see how things were going," Marshall said.
The state architect said nearly half of the 900 pilings for the building have been driven and work on the rest is moving along. Steel to bring the structure to grade level is at the site and will be installed as fast as footings are completed, he said.
However, he added that steel for
Lab Theater Play Schedule Changed
The Lab theater production,
"The Marriage of Sobeide," will be presented at 8 p.m. Monday, Jan. 14, and Tuesday, Jan. 15, in the Little Theater of Green hall instead of Wednesday through Saturday of this week as previously scheduled.
The change was made because of the Thursday and Friday performances of the Black Hills Passion play, according to Frances Feist instructor in speech.
The play will be staged two nights instead of four due to final examinations which begin Thursday, Jan. 17, she said.
the superstructure is not available because of shortages caused by the defense program. Every effort is being made to obtain the necessary steel to complete the building.
SOLIDARITY
RAY HOWER, business senior, was one of the first in line Tuesday afternoon as scores of University students answered the American Red Cross appeal for blood. The donations are needed for the fighting men in Korea. Mary Brockman, Red Cross worker from Kansas City, Mo., is shown attaching equipment for the measuring of Hower's blood pressure.-Kansan photo by Don Sarten.
Kansas Weather Fooled Old Timers When It Went Cold And Wet In '51
Weather in the Lawrence area in the past year had the oldtimers shaking heads in both disbelief and wonderment as Kansas, generally "hot and dry," went "cold and wet."
Only two years are known to have been colder than 1951. The past year had a mean average temperature of $3.50$, which was described as "209 below normal." It was the
Statistics released by C. J. Posey, a professor of meteorology at the university who retired in 1947 revealed that records were nearly set for yearly averages of both cold and rainy days.
"Winter days" were classified by the retired professor as "below freezing temperature days." The consecutive days were from Dec. 13, to 27, inclusive.
Professor Posey, who has been the unofficial Lawrence weather observer since 1920, and is in possession of records on weather antics dating back to 1868, said that "the miserable year was climaxed by 17 'winter' days—15 of which occurred in succession."
"The average for a year doesn't vary much," Mr. Posey explained.
"Compare our coldest average of 50.01 in 1869 with the warmest average on record, 1934, when we had a high of 59.15, and you'll see what I mean."
It was the second rainiest year on record. A precipitation measurement of 50.76, was 14.31 above a normal year. But this was still shy of a record 51.62 established in 1915.
Breaking down days into "clear, partly cloudy, and cloudy." Professor Posey said that 142 days were clear, 94 partly cloudy, and 129 cloudy, with a percentage of cloudiness for the year set at 48.21. A normal cloudy year averages about 43 per cent, the professor said.
The driest year around Lawrence was in 1937 when 21.59 moisture content was recorded by the local weatherman.
coldest year since 1929, which registered a chilly 53.11. But the coldest year on record was in 1869 and its mean average was 50.51.
Winter Band Concert 'One Of The Best'
One of the best concerts of the season was given Tuesday night by the University Concert band. The performance, the band's annual winter concert, proved why it is at the top among campus music groups each year.
By JIM POWERS
Tommy Lovitt, cornetist, made perhaps the best showing of the three featured soloists, although Robert Ausherman, clarinetist, and James Ralston, baritone vocalist, performed well.
The evening started with Strauss' overture to "Die Fledermaus" and Handel's "Water Music Suite," both played interestingly and in good quality.
Oboist Edith Nichols, fine arts sophomore, turned in another fine performance on the five movements from Handel's suite.
Lovitt played Goldman's Scherzo as though he had written it, mastering the difficult runs with ease.
Ralston sang three numbers from "Oklahoma" and gave notice that he could be with the Rodgers and Hammerstein troupe next year quite capably. He performed the unusual task of playing first trombone in the band when he wasn't singing.
Despite late December snows that have been labeled by many as indicative of a "rough winter ahead," the records reveal that only nine inches of snow fell in the past year. This is nine inches below a normal year's amount of 18 inches.
The highest temperature of 1951 was 100 degrees, recorded on August 6, and it was the only day of the year in which the temperature rose that high. In "1934 or '96, we had 58 days registering 100 degrees or more," the weather observer declared.
Others who deserve mention for
Throughout the program, and especially on Wood's "Virginia, A Southern Rhapsody," Eugene Johnson, flutist, was a standout and the best player in a very good section.
The greatest variation in temperature in one day occurred on the
And the troublesome skips from the low to the high ranges of the clarinet were handled nicely by Ausherman on von Weber's Concerto No. 2, first movement.
contributing much to the program are Dale Moore, bass drum, and Ronald Wigington, tympani.
22nd day of March. That day had a 36 degree "low," and a 77 degree "high."
The band showed up well as a unit on "March Militaire Française" by Saint-Saens and on the last number, finale from Tschalkowsky's Symphony in F minor, 4. which the highlight of the evening to many.
The finale added a rousing climax to the concert in which the musicians had to play for all they were worth.
"Hot" days of "90 degrees or more"
numbered 23, according to the professor's figures. Normally, there are 37 hot days in a year in this area.
There were 124 days of rain measured by the weatherman. "So you can see that it rained on an average of every third day," Professor Posey explained.
And they were worth quite a bit at that.
He's telling us.
One hundred more donors are needed to fill the slack Friday schedule. And a few more are needed for both Thursday morning and afternoon times.
At the end of the first day of blood donations, yesterday, a total of 183 pints had been given. Another 82 pints had been given by 10:30 a.m. today.
The bloodmobile quota for the four-day stay is 600 pints. Lt. Col. Bayard Atwood, project officer for the bloodmobile, and Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of Watkins hospital, said they were sure this morning that the quota would be reached.
The hourly quota for the bloodmobile is 32 pints an hour. Donors were reported making this quota today. One hundred fifty pints a day are needed to fill the four-day quota.
"Donations are running steadily now," Colonel Atwood reported. "We are taking an volunteers from ROTC Earth Day and running them through in a body."
The Red Cross is handling donations under the direction of the United States defense department. All blood collected is being flown, either as liquid or in dry plasma form, to the armed forces.
Colonel Atwood stated that ROTC classes held at noon would be rescheduled since the bloodmobile is in operation during the noon hour.
"Any ROTC men in those classes should check at the Military Science hall to find out the time of rescheduling," he said.
The blood-taking process takes 50 minutes to complete, Red Cross officials said. They also explained that it was a painless process.
German Club To See Films
Two films, "Enjoy your Holidays in Austria," and "Winter Paradise," will be shown at the meeting of the German club at 5 p.m. Thursday in 15 Fraser. The films will have English commentary, and will be open to the public.
Partly cloudy tonight and Thursday, colder tonight, little change in temperature Thursday. Low tonight 15 north to 25 south, high Thursday 30's north to low 40's south.
Black Hills Passion Play Opens Thursday In Hoch
University students and residents of Lawrence will be able to see one of the unique religious presentations in the world Thursday and Friday when the Black Hills Passion play comes to Hoch auditorium.
Matinees, at 2 p.m., and evening performances, at 8 p.m., are set for each day.
KU identification cards will gain admittance for students to the Thursday and Friday matinees. However, since Friday has been set aside for the public school children at a bargain 50-cent rate, KU students will find better seats Thursday and are urged to attend then.
For the two evening performances all tickets will be sold at a scale varying from $1 to $3. Public sale of these seats at full price is necessary to meet the costs of this great production, according to Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University.
Adult tickets may be purchased now at the Chamber of Commerce suite in the WREN building downtown, or at the Hoch auditorium box office preceding each performance.
The Passion play deals principally with the story of the last seven days in the life of James of assizes. A "double" stage, which eliminates scene-change delays, makes possible a 2½-hour presentation time.
Josef Meter heads a cast of more than a hundred in the role of the Christus, which he has played more than 9,000 times in Europe and North America. KU students as extras in the mob scenes and as choristers fill out the cast.
The Black Hills Passion play traces its history to Luenen, Westphalia, Germany. It was there in 1242, monks of the Cappenberg monastery presented what is believed to be the first of several passion plays now in existence.
About 35 students still are needed to serve as scenes actors in teenage roles, and Reba soldier.
Rehearsal for all students and Lawrence residents who wish to be in the drama will be at 7.30 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium. If not enough people volunteer Allen Cohen, a local teacher he might ask everyone in the drama department, including wives and children, to be in the play.
Ticket sales are going slow at present, which is unfortunate, since the presentation of the Passion play by the Black Hills group has received wide acclaim over the nation as a brilliantly done, enjoyable and impressive drama.
Background music from Bach, Handel and others will be provided by a choir of about 20 University students. Actors in the drama number about 25, plus about 70 extras recruited in Lawrence.
Unusual features of the drama are the authentic Biblical costumes, the mammoth scenery and the unusual lighting. It will require all of today to erect the lighting equipment.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 9, 1952
by Bibler
Daily Kansan Editorials
We Want It From The Horse's Mouth
He also made it clear that he won't come back and campaign for the Republican nomination. He won't run unless drafted.
The general is "as much a candidate as he can be under army regulations," Senator Lodge, head of the "Ike for President" move, has said. "He probably will not take an active part in the campaign, or speak out personally, until he has finished his job over there." Ike himself said that "in the absence of a clear-cut call" to political duty he would continue his job in Europe.
The question of the year was answered Monday: General Eisenhower, by his own words, is a Republican.
The American people are left to hope that Ike will make it back from Europe in time to be inaugurated, if he should be elected. The New York Times, Chicago Sun-Times, Life magazine, and a myriad of other publications have come out unqualifiedly for the general. A host of political figures are backing the Ike movement with no questions asked.
Frankly, it looks like they are all buying a pig in a poke. What does Ike stand for? Life magazine calls the fact that his moral, political, national, and international convictions are unknown, a "myth." The editors cite his personal qualifications for the presidency—he is a leader, he is a man of peace who thoroughly understands war, and he has great administrative ability, diplomatic talent, and righteous political principles.
They take the trouble to cull statements from various of his speeches to illuminate his political views, and his course "between the unfettered power of concentrated wealth . . . and the unbridled power of statism or partisan interests."
A call for blood donors has been issued at KU. The Red Cross needs at least 200 volunteers for their visit to the campus which ends Friday. All the blood is earmarked for immediate delivery overseas.
Let's Give Our Blood Today!
It goes without saying that there is an urgent need for the blood. Men are still shooting in Korea, and there are many who have needed transfusions for months on end. The Korean truce talks are no reason to stop the supply of blood and plasma.
Other campuses have staged gigantic parades to make the campaign a success. The University of Texas was given a large spread in the last issue of Life magazine for their efforts to persuade students to donate their blood. They answered a challenge from Oregon State college.
We hope such an effort isn't needed at KU. We hope students will donate, not because of any demonstration, but because they want to and because they feel it is their duty.
The ROTC started the ball rolling and had hoped to be able to fill the campus quota from their ranks alone. When parents refused to fill out necessary blanks, the ROTC was forced to request assistance from the student body. Let's not let them, or our men in Korea, down.
The load must fall upon upperclassmen, since donors must be at least 21 years of age. A few lower classmen are eligible, but the bulk will come from juniors and seniors.
In order to register for the bloodmobile, all you need to do is call Watkins hospital, 890, or the Red Cross,405. A.G.M.
Ike, says Life, is clear and strong for the profit system and is deeply disturbed about levels of taxation. He thinks cradle-to-grave security is an illusory goal. As president of Columbia he would not hire a known Communist but opposed loyalty oaths for teachers.
He believes that the danger to liberty is not only from Communism but from our own "shift-less reliance on bureaucracy and the federal treasury." He can also fight the fast-spending Pentagon, says Life, since he has been chief of staff and knows where the sources of the "militarist infection" lie.
All of this about Eisenhower sounds good. In fact, nothing bad about Eisenhower has ever been said loud enough to be heard. But it also sounds nebulous in the extreme. What this country needs for '52 is not hazy generalities about "middle courses," but a practical plan for government. Could Ike propose such a plan?
If he doesn't come back from Europe, if he really has "no intention of campaigning or in any way attempting to influence the election" in New Hampshire, or of campaigning for the Republican candidacy, should the voters also buy a pig in a poke?
Ike, with all his splendid qualifications for leadership, administration, and diplomacy, owes it to us to come back and say what he stands for now. The guessing game has gone on long enough. His job in Europe is important, but it cannot compare with the job of guiding the United States through the coming perilous years. Ike should come back and pitch in. —A.L.S.
Short Ones
Mrs. George Bernard Shaw's will sets up a trust to teach the Irish "the social graces," giving rise to the thought that from now on Paddy must remove an opponent's hat before cracking his head with a shillelagh.
Someone dynamites a pecan tree in Dallas, and it probably is a good way to crack pecans, but hardly acceptable in the living room.
Churchill says he will not ask for financial aid during his January visit to the United States, and the man who enters a hospital with a broken arm rarely has to say much, either.
A government official reports that the U.S. faces a shortage of brass, to which we reply that the danger can't become severe with General Willoughby still around.
A Topeka business man reports the theft of several suits from his cleaning establishment. He doesn't know whether the theft occurred during the night or day, and isn't sure how many were taken. Otherwise the case is practically solved.
The new 1,100-foot Kaw river bridge connecting Fort Riley and Marshall field was opened recently. Colonel McCormick, not to be outdone, plans to build a bridge spanning the 31 miles from Fort Sheridan to the front door of the Chicago Tribune.
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 Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the Nationa
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 Hadrick
Assistant Adv. Manager Dick Hale
National Adv. Manager Bill Taggart
Circulation Manager Elaine Blaylock
Promotion Manager Ted Barbera
Business Adviser R. W. Doores
Right or wrong?
YOU BE THE JUDGE!
Right or wrong?
YOU BE THE JUDGE!
STEP ON IT!
WE'LL NEVER GET THERE AT THIS RATE!
NOPE----
TOO SLICK
OR
WAIT PATEN!
SLOW DOWN!
WE'LL NEVER GET THERE AT THIS RATE!
NATIONAL SAFETY COUNCIL
STEP ON IT! WELL NEVER GET THERE AT THIS RATE!
NOPE--TOO SLICK
OR
WALT DITEN
SLOW DOWN!
WELL NEVER
GET THERE
AT THIS
RATE!
NATIONAL SAFETY COUNCIL
Little Man On Campus
SPECIAL
FRATERNITY
PINS
A-23
"We're pretty well stocked with 'Phi Urp' pins, Louise. Why don't you start dating boys out of th' 'Sigma Nothin' fraternity from now on?"
Why Do Students Cheat?
The dismissal of five students from Washington university, St. Louis, for breaking into a professor's office and stealing examinations has not brought to any end discussion of the problem.
On the contrary, Student Life, the campus newspaper, is still filled with news, editorials and letters concerned with cheating.
"While cheating has been on the increase here and in other universities," said a Student Life editorial, "... by the looks of things it will no doubt remain with us for some time longer."
"In dismissing these men, the University was, in part, attempting to set an example. It felt justified in perhaps disrupting five lives if such action would deter others from cheating.
"Legally, the expulsion was justified. . Morally, we are not so sure there is justification. . The administration must ask itself two questions:
"Had it created an atmosphere that would cause students not to cheat? . . . Did a situation exist on this campus so that students would not want or need to cheat?"
The newspaper recommended eight "cheating checks." They included, an adequate number of proctors; avoidance of "leaks" before exams are passed out; roomy classrooms, so students can sit in alternate seats; and the student's "own sense of values."
Students writing in letters to the paper have somewhat different views of the problem. Said one student: "As long as competition is said to remain the essence of a student's existence, as long as a student's worth must find its expression in quizzes, monthly tests, quarterly exams, semi-finals and what-have-you—so long will cheating be a temptation on this campus."
Said another student: "A course of study must be made meaningful to the student. . . Students who feel benefits derived from a course will wish to evaluate these benefits accurately. And the desire for accurate evaluation will eliminate the desire to cheat."
Faculty members interviewed seemed to feel that the blame for cheating should be placed on students desiring good grades rather than a good education. An assistant dean, according to Student Life, blamed the "student desire to get away with as much as possible."
But a professor of botany believed dishonesty could be traced in part to the commercial attitude of universities—"the selling of grade points for dollars," much as a marketable commodity is sold.
News From Other Campuses
A student at the Baylor university wonders how a couple of coeds made it home after he offered them a ride downtown in his car during bad weather recently. He later found one of their shoes in the back seat of the car.
Baylor Coed Loses Shoe
Loses Biology Final Exam
A copy of the biology department's final examination was among the main articles adrift as being the authors to aid a found bureau at Texas A&M college.
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. (in Lawrence add $2.00 university holidays and examination periods Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
Elected By A Landslide?
The president and vice president of the sophomore class at Sacramento Junior college in California were elected recently from a total of only 11 votes cast. Two of the votes were cast by the candidates themselves.
An old tradition at the University of Washington was revived recently as students declared Campus day. It is held on Saturdays and students turn out in a body to go to work on parking lots and intramural fields with shovels, rakes, and hoes.
Tradition is Revived
Play Ping Pong In Street
Four University of Colorado students were discovered playing ping pong on a traffic island in a downtown Boulder intersection.
THE MISSING BOX IS ON THE FENCE. THE WOOL BAGS ARE IN THE FRONT OF THE BUILDING. THE BASE IS IN THE FOREST. THE BOX IS STILL NOT HERE. THE MAN WHO LOST HIS BOX WAS THERE. THE BOX IS HELD BY THE MAN WHO LOST IT. THE BOX IS NOT HERE. THE MAN WHO LOST HIS BOX WAS THERE. THE BOX IS HELD BY THE MAN WHO LOST HIS BOX WAS THERE. THE BOX IS HELD BY THE MAN WHO LOST HIS BOX WAS THERE.
BATTLE WITH GUERILLAS . . . The body of a Communist guerilla lies in foreground here as French jungle troops in the background operate against hidden snipers in Cho-Ben Pass, Tonkin, Indochina. More than 200 bodies of dead Communists were found in this area after the action that took place when the French forces cut off a guerrilla force from its escape route to the mountains and scored a smashing victory over Reds who have been a bit too pressing lately.
Page 3
5 KU Teams Enter Debate
Five University debate teams will go to Liberty, Mo. Saturday to participate in the William Jewell college debate tournament.
1.
Making the trip will be William Arnold, College freshman; Fred Rice, College freshman; Lee Douglas, education sophomore; Harlan Parkinson, College freshman; William Crews, College sophomore; Richard Sheldon, College sophomore; Lee Baird, College freshman; William Nulton, College junior; Hubert Bell, College freshman; George Stoeppelwerth, College freshman; Kim Giffin, assistant professor of speech; and William Conboy, instructor in speech.
Teams from Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska are expected to compete in the tournament, Mr. Conboy said.
Horse Wrecks Car
Waterbury, Conn. —(U.P.)—Mrs.
Jennie Napoli won a $500 suit in
which she claimed her automobile
got the worst of the deal in an
encounter with a horse. She said her
car was wrecked when Carl Frankel's horse ran into it.
Death Takes KU Alumna
Of Topea; Class Of '21
News has been received by Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, of the death Thursday of Miss Helen Olson, '21, in Topeka.
Miss Olson was a member of Mortar Board at KU and after her graduation joined the national office of the Girl Reserve organization in New York City. She also worked for the Girl Reserves in Kansas, Wyoming and Colorado.
For the past few years she had been employed as vocational counselor for employment services in Kansas City, Wichita, and Topeka.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
PRECISE
WATCH
REPAIRS
Watch Repair
Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed
Unique Distinction Goes To Dreyer
Prof. Robert M. Dreyer, chairman of the University department of geology, has been notified of his election as a fellow of the Mineralogical society of America. He now becomes one of only 20 persons living between the Mississippi and California who are fellows of the society.
Wolfson's 743 Mass. Call 675
The term "fellow" confers recognition of accomplishment within the field to a greater degree than just membership.
The new honor also brings a unique distinction to Dr. Dreyer. He is now the only geologist in the United States who is both a fellow of the Mineralogical society and a member of the Society of Exploration Geophysicists.
Dr. Dryer is also a fellow of the Geological society of America and a member of several other societies pertaining to geology, mining and petroleum.
HOME IS WHERE THE BUCK IS
OR
MELTON BROADWAY
Who Did You Say Is a Boy's Best Friend?
Once there was a sophomore whose father had a bad habit of saying "No". Vehemently. Particularly about money. Ask him the Big Question and his jowls would turn a
fetching shade of vermilion.
So Junior, his need needed by three days of living on Pup-Op Nil (liver-flavor) sandwiches, cast about for a New Approach. Found it, too. Right at the Western Union office. He just sat down and worked out a wire to Negative Polarity Pappy. A brisk little wheeze . . . to wit: "Must have twenty dollars immediately. Urgent. Please flash by telegram money order." Results? Our sophomore was caressing the cash within two hours.
What's Junior's major? Psychology, of course.
It's darned good psychology to wire home at other times than just when you need help and comfort. For holiday greetings—Mother's Day—good news about grades—things that would make Home Happier. Try it next time. Just head for your local Western Union office.
Wednesday, Jan. 9, 1952
Chafee Will Give Stephens Lectures
University Daily Kansan
Zechariah Chafe, jr., professor or law at Harvard university, will present the third series of Judge Nelson Timothy Stephens lectures at the university on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The course will be in Fraser theater. The subject will be "The Three Basic Freedoms in the Constitution of 1787."
Professor Chafee is also the author of many books concerning law and legal subjects.
A meteor from outer space becomes a meteorite by surviving the friction of passage through the earth's atmosphere and reaching the ground.
Professor Will Discuss Russian Scientific Claims
Prof. Charles Leone, professor of zoology, will talk on the Russian claims of new discoveries in the field of genetics at 7:30 Thursday evening in Blake hall.
In his speech "Lysenke vs. Mendel" he will point out that the Russians have made no new discoveries and update 50 years of Western research.
His talk is sponsored by the Sigma Xi fraternity.
Body armor for aviators has turned the wheel of warfare back to the days of King Arthur. Today's armor consists of a thin sheet of aluminum backed by several-ply nylon.
50% Discount 50%
Stationery
Gift Soaps
Pens and Pencils
Dolls
Card Partners
Ties
Bed Lamps
Trays
Glass Sets
Knitting Bags
Baby Gifts
Games and Toys
Memo Pads
Picture Frames
Many Other Terrific Bargains
50% Save 50%
Main Store
1401 Ohio
- Christmas Cards
- Christmas Ribbon
- Buy Now For Next Christmas
- Christmas Paper
Rowlands.
Annex
1237 Oread
Free Parking East of Main Store
The Fifth Annual Presentation of the University of Kansas Light Opera Guild
*
*
"THE BARTERED BRIDE"
A COMIC OPERA BY
Bedrich Smetana and Karel Sabina
TUNEFUL MUSIC
GAY DANCES
AMUSING STORY
THE GUILD HAS PRESENTED "THE MIKADO" (GILBERT-SULLIVAN), "THE CONDOLSERS" (GILBERT-SULLIVAN), "SWEETHEARTS" (HERBERT), AND "THE PINK LADY" (KARYLL).
FRASER THEATER
February 4th,5th,and 8th at 8:15 p.m.
Matinee February 7th at 3:15
*
Admission 75c (State tax included) All Seats Reserved
Ticket Office At Green Hall and Bell's Music Co. Opens Jan. 31
*
Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 9, 1952
Tough Schedule Ahead For Traveling Jayhawks
Following close on the heels of the Kansas-Missouri game at Columbia Saturday night will be KU's third conference tussle of the season at Lincoln, Neb., with the Cornhuskers Monday night.
The match will be the last game for the Jayhawkers before they invade the den of the K-State Wildcats Jan. 26.
NU successfully opened its Big Seven campaign with a 63-62 victory over Colorado Jan. 5 and are idle until they play host to K-State Saturday, Coach Harry Good's Huskers lost to the Buffaloons 68-6 in the Big Seven pre-season tourney at Kansas City.
Coach Good's 20-man squad is dominated by 11 freshmen. He also has five sophomores, two juniors and two seniors. Jim Buchanan and Bud Ward, the seniors, spark the team's play.
Buchanan, a deadly two-handed setshot artist scored 284 points in games last season to rank as NU's second high scorer. He was named to the all-star squad at the Big Seven tourney this year.
Bill Johnson, 6-foot 8-inch sopohmore, has been filling the gap left by the graduation of Bob Pierce, last season's regular NU center.
Joe Good, 6-foot 1-inch guard, is also one of the Husker's better players. He was sidelined at the start of the season with an injured ankle but is back in action now.
Charles Ott, Clarence Cook, both 6-foot 3-inches tall, Paul Fredstrom, Stan Matzke and Jim Snyder are among the tall freshmen Coach Good is working into his lineup.
The Nebraskans have won four
games while dropping eight. They have scored 753 points to their opponents 759.
Kansas defeated the Cornhuskers, who finished fifth in the league with a 4-8 record, twice last year with scores of 63-47 and 61-52.
Lonborg, Sikes, To Attend NCAA Athletic Convention
Arthur C. Lonborg, athletic director, and J. V. Sikes, head football coach, will go by plane to Cincinnati where they will attend meetings of athletic directors and football coaches sponsored by the National Collegiate Athletic association. Lonborg is chairman of the basketball tournament committee. The coaches plan to return to Lawrence Saturday.
Your
Plymouth
. . . has a used car priced for you.
Buddy
GALLAGHER
634 Mass. Ph. 1000
CARL'S ANNUAL
STOCK BALANCING SALE... of fine men's wear!
SUITS Discounted 25 %
TOPCOATS Discounted 25%
WOOL SPORT SHIRTS Discounted 25%
SWEATERS 1/2 Price
CORDUROY COATS Discounted 25%
SPORT COATS Discounted 25%
JACKETS Discounted 25%
Entire Stock Not Included
CARLS GOOD CLOTHES
Schnellbacker Named To All-Pro Team
905 Mass. St.
Phone 905
Otto Schnellbacher, KU football and basketball great, has been selected as a defensive halfback on the all-professional football team announced by the Associated Press. He is a member of the New York Giants.
Bradley Upsets Bills 57-56
New York (U.P.)—A coach's gamble and a freshman's steel nerves today made the slick St. Louis Billikens the latest victims of the wave of upsets sweeping through college basketball ranks.
The coach was Forddy Anderson of Bradley, the freshman was Dick Peterson, and the final score—in a hectic, double-overtime game on the Billiken's own court Tuesday night —was Bradley 57, St. Louis 56.
While playing for KU in 1942, 1946 and 1947 he became one of the conference's best ends. He holds the school pass receiving record for a season and for a college career.
Such a result could hardly be foreseen at the start of the Missouri Valley conference battle, for St. Louis, with a 9-2 record, was ranked fifth in the nation and Bradley had only an 8-6 record in one of its
worst seasons in many a year.
But the Bradley Braves forced the game into overtime, and then into another overtime. With a minute and 57 seconds to go, freshman Peterson was fouled by Tom Lillis, the St. Louis center who scored the winning goal against Kentucky in the Sugar Bowl tournament.
and Notre Dame, No. 18, came from behind eight times to beat Butler, 55-49.
While St. Louis suffered, other high-ranked teams scored victories.
higher ranked teams to compete.
North Carolina State, ranked No. 11, notched an 85 to 76 victory over South Carolina in a Southern conference game, while St. Bonaventure, ranked No. 12, led all the way to trounce Canisius, 76 to 61, and remain unbeaten through eight games.
HOW MANY TIMES A DAY
DOYOU
INHALE?
50? 100? 200?
IF YOU'RE AN AVERAGE SMOKER THE RIGHT ANSWER IS OVER 200!
ESTABLISHED OVER 100 YEARS
PHILIP MORRIS & CO. LTD.
INC.
FORTWAX
FAMILY BRAND
SPECIAL BIND
MADE IN U.S.A.
BY
PHILIP MORRIS E CO. LTD. INC. 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 Sunday Evening over CBS
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
Cl
supe
poin
com
on
lege
no c
ship Sem Sant
Bulldoors
Sp
Into
a gl
tical
large
ficia
mon
an e
horn
Page 5
Education Group Challenges CAASupervisionAuthority
Cincinnati, Ohio—(U.P.)—A make or break convention began to-day for the National Collegiate Athletic association.
Challenged in its authority to' supervise college sports by a six-point program proposed by a special committee of the American Council on Education, the NCAA of 10 college presidents, the NCAA showed no outward defiance.
The educators' committee returned a six-point program to deemphasize athletics. But most of it was duplicated by the 31-point program to be presented to the 46th annual NCAA convention by the NCAA's policy-making council.
"They are making recommendations," Willett said. "We have a program of legislation."
Some of the ACE points, however.
But there was implicit in the statement of NCAA President Hugh C. Willett that the organization would battle the ACE for the right to rule intercollegiate athletic competition.
Ten Receive Track Awards
Awards were made to 10 members of the KU track team today by A. C. Lonborg, director of athletics.
Big Seven two-mile championship jackets were presented to Herb Semper, Keith Palmquist, Wes Santee, Art Dalzell, Norman Bitner.
Varsity letters were awarded to Lloyd Koby and Richard Wilson and Charles Grook, Hugh Mann and Bob Rader received freshman numerals.
Bull Given Artificial Eye
Spencer, W. Wa—(U,P)—F. F. McIntosh Jr., a cattle breeder, received a glass eye, and the American Optical Company reported it was the largest it had ever made. The artificial eye was designed for an 11-months-old bull. The animal lost an eye when it was struck by a cow's horn.
such as the plan to restrict all scholarships to the basis of the need of the student and his academic standing, were more far reaching than the plans of the NCAA.
Intramural
Tuesday's Results Independent "A"
Round-Up
Oread 2 Alpha Kappa S0 (for
feifei); KHK 42, Aluminum Five 21;
CFC 5-4 Flying Fine 19; Mifits 34,
AXE 18 and Varsity 85, ASCE 31.
Today's Schedule Robinson Annex Fraternity "A"
4:00 Kappa Alpha Fsi vs. Acacia
5:00 Sigma Chi vs. LC Alpha
5:00 ATO vs. PSL Delta Theta
Independent "A"
6:00 Boones vs. Don Henry
Cage Scores
St. Bonaventure 76, Canisius 61
Clemson 70, Furman 65
N. Carolina S. 85, S. Carolina 76
Bradley 57, St. Louis U. 56 (OT)
Notre Dame 55, Butler 49
Hamline 56, Carleton 48
Millikin U. 71, Illinois Wes. 67
St. Ambrose 58, Central Iowa 37
Valparaiso 53, Wayne U. 50
Calvin College 82, Hillsdale Col-
Figure 47
Wilsonville Tech, 64, Milwaukee
Extension, 43.
Extension 43.
Texas Tech 62, N. Mexico A&M 49
Texas 41, Southern Methodist 31
Texas Christian 42, Rice 30
Idaho 77, Eastern Washington 64
Oregon 79, Washington State 45
Eastern Montana 82, Rocky Mtn. 57
L. A. City College 74, Muir 46.
'Experts' Agree On Top Teams To Some Extent
The coaches and sportswriters and sportscasters, at least the ones contacted in the AP and UF polls, agree fairly close this week on which are the nation's best basketball teams.
With the exception of Kansas and Illinois, which the two polls had opposite with the AP listing KU first and Illinois second, they agreed on the next five teams.
The AP completed the top 10 with St. Bonaventure, Seton Hall and Iowa as eight, ninth and tenth respectively. The UP coaches agreed on Iowa's selection but placed St. Bonaventure 12th and Seton Hall 15th.
Both polls had Kentucky in the No. 3 slot, followed by Indiana, St. Louis, Washington, and Kansas State. But that's about as far as the agreement went.
Biggest difference appeared in the choice of the second 10 with the two polls agreeing on only half of them.
In addition to St. Bonaventure and Seton Hall, the UP listed North Carolina State, Louisville, Utah, Syracuse, Minnesota, Notre Dame, Oklahoma A&M and West Virginia.
The Associated Press's scribes completed the top 20 with West Virginia, St. John's, N. Y. university, Syracuse, Louisville, Duquesne, Sienna, Oklahoma City, Michigan State and Dayton.
PREPARE NOW FOR EXAMS
AN OUTLINE OF FIRST YEAR COLLEGE PHYSICS
We have 'em... The essentials of your courses highlighted and packed into a nutshell, for quick thorough review!
Ask to see the famous
COLLEGE OUTLINE SERIES
Labrador's puffs, rivaling in dependability the cliff swallows of San Juan Capistrano in California, leave their summer and winter haunts on definite dates and arrive at their destinations with equal predictability.
PREPARE NOW FOR EXAMS
We have 'em... The essentials of your courses highlighted and packed into a nutshell, for quick thorough review!
Ask to see the famous COLLEGE OUTLINE SERIES
ACCOUNTING, Elementary $1.00
CALCULUS, The $1.00
CALCULUS, Law $1.00
CHEMISTRY, First Year College $1.25
CHEMISTRY, Math. for General $1.25
CHEMISTRY, Oversee $1.25
ANTHROPOLOGY, Outline of $1.25
BATHROOMOGY, Principles of $1.00
BIOLOGY, General $1.00
BOTANY, General $7.50
BUSINESS, Law $1.00
CALCULUS, The $1.25
CHEMISTRY, First Year College $1.25
CHEMISTRY, Math. for General $1.25
CHEMISTRY, Oversee $1.25
CORPORATION FINANCE $1.25
DOCUMENTED PAPERS, Writing $7.50
ECONOMICS, Dictionary of $1.50
ECONOMICS, Pericles of $1.50
ECONOMICS, Readings $1.50
EDUCATION, History of $7.50
PRINTING, History $7.50
EUROPE, 1300-1848, History of $7.50
EXAMS, How to Write Better $2.50
PRINTING, Grades $1.50
GEOLOGY, Principles of $1.25
GEOmetry, Analytic $1.25
GEOmetry, Plane, Problems in $1.25
GEOLOGY, American $7.50
GOVERNMENT, American $7.50
GRAMMAR, English, Principles of $1.25
HYDRACULTURE for Firemen $1.00
LATIN AMERICA, History of $1.50
LATIN AMERICA in Maps $1.25
Prices Subject to Change
LAT, AMER, Civillz, (Readings) $1.50
LAT, AMER, Economic Development $1.25
LITERATURE, American $1.25
LITERATURE, Eng., Diction of $1.25
LITERATURE, Eng., History (I) $1.25
LITERATURE, Eng., History (II) $1.25
LITERATURE, German $1.50
LOGARITHMIC & Trig. Tables $6.00
MIDDLE AGES, History of MOLYBEN AND CHEMISTRY $1.25
MOLYBEN AND CHEMISTRY, Writing $1.25
MUSIC, History of $1.00
PHILOSOPHY, An Introduction $1.00
PHILOSOPHY, An Introduction in Physics $1.25
PHYSICS, First Year College $7.50
PHYSICS without Mathematics $1.25
POLITICAL SCIENCE $1.25
POLITICAL SCIENCE of Amer. $1.25
PORTUGUESE GRAMMAR $1.25
PSYCHOLOGY, Educational $1.25
PSYCHOLOGY, General $1.00
RUSSIAN HISTORY $1.25
SHAKESPEAREAN Names, Dict $1.25
SHAKESPEARE'S Plays (Outlines) $1.25
SOLITIES, Practical Use of $1.25
SOCIOLYGICAL Plasures of $1.25
SPANISH GRAMMAR $1.25
STATISTICAL METHODS $1.25
TRIG, Plane & Spherical $1.25
TUDOR & STUART Plays (Outlines) $1.50
U. S. in Second World War $7.50
U. S. since 1865, History of WORLD, Since 1914, History of ZOLOGY, General $1.25
University Daily Kansan
STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE
Wednesday, Jan. 9, 1952
Kuharich Takes Over Job Of Rejuvenating Cardinals
Chicago—(U.P.)—Husky Joe Kuhar recently took over the job of rejuvenating the sagging grid fortunes of the erratic Chicago Cardinals.
Kuharich, 34, became the youngest coach in the National Professional league yesterday when it was announced he had been signed to a two-year contract.
His salary was reported less than the $25,000 annual fee paid former Coach Curley Lambeau who left under fire with two games remaining of his two-year-contract. But Cardinal Managing Director Walter
Wolframer said the contract has provisions for bonuses if the team wins the division title or league championship.
Kuharich, a six-foot 230-pounder, hopes he'll snag one or both of these plums by employing the same coaching tactics that earned him a reputation as one of the nation's outstanding young coaches.
Kuharich recently resigned at the University of San Francisco after leading that squad in 1951 to its first undefeated season.
FOR YOUR
COLD WEATHER DRIVING NEEDS
- Chains For Ice And Snow
- Enough Anti-Freeze
- Dependable Brakes
- A Good Heater
- A Top Condition Motor
STOP AT
SANDERS MOTORS
Phone 616
622-24 Mass.
EUROPE for YOU in '52 with SITA
Students International Travel Assn.
Travel in Europe is NOT expensive if one knows how to go about it. SITA has been in the Student Tour Business for 19 years. No one can give you a better deal for less money. 70 Day Tours start as low as $500 incl. passage.
SITA also awards several scholarships and grants in aid.
Drop around and talk about these tours. Free descriptive folder and information about SITA tours may be secured from...
DOWNS TRAVEL SERVICE
1015 Massachusetts
MRS. LOIS ODAFFER
Phone 3661
MR. JOE BROWN
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Jan. 9. 1952
I will answer with as much detail and accuracy as possible.
The image shows two women wearing tailored coats. On the left, a woman is dressed in a long, oversized coat with a large ruffled collar. The coat has a high waistline and appears to be made of wool or a similar material. On the right, another woman is wearing a fitted suit with a peplum top and a skirt that matches the color of her coat. The suit includes a belt and gloves.
Both outfits are classic and elegant, reflecting a timeless style often associated with formal occasions such as weddings, galas, or professional events. The coats worn by both women have a distinctive design that emphasizes their shape and fit.
"WOOL IN CALIFORNIA" COLORS, as created by two of the nation's top mills, are seen in these important new fashions for Spring, 1952. At left is a distinctive straight-line coat fashioned by Madoff from Botany's Drurylaine in Lassen Brown, a striking cinnamony shade. Its deep capetel collar falls to a fluid flare at the back. This coat may be worn either belted or hanging in free lines. At right, a beautifully tailored suit by Kay Saks of California is seen as worn with matching California-made accessories. It's designed in Miron's ribbed worsted of Rose Bowl Pink, and worn with a hat by Suzy Lee and gloves by Mi-
Phi Delta Theta Elects Kassebaum President
Philip Kassebaum, College junior, was elected president of Phi Delta Theta fraternity Monday night.
Other officers are Robert Ball, reporter; Tom McGuire, treasurer; Virgil Wenger, assistant treasurer; Alan Peschka, freshman trainer; John Eaton, social chairman, and John Brand, recording secretary.
Frank Jennings, chaplain; Richard Sheldon, editor of fraternity publications; Dean Mammel, choriester; Charles Dockhorn, warden; Burwell Shepard, librarian, and Buord Bissell, senior member of executive committee.
Max Merrill, intramural chairman; John Campbell, activities chairman; Charles Keith, scholarship chairman; Dick Hughes, rush chairman; Stuart Knutson, historian, and Fredric Thompson, alumni secretary.
Miss Lee Jenkins To Wed Arlie Persel
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Jenkins, Blue Rapids, announce the engagement of their daughter, Lee, to Arlie D. Persell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ora Parsell, Blue Rapids.
Miss Jenkins is a College sophore, Mr. Persell is an Airman stationed at Memphis, Teen. He attended Kansas State college.
The announcement was made at a party at the Jenkins home in Blue aprids over the holidays.
The couple will be married in March.
French Societies Hear Akeley
Barton S. Akeley, visiting profes-
tor of philosophy at Baker univer-
sity, Baldwin, will speak at a meet-
dance of Bi Dekty Ward and J. Curr-
erie, French honorary societies, at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Pine room if the Union. Professor Barton, who has spent two years in France working for the American Friends service committee, will speak on "France—Symptoms."
Tiger
YOUR EYES
图
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
Gowans-Lundstrom Marriage Dec. 28
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Gowans, Hutchinson, announce the marriage of their daughter, Margaret, to Max Lundstrom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lundstrom. Little River.
The marriage took place Dec. 28 at the First Presbyterian Church at Hutchinson.
Mrs. Lundstrom is a senior in the school of education at the University, and is a member of the Alphar Cbi, Omega sorority.
Mr. Lundstrom formerly attended Pittsburg State College and is now serving in the United States Army.
Jean Taylor Engaged To Wichita U. Man
Mr. and Mrs. Perey E. Taylor, Wichita, announce the engagement of their daughter, Roberta Jean, to Robert H. Beuke, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hubert A. Beuke, Wichita.
Miss Taylor is a College sophomore and a member of Gamma Phi Beta. Mr. Beuke attended Wichita university and is a member of Alpha Gamma Gamma fraternity.
The couple will be married this spring.
Mr. and Mrs. Jay M. Broady, Schenectady, N. Y., announce the engagement of their daughter, Shirley, to Richard C. Spieled, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gottlieb Spieled, Troy, N. Y. The wedding will be this summer.
Shirley Broady Plans Summer Wedding
Miss Broady is a College sophomore and a member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority.
Mr. Spiedel attends Union college, Schenectady and is a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity.
Polish Your GERMAN!
Brush up on your FRENCH!
Ask for TUTORING!
English speaking European Graduate Student will assist you with these languages.
"Scattered Showers" an original skit by Mrs. George M. Beckmann, Mrs. Oscar M. Haugh and Mrs. John Weir will be presented to the Newcomer's club at 7:30 Thursday in the Art Museum.
Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity Elects Jim Hops President
ZOLTAN DIOS
Phone KU 327
Jim Hops, graduate student, was elected president of Alpha Tau Omega recently.
Other officers are David Hills, vice-president; Art Wahlstedt, secretary; Bob Wunsch, keeper of the annals; Jim Swim, pledge trainer; Don E. Stephenson, usher, and Arthur Collom, sentinel.
Bailey Chemistry club, 4 p.m. Thursday, 305 B.C. L.Discussion of ionization chambers, Ron Siramons.
Square Dance club, 7:15 tonight, Recreation room, Memorial Union. All invited.
Official Bulletin
Student Union library, 4:30 p.m.
Thursday, SUA office.
No more ISA council meetings this semester.
Newcomers of University Women's club. 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Spooner-Thaver Museum.
Campus Affairs committee meeting about "School Spirit" postponed to Feb. 6.
Deutscher Verein, Zusammenkunft, Donnerstag 5 p.m. Fraser 502.
Psychology club, 7.30 p.m. Thursday, 9 Strong. Don't miss movie, "The Silent One" at last meeting of semester.
Home Ec club, 7:15 Thursday, 110 Fraser, will work on Red Cross layettes.
The following are to attend Student Court in the Court Room of Green Hall, 7:30 p.m. Thursday; Don T. Mettler, Ronald M. Waller, Guerford W. Moore, Kenneth W. Philo, Marvin S. Liggett, Truman D. Francis, Kenneth L. Hoffman, Carl W. Kruse, Paul W. Zicklefoose, Ruth Smitherman, Donald W. Smitherman, Erwin David, Gene E. Davidson.
ASTE meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Fowler Shops. Election and installation of officers, movie and refreshments. Visitors welcome.
QST KU Amateur Radio club,
7:30 tonight, E.E. lab.
CQ code practice, 7:30 tonight,
E. Eg. lab.
Effective Thursday, Jan. 10, campus police will issue tickets for violation of the one-way traffic flow on Poplar lane and of parking rules
Chess club, 7:15 tonight, Pine Room, Union. Trophies to be given tournament winners.
SEE "UNSPOILED" EUROPE
Motor, bicycle, rail, floatbat and study tours for students and teachers from $500 (60 days). Year 'round Economy Touries FEORESPEND. LENT ON A TOUR JOURNEL 19th year!
SITA Students International Travel Association
Write OR PHONE FOR FREE FOLDER
PHONE 3661
"your midwest SITA representative"
DOWNS Travel Service
Lawrence, Kansas
TICKETS
AND
RESERVATIONS
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Announcing
DRIVE
NEW TRANS-ATLANTIC TOURIST CLASS RATES EFFECTIVE MAX 1
From New York
EFFECTIVE MAY 1
Helsinki $666.00
London 486.00
Madrid 630.00
Paris 522.00
Rome 643.00
(Round trip on season)
--- $666.00
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 Giesman, Manager
Miss Rose Gieseman, Manager 8th and Mass. St. Telephone 3
Telephone 30
in Zone H. The flow of traffic is to be west to east. Parking is on the left side of the street except for the angle-parking area between Strong and Bailey.
Jay Jane, 5 p.m. today, Pine Room Union
KuKu meeting, 7:15 p.m. Thursday important.
Math club, 5 p.m. Thursday, 203 Strong, Dr. Robinson, "Multi-Valued Logics."
Holy Communion for Episcopal students, 7 a.m. Thursday, Danforth Chapel. Breakfast in Union after service.
Travel Service THE
THE
Tel. 30 8th & Mass.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY
We are Equipped
NILES
LOCAL AND
INTERNATIONAL
MOVERIZ
to do-
- Storage
- Packing
for
- Moving
Ethan A. Smith
Reasonable Rates
CALL 46
Moving and Transfer Co.
11 East 9th St.
TODAY AND TOMORROW
AIRLI
of airtions.
nation
teurs
Mrs.
Servic
B.
DANA ANDREWS
DANA MARIEH
CLAUDE RAINS
CURIO THAT BRUCE THE
SEA WIDE OPEN!
SEALED CARGO
PHILIP DONN
F
n
i
c
l
r
J, Ro
3775J
TYPIN accura
Ask and
tours
passage
summ
Nation
ervati
Evening Features At 7:34 and 9:38 p.m.
STARTS FRIDAY FOR 1-BIG WEEK-1 The PATEE Takes Great Pleasure In Joining The Midwest Premier Showing of
TYPIIN books, ale se Slxth.
Audie Murphy
JAMES BEST
And
JOHN. HUDSON
Matinee Friday At 2:30 p.m. Evening Shows 7:34 and 9:34 p.m.
TYPII
promp
Stanle
Island
Technicolor STARRING
CIMARRON KID
RADIO makes parts.
ment efficier
Televi
Free p
TYPIN papers promp experi 1601.
cries.
tries.
a.m. u
STUD
self w
wiche
3604.
TYPIN papers cil cu 1952W.
Soon • 'Lavender Hill Mob'
New PATEE
PHONE 321
Page 7
is to in th r the strong
Classified Advertising
Room
urs-
203 lued
Phone K.U.376
opal forth after
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five day days days
75c $1.00
2c 3c
25 words or less ... 50c
Additional words ... 1c
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be received during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univeter-ate office, Journalism bldg, not later than 45 p.m. the day before publication date.
TRANSPORTATION
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether on business or destination. Provides Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass.
Ask us about family rates, ski coach,
and round trip reductions. All expense
tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book
in summer. Call Miss Gleseman at
National Bank for information and
reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 301.
BUSINESS SERVICE
mRS IRIENCED TYPIST: Term papers,
nss books, theses, medical and biolog-
reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. B.
E. C. Kramer Apl. 4, upairs. 3775J after 4 p.m.
TYPING of all kinds done promptly and accurately.
Mrs. Merritt, KU 296 10
TYING—Theses, term papers, matchbooks, letters, etc. Prompt and accurate service. Mrs. Hall. 1344W. 506 West Sixth. tf
TYPING: Themes, term papers, these-
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs
Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode
Island. ti
TYFING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these types impromptu. 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 equipment in this area thus assuring fast, reliable repairs and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. tt
CAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
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, 1091. Mass. **tf**
TYPING: Experience in theses, term papers, miscellaneous typing, and sten-cial cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1852W. 1915 Tennessee. tf
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, mals, home-made pies and cakes. Our larger space for customers includesITIONation. On a.m., t.m. midnight. Crystal Cafe, 690 Vt.
IAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet store. 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
FOR SALE
MUST SACRIFICE1 Graduating senior must part with top shape 1946 Indian motorcycle. Yours for only $175.00. Call broke Dick Brecko at 1922. 14
'37 CHEVROLET. Tudor, excellent condition.
Motor overhauled, new clutch,
good tires, spare. Call 3569R after 5:30
p.m. 15
MECHANICS DELIGHT. 36 Plymouth
george 903 Elm. Elm 2517M 14
age george 903 Elm. Elm 2517M 14
Schaum's "OUTLINE OF COLLEGE PHYSICS" and "OUTLINE OF COLLEGE CHEMISTRY" are here now! These books will give you the help you want in making an "A." See them at your Student Union Book Store. 11
NEW AND ATTRACTIVE STATIONERY
Includes six hardcover
halls. Forty-eight sheets,
and twenty-four envelopes in each box for
store-room displays today at the Studies
Union Book Store.
sF E F F I R S T F L I G H T custom built
soultiana or call 385 SR evenings. 14
soultiana or call 385 SR evenings. 14
NEW, SHIPMENT OF POCKET BOOKS
Students take them over
Student Union Book Store.
DRAFTSMEN AND ARTISTS! Pellean
drawing, lettering and sketching. Get
gours from the large selection now
available at the Student Union Body
II
LOST
PHI CHI fraternity pin at Skyline Sat-
cure. Reward to fetch. Call BOB
groth. 377.
PARKER PEN with initials B.L.H., between Corbin and Green hall, Monday, Jan. 7. Reward. Call Barbara Holmes. 860. 15
FOR RENT
ROOM FOR BOYS, vacancy for 2 boys
1222 Miss. Phone 495, 1122 each a month
1222 Miss. Phone 495,
FROM THE SMOKEY HILL TRAINING BASE AT SALINA, KANSAS TO THE SKYSCRAPING HIMALAYAS . . INTO THE WILD BLUE YONDER . . HELL-RIDERS OF THE HEAVENS WHO ROAR INTO...
THE WILD BLUE WONDER
THE WILD BLUE YONDER
STORY OF THE
B-29
SUPERFORT
"A Wounded Soldier Needs Your Blood—Today"
STARTS
SUNDAY
Prevue Saturday
At 11:15 p.m.
Granada PHONE 940
$500 Award To Be Given
The award is available to any woman student under 30 years of age who has received her bachelor's degree, or who will obtain it before July 1 of this year, from an institution where a chapter of the sorority is located.
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will again present a graduate fellowship award of $500 this year.
Applications for the fellowship may be obtained in the dean of women's office. The application must be filed with the chairman of the fellowship committee before Feb. 1.
The sorority also gives several scholarships annually to its members. These include foreign study grants of $500 for study in a foreign country and $250 for study in which each sorority member who receives a scholarship is required to assist the local Kappa chapter on the campus to which she is assigned.
The sorority also maintains a student loan fund open to all college women under 30 years of age with sufficient credit. The maximum amount loaned is $400.
Bandits Pull Fast One
Cairo, Ill.—(U.P.)-Three "helpful" strangers out to be highwaymen in disguise who beat a truck driver, Elmer McMahan, and robbed him of $60. He stopped his Chicago-bound truck when the men drove alongside, pointed at his rear wheels and yelled that he had a flat tire. They joined him on the highway and knocked him unconscious.
FOR SECOND SEMESTER large well furnished room in quiet home to young man student. No smoking. $20 a month.愿意来 KU and downtown. Phon 127.
RENT A TYPEWRITER and start the new year with higher grades. Only $1.00 for new machine, $3.50 per month for portables and standard machines. Student Book Store. I 11
MAN'S WRIST WATCH before Christmas vacation. Call Gerry O'Connell, 366.
FOUND
WOMAN'S WRIST Watch found in Memorial Union building. Will owner write identification to Box 5, University Daily Kansan? 11
ALL THE WIDE
WONDER OF
THE HIGH
SIERRA IN
COLOR BY
TECHNICOLOR
CHEF
TECH.
Ten Thousand Feet Above The Sea Owen Merritt Fought The Fight That Had To Come!
RANDOLPH SCOTT
MAN IN THE SADDLE
COLOR OF TECHNICOLOR
A COLUMBIA PICTURE
with JOAN LESLIE · ELLEN DREW · ALEXANDER KNOX
HEAR
TENNESSEE ERNIE
SING
Late News Events Color Cartoon "Leghorn Swagged"
"MAN IN THE SADDLE"
Prevue Saturday Night
Box-Office Open 11:15 p.m.
SUNDAY
"MAN IN THE SADDLE"
___
ADDED___
Wednesday, Jan. 9, 1952
Comfort! Convenience!
JAYHAYWER
NEW Baskets & CUSHIONED CHAIRS
Lawn Embellishes Family Bedroom
Berkley, Calif.-(U.P.)-A yard in the front bedroom should help those who wish unlimited sunshine and a view in their homes.
Rollo Wheeler, a University of California architectural student, has built a unique five room house for his family of four. A front lawn grows right in his bedroom.
The young architect "sliced out a hunk of hill," using the fill for the foundation of the bedroom. Then he dug down into it with a posthole and drilled through the wall, cement. In short, he said, "the room is held up by piles like a wharf."
Summer or winter, the Wheeler children can take off their shoes and squish their toes in the cool, green grass. Wheeler's wife enjoys doing her sewing on the lawn and the dogs, Pat and Mike, romp on the lawn.
Wheeler then planted lawn grass in the rug-sized space near the front plate glass window.
No Bicycle For Him
Providence, R. I. (U.P.)—Alfred M. Cohen, a Western Union messenger here for more than 40 years, boasts that he has delivered perhaps 1,800,000 telegrams without ever riding a bicycle.
Comfort! Convenience!
JAYHAWKER
NEW Push Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
LAST TIMES TODAY
2:30 - 7:00 - 9:00
BOB HOPE
"MY FAVORITE SPY"
STARTS THURSDAY
The slickest CON MAN...GUN MAN LADIES' MAN of them all IS GUMMING!
I
SYLVANUS!
University Daily Kansan
Columbia Pictures presents
U.S.MARINES
Columbia Pictures presents ROBERT CUMMINGS TERRY MOORE JEROME COURTLAND
in THE BAREFOOT MAILMAN in SUPERCOLOR
TONITE - THURS.
Box-Office Opens 6:45
Adm. 14c - 50c
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
---
DORIS GORDON DAY MACRAE "On Moonlight Bay"
Co-Feature
THE BOGART
SUSPENSE
PICTURE!
HUMPHREY
BOGART
In A Lonely Place
with
GLORIA
GRAHAME
Vacuum Cleaner A Secret Weapon
Sacramento — (U.P) - California' civil defense secret weapon is th vacuum cleaner.
The state office of civil defense has installed 19 ordinary vacuum cleaners with filters up and down California's 400-mile long coast a part of a warning system against radioactive dust.
The vacuum cleaners are mounted at airports, industrial plants business buildings and even home All 20 feet above ground to avoid street dust.
Spokane, Wash.—(U.P.)—A paw shop reported a man hooked his teeth for the duration of a mea strike in Spokane.
The defense office said the dust catchers will stay in operation during atomic tests at Frenchman fla in Nevada. After atom explosion there, a radioactive cloud of a non harmful variety was found floating over California.
Starts TOMORROW
THE FRANK-AS-
LIFE STORY OF A
TEEN-AGER . . . WHO
LEARNED A LOT OF
THINGS YOU NEVER
FIND IN SCHOOL BOOKS!
She's on her own and on the Loose!
But who is really to blame?
THE FILMAKERS present
On the Loose
On the Loose
starring
JOAN EVANS
MELVYN DOUGLAS
LYNN BARI
FLASH!
NEW YEAR'S DAY
BOWL GAMES
AND
COLOR CARTOON, Too!
HURRY . . ENDS TONITE
"Callaway Went
Thataway"
Granada
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Jan. 9, 1952
President Fears Threat Of War'
Washington—U.P.)—President Truman, in his annual "State of the Union" message, summoned the nation today to "move full steam ahead" in its rearmament drive because the "threat of world war is still real well."
Topical summary of President Trump's message:
Peace or war?—The United States and other free nations are passing through "a period of grave danger." Russia is increasing its "already excessive" armed might. There are signs of further trouble in the Far East. "The world still walks in the shadow of another world war. . . . (But) we have made real progress this last year along the road to peace."
and munitions. Korea United Nations forces have backed back the Chinese Communist invasion "without widening the area of conflict." But the situation remains "very hazardous" and an armistice is still uncertain. "We must—and we will—keep up the fight until we get the kind of armistice that will put an end to aggression."
The task—the free nations must stick together and may have to maintain large military forces "for years" to discourage aggression. The United States must "move ahead full steam" on its defense program. "We can lose if we falter . . . This is a time for courage, not for grumbling and mumbling."
Deadline Near For Fellowships
University students are going to have to move fast to take advantage of an opportunity to do study or research in certain Pan-American republics through Fellowships recently made available by the Department of State.
Corruption — Dishonest public
Application forms must be returned to the Office of Education no later than Jan. 15, 1952. They may be obtained from the Division of International Educational Relations, United States Office of Education, Federal Security Agency, Washington 25. D. C.
General qualifications for students include: United States citizenship; a bachelor's degree or its equivalent; the initiation or completion of some graduate study; and a satisfactory knowledge of the language in the country which study or research is to be undertaken.
Participating countries include: Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Columbia, Costa Rica, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru and Venezuela.
The U. S. government provides transportation for American students to and from the receiving country, and the host country pays tuition and a monthly maintenance allowance.
2 Carillon Recitals Set This Week
The weekly carillon programs will be at 7 p.m. today and 3 p.m. Sunday. Ronald M. Barnes, cariloneur, will be at the keyboard of the $78,000 instrument.
The program Wednesday will include:
Prelude No. 5 for carillon in D Minor (Van den Gheyn) "Die Lorelei" (Silcher), Pastorale for carillon (Menotti) "Alfred Suite for carillon" (Lefevere) "I Dream, of Jeannie" (Foster) "Elegie" (Massenet) and "Crimson and the Blue."
The program Sunday will include:
Prelude, Suite No. 4 for cello (J.
S. Bach); "The Old Refrain" (Kreis-
ler); French folk songs; "Magali"
"A ma main droite j'ai un Rosier."
"Nous m'irons plus au Bois," and
"La Marion et le Bosu"; "Anitra's
Dance" from "Peer Gynt Suite"
(Grieg); "Menuett" (Casseler) arr-
anged for carillon by Stanford
Lehmberg, College junior, and
"Crimson and the Blue."
servants "must be weeded out." Those guilty of misconduct will be punished—"I will see to that." Congress should apply "rigorous standards of moral integrity in its own operations," too. It should limit campaign spending and protect the rights of individuals in congressional investigations.
Wages and Prices—“ . . . we intend to hold the line on prices just as tightly as the law allows. We will permit only those wage increases which are clearly justified under sound stabilization policies; and we will see to it that industries absorb cost increases out of earning wherever feasible, before they are authorized to raise prices . . . except where the recent amendments to the law specifically require us to give further price increases.”
Inflation—Congress must enact "a strong anti-inflation law" and repair "the damage" done last year.
Taxes—There will be "high taxes over the next few years." They must be shared "as fairly as possible," and tax laws must be administered "without fear or favor of any kind for anybody." Mr. Truman said he will outline his tax plans in forthcoming messages to Congress.
Military Expansion—U.S. armed forces now total "nearly 3,500,000—an increase of more than 1,000,000 in the past year. Some further increases will be recommended this year, "with particular emphasis on air power." This will mean continued large-scale production of planes and other equipment "for a longer period of time than we had originally planned."
Civilian Production — Defense needs will mean "smaller production of some civilian goods." Cutbacks will be "nothing like those during World War II. . . but there will be considerably less of some goods than we have been used to these past two or three years." The next two years will see the peak of defense production.
Foreign Aid—"... we must go on helping our friends and allies to build up their military forces." Weapons must be sent "in large volume" to our European Allies. Economic aid is necessary, too. Increased military and economic aid also must be given to people in Asia who "want to be free to follow their own way of life."
Point Four-more funds are needed for the program to aid backward areas of the free world.
Politics—this is a presidential election year and "we have a great responsibility to conduct our political fights in a manner that does not harm the national interest." Mr. Truman gave no hint of his own political plans for 1952.
Fair Deal—the government "mus keep on working to bring about a fair deal for all Americans." This program includes housing, health insurance, civil rights, federal aid to education, aid to medical education to provide more doctors, improve social security benefits, improvement in the Taft - Hartley law, readjustment benefits for veterans of the Korean war, soil conservation and a strengthened system of farm price supports.
Commissions Will Go To 15 AFROTC Cadets
Fifteen University AFROTC graduates will be appointed second lieutenants in the Air Force reserve Jan. 24, Col. Lynn R. Moore, professor of air science and tactics, said today.
The cadets who will receive the commissions have completed work for their Bachelor degrees and have completed the four-year ROTC course.
A banquet will be held in honor of the graduates at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 15. The men will be given their officer's insignia at the banquet.
Richard E. Brecko, Gordon R. Brown, Frank L. Byam, Hubert Capps jr., John W. Davis jr., Robert L. Etherton, Kenneth E. Garrett, Lawrence R. Hill, William W. Howard jr., Harvey A. Jetmore jr., Keith E. Moore, Lee R. Payton, William D. Rhue, Melvin E. Smith, and James W. Westbrook.
The men who will receive commissions later this month expect to be called to active duty soon. The exact date is not known because Air Force policy along that line is not concrete.
Organized houses and University organizations may send delegates to the youth section of the United Nations conference to be held on the campus on Thursday, Jan. 24, and Friday, Jan. 25.
UN Meeting OnJan.24-25
The AFROTC students who will be commissioned are as follows:
Although several young people have attended this conference before as delegates, this will be the first time that there will be a special section for youth.
Mrs. Virginia Wilder, teacher at Haskell institute, will be the leader of the youth group, assisted by several high school teachers from over the state.
The conference is sponsored by University Extension.
This group will consider how the United Nations is affecting the education of youth, their future jobs, and vocational and professional training for their life's work.
Two-hour written examinations are given in all courses at the University. The degree to which the examination influences the final grade in the course is dependent upon the instructor.
They will have a special session with the conference leaders.
Final Exams Begin Jan. 17 With 2 Free Periods Given
Women In Green
Bridgeport. Conn. —(U.P.)—Surgons at St. Vincent's Hospital are wearing green outfits in the operating room instead of the customary white ones. Sister Mary Loretta, hospital administrator, said the change-over was made to eliminate glare from the white cloth on the eyes of the doctors.
Registration, payment of fees, and enrollment for the spring semester will begin Jan. 28 and last for three
Home rule and statehood—Home rule for the District of Columbia and statehood for Alaska and Hawaii.
Final examinations will begin one week from Thursday.
The second period of grace is Saturday afternoon, Jan. 19. Finals will be stopped Saturday at noon and will not be resumed until Monday morning, Jan. 21.
Two periods of grace have been obtained by the All-Student Council this year. Thursday morning, Jan. 17, is the first period. Examining the progress of the 17th and continue through the following Thursday.
New undergraduate orientation on Jan. 28 and 29 will include a physical examination, written entrance examinations, introduction to the rule of the University, and to the philosophy of the University.
days. Classes will begin Thursdays, Jan 31.
Registration for new students will be held in Strong hall Jan. 30. Seniors who will graduate in June will be allowed to enroll the first day.
Enrollment will be held principally in Robinson gymnasium. Law students will enroll in Green hall; the business students will enroll in the School of Business office, 201 Strong hall; medical students in Haworth hall; pharmacy students in Bailey Chemical laboratories, and graduate students in the Graduate school office, 227 Strong hall.
Demand Russia Account For World War II Prisoners
Washington—(U.P.)The United States has formally demanded that Russia account for hundreds of thousands of German and Japanese prisoners of war captured during World War II.
Japanese prisoners of war The State department disclosed today that the request for an accounting was submitted to the Russian foreign office in Moscow in a formal note Tuesday.
The United States formally called upon Russia to send a representative to the forthcoming meeting of the United Nations commission on prisoners of war "to bring about the return of all those still alive and to account for those who have died."
Airfield Problem Stalls Final UN Truce
Panmunjom, Korea—(U.P.)-The Communists yielded to all United Nations demands on supervision of a truce today except the one that would bring final agreement—a ban on military airfield construction.
The UN's Maj. Gen. Howard M. Turner promptly rejected the Red program.
Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway's supreme headquarters in Tokyo backed up the Allied truce delegation with a "voice of the UN command" broadcast warning that the Reds must agree to the airfield construction ban if they want an armistice.
Kill Russia's Bid For High Level Pow-Wow
Paris—(U.P).The United Nations killed today Russia's demand for an immediate high-level meeting of the UN security council to take up the Korean armistice deadlock.
At the same time the UN's main political committee approved a Western proposal favoring a special council session on the cold war in general, but only after a Korean armistice has been achieved in battlefield negotiations.
No Tax Hike Planned In Election Year
Washington—(U.P.)—Congress, mindful that this is an election year, served advance notice on President Truman today that it will not approve higher taxes or do much legislating on any other issue it can safely sidestep.
Members also felt the President had little choice but to recommend higher taxes to offset an anticipated deficit for the 1953 fiscal year of about $10,000,000,000.
But even such an administration stalwart as Speaker Sam Rayburn said bluntly that he did not expect Congress to approve a big tax increase this year.
The Senate Republican policy committee unanimously went on record Tuesday as being opposed to any tax boost in 1952.
Enterprise Adrift In Danger Zone
Unless they succeed, the vessel Carlsen has gambled his life to save may pile up on rocks at Lizard Head, ancient graveyard of ships only 10 miles away.
Falmouth, England—(U.P.)—Capt. Henrik Kurt "Stay-put" Carlsen and his crew of one worked desperately today to get a new towline aboard the floundering U.S. freighter Flying Enterprise.
The old towrope snapped in rough seas about 56 miles Southwest of Falmouth today, casting the Enterprise adrift in some of the most perilous waters around Britain.
California Drivers Are At It Again
Los Angeles, Calif.-(U.R.)—It took Robert Chambers, 23, only 20 minutes to collect 19 traffic citations on a complaint more than six and a half feet long, but a 22-year-old woman nearly equaled his record.
But 22-year-old Shirley Ann Finley was not so lucky. She was fined $250 on her plea of guilty to 18 violations, all committed during a 38-block drive through Long Beach, Calif.
The charges against her included disorderly conduct, reckless driving, speeding up to 100 miles an hour and driving through six lights.
Chambers pleaded guilty to two of the charges, drunk and reckless driving. Tuesday and the other 17 charges were dismissed.
And she didn't have a driver's license.
Establish Cause Of Mine Disaster
Washington—(U.P.)—A spark from "non-permissible electrical equipment" caused the coal mine explosion that killed 119 miners at West Frankfort, Ill., according to Bureau of Mines inspectors.
A six-man inspection team said in a report issued late Tuesday that working areas of the big mine were filled with explosive gas because ventilating equipment failed and an electrical charge from the electrical equipment ignited the gas.
The tragedy occurred Dec. 21 in the Orient No. 2 mine of the Chicago, Wilmington and Franklin Coal Co. About 133 miners escaped uninjured and unaided, and five others were rescued. One of the rescued men died in the hospital.
49th
E
F
S the visi tior rad Kal
OPS Asks Horse Meat Investigation
Chicago—(U.P.)The regional director of the Office of Price Stabilization today called for a crackdown on an alleged racket in which $1,000,000 worth of horse meat was sold as hamburger and luncheon meat.
Michael Howlett asked United States District Attorney Howard Doyle for a special federal grand jury investigation after reporting that the horsemeat was sold as beef to customers in Chicago Springfield, Ill.
UNIVERSITY
Kansas State Historical Society
DAILY
49th Year No. 74
Topeka, Ks.
Thursday, Jan. 10, 1952
hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Educational TV Network Plans Advance; FCC Extends KANU Construction Permit
Steps are now being taken toward the establishment of a national television network of educational stations, R. Edwin Browne, director of radio and TV at the University of Kansas, said today.
The action was initiated at a meeting on educational television called by Mayor Joseph Darst of St. Louis, Mo. Mr. Browne has just returned from that meeting. Present were representatives from institutions in 29 cities in 18 states.
A working committee was appointed to lay the groundwork for the network, which would be controlled by the member stations, Mr. Browne said. It is planned that the network would produce educational TV programs as well as effect exchanges of programs originating in the member stations.
The benefits of this cooperative effort, Mr. Browne said, would be great economies in the per program per station costs and at the same time provide higher quality programs through the pooling of resources.
The projected TV station at KU would become a member of the network, he said.
Pharmacy Students Will Visit Indiana
Kappa Epsilon, honorary pharmacy sorority, is sponsoring a trip to Indianapolis, Ind, between semesters. All juniors and seniors in the School of Pharmacy have been invited.
All expenses except transportation will be paid by the Lilly Pharmaceutical house, which will be lost to the group. They will leave Sunday, Jan. 26, and return the following Wednesday.
BULLETIN
Falmouth, England—(U.P.) - T he crew of the Flying Enterprise today climbed to the top of the ship's funnel and then plunged overboard. Within four minutes Capt. Kurt Carlsen and Mate Kenneth Dancy were picked up by the British tug Turmoil.
Shortly after they leaped overboard, the ship went down.
Apply Now To Change Schools Next Term
If you plan to transfer from one school within the University to another to start the spring semester, by acting now you can save a lot of standing in line at registration time.
Bach Interpreter To Give Third Chamber Music Recital
The AM transmitter is to be installed in the same structure that will house the FM transmitter for station KANU, and which will be located at the base of the 514 feet tower southwest of the campus. The tower will be able to send out signals for both the FM station and KFKU, the University's AM station.
for bus.
When the AM transmitter is installed, Browne said KFKU would air its programs from the Lawrence tower. For many years KFKU has used the transmitter facilities of WREN, Topeka. This means that programs are originated here and sent by telephone line to WREN's transmitter near Grantville.
Plans for the transmitter house are now being checked by the state architect and will soon be put out for bids.
The new 5,000-watt AM radio transmitter for the University has been shipped from Camden, N.J., R. Edwin Browne, director of radio and TV at KU, reported today.
New Transmitter Shipped Here
KFKU will continue to share WREN's frequency and will retain the same hours for broadcasting. These are 2:30 to 3 p.m. and 7 to 7:30 p.m. Mondays through Fridays.
Stop at the Registrar's office before the beginning of final examinations to make application for transfer. By so doing now papers may be prepared in time for enrollment.
Rosalyn Tureck, pianist, will appear in an all-Bach program in the third concert of the Chamber Music series at 8 p.m. Monday. Jan.14, in Strong auditorium.
In addition to being an accomplished interpreter of Bach, Miss Tureck has been described as one of the country's leading teachers of the great classic master. She has lectured on Bach throughout the United States and given several master classes at summer music schools.
Miss Tureck made her first public appearance in a solo recital at the age of nine in her native city of Chicago. Between the ages of nine and 16, she played with the Chicago Symphony orchestra as a pupil of Jan Chiapusso, professor of piano at the University.
Miss Tureck has been a faculty member of the Juilliard school of dance in New York, the David Mannes school of music in New York, the Philadelphia conservatory of music and of the teachers' college of Columbia university, New York.
At present, Miss Tureck is on a leave of absence from the faculty of the Juilliard school of music.
The young virtuoso gave two all-Bach recitals in Chicago and won a fellowship at the Juilliard graduate school in New York city. She graduated from the school cum laude in 1936 and received the Phelta Beta award for "excellence in music and the arts."
In 1897, at the age of 23, Miss Tureck presented her first Bach
series at New York city's Town Hall. She received the first Town Hall Endowment award immediately after her New York debut.
Since that time, she has appeared with the New York Philharmonic, the Philadelphia orchestra, the Minneapolis, St. Louis and Chicago symphonies.
The Federal Communications commission has extended until July 10 the construction permit for FM radio station KANU at the University, according to word received today by R. Edwin Browne, director of KU radio.
The university had requested the extension because of delay in construction of the transmitter house. Plans for the house, which will be located at the base of the 514-ft. tower southwest of the campus, are now being given a final check by the office of the state architect.
Earlier it had been planned that the University building and grounds force would build the house. However, shortages of labor and material resulting from the summer floods caused the school to seek a contractor.
The regular session of student court will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in the court room in the basement of Green hall.
13 To Appear Before Court
Thirteen persons have been notified to appear. Most of the charges are for parking violations.
are for parking. Six justices and the chief justice try the cases. Four are law students: Ralph Brock, Orval Kauffman and Jerome Jones, third year law students and Thomas Reynolds first-year law. The other three justices are Anne Snowy, College senior; Roy Zimmerman and Loy Kirkpatrick, College juniors.
The justices are appointed by the president of the All Student Council with the ASC advisory committee, and approved by a two-thirds vote of the Council.
The most frequent court cases arise from traffic and smoking violations. When a student receives a parking ticket which he believes to be unjustified, he may appeal it to the court.
Persons notified to appear at this session include: Donald Mettler, Ronald Waller, Guiford Moore, Kenneth Philo, Marvin Liggett, Truman Francis, Kenneth Hoffman, Carl Kruse, Paul Zickefoose, Ruth Smitherman, Donald Smitherman, Erwin David and Gene Davidson.
The first of a series of six organ recitals to be sponsored jointly by the School of Fine Arts and the Museum of Art will be presented on Sunday at 4 p.m. on the baroque organ in the Museum of Art.
Graduate To Give First In Series Of Six Recitals
The organist for the first recital will be a graduate of the University, Jack McCoy, who is at present on the faculty of Ottawa university. Mr. McCoy's program will consist of works of the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries.
Passion Play To Show Last 7 Days Of Saviour
Jerusalem, the year 30 A.D. will be in Hoch auditorium this afternoon, tonight and Friday afternoon and evening in the $ \frac{2}{1} \% $ hour long Black Hills Passion play.
P. R. H. S.
JOSEF MEIER AS CHRISTUS
Lt. Col. Bayard Atwood, bloodmobile project officer, reported this morning that bloodmobile officials were "fairly certain" of reaching the 600-pint quota.
Blood donations at the bloodmobile in Military Science hall reached 480 pints today with 87 pints being collected by 10:30 this morning. A 393 total was reached at the end of operations at 5 p.m. yesterday. Two hundred ten pints were collected yesterday.
Need 120 Donors To Make Quota
"Of course," Colonel Atwood said, "we want to go over the quota as much as possible."
A few more donors are still needed for the final day of donations tomorrow.
Mrs. Marjorie Hipp, executive secretary of the Douglas county chapter of the Red Cross, said that from five to 10 more donors were needed at two two-hour intervals tomorrow. From 9 to 11 a.m. and from 2 to 4 p.m. donors are still needed.
Matinees begin at 2 p.m. and evening performances at 8 p.m.
evening period. Every student has heard the story many times of Christ's triumphal entrance into Jerusalem, of the Last Supper, of Judas' betrayal—in brief, the story of the last seven days of Jesus of Nazareth, his crucifixion, resurrection and ascension.
This story becomes startlingly real and important in the presentation of the Black Hills Passion play, which has been called a "modern miracle." The afternoon performances are continuous while the evening performances will have intermission for the convenience of the audience.
Unusual and effective lighting, authentic Biblical costumes, impressive scenery and a cast of about 125 are some of the features of the drama. Not to be forgotten are the two camels, mother and daughter, and two donkeys, mother and son, who are in the play.
Incidental music from Bach, Handel and others will be played during most of the production. A choir composed of about 20 University students will sing backstage during parts of the play.
I-D cards will admit University students to the Thursday and Friday matinees. However, the Friday matinee is intended primarily for the public school children. Tickets for the two evening performances will be sold at a scale varying from $1 to $3.
Tickets may be purchased at the Chamber of Commerce suite in the WREN building.
Josef Meier, who plays the role of Christ, pointed out that the language used in the play is "not unfamiliar," that it might be heard in present day life.
The Black Hills Passion play traces its history to Luenen, Westphalia, Germany. There in 1242 monks of the Cappenberg monastery presented what is believed to be the first of several Passion plays now in existence. The play was presented by the Clergy until the 17th century.
The Black Hills presentation antedates even the famed Oberammergau which is given in Germany once, each 10 years.
Part of the receipts for each performance by the Black Hills group, above expenses, is given to help someone, crippled children or underprivileged youths.
Truman--Churchill Meeting Deemed 'Satisfactory' By HST
Washington—(U.P.)—President Truman has announced his review of world problems with Prime Minister Winston Churchill yielded "most satisfactory" results.
Both American and British officials were satisfied the talks achieved the broad objectives of reviving a better working relationship between the two English-speaking nations, and intensifying their joint vigil against the soviet threat anywhere.
Some of the specific results of the conference already have been disclosed in a general way. They include:
Role Of Christ Unlike Any Other Part
"There are so many things you cannot do with the Passion play that can be done with other stage productions," said Josef Meier, who portrays Christ in the play which will be given in the first of four performances at 2 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium.
Although he has given more than 9,500 stage performances in the drama, Meier said he still has not tired of acting in it. "The character of Christ is of such tremendous depth that there is always something new I discover," Mr. Meier explained.
The play must have reverence and simplicity to a greater degree probably than any other drama, he pointed out.
The parts in the play do not wear on the actors because of the instinctive impression her receive of the importance of their part,"
he explained. "Whenever new people would come to us I could recognize the production taking hold of them and shifting their thinking," Mr. Meier said.
The role of Christ is different from any part in any other play, he pointed out, because the character dominates the actor, instead of vice versa. He expressed the belief that the universality and appealing quality of the drama come to a high degree from this fact.
"Many people, especially children, do not think of Christ as a real person like themselves," he said. "The drama comes to make them realize that Christ bore the crucifixion then as you and I would bear it today, and makes his sacrifice seem still greater and more beautiful."
People come to the play with certain pre-conceived ideas of the appearance of Christ, he noted. "These different conceptions are unified and the drama gives a heightened sense of realism, a sort of logic with which to approach the character of Christ."
However, even those completely uninterested in religion would enjoy the play, he pointed out, since it is a fine drama even from the non-religious person's point of view.
Perhaps the most unusual presentation the group has given, Meier said, was before the inmates of a penitentiary. "The penetrating interest of the man was felt particularly strong," he scene where Christ is coursing his cross to Mt. Olive and moth's mother Mary.
Meet is in his family to play. Hi n continue tradition.
sixth generation of use and act in the nd daughter will year-old Meier
Stalin—Agreement between Mr. Truman and Mr. Churchill that now is not the time to seek a top level meeting with Soviet Premier Josef Stalin.
European Army—Both the United States and Britain are completely agreed that Britain should not join this army which would pool the troops of six continental nations. But Mr. Churchill promised that Britain would support the project.
Atomic Air Bases in Britain—Mr. Churchill got renewed assurances that the United States would not use these bases for atomic bombing of Russia, if that ever becomes necessary, without the fullest advance consultation and agreement.
Britain's Economic Position—Mr. Churchill painted a grim picture of the outlook, including disclosure that Britain's gold and dollar reserves dropped $334,000,000 in the last three months. But he did not ask for special American aid and a sured Mr. Truman Britain would intensify its belt-tightening austerity program.
Atlantic Pact—Mr. Churchill and Mr. Truman agreed to use their influence to get the North Atlantic Treaty Organization machinery streamlined and more effective.
China and Korea—The two leaders agreed to press for peace in Korea but conceded that their countries would have to remain at odds on such issues as recognition of Red China.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 10, 1952
by Bible
Daily Kansan Editorials
Is Chiang To Blame For China's Downfall?
Those who charge Generalissimo Chiang Kaishek with corruption forget his prewar years, according to James R. Graham in a recent article in the Los Angeles Times. The son of missionary parents in China and a personal friend of Chiang, Dr. Graham should know what he is talking about.
"General Chiang had been in undisputed authority for the decade 1927-1937," he said. "His administration brought an era of prosperity and peace to the whole land from Peiping to Canton, from Shanghai to Chengtu, and efficiency and honesty in the provincial and national governments that had been unknown for a millennium," he added.
"Chiang drove the war lords into retirement, exterminated banditry, suppressed the growth and use of opium, stimulated home industry, road building and construction," he continued. "He established sound civil government throughout the provinces before he turned to build a military establishment for national defense."
Graham said that it was the Japanese fear of competition in industry which started the downfall of Chiang's government. Soon afterward, the Nationalists were having to fight two wars, one with the Japanese and one with the Communists.
He blamed the Truman administration for not sending troops to help Chiang. This goes a step further than the viewpoint taken by John T. Flynn in his book "While You Slept." Flynn insisted that the U.S. failed by not furnishing Chiang with sufficient weapons and ammunition.
As Graham stated it, "When a man is flat on his back and his enemies are sitting on him you do not hand him weapons. There is only one thing left to do, and that is to attack his attackers. Direct intervention in 1948, as in Korea in 1950, could have probably saved South China."
1941-1945, for whose wickedness Gen. Chiang Kai-shek got the blame, were not his old guard at all, but enemies and intruders in his ranks who promptly flopped over to the Communists when they began to roll," he said.
Graham readily admitted that there was corruption in the Nationalist government. He said that the corruption, graft and wickedness was "monstrous and colossal." But he added that Chiang was not to blame.
The truth is that the old generalissimo was losing his powerful dictatorial grip on the country. People were switching by the thousands to the new Communist government which gave promise of supplying the basic needs not being met under Chiang. Since then, the Communists have linked with Russia and the people have been deceived, for they still are not being provided for.
Chiang's government was too flat on its back to do anything about it, as Graham pointed out, because even some of the General's generals were selling out, with their troops, to the Reds. Many men fought on both sides. Anyone who fed them could lead them.
But Chiang himself cannot go blameless.
"The corrupt Chinese officialdom of those days,
In the United States many sandals in government circles have rocked Washington and the voters. The Truman administration already has been referred to as a corrupt group. The president, as leader, has to shoulder much of the fault, even though he may be only indirectly responsible.
The same is true for Chiang Kai-shek.
Short Ones
Little Man On Campus
Senator Taft's backers insist that he will win the 1952 election in a walk, and we are reminded of the famous picture of a small boy whistling as he walks through a cemetery at night.
The 16-year-old bride of a wealthy Swiss industrialist, suing for $10,000 a month separate maintenance and $75,000 for attorney's fees, declares that "money doesn't mean anything to me." Which is a refreshing attitude in these mercenary days.
B. B. Lee C-22
"Aww, this course ain't so rough—I never cracked a book in it last semester!"
News From Other Campuses
Texas Wins Blood Contest
Students at the University of Texas were the winners of a recent blood-for-Korea drive after being challenged by the University of Idaho. The Texans staged skits, pledged students to give blood and elected a "Miss Bloody Mary" in promotional activities.
Party Honors Foreign Students
Students at the University of Washington were hosts to more than
500 foreign students from Seattle college at an annual Christmas party in which the foreign students were served all sorts of "good old fashioned American chow."
Mall 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 year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17. 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence Kans., under act of March 3. 1879.
About KU And Flood Relief
(from Lawrence Journal-World)
Dear Editor:
The people of North Lawrence will never be able to adequately express their appreciation for the tremendous help given us by the sorrowful girls and fraternity boys of KU. From 1951 on, the terms "college girls" and "college boys" will have a new meaning for us. These young people certainly have been generous in their help, both physical and financial.
Even though we saw it happen, we still can't quite understand how these fine girls and boys would come over to North Lawrence and do so much in the way of dirty and heavy work to help us out.
These young people shoveled dirt, mopped floors, washed walls, and waded through muck and mud. They didn't do it for glory, they did it
Some people may think of college girls as flighty, young things in organdy dresses, but over here we think of them as sympathetic and generous young women clad in blue jeans and checker shirts, pitching in to help unfortunate people get a new start in life.
just because they wanted to be good neighbors.
God bless them! We are fortunate to have them as a part of our community.
Not only did they work and work, but some of them came back at Christmas time with gifts of clothing, food and money.
North Lawrence should forever be loyal to our great State University and to the young people who go to school on Mount Oread.
Pearl Williams
503 Elm
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 Sheppeard, Ellsworth Zahm
City Editor...Joe Taylor
Sports Editor...Charles Burch
Telegraph Editor...Dan 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
ALL THE WIDE
WONDER OF
THE HIGH
SIERRA IN
COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR
Ten Thousand Feet Above The Sea Owen Merritt Fought The Fight That Had to Come!
RANDOLPH SCOTT
MAN IN THE SADDLE
DISTRIBUTED BY TECHNICOLOR
A COLUMBIA PICTURE
with JOAN LESLIE · ELLEN DREW · ALEXANDER KNOX
HEAR
TENNESSEE ERNIE
SING
"MAN IN THE SADDLE"
ADDED
"MAN IN THE SADDLE"
Late News Events Color Cartoon "Leghorn Swaggled"
Prevue Saturday Night
Box-Office Open 11:15 p.m.
SUNDAY
Comfort! Convenience
JAYHAWER
NEW PUSHBACK CUSSIONED CHAIRS
100%
GO TO FRITZ CO.
1. Get Gas
2. Change Oil
3. Lubricate
4. Check Ti
4. Check Tires
MEN WITH KNOW HOW
△
CITIES
SERVICE
FRITZ CO.
CITIES
8th and N.H.
Phone 4
Downtown—Near Everything
SERVICE
---
Thursday, Jan. 10, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
TUESDAY AND THURSDAY Pan Fried Chicken
75c Hot Home-Made Rolls Potatoes and Chicken Gravy
BEEF
FRENCH FRIED SHRIMP Everyday----75c
STREIT'S CAFE
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 Phone 278 18 E.9th.
REDUCED PRICES
150 FABRICS
P. H. Davis CUSTOM SUITS
SAVE
university shop
14021 CRESENT DRIVE...IN WEST BUILD.
up to $30.00 on extra trousers in a selected group of fabrics.
FILKIN'S LEATHER SHOP 820 Mass.
BELTS A Full Line Styled and Designed to Please You.
SHAVING KITS Attractively Fitted For Convenience In Travel and At Home
SALE
LEATHER BASKETBALL SHOES
295 pair
LUGGAGE High Quality Leather For Long Lasting Beauty.
LEATHER GOODS
To Fill Your Needs
KIRKPATRICK'S
715 Mass. Phone 1018
Patronize
Advertisers
Daily Kansan
Try Our U.S. Choice-Club Steaks
We also serve sandwiches, malts, chili OPEN 6 A.M. TO MIDNIGHT
CRYSTAL CAFE
609 Vermont FREE PARKING
PERSONALIZED HAIR STYLING
10
For An Appointment Call
Corn's Studio of Beauty
23 West 9th Phone 709
Interlocking Sets
Quality Diamonds
White or Yellow Gold Settings
Your Beauty
SAMPLE'S
Demands Attention!
$ \left( 9 1 4 \frac{1}{2} \right) $ Mass. Phone 368
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
A. G.
GRANADA CAFE
BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER
Specials 65c - 75c
FOR BREAKFAST
DELICIOUS HOTCAKES AND COFFEE 25c
GRANADA CAFE
First Door South of Granada Theater
Pick Up The Groceries For Your Midnight Snack At
LOG CABIN MARKET
1827 Louisiana Phone 910
At The Foot of The Hill
EXPERT UPHOLSTERING
TAPE IN LINEN TAPE ON THE SEAT OF THIS SOFA. IT IS SUPPLIED WITH A HAND COVER AND BACK CASE.
At DINGMAN FURNITURE 1803 Mass. Call 150
MONEY-TIME-WORK
by having your clothes washed at the
Save
Save MONEY - TIME - WORK
9 Pounds Washed for
LAUNDERAIDE
35c
Soap, Bleach and Bluing Furnished
Dryers Available
LAUNDERAIDE--813 Vermont Phone 2515
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Jan. 10, 1952
Jayhawkers Prepare For Big Seven Drive
Long and hard practice sessions have occupied the Jayhawkers this week as they prepare for their important drive for the Big Seven conference pennant.
The Kansans, with 11 victories, currently have the longest string of wins this season of any major college quintet in the nation. But only one of the conquests has been inside the conference.
The team's victories have been over some strong opponents but the real test is yet to come within the league. Kansas and K-State are the only major powers in the Big Seven this year but the other five teams cannot be counted out. All of them, including Saturday's foe, the Missouri Tigers, are capable of pulling unsets along the route.
With this in mind, Mentor Allen
'Unbeaten' List Trimmed To 7
New York—(U.P.) The list of major unbeaten college basketball teams was sliced to just seven today as Syracuse university and Mississippi State were blasted out of the charmed circle.
Syracuse, winner of its first six games, absorbed a thoreth 72 to 49 drubbing Wednesday night from Pittsburgh, while Mississippi State, victor in its first nine contests of the season, was just as soundly whipped by Mississippi. 77 to 62.
The twin defeats left these "Lucky Seven" as the elite of the college court—Kansas, Seton Hall, Florida, Iowa, Illinois, Duquesne, and St. Bonaventure.
Seton Hall, currently ranked as the No.16 team in the nation, is the only member of this group to play tonight-risking its 11-0 record against Creighton.
Syracuse was stopped chiefly because Pitt's Panthers found a way to stop six-foot, eight-inch Center Ed Miller. The Orange pivot man carried a 24-point a game average into Wednesday night's fray in Pittsburgh, but the Panthers throttled him with just a single goal and four free throws for a punty total of six points. Credit for the defensive job goes mainly to Pitt's Junior Center, Don Dirostek.
SHOP BROWN'S FIRST
MEN'S GENUINE LEVIS Sizes to 42 $3.75
ORIGINAL
LADY
LEVIS
Sizes 23 to 36
$4.25
TUXEDO RENTALS
MEN'S STOCKMANS TROUSERS $7.98
LADY LEVI RIDERS $9.98
First Door South Of The Patee Theatre
Brown's TOGGERY 830 Mass.
js working his charges as hard as ever in an effort to keep them in the sharpest form possible throughout the season. He points out that KU cannot afford to let up for a second. He also believes that being rated the nation's top team is a great honor to turn out to be a jinx as every team goes all out to defeat such highly-rated clubs.
KU is showing more polish, speeec anbd alance than it has in the past three years. Coach Allen attributes this to the experience of four of his starters who are playing their final year. Greater reserve depth is also a major factor in this season's fine team.
With the fine support of Dean Kelley, Charlie Hoag and several capable reserves, the KU team has risen to the top of the nation's cage teams.
Holy Cross 74, Trinity (Conn.) 50
Columbia 68, Harvard 51
Colgate 60, Cornell 34
Navy 77, Catholic U. 39
Pittsburgh 72, Syracuse 49
Villanova 79, Creighton 61
Yale 64, Brown 59
Dayton 101, Ohio U. 71
Kent State 70, Akron 53
Louisville 75, Xavier (O.) 67
Okklahoma City 53, Wichita 46
Bowling Green 54, Toledo 53
William and Mary 75, Hampden
Student 69
Cage Scores
Georgia Tech 56, Auburn 54
SEE "UNSPOILED" EUROPE
Motor, bicycle, rail, flatball and study tours
for students and teachers from $500 (60
USD) to $1000 plus air or air 30-50 days $50 up. See MORE
SPEN LESS & A SITA TOWER 19th year
SITA Students International
Travel Association
WRITE OR PHONE FOR FREE FOLDER
PHONE 3661
"your midwest SITA representative"
DOWNS Travel Service
1015 Mass. St.
Lawrence, Kans.
H A N
After-Inventory CLEARANCE
Dresses, Cottons ---- $3.99
Values to $14.95
Winter Dress ----- $7.00
Values to $16.95
Brassieres ___ $1.69
Values to $2.50
Summer Gloves ---- $1.00
Values to $1.98
HAMILTON'S
934 Mass.
Phone 1717
No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money.
Be Happy- GO LUCKY!
LUCKIES TASTE
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!
When sending smokes to servicemen,
And you don't know their choice,
Send better-tasting Lucky Strike—and, oh, how they'll rejoice!
Jane E. Brown
Le Moyne College
It doesn't take an engineer
To figure out just why
The truly fine tobacco makes A Lucky your best buy!
Seward D. Shukers
Kansas University
the campus lesson I rate first
L.S./M.F.T.
co experts pick
brand for me!
wayt
niv.
LUCKY STRIKE
IT'S TOBACCO
CIGARETTES
L.S./M.F.T.
WITH LOVE
LUCKY
STRIKE
IT'S TOASTED
CIGARETTES
L.S./M.F.T.
© A.T. Co.
The American Plan C
L. S./M.F.T.-Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco
C
Ted's Recall To Service Expected To End Career
Page 5
By OSCAR FRALEY
New York—(U.P.)-The Marines apparently wrote finis today to the baseball career of slugging Ted Williams.
A captain in the Marine Air Corps reserves, Williams will be recalled to active duty in May. And, barring a speedy release from active duty, close friends feel that he never will return to the major leagues.
For even at best, the 33-year-old Williams does not love baseball as a game. Hitting, yes. But baseball, as a team game, no. Nor does he need it financially any more, a facet which was his greatest spur as a poor boy seeking security.
Baseball, in recent years, has lost whatever appeal it ever did have for him. His batting production faltered, the boos of the crowd jarred him and clubhouse life was ever a stormy session with critical sportswriters who nagged him constantly with needling twewriters
It made of him a Jekyll-Hyde character who was unpredictably edgy and easy by turns. Around baseball men he was charged with being temperamental, touchy, curt, grouchy and insulting. From time to time, all of those descriptions fitted.
Baseball became for him a chore without joy and he missed the fun derived from the scraps, the scrapes and the squabbles by such as the Stankys and the Durochers. Few people understood Williams, and tall Ted didn't care. He was a man alone, and a lonesome one.
Yet in his frequent appearances on the fishbeat he—his real love—he was a different man. Here he was affable and personable, a right nice guy, and he'd sit and chin with all comers.
Williams has talked, and often, of the day when he would retire from baseball. He laid a portion of his future course as early as December
of 1050 when he signed a long-term contract as a consultant with a fishing equipment concern. That assures him of a fine income if and when he calls it quits in baseball.
But even more important, as massive baseball future is concerned in the hope of his recall to duty with the Marine Corps, is his baseball reputation.
-Intramural
Round-Up
Wednesday's Results Fraternity "A"
Acacia 31, Kappa Alpha Psi 11; Sigma Chi 31, Lambda Chi 21; and Phi Delta Theta 34, Alpha Tau Omega 33.
Independent "A"
Don Henry 36, Boones 21.
Today's Schedule
Robinson Gym
Fraternity "B"
6:45-E Phi Kappa vs. Pi K A
Fraternity "C"
6:45-W Phi K Psi vs. Delta Chi
Independent "B"
7:45-E AFROTOC vs. Battenfeld
W Navy vs. Don Henry
8:45-E Varsity vs. KHK
Independent "C"
8:45-W Varsity vs. AFROTOC
8:45-I 1222 Club vs. Jolliffe
Annex Fraternity "A"
**Fraternity "A"**
4—Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. Sigma Nu
5—TKE vs. Triangle
6—Phi Gam vs. Phi Kappa Tau
8—Delta Tau Delta vs. Pi K A
**Independent "A"**
7—Battenfeld vs. Geology club
7—Battenfeld vs. Geology club
8—Misfits vs. Twin Pines
Mary Ann Mahoney, Alpha Chi Omega's high scoring sophomore, broke her own season's scoring record Wednesday as she scored 41 points to lead the Alpha Chi basketball team to a 54 to 24 win over Theta Phi Alpha.
Mahoney Breaks Scoring Record
In other intramural basketball games this week, Delta Delta Delta defeated Monchsonia 40 to 21, Freshman MJ won over Alpha Phi 17 to 15, Gamma Phi Beta defeated Temtruth 29 to 26, Freshman BL forfeited to Alpha Delta Pi, and Freshman AA defeated Pbi Beta Pi 11 to 8
Delta Gamma forfeited to Cohops, Freshman BH forfeited to Foster Alpha Omicron Pi forfeited to Chi Omega, Kappa Kappa Gamma defeated Sellards 29 to 25, Sigma Kapna won over Freshman MK 19 to 6 and Miller defeated Locksley, 25 to 18.
Travel Service THE
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
TRAVEL AGENCY
Tel. 30 8th & Mass.
PRECISION
WATCH
REPAIR
Thursday, Jan. 10, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Watch Repair
Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed
Wolfson's
743 Mass. Call 675
Entire Stock
Men's Topcoats
TWEEDS – COVERTS
GABARDINES
All Wool – Rayon and Wool
All Rayon
NOW
REDUCED
20%
Pick one out NOW while we have a good selection of sizes
Gibbs Clothing Company
811 Mass. St.
105
Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
AYE-IT'S
THR-R-R-IFTY
Shopping HERE
SAVE
SAVE
SAVE
A penny saved is still a
penny earned-and you'll
save many a penny buy-
ing all your food needs
at Cole's or Rusty's. Since
every day, it stands to reason that you're bound to save all along your food list — and that means a lower total cost for your basketfull of foods. Aye—it's always thr-r-rifty shopping here . . . so take your fling at our Super Values. Rusty and Jimmy
Armour's Banner Shank Portion Ib.
HAMS 39c
(Whole or Butt Portion 45c lb.)
Fresh Sliced lb.
PORK LIVER 29c
Ohse's All-meat lb.
FRANKS ___ 49c
U.S. Choice lb.
CHUCK ROAST ---- 69c
Pan Ready Ib.
PERCH FILLETS ---- 39c
Hunt's
PEACHES
4 No. 21/2
Cans ___ $1.00
Strongheart
DOG FOOD
1 lb.
cans---- $1.00
Andy Boy Ige. Stalks
**CELERY** ___ **2 for 25c**
Firm Slicing 1 lb. tube
**TOMATOES** ___ **25c**
Solid-Crisp jumbo hd.
**LETTUCE** ___ **21c**
*McClure's* 10 lb. bag
**POTATOES** ___ **57c**
Fancy Texas 46 oz. cans GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 5 for $1.00
Kitchen Parade No. 21½ cans
PINEAPPLE 4 for $1.00
Miracle No. 303 cans MIXED VEGETABLES 10 for $1.00
Good Value No. 2 cans HOMINY 12 for $1.00
Northern TOILET TISSUE ... 12 for $1.00
SUNDAY STORE HOURS 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. WEEK DAYS 9 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.
RUSTY'S
Food on Center
23RD. AND LOUISIANA
LOW PRICES EVERYDAY
OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAYS
ICA
LOTS OF GREAT PARKING SPACE
COLE'S
Food on Center
2ND. AND LINCOLN
EVERYDAY LOW PRICES
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Jan. 10, 1952
Beta Theta Pi Elects McNeill
Harvey Grandle, College senior,
was elected president of Beta Theta
ii fraternity Monday night. Neil Mc-
Nell, business junior, was elected
vice-president.
You Get Same Day Laundry Service By Coming To
RISK'S
Page 6
Self-Service Laundry
613 Vt. Call 623
Star Kansas Basketball Player Is Swamped With Fan Mail
It is probably safe to say that very few students here at the University have surplus mail headaches.
Clyde Lovellette has correspon- $dence problems, though. And the combined efforts of 6 feet and 9 inches in a row of wife, Sally, have not been able to make a dent in the increasing amount of mail he receives daily.
A large part of the letters are from young basketball players over the country. Most of them just ask for the All-American's autograph but others have more unusual requests.
One New Jersey youngster asked Lovellette to "write and tell me all about yourself." Clvde did. too.
Lovellette makes it a practice to answer the requests of every letter and postcard. Most of his fans receive a copy of the Kansas basketball brochure autographed with a personal message.
There are few delivery problems involved in all the mail, even a postcard from the East Coast was delivered properly when simply addressed to "Clyde Lovellette, Lawrence."
Another letter was addressed to Lovellette at "Mt. Oread, Kansas." Still another was delivered when addressed to, "The best basketball player in the nation, Lawrence."
See Bigg
See 'em
Bigger
Bring In Your
NEGATIVES
We'll blow 'em
up to ..
4" x 5" ----$ .40
5" x 7" ----.60
8" x10" ---- 1.00
MOSSER-WOLF
1550 Broadkapping
2556 General Writing
2668 General writing
Bookkeeping
1550
General Writing
2556
General Writing
2668
General writing
2968 Broad writing
Institutional
1555
Institutional
2284 Broad Stick
2442 Fine Stick
$2.00
and up
complete
FOR YOUR PERSONAL
SELECTION
33 NUMBERED POINTS
Esterbrook
RENEW-POINT FOUNTAIN PEN
One slightly confused fan sent his letter to Lovellette at "Kansas State College, Lawrence, Kans."
2284 Broad Stick
442 Fine Stick
FOR YOUR PERSONAL
SELECTION
Esterbrook RENEW-POINT FOUNTAIN PEN
Student Union Book Store
Clyde's fans extend from coast to coast with cards arriving from as far away as Canada, Puerto Rico, and England. Letters have arrived from every state and most Kansas towns, including Manhattan.
Mail is no new problem for Lovellette although it has reached its greatest proportions this year. During his sophomore year, Lovellette received about 200 pieces of fam mail. Last year's record of about 500 pieces is sure to go by the wayside at the present rate, however.
Lovellette is the ideal of hundreds of young Americans. As one fan of a few years added on his postcard, "PS. Your good."
Official Bulletin
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship
7.30-8.30 tonight, 206 Strong.
IVCF Missionary meeting, 12- 12:50 p.m. Friday, Danforth chapel. All welcome.
Mathematics colloquium, 5 p.m.
Monday, 203 Strong.
KuKu, 7:15 tonight. 105 Green, important.
Red Peppers, 5 today, Strong auditorium.
Delta Sigma Pi business meeting 7:30 tonight. 3 Strong Annex F.
No more ISA council meetings this semester.
Union library, 4:30 today, SUA office.
Bailey Chemistry club, 4 today, 305 B. C.L. Discussion of ionization chambers, Ron Simmons.
Students who are planning to transfer from one school of the University to another (College to Business, College to Education, College to Journalism, or from any school at KU to another school at KU) should stop at the Registrar's office before the beginning of final examinations to make application for transfer so that the papers may be prepared in time for enrollment. It will save a lot of standing in line if you do! J. K. Hitt. Registrar.
Deutscher Verein, Heute, 5 p.m.
Comfort! Convenience!
JAHWAWER
NEW Parkway CUSHIONED CHAIRS
Continuous Shows Every
Saf.-Sun. 1:00 p.m. On
Mon, thru Fri. Shows At 2:30-7:00-9:00
NOW Thru SAT.
Meet Sylvanus!
Con Man - Gun Man
Ladies' Man
"Flime Lieber Oesterreich" in 15 Fraser.
ROBERT CUMMINGS
TERRY MOORE
JEROME COURTLAND
THE
BAREFOOT
MAILMAN
IN SUPERCINE COLOR
THE BAREFOOT MAILMAN in SUPER CINEMA COLOR
—Plus—
FOOTBALL
ROSE BOWL
SUGAR BOWL
COTTON BOWL
Newcomers of University Women's club. 7:30 tonight, Spooner-Thayer Museum.
Psychology club, 7:30 tonight, 9 Strong. Don't miss movie, "The Silent One" at last meeting of semester. Home Ec club, 7:15 tonight, 110 Fraser, will work on Red Cross lavettes.
The following are to attend Student court in the Court room of Green hall, 7:30 tonight: Don T. Mettler, Ronald M. Waller, Guifford W. Moore, Kenneth W. Philo, Marvin S. Liggett, Truman D. Francis, Kenneth L. Hoffman, Carl W. Kruse, Paul W. Zickefoose, Ruth Smitherman, Donald W. Smitherman, Erwin David, Gene E. Davidson.
ASTE 7:30 tonight, Fowler shops.
Election and installation of officers,
movie and refreshments. Visitors welcome.
Math club, 5 today, 203 Strong, Dr. Robinson, "Multi-Valued Logics."
The first democratic legislature in America was the Virginia House of Burgesses, established in 1619.
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 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
Excellent clinical facilities. Athletic and recreational activities. Dormitories on the campus.
CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY
1845-H Larrabe Street Chicago 14, Illinois
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Pick of the Week:
Don't Be That Way
Luis Arcaraz
Tell Me Why
Eddie Fisher
Charmaine
Paul Weston
On 45 and 78
Bell's
925 Mass.
Bell's 925 Mass
STARTS TODAY
TEEN AGE GIRL WITH AGE OLD IDEAS!
SHE learned a lot of things you never find in school books!
'I WANT TO HAVE FUN AND NOBODY'S GOING TO STOP ME!'
THE FILMAKERS present On the Loose starring JOAN EVANS · MELVYN DOUGLAS · LYNN BARI 'Is it all our fault?' SHE'S ON THE LOOSE FOR THRILLS!
P. N. A. M.
Features Tonite At: 7:45 and 9:44
WHY SURE . . . COLOR CARTOON: TOO!
EXTRA
NEW YEAR'S
DAY BOWL
GAMES
Granada PHONE 046
Continuous Shows Sat. and Sun. from 1 p.m.—Open 12:45
THIS G
HAD TA
OVER,
N
SVM Members Leave More Than Good Will
More than good will and a feeling of inspiration was left on the campus by the 2,100 students who attended the Student Volunteer Movement conference here during the Christmas vacation.
Billfolds, pocketbooks, necklaces,
eye glasses, overcoats, gloves (25
pairs), books, notebooks, ear muffs
and pens are among the items left.
Perhaps the students were too eager
to start their missionary work back
home and forgot a few of the
material things of life.
One student got on a train for Michigan and discovered he had left his ticket behind. A telegram to this effect was received by Dr. Edwin Price, director of the University Wesley foundation, who has been assisting in re-uniting the lost articles with their owners. Dr. Price mailed the student his ticket, which he had left under the cot he slept in in Robinson gymnasium.
Another student, who lost a bill-fold containing $40, was also lucky and had it returned. Several others who lost valuable items were not so lucky, however, Dr. Price said.
A Sigma Nu and an African missionary both discovered their boots didn't fit and phoned Dr. Price. He arranged for a switch. The missionary had phoned from an East coast city.
Dr. Price said the students lost much more this year than at the SVM conference here four years ago.
Geological Society Picks KU Professor
Dr. Cecil G. Lalicker, professor of geology, has been elected national secretary-treasurer of the Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists for the third consecutive year.
Other officers recently elected are Clifford C. Church, San Francisco, Calif., president, and Morton B. Stephenson, Houston, Texas, vice-president.
University Daily Kansan
The new officers will be installed at the annual convention in Los Angeles in March.
Advertising Fraternity Elects Spring Officers
New officers were elected for Alpha Delta Sigma, national advertising fraternity, at a meeting Tuesday.
They are Frank Lisec, president; Ted Barbera, vice-president; Bill Taggart, secretary; Dave Arthurs, treasurer; and Max Urban, corresponding secretary.
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
Last Times. Tonite
Box-Office Open 6:45
DORIS DAY
'ON MOOLIGHT BAY'
--And--
Humphrey Bogart
"IN A LONELY PLACE"
Adm. 14c - 50c
FRIDAY-SATURDAY
Adm. 14c - 50c
Whip Wilson
Fuzzy Knight
"WANTED, DEAD
OR ALIVE"
—Co-Feature—
THIS GUY
AND TAKEN
OVER...
THE
MAN WITH
MY FACE
RELEASED THRU UNITED ARTISTS
Ch. 8 "Flying Disc Man From Mars"
Classified Advertising
Phone K.U.376
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five day days days
25 words or less ... 50c
Additional words ... 1c
75c $1.00
2c 3c
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be mailed to you in person during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univer- sity press office, Journalism bldg., not later than 4:54 p.m. the day before publication date.
TRANSPORTATION
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange and international travel whether tours or other activities. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Traff Service, 1015 Mass.
Ask us about family rates, sky coach,
and round trip reductions. All expense
hours. Fall and winter cruises. Book
a European travel trip next summer.
Call Mass. Visit National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30-
BUSINESS SERVICE
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports and miscellaneous. Mrs. Krohn and U.4. upstairs. 2775J after 4 p.m. Ph-2
TYPING of all kinds done promptly and accurately. Mrs. Merritt, KU 296 16
TYPING—Theses, term papers, matchbooks, letters, etc. Prompt and accurate service. Mrs. Hall. 1344W. 506 West Sixth. tf
TYBING: Theses term papers, miscellaneous. Prompt, accurate service. perienced. Mrs. R. B. Loomis, 27F Sumyside, 2834M. 16
Page
TYPING: Themes, term papers, thesee prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs. Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. $^{1}$
Did He Send It Back
Or Not, That's The Question
Great Lakes, III—(U,P)—A Navy recruit here received a letter that is a superb example of feminine something or other.
Here it is:
"Hello Honey:
"I am engaged so don't write any more. I am sending back your ring. If you don't need it, send it back to me. My new boy friend can't afford one as of now. Bye."
"Nancy."
TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these tying tests. 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 equip-ment in area thus assuring fast, efficient service and television. Phone 138. 826 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. tt
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 6044, 1109 Mass. tt
TYING: Experience in theses term papers, miscellaneous typing, and stencil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. tt
CRYSTAL CASTLE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malfits, home-made pies and air-conditioned. Open by am, af. midnight. Crystal Cake. 699 Vt.
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our staff is dedicated to providing fun, fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf
FOR SALE
CAMERA, CIRAFLEX f3.5 Wollensak lens, shutter to 1/200 sec, reflex focus. Priced $10 below dealers price. In excellent condition. Phone 1146R. 16
'37 CHEYROLET. Tudor excellent condition.
Motor overhaulied, new clutch,
good tires, spare. Call 3569R after 5:30
p.m. 15
MUST SACRIFICE! Gradunting senior
must part with top shape 1946 Indian
motorcycle. Yours for only $175.00. Call
broke Dick Brecko at 1922. 14
MECHANICS DELIGHT. 38 Plymouth
Call 620-755-1449 or see anyley 603 Eilam
Schaum's "OUTLINE OF COLLEGE PHYSICS" and "OUTLINE OF COLLEGE CHEMISTRY" are here now! These books will give you the help you want in making an "A." See them at your Student Union Book Store. 11
NEW AND ATTRACTIVE STATIONERY for residents of Corin and North College Halls. Forty-eight sheets and twenty-four envelopes in each box for only 98c. Get yours today at the Student Union Book Store. 11
SET OF FIRST FLIGHT custom built
INSTRUMENTS
Louisiana or call 385 SRH events.
14
STORY OF THE B-29 SUPERFORTRESS... FROM THE TRAINING BASE AT SALINA, KANSAS TO THE SKYSCRAPING HIMALAYAS COMES THIS THRILLING STORY !!!
--house. One-half block to campus. P)
**6838J**. 1
THE WILD BLUE YONDER
P-40
INTO
ROAR THE HELL-RIDERS OF THE B-29s!
STARTS
SUNDAY
Special Prevue Saturday At
11:15 p.m.
Thursday, Jan. 10, 1952
Blood — Today"
"A Wounded Soldier Needs Your
Granada
PHONE 946
NEW SHIPMENT OF POCKET BOOKS just in. Come in and look them over. Student Union Book Store. 11
DRAFTSMEN AND ARTISTS! Pelican Graphos instruments are here. For drawing, lettering, and sketching. Get yours from the large selection now available at the Student Union Book Store. 11
TRAILER HOUSE; 25 feet, 1947; in good condition; semi - permanent located. pharmacy. Medical student wishes to sell more. 1929 Connecticut, phone 25681.
LOST
PHI CHI fraternity at Skyline Sat-
urdays. Reward to finder. Call Bibl-
Groth, 377.
PARKER PEN with initials B.L.H., between Corbin and green hall, Monday, Jan. 7. Reward. Call Barbara Holmes. 860. 15
FOR RENT
SINGLE OR DOUBLE room available for undergraduate girl students in nice
HAVE VACANCY in single and doub-
rooms for next semester. Phone 155*
1416 Tenn. 1
LARGE FURNISHED one room apartment, electric refrigerator, separate heat share bath. Two miles from campus. $33 Bills paid. Call 22258. 1-
FOUND
ROOM FOR BOYS, vacancy for 2 boy
122 Miss Jellie 495,
122 Miss Jellie 495.
FOR SECOND SEMESTER large we furnished room in quiet home to your man student. No smoking $20 a month. Encouragement to KU and downtown. Photo 127.
RENT A TYPEWRITER and start the new year with higher grades. Only $1.00 and $5.50 per month for portable and standard machines. Student Unite Book Store.
- STARTS TOMORROW -
THE PATEE TAKES GREAT PLEASURE IN JOINING
THE MIDWEST PREMIER SHOWING OF THIS
BIG PICTURE ...
WOMAN'S WIST Watch found in Memorial Union building. Will owner please write identification to Box 5, Universit Daily Kansan? 1
He Led the Last Great OUTLAW RAIDS!
BARRICAUX
The COFFEYVILLE RAID!
COFFEYVILLE RAID!
The COFFEYVILLE RAID!
BILL DOOLIN
THE KID
The CIMARRON
KID
COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR
CIMARRON
COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR
A. G. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B.
CIMARRON ROSE BOB DALTON
CIMARRON ROSE
BOB DALTON
RED BUCK
Universal International
AUDIE MURPHY·YVETTE DUGAY
with BEVERLY TYLER • JOHN HUDSON • LEIF ERICKSON James Best Matinee Tomorrow At 2:30 p.m. Doors Open 2:00 p.m. Evening Features at 7:34 and 9:32 p.m. Continuous Shows Sat. and Sun. Features At 1:44 - 3:42 5:40 - 7:38 - 9:36 p.m.
ENDS TONITE • "SEALED CARGO"
New PATEE PHONE 321
Page 8
University Daily Kansart Thursday, Jan. 10, 1952
News Roundup
British Recognition Of Reds Only 'Paper Relationship'
Washington—(U.P.)—Prime Minister Winston Churchill considers Britain's recognition of Red China only a "paper relationship."
Churchill doesn't intend to have his new Conservative government withdraw at this time the diplomatic recognition hastily granted by the late British Socialist government.
But he did promise President Truman, according to American officials, that Britain's recognition of the Chinese Communist regime will not stand in the way of British action with the rest of the free world to meet any threat of aggression by Red China.
Long Fight To Save Ship Appears Lost
Falmouth, England—(U.P.)—Capt. Henrik Kurt Carlsen and Mate Kenneth R. Dancy were taken aboard the tug Turmoil today when The Flying Enterprise started sinking under them.
The U.S. Destroyer Willard Keith radioed that the Enterprise, smashed by gale winds and triphammer seas, appeared to be sinking slowly.
Grange Asks Check Of Railroad Policy
Washington—(U.P.)The National Grange today called for careful re-examination of "our entire transportation policy" with an eye toward revamping federal railroad regulations.
In a letter to Gustav Metzman, chairman of the Eastern railroad presidents conference and president of the New York Central system, Grange Master Herschel D. Newsom said rising transportation costs coupled with increasing freight volume have brought financial difficulties to the railroads.
"It is all too evident," he said, "that railroad bankruptcy means eventual government ownership or government subsidy—neither solution is tolerable."
McLaughlin Leaves Million To Texas U.
Los Angeles—(U.P).—Oil developer Andrew Cyrus McLaughlin left the bulk of his $1,000,000 estate to the University of Texas under the terms of a will on file today in superior court.
His hand-written will, filed for probate Wednesday, directed that the estate be used by the university's school of medicine to establish and maintain fellowships for the investigation of infection and immunity.
Murray Lashes Steel Management
Washington—(U.P.)—CIO President Philip Murray accused the steel industry today of wanting its plants manned by "robots" who do not demand higher wages or "talk back" to management.
Murray charged that the industry ignores "human values" and "pushes around" the CIO United Steelworkers to a point of "rebellion."
Rescue Vessels Rush To Disaster Area
Seattle, Wash.—(U.P.) —Rescue vessels plowed at full speed through the stormy North Pacific today to reach 45 men adrift in lifeboats after abandoning the sinking American freighter Pennsylvania in "mountainous" seas.
Seven ships were en route to the Pennsylvania's position 700 miles off the Washington coast. They battled rain, snow and winds up to 35 miles an hour to reach the disaster scene.
A&P
SUPER MARKET 936 Mass. St.
FOOD VALUES
Country Doz.
Fresh Eggs 39c
Campbell's 8 oz. can
TOMATO JUICE 10c
Dole No. 211 can
PINEAPPLE JUICE 10c
Campbell's 10½ oz. Cans
TOMATO SOUP 3 for 35c
Sultane 12 oz. glass
STRAWBERRY PRESERVES 29c
Frozen - Whole Sun Makes 1 1/2 pts. 6 oz. can Orange Juice 2 for 29c
Squirt - Dr. Pepper
COCA-COLA ___ 6 for 25c
These Prices Effective thru Sat., Jan. 12, 1952
Newest Independent Nation Holds Another Distinction
Washington—(U.P.)-Libya, the land where U.S. marines fought the Barbary pirates, “on the shores of Tripoli” 146 years ago, is not only the world's newest independent nation. It is also the poorest.
The 1,340,000 Arabs who exist in that sullen North Africa region manage to scratch only an average of yeet on their mountains, desertes and rocky mountains—the lowest per capita income in the world.
More than 90 percent can neither read nor write. A third have been afflicted and a tenth blinded by an infectious disease, trachoma.
The United States this year will supply $900,000 for UN projects and $1,150,000 for Point-Four technical assistance to help lift Libyan living standards.
Libya, nearly one-fourth the size of the United States, sprawls for 800 miles along the Mediterranean coast between Egypt on the east and Tunisia on the west.
Centuries ago great forests stood and jungle beasts roamed along its northern shores. But now great deserts reach all the way to the sea.
Less than five per cent of the land can be farmed and then only irregularly. There are two severe and two minor droughts every 10 years—and seldom a good season.
There is some fertile land in Tripolitania where farms can grow barley, figs, olives, oranges, and dates in good seasons. But in the rest of the country, the soil is bad.
In an effort to make a start toward improving conditions in Libya, the S. has launched a series of projects. This is the way they shape up;
Agriculture—the U.S. hopes to open two agricultural training schools in Tripiol and near Bengazi—the two capitals—by next August. Each will have about 200 students. Libya will supply the buildings but the U.S. will provide the teachers and pay most of the operating expenses. Point-Four also plans to establish five or six demonstration farms.
Education—Point-four will establish an advisory group to try to raise the level of general education. There now are only a handful of Libyan college graduates, no doctors, engineers, or even pharmacists.
Health—A U.S. public health service specialist has just completed a survey showing Libyan conditions to be incredibly bad. Point-Four will supply advisers to deal with the most urgent problems, especially trachoma.
YOUR EYES
目
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Your
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
Plymouth
. . . has a used car priced for you.
Buddy
GALLAGHER
634 Mass. Ph.1000
Dr. F. C. Allen, Jayhawker basketball coach, has written three books: "My Basketball Bible," "Better Basketball" and "Phog Allen's Sports Stories."
New Pumps of Soft Grey or Blue Suede by "Jacqueline"
J
$8.95
Also lots of new flats -
instep strap - by
"CONNIE"
Blue and Red
$5.95
Haynes & Keene
819 Mass. St. Phone 524
KU and YOU in EUROPE in 1952 with SITA Students International Travel Ass
Compare these prices!
70 Day Bicycle-Motor-Rail Tour covering England, France, Italy,
Switzerland, Germany, Holland, Belgium ... $950*
65 Day Rail-Motor Tour covering same route as above___ $1050*
80 Day Bicycle-Rail-Motor-Boat Tour covering England, France,
Switzerland, Germany, Austria, Denmark, Sweden, Norway,
Scotland $975*
70 Day Bicycle-Rail Tour covering England, Belgium, Germany,
Switzerland, France $550*
For further information and free descriptive folder, see your SITA travel representative at . . .
- All prices include passage.
DOWN'S TRAVEL SERVICE
1015 Massachusetts
MRS. LOIS ODAFFER
Phone 3661 MR. JOE BROWN
Booo Co
Iddp
Ivwgw
cy
S F
was bjotn gea pn kkt ee
Work On Fieldhouse Progressing
Work on the pilings of the new million-dollar University fieldhouse on the south edge of the campus is about half done.
Frank Elayer, state building inspector assigned to the project, estimated that approximately 450 of the 875 steel pilings have already been driven.
He explained that the huge stone and steel structure will be supported by 20 main footing piers, ten on each side of the building. Ten of these already have been driven.
tainers does not freeze so can be poured in zero weather.
The Raymond Piling company of Kansas City which has the contract for the pile driving was allowed 75 working days in which to complete the work. The piling job has reached its present stage with the workmen having been on the job only about 30 days.
The 167 tons of steel needed to complete the fieldhouse has not yet been released by the National Production authority so the completion date for the structure is still uncertain.
The only working days which have been lost were when the wet snow made the ground around the machines too slippery. The pre-heated concrete which is poured into the well-insulated steel con-
The Bennett Construction company of Topeka has the general contract for the project. It now has about 10 men on the job as does the Raymond Piling company.
UNIVERSITY DAILY
49th Year
Friday, Jan. 11, 1952
hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Bloodmobile Passes Quota Of 600 Pints
Blood donations to the Red Cross bloodmobile at the University were over the 600 pint quota today. A total of 624 pints had been collected at the close of the third day of bloodmobile operations last night.
operations
Another 85 pints were collected by
10:30 this morning. The daily break-
down: Tuesday: 183 pints; Wednesday:
210 pints, and Thursday: 231
pints
Lt. Col. Bayard Atwood, bloodmobile project officer, and Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the University health service, said they were estimating that the total would go over 750 pints. Another 200 pints were expected to be given by the end of operations today.
Bloodmobile registrations were closed by Red Cross officials at noon yesterday.
Select Directors For College Daze
The three were picked by the Student Union Board of Directors at a meeting Wednesday afternoon.
Dick Klassen, business junior, and Dana Hudkins, education junior, have been chosen producer and director of College Daze, student musical revue. Kenneth Dam was elected business manager.
"Love Is Here To Stay," title of 'he winning script submitted for the snow, will be presented April 29 through May 2.
A casting party for all students interested in taking part in the musical will be held at the beginning of next semester.
IRELAND
ROSALYN TURECK, pianist, will appear in an all-Bach program in the third concert of the Chamber Music series at 8 p.m. Monday, Jan. 14, in Strong auditorium.
Murphy To Talk At Jaycee Dinner
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will be the principal speaker at the annual Bosses Night banquet of the Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce.
Incoherent Writing Caused Failures In Proficiency Test
The banquet will be at 6:45 p.m.
Tuesday, Jan. 22, at the Eldridge
hotel. The plan for the event is for
each Jaycee member to bring his
employer for a get-acquainted session.
WEATHER
Partly cloudy and continued mild tonight with diminishing winds; Saturday partly cloudy, colder, turning much colder in north portion.
It was explained that the selection of Chancellor Murphy was particularly appropriate since in 1949 he was chosen by the national Junior Chamber of Commerce as one of the 10 outstanding young men in America.
The examination was taken Dec. 8 by 332 students. It is required of all juniors and seniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and the Schools of Education and Journalism.
An accumulation of mechanical errors and incoherent writing were responsible for failures in the recent English Proficiency examination, Mrs. Natalie Calderwood, assistant professor in English said.
When asked how students should prepare for this inevitable examination, Mrs. Calderow said:
The type of errors made were general and there was no particular error that appeared more often than another, Mrs. Calderow said.
"The most important preparation is to try to do a good job of speaking and writing every day—every time you open your mouth to speak, every time you write a letter home, every time you take notes or an examination in every course. To
However, she gave two practical suggestions for students who want to prepare themselves. One was to take the English exam, while another is especially the answers to the question 'What are our papers graded on?'
do a good job of a composition examination, you can't begin preparation the night before."
Anthropologist To Speak Over KLWN Sunday
The next examination will be given on Saturday, March 8. Mrs. Calderwood urged that students who have doubts about their ability to pass should feel free to drop in and talk with her in 211 Fraser after the start of the second semester
"Secondly," she said, "don't be overconfident and therefore careless."
Carlyle S. Smith, assistant curator of anthropology and assistant professor of sociology and anthropology, will be the twelfth speaker Sunday morning in the Sociology on the Air series over KLWN.
He will talk on "Archeology of the Great Plains" at 9:45 under the sponsorship of the department of sociology and anthropology.
Dr. Smith, who holds a Ph.D. degree from Columbia University, has been heading a team of field researchers for the past four summers.
In the past two years he has been excavating in the central part of S.D. in a village that was probably occupied by the Arikara Indians, family classifying his 20,000 objects unearthed during his excavations.
In Kansas he has sampled a dozen sites and in Republican county he conducted intense excavations in an area inhabited by the Pawnee Indians.
6 Are 'Not Guilty In Parking Cases
Six students were declared not guilty of parking violations by the student court in a regular session Thursday evening.
Truman Francis, engineering freshman; Guilford Moore, business senior, and Ronald Waller, fine arts freshman, were declared not guilty because of a failure by the department of buildings and grounds to place a sign at the entrance of parking zone Q. The men had parked in the zone not knowing it was restricted.
Kenneth Philo, engineering senior, and Carl Kruse, graduate, were declared not guilty of overparking on Jayhawk boulevard. There were two dissenting votes on these two cases. Denee Deane, Engineering school, were declared not guilty of violation during the summer session of school.
Four persons were declared guilty because of a failure to appear before the court. They were Donald Mettler, Donald Smitherman, graduate, Ruth Smitherman and Paul Zickefoose, graduate.
Two appeals were denied. Marvin Liggett, freshman in medicine, and Erwin David, engineering senior, were declared guilty of overparking on the campus.
Proficiency Exams To Be Seen Jan.15
Students who passed the English proficiency examination may see their papers Tuesday, Jan. 15, between 9 a.m. and 12 noon and between 2 and 5 p.m. in 201 Fraser.
Those who failed the examination will be notified to meet their advisors to go over their papers at a later date.
Kansas State Historical Society
Audience Thrilled By Passion Play
By DON PRINGLE
The Black Hills Passion play, a "modern miracle," gripped the matinee and evening audiences Thursday in Hoch auditorium and never-to-be-forgotten impression.
50 Firms Visit Business Office
During the past semester personnel representatives from about 50 companies from all over the United States interviewed mid-term graduates of the School of Business.
On Tuesday, Jan. 15, representatives from the Colgate-Falmive-Peet company will be at the business place bureau to interview students for jobs in both technical and field interviews will be coordinated with the School of Engineering and Architecture schedule on that day.
Sophomore Wins ISA Scholarship
Jack Heysinger, instructor in economics and director of the placement bureau, said that the service is open not only to students in the School of Business but also to other students who are interested in jobs similar to those open to business graduates.
Through the placement bureau maintained by the school, business graduates have an opportunity to meet with prospective employers in a field in which they are most interested.
The 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.
Eloise Fetuerborn, College sophmore, from Richmond, Kan., has been awarded the $50 Independent Student association scholarship.
Members of the committee were Anne Rush, Robert D. Kelsey, Alan Hurt and Victoria Rosenwald
Selection was 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.
Offer Fellowships To Study Abroad
Fellowships for graduate study abroad are being offered by the Leibniz—Kolleg of Tubingen University, the Deutsche Akademische Austauschdienst, Bonn, Germany, and the American Swiss foundation for scientific exchange for the academic year 1952-53.
Application blanks may be obtained from the German department office, 304 Fraser, and all application blanks must be in by Saturday, March 1.
The Deutsche Akademische Austauschdienst, Bonn, is offering seven fellowships; the Leibniz-Kolleg of Tubingen University, 2 and the American-Swiss foundation, one or more grants to students holding the doctor of philosophy or doctor of medicine degrees.
General qualifications for these fellowships are a good knowledge of German, a bachelor's degree by the date of departure and demonstrated academic ability and capacity for independent study.
Libraries Extend Hours
Watson and Lindley libraries will remain open until 10 p.m. on Saturdays, Jan. 12, and 19 for the convenience of students.
ISA To Hold Dance Feb. 15
The Independent Student association will have a dance Friday, Feb. 15 from 9 p.m. to midnight at the Community building. The Collegians will play.
Unusual lighting effects, brilliant,
authentic costumes and simple but
effective scenery added to the fine
acting of all those in the cast, were
worthy of the story of the last seven
days of Jesus of Nazareth, his crucifixion, resurrection and ascension.
The speaking voices of the actors were clear and easily understood even on the second balcony. Josef Meier's portraital of Christ was done with grace and spiritual appeal.
Fred Hagan, who played Judas, won the pity and hatred of the audience simultaneously. Even back-stage one sensed a compulsion in the other actors to avoid him after his betrayal of Christ.
The terrifying cruxificon scene was particularly impressive.
Hollywood could well take lessons from the Black Hills group on how to best present religious drama.
The body control exerted by Meier on the cross is remarkable. He completely conceals all evidence of breathing during the long period while he is on the cross and then returns to the cross. The art was taught him by his father and has remained a family secret for nearly 200 years.
The University first made arrangements to bring the Black Hills Passion play here last February. Although it was recognized that this week was a poor time from the student viewpoint, it was believed that the play was of such merit that it should be brought anyway. This week was the only date the troupe had open.
Of course everyone will find something in the drama which seems particularly effective or which does not agree with their ideas of the story. This writer kept noticing the sort of turbans or hats worn by the high priests. They were shaped so that they looked like two big mickey mouse ears, appropriate apparel for the cruel priests who professed to be religious.
The dialogue for the play was translated from the German by Meier and simplified so that even children could understand it. He added the soliloquy for Judas, which is good drama and helps to humanize the world's most famed villain.
Performances of the play will be given again this afternoon beginning at 2 p.m. and this evening beginning at 8 p.m. The afternoon performance is continuous and lasts $2\frac{1}{2}$ hours. The evening performance will have intermission and may be slightly longer.
Engineers Get $750 For Fund
A gift of $750 to the KU Endowment association has established "The Dean's contingent fund of the School of Engineering and Architecture of the University of Kansas," according to Irvin Youngberg, secretary.
Dr. Philip Young, dean of the Graduate School of Business at Columbia university, is the donor.
Dean T. DeWitt Carr of the KU engineering school said the fund and any future additions would be used for building up the school and related projects for which there is no provision in the budget.
ID Cards Are Good For Play Tonight
Josef Meier, who portrays Christ in the Passion play, suggested to the administration that students be admitted to this evening's performance of the play in Hoch auditorium.
The suggestion was readily accepted. Plenty of seats will be available for all students who wish to see the drama which begins at 8 p.m. Most of the seats left are the $3 seats which provide the best possible view of the play.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 11, 1952
Cram Course
Biometrics
A. The Phenom
PETER MEYER
N.Y.C.
Cram Course
A. Tue Prince
Eight dollars buys him a "complete and unbridged" set of notes, sold by this scavenger who guarantees they "will pull you through in a breeze." With only a little study, the student discovers the course curriculum has changed considerably, rendering the notes useless.
Seven dollars enrolls him in the notorious "Cram Course," a rather unique institution on this or any other campus. Upon discovery, the University promptly boots it from the Pine room
One dollar and 70 cents buys this harbinger of midnight oil, the Western Civilization manual. This hapless student is apparently unaware of the fate awaiting him.
A Picture Editorial
Fifteen cents for the first of innumerable cups of coffee. And that is his first cigaret.
(Read pictures clockwise from top)
'The Big Fix' or 'Western Civ'
on the ground that no paid lecturers are allowed there. The Community building is just as good, however.
Ten dollars (at a minimum) backs up his pice to a campus brain to illegally take the quiz for him. The brain, nobody's fool, is obviously holding out for more. Chances are he'll get it.
And guess who takes the quiz and who gets the credit? Something's rotten here. A doubting Thomas (proctor) surveys the situation.
Worth it? asks the luckless youngster, giving vent to his emotions upon receiving a "D—" grade. Well, somebody made money out of the deal. Who says the Western Civ department is Socialistic! This looks like pure Capitalism, $26.85 worth.
(Daily Kansan photos by Al Marshall)
Daily Kansan Editorials
Popularity Versus Politicians
Can General Eisenhower win the Republican presidential nomination?
His biggest obstacle at the present time is Senator Robert Taft, but he also has other obstacles to overcome in order to win the nomination.
He cannot actively campaign. He cannot even directly declare that he is a candidate. Army regulations do not allow those on active duty to declare themselves as political candidates and so Ike must leave his campaign to friends.
According to Time magazine's poll. Taft has already nailed down 400 votes of the nominating committee. Ike can count on 300. There are 500 votes remaining.
Public sentiment does not necessarily reflect itself in the nominating committee's voting, and so any public sentiment for Eisenhower can just about be discounted.
The Republicans know what Senator Taft stands for. He is conservative, in disagreement with the present foreign policy, and an old party regular. They know little about Ike. About all they know is that Eisenhower supports the present foreign policy at least in regard to NATO, his job now.
Since Taft is an organization man, Republicans can count on him to award jobs if he is elected. Eisenhower is not an organization man and therefore owes nothing to the Republican organization regulars.
The recent Truman scandals have driven down Democratic prestige. The Republicans now have a good campaign issue and believe that any Republican nominated can win. With this in mind the opinion is that since Taft is an organization man, why bother with Eisenhower?
Senator Lodge's statements Sunday at least put Eisenhower into the political ring, and thus prevent a stampede to Taft in the absence of Ike.
Editorial opinion has begun with support for Ike. The New York Times has said that Eisenhower is "superbly equipped" for the presidency, and the Chicago Sun-Times states that "Eisenhower can best bring unity to a free world."
This editorial opinion will at least keep the Taft movement down and tide the Eisenhower movement until Ike can speak for himself.
Senators Lodge, Duff, and Carlson have a terrific job, for Eisenhower has stated that he will run only if drafted. They have until July to put on a winning show for Eisenhower, but what is the play Hamlet without a Hamlet?
-Joe Lastelic.
A Chamber of Commerce safety slogan says "Don't kill your holiday by accident." Implying, of course, that anyone planning to kill it deliberately may do so without fear of reprisal from the Chamber.
Football may be all right as a sport, but for good, clean fun there is nothing like trying to bribe an income tax official.
Comments...
Coach "Phog" Allen's recent charge of stalling in the construction of the new fieldhouse really should have been expected. Wasn't he the one who not long ago sounded off at the control style of basketball?
A sports headline says "28 Gorillas Get Letters." It is things like this that give sports a bad name.
They are the same ones who clapped when Senator Lodge was named to head the Eisenhower movement rather than Senator Saltenstall.
Governor Arn of Kansas and Senator Kem of Missouri announce that they will be candidates to succeed themselves and headline writers throughout the middle west cheer.
D-
The two men are in a formal setting, with one standing and the other sitting. The standing man is holding an envelope and appears to be presenting it to the seated man. Both men are wearing suits and ties, suggesting a formal event or meeting. The background includes a building with columns, indicating an institutional environment.
THE FOUNDATION OF THE RAYNAN COLLEGE
140
Friday, Jan. 11, 1952
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
First Discussion Of Child Workshop To Start Saturday
Seven persons professionally connected with the field of child care will lead the discussions at the first session of the Work shop for the Preschool Child Saturday at the University Nursery school, 1100 Missouri street.
Those leaders during the day's activities are: Mrs. Mary Daniels, director of the Co-operative Nursery school, Lawrence; Mrs. Luella M. Foster, instructor in home economics and director of the University Nursery school; Mrs. Alberta Hillyer, director of the Community Nursery school, Topeka; Miss Ruth McNeill, head teacher at the University Nursery school.
Dr. G. M. Martin, director of the division of child and maternal health, state board of health, Topeka; Thelma McClure, group care consultant for the state department of social welfare, Topeka, and Mrs. Anna Brown Ransom, director of the Family Service Day nursery, Topeka.
A general session will begin at 9:45 a.m. with a discussion on "What To Expose of the Two's and Three's" A film, "The Terrible Two's and the Trusting Three's," will also be shown. More discussion on "Play Material for the Two's and Three's" will follow the film.
The first of the four meetings will begin with coffee and registration at 9 a.m. Saturday at the University Nursery school.
The workshop is open to anyone who is interested in child care. The registration fee for the four Saturdays of the workshop is $2. Persons are not required to attend all four meetings.
The remaining three meetings will be held Saturday, Jan. 19, Saturday, Jan. 26, and Saturday, Feb. 2. They will cover the four and five year old age group, emotional problems of children, and child health.
OLDMAINE
Trollers
HANDCRAFTED UNION COLUMBIA
Made in the United States
OLDMAINE Trollers
handcrafted with originals
for those who want the best!
on the beat with something smart for young feet!
Tan Suede
Grey Suede
Blue Suede
Black Suede
Brown Suede
on the beat
with
something
smart for
young
feet!
Tan Suede
Grey Suede
Blue Suede
Black Suede
Brown Suede
Such heavenly shoes at a close-to-the-earth pricel They do a smart co-starring job with practically your entire wardrobe, beside giving you walking-on-air comfort. Hand-sewn trim and flexible leather soles give OLDMAINE TROTTERS that wonderful workbench look.
$9.95
Piner fitting I.
Longer wearing I
Easier flexing I
Royal College Shop
837-839 Mass. Phone 648
我会在保证安全后。
A type play which has received a recent revival in England and the United States, the poetic drama, will be presented in the Lab theater play "The Marriage of Sobeide" at 8 p.m. Monday and Tuesday, Jan. 14 and 15 in the Little Theater of Green hall.
Poetic Drama To Be Given Jan.14,15
Tickets will be on sale at 25 cents both nights of performance at the box office in Green hall.
Written by German author Hugo von Hoffmanstahl in 1899, the play was translated for the American stage by Baird Quincy Morgan, assistant professor of German at the University of Wisconsin.
Herm is directing the play whose cast is made up of the acting class of Frances Feist, instructor in speech.
The play has an oriental background with a setting in a city of ancient Persia.
The poetic drama is a sort of opera without music," Herm said.
junior as Shalmassar; Claussen as a debtor; Mary Beth Moore, College junior; and Gulistane; Jonell Aschcraft, College junior; a slave; Robert Ziesenis, College senior; as a camel driver; Claussen as a gardener; Barbara Donovan, College senior; as the gardener's wife; and Ziesenis as Bahram, a servant.
Walling will be stage manager, White will handle lighting and Miss Orendoff and Miss Donovan will be in charge of costumes and make up.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
HUGHES COOPERATIVE PLAN for MASTER of SCIENCE DEGREES
PURPOSE
ELIGIBILITY
To assist outstanding BS graduates in obtaining their Master of Science Degrees while employed in industry and making a significant contribution to important military work.
June 1952 graduates receiving BS Degrees in the following fields:
Electrical Engineering
Electronic Engineering
Physics
Mechanical Engineering
Aeronautical Engineering
CITIZENSHIP
PROGRAM
Those chosen to participate in this plan will be from the upper portion of their graduating classes or will have evidenced unusual technical ability. They must also have evidenced imaginative ability and possess personality traits enabling them to work well with others.
Under this Cooperative Plan, starting June 1952, the following schedule of employment at Hughes is arranged:
Full time—from June 1952 to Sept. 1952
Half time—from Sept. 1952 to June 1953
Full time—from June 1953 to Sept. 1953
Half time—from Sept. 1953 to June 1954
Under this arrangement it is possible for a recipient to receive $ \frac{8}{10} $ of a normal year's salary each year and to attend
PARTICIPATING UNIVERSITIES The University of California at Los Angeles and the University of Southern California will participate in this program, and candidates for Master of Science Degrees must meet entrance requirements for advanced study at these schools.
Applicants must be United States citizens who can be cleared for "Secret," due to their work at Hughes Research and Development Laboratories being of a classified nature.
SALARIES
a university half time during regular sessions working on his Master's Degree.
Salaries will be commensurate with the individual's ability and experience and reflect the average in the electronics industry. Salary growth will be on the same basis as full-time members of the engineering staff. In addition, the individuals will be eligible for health, accident, and life insurance benefits, as well as other benefits accruing to fulltime members.
TUITION
TRAVEL AND MOVING EXPENSES For those residing outside of the Southern California area, actual travel and moving expenses will be allowed up to $10 \%$ of the full starting annual salary.
Tuition at either UCLA or USC, covering the required number of units necessary to obtain a Master's Degree, will be paid by Hughes Research and Development Laboratories.
NUMBER OF AWARDS Approximately one hundred Cooperative Awards shall be made each year, if sufficient qualified candidates present themselves.
SELECTION OF CANDIDATES Candidates will be selected by a committee of representation composed of two each from the University of California at Los Angeles, the University of Southern California, and the Hughes Research and Development Laboratories.
DATES FOR APPLYING Informal applications should be mailed prior to January 30,1952.The Laboratories will then forward formal applications, which should be returned, accompanied by up-to-date grade transcripts, by February 15,1952.Selections will be made during the month of March.
ADDRESS CORRESPONDENCE TO Hughes Research and Development Laboratories Engineering Personnel Department Culver City, California
Friday, Jan. 11, 1952
College Students Still To Have 30 Days To Enlist At End Of Academic Year
Lewis B. Hershey, director of selective service, told college students this week that they would still have 30 days after the end of their academic year to enlist in the service of their choice.
Your
Plymouth
Man
. . . has a used car priced for you.
Buddy
GALLAGHER
634 Mass. Ph.1000
All that a student has to do, call Hershey, is to get his dean or registrar to tell his local draft board he is a full-time student doing satisfactory work, and actually has been attending classes before the induction notice was mailed out.
The 1951 amendments to the act changed this. By them it was provided that any student pursuing a full-time course who was ordered for induction would, if he had never been deferred before as a student, be deferred in class I-S until the end of the academic year. But he could receive only one such deferment.
The selective service law places an obligation on each registrant to keep local board advised of his current status. Therefore, Hershey suggested that it would be a wise move for each student to have his school send
official notice to the local board as soon as he learns he has passed his pre-induction physical.
There is also another student classification under the current regulations. This is II-S.
To receive this designation a college man must be in the upper portion of the men in his class or have made a score of 70 or better on the selective service college qualification test.
Thus according to the existing regulations there are two student deferment categories. I-S is for those students who fail to meet the requirements for the II-S status. Those with this rating are allowed to complete only their current year of study.
II-S is for those who meet either or both the academic and the test score requirements. This is a more permanent condition and may enable a student to finish his entire education.
Delicious
CHEESE
PIES CAKES COOKIES
are perfect mates to a cup of coffee for between-meal and midnight snacks.
DRAKE'S crisp cookies and light, fluffy cakes are served to you daily .oven fresh !!!
DRAKE'S BAKERY
907 Mass.
Phone 61
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
DR.C.R.ALBRIGHT Chiropractor - X-Ray and Physio-Therapy
Residence Phone 3486-R 105 E.Eighth St.
VAN'S PRESCRIPTION SHOP Phone 601
1023 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Ph. 1531
HOLT PHARMACY
14th and Mass.
Phone 234
Across from High School
MARIAN BROCKWAY Chiropractor
CRAIG - COLBURN Chiropractic Clinic
10 E. 9th St. Tel. 4224
1024 Vermont St.
Telephone 115
Round-Up
-Intramural
Sigma Nu 35, Sigma Phi Epsilon 32; TKE 49, Triangle 34, and Delta Tau Delta 38, PI KA 32.
Thursday's Results Fraternity "A"
Phi Kappa Psi 40, Delta Chi 29.
Independent. 67
Phi Kappa 28, Pi KA 25.
Fraternity "C"
University Daily Kansan
Phi Kappa 28, Pi KA 25.
Fraternity "B"
Geology club 39, Battenfeld 37 and Misfits 32, Twin Pines 14.
AFROTC 45, Battenfeld 24; Navy 35, Don Henry 22, and Varsity 31, KHK 29.
Independent "C"
Varsity 55, AFROTC 32 and 1222 Club 32, Jollife 31.
Today's Schedule
Robinson Gym
Fraternity "B"
6:45—E Beta Theta Pi vs. Phi Kappa Psi.
W Lambda C Alpha vs. Alpha
Eusilon, PL
7:45—E* Ph Kappa Tau vs. ATO.
Phi Ephela vs. Sigma
Phi Ephela
7:45—E Phi Kappa Tau vs. ATO
8:45—E Delta Tau Delta vs. AKL
8:45—E DU vs. Kappa Sigma.
8:45- Aloo taai daa Dena vs. Al
8:45- E DU Kappa Sigma.
W Phi Kaip Chi Chi Chi Chi.
**Fraternity "A"**
Bahoon Amor
Page 4
4-Beta Theta Pi vs. Sigma Pi.
5—Beta Kappa Sigma vs. P Kappa P
6—Beta Kappa vs. Delta Chi.
7-Sigma Chi vs. Acacia.
8—Beta Kappa Tau vs. P Kappa A.
Saturday's Schedule
Fraternity "A"
Fraternity "A" Robinson Annex
2-ATO vs. Delta Tau Delta.
2-ATO vs. Delta Tau Delta.
3-Phi Gamma Delta vs. Phi DT.
4-Du vs. Sigma Nu.
5-Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. TKE.
Fraternity "C"
Robinson Gym
W AKL vs. Delta Chi.
Sunday's Schedule
Robinson Annex
Fraternity "A"
w Pn Delta 1. vs. Sigma Ch
3—E Lambda CA vs. Sigma PE
B- I Bambola CA vs. Sigma PE.
W DU vs. Phi Kappa Sigma.
2—E Beta Theta Pi vs. P. Kappa P.
5—E Delta Tau Delta vs. TKE.
4-E Phi G Delta vs. Kappa Sigma
2:30- Phi K Sigma vs. Phi Kappa
2:30- Delta Chi vs. Sigma Pi.
4:30- Beta T Pi vs. Phi Kappa Psi.
4:30- Triangle vs. AKL.
Mall subscription: $3 a semester. $4.50 for a four-month postage). Published in Lawrence, Kansas every afternoon during the University of Kansas summer holidays and examination periods Entered as second class matter Sept. 17. Received university holidays and examination periods Kanser. under act of March 3, 1879
The New Yorker
25th Anniversary Album
$5.00
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass.
Tel 666
CHRISTMAS TREE
Church Services
mil al la
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.
First Christian Church
00 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.
Church Of Christ
1501 N. H.
W. Taylor Carter, Minister Kieth Barnhart. Music Director
11:00 - Sermon
10:00 - Bible Study
11:55 - Communion
6:30 University Class
7:30 - Evening Service
Plymouth Congregational Church
925 Vermont St.
Dale E. Turner, Minister
10:00—Church School Class for University Students
11:00—Morning Worship
5:30 p.m.—University Discussion Group
SUNDAY SERVICES
5:30 p.m.—University Discussion Group
9 a.m. - Holy Communion for collegians. Breakfast and Canterbury meeting follows in Rectory. Installation of officers and report of the Provincial Canterbury Conference.
11 a.m. - Morning prayer and sermon Jan. 17, 7 a.m. - Holy Communion in Danforth
MEMBER ASSOCIATION
CANTERBURY CLUBS
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
8th and Kentucky
George C. Fetter, minister Gus Ferre, minister to students
9:45 University Class led by Gus Ferre'
11:00 Morning Worship. Subject-"And Seeing The Multitude"
5:30 Roger Williams Fellowship. Panel Discussion The Need For a National Baptist Student Fellowship"
7:30 Evening Worship and Song Service. Guest Speaker - The Rev. Clayton Browne
First Methodist Church
Tenth and Vermont
Oscar E. Allison, Minister
Edwin F. Price, Minister to Students
9:45 a.m. Wesley Foundation Church School Class
10:50 Morning Worship Sermon:"What God's Kingdom Means to us Now"
[Signature]
5:30 - 7:30 Wesley Foundation Fellowship. Students will discuss "Shall I Take a Religious Vacation".
University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Kansas To Place String Of14 Victories On Line
The Kansas Jayhawkers will be putting a string of 14 victories, three of which are from last season, on the line when they battle the Missouri Tigers in Brewster fieldhouse at Columbia, Mo., Saturday night.
The game will be the second conference effort for the two clubs, Kansas having won its opener 71-48 while Iowa State nudged MU 57-53.
In their only tussle with the young Tigers this season, KU downed them 75-65 in the finals of the Big Seven tourney.
Stalcup's crew will try ball control and a pressing defense to defeat the experienced Jayhawkers. Coach Phog Allen has been drilling the squad on the pressing defense and the KU team should be able to handle anything that MU might try.
In that game Coach Sparky Stalcup's team showed considerable talent as they pressed KU most of the way. The MU team, which has won six while losing five games, is young but what it lacks in experience it makes up in speed and hustle.
Clyde Lovellette, the nation's No. 1 scorer with a 27.1 average for 11 games, will be facing one of the conference's best "big boys" in Bill Stauffer, 6-foot 4-inch center. Stauffer is a strong rebounder but has never been successful in holding down Lovellette's scoring.
Lovellette has scored 298 points in
Cage Scores
Seton Hall 60, Creighton 44
Penn. State 61, Syracuse 57
Duke 74, New York U. 72
Loyola (ill.) 68, St. John's (N.Y.)
Maryland 55, Georgetown (DC) 40
Virginia 88, VMI 60
Wake State 55, North Carolina 53
Indiana Forest 71, DePauw 52
Detroit Tech 119, Cleary 22
Illinois Normal 89, Michigan
Friday, Jan. 11, 1952
Norm 60 San Francisco 51. Lovola (Cal.) 44.
Coach Allen, his staff, a 12-man varsity squad and "11 B" team players will leave after practice this afternoon by bus for Columbia, Mo. The Tiger has a game with the Tiger reserves the varsity encounter.
11 games on 66 of 116 field shots for a shooting average of 51 per cent.
The Kansas players will return to Kansas City Sunday before going to Lincoln, where they play the NU Cornhuskers Monday night. The "B" team will return to Lawrence Sunday.
Kansas State was the offensive and defensive leader in the Big Seven conference last year. Offensively, the Wildcats led with a 69.5 points per game average. Defensively, they held their opponents to a 49 points per game average.
YOUR EYES
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Lawrence Ophelia Co.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
SEE "UNSPOILED" EUROPE
Motor, bicycle, rail, flatbat and study tours for students and teachers from $500 (60 days). Year 'round Economy Tours by steam boiler. SPEEND, LSMS OR SAISA TOURJ 18th year
SITA Students International
Travel Association
WRITE OR PHONE FOR FREE FOLDER
PHONE 3661
"your midwest SITA representative"
DOWNS Travel Service
1017 N. 25TH ST.
Lawrence Kane
A LITTLE CARE
POLICE
Means A Lot of Mileage
You can get more miles for your tire dollar by taking care that you don't wear your tires too thin.
If your tires are showing wear bring them in to RAPID TRANSIT for trade-in on new U.S. ROYAL MASTERS or U.S. ROYAL AIR-RIDES.
You'll be surprised how much your old tires are worth!
Tire Man
We also have a large selection of good used tires—white and black sidewalls.
GOOD SERVICE IS BUILDING OUR BUSINESS Rapid Transit Service
NCAA Opens Business Talks
Open All 24 Hours
Mobilgas
Cincinnati, O. — (U.P) — Business sessions of the National Collegiate Athletic association convention open today and a proposal to give the organization explicit authority to control televising of sports events is the first item up for a vote.
Among matters to be decided by the NCAA delegates is a measure which would membership committee which would punish violators of NCAA regulations.
1000 Mass.
Later, delegates will consider resolutions on post-season games, spring training, financial assistance and education adherence to scholastic requirements.
Phone 1300
U.S.
ROYAL
HIRD
After the NCAA votes itself authority to act on these problems and arranges for policing them, it is probably tomorrow.
Control over live telecasts seemed a certainty. At a round table discussion of video problems Thursday, most delegates favored continued restrictions. Their recommendation, sent to the convention floor, called for a "middle course of moderation."
Mikols reports that his squad is in "fair shape" after practicing eight weeks.
Kansas Swimmers To Return To Action Against Huskers
University swimmers meet Nebraska in a conference match for their first competition in two years in the remodeled Robinson gym pool at 2 p.m. Saturday. The two teams will swim a 10-event meet in the new 20-yard pool.
The squad includes Dean Glasco, John Welsh, in the backstroke; Charles Orthwein and Jerry Scott, in the breast stroke; Sam Perkins, Ken Reid and Bill Payne in the free style and sprinters John Ashley and Mahlon Ball, Dick Effin and Bob Wellborn.
swimmers until Denver university brings a team here Jan. 31.
Leading Coach Walt Mikols's Kansas will be letterman Harry Newby, a free-styler. The only other letterman, senior Tom Payne, will miss the meet because of recent illness.
This will be the only meet for the
The Jayhawkers are low in experience because pool repairs forced cancellation of last year's schedule. Coach Mikols, however, will send a group of promising youngsters, several of whom have no high school experience, into their first competition.
"We don't know exactly what to expect from Nebraska," Mikols said, "I know what the Huskers did last year, but so far I haven't received their roster, so I can't make any comparisons."
He explains that this is the first time that a swimming meet has been scheduled in the fall semester but he doesn't mention the team out of the practice stage.
Eldridge Pharmacy
Drugs, Sundries, Fountain, Pines
Agency for Mixture No. 79
701 Mass. Phone 999
T T
CONFERENCE IN THE CLOUDS
Among the undergraduates on any college campus, you'll find the talk reaching up to the clouds. And once in a while—in a classroom, around a study table, or even in a bull session—a really big idea is born.
Big ideas come, too, from the men and women in laboratories, business offices, shops. But often these professionals are exploring a path first glimpsed in college.
How do we know? Because of the many college people who have come into the Bell System, where big ideas and a lot of dreams have taken their place in progress. The human voice, carried along a wire, first across a town, then a state, a nation, and now the world. Music and pictures and things happening delivered into cities and hamlets all across the land by radio and television networks.
MERCHANTS & STORAGE CO.
BEST BUYING DEPT. OF
STORAGE
We're always looking for the men and women who get big ideas—whether they're about people, or machines, or ways of doing things. It's the only way the Bell System can keep on giving this country the best telephone service in the world.
BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Jan. 11, 1952
Molly Smith To Wed Carl Brown In Fall
Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Smith, Mission, announce the engagement of their daughter, Molly, to Carl Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Brown, Kansas City, Mo.
Miss Smith is an education senior and a member of Alpha Delta Pi social sorority.
Mr. Brown is a freshman in dental school in Kansas City, and a member of Delta Chi social fraternity.
The wedding is planned for fall.
Paper-making is a major industry in Vermont.
Pi Kappa Alpha Dinner Dance
The pledge class of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity will entertain with a dinner dance from 6 to 11 p.m. at the chapter house tonight. Chapersones will be Mrs. Edna E. Ramage, Mrs. Thomas A. Clark, Mrs. R. L Blume and Mrs. Frank Baird.
Phi Psi Dinner Dance
Phi Kappa Psi fraternity will entertain with a dinner-dance from 6:30 p.m. to midnight in the Kansas room of the Union Saturday. Mrs. J. H. Kreamer, Mrs. F. L. M-Creary, Mrs. Andrew McKay, Mrs. C. H. Wentworth, Mrs. Dean Alt, Mrs. Ralph Park, Mrs. W. S. Shaw and Mrs. A.H. Little will be chaperones for the evening.
LOOKS LIKE A PICTURE FRAME?
That's just what it is—We are equipped to pack, store or move anything from your tiny picture frames to your grand pianos — and at lowest rates obtainable.
Call 46 for free estimate
Ethan A. Smith MOVING and TRANSFER CO.
11 East 9th St.
Phone 46
HOLLYWOOD FILM CENTER
LOOK SMART
FEEL SMART
BE SMART
SEND YOUR CLEANING TO
INDEPENDENT
Laundry and Dry Cleaners
Phone 432
740 Vt.
1903 Mass.
Election of officers and initiation of new members will take place at the Rev. Richard Albert's home at 502 Third Avenue, NW. of the Lutheran Student association.
About 10 students will be initiated.
Religious Notes
Lutherans To Initiate Ten
'Religious Vacations' Topic
"Shall I Take A Religious Vacation" will be the topic of a discussion at the Wesley foundation meeting Sunday evening in the church at 10th and Vermont.
Suzanne Plummer, Ronald Sammons, Hugo Hallman and Dorothy Becker will lead the discussion.
KU Disciples To Hear Miller
Dwight C. Miller, instructor in fine arts, will give an illustrated lecture on religious art at the meeting at 5:30 p.m. Sunday of the KU Disciple fellowship of the Christian church.
Members of Kappa Beta, club for women students of the church, will give the devotions.
Delegates To Give Reports
Presbyterian students will hear reports from their 23 delegates to the Student Volunteer Movement conference for supper at $30 in Westminster house.
The fellowship supper and meeting will close with a modified reproduction of the worship drama used at the midnight service at the SVM conference.
Baptist Fellowship To Meet
"The Need For A Baptist Student Movement" will be discussed by Baptist students at the meeting of the Roger Williams fellowship at 5:30 p.m. Sunday in the church at Eighth and Kentucky streets.
The University Sunday school class at 9:45 a.m. will be led by Gus Ferre, minister to students.
Gamma Delta Hears Frank
The Rev. Dr. Erdmann Frank of Joliet, Ill., will speak to members of Gamma Delta, organization for Lutheran students, following the cost supper in the church clubrooms at 5:30 p.m. Sunday.
Lambda Chi's Elect Boyd
Gerald Boyd, College senior, was elected president of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity for 1952.
Other officers are Leland White, vice-president; Ben Phillips, secretary; George Frazer, treasurer; Bill Atkinson, social chairman; Morris Kay, ritualist; Bill Chaney, rush chairman, and Phill Owen and Becker, Inter-fraternity council representatives.
Memphis, Tenn. — (U.P.) — R. W.
Blaker's son, Roger, got his first barber shop haircut at seven weeks old.
Baby Gets Trimmed
Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Overman, of Oswego, announce the engagement of their daughter, Lee Ann, to Lt. Wilson, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Wilson, of Kansas City, Kan.
Overman-Wilson Engagement Told
Mr. Wilson, a naval cadet stationed at Pensacola, Fla., attended the University before entering the service. He is a member of Phi Kappa Psi social fraternity
Miss Overman is a business senior.
Phi Kappa Tau fraternity will entertain with a party at the chapter
Phi Kappa Tau Party
COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR
ALL THE WIDE WONDER OF THE HIGH SIERRA IN
Ten Thousand Feet Above The Sea Owen Merritt Fought The Fight That Had to Come!
RANDOLPH SCOTT
MAN IN THE SADDLE
COLOR OF TECHNICOLOR.
A COLUMBIA PICTURE
wifi JOAN LESLIE · ELLEN DREW · ALEXANDER KNOX
HEAR
TENNESSEE ERNIE
SING
"MAN IN THE SADDLE"
ADDED
SHEPHERD'S
Late News Events Color Cartoon "Leghorn Swagged"
"MAKE MINE MILK"
Prevue Saturday Night
Box-Office Open 11:15 p.m.
SUNDAY
You Try a
Comfort! Convenience!
JAYHAWK
NEW Park-Bear CUSHIONED CHAIRS
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Tall Glass of
Delicious
Grade-A
Homogenized Milk, Too.
Lawrence-Sanitary
At Your
Dealers
LAWRENCE Sanitary MILK AND ICE CREAM CO.
or Call
0
.
Phone 696
house from 8 p.m. to midnight Saturday, Chaperones will be Mrs. R. T. Blume, Mrs. Mary Younkman am, Mrs. Chaucey L. Veatch.
Comfort! Convenience!
JAYHAWKER
NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
Continuous Shows Every
Set Sun 1:00 p.m. On
Sat.-Sun. 1:00 p.m. On
Mon. thru Fri. Shows At
2:30-7:00-9:00
NOW Thru SAT.
Meet Sylvanus!
Con Man - Gun Man
Ladies' Man
ROBERT CUMMINGS
TERRY MOORE
JEROME COURTLAND
THE BAREFOOT MAILMAN
IN SUPERCINE COLOR
BOLSA
—Plus—
FOOTBALL
ROSE BOWL
SUGAR BOWL
COTTON BOWL
NOW
He Led the Last
THE PATEE TAKES GREAT PLEASURE IN JOINING THE MIDWEST PREMIER OF THIS-BIG-PICTURE
CIMARRON
Great OUTLAW
RAIDS!
The CIMARRON KID
COLOR BY
TECHNICOLOR
1996
CARRYING ON WITH HER DAD
AND HIS MOTHER
HE'S ALWAYS A PROTECTOR
OF OTHERS.
Searcing
AUDIE MURPHY
YVETTE DUGAY
with
BEVERLY TYLER • JOHN HUDSON
LEIF ERICKSOM
James Best
FEATURES TONITE AT
7:34 and 9:32 p.m.
Doors Open 6:45 p.m.
Continuous Showing
Sat. & Sun. from 1 p.m.
Plus: Color Cartoon-News
New PATEE
PHONE 321
New
Coming Soon "Lavender Hill Mob" Watch for Date!
ditio
good
pim
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Classified Advertising
Phone K.U.376
Classified Advertising Rates
One day
three days
75c
2c
25 words or less ... 50c
Additional words ... 1c
Five
days
$1.00
3c
TRANSPORTATION
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted
before the understanding that the bill will be
paid. Attend the meeting during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univer-
sity business office, Journalism blight, not later than 45 p.m. the day before publication date.
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether for domestic or international purposes. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 615. Downs Travelf Service, 1015 Mass.
Ask us about family rates, sky coach and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book massage not for European travel next summer. Save up to 20% on National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30-
BUSINESS SERVICE
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers.
date books, theses, medical and biologi-
cal studies, miscellaneous. Mrs.
J. Roscoe, 838 La. Apt. 4, upstairs.
2775J after 4 p.m. 2-7
TYPING of all kinds done promptly and accurately.
Mrs. Merritt, KU 296 16
TYPING—Theses, term papers, matchbooks, letters, etc. Prompt and accurate service. Mrs. Hall. 1344W. 506 West Sixth. ff
Friday, Jan. 11, 1952
TYING: Theses, term papers, miscellaneous. Prompt, accurate service. Interested. Mrs. R. B. Loomis, 27F. Sunnyside, 2834M. 16
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses—prompt, accurate service. Callers, Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. Iff
TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these typing experience. Mrs. Shields, 1290 Ohio. Pt. 1601.
RADIO AND TV repair service on all MIKOS. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment in it. Service area assuring fast, efficient service. Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. 822 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery.
TBING: Experience in theses, term papers, miscellaneous typing, and stenoclasic cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, philom 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. tt
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 am, until midnight.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks
sandwiches, malfles, home-made pies and
air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. till
midnight. Crystal Café. 690 Vt.
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our team is very attentive, frank, fli, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Comp. Phone 418, tr
FOR SALE
CHEVROLET, Tudor, excellent condition. Motor overhauled, new clutch, good tires, spare. Call 3569R after 5:30 p.m. 15
CAMERA. CIRAFLEX f3.5 Wollensk
lens, shutter to 1/200 sec, reflex focx-
fusing. Price $10 below dealers price. In
excellent condition. Phone 1146R. 16
NEW AND ATTRACTIVE STATIONERY for residents of Corbin and North College Halls. Forty-eight sheets and twenty-four envelopes in each box for only 98c. Get yours today at the Student Union Book Store. 11
MUST SACRIFICE! Graduating senior must part with top shape 1946 Indian motorcycle. Yours for only $175.00. Call broke Dick Brecko at 1922. 14
SET OF FIRST FLIGHT custom built golf irons 2 to 9 inclusive. See at 1140 Louisiana or call 3685R evenings. 14 NEW SHIPMENT OF POCKET BOOKS just in. Come in and look them over. Student Union Book Store. 11
DRAFTSMEN AND ARTISTS! Pelican
drawing, lettering, and sketching. Get
yours from the large selection now
available at the Student Union Book
THE
Travel Service
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
TRAVEL AGENCY
8th & Mass.
Tel. 30
MECHANICS DELIGHT, CALL 2517M4
mechanics@hotmail.com. Call 2517M4
see anytime 600 Eum
Schaum's "OUTLINE OF COLLEGE PHYSICS" and "OUTLINE OF COLLEGE CHEMISTRY" are here now! These books will give you the help you want in making an "A." See them at your Student Union Book Store. 11
FOR RENT
SINGLE OR DOUBLE room available for undergraduate girl students in nice house. One-half block to campus. Ph. 3683J. 14
HAVE VACANCY in single and double
next semester. Phone 1826
1416 Tern.
LARGE FURNISHED one room apartment, electric refrigerator, separate heat share bath. Two miles from campus. $35 Bills paid. Call 22258. 14
ROOM FOR BOYS, vacancy for 2 boys
812 Miss $12 each a month
1222 Miss $495. Phone 495.
RENT A TYPEWRITER and start the new year with higher grades. Only $1.00 weekly. Save $3.50 per month for portables and wireless machines. Student Uniform Book Store.
ROOMS FOR GIRLS at 1216 Louisiana
Ask for Mrs. Wilson; Phone 32483, 16
GARAGE, $10 per month. See M. C.
Spencer, 1234 Oread. 16
PHI CHI fraternity at Skyline Sat-
tle, Reward to finder. Call Bolei
Groth, 377.
FOUND
LOST
WOMAN'S WRIST Watch found in Memorial Union building. Will owner please write identification to Box 5, University Daily Kansan? 11
Chancellor Murphy Speaks At Dinner For K-State Dean
NOW!
The dinner was sponsored by delegates to the 81st annual convention of the Kansas state board of agriculture.
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy spoke at a dinner honoring Dean Ray I. Throckmorton of the Kansas State college school of agriculture Wednesday evening in Topeka.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
ENDS SATURDAY
SHE'S ON THE LOOSE FOR THRILLS ! ! !
Features Tonite: 7:45 - 9:44
Continuous Shows Shows, from 1
Features: 1:45-3:44-5:43
7:42-9:41
The Shocking Truth! JOAN EVANS·LYNN BARI·MELVYN DOUGLAS ON THE LOOSE
[Image of a military aircraft in flight].
STARTS
SPECIAL OWL SHOW
SATURDAY AT 11:15 P.M.
SUNDAY
You'll cheer the gallant guys who fly the war-torn skies... and love the gals they go for!
FROM THE SMOKEY HILL AIR BASE SALINA, KANSAS TO THE SKYSCRAPING HIMALAYAS !!!
INTO
THE WILD BLUE YONDER
ROAR THE HEROES OF THE B-29s!
CRASH LANDING!
And a battle-torn plane is engulfed in a sea of blazing gas!
BOMBS AWAY!
Trapped in deadly flak; their orders read "keep her on target!"
THE WOMAN WHO WAITED!
Could she send the man she loved on a suicide mission!
HERBERT J. YATES presents
"THE WILD BLUE YONDER"
Story of the B-29 Superfortress starring
WENDELL COREY • VERA RALSTON • FORREST TUCKER • PHIL HARRIS
with WAITER RRFNAN • WILLIAM CHING • RUTH DONNELLY • HARRY CAREY JR. • PENNY EDWARD'S
CONTINUOUS SHOWS SUNDAY FROM 1 P.M. - OPEN 12:45
Features
At:
1:23
3:24
5:25
ALSO
WALT DISNEY
COLOR CARTOON
CRASH LANDING!
And a battle-
torn plane is
engulfed in a
sea of blazing
gas!
BOMBS AWAY!
Trapped in deadly flak; their orders read "keep her on target!"
INTO
THE
WILD
BLUE
YONDER
ROAR THE HEROES
OF THE
B-29s!
THE WOMAN
WHO WAITED!
Could she send
the man she
loved on a
suicide mis-
sion!
THE WOMAN WHO WAITED!
Could she send the man she loved on a suicide mission!
At:
1:23
3:24
5:25
7:26
9:27
granada PHONE 946
COLOR CARTOON
Movietone News
VARSITY
THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
TONITE - SATURDAY
Adm. 14c - 50c
RANGELAND RAMPAGE!
WHIP WILSON
WANTED:
Dead or Alive
MONOGRAM PICTURE
THE FUZZY
KNIGHT
JIM BANNON
THIS GUY HAD
TAKEN OVER...
he had my dog—
my wife—
my clothes—
my life!
-Co-Feature—
Ch. 8 "Flying Disc
197
Man From Mars"
Adm. 14c - 50c
SUN. - MON. - TUES.
---
Gun Deep in Trouble!
...As Roy faces murder in Boys' Camp!
ROY ROGERS
KING OF THE COWBOYS
TRIGGER
SMARTEST HORSE IN THE MOVIES
HEART OF THE ROCKIES
with
PENNY EDWARDS
GORDON JONES
and RALPH MORGAN
FOY WILLING AND THE
RIDER'S ROADS
Gun Deep in Trouble! ...As Roy faces murder in Boys' Camp!
Gun Deep in Trouble!
ROY
ROGERS
KING OF THE COWBOYS
TRIGGER
SMARTEST HORSE IN THE
MOVIE
HEART
OF THE
ROCKIES
with
Co-Feature
CO RELEASE
Stan Laurel
Oliver Hardy
"PARDON US"
PLUS
Joe MacDoakes "SO YOU WANT A RAISE" Late News Events
Late News Events
Q2-4 A 6 B C D
Friday, Jan. 11, 1952
News Roundup
Final Approval Given Arms Count And Reduction
Paris—(U.P.)—The United Nations gave final approval today to negotiation of a Western program for a world arms count and reduction by the new UN disarmament commission.
The five-nation Soviet Communist bloc voted against the proposal, largely because it instructs the new commission to base its work on the Baruch blue-print for atomic controls.
However, Russia has promised to take its seat on the 12-nation body which must begin work within 30 days.
Schuman Plan Gains Favor In Germany
Bonn, Germany—(U.P.)—The West German Bundestag, the lower house of parliament, ratified the Schuman plan to pool Western Europe's coal and steel resources today by a vote of 232 to 143. Three members abstained.
Chancellor Konrad Adenauer announced during his final speech on the ratification that he intends visiting Washington this spring. In his attempt to align West Germany fully with the Allies, he already has visited Paris, London and Rome.
Seattle, Wash.—(U.R.)-Seven long-range patrol planes took to the air today to join a fleet of rescue vessels criss-crossing the last-reported position of the freighter Pennsylvania searching for some trace of the 46 crewmen who abandoned her in the stormy North Pacific.
West Germany must take its place in the Western defense front, Adenauer said, and ratification of the Schuman plan would commit Germany finally to participation in Western defense.
Planes Join Search For Missing Ship
The Canadian weather ship Stonetown was directing the surface search. This morning the Stonetown reported "no sign of the Pennsylvania or its crew members in lifeboats."
UN Armistice Talks Again Deadlocked
Panmunjom, Korea—(U.P.) —United Nations negotiators determined today to "keep trying" to resolve deadlocks over armistice supervision and prisoner exchanges despite Communist double-talk.
UN members of the armistice supervision sub-committee demanded that the Communists give them a simple answer to the question the Allied team has repeated again and again—"do you or do you not intend to strengthen your military capability during an armistice by airfields?"
Chinese Maj. Gen. Hsieh Fang, senior Red supervision sub-committee delegate, has repeatedly accused the UN of "slander and misrepresentation" for charging that the Communists plan to build the airfields.
Topeka, Kan.—(U.P.)—A General Electric company research official, Dr. Vincent J. Schaefer, believes that an investigation should be made to determine if the great July floods in Kansas could be attributed to rain-makers.
Suspect 'Rain-Makers' Are 'Flood-Makers'
In an address at the 81st annual meeting of the Kansas Board of Agriculture Thursday, Schaefer said:
"I would hesitate to say definitely that the Kansas floods were related to cloud seeding. I don't know, but I think it should be investigated and if they were, something should be done to see that it doesn't happen again."
Try A
Fish Dinner
At Duck's
Red Snapper
Shrimp - Scallops
University Daily Kansan
Open From 11 a.m. to Midnight
DUCK'S Sea Food CAFE
824 Vermont
Engineerettes, Husband and Wife party, 8 p.m. today, Kansas room, Union.
Official Bulletin
Student Union activities is sponsoring a ride bureau for students desiring transportation during the interim between semesters. Those wanting rides and those desiring passengers should sign at hostess desk in Memorial Union between 8 a.m. and 10:30 p.m.
Mathematics colloquium, 5 p.m.
Monday, 203 Strong hall.
Lutheran Student association, 6 p.m. Sunday, church parsonage, supper, election of officers, and initiation of new members.
KU Disciple fellowship, 5:30 p.m.
Sunday, Myers hall. Dwight Miller
of art department, illustrated lecture
on religious art.
Students who are planning to transfer from one school of the University to another (such as College to Business, College to Education, College to Journalism) should stop at the registrar's office before the beginning of final examinations to make application for transfer, so that the papers may be prepared in time for enrollment. It will save a lot of standing in line if you do! James K. Hitt, registrar.
PRECISE
WATCH
REPAIRS
Socialist Study club meeting, 2 p.m. Saturday, 1539 Tennessee street.
Watch Repair
Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed
Wolfson's
743 Mass. Call 675
Page 8
THE DRESS SHIRT
... and he sends his shirts to
ACME Bachelor Laundry and Dry Cleaning
1111 Mass.
Phone 646
Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
KU and YOU in EUROPE
in1952
SITA
Students International Travel Assn.
Compare these prices!
70 Day Bicycle-Motor-Rail Tour covering England, France, Italy,
Switzerland, Germany, Holland, Belgium -------------$950*
65 Day Rail-Motor Tour covering same route as above___$1050*
80 Day Bicycle-Rail-Motor-Boat Tour covering England, France,
Switzerland, Germany, Austria, Denmark, Sweden, Norway,
Scotland $975*
70 Day Bicycle-Rail Tour covering England, Belgium, Germany,
Switzerland, France $550*
- All prices include passage.
For further information and free descriptive folder, see your SITA travel representative at . . .
DOWNS TRAVEL SERVICE
1015 Massachusetts
MRS. LOIS ODAFFER
Phone 3661
MR. JOE BROWN
Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
PETER LYNCH
DIVING FOR THE LEAD are these four swimmers as they compete in the 100-yard free style race in Saturday's meet between KU and Nebraska which the Jayhawkers won 49-44. Dick Eflin, third from left, was the meet standout with two firsts and a place on the winning 400-yard relay team. He also won this race with a time of .59.6. Pictured are, left to right, Jerry Desmond and Jack Greer of Nebraska, Eflin and teammate John Ashley—Kansas photo by Al Marshall.
UNIVERSITY DAILY
49th Year No. 76
Monday, Jan. 14, 1952
hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Opera Guild To Present 'Bartered Bride'
The University Light Opera guild will present Bedrich Smetana's "The Bartered Bride" in Fraser theater Feb. 4, 5, 7 and 8.
Nearly 100 students will take part in the production. No academic credit for the work is given and practice is held outside class hours.
The production is given by students selected from honorary University musical organizations, Mu Phi Epsilon, Phi Mu Alpha and Sigma Alpha Iota, and the University Players.
Gerald M. Carney, associate professor of music education, is director of music for the production. Tom Shay, instructor in speech, is dramatics director. Clayton Krehbiel instructor in music education, is choral director. Leo Horacek, instructor in music education, is assistant musical director. Technical consultant for the production is G. Criss Simpson, associate professor of organ and theory.
"The Bartered Bride," a comic opera, has its setting in a Bohemian village in 1850 on a Feast day.
The story centers around the efforts of Kezal, the marriage broker, to arrange the marriage of Marie, the heroine, to Vashek, a simple peasant lad.
The first production of the Light Opera guild, which was formed in 1782 and included the musical fraternities, was the Others and Sullivan show. "The Mikado."
But Marie is in love with Jenik, and the plot develops as the young lovers try to outwit the marriage broker.
A stage band, ballet dancers, harlequinus, acrobats, sword swallowers and a strong man are included in the opera. A dancing ensemble, a singing chorus and an orchestra will be used for the performances.
Subsequent productions have included "The Gondoliers," another Gilbert and Sullivan production, Herbert's "Sweethearts," and "The Pink Lady" by Karyll.
To Change Schools See Registrar Now
Students who are planning to transfer from one school of the University to another during the spring semester should apply for a transfer at the Registrar's office before the beginning of final examinations. The necessary papers can then be prepared before enrollment time.
--ing the food and agricultural organization of the UN.
Marriage Of Sobeide Opens At 8 Tonight
"The Marriage of Sobeide" will open at 8 p.m. today for two nights in the Little Theater of Green hall to round out the fall semester's Lab theater season.
Ten students—all members of the acting class of Frances Feist, instructor in speech—have roles in the poetic drama-type production.
Original plans also called for the showing of "Irish Fantasy," prizewinning play by Robert Ziesenis, College senior. It will be held over until the spring semester Lab theater series due to the length of "The Marriage of Sobeide."
Debaters Win At Tournament
A predominantly freshman and sophomore University debate squad brought home the best over all record from the William Jewell college debate tournament at Liberty, Mo., Jan. 12.
Miss Tureck, a former student of Jan Chiapusso, professor of piano at the University, has been described as one of the leading teachers of J. S. Bach's style.
The third concert of the Chamber Music series will be given at 8 p.m. today by Miss Rosalyn Tureck, pianist, in Strong auditorium.
She has lectured on the great artist throughout the country, while on leave of absence from the faculty of the Juilliard School of Music in New York.
Prelude and Fugue, for the "Well-Tempered Clavier," Book 1; "Italian Concerto;" Partita in C minor; Three Preludes and Fugues, from the "Well-Tempered Clavier," Book 2; Aria and 10 variations in the Italian style, and Toccata, Adagio and Fugue in D major.
Undefeated through four rounds of debate, winning 12, were the teams of William Arnold and Fred Rice, College freshmen; and Hubert Bell, College freshman, and George Stopepwerth, engineering freshman, and John Glass, education sophomore, and Stephen Rench, College senior.
Forty-seven universities and colleges participated.
The all-Bach program will include:
Washington—(U.P.)—President Truman submitted to Congress today his plan for sweeping reorganization of the scandal-ridden internal revenue bureau.
BULLETIN
The plan would abolish the "archaic statutory office" of 64 collectors who would be replaced by up to 100 commissioners under civil service.
UN Conference Set
V. G. J. Stavirdi, a member of the United Nations staff, will be the keynote speaker at the fourth annual United Nations conference to be held at the University on Thursday, Jan. 24, and Friday, Jan. 25.
Other featured speakers on the program are Mrs. Florence Reynolds, United Nations representative, food and agricultural organization, and Amiya Chakravarty, visiting professor of humanities.
Mrs. Reynolds has had extensive experience as a UN representative and has traveled widely representing the food and agricultural organization of the UN.
Mr. Stavirdi is the director of UN reference and public relations division of the department of public information. A British subject, he received his bachelor of arts degree from Oxford university, and has held important positions in the British Ministry of Information.
Mr. Chakravarvay was former advisor to India's UN delegation.
Mrs. Virginia Wilder, teacher at Haskell institute; Mrs. Oad Essex, community UN leaders, Stafford; Robert Fri and Miss Ellen bywaters, juniors, Shawnee Mission High school, Shawnee, and Mrs. V. B. Ballard, present state chairman Kansas United Nations.
In 1941 he was sent to New York as one of that Ministry's representatives on the United Nations board, and in 1943 he became secretary general of the formation organization. He has held his present position since 1946.
New Courses Widen Students' Choice
Other speakers are Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy; Mrs. Benjamin O. Weaver, 1950 state chairman Kansas United Nations; F. L. Schlaif, state chairman United Nations; Desire Browne, Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
Jerome Cushman, librarian at Salina public library; Mrs. Pearl Richardson, vice chairman of the speakers research committee for UN; R. Edwin Browne, director of University Visual Instruction, director of University visual instruction; L. D. Wooster, president of Kansas UNESCO.
Students enrolling in the University for the spring semester will have their choice of a number of new courses to be offered in six different schools. ◎
Democracy Today, Social Science 20, is an important course according to Dean Paul B. Lawson of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. It is open to students of all classifications for one hour credit.
The department of Latin and Greek is offering a new junior and senior course, Greek Prose and Poetry in Translation, to be taught by L. R. Lind, associate professor of Latin and Greek.
"The new course is intended as a student forum on the problems and prospects of democracy in the middle of the 20th Century," Dean Lawson said. "It will consist of a Tuesday lecture for 15 weeks in which members of several departments will take part, and there may be several well known outside speakers."
Hildon Gibson, professor of political science and human relations, will be in charge of the course. He will act as moderator at the Thursday discussion meetings of the course when the lecture of the preceding Tuesday will be discussed.
Plans for broadcasting both the lecture and discussion periods are being considered.
The U.S. in east Asia will be taught by George Beckmann, instructor in history.
Vladimir Sajkovic, instructor in German, will teach the Russian Literature course, and Phillip Mitchell, assistant professor of German will teach Scandinavian Literature.
Two new courses in the English department are Evolution of Poetic Expression in the 19th and 20th Centuries, taught by Amyla Chakra-varty, visiting professor of human sciences at Dyden to the Modern Critics taught by Arvid Shulenberger, assistant professor of English.
New junior and senior courses being offered by the department of Germanic languages are Russian Literature of the 19th Century in English Translation, and Modern Scandinavian Literature in English Translation.
The William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information is offering a course in Propaganda and Censorship. Prerequisites for the course are Psychology I and Sociology I.
"It is a course which is timely, not only for journalists, but for the citizenry in general," Dean Burton W. Marvin said. "It will be taught by Emil T. Telelf, associate professor of journalism, who has strong
Students who owe fines on overdue or lost books from Watson library will be required to pay them at the business office in Strong hall before they can enroll for the spring semester.
Library To List Book Fines
C. M. Baker, director of libraries,
said a list of fines and lost books
will be turned in at the business
office Tuesday. Students owing
fines will be required to pay them
along with their registration fees at
the business office during the regular
registration period.
"If a student reports a lost book, we stop the overdue fines immediately," Mr. Baker said. "However, if the book isn't reported, the student is charged fines for lateness until it is reported."
"We would like to reduce the list of fines as much as possible before it is sent over to the business office," Mr. Baker said.
WEATHER
Mr. Baker added that any student who loses a book belonging to the library is required to pay the price of the book plus a $1 replacement fee.
Partly cloudy and colder tonight and Tuesday. Low tonight 20-25 northwest; 30's southeast. High Tuesday 30-35 northwest, 40-45 southeast.
backgrounds in both newspaper work and political science." Dean Marvin said.
Two courses in the history of art will be offered by the School of Fine Arts. They are Forerunners of Modern Art and Prints and Drawings, and they be taught by Klaus Berger, assistant professor of art history.
The second course, Prints and Drawings, consists of a survey of the works of major print makers and draftsmen of European tradition, supplemented by field trips to the Nelson Art gallery in Kansas City, Mo.
"the purpose of the course is to teach students to produce an illustration from a blue print," Dean Thomas Gorton, said.
The School of Business is offering Industrial Procurement. It will be taught by Paul McColum instruc-
tors in the School of Business to anyone in the School of Business,
Dean Leonard H. Axe said that the course will cover purchasing not only by buying outright, but also by other methods, such as leasing and borrowing. A student must have had five hours of economics before enrolling in the course.
Production Illustration will also be offered by the School of Fine Arts. This course in industrial design will be taught by Bernard Dietz, instructor of design.
Time Study and Motion Analysis will be taught by Arthur N. Paul, associate professor of mechanical engineering.
Four new courses, two in mechanical engineering and two in mining and metallurgy, will be offered by the College of Engineering and Architecture.
A graduate course. Thermodynamics of Fluid Flow, will also be taught by Professor Snver.
Warren E. Snyder, chairman of the department of mechanical engineering, said, "The course is designed for persons who are going into industry and want the efficient use of personnel."
The courses in mining and metal- lurgy are Mine Plant II, and Metal- lurgical Processes. Mine Plant II is concerned with transportation and hoisting applied to mining operations.
Hurbert E. Risser, instructor in mining engineering, will teach the course.
Metallurgical Processes is concerned with centering, smelting, fuels and refractories used in extractive processes. Frank Bowlish, instructor in mining and metallurgy, will teach the course.
The Graduate School is offering seven new courses. There are in mathematics. Complex Orthogonal Functions will be taught by Vidar M. Wolontis, assistant professor of mathematics.
Introduction to Algebraic Topology will be taught by William R. Scott, assistant professor of mathematics. General Analysis will be taught by Nachman Aronszajn, Research associate and visiting professor of mathematics.
Other courses offered include; Analysis of Program Activities taught by R. Paul Brotsman, assistant professor of social work; Experimental Stress and Analysis, taught by Loring Hanson, associate professor of applied mechanics; Biochemistry of the Steroid Hormones, taught by Harold Nicholas, assistant professor of biochemistry, and Seminar in American Literature, taught by Edward F. Grier, assistant professor of English.
Tryouts To Be Held This Week For Play
Tryouts for "The Lady's Not for Burning," the speech and drama department's third major production of the year, will be held at 4 p.m. Tuesday and at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Little Theater of Green hall.
Tom Rea, instructor in speech, emphasized that all students in the University are eligible to try out for the play.
---
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday, Jan. 14, 1952
Daily Kansan Editorials
Please,Mr.Wolf,Let's Raise Less Howl
The final words of President Truman's state of the union address had hardly ceased ringing when the political wolves began to howl.
With a super-charge of drool, brought on by the prospects of an election year, the ancient charges of socialism, reckless government spending and statism were given added vigor.
Ignoring the political stabs, however, the speech is well worth comment. The state of the union during 1952 could have a decisive influence upon the permanent status of the nation. The now obvious trend toward a half-war, half-peace, armed economy can easily become firmly entrenched throughout the nation's structure.
In his address, the President called for further military expansion, an increase in foreign aid, a tightening of inflation controls, higher taxes and more of the so-called fair deal or welfare legislation.
Specific domestic measures requested included increases in social security benefits, civil rights legislation, more conservation, better defense and veteran housing, aid-to-education and health legislation.
Many Congressional leaders casually tossed these requests aside as nonsense. They merely chuckled over the request for higher taxes (in an election year!)
The ridicule of these serious problems by the politicians is not disturbing. We have long been accustomed to not expecting intelligence on their parts (especially during an election year!) The disturbing element is, however, the acceptance of this attitude by many normal persons. It is especially alarming to note this attitude being adopted by some of the supposedly enlightened elements of the population.
The assumption that expenditures for domestic or welfare services by the government must be sacrificed for defense is not only without factual basis, but evokes outright horror when its implications are realized.
The all-for-guns-nothing-for-butter policy, once propounded by the Hitler regime, could conceivably lead the nation to the border of a permanent military state. This grim prospect approaches reality as the sound of the President's warning that large scale production of planes and other equipment will have to continue "for a longer
Daily Kansan
News Room Student Newspaper of the Adv. Room K.U. 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANASIS 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
Editorial Associate Anne Snyder
NEWS STAFF
Managing Editor Charles Price
Assistant Managing Editors Nancy Anderson
Melvin L. McLean, Joe Shenard
Benjamin Holman, Lee Sheppeard, Eilworth Zahm
City Editor
Sports Editor
Telegraph Editor
Social Editor
News Adviser
Charles Burch
Dan Sarten
Katherine Harzts
Victor J. Dotillie
BUSINESS STAFF
period of time than we had originally planned" rings on.
Business Manager ... Bob Sydney
Advertising Manager ... Dorothy Hedrick
Assistant Adv. Manager ... Dick Hale
National Art Manager ... Bill Taggart
Circulation Manager ... Eleanor Baylock
Promotion Manager ... Ted Barnes
Business Adviser ... R, W. Doores
But even if spending for military purposes must continue for an unforeseeable length of time, total neglect of the welfare of the population need not accompany. Certainly such is not the case at present.
In all probabilities, the maintenance of defense needs at the level estimated by the administration will necessitate a hike in taxes in 1952. However, this is possible, along with welfare expenditures, with or without tax increases.
The added revenue which would finance such an economy can be captured by plugging up the present loopholes in the tax bill. It has been estimated that the bill passed in 1951 contained loopholes which allows as much as $4 billion to slip through annually.
Tax loopholes are usually technicalities, seldom recognized by the average taxpayer and almost never publicized as highly as the cost of welfare measures. Nevertheless, they are enjoyed by various business interests, and are actually government subsidies to those who benefit from them. Such subsidies are merely another jack to higher taxes, or what's worse, a contributor to the inflationary spiral.
Tax loopholes are too numerous and some too intricate for all to be considered in a brief space.
One such loophole, under the title of "percentage depletion," cost the government $750 million last year. Under this clause, certain industries dealing in exhaustible resources (e.g. oil) are allowed tax exemption on the first 27.5 per cent of their income. If a company earned $5 million during a year, its exemption would total one and one-eighth million dollars.
In 1947, $400 million dollars was lost by the government in this way. A Treasury department report indicates that 10 persons whose incomes were derived from oil and gas and who earned a total of $62 million paid the same tax rate as a person earning seven thousand dollars.
The percentage depletion clause was enacted in 1926 as a means of aiding prospectors in the oil industry. Since the benefits are available as long as the oil well is in operation, companies which originally needed the subsidation are still deriving benefits from it and at the same time are amassing fortunes.
Tax loopholes are not, however, the lone point at which government revenue is lost. The very same Congressmen who scream loudest at the suggestion of welfare expenditures have done much to throw away hundred millions of dollars of the government's money. In 1951 the Congress enacted new corporation tax rates and made them effective April 1 instead of January 1. The loss of taxes from the record-breaking high during this exempted period amounted to $500 million.
A proposal to reduce the percentage depletion allowance mentioned above was soundly rejected by the Senate by a vote of 71 to 9.
Yet, the Congressmen-politicians have proved their genuine interest in the welfare of the people. In 1951, soon after the new corporation tax rates had been enacted, the Senate halved an appropriation for basic scientific research because the government could not afford the $12 million cost.
Ben Holman.
FINAL EXAM
"By the way Prof. —— What's the name of this course anyway?"
Our Choice Of The Flicks
Everyone from the New York film critics to the local popcorn munchers having submitted a list of the best movies of 1951. We felt it was time to make known our choice.
In order of excellence, the top ten are:
A Streetcar Named Desire
A Place in the Sun An American in Paris Detective Story The Lavender Hill Mob Decision Before Dawn The Red Badge of Courage Strangers on a Train The Frogmen
In other categories:
Worst movie of the year—"The Blue Veil"
Worst movie of the year—"The Blue Veil"
Best actress—Vivien Leigh as Blanche in "Streetcar"
Best actor—Marlon Brando as Stanley in "Streetcar"
Runner-up best actress—Shelley Winters as the factory girl in "Sun."
Runner-up best actor—Robert Walker in "Strangers on a Train."
Best director—Elia Kazan for "A Streetcar Named Desire."
Best single scene—the prison scene in which Elia Kazan's Trial.
Worst actress—Debra Paget in "Bird of Paradise."
Worst actor—Gregory Peck in "David and Bathsheba."
Best director—Elia Kazan for "A Streetcar Named Des
Best single scene—The prison scene in which Elizabeth Taylor says goodbye to Montgomery Clift in "A Place in the Sun."
Best line of dialogue—Vivien Leigh's last words in "Streetcar to the doctor who has come to take her to the insane asylum: "Whoever you are-I have always depended on the kindness of strangers."
Most absurd scene—The song practice in "Take Care of My Little Girl," in which the sorority girls are standing up in hose and heels to warble.
Most promising new actor—Oskar Werner, a Viennese actor, as the German soldier turned U.S. spy in "Decision Before Dawn."
Most promising new actress—Pier Angeli in "Teresa"
Actor who most needs a new role—Clibton Webb.
Most boring picture—"Santa Fe" a Randolph Scott cowbeau show.
Worst screen play—"The Great Caruso."
Most nauseating screen play—"Half Angel."
Biggest disappointment of the year—Ezio Pinza's debut on the screen.
—Anne Snyder.
Where Does College Fit Into The Picture, Or Does It Fit At All?
Most college students feel that college football is over-emphasized. This was indicated last month by results of the Associated Collegiate Press national poll of student opinion.
More than 3,000 students from 65 colleges and universities in all parts of the country were asked: Do you feel that football at most colleges is overemphasized or just about right? The result:
1. Overemphasized ... 53 pet.
4. No opinion 4 pct.
2. Outeremphasized ... 5 pc.
3. Just eyes right ...
2. Underemphasized ... 5 pct.
The farther along a student was in his college career, the more he tended to feel that football was overemphasized. Seventy-three per
Several of the students interviewed blamed overemphasis on sports writers who "put too much stress on the game." Others said it was the fault of the public, which "rates colleges according to sports prestige."
cent of the graduate students interviewed said there was too much stress put on football, while 43 per cent of the freshmen voiced this opinion.
The figures went up according to classes in a steady progression: Sophomores, 53 per cent; juniors, 57 per cent; seniors, 61 per cent.
Students were also asked: Do you
There were no important differences of opinion between men and women.
feel that organized football is (1) as necessary to a college as a history department; (2) less necessary; (3) more necessary? Here are the results:
1. As necessary ... 36 pct.
2. Less necessary ... 53 pct.
3. More necessary ... 6 pct.
4. No opinion ... 5 pct.
A follow-up question asked students to rate football with a zoology department. Results differ only slightly from those of the preceding question:
1. As necessary...30 pct.
2. Less necessary...53 pct.
3. More necessary...8 pct.
4. No opinion...9 pct.
In both questions the attitudes of
graduate students differed markedly from the opinion pattern. Only 12 per cent of the graduate students considered football "as necessary" as a history department; 77 per cent thought it "less necessary." Figures for the zoology question were almost identical.
Several students who voiced "no opinion" declared that football was "the more popular" at their school. A male senior from an eastern college when asked to rate football and a history department declared, "Neither are necessary." His opinion
There were practically no differences of opinion among the other classes; and there were none between men and women.
was shared by six others.
The majority of those who commented seemed to express either one or both of the following attitudes: (1) There is a place at college for a sound athletic program, one which "develops sportsmanship and fair play." (2) College football, in many instances, has "gone commercial."
.
Editor's note: The Student Opinion story next time will deal with the loyalty oath.
Mail subscription: To a semester, $4.50 a year. (In Lawrence add: .00 a semester postage). Published in Lawyers Kans. every afternoon during the University's Saturdays and Sundays. University holds and examination periods. Entered as second matter Sept. 17, 1919, at the Post. Office of Lawrence Kans., under act of March 26, 1919.
Page 3
University Daily Kansan
Students Do Plastics Work In Fowler Shops Laboratory
By SHIRLEY LYON
Unlike the home economics department, Fowler shops has no egg beaters or electric mixers, but there is a plastic dough mixing machine in the plastics laboratory on third floor.
A
The laboratory under Grant Snyder, instructor in shop practice, is the only one of its kind it the Midwest. It was established three years ago.
Other machines in the shop are for molding the plastic material into various shapes and sizes, then polishing it to a high luster.
Mr. Snyder says that although the classes have not done so, it is possible to make plastics in the plastics dough mixing machine or mill, which kneads the ingredients and lubricants into a homogeneous state.
The students learn fast production methods as well as hand methods. The majority of the students taking courses in plastics are engineering, occupational therapy, and fine arts students.
They make trays, drafting instruments, signs, advertising displays, and many other industrial projects. One student is now making new signs for the department which will be white with red letters and may be illuminated by a fluorescent light inside each sign.
Besides making products, the students learn much about the composition of plastics and study samples.
"Almost everyone today is interested in or curious about plastics," says Mr. Snyder. "You can pick up your newspaper and find articles about the plastic industry everyday. Some of the articles are true and some have run off into the realm of fantasy.
"People who have been poorly informed sometimes can have us believing that, given a few soy beans and a mold, anything can be whipped up—from a cheese grater to an airplane.
"This is entirely false, of course. There is nothing strange about the materials, but even with their limitations and correct application, we still have a vast and exciting field in which to work."
Because occupations that require knowledge of plastics products are
increasing, Mr. Snyder says that those who are industrial designers, engineers, draftsmen, students, and buyers in the electrical, radio appliance, automotive, cosmetic, packaging, and many other industries, must know something about plastics products. The classes in plastics serve this purpose.
University Radio Players will hold tryouts for students wanting to learn and develop radio technique by participating in KFKU programs.
KFKU Tryouts Will Be Jan. 30
Auditions will be held in studio A, engineering experiment station, between 8 and 10 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 30. Students should bring dialog, monolog, narrations, or combinations of the three with them to the audition. The scripts should be no longer than five minutes.
"The primary job of KFKU is to bring educational, informational, and public service programs to radio listeners over the state and surrounding regions," R. Edwin Browne, director of KFKU said.
"A secondary function is to provide opportunities for skilled stu-
to receive practice in the techniques of radio broadcasting," he added.
KU Professor Writes For National Book
Dr. Charles D. Michener, chairman of the entomology department, is the author of a 212-page section in a larger publication of 1,420 pages just issued by the United States Department of Agriculture.
The book is technical and is titled "Hymenoptera of America North of Mexico." Bees, ants, wasps and their relatives are the subjects of the book. Dr. Michener's contribution is the section on bees.
Advance registrations indicate the third annual County Clerk's school Wednesday and Thursday at the University will be the largest ever held. Dr. James W. Drury, coordinator of the school, said today.
County Clerks To Meet At KU
Following a welcome address by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, the principal first day speakers will be Secretary of State Paul R. Shanahan, of Topeka; City Clerk Allison Schroeder of Newton, and Dwight Payton, editor of the Overbrook Citizen.
Prof. Lane Lancaster of the University of Nebraska, nationally known as an authority on rural local government; and Dr. Hugo Wall of Wichita university, also known over the nation as an expert on local governmental procedures, will be the principal instructors Thursday.
Participants in a panel on fiscal and budget operations will be Mrs. Mabel Click, superintendent of public instruction of Johnson county; Alvin Jones, of the state commission on revenue and taxation; Linn Peterson, clerk of McPherson county, and Schroeder.
KU faculty instructors will be Dr. Drury, Dr. Ethan P. Allen, director of the Bureau of Government Research; Allen Crafton, professor of speech and drama; Edwin O. Stene, professor of political science, and Julian D. Morgan, associate professor of business.
The County Clerk's school is one of several public officer's institutes held at KU each year under joint sponsorship of University Extension and the Bureau of Government Research.
SUA Will Sponsor Ride Bureau Service
Monday, Jan. 14, 1952
A ride bureau sponsored by Student Union activities will again provide transportation for students during the interim between semesters. James Burgowe, director of SUA, said today.
Students desiring rides and drivers wishing to take passengers may sign up at the hostess desk in the Union from 8 a.m. until 10:30 p.m.
Liberals Do Most Of Writing For KU Magazines Gallin
By JEANNE FITZGERALD
"Most of the persons who are interested in writing for and printing magazines at the University are liberal minded." Dan Gallin, editor of Upstream, politics and humanities magazine, said in a reason. Gallin
During the past year a new trend was started, whereby material of a more restricted nature, meant to be used by other audience, was used in the magazine.
This was the main reason Gallin' gave for the liberal policy of the magazine. Gallin was referring to student magazines at KU which lean toward the more serious literary material.
The Upstream society has been operating since last year, Gallin said. The original plan was to have Upstream sponsored by Tau Sigma political organization, and Quill club, student writer's organization.
"We have made definite efforts to
view, at various times, the passport.
Upstream, which is published jointly by the Upstream society and the Quill club, has been on the campus for several years. Although several changes have been made in the magazine during the past year, it has maintained its policy of liberalism.
"The majority of the magazine staff members from the Upstream society is liberal or radical in its politics," Gallin said. "This is the main resemblance between the old and the new Upstream."
He added that the publishers try to print both sides of the question so that the magazine will not contain purely the liberal point of view.
The original magazine was intended to appeal to the masses. The articles were written down and it "failed miserably," Gallin said.
Tau Sigma Alpha decided not to take part in publishing the magazine. Then the Upstream society was formed for the purpose of co-commoring the magazine with the Quirk University, largely composed of students living in co-operative houses who had published the magazine before.
When the Quill club and the Upstream society decided to publish Upstream, the Quill club publication, Trend, was merged with Upstream. This gave Upstream a much larger reader audience.
Upstream is published by two six-member boards, one from the other from the upstream board. Each board has a faculty member.
In regard to what goes into the magazine. Gallin said the joint board meets with the staff and "we just hash things over. We decide what material to ask for, what to write, and review material we already have."
Approximately half of each issue is submitted by the Quill club and the other half by the Upstream society. The magazine appears four or five times each year and the subscription is $1.
Gallin, originally from Roumania,
is here on a student visa.
He claims no particular nationality now. He is a College senior majoring in political science.
He said he had never worked with publishing a magazine until becoming editor of Upstream during the last year.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
PRECISE
WATCH
REPAIRS
Watch Repair
Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed
Wolfson's 743 Mass. Call 675
CASH FOR BOOKS
at the
MONDAY JANUARY 21
STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE
TUESDAY JANUARY 22
WEDNESDAY
JANUARY 23
The Student Union Book store will pay top price for all current used books. An out-of-town buyer will be here to buy all obsolete & discontinued titles.
STUDENT Union Book Store
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Monday, Jan. 14, 1952
Kelley Hits In Last Seconds As Kansas Edges MU 60-59
By CHARLEY BURCH Daily Kansan Sports Editor
A corner shot in the final 22 seconds of the game by Dean Kelley, Kansas guard, pulled KU ahead of the upstart Missouri Tigers to give the Jayhawkers a 60-59 victory at Columbia, Mo., Saturday night.
The win was the 12th of the season for the Kansas quintet, holder of the nation's longest victory string, and their second victory within the Big Seven.
1938-40
DEAN KELLEY
Kelley's g a m e w i nning s h o t came after the Tigers had pulled up from a 33-19 half time detict. MU.'s scoring drive was led by Freshman Art Helms with 14 points and Bill Stauffer, who canner 12 of his 17 points in the last two quarters. G e n e Landolt, M U f o r k
another MU freshman, poured in 13 points.
Lovellette again coped game scoring honors with 23 points. He was held to one fielder the first quarter but picked up the pace in eight points in the second period and 13 in the final two sessions.
Lean Bill Lienhard was next for Kansas with 13 points, nine of which came from the charity shot. He dropped in nine of 10 free shots.
Bob Kenney fell below his 15-point average as he scored four fielders and a pair of free throws for 10 points.
Both teams got off to a slow start with the score 11-6 at the end of the first quarter. Coach Sparky Stalcup had his team use ball control but his charges were cold at the hoop.
They connected on only 20 per cent of their efforts during the first half but stepped up their pace to a 52 per cent mark the final half. KU connected on 39 per cent of its shots.
The pesky Tigers began to bridge the gap in the third period as they outscored KU 21-15 and 19-12 in the final frame. With four minutes in the third stanza the Tigers had narrowed the difference to 44-31 and continued to roar with the score being 48-40 going into the final period
Continual banging away at the loop gradually narrowed the margin until Wilf Wilford pumped in a corner shot to give Missouri a 59-58
'B' Jayhawkers Win Fourth Tilt
The Jayhawker "B"队 extended its winning streak to four games as they edge the Missouri Tiger "B" quintet 59-57 in a game preceding the MU-KU varsity battle at Columbia. Mo., Saturday night.
Coach Dick Harp's team was paced by Allen Kelley, who canned six fielders and three free throws for 15 points. Eldon Nicholson, 6-foot 6-inch freshman center, followed with 12 points.
Guard Bob Cruts led the young Tigers with 11 points.
Tigers with 10 points.
Kansas "B"
Buller ... G | FT | F
J. Anderson ... 0 | 0 | 4
Alberts ... 3 | 1 | 3
Dye ... 3 | 2 | 3
Thompson ... 1 | 1 | 3
Whitney ... 0 | 0 | 1
Nicholson ... 3 | 1 | 1
A. Kelley ... 6 | 3 | 3
Smith ... 2 | 1 | 1
D. Anderson ... 0 | 2 | 3
Totals 22 15 25
Missouri “B” (57) G FT F
Bumgartner 1 0 0
Fowler 1 3 1
Elmore 1 1 1
Oligschlegel 3 0 2
Loomis 0 3 5
Conway 2 4 2
Hughes 3 2 1
Schaeffer 0 1 4
Cruts 4 3 5
Israel 4 0 4
Holst 2 2 0
Totals ...19 19 25
lead, its first of the battle. The Eigers attempted to play keepaway the rest of the way but failed.
A shot by Lovellette missed, John Keller replaced the Jayhawker stalwart with 1:45 left to give KU more speed. Traveling was called on Missouri with 55 seconds remaining before Kelley fired the winning basket. The ball hit the far rim, bounced around twice and then fell through the nets.
Missouri still had time to score but the Tigers were over-anxious. They galloped down the court, fired and missed. KU gained possession with 48 seconds left and kept it until the game ended. The Jayhawkers were fouled twice in the closing seconds but took the ball out each
Box Score
Kansas (60)
Kaisers (60)
G GA F FA PF TP
Kenney 4 8 2 2 10
Linehard 2 9 9 10 5 13
Hoag 1 3 0 1 1 12
Heitolt 0 0 0 1 1 0
Lovellette 10 24 3 4 4 23
Keller 0 0 0 0 0 0
Hougland 2 5 0 0 3 4
Kelley 3 6 2 5 4 8
Missouri (59)
G GA F FA PF TF
Lundge 5 8 3 5 13
Wilfong 3 8 0 1 4 6
Casteel 0 0 0 0 0
Zimmerman 0 0 0 2 0 0
Stauffer 5 15 7 9 2 17
Adams 1 5 0 0 3 2
Dippold 1 7 3 4 5 5
Helms 6 10 2 3 5 14
Murrey 0 1 2 2 2 2
Park 0 0 0 2 0 0
Totals ... 21 54 17 28 27 59
Grad Wins First In Chess Tourney
Klaus Ziegler, graduate student from Austria, was awarded the first place trophy at the conclusion of the European关节ament Jan. 9 at the Student Union.
Sponsored by Student Union Activities, the seven round tournament had been going on for the past two months.
Edgar Marihuh, College sophomore, received a trophy for placing second, and Robert Rannie, education freshman, and John Augustine, pharmacy junior, were awarded the third and fourth place trophies.
Medals were given to the fifth, sixth and seventh place winners, Frank Tarr, business junior; Alton Thomas, education sophomore, and Kenneth Lake, graduate student.
Betty Annis also received a bronze medal as top ranking woman in the tournament.
Columbia, Mo. — (U,P)—Bob Maddock, an assistant football coach at Missouri University, said today he had been offered the job of line coach at the University of Indiana, but was undecided about acceptance,
Maddock said he was offered the position by Bernie Crimmins, Indiana's new head coach, at the NCAA meeting in Cincinnati last week.
MU Grid Assistant Offered New Post
Coach Don Faurot of Missouri was notified of the situation Sunday.
Maddock and Crimmids were team-mates at Notre Dame, where Crimmins had been an assistant to Frank Leahy since 1946. Maddock has been at Missouri for three years.
Jack Eskridge, a forward on the 1948 Jayhawk basketball team, scored 30 points in the second half against Nebraska, but Kansas lost, 70-64.
Considerable discussion arose over whether a basket by Dean Kelley was shot before the half time buzzer sounded or not. Chaucey Simpson, a Missouri football coach serving as time keeper, ruled that Kelley shot after the half had ended.
Charlie Hoag will take over the starting post, held down by Bill Lienhard, who is suffering from a groin injury, as the Jayhawkers try to bounce back against the Nebraska Cornhuskers at Lincoln, Nebr., tonight.
Hoag To Start Against NU
time.
Lienhard will probably be available for limited duty. His injury is similar but not as serious as that which sidelined Hong during much of the football season and until a week ago in basketball.
The game, which is the first between the two clubs this season, will be broadcast at 8 p.m. over WHB While KU was edring out a 60-59
While KU was edging out a 60-51
win at Columbia, Mo., Saturday night, the Huskers were soundly trounced by Kansas State 71-36 in the Wildcats' league opener at Manhattan.
Clyde Lovellette will go into tonight's game with a 26.75-point average over a 12-game route with 321 points.
The Jayhawkers, who went to Lincoln from Kansas City yesterday, are showing more balance this season as Bob Kenney and Bill Lienhard continue to pop the cords regularly. Kenney has a 14.25 average and Lienhard an 8.75 point average.
Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests
No. 32...THE YAK
"Some people will do anything for laughs!"
He's far too sophisticated to be amused by slap-stick comedy! From the minute the curtain went up, he knew that you just can't judge cigarette mildness by one fast puff or a single, swift sniff. Those capers may fool a frosh - but he's been around and he knows! From coast-to-coast millions of smokers agree: There's but 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
S A H W O P H I T O R A T E C O M E N T O R S
B
I
H
T
V
SE
6D
Page 5
NCAA Action Falls Short Of Carr's Hopes
"Far short of my expectations," is the feeling of T. DeWitt Carr, dean of the School of Engineering, about the NCAA convention last week in Cincinnati. Dean Carr, as faculty representative, represented the University at the meetings.
Dean Carr said he particularly regretted that the convention did not take more action on the proposals made by the presidential committee of the American Council of Education.
Action taken included: adoption of a broad principle of ethical conduct with a five man committee on ethics; limitation of out-of-season practices—football practice sessions being limited to 20 sessions in a period of 30 calendar days and basketball to 20 sessions in 24 calendar days.
The NCAA also passed an amendment concerning financial aid to athletes. Under the ruling "any college athlete who receives financial assistance other than that administered by his institution shall be ineligible, except for aid from his parents or legal guardian.
A resolution that would instruct the football rules committee to outlaw the two-platoon system was voted down by a wide margin. Kansas and Kansas State representative
Intramural
Round-Up
Fraternity "B"
Beta Theta Pi 61, Phi Kappa Psi 29
Lambda Chi Alpha 18, Alpha
Epsilon Pi 57
ATO 53, Phi Kappa Tau 25
ATO 35, Phi Kappa Tau 25
ATO 40, Theta 40, Sigma Ph
Forsell 22,
Delta Tau Delta 27, Alpha Kappa
Lambda 24
DU 33, Kappa Sigma $ ^{20} $ Phi Kappa Sigma $ ^{20} $
Fraternity "A"
Phi Kappa 0, Chi Chi Chi 2 (forfeit).
Beta Theta Pi 2, Sigma Pi 0 (forfeit)
Phi Kappa Sigma 25, Phi Kappa Psi 31
Phi Kappa 37, Delta Chi 47
Sigma Chi 65, Acacia 20
Phi Kappa
Phi Kappa Tau 38, Phi Kappa Alpha 23.
Fraternity "A"
Fraternity "C"
Phi Gamma Delta 31, Phi Delta
Theta 32
DU 42, Sigma Nu 36
sigma Phi Epsilon 64, Tau Kapps
Epsilon 40.
Beta Theta Pi 33, Phika Psi 28
Pi Delta Theta 61, Sigma Chi 21
Lambda Chi Alpha 38, Sigma Phi
Epsilon 17
DU 49, Phi Kappa Sigma 17
Phi Comma Delta 50 Kaw
Sigma 85 ATO 48. Sigma Nu 11
Delta Tau Delta 42, Tau Kappa Epsilon 17
Alpha Kappa Lambda 40, Delta Chi 24.
Fraternity "A"
Phi Kappa Sigma 24, Phi Kappa 30 Delta Chi 67, Sigma Pi 14
Beta Theta P16 36, Phika Psi 34
Triangle 16, Alpha KappaLambda
Today's Schedule
Robinson Gym Fraternity "B"
6:45—E Phi Kappa Alpha vs. Triangle (east)
W—Sigma Nu vs. Phi Kappa Alpha (west)
University Daily Kansan
YOU GET SAME DAY LAUNDRY SERVICE
AT
voted for the move, Oklahoma against.
E. C. Quigley, former director of athletics at KU was re-appointed to the football rules committee, and Arthur C. Lonborg, KU director of athletics, was re-appointed to the basketball tournament committee.
Lonborg also attended the NCAA meet, Jules V. Sikes, football coach, and Clifford C. Kimsey, assistant football coach, attended the convention of the American Football Coaches association which was also held in Cincinnati last week, as was the Association of College Baseball Coaches convention, attended by Hubert Ulrich, baseball coach.
Lonborg expressed the view that the NCAA convention was "one of the best in a long time. It was well attended and well-conducted."
He noted that there might be a slight possibility that one of the KU football games next year could be telecast "live," that is, at the same time as actually taking place.
RISK'S
SELF SERVICE LAUNDRY
613 Vt. Call 623
The rule limiting out-of-season football practice was about the same as passed by the Big Seven in the Kansas City conference, except that the Big Seven rule extended sessions over five weeks instead of 30 calendar days.
Coach Sikes said the NCAA and coaches conventions were both "very good," and "accomplished about what I expected."
"I don't believe the practice limitation will affect the team too much," Coach Sikes said. "I think we'll still get in about the same amount of time since we didn't practice much more than that under the old rule."
New Ruling Strips Blaik Of One Post
The shakeup started new reports that Blaik soon will resign.
West Point, N. Y.—(U.P.)—Army Football Coach Earl Blakie will be stripped of half his powers in a trial against his reform, the academy, superintendent.
The Big Seven remains one of the few conferences which has prohibited its members from any postseason contests. The NCAA voted to continue the study of this issue and of whether games could regularly be televised "live."
Hunting Safety Sought
Freeport, Me.-(U,P)-The hunting accident inspector has asked L. L. Bean to produce and offer for sale safe-hunting scarlet gloves with black words: LOOK BEFORE YOU SHOOT, stamped across the back.
Maj. Gen. Frederick Irving said he will institute a series of reforms as a result of the cribbing scandal which wiped out the football team last summer. One of these, he said, will split the jobs of athletic director and football coach. Up to now, Blaik has held both positions.
Texas is the only state that was an independent republic before it was annexed by the United States.
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.
(Nationally Accredited)
An outstanding college serving a splendid profession.
CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY
Big Seven Pace Slows Down Until KU-K-State Tilt
Kansas City, Mo.—(U.P.)—The Big Seven basketball conference marked time today until Jan. 26 when unbeaten Kansas collides with strong Kansas State at Manhattan.
Excellent clinical facilities. Athletic and recreational activities. Dormitories on the campus.
Tonight will find Kansas State at Oklahoma, meeting a Sooner team that has lost all but three of its 12 games to date, though Oklahoma is no worse than 1-1 in league play.
It has become evident that the Big Seven has but two top teams, though Missouri has shown absolutely no fear in two meetings with Kansas. One of them was a loss in the pre-season tourney, the other a conference defeat.
Also tonight, Kansas will try for its 13th successive win at Lincoln, where the dazzling Jayhawkers meet Nebraska. Missouri will entertain Drake, a non-conference rival.
CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY
1845-H Larryabre Street
Chicago 14, Illinois
Saturday's schedule calls for an Iowa State-Kansas State' clash at Manhattan and a Colorado-Missouri meeting at Columbia.
Monday, Jan. 14, 1952
Jayhawkers Capture First Swimming Meet
Each team posted five first place winners in the 10-event meet which was the conference opener for both teams. It was the first competition for Kansas since they discontinued swimming last year.
Dick Edfin led Coach Walt Mikols' Jayhawkers with dual wins in the 120-yard individual medley and the 100-yard free style. He posted a 1:21.1 time in the 120-yard event and a .59.6 mark in the free style race.
Pool records were set by each of the 10 winners because it was the first meet in the new Robinson pool.
Kansas winners besides Effin included Sam Perkins in the 220-yard free style, Dallas Chestnut in diving, and the 400-yard free style relay team of Mahlon Ball, John Ashley, Effin and Bob Wellborn.
Kansas university swimmers came out of two years of moth balls Saturday to scuttle Nebraska university, 49-44 in a dual swim meet in the newly enlarged Robinson gym pool.
Phog, writing in the February is 4- sue of Household magazine, says that "so long as high school sports are directed—not promoted—the boys who play won't be corrupted."
Phog Allen Shows Concern Over High School Corruption
Kansas placed 1-2 in diving with Chestnut and Wellborn in the winner and runner-up slots and in the 3rd place. Ashley placed second in that race.
Coach Forrest C. Allen, head basketball coach, has expressed his deep concern that the "pollution" which has seeped into college athletics might reach the high schools.
In an article entitled "Will Our High School Kids Be Next?" he outlines seven ways to ruin high school sports. They are:
1. Bet on all your games.
4. Insist on winning teams at all costs.
2. Boo the officials and protest decisions,
3. Shop around for the highest college bidder, rather than send your son to the college with highest educational standards
5. Go "big time" with a coach who wants only to win and ignores the higher standards of sportsmanship.
Drugs, Sundries, Fountain,
Rines.
6. Put pressure on your son's
Eldridge Pharmacy
Agency for Mixture No. 79
701 Mass. Phone 999
teachers to keep him eligible.
activities by saying, "Everyone's doing it. Why shouldn't we?"
Calling high schools "The real backbone of amateur sports," Allen places the responsibility on parents and school officials to curb any corrupt practices.
In conclusion, he writes:
"The ultimate answer lies in the moral filer of the boys themselves and the ideals they've learned at home. If a boy can't be bribed, he won't be."
Plymouth
Your
Man
. . . has a used car priced for you.
Buddy
GALLAGHER
634 Mass. Ph.1000
Results
300-yd. medley relay: 1. Nebraska (Reed, Hlidek, Gradwohl); 2. Kansas, 3:21.1.
220-yd. free style: 1. Perkins, Kansas.
2. Bentz, Nebraska; 3. Munson,
Nebraska; 2:9. 0
60-yd. free style: 1. Desmond, Nebraska; 2. Ashley, Kansas; 3. Ball, Kansas; .32.6.
120-yd. individual medley: 1. Eflin, Kansas; 2. Balderson, Nebraska; 3. Reid, Kansas; 1.21.1.
Diving: 1. Chestnut, Kansas; 2. Wellborn, Kansas; 3. Slusar, Nebraska, 274.5 points.
200-yd. breaststroke: 1. Hlidck,
Nebraska; 2. Scott, Kansas; 3. Peters,
Nebraska; 2:48.0.
MOVING
LOGAL
LONG-
DISTANCE
MOVING
De Luxe Service
at No Extra Cost!
ETHAN A. SMITH
Moving & Transfer Co.
IIE, 9th St.
Phone 46
200-yd. backstroke: 1. Balderson, Nebraska; 2. Healey, Nebraska; 3. Glasco, Kansas; 2:34.5.
100-yd. free style: 1. Eflin, Kansas;
2. Ashley, Kansas; 3. Greer, Nebraska. :59.6
440-yd. free style: 1. Bentz, Nebraska; 2. Perkins, Kansas; 3. Manson, Nebraska; 5.29.6.
400-yd. free style relay: 1. Kansas (Ball, Ashley, Eflin, Wellborn); 2. Nebraska, 4:02.6.
According to Plautus
It is wretched business to be digging a well
a well
just as thirst
is
mastering
you.
Mostellaria
Coca-Cola is the answer to thirst. If you're digging a well or boning up for exams keep fresh for the job. Have a Coke.
5¢
DRINK
Coca-Cola
REG. N.S. MARTOCO
BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY
LAWRENCE COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.
"Coca" is a registered trade-mark. © 1952, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY
age 6
University Daily Kansan
Mondav. Jan. 14. 1952
THE LONG EARTH IS A NATION OF THRONES AND TREVENESS. THE WOOL JACKET IS A MODERN STYLE THAT IS FASHIONABLE, HISTORICAL AND EXCELLENT FOR ALL WEATHER CONDITIONS. IT IS MADE FROM WOOL THAT IS GREAT FOR WINTER WEATHER AND CAN BE WORN IN ANY COLOUR. THE JACKET IS MEDIUM OR LARGE SIZES AND CAN BE WORN ON A DRESS SHOP OR AT A VINTAGE SHOP. IT IS MADE FROM WOOL THAT IS GREAT FOR WINTER WEATHER AND CAN BE WORN IN ANY COLOUR. THE JACKET IS MEDIUM OR LARGE SIZES AND CAN BE WORN ON A Dress Shop Or At A Vintage Shop.
WHAT MANWOULDNTE ENJOY the comfort of this all-wool casual jacket? In a traditional black, brown and gray plaid, with leather buttons, it affords plenty of pocket space in three large patch pockets.
Women's Rifle club, practice Monday thru Friday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. No exercise Tuesday night.
Student Union Activities is sponsoring a ride bureau for students desiring transportation during the incim between semesters. Those attending rides and those desiring passengers should sign at hostessask in Union between 8 a.m. and 10 p.m.
Mathematics colloquium, 5 tonight,
2 Strong hall.
Students who are planning to transfer from one school of the University to another (College to Business, College to Education, College Journalism, or from any school at U to another school at KU) should up at the Registrar's office before the beginning of final examinations make application for transfer so that the papers may be prepared in time for enrollment. It will save a lot of standing in line if you do!— James K. Hitt, registrar.
While basketball coach at Warensburg Teachers college from 1913 1919, Phog Alen coached his ims to seven straight conference les.
Right or wrong?
YOU BE THE JUDGE!
LET'S STOP AN
CLEAN THE
WINDSHIELD
VEAH-ITLL
ONLY TAKE
A MINUTE
OR
IF YOU CAN'T
SEE-LET'S
STOP
I WILL
IN A
MINUTE!
NATIONAL SAFETY COUNCIL
Sigma Kappa Elects Pat Davis President
Patricia Davis, education senior, was elected president of Sigma Kappa for the spring semester.
Travel Service
THE
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
TRAVEL AGENCY
Tel. 30 8th & Mass.
Other officers elected were Elrin Watson, vice-president; Marian Miller, pledge trainer; Vernie Theden, recording secretary; Haven Moore, corresponding secretary; Anneliese Schierlin, treasurer; Dot Taylor, scholarship chairman; Gay Bonney, social chairman; Sally Black, house chairman; Baskett, as much chairman; Jeanne Carter, triangle correspondent; Pat Hessling, registrar and Carolyn Neff, historian librarian.
Delta Gamma Announces
Delta Gamma sorority announces the pledging of Miss Joan Bingaman. College junior from Kansas City, Mo.
Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Overman, of Oswego, announce the engagement of their daughter, Helen, to Don Wilson, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Wilson, of Kansas City, Kan.
Overman-Wilson Engagement Told
Miss Overman is a business senior. Mr. Wilson, a naval cadet stationed at Pensacola, Fla., attended the University before entering the service. He is a member of Phi Kappa Psi social fraternity.
Miss Overman's name was incorrectly given as Lee Ann in Friday's edition of the Daily Kansan.
Jim Shaff Chosen AKL President
Jim Shaff, business senior, was elected president of Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity Monday night.
Other officers are Dick Etherington, vice-president; Stan Lehmberg, recording secretary; Frank Mischlich, corresponding secretary; John Esther, steward; and Ralph Tannahill, treasurer.
Appointed officers are Leroy Carroll, assistant treasurer; Lyle Jenkins, social chairman; Frank Mischlich, assistant social chairman; Ralph Kiehl, membership chairman; Bob Davis, scholarship chairman; Kent Bowden, intramurals chairman; Chuck Morelock, chapter editor; Gene Campbell, forums chairman; Bert Larkin, historian; Jim E. Phillips and Bill Bowden, sergeants at arms; Jack Chittenden, chaplain; and Stan Lehmberg, rush booklet chairman.
Mechanical Engineers Elect William Garlock President
William Garlock, engineer senior,
was elected president of Pi Tau Sigma,
honorary mechanical engineering
fraternity, at a recent meeting.
James Archibald, engineering senior, was elected vice-president; Paul Randall, engineering senior, correspondring secretary; James McCormick, engineering secretary and Decio DeCampos, engineering junior, treasurer.
A. W. Gibson, instructor in mechanical engineering, is the fraternity's faculty advisor.
Engineers Choose McLead President Of ASTE
James McLeod, engineering senior, was elected president of the American Society of Tool Engineers Thursday night in Fowler shops.
Other officers elected included Gerald Tibbs, engineering junior,
「好き」の表情はどれか?
Are you in doubt?
Then send your laundry and dry cleaning to
LAWRENCE LAUNDRY
and DRY CLEANERS
Call 383
004
Television Cleanup Includes LowNecklines,WildWest Shows
Hollywood — (U.P.) — Plunging necklines aren't the only dangers kids have to be protected from on TV. Now they're cleaning up ole Kit Carson.
Yep, that fine, upstanding example of young manhood. That's the problem. Everybody's afraid Junior's gonna try to be just like he was.
“It’s all in the history books,” Williams explained. “But we’re afraid to put it on TV. What if some kid went out looking for grizzly bears to prove he was as brave as Kit?”
"And that's too dangerous," grinned Bill Williams, who plays KIT on TV. "Some of his exploits are so wild and risky you wouldn't believe 'em."
Take the time he rassled a wild grizzly bear with his bare hands, his only weapon a knife clutched in his teeth. Got pretty mauled, Carson did, but he killed the critter eventually.
Carson was a pretty lusty gent, too. Needless to say, the script writers don't breathe a word about this on the program. Historians will tell you Kit had an Indian squaw for a wife. But television won't.
"There's another famous legend about Carson taking on a whole band of hostile Indians almost single-handed," Williams went on. "He did it for revenge. He and six others went in one night and slaughtered a whole village.
Campus Pinnings
Gloria Anne Lehmann, Alpha Delta Pi, Dodge City, to Jack Stewart, Sigma Nu, Salina.
Judy Robohn. Garden City, attends St. Mary's, Leavenworth, to Raymond Birk, Alpha Kappa Lambda, Gridley.
Kitty Lou Schrimpf, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Leavenworth, to Cadet Vald Heiberg, USMC, West Point, N.Y.
vice-president; Gene Brunson, engineering sophomore, secretary-treasurer and William Garlock, engineering senior, parliamentarian.
During the meeting a movie on straddle milling, a machine operation, was shown.
“这我们 don't use. For two reasons. One, it's kinda hard to believe. Two, we don't think the kids oughta see too much of this blood and gore.”
There's a lot more of Carson's famous exploits the mopps don't see, either. Too rip-roarin'.
"We play down the shooting," Williams said. "The only time I ever fire a gun is in self-defense. And I never draw first. Even then, I only wound the bad men in the hand."
"I used to carry a knife in my boot top. But we're cutting that out. It's too easy for some little guy to see me throw a knife and then go out in the kitchen, fish out a butcher knife and try the same thing on his little sister."
Williams doesn't go around romancin' the purty girls, either, a situation that'd probably have old Kit spinning in his grave.
And the kids eat it up. All except his own four-year-old daughter, Jody. She still calls him "Wild Bill." Hiccup."
"I play a sissy on horseback, if you wanta know the truth," Williams grinned. "But we have to do it. We make up for it with a lot of action and a lot of educational stuff."
Eye
YOUR EYES
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
SEE "UNSOFILED" EUROPE
Motor, bicycle, rail, flatfoot and study tours for students and teachers from $500 60 GU or up to $1200. On air or at 30-50 days, $550 up. SEE MORE. SPEND ELLS A OR A SITA TURTLE 19th year!
SITA Students International Travel Association
WRITE OR PHONE FOR FREE FOLDER
PHONE 3661
"your midwest SITA representative"
DOWNS Travel Service Lawrence, Kana.
Help In Your Finals Schaum's Outline Series
including
THEORY AND SOLVED PROBLEMS
COLLEGE PHYSICS,
including 425 SOLVED PROBLEMS___$1.75
Edited by Carel W. van der Merwe, Ph.D., Professor of Physics, New York University
COLLEGE CHEMISTRY.
including 276 SOLVED PROBLEMS___ $1.75
including 276 SOLVED PROBLEMS $1.75 Edited by Carles O. Beckmann, Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry, Columbia University and Henry Mouquin, Sc.D., Associate Professor of Chemistry, New York University
ANALYTIC GEOMETRY.
including 345 SOLVED PROBLEMS___$1.50
By Joseph H. Kindle, Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics, University of Cincinnati
CALCULUS.
including 974 SOLVED PROBLEMS___$2.25
By Frank Ayres, Jr., Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics, Dickinson College
-
Student Union
Book Store
MECI tudor see al
Monday, Jan. 14, 1952
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Classified Advertising
Phone K.U. 376
Classified Advertising Rates
25 words or less Additional words
TRANSPORTATION
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted
only by understanding that the bill will be
paid before the understanding occurs.
During the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except
Saturday) or brought to the Uncertain-
ness Center for Education. Journalism bldg., not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date.
RIDE WANTED to Philadelphia or any
other location. Please contact N
Gross Man at 3691.
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether on business or for other duties. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 613. Downs Traffic Service, 1015 Mass.
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
week. Car and bus tours at National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30.
BUSINESS SERVICE
TYPING of all kinds done promptly and accurately.
Mrs. Merritt, KU 296 16
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers note books, theses, medical and biologi- jose. R. Joscoe, 838 Lr. Apt. 4, upstairs. Ph. 27751 after p. 4 mtn.
TYPING—Theses, term papers, matchbooks, letters, etc. Prompt and accurate service. Mrs. Hall. 1344W. 506 West Sixth. tt
TYPING: Theses, term papers, miscell-
lanes. Prompt, accurate service. Ex
perienced. Mrs. R. B. Loomis, 27F,
Sunnyside, 2834M. 16
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses,
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs.
Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode
Island. 14
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-ment, which assures fast, efficient service. Bowen North and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. tf
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. tf
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastry. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 am. until midnight. **tf**
TYPING: Experience in theses, term papers, miscellaneous typing, and sten-cil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. ¥
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our staff has been trained to care for, fin, and feathers. Grunts Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks sandwiches, malts, home-made pies and customer air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. till midnight. Crystal Cafe. 609 Vt.
FOR SALE
Have your FOUNTAIN PEN REPAIRED!
work. Student Union Book Store. 16
work. Student Union Book Store. 16
FINALS ARE A SNAP when you use College Outline Series Handbooks. One for every subject. Student Union Book Store. 16
New shipment of TOT STAPLERS now at 96 at your Student Union Book Store.
CAMERA, CIRAFLEX f3.5 Wollensak
lens, shutter to 1/200 sec, reflex focus-
ing. Priced $10 below dealers price. In
excellent condition. Phone-1146R.
SET OP FIRST FLIGHT custom built golf irons 2 to 9 inclusive. See at 1140 Louisiana or call 3858R evenings.
37 CHEVROLET. Tudor, excellent condition.
Motor overhauled, new clutch,
good tires, spare. Call 3569R after 5:30
p.m. 15
MUST SACRIFICE! Graduation senior must part with top shape 1946 Indian motorcycle. Yours for only $175.90. broke Dick Breck at 1922. 14
MECHANICS DELIGHT. '36: Plmouth
MECHANICS DELIGHT. '36: Plmouth
see an early 600 Call. Elem
see an early 600 Call. Elem
FOR RENT
HAVE SPRING semester vacancy for one girl to share a double room, 1245 Louisiana. One-half block from Union Hall. 2:35 after 12 noon. 16
ROOMS FOR upper classman and graduate students. Quit, comfortable single rooms, close to campus. For second semester. 1131 Ohio. Phone 1784W. 14
SINGLE OR DOUBLE room available for undergraduate girl students in nice house. One-half block to campus. Ph. 36833. 14
HAVE VACANCY in single and double rooms for next semester. Phone 1555.
416 Tenn. 16
LARGE FURNISHED one room apartment, electric refrigerator, separate heat, share bath. Two miles from campus.$35.
Bills paid. Call 2225M. 14
*ROOM FOR BOYS*, vacancy for 2 boys
*1122 Miss. Phone 405, 1122 each a month*
*1222 Miss. Phone 405.*
ROOMS FOR GIRLS at 1216 Louisiana.
Ask for Mrs. Wilson; phone 3248J. 16
GARAGE, $10 per month. See M. C.
Spencer, 1234 Oread. 10
MISCELLANEOUS
SELL YOUR USED BOOKS to the Student Union Book Store on January 21, 2016. The server will purchase old edition and discontinued titles. Student Union Book Store.
WANTED: Persons seeking an evening of entertainment. Must be able to enjoy music, pleasant surroundings, genial hosts. Must be before 11:45 p.m. at the Pink Elephant.
HORN-RIMMED glasses in red case, around Fraser or West Hills. Have name and KU address in case. Call Joan Carter, 537. Reward. 2-1
LOST
FOUND — A considerable amount on the phone will be glad to return it to the owner if he will state the amount and approxi-
tively the cost. The money was lost. Call Bill Moe, phone 2475M.
FOUND
U.S. Students Don't Make Use Of Opportunity Offered By Association With Foreign Students
A majority of American students are not taking full advantage of an opportunity to discuss economic and social problems of real importance with students from foreign lands, says a field worker representing the largest private "student exchange" agency in the U.S.
Miss Olivia W. Foster, an assistant director in the Institute of International Educational offices for the Rocky Mountain area, said Wednesday that she felt "the main barrier lies in becoming acquainted."
Evaluating her own experiences while a student at Wellesley College Miss Foster said her problem had been, when the situation first conceived by her one of convincing herself she had anything to offer the visitor.
"Ive since found my fears were unfounded. A sincere desire to become friends is all that's necessary," she related.
"However," she stressed, "the international scene and problems of government are of tremendous importance to a foreign student. They have but a year to study—and they want to learn and discuss worthwhile material."
The visitor wants to become friends. "But many of them feel they are guests. As such it is not 'their
Violations A Habit
Newington, Conn. — (U,R)—One thing led to several others for a New York City motorist. After cracking up in a highway accident, Leonard Simon was asked by police about a collection of parking tickets and summonses, issued in various cities, which they said they found in his car.
He strolled around the work tables to watch the girls as they went about the kitchen, fast brunette was putting the finishing touches on Susan. Susan for her mother's dining table
They don't saw ladies in half as they do in a circus, but the wood-working tools of other things with the saws and tacks on the third floor of Fowler shops.
Girls Can Operate Machines In Shop, Observer Discovers
"Gee! Look at all the girls!" he said. Most of the students who take woodwork are women in occupational therapy, although the course is also for students, Russell Lefferd, shop practice instructor, assured him.
By SHIRLEY LYON
There was a constant drone and
Another girl was assembling a small end table. A modernistic lamp base caught his eye. "Boy, I really go for these modern designs," he said.
One student observed the $30 thousand worth of equipment and the students who use it when he wandered into the shop the other day.
Speakers will include: Dr. W. D. Moreland, chairman of department of political science and sociology, Fort Hays Kansas State college; Mrs. Mildred LeSeur, budget officer of Douglas county, and Dr. Frederic H. Guild, director of research, Kansas Legislative council.
Staff members of the Bureau of Government Research and the political science department will also participate in the training program.
City Clerks To Meet At KU
The second annual City Clerk's school will convene at the University on Thursday and Friday, Feb. 21 and 22.
The school is sponsored by the Bureau of Government Research, the University Extension and the city clerks of Kansas.
Training school sessions will consider problems of budgeting and reporting, municipal revenues, election procedures, and changes in city laws.
A special session will be on the site "Problems of Third-Class Cities."
buzz from the machines on the other side of the room. The visitor watched a girl in a carpenter's apron cut a thick piece of wood in half on the buzz saw.
He wanted to ask her questions while she was sawing, but she ex- tended to suffer stresses safety and advises them to talk while running the power tools.
He looked about at the other activities in the shop. A blonde was busy sanding a fruit bowl as it revolved on a lathe and another girl was turning a piece of wood which looked as if it would someday be a rolling pin.
Beginning students use only the ban saw, the scroll saw, and the hand tools, he learned. In the second semester they learn to use the other machine tools which include buzz saws, dado heads, thickness planers, jointers, morticing machines, spindle shapers and speed lathes.
Although woodwork is not taught as a trade, the visiting male agreed that it is a good idea for everyone to know how to joint, saw, plane and drive nails.
"But the girls," he said, "They would make such lovely carpenters."
Randolph Scott
"MAN IN
THE SADDLE"
News - Cartoon
NOW ● 2:30 - 7 - 9
Comfort Conventional
JAYHAWKER
NEW Push Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
NOW Open 6:45
Roy Rogers
"HEART OF
THE ROCKIES"
And
Laurel and Hardy
"PARDON US"
place' to take too many liberties with another student's privacy," she explained.
She said students here have a "tremendous opportunity to 'get the feel' of problems confronting the serious minded visitors in their own lands."
The field worker for this area is presently engaged in daily interviews with foreign students connected with the institute. She is using the dean of men's office for the 45-minute discussion period devoted to each student.
Personal contacts with the visitors from other lands have proved both "stimulating and richly rewarding" to Miss Foster. "And you have a miniature U. N. right on your campus," she pointed out.
Of the 120 foreign students attending the university, 55 are sponsored by the institute, "which is the largest representation we have in the Rocky Mountain area," she said.
The institute is dealing with over 3,000 people this year who are doing advanced study in countries other than their own. The organization answers inquiries concerning educational facilities all over the world.
NOW!
INTO THE WILD BLUE YONER
ROAR THE MIGHTY B-29a!
NEW-ADDED MATERIALS!
THE WILD
BLUE
YONDER
WENDELL VERA
COREY-RALSTON
FOREST TUCKER - PHIL HARRIS
WALTER BRIERNAN
Also Color Cartoon - News
NEXT!
ALL THE EXCITEMENT OF
THE BEST-SELLING BOOK...
FIDDLERS GREEN
ENTERTAINMENT
"The
RAGING
TIDE"
Starring
Shelley WINTERS
Richard CONTE
Stephen McNALLY
Charles BICKFORD
Alex NICOL
Granada
The primary purpose of the institute's representative is to keep in personal contact with the foreign students. But, if time permits, Miss Foster will be glad to see any student interested in scholarship opportunities.
The Fulbright scholarship is probably the best known opportunity to study abroad," she admitted "but there are countless others."
Miss Foster will remain hero through Tuesday.
Dean Reese Attends Pharmacy Meeting
She cited the need for English instructors for the "grammar and high schools of France," as an example "Many of the scholarships 'go bending' because there are no applications, teaching experience is necessary, although a student must of course meet the usual requirements."
J. Allen Reese, dean of the School of Pharmacy, attended a committee meeting of the executive board of the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy Friday and Saturday at Ann Arbor, Mich.
Dean Reese is president of the association this year. The meeting was held to make plans for arium forochemical and chemical chemistry. The seminar will be held in July at the University of Michigan School of Pharmacy.
NOW
Don't Miss The Screen's
Biggest Thrill Packed Hit!!
He Led the Last Great OUTLAW RAIDS!
COLOR BY BILL DOOLIN THE KID
COLOR BY
BILL DOOLIN
THE KID
TECHNICOLOR
"the CIMARRON
KID"
Starring
AUDIE
MURPHY
YVETTE
DUGAY
WITH
BEVERLY TYLER
JOHN HUDSON
JAMES BEST
PLUS
Color Cartoon
Letters News
CIMARRON KID
CIMARRON RUSSE
BOB DALTON
RED BUCK
FEATURE TIMES
Tonight - 7:34 and 9:32
Matinee Tues.: 2:30 p.m.
Patee PHONE 111
OUR NEXT ATTRACTION "The Lavender Hill Mob" Direct from 8 hilarious weeks in Kansas City!!
---
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Jan. 14, 1952
Dyche's Fluorescent Minerals Make Colorful Display
Fluorescent minerals which light up into varied colors are on display in the basement of Dyche hall.
Those minerals in an ordinary $ \circled{R} $
These minerals, in an ordinary light, are common gray, black or brown colors. Application of an ultra-violet light transforms them into lavender, purple, green, yellow and blue shades.
The principle of this color change is that when certain wave lengths hit certain minerals, it causes the minerals to give off wave lengths of a color different from their normal color in sunlight.
On display in Dyche are minerals set on a black velvet background. Included are curtisite, transforming into green and lavender; scapolite, yellow and brown; fluorite, blue; calcite, lavender; and willemite, green and purple.
The collection is from California, Quebec, England, Lake Superior region, New Jersey, Africa, Sicily, Nevada, Ohio, North Carolina and Utah.
This color property is used in identifying various minerals and also makes a pretty display. Another practical value of this fluorescence is its use in finding minerals.
Scheelite, principal ore of tungsten, is found by the fluorescent identification. Prospectors, looking for scheelite, walk around with a portable fluorescent light and when they find the scheelite color, they know they have tungsten available. The principle is also used in prospecting for iron ore.
The same chemical compounds
occurring naturally in these minerals can be produced artificially. These artificial chemicals are used in fluorescent lighting pigments.
Mrs. Luella M. Foster, director of the nursery, said that the idea of the conferences is to bring together people working with pre-school children and to share experiences with each other. Meetings are in the form of workshops.
45 Attend Child Conference
Forty-five persons attended the first of four child conferences at the University Nurserv Saturday.
Two and three-year old youngsters were discussed in the morning. Two films "The Terrible Two's" and "The Trusting Three's." were shown.
During the afternoon session a study was made of the use of music for pre-school children.
Mrs. Foster explained that the idea for the conferences was originated by the Lawrence Pre-school association. Other sponsors are the Kansas state board of health, the state department of social welfare, the University Extension, and the KU department of home economics.
Parking Permits Will Expire Jan. 30; Need New Tags For Spring Semester
Senior Wins Jingle Prize
Back in October he let his wife talk him into writing several contest intings.
The Lucky Strike advertisement in Thursday's Kansan featured a jingle written by Seward Shukers, engineering senior.
His wife read them, thought they were good enough to send in and then she, too, forgot about them.
It took about 20 minutes for him to knock out four or five, but he didn't think any of them were any good and forgot about them.
Recently Shukers got a special delivery letter telling him the advertising agency had accepted the jingle he had written and the Shukers were $25 richer.
Will Mail Grades For Western Civ
Results of the Western Civilization examination will be available by the end of final examination week, J. Eldon Fields, associate professor of political science, announced today.
The examination grades will be mailed to the 138 students who took the examination when the final results are tabulated. Students are requested not to inquire at the Western Civilization office concerning their grades.
Students who failed to leave post cards for mailing of their grades at the time they took the examination are requested to leave a self addressed card at the Western Civilization office, in Strong annex C.
College Faculty To Meet Tuesday
The College faculty meeting will be held at 4 p.m. Tuesday in Strong auditorium, Dean Paul B. Lawson of the College said today.
The committees on the English proficiency examination, honors and Western Civilization will give reports. Dean Lawson will report on the annual meeting of the Association of American Colleges, which he attended the past week in Washington, D.C.
> When the sun sets Jan. 30, it will go down on the validity of your fall semester campus parking permit, Donald K. Alderson, chairman of the KU parking committee, said today. You will need a spring semester permit when classes start Jan. 31.
--b quires staff litions office. a bettication In C Counc charitics the ca Campi
If you are a student, had a permit this fall and your needs have not changed, you may apply for the spring semester permit any time by signing an application which is on file. The office is on the first floor of Robinson gym, just inside the center door.
AUGUSTINE SHEERAN
Staff members who have paid for parking permits for the entire year, September to September, will have their spring semester inserts mailed to their offices about Jan. 21, Mr. Alderson said.
If you didn't have a fall permit and want one for the spring semester, you must make application. Applications may be obtained at the office or from the KU Business office. The fee for the second semester permit is 75 cents.
All parking rules will be enforced throughout the final examination and between-semester periods, Mr. Alderson added.
The spring parking plate insert for the large plate issued previously will have a red background with white letters and figures.
J. B. H.
HUSBAND MURDERED . . . Mrs. Irene Yule, San Francisco, gazes at photo of her husband, Col. John Yule, who was found slashed to death in a Hong Kong hotel. He was on the way home from Indo-China. Mrs. Yule believes he was killed for money.
More than 850 pints of blood will be flown directly to Korea within the next few days.
850 Pints Blood KU To Korea
The blood was collected by the Red Cross bloodmobile during a four-day stay at the University. The quota of 600 pints was exceeded by 258.
WINS MEDAL . . . the marine corps has announced the award of the congressional medal to Sgt. James Johnson, Pocatello, Idaho, missing in action in Korea. He engaged the enemy in hand-to-hand combat so platoon could escape.
Six hundred forty pints were donated by the three ROTC units. The Air Force cadets donated 353 pints. Navy midshipmen gave 203 pints and Army ROTC men contributed 84 pints. The rest was donated by various fraternity groups.
Bloodmobile Project Director Lt.
Col. Bayard Atwood said today that he was quite pleased with this first attempt.
"Since most quotas are not reached during the first visit of the bloodmobile," Colonel Atwood said, "this indicates a pretty good reaction."
The colonel said he was especially pleased with the turnout of many fraternity groups as well as of the ROTC units.
Praise was given to the bloodmobile team from Kansas City and to volunteer workers.
"Many of them worked through lunch hours and overtime," Colonel Atwood said. "Their only concern was to get the blood and get it shipped."
Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of Watkins hospital, said that the tentative dates of March 24 and 25 have been set for the next visit of the bloodmobile. But this may be postponed until after Easter.
All of the blood collected by the bloodmobile will be flown directly to Korea. Fresh blood will be flown out of Kansas City every day.
She retired from her position at Watson library Dec. 1 because of physical disability. Her career of library work included a position as assistant librarian at the College of Emporia as well as work with the Emporia and Clay Center public libraries.
Mrs. Pearl Pray Smith, for 14 years a cataloguer at Watson library, died Jan. 11 at Watson Memorial hospital at 62 years of age.
Retired KU Employe, 62 Years Old, Dies
Funeral services were held this afternoon at the Rumsey Funeral home with the Rev. H. M. Sipel, minister of the First Christian church, in charge. Burial was at Oak Hill cemetery.
Mrs. Smith received her library training from the library school of Kansas State Teachers' College, Emporia.
She is survived by her father,
Hezekiah Prav. of Mitchell, S. D.
Zooloav Prof To Speak
"Problems of Catching and Raising Fish" will be the topic of a talk by Dr. Frank Cross, instructor in zoology, Tuesday. Dr. Cross will speak before Phi Sigma, national honorary biological society, at a noon meeting in 301 Snow hall.
News Roundup
Plane Crash NY River; All Aboard Believed Saved
New York—(U.P.)—A Northeast airlines Convair plane with 36 persons on board undershot a runway at La Guardia airport today and came down in the East river, but all passengers and crew were believed rescued.
The plane missed the field, plowed into the river about midway between College Point and Rikers island. The Convair transport did not sink.
The crew of the tug Bill Endter witnessed the crash and raced their boat to the scene and picked up 25 persons immediately. Four Coast Guard crash boats and two helicopters joined the tug within minutes.
GOP Women Out To Save 'Their Party'
San Francisco—(U.P.)—Mrs. Joseph R. Farrington, president of the National Federation of Women's Republican Clubs, said today that the GOP "has always had the capacity to win but we have not always exercised it—we have merely planned to use it."
"But in this campaign of 1952, Republican women are determined that actions shall speak louder than words," Mrs. Farrington said as she opened a meeting of the federation's advisory board.
"The history of the world shows that when our civilization has reached a great moral crisis, it has been the women who have risen to meet the issues," she said. "Our country faces such a crisis today."
Women, she said, should inform themselves about politics and national affairs.
Paris—(U.P.)—The Big Three Western powers decided today to ask the United Nations to refer Russia's surprise new atomic proposals to the new 12-power disarmament commission.
The decision was taken by U.S. Delegate Ernest A. Gross, British Minister of State Selwyn Lloyd and French Delegate Jean Chauvel at a meeting in the British delegation's offices.
The Soviet proposals, introduced by Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Vishinsky in the General assembly Saturday, bowed to two Western demands for control of atomic energy.
Russians Bow To Atom Control Demands
Truce Talks Marred By 'Lying' Charge
Pammunjom, Korea—U.(P.)—The Communists almost broke up the Korean armistice negotiations today with a charge that the United Nations command was lying.
"As a representative of the UN command, I shall not sit here and listen to unfounded charges that the UN command is making a deceitful proposal and lying," Rear Admiral R. E. Libby angry told the Reds.
He denied the Communist charge, demanded an apology and finally proposed a recess until 11 a.m. Tuesday.
"You can't intimidate us," retorted North Korean Maj. Gen, Lee Sang Cho. But he agreed to the recess.
Ottawa, Ont.—(U.P.)—The United States, Great Britain and Canada have agreed on the terms of a barter deal involving American steel, Canadian aluminum and Malayan tin, sources here said today.
Three Nations Agree On 'Barter' Deal
The deal resulted from the conferences last week between Prime Minister Winston Churchill and President Truman in Washington.
Economists Say Prosperity To Continue
Paris—(U.P.)—Five of the world's leading economists predict continuing prosperity will be "the rule rather than the exception," with the United States providing the key.
A report to the United Nations by Prof. James W. Angell of Columbia university and four other international experts said:
"We believe that large-scale world depression will be avoided, and that, for the foreseeable future, there will be an upward movement in production of all kinds throughout the world, interrupted only by relatively minor setbacks. . ."
However, the report warned that "any substantial or sudden cut back in rearmament would clearly involve a serious risk of recession, and even a levelling off of the program would mean a drop in the secondary defense demands for inventories, plant and equipment."
Scientists Again Seeking 'Cold Bug'
Washington—(U.P.)—Scientists who "lost" the cold bug a while ago are getting ready to look for it again.
The U.S. Public Health service is undertaking a new $50,000-a year project in an effort to track down the cause of the common cold
One of the most baffling of all medical problems, the cold is responsible for one-third of the lost work days in this country. Despite years of research, nobody knows what causes a cold or how to cure it.
CIO Workers Want Aid For Union Idle
Washington—(U.P.)Some 600 delegates of the CIO United Auto Workers converged on the capitol today to seek congressional action to relieve spreading unemployment in Detroit, Michigan, and other industrial areas.
The union representatives scheduled personal visits to their congressmen to urge passage of a bill to grant extra federal unemployment pay to workers laid off as a result of the defense program
More than half of the delegates came from Michigan, where an estimated 170,000 workers—including 125,000 in the Detroit area have been laid off as a result of cutbacks in automobile production.
F B
Pro To
Bert of Eng with th Va.
vice w of ful active Norfol
during
Sch Lati
More the hig ceived Place can Latin
In numbe teachin gradua made quirem
Stud
school
langua
Latin's
making
two
ce
Learn
to
write
Gene
nesday
extrem
tonight
high V
Stu In
Thro mittee have h their o question during
On what s Union, they th
Fresh their i orienta meetin
Fore to knoople
Fall Semester Marked By ASC Legislation
Bv JACKIE JONES
The All Student Council enacted a large amount of import student legislation during the fall semester.
UNIVERSIT
James Logan, president of the ASC, said, "We have acted in the interest of the students and we feel that they will be satisfied with our work."
Last spring the ASC abolished the salaries which were paid to the president, secretary and treasurer of the Council. This had been a controversial issue for many months.
Bill was also passed which requires that application blanks for staff positions on campus publications be placed in the dean of men's studies or in student records a better chance to serve on a publication if they wish to.
A committee has been set up to investigate unsatisfactory housing conditions in private homes where rooms are rented to students. A code of standards was established and efforts will be made to force centers to keep their rooms in suitable living condition.
The legislation includes a day of grace before final examinations. Students have requested this grace period for several years.
Prof Called To Service
Bertram Vogel, assistant professor of English, reported for active duty with the U.S. Navy today at Norfolk Va.
In other legislation this fall, the Council consolidated the many charitable drives which are held on the campus each year into one major Campus Chest drive.
The ASC is attempting to make quiz files available for the benefit of all University students.
Professor Vogel received his recall to active duty with the Navy earlier in the semester but was allowed to continue his teaching duties at the University until
Professor Vogel returned to service with his former line officer rank of full lieutenant. He will receive active duty assignment orders at Norfolk.
Schools Want Latin Teachers
More calls for Latin teachers for the high schools of Kansas are received each year by the Teachers Placement Bureau than the bureau can handle, the department of Latin and Greek announced.
In an effort to increase the number of students capable of teaching Greek and Latin after graduation concessions have been made in the foreign language requirement.
WEATHER
Generally fair tonight and Wednesday, warmer Wednesday and in mid-April tonight 20 northwest to southeast high Wednesday generally in 50's.
The University Daily Kansan will not be published during final week. Wednesday's edition will be the last paper until classes resume Thursday, Jan 31. At that time a new editorial, news, and business staff will be in charge.
Erwin D. Canham, editor of the Christian Science Monitor, will be principal speaker at the dedication of the new journalism building Friday, Feb. 22.
Wednesday's Kansan Last For Semester
The Monitor editor received degrees from Bates college and Oxford university, England, which he attended as a Rhodes scholar. He has also received honorary degrees from Boston university, Kenyon college, Yale university, Lehigh university, and Principia college.
It is expected that the Jan. 31 edition will be the first Daily Kansan to be managed in the new home of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information. The old Fowler shop has been remodeled for the school.
Students Voice Opinions In Campus Affairs Group
He headed the Washington bureau of that paper from 1932 to 1939, was news editor from 1939 to 1941, and managing editor from 1941 to 1944.
Mr. Canham has been a member of the staff of the Monitor since 1925. As a member of the staff, he covered the annual sessions of the League of Nations Assembly in 1926, 1927, and 1928.
Freshmen had a chance to give their impressions and comments of orientation week at the committee meeting of Oct. 31.
In the spring of 1948, he was vice-chairman of the U.S. delegation to the United Nations conference on freedom of information at Geneva. He was appointed alternate American delegate to the UN general assembly in 1949 by President Truman.
In his capacity as a newspaperman Mr. Canham served as president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors in 1949.
He is currently giving weekly radio analyses of world events on "The Christian Science Monitor Views the News" program on Tuesday evenings over a nation-wide ABC network.
Foreign students said they wanted know more about the U.S. and its triple-particularly its ways of life
At the end of each semester journalism students in the Editing II class take their turn as managing of the University Daily Kansas.
Editor To Speak At Dedication
Mr. Canham is an honorary fellow of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity, and charter member of William Allen White Foundation board.
Editing Students Manage Daily Kansan This Week
Monday's edition was managed by Joseph Lasticel, senior, with today's edition being managed by Helen Lou Fry, senior.
Through the campus affairs committee meetings, University students have had the opportunity to voice their opinions on four important questions concerning the University during the fall semester.
Wednesday two seniors will be acting as managing editors. They will be Richard Marshall and Dorothy Oglebee.
On Oct. 17, the group discussed what should be in the enlarged Union, with students naming what they thought it should contain.
Students and faculty members present at the campus affairs meeting Dec. 5 agreed that the instructor should be a good plan and should be continued.
—at the third fall semester meeting of camus affairs Nov. 13.
In reality campus affairs is not a committee made up of select members, but rather a discussion group that includes students or faculty member may participate.
Campus affairs meetings will continue to be held next semester with first class on Wednesday, D. School spirit will be the topic of discussion.
49th Year
Tuesday, Jan. 15, 1952
hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Dr. Bash To Give Sociology Talk
Dr. Wendell H. Bash, chairman of the department of sociology at Colgate university, will be the 13th speaker Sunday morning on the Sociology on the Air series.
Dr. Bash visited the KU campus while on a faculty fellowship from the Foundation for the Advancement of Education (Ford Foundation).
A report from the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce has disclosed that apparently no sales of these materials have made by peddlers in the Lawrence area.
Students wanting rides between semesters and those desiring passengers may sign at Union hostess desk from 8 a.m. to 10:30 p.m.
No KU student has reported purchase of an inflammable sweater to either the office of the dean of men or women of women a check revealed today.
SUA Offers Ride Bureau
His topic, "General Education Today," is sponsored by the University department of sociology and be discussed at 9:45 a.m. over KLWN.
At present Dr. Bash is touring campuses throughout the country to study and observe teaching techniques and course materials.
Before he left Kansas he tape-recorded his talk, which consists of a series of answers to questions posed by Carroll D. Clark, professor of sociology.
Nothing 'Hot' Worn Here
Many of the sweaters, which ignite when the wearer approaches an open flame, were sold before Christmas in Kansas City.
All seniors expecting to graduate at the end of the fall semester, who want their pictures in the 1952 Jayhawker, should contact Hixon studio for an appointment as soon as possible, Richard Hackney, business manager, said.
Seniors, Take Your Jayhawker Pictures
Dorm To Open Next Semester
KU Entomologists Line Up With Science In Insect War
Stephenson hall, scholarship dormitory for men, will probably be finished by the beginning of the spring semester, it was announced today by the Martin K. Eby construction company.
The other two scholarship dormitories currently under construction, Pearson and Sellards halls, are not likely to be completed until mid-April according to the same announcement.
The charge will be $2.75, to be paid at the time the picture is taken. Men should wear dark suits, women light blouses or sweaters. The appointments will not take longer than 15 minutes.
The three brick dormitories are being constructed on the east side of the campus near Templin and Battenfeld halls.
The study of the problem was given new impetus by the experience of the Army in Korea. There it was dislaced under only one attack of DDT, that the flies mosquitoes, and like fire of DDT.
The University entomology department is now lined up on the bof science in the battle of insect control.
Work on the buildings was slowed down by bad weather. They were all originally scheduled for completion by Dec. 1, 1951. Construction was begun in November of 1950. Each of the three buildings was a gift to the University. Stephenson hall was provided by a $150,000 gift by Mrs. C. R. Stephenson of Kansas City, Mio., in memory of her late husband. The other two were made possible by a gift of approximately $300,000 by Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Pearson of Corsicana, Texas.
It is, at present, thought by researchers that after insecticides are no longer applied, insects will usually become susceptible once
Working on the project are Robert R. Sokal, instructor in entomology, Richard N. Lynes, graduate student, Preston Hunter, graduate student.
The problem caused great concern for these insects are carriers of disease.
under a recent contract with the office of naval research local studying insect resistance to insecticides.
Three researchers in the field, working under the direction of Dr. Charles D. Michener, professor of entomology, are studying the genetics and ecology of drosophia, for fruit flw.
The KU approach to the project is different than that carried on elsewhere in he nation, Dr. Michener said.
"Elsewhere the physiological changes in the action of DDT are being studied, but here we're interested in the genetic and ecological aspects," he said. "Science does not know how DDT kills insects, and therefore it is particularly important to understand the genetic changes brought about as insects develop resistance to insecticides." he said.
Dr. Michener explained that "If we understand these changes, we can use insecticides in such a way to develop the least resistance in insects."
more to insecticides.
Another serious aspect of resistance is that flies can become resistant to numerous insecticides simultaneously.
It is hoped that by alternating insecticides it will be possible to keep resistance low enough so that they will remain useful.
The first year of study here was concerned with the development of research techniques. This year two weeks of the fruit fly are being studied.
7 ROTC Students To Be Officers
Seven Navy ROTC midshipmen will be given commissions in the regular Navy and in the Marine corps at the end of this semester.
The men will be given a 20-day delay in reporting and then will be called for active duty.
Upon completion of the four-year NROTC course, six men will be commissioned ensigns in the Navy and one man will get a second lieutenant's rank in the Marine corps.
The men who will be commissioned as ensigns: H. R. Bailey, engineering senior; R. R. Dunwell, education senior; R. C. Keeling Jr., engineering junior; L. J. Lenz, engineering senior; C. E. Nelson, engineering senior; C. E. Sloan, engineering senior.
H. J. Keeling, engineering senior, will be commissioned a second lieutenant in the Marines.
Lot Of Space For Housing
There are plenty of vacancies in the University dormitories and private homes for any students who wish to move during mid-term.
Mrs. Ruth Nash, housing director, said that the only shortage of living quarters was for married students with children.
She pointed out that any students moving to rooms that are not on the approved list should be certain that the room does not contain an unvented gas stove. If it is a third floor room it must have a metal fire escape.
Med College Tests Set For May 10
The Medical College Admission test will be given Saturday, May 10 and Monday, Nov. 3 to candidates for admission to accredited medical schools.
The tests are required of applicants to leading medical colleges. The KU School of Medicine requires the test. The Association of American Medical colleges recommends that candidates for admission to classes starting in the fall of 1953 take the May test.
Application forms and a bulletin of information, which gives details of registration and administration, as well as sample questions, will be available from the Guidance bureau about Feb. 15 or directly from Educational Testing service, Box 592, Princeton, N.J.
Completed applications m u s t reach the ETS office by April 26 and Oct. 20, respectively, for the May 10 and Nov. 3 tests.
History Professor Claims Longest Teaching Record
"It would be a good measure if students took history in college, but I do not feel that it should be required because I am a believer in free choice," Dr. W. W. Davis, professor of history, said in a recent interview.
Dr. Davis has the longest record at the University. He began teaching in 1910.
He believes that history enables a student to understand better life. It is harder to miile a person by unwise government policies or reforms if he has a good history background, he said.
Dr. Davis said, "There is no complete repetition of history. There is only a similarity with some variation."
In the approaching presidential election, Dr. Davis feels that the presidency should be filled by a man who can win the confidence of the people and successfully work with the Congress which he believes intimately represents the people.
Dr. Davis stated that he believes there is no state more open-minded than Kansas although he is a native of Florida.
He has traveled in the Far Eastern countries of Manchuria, Korea, Japan and China. His hobby is fishing and he is a former mountain climber. He is married and has a son, Edward, who is an assistant professor of political science at the State University of Iowa in Iowa City.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 15, 1952
Daily Kansan Editorials Would-Be Teachers And Their Profession
Some of the results of the draft deferment examinations were announced last week by President Henry Chauncey of the Educational Testing service in Princeton, N.J. According to Chauncey, 63 per cent of the 339,000 college students who took the test passed.
The scores of students varied with different fields of study, he said. Engineering students led the standings with 68 per cent passing, with physical science and mathematics ranking next with 64 per cent. Education students were at the bottom with only 27 per cent making the grade.
The test clearly indicates what fields the bright college students are choosing today. It means that the teaching profession is no longer attracting the most intelligent students. Something needs to be done to remedy this situation before it becomes critical to society.
There are plenty of reasons why brighter students, on the whole, are not planning to teach.
High salaries of industry beckon today more than ever before. No matter how far the graduate can hope to go in education, there is always more money for him if he takes a job in industry. Some scholars with advanced degrees jump immediately into business positions many flights up the ladder. And we continue to read about men who work their way to the top.
Only the social advantages of education stand
Moreover, free enterprise has not disappeared to the extent that new endeavors cannot be successful. So hundreds of confident graduates give up their ideas of teaching to go into business on their own.
The British are different in their methods of government too. Instead of hiring an expert at $25,000 per year to set up a new bureau to find ways to meet government expenses, Prime Minister Churchill merely cut his own salary.
When asked in a poll to name the most important problem facing American college youth today, 34 per cent of the students in one eastern school replied, "Miscellaneous." And the more a person thinks about it the more likely it sounds.
up. Some students continue to enter the field because they consider it socially and spiritually gratifying to teach. They have been able to classify themselves in the same group with ministers and, although salary scales are much different, with doctors, who perform a service for their community.
With the majority of intelligent students apparently shunning education, this leaves a lower-level group to instruct America's future generation. Whether or not this will affect the scientific and cultural progress of the future remains to be seen.
Meanwhile, professors could stand a raise.
Jim Powers.
A Jayhawker tradition is passing from the scene. No longer will the Daily Kansan feature a Bibler cartoon. At least not for quite a while.
So Long For Awhile
You see, we've run all of Dick Bibler's work, and some of it we've run twice. As you'll notice, we have subscribed to a service new to KU students. We hope you'll enjoy it as much.
Dick's "Little Man On Campus" will be sorely missed. No longer will the trials and tribulations of Worthal amuse students and faculty alike. Bibler, a graduate of KU, was able every time to capture a bit of college life and make us laugh about it. He had the peculiar talent of tickling our literary palates.
Bibler is now attending Stanford university. We had some correspondence with him in attempting to obtain new "LMOC's" but his service is temporarily suspended for the Daily Kansan. Many other college newspapers will be able to continue, however, since they didn't get in at the first.
We think you will find the successors to the Bibler work equally amusing. From the proofs we saw, Ken Carroll is also able to portray college life in a humorous vein. He isn't known to us yet, but we think you'll find he is just as entertaining. —A.G.M.
10
KEN COLLINS
"So the farmer sez to the salesman."
News From Other Campuses
K-State Opens Arts Building
Departments of English, speech, modern languages, and history, government and philosophy will occupy the new Arts and Sciences building at Kansas State the second semester. The building, started in April 1950, was to be finished last August, but a shortage of material and labor and the flood last summer caused the delay.
Unusual Beauty Contest
couldn't be in activities, pinned, engaged, going steady, or married Also, they could not have held a previous beauty titles. The only r ward was to have been the title "Miss Rag Mop" and her picture the Daily Nebraskan.
An unusual contest at the University of Nebraska was the choosing of "Miss Rag Mop" by the Daily Nebraskan staff. The contestants
West Virginia was formed from 40 western counties of Virginia.
Mall subscription: $5 a semester, $4 a year, (in Lawrence add 10.9 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Ks every afternoon during the Universal year except Saturdays and Sundays. Um Entered as examination period Entered as second class class 1910, at the Post office at LA Kans., under act of March 3. 1879a
CASH FOR BOOKS
at the
STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE
MONDAY JANUARY 21
TUESDAY
JANUARY 22
WEDNESDAY JANUARY 23
The Student Union Book store will pay top price for all current used books. An out-of-town buyer will be here to buy all obsolete & discontinued titles.
---
STUDENT Union Book Store
ews
of K
Dr. E.
Muse
year's
suseum's
survival
ok a spis
Newswote
dotted the
scs weese
The stu-
te has he
failed in
from me
treat
mich the
The re
but D
study on
used she
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
rizes Won y Graduate
Leis Arturo Lemus, '51, Guatela, won first prize of $1,000 in a central American book contest for translations of English literature into the Spanish language.
an instructor of philosophy of education at the University of Guatemala, he also holds the position of consultant in the Guatemala department of education.
Mr. Lemus compiled information the book while studying for his stater of education degree at theiversity of Kansas, which he attached two years on a government parishhip.
last year he passed an examination at the University of Guatemala which qualified him for a degree there on the basis of his KU degree and received a degree education at Guatemala's annual duation exercises on Dec. 1.
In addition to the cash award, the t奖 prize included a gold medal, gloma and publication of his book. Mr. Lemus, who is married and a daughter, plans to buy real estate for a home in Guatemala with the prize money.
Jewsweek Writes of KU Professor
Dr. E. Raymond Hall, director of the Museum of Natural History, his year study of weasels, and the museum's old standby, Comanche, he survivor of Custer's Last Stand, ok a spot in the nation's eye today. Newsweek magazine of January 14 voted a full page, with pictures, the science section to Dr. Hall, weasels, and Comanche.
The stuffed cavalry horse Comanie has had a special humidifier inled in his glass case to preserve m from possible deterioration. But its treatment is only the peg on ich the story hangs.
The remainder of the story is
But Dr. Hall and his 466-page
udy on weasels, which was re-
leased shortly after Christmas.
Windows Required
or Taverns In Oklahoma
Henryetta, Okla.—(U.P.)—Henryetra-tavern and pool hall owners we been ordered to install "picre windows" in their establishments so the public can see what's ing on inside.
The city council passed an ordinance requiring the glass fronts after police Chief Tom Liddell was booked unconscious and hospitalized after walking into a Main Street vern.
"We want to know what's going in there," Lindell said. "If they be not ashamed of what they're doing, they'll co-operate with us."
A.
HOW MORAL CAN A VICTORY GET?
Don't Put All Your Goose Eggs in One Basket
college basketball team once had plenty of nothing. It was so bad that even the each hadn't gone to a game all season, couldn't stand to watch his job collapse, so the team careened through its schedule and hit the road for the big game, the season's windup. Due to lose by over five points, the experts said.
But somebody back on campus had a trainstorm and started a notion. Telegrams, to be exact. Just before game time, the team got more telegrams than you could shake a referee at. Group telegrams from fraternities and sororites, personal telegrams from Prexy and the Ocean of Women—hundreds of telegrams, I saying "We're behind you, team!" and by golly, the boys pulled themselves together and went out and lost by only eighty-point points, instead of forty-five. The moral is plain. The more you encourage guys, the better theyay. Give them a hand by telegrams for gratitude and cooperation—whether it's cash from home you snort or a date or just to send a thoughtful message to someone on any special occasion. Just call Western Union, or your local Western Union office.
The week's schedule of programs to be heard on KFKU. University radio station, 1250 on the radio.
Radio Schedule
Tuesday
Art by Radio ... 2:30 p.m
(Design Lesson by Miss Maud
Ellsworth, associate professor of
education).
KU Calvacade of Hits ... 7:00.pm (Ralph Brock, 3rd year law,
"Warnings of the Student
Court" featured speaker of the week).
Memo Pad 7:25 p.m.
(What's new in Cultural Events
in Lawrence, Topeka, Kansas
City area).
Music from Mt. Oread ... 2:30 p.m.
(Bestowing the University band)
Wednesday
(Featuring the University band)
KU in the News ... 2:45 p.m.
KU in the News ... 2:45 p.m.
(Tom Yoe reporting University
News of the Week).
Concert Hall 7:00 p.m. (Concert artists: Jussi Biorling, Charles Courbain, Eleanor Steber, William Primrose, and the London Philharmonic orchestra).
Thursdav
Adventures in Music Land...2:30 p.m.
("With a Hundred Songs in His Heart"); Schubert).
Brain Busters ...7:00 p.m.
Skits Chosen For Revue
Skits submitted by eight organized houses have been judged worthy to be presented in the Rock Chalk Revue by the drama department at the University of Nebraska.
Winners in the men's division are Alpha Tau Omega, Beta Theta Pi, Kappa Sigma, and Phi Kappa Alpha.
Winners in the women's division are Delta Gamma, Delta Delta Delta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, and Sigma Kappa.
Tuesday, Jan. 15, 1952
A meeting of skit writers and house directors is scheduled for Tuesday, Feb. 5, Frank Norris, Revue director said today.
(Featuring Emil L. Telfel, associate professor of journalism, M.D. Clubb, professor of English, A.H. "Pop" Werner, assistant football coach, and Robert Sternfeld, assistant professor of philosophy).
Story Book Train ...2.30 p.m.
("Snipp, Snapp, and Snurr,
and the Red Shoes").
Museum of Art Organ ...2.30 p.m.
(Gerald Hamilton at the Con-
sole).
Chamber Music ...2.45 p.m.
"Babuynia's Sorenade in C. major."
Friday
Pictures from the Air!
T
Airborne photographers are finding excellent subjects all over the country.
For information on Aerial Photography, get one of our booklets on Pictures from the air
only 25c
MOSSER WOLF
MOSSER WOLF
24 Hour Photofinishing
Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
Hear the story of Jazz by these great Jazz artists on RCA records from Bell's Music Co.
925 Mass.
NOW-RCA VICTOR RECORDS bring you the living, exciting STORY OF JAZZ PLAYED BY THE MEN WHO MADE IT!
BENNY GOODMAN
TRIO
Benny Goodman gave bite and freshness back to jazz. Here the trio plays clean and full of taste the music that had the saddle shoes of '36 jumping in the aisles.
Tiger Rag • After You've Gone • China Boy • Someday Sweetheart • Body and Soul • More Then You Know
6
Here is the story... how it began and how it grew.
Yours in a treasury of historic recorders expertly restored from priceless master discs and brought to you now on "45," and Long Play. Each album, 6 selections, "45," $3.04. Long Play, $3.15.*
Trombone
GREAT TRUMPET ARTISTS
From Bunk Johnson to Dizzy Gillespie . pie . , with Armstrong, Newton Beiderbecke and Berigan. Hear the trumpets—every jazz horn style.
Basin Street • From Monday On Frankie and Johny • When the Saints Go March In • The Blues My Baby Gave to Me Anthropology
SUPER
sechel
Sydney Becket
When Sydney
Bechet points
the bell of this
soprano sax at the
roof, nobody leads but him.
So listen to the master.
Sweetie Dear • I'm Coming Virginia
The Mooche • Strange Fruit • Rose
Room • Oh, Lady be Good
Lionel Hampton
Lionel Hampton
Remember the mid-forties, when "The Hamp's' frenzied showmanship jammed the dance halls with couples too excited to dance? Listen for that splashy vitality on these earlier sides.
On the Sunny Side of the Street • Gin for Christmas • Buzzin' Round With the Bee • Don't Be That Way • Jivin' the Vibes • Shoe Shiner's Drag
Jelly Roll Morton
Back in 1905, M. Jelly Roll ("I invented jazz") dreamed up the "iff." On these historic sides, you're listening to the man who actually cut the patterns for jazz.
The Chant • Ponchartrain • Victor Jazz
Original Jelly Roll Bells • Georgia
Swing • Black Bottom Stomp
*Prices include Federal excise tax. Add local tax.
Subject to government price ceiling regulations.
RCA
GREAT TENOR SAX ARTISTS
In 1923, Coleman Hawkins blew precisely on his tenor sax. Everyone wanted to be great on the new horn. Hear six who were.
High on an Open Mike + Cotton Tail Sweethearts on Parade *The Eel Crazy Rhythm Black Velvet*
ARTIE SHAW
Artie Show put strings in a jump band and the jazz purses hooted. But his arrangements of beloved show tunes turned the hooks into whistles.
Indian Love Call • Carioca • Rosalie What is this Called Love Call? • Donkey Serenade • Softly, as in a Morning Sunrise
EARL HINES
BILLY ECKSTINE
Hines was the first to cut his right hand free . . . to make the piano a solo instrument. Twelve years ago a young singer named Eckcine come along. This is what they did together.
Stormy Monday Blues • Water Bay • *I Got It Bad and That Ain't Good* • Somehow • Jelly, Skylark
RCA
RCA VICTOR records
THIS MASTER'S GROUP
Get Your RCA Victor JAZZ Records at the RECORD NOOK 9th and Mass.
9th and Mass.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Jan. 15, 1952
Huskers Pull Surprise As KU Ekes By 69-66
By CHARLEY BURCH
Daily Kansan Sports Editor
By controlling the ball the last minute and five seconds, the Kansas Jayhawkers managed to stave off the terrifying Nebraska Cornbushers 69-66 at Lincoln, Neb., Monday night.
The victory was the second close call for the slumping Kansans as they were almost knocked from the unbeaten list by Missouri Saturday night. The triumph was their 13th of the season and third within the Big Seven.
Nebraska opened the encounter with a volley of shots to take an early 10-5 lead which Kansas quickly overcame to go ahead 21-10 at the close of the first quarter. The Jayhawkers tallied 17 more points but Nebraska ripped loose with a 23 point barrage to make the half time score 38-33 in KU's favor.
Both teams played in spurs throughout the game with KU taking off in the third period with eight points in the initial four minutes while holding the Huskers scoreless. 10
Jim Buchanan, who poured in 19 points, led the NU second half attack with 13 points. Nebraska and Kansas utilized the fast break but NU was unsuccessful several times as passes missed their marks and officials called steps. Kansas also missed many close shots including several layups.
several layups.
Going into the final quarter Kansas held a 55-47 margin and moved to a 62-49 spread before the fired-up Huskers cut it to 65-60 with 5:04 lead. Dean Kelley, who played another outstanding game with a fine first half job of guarding Buchanan, made a layup to put KU seven points ahead.
After an exchange of fouls, one by Paul Fredstrom and another by Charlie Hoag, KU regained possession of the ball with 65 seconds showing on the clock. NU resorted to a full-court press which was ineffective as the final seconds ticked away with KU still holding the ball.
NU quickly popped in two goals after gaining the ball on a Kansas foul. Bob Kenney scored the final Jayhawker fielder with 2.53 in the game but 50 seconds later Gerald Sandbulte ripped the cords for NU's last two pointer.
Kenney was fouled in the last three seconds and Kansas was bringing the ball in when the final gun sounded.
KU's scoring was spread among eight players with Lovellette leading the parade with 24 points, 16 of which came in the first half along
KU Corn-ered
Kansas 69
G FT F
Kenney ... 7 3 2
Lienhard ... 2 0 2
Davenport ... 1 0 0
Heitholt ... 0 0 0
Lovellette ... 10 4 4
Born ... 1 3 1
Hougland ... 2 3 2
Hoag ... 1 0 4
Kelley ... 4 0 3
Totals ... 28 13 18
Nebraska 66
G FT F
Matzke 5 1 3
Fredstrom 0 0 5
Weber 0 0 1
Johnson 3 0 4
Ott 1 2 4
Good 5 2 2
Buchanan 9 1 0
Fagler 1 0 0
Seger 4 0 1
Exstrom 1 0 0
Sandbulle 1 0 1
Totals 30 6 21
SEE "UNSPOILED" EUROPE
Motor, bicycle, roll, fahltob and study tours
and teachers from $500 (60
days), year round Economy Tourns by steamer
or air 30-50 days, $550 up. SEE MORE,
SPEND LESS ON SITE TOUR 19th year!
SITA Students International
Travel Association
WRITE OR PHONE FOR FREE FOLDER
on PHONE "your midwest SITA representative"
DOWNS
Travel Service
1015 Mass. St.
Lawrence, Kans
with three fouls. Kenney was next with 17 and Kelley came across with eight.
The Huskers, who were trounced 71-36 by Kansas State Saturday, were seeking their second conference win. Against the Wildcats Coach Harry Good's young Huskers connected on only 15 per cent of 95 shots while hitting a torrid 45 per cent against KU.
Kansas made good 40 per cent of its tries and potted 13 of 22 free throws.
Bill Lienhard surprised the Kansas coaching staff by being able to start and see considerable action. An injured groin muscle hampered him in the Missouri tilt and Coach Phog Allen intended to use him sparingly, if at least, against the Huskers. He responded to treatment by Coach Allen and Trainer Dean Nesmith ir time to retain his starting spot.
Cage Scores
Duquesne 88, Westminster (Pa.) 58
Seston Hall 69, Eastern Kentucky 52
Alabama 63, Vanderbilt 44
Mississippi 90, Georgia Tech 64
Kentucky 95, Georgia 55
Akron Goodyear 77, Baldwin-Wal-
lae 71
Indiana State 64, Beloit 59
Bradley 77, Wichita 61
Missouri 59, Drake 50
Illinois 78, Indiana 66
Iowa 78, Northwestern 64
Minnesota 70, Michigan 60
Ohio State 85, Purdue 69
Arizona 65, Hardin-Simmons 43
Arkansas 54, Baylor 38
Kansas State 65, Oklahoma 54
Southern Methodist 40, Texa-
A& M 34
Idaho 56, Washington State 49
Intramural
Round-Up
In Fraternity "B" basketball games Monday, Sigma Nu was defeated by Pi Kappa Alpha 41-25 and Phi Kappa Sigma defeated Triangle 24-23.
These are the last intramural games this semester; play will resume Feb. 2.
There are more farms in Texas than any other state.
ONE GROUP
Values to $4.50 NOW
SHIRTS
$2.65
It will pay you to stock up now at these substantially reduced prices!
Shop at CARL'S...
you'll be glad you did!
Five Undefeated Cage Teams Win Basketball Tilts
CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES
New York—(U.P.)—Four of the nation's five undefeated major college basketball teams — Illinois, Iowa, Kansas and Duquesne — added another victory to their impressive records today and three of them won't risk their perfect marks for two weeks.
Coach Harry Combes' well-balanced Illinois team defeated Indiana, 78 to 66. Monday night for its 11th straight and Iowa kept pace with the Illini at the top of the Big Ten standings by collecting its 11th straight at the expense of Northwestern, 78 to 64. Both Illinois and Iowa have four conference triumphs.
Kansas boosted the nation's longest major streak to 13 by beating stubborn Nebraska, 69 to 66, in a Big Seven game, and Coach Dudey Moore's Duquesne team tooyed with Westminster, 88 to 58, for its 11th straight.
905 Mass. St. Phone 905
St. Bonaventure, the other major undefeated club, doesn't risk its 9-0 mark until it meets Cincinnati Saturday night. Iowa goes into action Saturday against Minnesota, which defeated Michigan, 70 to 60, Monday night.
Illinois, Kansas and Duquesne—ranked first, second and 10th, respectively, by the United Press Board of Coaches—won't play again for two weeks as most college players switch from baskets to books for mid-year examinations.
Kansas' triumph kept the Jayhawks on top in the Big Seven with a 3-0 record but Kansas State remained right behind with a 2-0 league mark by beating Oklahoma, 65 to 54.
KU Retains 2nd Place In UP National Ratings
New York—(U.P.)—Illinois' Big Ten powerhouse was rated the nation's No.1 college basketball team for the fifth straight week today, although Kansas closed ground in the race for the national championship.
The Illini, victorious in their first 10 games, received 18 first place votes and 325 points from the 35 leading coaches who make up the rating board. Kansas, with a 13-0 record for the season's longest major college winning streak, had 12 first place ballots and 308 points.
Washington of Seattle and Iowa made big strides in the weekly ratings by the United Press Board of Coaches and St. Bonaventure and Duquesne gained places among the top 10 teams for the first time this season in the week's major advances.
The coaches based their ratings on games played through Saturday, Jan. 12.
Although Illinois received five more points than last week, its lead over the Jayhawks was narrowed by 28 points.
Kentucky (10-2) retained third place with two first place votes and 260 points; Washington (12-2) jumped from sixth to fourth with one first place ballot and 153 points, and St. Louis (10-3) held fifth place with one first place vote and 138 points.
Iowa, undefeated in its first 10 games, vaulted from 10th place to sixth with 123 points for a one-point lead over Kansas State (10-3), which held seventh place.
Indiana (8-2) dropped from fourth to eighth place with 80 points, followed by St. Bonaventure (9-0) and Duquesne (10-9) with 58 and 47 points, respectively. St. Bonaventure, which was the 12th last week, and Duquesne, which ranked 21st, were the week's newcomers among the top 10, replacing St. John's of Brooklyn and New York university.
St. John's led the second 10 teams with 45 points, followed by North Carolina State (37), Seton Hall (35), Oklahoma A&M (26) and NYU (22).
Points are awarded on the basis of 10 for a first place vote, two for a second, and so on down to one for a first place vote.
YOUR EYES
图
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
STUDENTS
Want to work at the Student Union Book Store during enrollment?
Stop in this week.
STUDENT
Union Book Store
EUROPE for YOU in '52 with SITA
Students International Travel Assn.
Travel in Europe is NOT expensive if one knows how to go about it. SITA has been in the Student Tour Business for 19 years. No one can give you a better deal for less money. 70 Day Tours start as low as $500 incl. passage.
SITA also awards several scholarships and grants in aid.
Drop around and talk about these tours. Free descriptive folder and information about SITA tours may be secured from . . .
1015 Massachusetts
MRS. LOIS ODAFFER
DOWNS TRAVEL SERVICE
Phone 3661 MR. JOE BROWN
Tuesday, Jan. 15, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
e
the
ek
na
ms
th
6)
2
of
a
e
i
d
h
45
45
By OSCAR FRALEY
St. Louis Mentor Defends Big-Time College Basketball
New York—(U.P.) Defending big-time basketball despite the recent fix scandal, Coach Ed Hickey of the touring St. Louis university basketball team insisted today that hiding athletes on the campus was not a cure-all for sports evils.
New York—(U.P.) —With Lowell "Red" Dawson installed as new football coach at Pittsburgh, two major jobs remained open today in the annual jumping bean contest conducted by the nation's colleges
Two Grid Posts Remain Vacant
Forrest Evashevski, who went to Iowa, must be replaced at Washington State. And Paul Bixler must be replaced at Colgate.
There was a good chance that the Washington State job would go to Al Kircher, Evashesvski's backfield assistant, today. He was offered the position, but said "I honestly have not made up my mind." The hitch seemed to be how much Evashesvski was offering him to go to Iowa. He conferred with his former (and maybe future) boss Monday night.
Bixler quit Colgate Sunday, and the school has not yet started the round of interviews which usually follows a departed coach. Line coach Howard Hartman is considered a good possibility.
Dawson's appointment to take over at Pitt was the latest development on the coaching front. Praised as developer of the intricate Michigan State offense as an assistant to Biggie Munn, he technically replaces Tom Hamilton. But Hamilton, the Pitt athletic director, had only installed himself as coach on a one-year basis when Les Casanova quit and Dawson wasn't immediately available.
Pitt did consider grabbing Earl Blaik of Army when the cribbing scandal wiped out Blaik's team this summer.
Lafayette still must replace Clipper Smith, Arizona must replace Bob Winslow, and, of course, the Colgate job is open.
Indiana already has replaced Clyde Smith with Bernie Grimmins of Notre Dame. North Carolina State signed Horace Hendrickson to replace Beattie Feathers and Little Bates promoted Assistant Coach Bob Hatch to replace the resigned Ducky Pond.
- Tossing the problem of keening the kids clean squarely in the laps of the coaches and the college presidents, Hickey insisted: "You can have dishonesty in the basement of a church."
The rotund coach whose widely-traveled teams never have been touched by the breath of scandal insisted that if the coaches and college presidents made certain that their athletes were intent first on an education and secondly on sports there would be no sliding of morale and morals. And he held that despite the recent scandal basketball was continuing to grow across the nation.
"We have too much belief in our youngsters, and in their future, to think that this could be repeated," he said. "As for off-campus basketball, we have more than the ABC's to teach in college. We must be certain that our kids are education-minded but we also have to teach them other things.
"Growing youngsters have an ambition to make varsity teams, and part of the inspiration is the thought of playing in different parts of the country. Certainly we must think of the mind, but we also must think of the heart and the soul."
Sizing up the basketball being played across the nation this season. Hickey named Washington and Kentucky as the two best teams he has seen.
"There is a parallel in baseball"
Hickey explained, "After the Black
Sox scandal, baseball grew in popularity because steps were taken to keep it clean. Similarly, basketball is not going to die, by any means.
PRECIOSE
WATCH
REPAIRS
Watch Repair
Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed
Wolfson's
743 Mass.
Call 675
J. Paul Sheedy\* Switched to Wildroot Cream-Oil Because He Flunked The Finger-Nail Test
BILLIE
NONE of the girls were wild about this Wildcat. His hair looked like something the cat dragged in! "I'm feline mighty low," he told his Paw. "Every Tomcat, Dick and Harry on campus has dates but me!" "Yes, Siam aware of that, son. You need Wildroo Cream-Oil hair tonic. All the cats are using it because it's non-alcoholic. Contains soothing Lanolin. Relieves annoying dryness. Removes loose, ugly dandruff. Help you puss — I mean past the Finger-Nail Test." So Paul got Wildroo Cream-Oil, and now he's the most popular Persian at school, Purr-haps it's what you need! Take some small change out of your kitty and puss-foot it to the nearest drug or toilet goods counter for a bottle or tube of Wildroo Cream-Oil. And ask fur professional applications at your favorite barber shop. Hurry — meow is the time!
*of131So.Harris HillRd.,Williamsville,N.Y
MILKMIST
CREAMY MINT
MASTER'S TEA
BROWS THE HAIR
ALCOHOL FREE
LAMINO
LEAM-OIL
Wildroot Company, Inc., Buffalo 11, N. Y.
WILDROOT CREAM-OIL
Hair Tonic
Can You Solve This Puzzle?
-Solution Tomorrow
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 | | | | | | | 12 | |
13 | | | | | | 14 | | |
| | 15 | | 16 | | | 17 | |
18 | | | | | | | | 19
20 21 | | | | | | 22 | |
23 | 24 | | | | 25 | | |
| | | | | | | |
| 26 | | | | 27 | |
28 | | | 29 | 30 31 | | 32
33 | | 34 | 35 | | 36 |
| | 37 | | 38 | 39 | |
| 40 | | 41 | | | | | |
ACROSS
1. and 7. name of Lawrence busi-ness this man heads.
11. Just as, also (Ger.)
12. Unemployed
13. Bridge taxes
14. To calm
15. Apiece (abbr.)
16. Recent
17. Identification (abbr.)
20. World peace body (abbr.)
22. Laugh
23. Alma Mater (old abbr.)
25. Female animal
26. To exist
27. Means of transportation (abbr.)
29. More on the highways
33. Man's nickname
34. Dick Tracy character
35. Same as 15 across
36. Objective case of I
37. Belonging to us
38. Meaning nitrogen
40. Endeavor
41. Wide-awake
DOWN
1. Encountered
2. Wood-wind instrument
3. Athletic race
4. U.S. railroad line (abbr.)
5. Union of persons (abbr.)
6. Coed's answer
7. Wire measure
8. To depart from script
9. Dressed
10. Opens locks
14. Actual weight (abbr.)
18. Men's pep club
28. and 19. School emblem
21. N. Island off U.S. (abbr.)
22. A cry of joy
24. Second hand
25. Vehicles
29. In support of
30. Actual
31. Stun
32. Brisk energy
34. Purchase
37. Alternative
38. Same as 37 down
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Jan. 15, 1952
Austrian Law Graduate Admits She Has No Interest In Politics
By ROGER YARRINGTON
One law student who definitely doesn't have her sights set on politics is Ellinor Loeffelmann of Graz, Austria, who says, "Anyone who has a little sense, and wants to live in peace, stays out of politics in Austria."
Miss Loeffelmann has a law degree from Graz university and is now enrolled at Kansas university as a special student in journalism.
She explains that when one is interested in politics in Austria, he usually suffers because of the constant change in government. "One year your party is in office and you are all right. The next year another party is in office and you may be a criminal for your politics."
At present, she says, the people of Austria are especially disinterested in politics. "Although it's hard to generalize, most of the people are so tired of war, politics and conflict they just don't care; they just want to avoid another conflict." She believes the situation is particularly sad because Austria is in a geographic position to suffer first if there is another war.
"Austria is divided into four zones of occupation by the United States, England, France and Russia. The
Extension Director Speaks In Memphis
Gerald L. Pearson, director of University Extension classes, spoke at the national fire department conference last week in Memphis, Tennessee.
His speech, "Can In Service Training Benefit Firemen?" was heard by representatives from 38 states and Canada. Mr. Pearson has received our requests to give the talk in individual fire schools.
Charles D. McMurray, instructor of remainship, and Clyde Babb, Extension representative, also attended the four-day meeting.
The conference was conducted by the western actuarial bureau. The bureau is the parent company of all late inspection bureaus.
The purpose of the meeting was to set up a pattern that can be followed by individual states. New ideas and information about fire prevention and modern equipment and practical methods for combating fires were discussed.
Official Bulletin
CQ practice, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, E. E. lab.
Women's Rifle club practice 9 a.m.
4 p.m. Monday through Friday.
o practice tonight.
Student Union Activities is sponsoring a ride bureau for students desiring transportation during the dim inter between semesters. Those attending rides and those desiring passengers should sign at hostess desk in Union between 8 a.m. and 30 p.m.
Students who are planning to transfer from one school of the university to another (College to business, College to Education, college to Journalism, or from my school at KU to another hool at KU) should stop at the registrar's office before the beginning of final examinations to make application for transfer so that theppers may be prepared in time for pollntment. It will save a lot of ending in line if you do...James Hitt, Registrar.
WALKERS!
Think for two-
The driver and you
NATIONAL, SAFETY COUNCIL
people.” Miss Loeffelmann says, “are generally glad to see a ‘turn for the West,’ but because of their position they must deal with both East and West and not offend either. It is a situation that calls for great diplomacy. As a whole we don’t mind the occupation too much,” she said. “We have had it for almost seven years now and have gotten used to it. We are accustomed to Russia saying ‘no’ when all the others say yes,” she added with a smile.
Miss Looefelmann said most of the people in Europe would not like General Eisenhower to leave his SHAPE job for a political campaign in America. "We are glad to see such a man as Eisenhower who is particularly interested in us heading the Western powers," she said.
When asked about the United Nations, she said, "The people of Austria naturally are not too interested in it because Austria is not a participating member. We appreciate the United Nations' efforts and would like to have faith in the UN, but most of the Austrian people are waiting to see if it will succeed before they place their hopes in it."
Miss Loeffelmann, who lives at Watkins hall, left Europe for the U. S. July 19. She is studying at KU under the sponsorship of the International Institute of Education. She will return to Austria in the fall to resume her law study at Graz for two years, after which she will be graduated with a doctor's degree.
Thompson-Wilson Engagement Told
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Thompson, Atchison, announce the engagement of their daughter, Lee Ann to Lt. Paul A. Wilson Jr., (USMC), son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Wilson, St. Louis.
Miss Thompson, a College sophomore, is a pledge to Alpha Delta Pi social sorority.
Lt. Wilson is stationed at Camp Pendleton, Calif. He was graduated in '51 from the University of Missouri.
PEO Founders Dinner
The Lawrence chapter of PEO will have its annual Founder's day dinner, Saturday, Jan. 19, at 6:30 p.m. at the Eldridge hotel.
All University girls who are PEO members are invited to attend. Those desiring reservations are to call Mrs. George B. Smith, Lawrence 1915, not later than Thursday, Jan. 17.
N
W
E
S
LOCAL AVE
IMMUNITY MOVES
Storage
- Packing
- to do—
- Moving
We are Equipped
for Reasonable Rates
CALL 46
Ethan A. Smith
Moving and Transfer Co.
11 East 9th St.
Miss Harder Engaged To Charles Schroff
Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Harder, Hiawatha, announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary Jane to Charles Lee Schroff, son of Mrs. Margaret Schroff also of Hiawatha.
Miss Harder is a fine arts sophomore. She attended Baker university last year where she was a member of Delta Delta Delta social sorority.
Mr. Schroff is a College sophomore.
Ann Galloway Plans Summer Wedding
Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Galloway, Wichita, announce the engagement of their daughter, Ann, to Pfc. William C. Salome III (USA), son of William C. Salome Jr. also of Wichita.
Miss Galloway is a College senior and president of Delta Delta Delta sorority.
Mr. Salome attended the University in 1951 and is now stationed at Fort Riley.
A summer wedding is being planned.
Sea level in the distant past dropped many feet when untold tons of water were locked up in advancing glaciers. In the last 100 years, says the National Geographic Society, water released from melting glaciers and ice sheets has raised sea level about $ 2 \frac{1}{3} $ inches all over the world.
Most Breakfasts Inadequate
A recent survey of eating places at K-State indicates that many students there are not eating the right kind of breakfast. Pancakes and eggs are the favorites for those who eat a big breakfast, while rolls, doughnuts and coffee are eaten by those short on time. Nutritionists advise that one-fourth of the day's calories be supplied by breakfast.
OCEAN FRESH
SEA FOODS
The Great Salt Lake in Utah has no known outlet.
on our menu . . .
BROILED MAINE LOBSTER
FLORIDA POMPANO
SOFT SHELL CRABS
and other SEA FOODS Deliciously Prepared
Open from 11 a.m. to Midnight
DUCK'S Sea Food CAFE 824 Vermont
Typewriter Rentals
Rent a New or Used Typewriter
And raise your grades by typing those last minute notes and term papers.
ROYAL
The first $14.00 in rental can apply on the purchase of a typewriter.
Rent Yours Now
AT THE
STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE
---
University. Datly, Kansas
Project On Flood Set
How individuals met the crises imposed by last summer's floods will be the subject of a University research project.
R. Paul Brotsman, assistant professor of social work, will direct the study, which will be a joint undertaking of the departments of human relations, sociology and social work.
"Community Mobilization for Disaster and Rehabilitation" is the project title. It will be confined generally to the actions of individuals living in the city of Lawrence and the neighboring rural region during the July 15 to 20 period. However, the work of various community organizations will be included, Brotsman said.
Research assistants will go into the field to question the persons affected by the flood and those who worked to alleviate the disaster.
A committee to guide the project is composed of Brotsman, Dr. E. Jackson Baur, Dr. Hilden Gibson, Dr. Marston McCluggage, Prof. Joseph Meisels and Charles K. Warriner, sociology instructor.
Bequest Will Set Up Funds
A bequest of $2,819.93 from the late Mrs. Harriet Shipley Parker of Manhattan has been received by the University Endowment association, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy announced Monday.
The sum is to be divided equally to establish two prize funds for music students. Mrs. Parker also willed an antique walnut center table and a tea set to the Spooner museum of Art.
Mrs. Parker, who died February 18, 1949 was graduated from the University in 1909 and later earned an M.S. degree from the University of Chicago. She lived most of her adult life in Manhattan where she was an English teacher at Kansas State college.
The two funds are to be the James Tolbert Shipley, Jr., honoring Mrs. Parker's brother, and the Ellen Cordelia McMaster, honoring her mother. The income from each is to be under the control of the dean of the School of Fine Arts to be given as music prizes.
In the 21 years from 1908 to 1928 that Kansas was in the Missouri Valley conference, Jayhawker teams won 11 conference titles and tied for two others.
Classified Advertising
Phone K.U.376
Page 7
Classified Advertising Rates
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be received during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University office. Journalism bldg., not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date.
25 words or less ... 50c
Additional words ... 1c
TRANSPORTATION
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange and international travel whether tours or itineraries. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 610-895-3003, Travel Service, 1015 Mass.
RIDE WANTED to Philadelphia or anywhere in the East. Please contact Norman Gross at 3691. 16
Ask us about family rates, sky coach,
and round trip reductions. All expense
passage now on weekends and winter cruises. Book
summer. Call Miss Glesseman at First
National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30-
BUSINESS SERVICE
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports and miscellaneous. Mrs. J. Rattner A., 4. up. afters. Ph. 275 at 4 p.m.
TYPING of all kinds done promptly and accurately. Mrs. Merritt, KU 296 or 2670J after 5 p.m. 16
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast. lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. **tt**
TYPING—Theses, term papers, match books, letters, etc. Prompt and accurate service. Mrs. Hall. 1344W. 506 West Sixth.
TYPING: Theses, term papers, miscellaneous. Prompt, accurate service perienced. Mrs. R. B. Loomis, 2FK, Sunnieside, 2834M.
ORGANIZED HOUSES
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-viches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 104, 119 Mass. ff
TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these typing experience. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio. Pt. 161
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment, we assure fast, efficient service. Bounceback to television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. tff
TYING: Experience in theses, term papers, miscellaneous typing, and stencil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone
1982W, 1915 Tennessee. tt
NOW Is The Time To Have Your Rugs Cleaned For Spring
See Our BIGELOW-Trained Man Today.
We Offer KARPET-KARE Service Developed by the Makers of BIGELOW RUGS AND CARPETS WITH KARPET-KARE YOU GET:
- Rugs Cleaned Right on Floor
Phone 75 NewYork Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCE
- New Look To Your Carpets
- No Soap or Cleaning Odors
- Retarded Resoiling
CRYSTAL CASTA serves choice steaks, sandwiches, mails, home-made ples and air-conditioned. Open from a.m. to midnight. Crystal Cake, 690 Vt.
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet store and we send goods are our business. Our one-stop shop is everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Gift Shop, 1218 Comm. Phone 418. ff
TRAILER HOUSE, 25 feet, 1947, in excellent condition. Reduced to sell immediately. 929 Cnw. Phone 2568M. 2-4
FOR SALE
Have your FOUNTAIN PEN REPAIRED
Bring that old pen to us for all repair
work. Student Union Book Store. 16
FINALS ARE A SNAP when you use College Outline Series Handbooks. Offer for every subject. Student Union Book Store. 16
TROMBONE, $40. See at 1116 Tennessee after 5:30. 16
New shipment of TOT STAPLERS now in.
Get yours today, only 98c at your Student Union Book Store. 16
CAMERA. CIRAFLLEX f3.5 Wollerskai
lens, shutter to 1/200 sec, reflex focuss.
Priced $10 below dealers price. In excellent
condition. Phone 1146R. 16
37 CHEVROLET, Tudor, excellent condition. Motor overhauled, new clutch, good tires, spare. Call 3569R after 5:30 p.m.
TRAILERS FOR RENT. two wheel and four wheels. Have some good used trailers, also a 1983 Ford two-cylinder a good one. Hitchback TRAiler rental. 8-21 North 3rd.
FOR RENT
HAVE SPRING semester vacancy for one girl-to share a double room 1245 Louisiana. One-half block from Union. Call 3835 at 12 noon. 16
HAVE VACANCY in single and double rooms for next semester. Phone 1555,
1416 Tenn. 16
ROOMS FOR GIRLS at 1216 Louisiana
Ask for Mrs. Wilson; phone 3248J. 10
ROOM FOR BOYS, vacancy for 2 boys for spring semester. $12 each a month.
1222 Miss. Phone 495. tf
GARAGE, $10 per month. See M.
Spencer, 1234 Oread.
MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED: Woman student to share pleasant 3-room apartment; private bath; good location. Call 1474M before 8 a.m. 31
SELL YOUR USED BOOKS to the Student Union Book Store on January 21. The book carrier will purchase old edition and discontinued titles. Student Union Book Store.
STUDENTS: WANT TO WORK AT THE
STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE DUR-
ING ENGLISH INFORMATION? STOP IN THIS
WEEK. STUDENT UNION BOOK
STORE.
BROWN TWEED coat, with belt, in Myers hall chapel Sunday, Jan. 13. If found, please return to Jane Rawlings, phone 900, 1698 Lilac Lane. Reward. 16
LOST
10
HORN-RIMMED glasses in red case, around Fraser or West Hills. Have name and KU address in case. Call Joan Carter, 537. 'Reward.'
HURRY LAST 3 DAYS ENDS THURSDAY
THE CIMARRON KID" COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR
AUDIE MURPHY
James Best
John Hudson
— In —
Tuesday, Jan. 15, 1952
Plus: "Aristo Cat" - News
New PATEE
PHONE 321
SUNDAY, Jan 15, between 6:15-7 p.m.
light tan suede jacket (size 40); was picked up by mistake at the Alamo Cafe.
Call Gary Walker, 3021. 16
Your
. . . has a used car, priced for you.
Plymouth
Man
Buddy
GALLAGHER
634 Mass. Ph. 1000
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
FOR 9
HILARIOUS
Weeks Carl
Coopers Little
Man In The K.C.
Star Has Been High On
His Chair . . . And Still
Going Strong . . .
It Must Be Good!
It Must Be Good!
—Set. Review of Lit.
"A WILD RIDE INTO A WORLD OF UPROARIOUS FANTASY!"
"The
ALEC
GUINNESS
30
Lavender
Hill Mob
With STANLEY HOLLOWAY.
A.J. Arthur Rank Organization Presentation)
STARTS FRIDAY
New PATEE
PHONE 321
Comfort! Convenience!
JAYHAWKER
NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
NOW ● 2:30-7-9
Randolph Scott
"MAN IN THE SADDLE"
"MAN IN THE SADDLER
Late News - Cartoon
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
Last Times Tonite●6:45
"Heart Of The Rockies"
"Pardon Us"
WED. - THURS.
Open Each Evening 6:45
Buff Lancaster
"JIM THORPE
ALL AMERICAN"
— And —
ERROL FLYNN
DeHAVILLAND
ANN SHERIDAN
DODGECITY
Sports - "Mat Master"
Travel Service
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
TRAVEL AGENCY
Tel. 30 8th & Mass.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
NOW! ENDS
WEDNESDAY
HELL-RIDERS
OF THE HEAVENS!
HERBERT J. YATES
presents
THE WILD
Story of the B-29 Superfortress WENDELL starring VERA COREY • RALSTON
Features: 2:53-7:23-9:23
Also: Color Cartoon-News
BLUE YONDER
Starts Thursday
Starts Thursday Shelley . . . that bad girl is back again !!!
HARVESTER
Not even the lashing sea... COULD MATCH THE STORMY PASSIONS THAT SWEPT THEIR LIVES!
RAGING TIDE From the Sensational Best-seller. FIDDLEY
RAGING TIDE
From the Sensational Best-seller.
FIUDLERS CHEEN
Starring
Shelley WINTERS
Richard CONTE
Stephen McNALLY
Charles BICKFORD
Alex NICOL
with John McINTIRE UJ
SOON Jane Wyman "The Blue Veil"
Granada
New Order From Stalin
Tuesday, Jan. 15, 1952
Paris — (U.P) —Russia's new proposals for World atomic control resulted from a directive issued by Marshal Josef Stalin, Byelorussia told the United Nations today.
Kuzma Kisslese, delegate from Byelorussia, an integral part of the Soviet Union, made the statement in UN assembly's main Political committee.
He accused the West of trying to give the new Russian atomic proposals, announced Saturday by Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei V. Yishinsky, a "first-class burial" in the fledgling UN disarmament commission.
Fight Truman Plan
Washington — (U.P) — President Truman's plan for reorganizing the tax-collecting Internal Revenue Bureau ran into stiff opposition in Congress today.
The opposition had an iceberglike quality—most of it was below the surface.
Chairman Robert Ramspeck of the Civil Service Commission said in a speech at New Orleans, La., that the reform would be a long step in the right direction. But he added that "it would be still better if even the top position (of Internal Revenue commissioner) were placed under Civil Service."
Washington—(U.P.)—Sen. Estes Kefauver said he was going to the White House to "talk politics with President Truman." Other Democrats fervently hoped he would get some clue to Mr. Truman's 1952 intentions.
Political Chat Now
The conference today could have an important bearing on whether the Tennesseean throws his hat in the ring for the Democratic presidential nomination. Kefauver is rated a leading contender for the nomination if Mr. Truman passes it up.
Pay Increase Bill
Washington — (U.P.) The House votes today on Legislation giving servicemen and women a 10 percent "cost-of-living" pay increase, and both Democratic and Republican leaders predicted passage, although with considerable opposition.
The bill provides monthly pay boosts ranging from $7.50 for recruits to $114.68 for generals. The increases would cost the taxpayer about $322,000,000 a year.
Many members were reported opposed to the measure but hesitant about voting against it in an election year.
Korea Full Of Hills
With the 45th Division in Korea— (U.P.)—Warrant Officer A. E. Gibson, Watumaka, Okla., scratched his head today when told a certain hill was "four rests" high.
Gibson was talking to Sgt. Burkes Sparks, also of Wetumka, when he heard about "rests."
Sgt. Sparks said that the hill his burrow is in is so steep he has to stop and rest four times during the climb. That, he said, is a four rest hill.
"Most of the hills around here are at least 'three rest' ones," Sparks told Gibson.
Train Is Snowbound
San Francisco — (U,P)—Dog sleds, ski teams and snowmobiles battled up the Sierra mountains today to reach the streamliner City of San Francisco where 226 persons huddled in snowbound helplessness.
They had no heat or light. Food was running short. Six children were reported sick and six adults suffered heart attacks.
Winds up to 100 miles an hour howled over the stranded train, pinned immobile between two giant snowslides on the Western side of Donner summit.
One rescue party bringing food and medical supplies reached the train last night. Snow at the scene was reported to be 14 feet deep.
University Daily Kansan
Page 8
Theater Season Reaches Apex With 'Marriage Of Sobeide'
By PHIL NEWMAN
What was probably the apex of the fall semester's Lab theater season was reached in the presentation of "The Marriage of Sobeide" Monday evening in the Little theater of Green hall.
The experience of the ten members of the cast was much in evidence as each performed with enthusiasm. Their superiority was due, no doubt, to the fact that all are members of the acting class of Frances Feist, instructor in speech.
Of the several actors who stood out none was more spectacular than Shirley Strain, College junior, as Sobeide. Miss Strain handled the difficult emotion-filled role with an experienced touch.
The play's plot concerns the wedding day of Sobeide, a Persian girl with a family background of poverty, and of her trialsome marriage to a wealthy merchant.
Also outstanding was Kurtley Walling, College junior, in the character role of Shalnassar, despite his lack of experience.
Gerhard Herm, special student from Crallheim, Germany, did a
capable job of directing the production.
Costumes were handled by Barbara Orendorf, College junior, and Barbara Donovan, College senior. John White, College senior, was in charge of lighting and Walling was stage manager for the play.
The production will be presented again at 8 p.m. today with tickets on sale in the box office of Green hall.
East Hampton, Conn.—(U.P.)Mrs. Sarah O'Connell says New England-ers don't have to go to the South Seas for hurricane weather or out west for tornados. She's seen both right here. The 88-year-old woman has seen three hurricanes, one tornado, two floods and several blizzards, including the famous blizzard of 88.
Been Under The Weather
CHEVROLET
We Want You To Be Our SPECIAL GUEST!
SATURDAY, JAN. 19
To See The New
1952 CHEVROLET
WINTER CHEVROLET
Phone 77
738 N.H.
No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money.
Be Happy- GO LUCKY!
SUNSHINE
UCKY STRIK
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!
It's good to smoke a Lucky Strike; It's pleasure without flaw Cause Luckies always are so free And easy on the draw!
always smoke those Lucky Strikes-
Their better taste is grand;
buy 'em by the carton,
So they'll always be on hand.
Lois Jarl
Santa Barbara College
George A. Taylor Northwestern University
L.S./M.F.T.-Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco
I'm quite an athlete in school,
And many I have raced.
There's just one thing that can't be beat.
It's Luckies' better taste!
Harris Freedman
La Salle College
arbara College
GREEN STREET
L & J MAN
LUCKY STRIKE
715 TOA4TEO
CIGARETTES
LS/M.F.T.
© A.T. Co.
PRODUCT OF The American Tobacco Company
Kansas State Historical Society Toneka, Ks.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, TURSDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 16, 1922
rt Be To Cause rng
at least it must
fulfill our demand
of thoughts
for the truth most
the truth most
involvement is
and distrust of
the global economy
February
of Terror .
Sanarday
Following.
100
HIGH SCHOOL NEWS
TO BE A FEATURE
Daily Kassan Will Have a Correspondent in Secondary School.
A document of high school news will be one of the features of the newsletter. The correspondent have been asked to meet with the press and to answer questions that are of interest to them.
Sand one hour each day.
The Daily Kassan will be able to become the writing coach for the University information desk.
One hour each day.
An annual award will be given from made of three cash prizes to the winner.
TO SAVE ON LEMONS
Harman & Baldy, Vol. WILL Starr
Citric Acid Plant at Los Angeles, Cal.
*Young at M. Addison Academy*
*A water writer and the University of Oxford's Water Researcher* *Associate at Edinburgh University* *Associate at Edinburgh University* who gives talks on water issues to kids and women
THE DUCH
A fine short story of a col-
laboratory man who "would have
liked to make good bets"
Don't mistake it in Wednesday's
Daily News.
Want Faculty to Exempt a "2" Students from Spring Exams.
The Secrets of the College are contemporary problems the College faces, and the method they advise to solve them may differ from the method they advise to all will be different. Students should do the same during the time when they come to college.
The principal argument advanced,
as that it will have the effect of reducing
the standard of the class relation.
UNIVERSITY DAILY
Students Taught in Verse but Some of It Limped Perceptibly.
**Excursions of day trips.**
one the subject of a skip through the department of mathematics.
one the subject of the "Illustrated Political Geography" in short one of the cultures and lands it can be accessed to and learn about it. If it is hard to find access to the Adelaide the student can have various versions of "bible" below him. This was an adventure to all students, but there are many that have trouble with the language. For instance if a professor wants you to read some old greek books would you and give you more answers? You could read them and know what
Change Chemistry Schedule
MEDICALS IN MALU
Moved board the
THREE ROOM
Where daily New Patient
Bldg.
RENTAL COPIES GO
Three Week Entertainments in
the White building cause the
support of the department of health
and the College of Nursing.
The White building causes the
support of the department of health
and the College of Nursing.
The White building causes the
support of the department of health
and the College of Nursing.
Advertise Sweep for Meeting.
The college, went to Tyler Hospital,
the College of Nursing, the College of Nursing,
went to Tyler Hospital,
the College of Nursing,
went to Tyler Hospital,
the College of Nursing,
went to Tyler Hospital,
the College of Nursing,
went to Tyler Hospital,
went to Tyler Hospital,
went to Tyler Hospital,
went to Tyler Hospital,
went to Tyler Hospital,
went to Tyler Hospital,
went to Tyler Hospital,
went to Tyler Hospital,
went to Tyler Hospital,
went to Tyler Hospital,
went to Tyler Hospital,
went to Tyler Hospital,
went to Tyler Hospital,
KANSAS MAKING USE
OF NEW HOSPITAL
Thirty-four County Case
Sent to Roedeale Since
October 28.
Nineteen counties of Kansas have
been involved in the environment made
in this state hospital county since
October 28.
Students who plan to take chemistry next semester are asked to note a change in the course schedule. The lecture for Chemistry 48, quantitative analysis, has been changed from 4 p.m. on Tuesdays to 4 p.m. on Fridays.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 40 YEARS AGO
Bv JEANNE FITZGERALD
The school will occupy the old Fowler shops which has been remodeled for its use.
Although the Daily Kansan is only 40 years old today students at the University started publishing weekly and semi-weekly editions of the paper at intervals after 1902.
The University Daily Kansan is observing today its 40th year as a daily, and is in the 49th year of publication. She has reached the awkward age when she finds that she is getting up in years but still hasn't reached the age where its socially correct to shout about it.
This adds up to 49 years of circulation by the Kansan on this campus and means that next year she will celebrate her Golden anniversary. In 1953 she plans to do a little ballyhooing.
49-Year-Old Kansan Marks 40 Years As Daily
Even though she has weathered two wars and a depression, the Kansan hasn't changed much. Possibly that's one advantage a newspaper has over a human.
Through the years she has changed her page size and typography in several ways. The Daily Kansan originally consisted of four pages which were much larger than they are now and she carries them as well, she has gained several more pages and has become departmentalized.
According to a 1914 Kansan, the administration ruled out all recreation at the University on Sunday, which put a crimp in the activities of the Oread golf club. In the same year, Chancellor Frank Strong was in favor of cutting out one of the olds from 1917 and 1941 students took part admirably in the war effort during these global conflicts.
But as for news content, students have done about the same things since 1912 that they are doing now. They were worried about the financial condition of the school annual and the outcome of final exams. They argued about the politics which seemed to accompany the selection of the prettiest young "creature" on the campus.
Next semester the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information will move out of the present building (better known as the "Shack" by journalism students) which was considered old by a front page article in a 1923 Kansas.
Sixty-five county clerks from 40 Kansas cities registered this morning for the third annual County Clerk's school to be held today and tomorrow at the University.
The school officially opened this morning. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy gave the welcoming address. Paul R. Shanahan, Secretary of State, was the principal first day speaker.
Clerk School Registers 40
Prof. Lane Lanceater of the University of Nebraska, authority on rural local government; and. Dr. Hugo Wall, professor of government at Wichita university, will be the main speakers tomorrow.
Twenty-five ROTC men will be commissioned at the end of this semester, according to reports from the ROTC groups at the University.
The Army ROTC unit today listed the names of three cadets who will complete their four - year ROTC training at the end of the semester. The Navy had named seven midshipmen to be commissioned and the Air Force, 15 cadets prior to the Army announcement.
Seven persons want rides home between semesters and so far no drivers have volunteered to give them a lift, the student ride bureau in the Union reported today. Any driver with room for passengers is urged to contact the bureau as soon as possible. Rides are wanted to the East coast and to the South as well as to points in Western Kansas.
After dinner in the Kansan room of the Union tonight, the clerks will be entertained at a special program for them at 7:30 p.m.
Partly cloudy in west and mostly cloudy in east tonight and Thursday, turning cooler in northwest and extreme west Thursday. Low tonight 20's northwest to 50 southeast.
WEATHER
Seven Students Want Rides
To Commission 25 ROTC Men
49th Year No.78
Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1952
D. M. Swarthout, professor of piano, will give a talk at 10:30 a.m. Thursday before the Council of Clubs at the Council Club house in Kansas City, Kan. His topic will be on the University carillon.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
hansan
Andes To Head Aeronautical Engineering
Ammon S. Andes, associate professor of aeronautical engineering, has been appointed acting chairman of that department effective Monday, Jan. 28. The appointment was announced today by Dean T. DeWitt Carr of the School of Engineering and Architecture.
Swarthout To Speak To Council Of Clubs
Andes succeeds Dr. William M. Simpson, chairman the past seven and a half years, who has resigned to join the staff of the US Naval civil engineering research and education laboratory at Port Heuneme, Calif.
Students still looking for transportation to the K-State-KU basketball game Saturday, Jan. 26, may make reservations for the pep club bus by calling Martha Mueller at 4280.
The program is sponsored by the music and dramatic arts department of the council. Following his talk Dr. Swarthout will be guest of the group officers at a luncheon.
"We're fortunate that Professor Andes, who has been with us five and a half years, to attend administrative duties of the department," Dean Carry said.
A change in climate for a member of Dr. Simpson's family was a reason given for change in mid-year.
Dean Carr said about 25 inquiries from all over the nation have been received in regard to the chairmanship.
Rides To Manhattan Offered On Pep Bus
Professor Andes holds degrees from Montana State college and the California Institute of Technology. He taught seven years at Washington State college and did war work for Consolidated Vultee aircraft in Fort Worth, Tex. He came here in 1946.
"There will be a number of seats available on the bus because the majority of pep club members plan to go to Manhattan by car," Helen Maduros, Jay Jane president, said. "We would like to have the bus full, if possible."
The names of 251 students who are candidates for degrees from the University at the close of the fall semester were announced today by James K. Hitt, registrar.
251 Seniors Named For Graduation
To Use New System Of Closing Hours
Closing hours for all women students throughout final week will be the same as during any other week in the school year, Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women, has announced.
Regular closing hours are 10:30 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday; 12:30 a.m. Friday; 1 a.m. Saturday, and 11 p.m. Sunday. These will be the closing hours through and including Wednesday, Jan. 23.
This is the first final week for these rules to take effect, in accordance with the revised ASW Regulations for University Women. The senate proposed this plan last spring, to be taken into effect during the final week period in the fall.
From Thursday, Jan. 24 through and including Wednesday, Jan 30, closing hours will be 12 midnight.
Board Elects Kansan Staff
J a c k Zimmterman, Ellsworth
Zahm, and Dorothy Hedrick were
elected to the key positions of the
University Daily Kansan for the first
eight weeks period of the spring
semester.
Zimmerman will be editor in chief; Zahm, managing editor; and Miss Hedrick, business manager. All are journalism seniors.
Other news and editorial appointments approved by the board were assistant managing editors: Benjamin Holman, Joseph Lastelic, and Helen Lou Fry, journalism seniors, and James Powers, graduate student.
Final program plans for the fourth annual United Nations conference to be held at the University Thursday, Jan. 24, and Friday Jan. 25, have been announced by University Extension, sponsors o the meeting.
Anne Snyder, College senior, and Jill
Wright, a graduate student,
were elected editorial assistants.
Approved business staff appointments were: William Taggart, advertising manager; Ted Barbera, circulation manager; Virginia Johnston, national advertising manager, advertising manager, and Emory Williams, promotion manager. All are journalism seniors.
Following his address special sectional meetings will be held on press and publicity, library services, UN-ESCO, non-governmental organizations, radio and television, high school students, film service, and service clubs.
Appointments for city, sports telegraph, and society editors will be approved by the Kansan board at a later date.
Program Plans Announced For UN Conference Here
Amiya Chakravarty, visiting professor of humanities, will speak on "Near East Today" at the second guest room. Following his address, special
Following registration e a r l y
Thursday morning, c hancellor
Franklin D. Murphy will welcome
the delegates to the University, and
the response will be given by Mrs.
Benjamin e Weaver,
steward of Kansas UN, and F. L.
Schlagle, 1951 state chairman of
Kansas UN.
V. G. J, Stavridi, United Nations staff member, will give an address, "World Understanding" at the first general session. He will also speak on "New Patterns for World Affairs" at a banquet to be held Thursday evening in the Kansas room of the Union.
Friday morning the third general session will include summary reports from groups, and talks by Mrs. Oad Essex, UN community leader, Stafford, and Robert Fri and Miss Ellen bywaters, juniors from Shawnee Mission High school Shawnee Mission High school
The conference will close with a luncheon at noon Friday in the Kansas room of the Union. At this meeting Mrs. Florence Reynolds, a representative of the UN food and agricultural division, will speak on "Food and Industry Around the World."
The 1952 mid-year class is much smaller than the mid-year classes of the past two years. Last year the January graduating class numbered 488 and in 1950 it was 518. This indicates an early entry into college operations caused by the return of the veterans, Mr. Hitt said.
The largest number of candidates comes from the College with 77 persons. The next largest total comes from the School of Engineering and Architecture which has 66 candidates. The School of Business 48, School of Fine Arts 17, School of Education 23, School of Law 13, School of Journalism 5 and School of Pharmacy 2.
The list contains no candidates from the Graduate School or the School of Medicine. These schools do not grant degrees at mid-year, although some graduate students are now completing their work.
Those who successfully complete the graduation requirements will have their names listed in the June commencement program and may take part in the activities at that time if they wish. However, their diplomas will be mailed to them next month.
The list of candidates by schools with their respective degrees are: College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
Raymond J. Ackermann, Ann A. Altringer, Benjamin S. Benjaminov, Betty John Bennett, George Paul Bielan, Kernie Ward Binyon, Samuel Annon Boyer Jr, Sarah O'Bryon Bradley, Patricia Ann Cheatham, Robert Ellis Christensen, Roy Elmer Crouch, LaVone Annette Daily, Charles Thomas Deeds, Harry Jack Faerber.
Keith H. Ferrell, Joel Dean Fitzgerald, Gerald Wayne Fleener, Leslie Wayne Fleming, James Howard Garrison, Gerald Wayne Gearhart, Kirk W. Grutzmacher, Mary Frances Hadley, Robert Verne Hadley, Thomas James Halpin, Georgianne Hedrick, Frank Charles Holefelder, Mary Gloria Honan, James East Irby, Mary Finckler Keyser.
Elfred Herman Kramer, Harry Lincoln Laey jr., Daniel Ernest La-Master, Virginia Am Lightfoot, Richard E. Longarini, Melva L, Lutz, William Henry MacLaughlin jr., Engeure M. Malone, Mary Elizabeth Mann, John Richard Martindel, John Stanley May, James Joseph McNerney III, Robert Vern Miller, Drikan Christian Milton, Ralph Wyeth Mitchell, David Lewis Mordy, Malcolm Maurice Morrow, Jane E. Moser, Janice Ethelyn Moses, Glenn Eubank Muncy, Charles Malukahki Lee Sing Nakoa, Thomas Robert Oglevie.
William Elgin Palmer, Michael Hodes Quinn, Shirley Louise Reams, John Rogers Reany, David Oscar Schmidt, Robert Lee Sigler, Lowell Smith jr., John August Steinberger, Harley Edward Sterling jr., Jack Dean Thomas, William Coleman Thorne, Benjamin F. Thrasher, Alfonso Torres-Vincenzi, John William Tranham, Phillip Lawrence Waismbleum, James Wesley Westbrook, John Thomas Whealen, John W. White Jr., Barbara Anne Wood, Mary Ann Woods.
Bachelor of Science in Nursing: Donna Beth Clark, Josephine Joann Eson, Shirley Jane Hoffman, LaVerne B. S. Neiswender, Mary Ann Suderman.
Bachelor of Science in Physical Therapy; Curtis Glenn Sales. The William Allen White School
Stan Allen White School of Journalism and Public
of Journalism and Information
Bachelor of Science in Journalism;泉马P.R. Dring, Charles R. Price,
(Continued on page 8)
Page 2 University Daily Kanson Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1952
Daily Kansan Editorials
Ike And His Monday Morning Quarterbacks
Now that Eisenhower has indicated his willingness to run, the "experts" are trying to figure out where he stands.
Since Eisenhower has never sought a political office, there is no record for reference. At his military post with NATO he has not spoken on political issues for almost a year.
Thus there is no clear cut indication of his stand on most current foreign and domestic issues.
Realizing that the delegates should know where a candidate stands before they vote for him, certain "enlightened" persons have undertaken the job of informing the rest of us of the general's views.
This task has taken two forms. One starts from the premise that Eisenhower is basically an honest man of high integrity.
The second approach is to go back over past statements by Eisenhower. Quotations are patched together and segregated into various categories. The finished product is presented as the general's stand.
Next it is determined what any honest man of high integrity would do in each situation, and it is concluded that this represents Eisenhower's stand.
The first approach is an obvious inversion of reason. It begins with a conclusion about Eisenbower. From this conclusion it deduces certain factors about the man, and winds up with the conclusion again.
If one does not become too dizzy from this weird circular motion, it might be realized that
the approach does not bother to validate the original conclusion. To question it is to be reasonable.
The second approach at least uses normal forms of reasoning. It attempts to formulate a stand for Ike by presenting a patch work of past quotations:
The chief fault of the second method is the difficulty experienced in applying Eisenhower's past statements to specific issues at present. The general result can be little more than a list of generalities. The notable exception is, of course, the general's stand on the welfare state.
Again, the further one gets from the original quotations in applying them to present situations, the more the chance of guess work increases. As an example, although we are told Eisenhower is a stern internationalist and a proponent of "international understanding" and the United Nations, what shall we put down as his stand on the recognition of Communist China or aid to Chiang?
Nor can the argument be accepted that candidates are not expected to take firm stands. Since he has no prior record, Ike must be taken at his word. To date this has been nil.
If Eisenhower chooses to remain the aloof, noncommittal candidate, his attitude should be recognized for what it is worth—a bit of political strategy.
The efforts of some of his supporters to build a leg for him to stand on, except that they are part of this strategy, are an interesting spectacle of blind reasoning and animated emotions.
—Ben Holman.
Are We Headed For A 'Preventive War'?
The United States is now engaged in a rearmament race. It is a race which will enable us, if need be, to safely repel aggression from any quarter. In preparing our defenses it has become necessary for us to use dates—we find ourselves saying that we can produce so many pleasure cars and at the same time have a certain number of tanks available by such and such a date.
We can make ice boxes and stoves, and this and that, and still be ready on a certain date with all the arms that we and our allies will need in order
to hold the bridge.
Daily Hansan
This date is an essential in our calculations, and we find ourselves accepting the year 1954 as the proper figure for our equation. However, the farther one is from home, the more this date sounds like a D-Day, the day on which we will be prepared to start a preventive war.
News Room Student Newsmen of the Adv. Room K.U. 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS K.U. 376
Let's stop this nonsense of raming dates. The plain facts are that any day is Russia's D-Day, and no day is ours. We must steel ourselves against the desire to flex our muscles once we have recovered from our 1845-46 illness and guard against giving any substance to the belief that we will then desire to pick a fight.
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Asn.,
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
NEWS START
Managing Editor Charles Price
Assistant Managing Editors Nancy Anderson
Benjamin Holman, Lea Sheppeard, Ettwiler Dixon
City Editor Joe Taylor
Sports Editor Charles Burch
Telegram Editor Don Sarton
Seedling Editor Kathrin Schutz
News Advisor Victor J. Daniell
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager...Bob Sydney
Advertising Manager...Dorothy Hedrick
Assistant Adv. Manager...Dick Hale
National Adv. Manager...Bill Togart
Creative Manager...Elinne Elaine
Promotion Manager...Ted Barbara
Business Adviser...R. W. Doores
We must adjust ourselves to the idea that 1954 will not bring us "surecase from sorrow" but that if up to that time we are successful through strength in avoiding war, then 1955 and 1956 and all the years to come will see the continuance of our burdens or a large portion of them.
Nineteen fifty-four is neither a year in which to attack nor a year in which to let down. It is just another year which will be filled with tensions and with dangers—just as every year will be until the Iron Curtain has been melted and the Russian people have learned that free peoples are not the enemies of other free peoples.
By constantly referring to and aiming for a date in the future, when our military strength will be sufficient to wage war, we are running the risk of making people of other nations believe that when we are strong enough we will start a preventive war. William Stanfill.
Letters To The Editor Editor Of Upstream Objects
Dear Editor:
The article about Upstream magazine in the Daily Kansas of January 14 is misleading because it contains several quotations and distortions out of context. Most important among the latter is the following statement: "The original magazine was intended to appeal to the masses."
This is, of course, unshred. There are do "massus" to appeal to. Upstream attempted to gain in its early years a "mass-circulation," and all that means is 1,500 sold copies
This objective was not reached because today's conditions are not favorable to "little magazines" of the Upstream type, not because the articles were "written down." No such snobbish and domestical policy was ever followed.
rather than 560, which is our present circulation.
Dan Gallin,
Editor, Upstream
It is equally unique that today's Upstream is "meant to appeal to a limited reader audience." Our "limited reader audience" is unfortunately a product of external circumstances, not of editorial policy. We
rather hope that in spite of this we did not "fail miserably" in terms other than circulation.
Moreover: (1) Upstream has two editors, Mary Kiehl and myself; (2) there is no such thing as Tau Sigma Alpha - Pi Sigma Alpha is an honorary political science fraternity; (3) there is no "old" and "new" Upstream except in format. There has not been a chance in policy, which is still one of critical analysis of facts from all possible sides; (4) several of our contributors and staff members sharply resent being called liberals.
KEN COLLINS
"Mr. Bruno, would you please pay attention to this anatomy?"
To Be Or Not To Be President
Following the Eisenhower announcement last week which put the general into the presidential race, the big question left is what will Harry Truman do?
The only solid fact that can be found among the political talk in Washington is that Mrs. Truman is ready to return to Independence Mo. She never has particularly cared for the hustle of official life and her past few years in the White House have increased her feelings.
This attitude has become even more obvious since the attempted assassination of the President by two Puerto Ricans in November or 1950. From that day on she has shown no hesitation in expressing her desire to return home.
Everyone who is close to the Truman family, either in the camp or at home in Missouri, knows this. But no matter what Bess says or does the belief still exists that Harry is interested in running for another term. He feels that although he served only a few months less than the full four years of his first term, it was not his. He would like to be elected twice on his own.
The initial attempts to get Judge Thomas Murphy of New York to head the government clean up committee also indicated that the President was anxious to have a good record behind him. But the more recent announcement that the investigation will be done by attorney-general's office is likely to undo any credit received the first move.
Youngdahl has been the GOP's best vote getter in Minnesota for several years now. He was returned to office by a sizable margin in 1948 while the state was going heavily for Truman and Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey. If he had remained in St. Paul and headed the Republican ticket again in 1952 the Democratic presidential nominee would certainly have found it hard sledding.
Also he believes that he can be re-elected if he makes the race. President Truman has turned up loser at the polls only once and so is pretty sure he knows the ropes. Among his close friends he laughs frequently over the surprise he pulled in 1948. This he attributes to what he likes to call his "Missouri political horse sense."
Mr. Truman has been acting, talking and maneuvering like a candidate. Last summer he took a big punch out of the Republican party in Minnesota by naming Gov. Luther W. Youngdahl to a job as a federal judge in the District of Columbia.
At his news conferences he has said that he will make up his mind sometime before the convention. Beyond this he is almost as coy as was President Roosevelt before his last two conventions.
Mr. Truman is going to have to say yes or no soon or else the Democrats will be behind the eight-ball for candidates. There are several who would like to run but who don't want to buck the President. But if he would announce his intentions they could either hold on to their plans for future years or begin the spade work which is necessary to get the convention votes. — Joe Taylor.
News From Other Campuses
An Expensive Cage Trip
Basketball fans at DePaul university in Chicago who have $77.50 will have an opportunity to ride a special train to New York to see DePaul play Manhattan college in Madison Square Garden. The trip will be made between semesters.
The University of Minnesota Health Service has been working X-ray machines overtime the past weeks searching for breaks in student
X-Ray Broken Bones
bones. Ice and packed snow, several inches thick, cover the sidewalks giving student feet about as much traction as "banana peels on a ballroom floor." Most of the injuries so far have been minor.
Mall subscription: $a a semester, $4.50 a year. (In Lawrence county, $8 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence Kans., afternoon during the University days and Sundays. University holidays: examination period. Entered as second class after Sept. 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence Kans., under act of March 3, 1979.
Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Save
MONEY...
TIME...
WORK...
by having your clothes washed at the LAUNDERAIDE
9 pounds washed for
35c
Soap, Bleach And Bluing Furnished
Dryers Available
LAUNDERAIDE
Phone 2515
The New Flower Shop Experience-Courtesy Quality
the Flower Box
813 Vermont
We Have A Complete Line Of
ELMER'S CANDIES
Custom Made-To-Measure TROUSERS
LeRoy Fleming, Owner Night Call 749 Phone 278 18 E. 9th.
only $4.95
SPECIAL OFFER
With each purchase of a custom tailored suit in a selected group of 40 fabrics. Receive an extra pair of matching trousers or slacks of a different fabric for just $4.95.
university shop
FACTS CREEKST DRIVE...IN BEST BUILD...
Calf Hide BILLFOLDS
Meeka
- Tex Tan
EVERY THURSDAY
- Benner
- Bosco Tooled or Plain
$3.50 to $7.50
FILKIN'S LEATHER SHOP
PAN FRIED CHICKEN
- Home Made Rolls
- Chicken Gravy ONLY 75c
820 Mass.
STREIT'S CAFE
9th and Tennessee
Patronize
Daily Kansan
Advertisers
Try our homemade pies and cakes. We Also Serve Sandwiches, Malts, Chili.
CRYSTAL CAFE
BREAKFAST - LUNCH - DINNER
609 Vt.
Open 6 a.m. until Midnight
FREE PARKING
PERSONALIZED HAIR STYLING
MARILYN MONROE
For An Appointment Call
> 23 West 9th Phone 709
Corn's Studio of Beauty
FREE...
One Basketball
GOAL
with each
Sporting Goods
KIRKPATRICKS
BASKETBALL PURCHASE
Don't miss this . . .
715 Mass. Ph. 1018
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
2014
GRANADA CAFE
First Door South of Granada Theater Specials Everyday 65c to 75c CHICKEN AND HOME-MADE NOODLES EVERY SATURDAY
70c
Open 6 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday Closed Sunday
Pick Up The Groceries For Your Midnight Snack At
LOG CABIN MARKET
1827 Louisiana Phone 910
At The Foot of The Hill
EXPERT
UPHOLSTERING
At DINGMAN FURNITURE 1803 Mass. Call 1503
Priscilla.25CT.
Give her a
Diamond from Sample's
Quality Diamonds White or Yellow Gold Settings
SAMPLE'S
914 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass.
Phone 368
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1952
East-West TurmoilForcesAdm. Byrd To Delay Antarctic Expedition
Washington—(U.R.)—Rear Adm. Richard E. Byrd wants to lead another expedition to Antarctic but the odds are it won't be soon.
The Korean war, the cold war, and lack of money are standing in the way of a new trek to the South Polar region.
"I do want to go there again."
"I will not work on an Antarctic expedition until the Korean crisis is over." Byrd said recently. "When that is over, I would feel free to start in again on an Arctic program.
There is no monetary provision for a new Antarctic expedition in the naval appropriation for next year. Nor is there likely to be as long as the cold war continues between the west and the Iron Curtain countries.
It may be, too, that United States policy regarding sovereignty in Antarctica may have to be clarified before the next large-scale expedition from this country to the bottom of the sea could arise among this and other countries over control of the 6,000,000 square miles of ice continent.
Byrd is now on active duty in the Defense Department, working on Polar strategic problems for the chief joints of staff.
Byrd went to Antarctica first in 1928-30. He conducted a second expedition in 1933-35. He spent the long winter night alone, in scientific observations not a great distance from the South Pole.
In 1939, Byrd was head of the United States Antarctic service. This expedition explored more than 100,000 square miles of previously unknown territory, and charted 700 miles of additional coast-line.
The 1946-47 Antarctic operation, called "High Jump," brought more knowledge about the region than had been accumulated in all previous explorations. The complete official reports of this expedition never have been published.
"High Jump II" was scheduled for the season of 1949-51, but was postponed in August, 1949, for reasons of economy. Its purposes were naval training in cold regions, exploration, and mapping.
If and when the navy resumes Antarctic exploration, the interest again will be chiefly in the training phase. Antarctic averages about 40 degrees colder than the Arctic region, and training there affords extraordinary tests of human adaptability, ice navigation, and aviation
The political opinion regarding U.S. policy in Antarctica probably will be tested in Congress next year.
The House foreign affairs committee has a resolution pending by which this country would declare its right of sovereignty over that part of the Antarctic continent between the 90th meridian, west, and the 150th meridian, west, and would reserve rights based on discoveries and exploration in other areas.
Besides the physical aspects of Antarctica, there is a delicate diplomatic problem. Other countries claim part of the big icy region. Among these is Russia, advancing claims based on an expedition in 1820-21.
The State and Navy departments are keeping close tab on Antarctica. They know that in event the Suez and Panama canals are blocked, a huge volume of traffic would have to traverse the Cape of Good Hope and Cape Horn. The seas in those regions would have great strategical importance.
First City To Melt Ton Of Ice To Be Named 'Sunshine City'
Carlsbad, N. M.—(U.P.)—Everyone was trying to "horn in" on the act today as cities across the nation prepared to vie for the title of the "sunshine city."
And Frank Kindell, manager of the chamber of commerce which fathered the idea, said "we'll let 'em all in."
He said he had received calls from the chambers of commerce at Smryma Beach, Fla., and at Corpus Christi, Tex.
However, he added, the official entries are the towns invited to participate at the start: Carlsbad, Los Angeles, Phoenix and El Paso.
Kindell even went so far as to agree that the snow-bound town of Glenwood Springs, Colo., might be allowed to enter a chunk of ice in the contest. The Springs claims a secret weapon in the form of a hot spring.
"We'll write them a letter," he said. And added "everything is air in war and . . ."
In Los Angeles the chamber of commerce said it is "okay with us" if Glenwood Springs comes in.
The contest gets underway toorrow morning at 9 a.m. when themayors of the various cities haula ton of ice out into their sunshine.
First city reporting its pile has melted to a 100-pound cakes gets the prize-designation as the "sunshine city" and the keys to all the
TICKETS
AND
RESERVATIONS
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
BREER
Quickie Vacation After Finals
From K.C. (Round trip tax incl.)
Bnf. Houston $94.07
Cal. Denver 76.48
CGS Memphis 52.79
MCA Sioux City 35.88
TWA - EAL Tampa 149.16
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
other contestant cities.
Kindell said today that his agency has placed a 30-day limit on the contest. If the ice hasn't melted by then the city having the smallest chunk will be declared winner.
Taxpayer Pays Up
Miss Rose Gieseman, Manager 8th and Mass. St. Telephone 30
He said a ton of ice would measure 77 by 42 inches.
Miss Rose Gieseman, Manager
Lincoln, Neb. — (U.R.) — Frank Heintze, state treasurer, received a check from an honest taxpayer. The Nebraskan wrote Heintze that he "got hold of" two cartons of cigarettes on which the state tax of three cents per pack had not been paid. He mailed Heintze a check for 60 cents.
CERONO
MARSHALL RODOLPO GRAZIANI was known as the Lion of Africa when Mussolini was posing and roaring during the Fascist regime in Italy. He was commander of Il Duce's northern republic at the war's end. Later he was sentenced to prison by the Allies. Now he has returned to public life and here addresses a national meeting of the Federation of Republican Veterans in Rome and gives the Fascist salute. He is president of the club
Man Owns Most Unique Real Estate In World
East Hampton, Conn. — (U,F)—J. Howell Callin sends his the only person in the world who holds a deed to an underwater island.
He bought the island 40 years ago from the state. It was really an island in those days. Since then the lake which surrounded it was dammed up to make it larger. The island disappeared under five feet of water.
"I see it once a year or so when the water is low." Conklin said.
SEE "UNSPOILED" EUROPE
Motor, bicycle, flat, floatab and study tourers for students and teachers from $500 (60) to $700 (80) per day or air 30-50 days, $550 up. See MORE SPEND LENDS A SITA TURN! 19th year
SITA Students International Travel Association WRITE OR PHONE FOR FREE FOLDER
PHONE 3681 "your midwest SITA representative"
DOWNS Travel Service Inc.
In NY, NJ, CT, DE,
Louisiana, Kansas.
--SOLUTION TO YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE
M O R G A N M A C K
E B E N S O I D L E
T O L L S A L L A Y
E A N E W I D
M O R G A N M A C K
E B E N S O I D L E
T O L L S A L L A Y
E A N E W I D
K Y B H
U N H A
K S U C O W
U S A K
B E R
J D F O R D S P
A L B O E A M E
Y O U R A Z O P
T R Y A L E R T
K Y
U N
K S U
U S
B E
M. J. C. RUBIN
Mr For
Offer for
Dr.
an
auti
rger
nly
agr
Dr.
action
the
enti
orth
The
annu
ts in
ses,
sects
The ca is or gr anties of Austria in the osr ser basel.
raser,
in the
state of
sturd.
Cand
referee
ave a
accred
ersity,
and cap
and hau
an.
Harva
Io Int
Robb
school
will be
interviewed
take to
into the
Appeal
see, Mr.
official
warrlor
as gra
1
1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789
Michener Writes for Science Text
Dr. Charles D. Michener, chairman of the entomology department, author of a 212-page section in a larger publication of 1,420 pages recently issued by the U.S. department agriculture.
Dr. Michener's contribution is the action on bees, on which he is one authority. The book entitled "Bymoptera of America of Mexico."
The book is a technical reference manual, primarily for use by scientists in the fields concerned, listing bees, ants, wasps and other similar insects.
Offer $1000 Grant for Foreign Study
The Germanistic Society of America is offering a fellowship of $1,000 or graduate study at the Universities of Graz, Innsbruck or Vienna, Austria; or for study at a university in the Western Zones of Germany; or for study at the Universities of Basel, Bern or Zurich, Switzerland. The field of Germansics includes history, art, language, literature and politics.
Candidates must be unmarried, referably under 35 years of age, ave a bachelor's degree from an accredited American college or university, have a good academic record and capacity for independent study and have a good knowledge of German.
Application blanks are available in the German department office, 304 braser, and all applications must be in the New York office of the Institute of International Education by Saturday, March 1.
Robert Malott, of the Harvard school of Business Administration, will be on the campus Thursday to interview any student who would like to be a candidate for entrance into the Harvard school next year. Appointments may be made.
SEN. JAMES DUFF of Pennsylvania stands beside the doorway of the "Eisenhower-for-President" headquarters which were formally opened recently at the Shoreham hotel in Washington, D.C. "We like Ike" is the motto over the door.
Harvard Representative in Interview Students
EISENHOWER HEADQUARTERS
see Malott by calling the collec-
tion of Malott, son of former Chan-
nellor Deane W. and Mrs. Malott,
was graduated from KU in 1949.
WE LIKE IKE
Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1952 University Daily Kansan Page 5
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will be the guest speaker at a banquet of the Native Sons and Daughters of Kansas which will be held Monday, Jan. 28, in Topeka. He will speak on "The Catfish—An American Aristocrat."
The Native Sons and Daughters will be holding their annual meeting and speech contest. The contest is open to one representative from each Kansas college and university and the subject will be "Kansas and National Defense."
Chancellor To Speak At Topeka Banquet
Age Runs In Family
Alexandra Bay, N. Y., 10-07—MIS.
Margaret Ann Shindler celebrated her 103rd birthday but wasn't too impressed by all the fuss over her age. Her grandmother, Mrs. Shindler recalled, lived to be 107 and was still able to walk three miles to church.
Travel Service
THE
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
TRAVEL AGENCY
Tel. 30 8th & Mass.
More Jobs Open In Education Than People To Fill Them
There are more job openings in the field of education than persons to fill them, according to H. E. Chandler, associate professor of education.
"We are expecting 14 persons to be graduated in February," he explained, "and 35 vacancies in schools have been made known to us already. By next week we expect to have approximately 75 vacancies listed, which is about normal for the mid-semester period."
Mr. Chandler explained there are two major factors for the comparatively large number of February vacancies. "Quite a large number of women teachers get married during the Christmas vacation," he said, "and the draft law is taking men who have not been in the service."
At present there is a greater demand for those in the fields of home economics, commerce and English in the high schools. In grade schools there is a bigger demand for music and physical education teachers, Mr. Chandler said.
Since the war, he stated, more opportunities have been opened for women in various fields other than teaching. As a result of this there
are 800 more men teachers than women in the high schools of Kansas.
"An estimated 725,000 persons should take educational training within the next 10 years to compensate for those leaving the teaching profession and the population increase," he explained.
{"text": "Twenty-five thousand classrooms per year will have to be built for five years if we expect to take care of the children who will be attending school."}
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
YOUR EYES
EYE
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
RETAILING needs college-trained young people like YOU as FUTURE EXECUTIVES
Retailing is a dynamic profession. It offers as many career possibilities as there are personal aptitudes: interesting positions in merchandising, advertising, fashion, management, personnel, or teaching. One-year graduate program leading to Master's degree combines practical instruction, market contacts, and supervised work experience—with pay—in top New York stores. Programs for Bachelor's degree candidates and non-degree students also.
REQUEST BULLETIN C-33
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF RETAILING
100 Washington Square New York 3, N.Y.
DON'T FORGET
The Student Union Book Store Will Pay Top Cash For Used Books
MONDAY - JANUARY 21
TUESDAY-JANUARY 22
WEDNESDAY - JANUARY 23
Bring all of your used books. We will buy current issues and an out-of-town buyer will buy all obsolete and discontinued titles
- - -
STUDENT Union Book Store.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1952
Jayhawkers Prepare For Battle With K-State
After narrowly escaping defeat at the hands of two definitely weaker teams, the Jayhawkers have returned to the confines of Robinson gym to recoup their forces for the Kansas State battle at Manhattan Jan. 26.
No regular drills were held Tuesday and none are scheduled until Friday. The layoff is forced by finals.
Coach Phog Allen intends to continue drilling the squad on all phases of the game. The Jayhawkers fell off in the free throw department against Nebraska as they dropped in only 13 of 22 but they proved to be the victory margin. KU went in the game as the nation's third proficient free throwers with a 72 per cent average.
The Kansans seem to have been spent since romping over Oklahoma here Jan. 5. Since then the team has stubbed its toe against Missouri and Nebraska on a tiring and near-disastrous road trip.
The journey proved to be a grind for the Jayhawkers who went into the tussles as AP's pick of the nation's best team. The games came after a week's absence from competition and both opponents were fired-up for the all-victorious Jayhawkers.
Coach Allen feels that the team was too intent upon preserving its perfect record and not focusing its efforts enough upon the individual victory.
"Instead of playing to win, the boys played to keep from being beaten. They are conscious of their winning streak and subconsciously are becoming defensive minded instead of rising to an offensive pitch." Coach Allen said. "I don't think it will affect the K-State game."
Bill Lienhard, who has been slightly bothered with an injured groin muscle, saw considerable action at NU and should be at full strength against the Wildcats.
KANSAS
STATE
JIM IVERSON. 5-foot 10-inch senior, is K-Stater's second highest scorer with 172 points. He canned 15 games and led the Wildeo's latest victory.
Cap'n Fearless Fraley Finds Crucial Housing Shortage
New York—U (P. U.) - Florida hotel rooms usually are at a premium but old Cap'n Fearless, the poor man's Moby Dick, didn't know until after a trip to the National Motor Boat show today, mates, just how crucial is the Southland's cabana crisis.
One gent has spent $71,450 just to put a roof over his head for the baseball training season.
This high-rent victim, Lou Perini owner of the Boston Braves. Bu'
Ravens Risk Perfect Slate
Rv UNITED PRESS
Tonight's CIC baseketball feature throwing together Washburn and St. Benedict's at Atchison will spoil one of the loop's two unblemished records.
Washburn is 3-0 in the conference and 6-5 for the year, while St. Benedict's Ravens have an excellent 7-1 record for the season and a victory in their only CIC game. Betting on either club tonight would be shaky.
The CIC has come up with several good teams this year, besides the Ichabods and the Ravens. Fort Hays State can show a 10-3 figure for its work to date, though it is only $ \frac{1}{2} $ in the league. And Southwestern of Winfield has won seven of its 10 starts and in CIC play is 2-1.
At Emporia State, the situation is different. The Hornets are green and the going has been rugged for them. Int eight starts they have los seven times, including twice in the conference. Pittsburg State's Gorillas have a 6-5 mark for the year and 0-2 in the CIC.
Hays and Emporia meet tomorrow night at*Emporia. Washburn will entertain non-conference Omaha University Friday at Topeka and Saturday's card will catch Emporia and Kansas Wesleyan meeting at Salina, and Pittsburg and St. Benedict's mixing at Atchison.
W L
Washburn 3 0
St. Benedict's 1 0
Southwestern 2 1
Hays 1 2
Emporia 0 2
Pittsburg 0 2
don't call him "Poor Lou." You should be so fortunate.
For the big job at the motorboat show is a 48-foot wheeler promote yacht and Perini took one look and bought it. Which is a nice way to be able to look, too, instead of wondering whether you can afford a new set of oars for that rowboat tied up at the creek.
Of course, they have the oars available at the boat show, and just about anything else you want from propellers to popcorn. But harting a course through all three oops of four is now known imitated and sensick pills ready at hand, old Cap'n Fearless was looking for the upausal.
One thing which struck me, and quite a few other staring landlubbers, was the provocative figurehead from a British ship built in 1820. Wearing the grandmother of all plunging necklines, it is known as "Sally." Soil, it would be called "My Friend Irma." From the collodetle, early 19th century prudishness was greatly exaggerated.
Avast from there, and I did, was a collection of scrimshaw which proves that a sailor's life isn't all it's cracked up to be. Scrimshaw is whale bone carving and the guys who did this intricate business couldn't have had a girl in every port to keep their minds busy.
NCAA Expected To Keep Present 2-Platoon Rule
White Sulphur Springs, W. Va—(U.P.)The NCAA football rules committee was expected to okay the two-platoon system today as a means of reducing injuries and producing faster games.
Man
Plymouth
Your
A rules sub-committee voted favorably on the free substitution rule Tuesday after Amos Alonzo Stagg, grand old man of football, made a strong plea for itsentention.
. . . has a used car priced for you.
Besides voting on the sub-committee's recommendations the rules committee will also take final action on editorial changes designed to clarify the rules.
Buddu
Stagg, a member of the rules committee since 1904, said he was convinced the present rule "gives us the best game we've ever had."
The subcommittee said that everyone concerned with the game is accustomed to the liberal substitution rule and that it "is not believed to be significant in the ills of the game."
GALLAGHER 634 Mass. Ph.1000
Cage Scores
St. Louis U, 75, New York U, 66
St. John's (NY) 63, Manhattan 53
Cornell 60, Yale 52
South Carolina 71, Clemson 65
Florida State 72, Tampa U, 66
Louisville 73, N. Carolina State 68
Carroll College 85, Ripon 57
Findley 72, Cedarville 52
Lawrence Tech 83, Olivet College 56
Notre Dame 56, Michigan State 48
S. Dakota State 54, Morningside 51
Oberlin 70, Hiram 51
KU Named Top Team By AP For Third Week
Despite unimpressive showings recently, Kansas has been voted the nation's No. 1 basketball team for the third straight week in the Associated Press poll of sportswriters and sportscasters.
Kansas, with a 13-0 record,
received 22 first place votes compared
to 23 for second place Illinois but
the Jayhawkers pulled through with
a heavier vote for second and third
place.
KU had a total of 790 points and Illinois, winner of 11 games, amassed 773 points. Last week Kansas led Illinois with a 38-point lead over the Illi.
Games played after Jan. 12 were not taken into consideration by the poll.
With the exception of Kentucky, who remained in the No. 3 spot, the top ten teams were shuffled considerable from last week.
Indiana dropped from fourth to 14th and Seton Hall slipped from ninth to 12th. The Hoosiers' drop was the result of losing to Ohio State and Iowa after winning eight straight games. Seton Hall's 12-game win string was clipped by Siena.
Iowa, winner of 11 consecutive games, advanced from tenth to fourth. St. Louis remained at the half way mark and St. Bonaventure moved from eleventh to Dumont, where she moved the greatest movement from No. 16 to seventh.
The University of Washington dropped from No. 6 to eight position and Kansas State moved down two notches from seventh to ninth. West Virginia made its first appearance among the top ten.
Points
Team Points
1. Kansas (22) 790
2. Illinois (23) 773
3. Kentucky (9) 714
4. Iowa (6) 517
5. St. Louis (3) 414
6. St. Bonaventure (9) 326
7. Duquesne (4) 307
8. Washington (6) 295
9. Kansas State (3) 281
10. West Virginia (13) 192
Team standings with points figured on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis (first place votes in parentheses);
Women's IM Games Postponed 2 Weeks
The women's intramural basketball games scheduled for Tuesday and tonight have been postponed until the second semester.
Miss Ruth Hoover, director of the women's intramural program, said that the games will be played Wed-
Fan. 30, the last day of enrollment.
Several teams have shown considerable scoring ability during the first semester, and unless players are lost due to graduation the championship race should be close in the final weeks.
PRECIOE
WATCH REPAIRS
Watch Repair
Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed
Wolfson's 743 Mass. Call 675
KU and YOU in EUROPE in 1952 with
SITA
Students International Travel Assn.
Compare these prices!
70 Day Bicycle-Motor-Rail Tour covering England, France, Italy,
Switzerland, Germany, Holland, Belgium $950*
65 Day Rail-Motor Tour covering same route as above___$1050*
80 Day Bicycle-Rail-Motor-Boat Tour covering England, France,
Switzerland, Germany, Austria, Denmark, Sweden, Norway,
Scotland $975*
70 Day Bicycle-Rail Tour covering England, Belgium, Germany,
Switzerland, France $550°
- All prices include passage.
For further information and free descriptive folder, see your SITA travel representative at . . .
DOWNS TRAVEL SERVICE
1015 Massachusetts MRS. LOIS ODAFFER
Phone 3661 MR. JOE BROWN
Page 7
Dr. Allen Says Look Article Is Ridiculous, Hurts Fine Boys
The article, "How Basketball Players are Bought," was written by Tim Cohane, sports editor of Look, and according to Coach Allen, presents only the writer's views.
Dr. Forrest C. "Phog" Allen has declared that the article in the Jan. 29 issue of Look magazine which touched upon the "recruiting" of B. H. Born and Clyde Lovellette is "ridiculous and a slam at two fine boys."
"I wasn't contacted before hand and he obviously talked to only a few biased coaches. He presented a false impression and only one side of the story."
The story tells of the procurement
B. H. BORN LOVELETTE
of star high school basketball players by several of the nation's top colleges and devotes four paragraphs to Born's choice of schools. The enrollment of All-American Clyde Lovellette and Charlie Hoag also was commented upon by the magazine writer.
Cohane writes, in part, "Another interesting case is that of B.H. Born, 6-foot-8 citizen of Medicine Lodge, Kan. Born plays for the University of Kansas, coached by Dr. Forrest C. 'Phog' Allen. In prescribing cures for basketball's sore, Dr. Phog is the very epitome of windy niec."
The story also claims that Born's choice of Kansas astonished Eddie Hickey, St. Louis university coach who had corresponded regularly with Born. Cohane relates that Born visited in St. Louis and was permitted to drive Hickey's "sleek black convertible" in downtown traffic.
"But B. H. is enrolled at Kansas, and it is perhaps only coincidental that his mother was at the time employed by the state."
In regard to Hickey's car, Born said, "I've never even been in his car. I don't know where Cohane got his information but it surely wasn't from Hickey."
When asked about the article, Born said he would rather not comment, but that the story presented a false picture and that he intends to write a letter to Cohane.
Coach Allen also intends to write the author and the editors of Look in defense of the players.
Player Breaks Record As St. Louis Tops NYU
New York—(U.P.)-Little Eddie Hickey praised big Bob Koch today but Coach Howard Cann of New York university said all the St. Louis Billikins rated cheers as far as he was concerned.
"Koch played the best game ever seen him play." Coach Hickey said as he reviewed the 6-6 center's 50-point performance as St. Louis whipped NYU, 75 to 66, Tuesday night at Madison Square Garden.
Koch's total was a new individual single-game high for the Garden so far this season and was just one point off the highest score ever posted by a St. Louis player under Hickey, Lou Lehan once hit 31 for Hickey's 1948 National Invitation tournament champions.
A crowd of 14,938—the largest Garden throng of the season—watched St. John's beat Manhattan, 63 to 32, in the second game.
Holy Cross, which entertains St. Louis tomorrow night at Boston Garden, warmed up for that test by beating Providence, 106 to 77, but Crusader Coach Lester Sheary knows the points won't come so easily against Hickey's balanced offense.
Michigan State in a single season by beating the Spartans, 56 to 48. John Stephens led the winners with 18 points and football star Bob Carey was high man for the losers with 14. Michigan State beat the Irish, 65-2, in their first meeting this season.
At East Lansing, Mich., Notre Dame preserved its 42-year record of never losing two basketball games to
In other non-conference competition College of Pacific downed Sacramento State.65 to 47.
In the Southern conference, South Carolina defeated Clemson, 71 to 65, and VMI topped Richmond, 78 to 67. Texas handed Rice its fourth Southwest conference defeat, 60 to 53; Montana State overwhelmed Colorado college, 92 to 54, in the Rocky Mountain conference; and Arizona (Temple) State defeated Hardin-Simmons, 68 to 62, in the Border conference, Cornell set up a three-way first place tie with Penn and Princeton in the Ivy league by defeating Yale, 63 to 52, and Dartmouth edged Harvard 60 to 59.
Durocher Believes Giants Must Get Good Start To Win
University Daily Kansan
Four conference tilts head tonight's light schedule. In the Southern conference.
Santa Monica, Calif.—(U.R.)If the madcap Giants win the 1952 National league pennant, they'll get around to it before the final inning of a three-game flag playoff series, Manager Leo Durocher insists.
"We're as good a club as we were last year when we won the penent but we won't go losing 11 straight games in the first two weeks of the season." Durocher said. "I blame myself for that bad start. I brought the club along too fast and it just went stale before opening day. But oh, brother, did we get going again later on."
The dapper Durocher, who never makes flat predictions-on how his team will finish, said he was sure of only one thing—"That we won't get off to such a miserable start this year as we did last."
He also made a surprising forecast for his big and powerful right hander, Jim Hearn, tabbing him as the probable ace of the staff, despite the fact that he won 17 and lost nine last year, while Sal Maglie and Larry Jansen won 23 games.
"Hear really found himself and he's bound to improve." Durocher
10
Except for center field, where Willie Mays will have to be replaced if he is accepted for Army duty, and at second base where he was, at big big big gap to be filled, Durocher won't make any chances in his lineup.
Durocher is convinced the Giants have the best hurling staff in baseball with George Spencer in relief and with Dave Koslo, Montia Kennedy, Roger Bowman, and Rookie Jack Schmitt plus Lanier, he is especially strong on southpaws.
Durochoer said that Davey Williams, who will take over at second for Stanky, "can_field as well as Eddie and is a good hitter, but even so he can't carry Eddie's shoes in value to the club. No kidding about it that little horer guy sparked us in our final drive."
added. "Of course I also think that Maglie and Jansen will have good years. And Max Lanier will help us plenty."
BOB WELLBORN. KU senior, executes a jack-kite dive as he prepares for the Jayhawkers' next match with Denver university here Jan. 30. He placed second in the season's opener with Nebraska here Jan. 12. Kansan photo by Sheppeard.
Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1952
Louis To Play In PGA Tourney
The ex-heavyweight champion still wasn't happy because Bill Spiller, a Negro professional who also entered the tournament, still is barred. "I'm battling prejudice and I'll keep on fighting it." Louis said.
San Diego. Calif., (U.P.)—Joe Louis won his battle to play in the San Diego Open Golf tournament, but he warned today, "I'm just beginning to fight."
Louis was first invited to play in the tournament beginning tomorrow, then later told he couldn't play because Professional Golfers association doesn't permit Negroes in its competitions. This infuriated Louis and he launched what he called "the biggest fight of my life."
He won. Horton Smith, president of the PGA, announced Tuesday night that Louis can play because he is an amateur. But, Smith added, Spiller can't play because the PGA rules limit its professionals to "Members of the Caucasian race."
Smith insisted it was all a matter of rules. As soon as he arrived here from Pebble Beach, Calif., he conferred with Anderson Borthwick, chairman of the local committee which invited Louis in the first place. After they met, he announced Louis could play.
Smith said a change in those rules will be brought up at the next PGA convention in November.
"When they won't let Spiller play as a 'member,' they're taking a technical stand. The PGA can't do anything about the rules right now but they could make him an approved player.
Louis said, "I've got nothing against Smith personally. I'm glad to play with him Thursday. But I'm opposed to what Smith represents—prejudice.
"We expect to lick this prejudice." Louis said, "just like we've done in other sports like basketball and football."
"If Spiller is not approved, its strictly, because he's colored."
'Dizzy' Dean Proud Of Name, But Brother Drops 'Daffy'
Dallas, Texas—(U.P.)—It isn't hard to understand now why the nickname "Daffy" didn't hang on to the younger member of that famed brother pitching act—Jerome Herman and Paul Dean.
Big brother Jerome Herman still carries the nickname "Dizzy" and is proud of it. He lives it every day, in and out of baseball season, and is capitalizing on it via radio and television.
But Paul never was particularly sold on the "Daffy" idea and he's gone about composing his post-pitching future in an entirely different manner.
He admits he's still a novice, says, "It's a great life, despite all the tribulations which can flare up in minor league baseball."
Paul is launching his second season as head of the prosperous Lubbock, Tex., franchise of the Class C West Texas-New Mexico league.
"Ive never had it so good," Paul said as his charming wife, Dorothy, nodded agreement.
Paul leases the Lubbock club from an Oklahoma City construction man, P. B. Odom.
"He wants me to keep on running
it as long as I like the idea," Dean said. "And, I like it. Why, man, who wouldn't when the owner shows up maybe once or twice a year to see one game and then goes back to his own business."
"It's much better than worrying about that old three-two pitch."
"I take a look at their books,' Dizzy said. "But I'm more interested in that kid of Paul's."
The Deans were looking over the club books "for internal revenue purposes" when the interviewer arrived. Brother Dizzy was there, too.
He meant Paul, Jr., a six-foot, 150-pound 15-year-old who already is behaving in the Dean pattern on the pitcher's mound.
"He's got all the makings of a pitcher," Dizzy said. "He's got big feet and he's lazy, just like me an' Paul."
Choose Your Arrow White Shirt From These Popular Collar Styles DART
PAR
(French or Barrel Cuffs)
GORDON SUSSEX
(French or Barrel Cuffs)
DALE
(French or Barrel Cuffs)
BARD
(French Cuffs)
DREW GORDON DOVER
ARDEN
905
Mass. St.
CARLS GOOD CLOTHES
Phone
905
"1
"I lose my head every time
I see a man in an
Arrow
Shirt!"
ARROW PAR
widespread
soft collar
ARROW
GORDON DOVER
popular oxford
button-down
MADRID
TIE
ARROW
SHIRTS • TIES • SPORTS SHIRTS • UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEF3
round 9% - 10%
Page 8 University. Daily. Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1952
251 Seniors Are Candidates For Graduation In February
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1)
Robert Allen Sydney, Ralph Harlan
Watkins.
School of Engineering and Architecture
Bachelor of Science in Aeronautical Engineering: Robert Edward Miller. Clyde Vernon Sultzer.
Bachelor of Science in Architecture: Thomas Charles Crawford George Jim Pfefferkorn, Donald Dean Snakew.
Bachelor of Science in Architectural Engineering: Frank Leslie Byam III, Milton Dale Dunlap, Robert Lanpher Nifong, Charles David Seeber, Baegar Shirazi.
Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering: James Ethil Bryant Thomas Kent Foster, Clarence Alfred Lucas jr., Richard Andre Menuet, Corwin Scott Sterrett.
Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering; John Pichler Bailley, Paul W. Bird, Leonard Kinnamon Clement, William Sherman Gartung, Harold Joseph Keeling, Ross C. Keeling jr., Harland Theodore Peterson, Kenneth Walter Philo, William G. Richey, Wilber Michael Seaver, Frank C. Short jr., Roy K. C. Sue.
Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering; Eugene Carl Anderson, Harold Brailey, Norman Lee Bell, James Edward Elliott, Raldalph Erhart, Frank Gerald Exter, James L. Hogan, Vernon Earl Johnson, John Henry Kaaz, James Russell McDougal, Louis Stark Robb, Keith C. Smith, Robert Scott, Zimmerman.
Bachelor of Science in Engineering Physics: Lawrence Nathan Cosner, Arvesta William Muzzle jr. Bachelor of Science in Geological Engineering: James Erwin Holdeman, Charles Edward Sloan.
Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering; Richard Earl Brecko, Andrew Vivian Davis, George A. Hanson jr., Roy J. Haynes, Lawrence Ray Hill, Leonard Paul Knecht, Ludwig Johannes Lenz, Dale J. McBride, Clarence William Newhouse, Leslie Charles arrismj rr, Ainsleigh Chaine Settles, William Shih Shen, Elli Taylor, Anthony N. Tiaclos, Elmo Ceasus Tyree, John David Walters, Samuel Harrison, Zolliker.
Bachelor of Science in Metallurgical Engineering: Robert McGrath Cracy.
Bachelor of Science in Mining Engineering: Arthur Allyn McCinnis.
Bachelor of Science in Petroleum engineering: Kenneth Brandon arey, James Loren Relph, Barney I. Vachal.
School of Fine Arts
Bachelor of Fine Arts: D'Arlene
Kirk, Paul Baldwin Penny, Shirley
anne Stewart, Elizabeth Ann
swigart, Ronald S. White.
Bachelor of Science in Occupational Therapy: Billie J. Burttscher, Virginia Ann Caldwell, Marjorie Sourland Clark, Dorothy Helen Wilson, Lolita Catherine Garcia, Margaret Jean Luatrick, Margeryine Myers, Betty Jane Sims, Esther芳雯 Thrasher, Claire Elizabeth White, Elizabeth Ann Regier, Mary Rose Waken.
School of Pharmacy
School of Pharmacy
Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy:
Donald Dwight Hunter, George Elert
Rumple.
School of Education
School of Education
Bachelor of Music Education:
Dana Jane Richmond Saliba.
Bachelor of Art Education: Carol
Anne Donovan, Gary Dale Goodwin,
Donna Hedges Miller.
Bachelor of Science in Education:
Russell W. Annis, Margaret Marie
Bevan, Harry L. Cloverdyke, Mary
O Davis, Frank Dixon Eichhorn,
Mary Louise Fischer, Gordon Irvin
Gaston, Catherine L. Hemphill,
Robert Bertram Huggins.
Betty Jane McChristy Koonse, Mary Alice LaMaster, Patricia Nason Meeks, Pearl Elizabeth Mitchell, Barbara Joanne Nash, Earl Wesley Nettucch, Betty McLaughlin Whale, Margaretta C. White, Sheila Wilder, Michiko Yamasaki, Robert R. Dunwell
Bachelor of Science in Business:
Shelley Lee Bates, Gaylord Nelson
Benton, Bill Karl Bell, Ralph C.
Blades jr., Lawrence Allen Blakeley, Hubert Capps jr., Beverly J. Chaffin, Clarence Henry Chambers jr., Robert Thomas Coleman, Robert G. Davidson, John W. Davis jr., Dudley C. Elliott.
Richard Carson Fleener, John
Cloyd Fox, Herbert William Hane-
baum jr., Glenn A. Harberts,
George M. Harper, Frank Robert
Hass, Elden Arnoldnett Herd, Merill
Eleryl Holmberg, James Lowell
Houghton, William Wallace Howard
jr., Harvey Allen Jetmore jr.,
Thomas A. Keiser.
Jere Dean Kimmel, Charles Krone, Virginia Wood La Rue, Milton Ashely Lewis, James Loren Mc-Cormick, Charles W. Moore, David A. Moore, Guifford Wood Moore, Keith Edmund Moore, Andrew Gates Murray, Robert Murphy Pickrell, Joseph Rolland Powell, Paul Anthony Ramsey jr., William Donald Rhue, John George Schoap jr.
School of Law
Bachelor of Law: Richard L. Ashley, James Robert Barr, Robert Frederick Bennett, William John Conroy, James L. Grimes jr., Rajph George Henley, Norman Gail Maben, John Rarig Oliver, Aubrey Alphonso Perkins, Arthur Eugene Rudd, Russ Alfred Stanley, James Frederick Swoyer jr., Roderick Edward Weltmer.
Official Bulletin
Students expecting to graduate in February be sure your diploma fee of $12 is paid at the business office immediately.
Christian Science organization, p.m. Thursday, Danforth chapel.
Holy Communion for Episcopal students, 7 a.m. Thursday, Danforth Chapel. Breakfast at the Union.
CQ Code practice 7:30 tonight;
E. E. lab.
Lutheran Student association, 6 p.m. Sunday, Trinity Lutheran church. Installation of officers and cost supper.
Student Union Activities is sponsoring a ride bureau for students desiring transportation during the interim between semesters. Those wanting rides and those desiring passengers should sign at hostess desk in Union between 8 a.m. and 10:30 p.m.
The Jayhawker basketball team scored 1331 points in winning 16 games and losing eight last year.
All officers commissioned in the U.S. Army reserve who have been or are being deferred from induction under the terms of an ROTC deferment agreement will be ordered into active military service during the period from June to September.
Reserve Officers To Active Duty
The Department of Army announced this policy in a statement released today. The Army said it was making its plans known early so that such students will have the maximum amount of advance notice and can plan accordingly.
The Army also plans to order into military service those veterans who served less than two years on active duty with the armed forces during World War II and 1945. They will be ordered to duty upon being commissioned.
It is not currently planned to order into active service those veterans commissioned upon successful completion of the ROVC course. The VA will coordinate between the above dates. Such officers may volunteer for active service.
It is the intent of the Department of Army to give the officers an opportunity to select the month between June and September in which they desire to enter active service. Such requests will be honored provided at least one third of the officers in each branch will be on active duty by July 31, two thirds on active duty by Aug. 31, and the remainder in active military service by Sept. 30.
The Army stated that those officers commissioned after successful completion of the advanced ROTC course, who will not meet the academic requirements for a baccalaureate of professional degree, will be delayed from being ordered into active service until they have completed the degree requirements or until they withdraw from college.
The newly commissioned officers will be ordered directly to the appropriate branch service school for a three-month course. It may be necessary in some instances to assist with training in continental limits of the United States until spaces are available in the service schools.
To Sell Annual 2nd Semester,
Jayhawkers will not be sold and distributed until after the beginning of second semester. Students are requested not to try to obtain their Jayhawkers in the new Journalism building until next semester.
Fall graduates should contact Hixon for picture appointments if they want their pictures in the 1952 Javhawker.
LOOK
Those Shirts were sent to.. ACME
ACME Bachelor Laundry and Dry Cleaning
Phone 646
1111 Mass.
A
SUPERIOR JUDGE Frank Swain, Hollywood, ordered actress Diane Cassidy to invest 10 per cent of her salary in savings bonds after she argued she was having difficulty living on $200 per week and paying back debts from her income
Fishing Ranks High In Sports
More fishing licenses are sold than tickets to any other sport, Dr. Frank Cross, instructor in zoology, told members of Phi Sigma, national honorary biological society, Tuesday.
Dr. Cross said that we should know more about fish and their places of habitation.
"We have only a superficial knowledge of the ecology of lakes and streams," Dr. Cross said. Attempts to determine if lakes and streams are conductive to fish production have only been in the form of sampling.
FOR YOUR
By taking a sample of lake vegetation, attempts are made to determine if the lake would be good for growing aquatic plants. Using the method, is very unsatisfactory.
"This is like taking one part of the human body and from it determining the functions of the rest of the organs of the body," Dr. Cross said.
COLD WEATHER DRIVING NEEDS
- Enough Anti-Freeze
- Chains For Ice And Snow
STOP AT
- Dependable Brakes
- A Good Heater
- A Top Condition Motor
SANDERS MOTORS
622-24 Mass.
Phone 616
ELECRA
is still the big
in your budge
ELECTRICITY... is still the biggest bargain in your budget today!
Everyone is well aware of the inflated cost of living today! We are all conscious of the shrinking dollar . . . and of how much less it buys today than in 1940. But, there is one bright spot in these days of rising costs . . . and that is the low price of electric service.
The Kansas Power and Light Company pays more and more for materials manpower and everything else needed to provide your electric service. But despite this, and even with the new electric rate schedules which became effective January 1, 1952, a kilowatt-hour of electricity costs the average customer seven per cent less today than it did in 1940.
Yes, while the cost of living continues to soar up and up, your electric service continues to be the biggest bargain in your budget today.
THE KANSAS
POWER and LIGHT COMPANY
---
Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
SALVATORE BOTTI
PRINCESS PEARL ITTIGIAIH, daughter of the chief of the Alaskan village of Minto, presents Secretary of the Interior Oscar Chapman with a sealskin petition signed by 2,560 Alaskans protesting an edict which would cancel non-scheduled airline service to Alaska. The Indian village of Minto depends on non-scheduled flights to bring in fresh fruits, vegetables and milk for the inhabitants of the village.
Edison's Tools, Cigar Butt In Ford Village Treasures.
Dearborn, Mich.—(U.P.)—If Thomas Alva Edison were alive today, he could sit at his original work bench, pick up a cigar he lighted in 1929, and work with the same tools he used in 50 unsurpassed years of invention.
A material record of America's greatest inventor, who died Oct. 18, 1931, is painstakingly preserved here at Henry Ford's 250-acre Greenfield Village. Most of the objects lie where Edison left them.
Ford, who as a young man drew much encouragement from Edison in his work on the "horseless carriage", acquired the inventor's entire Menlo Park, N. J., laboratory and transported it here. $ ^{*} $
Brick by brick, chair by chair and chemical bottle by chemical bottle, all four buildings and their contents are facetiously as they were in Menlo Park.
The boarding house of Mrs. Sarah Jordan, where Edison's assistants lived, stands across the road from the original laboratory building. It was the first home ever lighted by electricity.
Edison's first visit to Dearborn was in 1929, the 50th anniversary of the invention of the incandescent electric light.
Charles Matzel, curator of the Edison buildings, recalls the event.
"After he had shown Edison around, Mr. Ford asked him if it was too much of a detail," related "Edison said the whole lay-out was 99 1/10ths per cent correct."
"Mr. Ford was worried. He asked
CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY
Doctor of Optometry degree in three years for students entering with sixty or more semester credits in specified Liberal Arts courses.
(Nationally Accredited)
An outstanding college serving a splendid profession.
REGISTRATION February 25. Students are granted professional recognition by the U.S. military, by defense and Selective Service.
Excellent clinical facilities. Athletic and recreational activities. Dormitories on the campus.
CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY
1845-H Larrabe Street
Chicago 14, Illinois
right away what tenth of a per cent was incorrect.
"Edison replied, 'our place was never this clean.'"
It was on this first visit that Edison left a cigar butt white walking through one of the buildings. After Edison left, Ford ordered that the cigar never be moved. It never has been.
Tucked away in a corner of his laboratory is Edison's first patented invention, an electrographic vote meter, and a device that mediates acceptance was concerned.
The light, made with a carbonized sewing thread for a filament, still burns.
Also at the 1929 celebration, Edison, who had 1,033 inventions patented from 1888 to 1928, made by hand a model of the first incandescent light.
Edison took the machine to Washington in 1868 but congressmen were unimpressed.
"Nice machine you have there," they told him, "but how can we fill-buster if all you have to do is press a button?"
Japan Undecided On Chinese Policy
Tokyo—(U.P.) The Japanese Government is trying to ride the fence and postpone as long as possible the difficult decision of choosing between Communist or Nationalist China.
If neither of the two Chinese governments is able to triumph over the other, the Japanese sooner or later will have to recognize one as the legal government. China is one of the closest and most important neighbors. It is one of the major powers aligned against Japan in World War II.
Although Japan and many of its former enemies have signed a peace treaty, China and Japan have not.
China was not represented at the San Francisco Peace Treaty conference. For the time being Japan escaped the task of having to make a decision that may be of great importance in years to come.
At present, political observers believe Japan is inled to recognize Nationalist China. But it is admitted that time and events may sway Japan's favor to the Communists.
The question is a hot one in Japan today, and it is being debated by persons in all walks of life.
All other things being equal, the Japanese would be inclined to pick the Nationalists over the Communists because the Japanese are strongly anti-Communist.
At the same time, however, the Japanese are practical people and many are influenced by the argument that Japan needs to trade with the Communist-controlled mainland of China.
Some of the pro-Nationalist forces in Japan argue that Japan does not need to trade with Communist China. They say Japan can find plenty of markets and raw materials elsewhere.
Other pro-Nationalists say that recognition of Communist China will be no guarantee that a large and profitable trade will arise between the two nations.
Some of those favoring recognition of the Peiping government argue that Japan must do business with its large neighbor to survive in the
Want to work at the Student Union Book Store during enrollment?
STUDENTS
Stop in this week.
STUDENT Union Book Store
VALENTINE CANDY
for
Her . . .
V
CA
1 to
Li
1 to 5 Pound Boxes Limited Supply
Take Advantage of Our Lay Away Plan and Make Your Selection Early
Dixie's CARMEL CORN SHOP
842 Mass.
Phone 1330
present world economic competition.
Since they do not have to make a decision immediately, Japanese government officials are saying very little on the subject. There can be little doubt, however, as to how Premier Shigeru Yoshida feels. He is head of the present conservative government and has no use for Communism.
Addressing the delegates at the San Francisco peace conference, Yoshida said:
"As regards to China, I confine my remarks to two points:
"The first point is that like others
we regret that disunity prevents China from being here.
"The second is that the role of China's trade in Japanese economy, important as it is, has often been exaggerated, as proven by our experience of the past six years."
For the present, Japan has cast its lot with the western democracies, particularly the United States. The attitude of Washington and others in the anti-Communist bloc undoubtedly will influence thinking on the recognition problem.
Washington is known as the Evergreen State."
MOVING?...
-'cross the state?
-'cross the country?
-'cross the street?
-'cross the town?
CALL ON US FOR OUR FREE ESTIMATES ON YOUR MOVING-LOWEST RATES OBTAINABLE.
PHONE 46
ETHAN A. SMITH Moving and Transfer Co.
11 East 9th St.
Is This The Way Your Dad Thinks You Spend Most of Your Money?
You Can Prove Differently If You Have Cancelled Checks For Your Expenses From Your Checking Account In
7777
The Lawrence National Bank 7th and Mass.
abM 1111 moustak.bro
10.5 33.57 10.04 12.98 14.62 15.94 16.62 17.14 17.62 18.14 18.62 19.14 19.62 20.14 20.62 21.14 21.62 22.14 22.62 23.14 23.62 24.14 24.62 25.14 25.62 26.14 26.62 27.14 27.62 28.14 28.62 29.14 29.62 30.14 30.62 31.14 31.62 32.14 32.62 33.14 33.62 34.14 34.62 35.14 35.62 36.14 36.62 37.14 37.62 38.14 38.62 39.14 39.62 40.14 40.62 41.14 41.62 42.14 42.62 43.14 43.62 44.14 44.62 45.14 45.62 46.14 46.62 47.14 47.62 48.14 48.62 49.14 49.62 50.14 50.62 51.14 51.62 52.14 52.62 53.14 53.62 54.14 54.62 55.14 55.62 56.14 56.62 57.14 57.62 58.14 58.62 59.14 59.62 60.14 60.62 61.14 61.62 62.14 62.62 63.14 63.62 64.14 64.62 65.14 65.62 66.14 66.62 67.14 67.62 68.14 68.62 69.14 69.62 70.14 70.62 71.14 71.62 72.14 72.62 73.14 73.62 74.14 74.62 75.14 75.62 76.14 76.62 77.14 77.62 78.14 78.62 79.14 79.62 80.14 80.62 81.14 81.62 82.14 82.62 83.14 83.62 84.14 84.62 85.14 85.62 86.14 86.62 87.14 87.62 88.14 88.62 89.14 89.62 90.14 90.62 91.14 91.62 92.14 92.62 93.14 93.62 94.14 94.62 95.14 95.62 96.14 96.62 97.14 97.62 98.14 98.62 99.14 99.62 100.14 100.62 101.14 101.62 102.14 102.62 103.14 103.62 104.14 104.62 105.14 105.62 106.14 106.62 107.14 107.62 108.14 108.62 109.14 109.62 110.14 110.62 111.14 111.62 112.14 112.62 113.14 113.62 114.14 114.62 115.14 115.62 116.14 116.62 117.14 117.62 118.14 118.62 119.14 119.62 120.14 120.62 121.14 121.62 122.14 122.62 123.14 123.62 124.14 124.62 125.14 125.62 126.14 126.62 127.14 127.62 128.14 128.62 129.14 129.62 130.14 130.62 131.14 131.62 132.14 132.62 133.14 133.62 134.14 134.62 135.14 135.62 136.14 136.62 137.14 137.62 138.14 138.62 139.14 139.62 140.14 140.62 141.14 141.62 142.14 142.62 143.14 143.62 144.14 144.62 145.14 145.62 146.14 146.62 147.14 147.62 148.14 148.62 149.14 149.62 150.14 150.62 151.14 151.62 152.14 152.62 153.14 153.62 154.14 154.62 155.14 155.62 156.14 156.62 157.14 157.62 158.14 158.62 159.14 159.62 160.14 160.62 161.14 161.62 162.14 162.62 163.14 163.62 164.14 164.62 165.14 165.62 166.14 166.62 167.14 167.62 168.14 168.62 169.14 169.62 170.14 170.62 171.14 171.62 172.14 172.62 173.14 173.62 174.14 174.62 175.14 175.62 176.14 176.62 177.14 177.62 178.14 178.62 179.14 179.62 180.14 180.62 181.14 181.62 182.14 182.62 183.14 183.62 184.14 184.62 185.14 185.62 186.14 186.62 187.14 187.62 188.14 188.62 189.14 189.62 190.14 190.62 191.14 191.62 192.14 192.62 193.14 193.62 194.14 194.62 195.14 195.62 196.14 196.62 197.14 197.62 198.14 198.62 199.14 199.62 200.14 200.62 201.14 201.62 202.14 202.62 203.14 203.62 204.14 204.62 205.14 205.62 206.14 206.62 207.14 207.62 208.14 208.62 209.14 209.62 210.14 210.62 211.14 211.62 212.14 212.62 213.14 213.62 214.14 214.62 215.14 215.62 216.14 216.62 217.14 217.62 218.14 218.62 219.14 219.62 220.14 220.62 221.14 221.62 222.14 222.62 223.14 223.62 224.14 224.62 225.14 225.62 226.14 226.62 227.14 227.62 228.14 228.62 229.14 229.62 230.14 230.62 231.14 231.62 232.14 232.62 233.14 233.62 234.14 234.62 235.14 235.62 236.14 236.62 237.14 237.62 238.14 238.62 239.14 239.62 240.14 240.62 241.14 241.62 242.14 242.62 243.14 243.62 244.14 244.62 245.14 245.62 246.14 246.62 247.14 247.62 248.14 248.62 249.14 249.62 250.14 250.62 251.14 251.62 252.14 252.62 253.14 253.62 254.14 254.62 255.14 255.62 256.14 256.62 257.14 257.62 258.14 258.62 259.14 259.62 260.14 260.62 261.14 261.62 262.14 262.62 263.14 263.62 264.14 264.62 265.14 265.62 266.14 266.62 267.14 267.62 268.14 268.62 269.14 269.62 270.14 270.62 271.14 271.62 272.14 272.62 273.14 273.62 274.14 274.62 275.14 275.62 276.14 276.62 277.14 277.62 278.14 278.62 279.14 279.62 280.14 280.62 281.14 281.62 282.14 282.62 283.14 283.62 284.14 284.62 285.14 285.62 286.14 286.62 287.14 287.62 288.14 288.62 289.14 289.62 290.14 290.62 291.14 291.62 292.14 292.62 293.14 293.62 294.14 294.62 295.14 295.62 296.14 296.62 297.14 297.62 298.14 298.62 299.14 299.62 300.14 300.62 301.14 301.62 302.14 302.62 303.14 303.62 304.14 304.62 305.14 305.62 306.14 306.62 307.14 307.62 308.14 308.62 309.14 309.62 310.14 310.62 311.14 311.62 312.14 312.62 313.14 313.62 314.14 314.62 315.14 315.62 316.14 316.62 317.14 317.62 318.14 318.62 319.14 319.62 320.14 320.62 321.14 321.62 322.14 322.62 323.14 323.62 324.14 324.62 325.14 325.62 326.14 326.62 327.14 327.62 328.14 328.62 329.14 329.62 330.14 330.62 331.14 331.62 332.14 332.62 333.14 333.62 334.14 334.62 335.14 335.62 336.14 336.62 337.14 337.62 338.14 338.62 339.14 339.62 340.14 340.62 341.14 341.62 342.14 342.62 343.14 343.62 344.14 344.62 345.14 345.62 346.14 346.62 347.14 347.62 348.14 348.62 349.14 349.62 350.14 350.62 351.14 351.62 352.14 352.62 353.14 353.62 354.14 354.62 355.14 355.62 356.14 356.62 357.14 357.62 358.14 358.62 359.14 359.62 360.14 360.62 361.14 361.62 362.14 362.62 363.14 363.62 364.14 364.62 365.14 365.62 366.14 366.62 367.14 367.62 368.14 368.62 369.14 369.62 370.14 370.62 371.14 371.62 372.14 372.62 373.14 373.62 374.14 374.62 375.14 375.62 376.14 376.62 377.14 377.62 378.14 378.62 379.14 379.62 380.14 380.62 381.14 381.62 382.14 382.62 383.14 383.62 384.14 384.62 385.14 385.62 386.14 386.62 387.14 387.62 388.14 388.62 389.14 389.62 390.14 390.62 391.14 391.62 392.14 392.62 393.14 393.62 394.14 394.62 395.14 395.62 396.14 396.62 397.14 397.62 398.14 398.62 399.14 399.62 400.14 400.62 401.14 401.62 402.14 402.62 403.14 403.62 404.14 404.62 405.14 405.62 406.14 406.62 407.14 407.62 408.14 408.62 409.14 409.62 410.14 410.62 411.14 411.62 412.14 412.62 413.14 413.62 414.14 414.62 415.14 415.62 416.14 416.62 417.14 417.62 418.14 418.62 419.14 419.62 420.14 420.62 421.14 421.62 422.14 422.62 423.14 423.62 424.14 424.62 425.14 425.62 426.14 426.62 427.14 427.62 428.14 428.62 429.14 429.62 430.14 430.62 431.14 431.62 432.14 432.62 433.14 433.62 434.14 434.62 435.14 435.62 436.14 436.62 437.14 437.62 438.14 438.62 439.14 439.62 440.14 440.62 441.14 441.62 442.14 442.62 443.14 443.62 444.14 444.62 445.14 445.62 446.14 446.62 447.14 447.62 448.14 448.62 449.14 449.62 450.14 450.62 451.14 451.62 452.14 452.62 453.14 453.62 454.14 454.62 455.14 455.62 456.14 456.62 457.14 457.62 458.14 458.62 459.14 459.62 460.14 460.62 461.14 461.62 462.14 462.62 463.14 463.62 464.14 464.62 465.14 465.62 466.14 466.62 467.14 467.62 468.14 468.62 469.14 469.62 470.14 470.62 471.14 471.62 472.14 472.62 473.14 473.62 474.14 474.62 475.14 475.62 476.14 476.62 477.14 477.62 478.14 478.62 479.14 479.62 480.14 480.62 481.14 481.62 482.14 482.62 483.14 483.62 484.14 484.62 485.14 485.62 486.14 486.62 487.14 487.62 488.14 488.62 489.14 489.62 490.14 490.62 491.14 491.62 492.14 492.62 493.14 493.62 494.14 494.62 495.14 495.62 496.14 496.62 497.14 497.62 498.14 498.62 499.14 499.62 500.14 500.62 501.14 501.62 502.14 502.62 503.14 503.62 504.14 504.62 505.14 505.62 506.14 506.62 507.14 507.62 508.14 508.62 509.14 509.62 510.14 510.62 511.14 511.62 512.14 512.62 513.14 513.62 514.14 514.62 515.14 515.62 516.14 516.62 517.14 517.62 518.14 518.62 519.14 519.62 520.14 520.62 521.14 521.62 522.14 522.62 523.14 523.62 524.14 524.62 525.14 525.62 526.14 526.62 527.14 527.62 528.14 528.62 529.14 529.62 530.14 530.62 531.14 531.62 532.14 532.62 533.14 533.62 534.14 534.62 535.14 535.62 536.14 536.62 537.14 537.62 538.14 538.62 539.14 539.62 540.14 540.62 541.14 541.62 542.14 542.62 543.14 543.62 544.14 544.62 545.14 545.62 546.14 546.62 547.14 547.62 548.14 548.62 549.14 549.62 550.14 550.62 551.14 551.62 552.14 552.62 553.14 553.62 554.14 554.62 555.14 555.62 556.14 556.62 557.14 557.62 558.14 558.62 559.14 559.62 560.14 560.62 561.14 561.62 562.14 562.62 563.14 563.62 564.14 564.62 565.14 565.62 566.14 566.62 567.14 567.62 568.14 568.62 569.14 569.62 570.14 570.62 571.14 571.62 572.14 572.62 573.14 573.62 574.14 574.62 575.14 575.62 576.14 576.62 577.14 577.62 578.14 578.62 579.14 579.62 580.14 580.62 581.14 581.62 582.14 582.62 583.14 583.62 584.14 584.62 585.14 585.62 586.14 586.62 587.14 587.62 588.14 588.62 589.14 589.62 590.14 590.62 591.14 591.62 592.14 592.62 593.14 593.62 594.14 594.62 595.14 595.62 596.14 596.62 597.14 597.62 598.14 598.62 599.14 599.62 600.14 600.62 601.14 601.62 602.14 602.62 603.14 603.62 604.14 604.62 605.14 605.62 606.14 606.62 607.14 607.62 608.14 608.62 609.14 609.62 610.14 610.62 611.14 611.62 612.14 612.62 613.14 613.62 614.14 614.62 615.14 615.62 616.14 616.62 617.14 617.62 618.14 618.62 619.14 619.62 620.14 620.62 621.14 621.62 622.14 622.62 623.14 623.62 624.14 624.62 625.14 625.62 626.14 626.62 627.14 627.62 628.14 628.62 629.14 629.62 630.14 630.62 631.14 631.62 632.14 632.62 633.14 633.62 634.14 634.62 635.14 635.62 636.14 636.62 637.14 637.62 638.14 638.62 639.14 639.62 640.14 640.62 641.14 641.62 642.14 642.62 643.14 643.62 644.14 644.62 645.14 645.62 646.14 646.62 647.14 647.62 648.14 648.62 649.14 649.62 650.14 650.62 651.14 651.62 652.14 652.62 653.14 653.62 654.14 654.62 655.14 655.62 656.14 656.62 657.14 657.62 658.14 658.62 659.14 659.62 660.14 660.62 661.14 661.62 662.14 662.62 663.14 663.62 664.14 664.62 665.14 665.62 666.14 666.62 667.14 667.62 668.14 668.62 669.14 669.62 670.14 670.62 671.14 671.62 672.14 672.62 673.14 673.62 674.14 674.62 675.14 675.62 676.14 676.62 677.14 677.62 678.14 678.62 679.14 679.62 680.14 680.62 681.14 681.62 682.14 682.62 683.14 683.62 684.14 684.62 685.14 685.62 686.14 686.62 687.14 687.62 688.14 688.62 689.14 689.62 690.14 690.62 691.14 691.62 692.14 692.62 693.14 693.62 694.14 694.62 695.14 695.62 696.14 696.62 697.14 697.62 698.14 698.62 699.14 699.62 700.14 700.62 701.14 701.62 702.14 702.62 703.14 703.62 704.14 704.62 705.14 705.62 706.14 706.62 707.14 707.62 708.14 708.62 709.14 709.62 710.14 710.62 711.14 711.62 712.14 712.62 713.14 713.62 714.14 714.62 715.14 715.62 716.14 716.62 717.14 717.62 718.14 718.62 719.14 719.62 720.14 720.62 721.14 721.62 722.14 722.62 723.14 723.62 724.14 724.62 725.14 725.62 726.14 726.62 727.14 727.62 728.14 728.62 729.14 729.62 730.14 730.62 731.14 731.62 732.14 732.62 733.14 733.62 734.14 734.62 735.14 735.62 736.14 736.62 737.14 737.62 738.14 738.62 739.14 739.62 740.14 740.62 741.14 741.62 742.14 742.62 743.14 743.62 744.14 744.62 745.14 745.62 746.14 746.62 747.14 747.62 748.14 748.62 749.14 749.62 750.14 750.62 751.14 751.62 752.14 752.62 753.14 753.62 754.14 754.62 755.14 755.62 756.14 756.62 757.14 757.62 758.14 758.62 759.14 759.62 760.14 760.62 761.14 761.62 762.14 762.62 763.14 763.62 764.14 764.62 765.14 765.62 766.14 766.62 767.14 767.62 768.14 768.62 769.14 769.62 769.62 770.14 770.62 771.14 771.62 772.14 772.62 773.14 773.62 774.14 774.62 775.14 775.62 776.14 776.62 777.14 777.62 778.14 778.62 779.14 779.62 780.14 780.62 781.14 781.62 782.14 782.62 783.14 783.62 784.14 784.62 785.14 785.62 786.14 786.62 787.14 787.62 788.14 788.62 789.14 789.62 790.14 790.62 791.14 791.62 792.14 792.62 793.14 793.62 794.14 794.62 795.14 795.62 796.14 796.62 797.14 797.62 798.14 798.62 799.14 799.62 799.74 799.74
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1952
Husbands To Get Revenge Day Against Wife's Cooking Habits
By HARMAN W. NICHOLS United Press Staff Correspondent
I can hardly wait until Jan. the Kitchen Day."
It's on a Sunday and I'm going to set the alarm early, tie on a bib and cook the family the doggondest breakfast we ever had. I can open a can, so we'll have orange juice. I can crack an egg, and I stir up an omelet. If the moon is right I can fry bacon. Plus toast and jam.
"National Husband in the Kitchen Day" is one of many days and weeks listed as "must" and official by the United States Department of Commerce.
As of now, we are supposed to be observing "Odorless Decoration Week," whatever that is. I sniffed around and decided to skip that one.
But I would not miss "Idaho Potato and Onion Week," which is from Jan. 16-26. While I am observing that one, I'll stuff the piggly bank each day on "National Thrift Week," which runs at the same time.
There won't be much rest then until we run into "National Take Tea and See Week." Tea is repuged to be an aid to good sight. The Tea Bureau, Inc., hopes everybody in the country dunks a bag of tea into a cup of hot water or brews a pot on the range. But Stamford, Conn., is
Religious Notes
Patton To Return To Universit
Maj. John H. Patton, chaplain in a jet-fighter group stationed at Dover, Del. will be released soon to resume his duties as director of Westminster foundation at the University.
He was recalled to active duty Sept. 23,1950 and will be released Mar. 1.
The regular 5:30 p.m. Sunday fellowship for Presbyterian students will be held in Westminster house, 1221 Oread.
KU Disciples Not To Meet
THE KU Disciples fellowship of the Christian church will not meet Sunday evening because of finals week
Mrs. Harold G. Barr, wife of Dean Barr of the School of Religion, will teach the regular Sunday school class at 9:30 a.m. in the church at 1000 Kentucky street.
Lutherans To Install Officers
William Spomer, College sophomore, will be installed as president of the Lutheran Student association following the organization's cost supper at 6 p.m. Sunday in the Trinity Lutheran church.
Other officers to be installed are Eugene Brubaker, vice-president; Marjorie England, secretary; and Eddie Harsh, treasurer.
Humphreys Elected President
Humpfrey's Elected President Richard Humphreys, College senior, recently elected eminent archon of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.
Other officers are Paul K. Smith, deputy archon; Donald Humphreys, treasurer; Joe Wolfe, Jerry Robertson, co-rush captains; John Van Keppel, pledge trainer; John Beeder, social chairman; Wesley Gish, correspondent; John Salisbury, chronicleer; Keith Jensen, warden, and Paul K. Worley, herald.
Meils-Simpson Engagement Told
Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Meills, Clearwater, announce the engagement of their daughter, Lois Ann, to Loren E. Simpson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd E. Simpson, Coffeville.
Thomas White, business senior, was elected president of Delta Tau Delta fraternity. Other officers are Frank Rodkey, vice-president; George Breckenridge, recording secretary; Dick Palmer, corresponding secretary and Jerry Kerr, sergeant-at-arms.
Miss Meils is a College senior and president of Carruth hall. Mr. Simpson was graduated from the University in 1951. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, honorary fraternity. He is now stationed at Fort Holsbird, Md.
Delts Elect Thomas White
27. which is "National Husband it
going to pull out the stops during tea week—Jan. 18-26. There will be a "tea queen," of course, and I'll go along with the idea because I like tea—and tea queens.
Many of the days are on the serious side, religious or patriotic. I go for them, too, but I mention here the days in which I have a particular interest.
Like Pancake day, on Feb. 2. Wish a Settlement Cook Book, there lives not a man who can churn up a better batch of batter than you know who. I've been at it so long I even know that you ought to flip 'em when they bubble just right on the white side.
Feb. 15-22 is "National Cherry Week" and we'll all bake a pie.
I'm about to pass up "National Sew and Save Week," which is from Feb. 23-March 1. But I plan to observe with befitting reverence "Nationally Advertised Brands Week" and "National Smile Week." I am now working up a smile for the latter.
The Department of Commerce is preparing a bulletin which takes care of the days and weeks for the rest of the year. It won't be out for a couple of weeks, but I'll fill you in when I get the details.
But I'll give you a couple of hints.
Before we get to 1953 we'll be honor-
ing watermelons, peanuts, mountain
daisies, mothers-in-law — in fact,
some 400 promotions.
If you are an addict, you can't miss. There's a day for you.
Barton Visits Canterbury Club The Right Rev. Lane Barton, Episcopal bishop of eastern Oregon, will celebrate Holy Communion at the 9 a.m. service Sunday in the Trinity Episcopal church. After the service the Rev. Barton will meet with the students in the rectory for the regular Sunday Canterbury club meeting.
Keith E. Moore was named as distinguished military student Wednesday night at a banquet to commission the twelve Air Force Reserve Officers Training Corps students who are graduating from the University this semester.
Keith Moore Honored At Military Banquet
George B. Smith, dean of the School of Education, spoke to the cadets and their guests and to the Air Force staff members and their wives at the banquet held in the Kansan room of the Union.
Col. Lynn R. Moore, (PAS & T) presented a pair of gold second lieutenant bars to each of the graduating cadets. Each cadet's guests had the privilege of pinning on the newly issued bars.
Those in the graduating class are W. D. Rhue, Gordon R. Brown, Hubert Capps, John W. Davis, Robert L. Etherton, Ken E. Garrett, William W. Howard, Harvey A. Jetmore, Keith E. Moore, Leo R. Payton, M.E. Smith and James W. Westbrook.
Robert Cassidy, business senior, was chairman of the committee in charge of arrangements for the banquet.
Phi Kappa Psi held its 75th annual winter formal dinner dance Jan. 12 in the Kansas room of the Union.
Phi Kappa Psi Lists Guests At Formal
Mrs. A. H. Little, Mrs. J. H.
Kreamer, Mrs. Andrew McKay, Mrs.
Dean Alt, Mrs. C. H. Wentworth,
Mrs. F. L. MacCreary and Mrs.
Ralph Park were chaperones.
The guests included Helen Zimmerman, Barbara Tucker, Georgia Green, Margie Campbell, Barbara Boyce, Marilyn Eyler, Betsy Bowers, Ruth Copening, Meredith Gear, Barbara Glover and Rosemary Owen.
Sue Speck, Nancy Landon, Jane Gallagher, Barbara Comstock, Jeanie Johnson, Sally Bontz, Mary Lynn Updegraft, Shirai Bhrayziel, Ann Bonecutter, Eleanor Ormand, Carolyn Campbell, Reva Franz, Dian Collingwood, Marilyn Muehlbach and Winnie Schumacher.
Sara Starry, Norma Mock, Charlene Feoerschler, Nancy Davidson Mary Rary Anglund, Erma Lutz, Tina Maduros, Marion Green, Barbara Bawdish, Julie Underhill, Betty Lu Gard, Betty Lou Collins, Martha Marley and Barbara Hibbard.
New York—(U.P.)—Fashion still is spinach, in the opinion of the woman designer who coined the popular phrase 15 years ago.
Elizabeth Hawes, who made the expression a part of Americana, still is sounding off on the subject of fashion versus style and the way American women dress, despite the fact that temporarily she is out of the dress-making business.
Fashion Still Is Spinach' Today Just As It Was 15 Years Ago
"Fashion," said Miss Hawes, "is what is here today and gone tomorrow. Style is what sticks."
The designer, observing there's always room for improvement, said American women are better dressed now than they were immediately after the war, or even as late as a couple of years ago when styles "simmered down" a bit.
"They've finally come around to the silhouette I was preaching before
Lorraine Johnson, Judy Ringer,
Jean Stoneman, Cindy Stevens, Barbara
Brammer and Mr. and Mrs.
R. B. Stevens.
Mid-Winter Dance For Faculty Club
A mid-winter dance for members of the Faculty club will be held in the main lounge of the clubhouse from 8:30 to 11 p.m. Jan. 18. Music will be provided by the "Faculty Follies" orchestra and refreshments will be served.
The club will keep its regular hours during finals week and the dining room will continue its regular schedule. The clubhouse is open from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. every day in the week.
LAST 2 DAYS - ENDS THURSDAY AUDIE MURPHY JAMES BEST JOHN HUDSON "THE CIMARRON KID"
"A piece of jewelry has one purpose," said the designer. "To draw attention to the spot it's worn. What a confusion a woman creates when she wears earrings, necklace, several dangling bracelets, a clip and two or three rings."
CARL COOPER'S LITTLE MAN IN THE K.C. STAR STANDING IN THE CHAIR AFTER 9 WEEKS AND STILL GOING STRONG... WE ARE PROUD TO BE ABLE TO BRING
Since 1949, she's been living and resting in the Virgin Islands, setting for a new travel book she's written, called "But Sav It Politely."
YOU
anybody ever heard of Christian Dior," said the pint-sized designer. "Back in the '30s, I was making dresses with snug bodices and full skirts. . . the same thing women are now wearing. If anybody says I'm bragging let 'em look at some of my designs on exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum."
THIS OUTSTANDING MOTION PICTURE . . .
Miss Hawes, before she closed her New York shop in 1949, catered to the social set and to such show business names as Lynn Fontane, Gladys Swarthout, Ingrid Bergman and Katherine Hepburn.
About the British Princess and the President's daughter, Miss Hawes said the clothes of both "are influenced too much by their position. Too staid and matronly."
It's that silhouette—fitted bodice and full skirt—which Miss Hawes contended will last several years because it's the one best suited to the American woman's figure.
"A SUPERIOR CONCOCTION OF WIT AND FARCE...
of satirical good humor!"
—Time Magazine
in the best tradition
"In the future let us soften the lines a bit," said the designer. "Some of these stiff full skirts are so determined. Let's have the fullness in a softer drape. More beguiling that wav."
"The
"I wish they'd just let Margaret Truman go out and buy what she wants, instead of what they think she ought to have," said the designer, a bit wistfully.
ALEC GUINNESS
versatile star of
"Kind Hearts and Coronets"
avender
9 Weeks of Tickling The Funny Bone of Kansas Citians !!!
FRIDAY
Hill Mob"
THE FUN STARTS
with STANLEY HOLLOWAY
Produced by Michael Belton. An Eating Studio Production
A J. Arthur Rank Organization Presentation
A Universal-International Release
Patee
PHONE 321
BROUGHT TO YOU
心
AT REGULAR PRICES
Comfort! Convenience!
JAYHAWKS 2
NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
LAST TIMES TONITE 7-9 Randolph Scott "MAN IN THE SADDLE"
THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY The funniest, sunniest most for-your monies
Dick HAYMES Nina FOCH Keland YOUNG "St. Benny THE DIP" NEWS
PREVUE SATURDAY
Nite Doors Open 11:15 SUNDAY FOR 4 DAYS
See it and sing!!
Doris Day Danny Thomas
WARNER BROS. PRESENT
"I'll See You In My Dreams"
ALSO STARRING
FRANK LOVEJOY PATRICE WYMORE WITH JAMES GLEASON
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
Burt Lancaster "JIM THORPE- ALL AMERICAN"
TONITE - THURS.
Errol Flynn
"DODGE
CITY"
4.24
go
of the
ristian
designer.
making
d full
en are
ys I'm
of my
booklyn
bodice Hawesurs be- to the
n the "Some deess in g that
ed her need to show tanne. sigma.
anditting written,
purdraw What when several wo or
d the laws influition.
garet
t she
k she
er, a
Kansan Classified Advertising
S
N
Phone K.U.376
Classified Advertising Rates
One day three days five days
25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00
Additional words ... 1c 2c
TRANSPORTATION
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted
understanding that the bill will be paid
promotionally on arrival during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
(except Saturday) or brought to the Univer-
sity office or office Journal,
newsblge, not later than 4:54 p.m. the day before publication date.
AIRLINE TICKETS, promi confinement of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether for business or other purposes. Phone Mrs. Louis Odafter, 610-355-7007 Service, 1015 Mass.
BUSINESS SERVICE
Ask us about family rates, sky coach and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book passions no. 1 Europe travel. Call Margo Krug at National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 20.
RIDE WANTED to Philadelphia or anyone else. Please contact Noram Gross at 301 691.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers note books, theses, medical and biological reports and miscellaneous. Mrs. J. Foster. 4. uptains. Ph. 2775 after 4 p.m.
.
TYPING of all kinds done promptly and accurately. Mrs. Merritt, KU 296 or 2670J after 5 p.m. 16
TYPING—Theses, term papers, matchbooks, letters, etc. Prompt and accurate service. Mrs. Hall. 1344W. 506 West Sixth. ff
TYPING: Theses, term papers, miscellaneous. Prompt; accurate service. Experienced. Mrs. R. B. Loomis, 27F, Sunnyside, 2834M. 16
TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these typing Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio. Pt 161.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chips, homemade pastry.
Free parking 600 Vt. Open from 6 am,
until midnight.
RADIO AND TV repair service on all majors, 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. 128 Vernon. Free pickup and delivery.
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches--for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1084 Mass. tf
TYPING: Experience in theses, term papers, miscellaneous typing, and stencil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1952W; 1915 Tennessee. tt
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malfles, home-made ples and cakes. The parking space for customers is cooled and insulated. A.m., t.m. the midnight. Crystal Cafe. 609 Vt.
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our staff includes veterinarians, finn, fin, and feathers. Gran's Pet and Gift Shop 1218 Comm. Phone 418. tf
FOR SALE
FINALS ARE A SNAP when you use College Outline Series Handbooks. One for every subject. Student Union Book Store. 16
TRAILER HOUSE, 25 feet, 1947, In excellent condition. Reduced to sell immediately. 929 Conn. Phone 2585M. 2-4
BROMONE, $40. See at 1116 Tennessee after 5:30. 16
Have your FOUNTAIN PEN REPAIRED!
work. Student Union Book Store.
work. Student Union Book Store.
CAMERA. CIRAFLLEX f2.5 Wollensk lens, shutter to 1,200 sec, reflex focussing. Priced $10 below dealers price. In excellent condition. Phone 1146.16
New shipment of TOT STAPLEBMS now available at 964-825-3288 or student. Ubok Book Store.
FOR RENT
ROOMS FOR UPPER classmates and
graduate students. Quiet, comfortable
single rooms, close to campus. For second semester, 1131 Ohio. Phone 1784W.
SINGLE ROOM. clean and quiet location, close to hill. Only one other room; close to bath. furnace heat. 407 West 13th. 2-5
THREE SINGLE ROOMS very, reasonable, close to town and university. Two blocks from good boarding place. Automatic heat. 1305 Vt. 15
University Daily Kansan
VACANCY for boys near campus, 1218
Mississippi. Phone 514. 2-5
TRAILERS FOR RENT, two wheel, and four wheels. Have some good used trailer sale, also a 1938 Ford two-door good door. Have a TRAILER rental, 34-21 North 3rd.
HAVE SPRING semester vacancy for one girl—to share a double room. 1245 Louisiana. One-half block from Union. Call 3825 after 12 room. 16
HAVE VACANCY in single and double rooms for next semester. Phone 1555.
1416 Tenn. 16
ROOM FOR BOYS, vacancy for 2 boys
1122 Miss. Phone 495
1222 Miss. Phone 495
ROOMS FOR GIRLS at 1216 Louisiana.
Ask for Mrs. Wilson: phone 24283, 16
HELP WANTED
STUDENTS: WANT TO WORK AT THE
STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE DUR-
ER ENROLLED? STOP IN THE
WEEK. STUDENT UNION
STORE. 16
MISCELLANEOUS
GARAGE, $10 per month. See M. C.
Spencer, 1234 Oread. 16
WANTED: Woman, student to share
pleasant-3 room apartment; private bath;
good location: Call 1974M before 8
a.m. 31
THE MARKET Research Department of Procter and Gamble has several traveling positions open for young women in our retail surveys. No selling; ages 21-26; ability in simple arithmetic; drivers license; all expenses plus blue light; training per semester. Email: procter@virginia.edu Virginia, Weiss, Procter & Gamble, Gwynne Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio. 2-5
Starts TOMORROW From The Sensational Best-Seller FIDDLER'S GREEF
Sensational Best-Seller
STORM SWEPT EMOTIONS
LASH THE SCREEN!
RAGING
RAGING TIDE
starring
SHELLEY
WINTERS
RICHARD
CONTE
STEPHEN
McNALLY
CHARLES
BICKFORD
ALEX NICOL
A UNIVERSAL
INTERNATIONAL
PICTURE
ADDED Football Thrills Color Cartoon - News
Eve. 7 & 9 p.m
Matinee 2:30
Features: 3:03-7:33-9:38
ADDED
Hurry . . . Ends Tonite
"The Wild Blue Yonder"
SELL YOUR USED BOOKS to the Student Union Book Store on January 21, 2014. The library will purchase old edition and discontinued titles. Student Union Book Store.
GRANADA
LOST
1. 什么是概率?
HORN-RIMMED glasses in red case, around Fraser or West Hills. Have name and KU address in case. Call Joan Carter, $37. Reward. 2-1
SUNDAY. Jan 13, between 6-15-7 p.m. a night tan suede jacket (size 40) was picked up by mistake at the Alamo Café. Call Gary Walker, 3021.
HORN-RIMMED glasses in green case,
room. Shirley Brondy, Ph. 3540, lecture
Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1952
Page 11
South Portland, Me.—(U.P.)-Rake-wielding workers scrape the Atlantic shoreline here for the seaweed that goes into your cocoa chocolate and ice cream. A jelly-like material is extracted from the wet seaweed, or moss, and is used to keep chocolate or cocoa in suspension and to give a smooth texture to ice cream.
Seaweed Good To Eat
FOUND
SHEAFFER PEN at 12th and Oread on Jan. 12. Owner cell 1190J and identify
WOMAN'S wrist watch found in Memorial Union building. Will owner please write identification to Box 5, University Daily Kansan? 2-5
MR. ZIPP
Charlie Black, forward on the 1946 and 1947 KU basketball team was selected to play in the East West games both years.
The new book by H. Allen Smith
$2.75
STARTS SATURDAY OWL 11:15 P.M. SUNDAY
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. Tel. 666
VOTED BY MANY CRITICS ACROSS THE NATION...ONE OF THE TOP 10 PICTURES OF
1951. ..
K.U. HERE IS THE ONE YOU HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR!!
T. S. HAWKINS
CANADA
Iris L. Baldwin
PETER C. WEBB
JERRY WALD and
NORMAN KRASNA
Present
M. H. C.
The Portrayal... The Cast... The Drama of the Year!
A. M. KABIR
VA
I
Bernardo Ribeiro
Magnificent JANE WYMAN once again deeply touches your heart...as she did in the ever-to-be-remembered Johnny Belinda...this time as the woman Louise, another truly great role that only JANE could play.
JANE WYMAN
THE BLUE VEIL
co-starring
CHARLES LAUGHTON·JOAN BLONDELL·RICHARD CARLSON·AGNES MOOREHEAD DON TAYLOR·AUDREY TOTTER·CYRIL CUSACK·EVERETT SLOANE·NATALIE WOOD
ALWAYS LATEST MOVIETONE WORLD NEWS
WATCH FOR
"Westward The Women"
"Double Dynamite"
"Fixed Bayenets"
Gran
Granada
ada
CONTINUOUS SHOWS-SUNDAY FROM 1 P.M. — OPEN 12:45 P.M
a
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1952
News Roundup
Sliding Scale Pay Boost Proposed For Armed Forces
Washington—(U.P.)—Sen. Lester C. Hunt said today he will fight for "sliding-scale" pay boosts for the armed forces, with only the lower pay grades getting the full 10 percent increase approved by the House.
"I think we should give all of the 10 per cent to the lower pay grades, whose families really need the money, and drop off to, say six or seven per cent for high ranking officers," the Wyoming Democrat said.
Red Camp Bombed
Pamunjomjon, Korea—(U.P.)-G e n. Matthew B. Ridgway's headquarters conceded today that an Allied plane might have bombed a Communist war prisoner camp as charged by the Reds.
Other developments in the deadlocked armistice negotiations included:
1. Both truce subcommittees reported "no progress" during the day but agreed to meet again today
2. The Communists agreed to consider a UN request that they accept parcels as well as mail for Allied prisoners.
3. The Reds again rejected a UN proposal that sick and wounded war prisoners be exchanged at once.
City Is Hot Spot
By United Press—Corpus Christi, Texas, today became the first city of the sun to file an official claim to the title "Sunshine City" with the Carlsbad, N.M., chamber of commerce.
Under the rules of the contest competing cities dragged chunks of ice-a ton—into the most promising hot spot in town Tuesday at 9 a.m. The city where the ice first melted down to 100 pounds is to be declared the winner.
French Stop Rebels
Plucky Glenwood Springs, Colo. kept its ton of ice in the ice house while citizens shoved seven feet of snow off the roof.
Hanoi, French Indo-China—(U.P.) Twelve thousand Viet Minh Communist rebels were hurled back today, with losses described as “terrible,” in a savage attack on French defenses Southwest of this capital of Tonkin State.
Kefauver On Way
Washington — (U.P.) — Democrats backing Sen. Estes Kefauver for the presidential nomination are going ahead with plans to set up a campaign organization, it was learned today.
Kefauver talked politics with
ONE GROUP OF
JACKETS Discounted 25%
Quilt or Pile lined jackets in waist or finger-tip length . . take advantage of these substantial savings!
WERE NOW
$15.25
17. 50
$11.45
20. 00
13. 15
26. 75
20. 05
Shop at CARL'S . . .
You'll be glad you did!
President Truman at a half-hour meeting Tuesday. Sen. Clinton P. Anderson (D.-N.M.) had a date at the White House for the same purpose today.
Crown Prince Born
CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES
Cairo, Egypt — (U.P.) — A crown prince was born today to 18-year-old Queen Narriman, the beautiful commoner who became King Farouk's second wife last May 6.
The government promptly declared an official holiday, and all Egypt joined Farouk in celebrating the birth of his first son—named Ahmed Fud, for the King's father. Both mother and son were reported loing well.
Train Morale High
Dutch Flat, Calif. (U.P.) -Rescue units fought through 30-foot drifts to within two miles of the streamliner City of San Francisco, snow-bound in the High Sierras for 72 nours with 222 persons aboard.
There were some reports of illness, but Dr. Lawrence Nelson, a physician aboard the train, said "there are medical supplies aboard the train and no one is in serious condition. Everybody is bundled up and comfortable. Morale is high."
Japs Still Holdout
Guam—(U.P.) —An estimated 10 Japanese holdouts from World War II evaded police patrols today, but
Don't Be Confused About Where You're Going...
STRAIGHT AHEAD
THIS WAY
DOWN
Call 388 For Information To
RIDE THE BUS
- Service between campus and downtown every 10 minutes.
'Fledermaus' To Play Kansas City Jan. 23
- Specials during rush hours.
- Transfer to other busses free.
The Metropolitan Opera company's production of "Die Fledermaus" which previously was scheduled for April in Kansas City has been re-scheduled to an onlineiffft tour. The group will play in Kansas City one night only on Wednesday, Jan. 23.
RAPID TRANSIT
YOUR CITY BUS SERVICE
Phone 388
Students and faculty who have made reservations for the April performance are asked to affirm their acceptance of the new date by dropping a postal card to Ruth Seufert, Kansas City concert manager.
Tom Bishop was the leading Jayhawkter scorer in 1931 with a 9.2 points per game average. Clyde Lovellette led the Jayhawkers last year with a 23.8 points per game average.
fresh footprints and banana peels narrowed the search perimeter,
Three exhausted patrols returned Tuesday from the dangerous boondocks on Northwest Guam reporting discovery of the tell-tale signs. The search got underway after a party of Guamanian coconut crab hunters said 17 shots were fired at them near Anao Point.
Truman Message Proposes Renewal Of Defense Act
Washington—(U.P.)—Following is the text of President Truman's summary of legislative recommendations made to Congress today in his annual economic report: $ \textcircled{4} $
1. Renew the defense production act for two more years, and strengthen its provisions, particularly those relating to production expansion and to the control of prices and credit.
2. Provide continued military an economic aid to free nations; and as a step toward removing trade barriers, repeal section 104 of the defense production act, which permits certain goods which European and other countries could export to us on mutually advantageous terms.
3. Aid small business by providing the necessary funds for the small defense plants administration.
4. Provide for certain urgently needed development projects, particularly the St. Lawrence seaway and power project.
6. Revise the basic legislation concerning labor-management t e l a tions, so that it will not hamper sound and healthy labor relations and uninterrupted production.
5. Provide for the construction of needed housing and community facilities in defense areas.
7. Repeal the sliding scale provisions in existing agricultural price support legislation; provide a workable support program for perishable commodities; and modify the tax on unallocated reserves of farmer cooperatives.
8. Provide at least enough additional revenues to reach the revenue goal proposed last year, by eliminating loopholes and special privileges, and by tax rate increases.
9. Provide powers to the board of governors of the federal reserve system to impose additional bank reserve requirements; and provide authority to control margins for trading on commodity exchanges.
10. Raise the level of benefit payments in our system of old-age and survivors insurance.
11. Authorize federal aid to help meet school operating costs, and increase aid for school construction and operation in critical defense areas.
12. Authorize federal aid to assist medical education, and provide for strengthening local public health services.
WRITE THOSE FINALS WITH CONFIDENCE...
Get A New Pen
Choose from our selection of Parker, Sheaffer, and Esterbrook
Esterbrook
Sheaffer's TM*
STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE
Pen in hand
S-1
Kansas State Historical Society
Topeka, Ks.
5,851 Enrolled As Classwork Begins
MISS PATTERSON
Mid-Year Slump Lowest Since War
Enrollment at the University stood at 5,851 this morning as the spring semester classes began.
HEAVY TRAFFIC AROUND nursing and ROTC desks.—The prenursing and ROTC desks were among those kept busy during the three-day enrollment period this week. In the above photo, Miss Sara Patterson, assistant professor of home economics, (second from left) advises Marijane Lynch, College sophomore, (left). Also in the picture are Miss Jean Hill, director of nursing at the Medical center; Leta Larrew, College junior, and Jo Ann Lusk, College sophomore. In the picture at the left, three students inquire about the ROTC program. Cosley Hollings, College sophomore; Sam Johnson, College freshman, and Jim Houghton, first year law, are shown talking to Sgt. Herman C. Hunn of Air Force ROTC—Kansan photos by Jim Murray.
Daily Kansan
Thursday, Jan. 31, 1952
No.79
49th Year
Representative Of Pakistan To Lecture Here Feb.7
Dr. Khalifa Abdul Hakim, director of the Institute of Islamic Culture in Lahore, Pakistan, will lecture at the University Thursday. Feb. 7.
Dr. Hakim will discuss "Islamic Culture" in Strong auditorium at 3 p.m.
Dr. Bakim will be the first representative of the new state of Pakistan to speak here, Dean Paul B. Lawson of the College, said.
"It is a great opportunity for us to hear so qualified an interpreter of the Moslem world," Dean Lawson said. "The Moslem sphere of influence, which extends from the Indian ocean to the Atlantic, is undergoing explosive change. We need to know much more about these peoples and their cultures."
-Dr. Hakim came to the United States to address the Notre Dame university Natural Law institute in December. He also will speak at Park college and Kansas City university.
He was dean of the faculty of arts in Osmania university in Hyderabad before taking his present position. He is noted as a linguist and has written books in Urdu (Hindustani) and English, the most recent being "Islamic Ideology."
---
Fall Parking Permits Expired 8 A.M. Today
Persons who have applied for spring permits may pick them up at the business office anytime today if the applications have been approved.
---
Fall parking permits expired this morning at 8 and tickets are being issued by campus police to any drivers whose cars did not bear the new red and white tag.
Art Conference Here Feb. 8,9
Plans for the third Art Education conference to be held at the University Friday and Saturday, Feb 8 and 9. was announced today by Miss Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of education.
The conference is sponsored by the art education department and University Extension.
Miss Henry has served as art education instructor during summer sessions at Northwestern, Chicago, and Denver universities. She has done work at Columbia university, the Chicago Art institute, and the University of Chicago.
"A feature of the conference will be an exhibit, 'Growth Through Art', which shows by creative drawings and paintings of children and explanatory script, the psychological, physical, and mental growth of children through art experience." Professor Elsworth said.
Miss Edith Henry, supervisor of art in the Denver elementary schools, will present three addresses and lead discussion groups.
Miss Henry received her bachelor of fine arts degree from the University of Nebraska in 1926 and her master's degree from the University of Denver in 1943.
The public is invited to see the exhibit and to attend any conference sessions.
The exhibit consists of 50 panels which will be shown on the west wing of second floor of Strong hall. It was made by the National Art Education association.
MILITARY SCIENCE
NAVAL SCIENCE
'The Bartered Bride' Opens In Fraser Monday
The soprano role of Marie will be sung by Phyllis McFarland, fine arts senior. The tenor role of Jenik will be sung by Frederick Tarry, fine arts sophomore.
A special guild orchestra of 24 pieces will play for the performances.
The University Light Opera guild will combine drama and music in presenting "The Bartered Bride" in Fraser theater Feb. 4, 5, 7 and 8.
Baseball Players To Meet
ID cards will not admit students but tickets go on sale today at the box office in Green hall which will be open daily from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. and from 1 to 4 p.m.
There will be a meeting of all baseball players at 4 p.m. today in 203 Robinson gymnasium.
Seventy students forewent their vacations between semesters for all-day rehearsals of the production. It will be presented at 8:15 p.m. on all dates but Feb. 7, when a 3:15 performance will be given.
"The Bartered Bride" is the fifth annual production of the guild.
Directors are Gerald M. Carney associate professor of music education, music direction; Thomas Shay, instructor in speech, dramatic direction; Clayton Krehbiel, instructor in music education, choral direction; Leo Horacek, instructor in music education, assistant music director, and G. Criss Simpson, associate professor of organ and theory, technical advisor.
The production is given by members of the University players and three honorary music organizations, Mu Phi Epsilon, Phi Mu Alpha and Sigma Alpha Iota.
The plot develops as Marie jilts Vashek for her true love, Jenik, and the couple attempts to outwit the marriage broker, Kezal.
The action of the story centers in a village in Bohemia about 1850. The scenes take place on a feast day beginning with a church service at noon and ends after midnight. The story concerns the arrangement of marriage of Marie, the heroine, to Vashek, a simple peasant lad.
Dreyer Resigns As Geology Head
Dr. Robert M. Dreyer, chairman of the geology department, has resigned as chairman to devote full time to his teaching job as professor of geology, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy has announced.
The resignation will be effective July 1. No successor has beer named.
Dr. Dreyer asked to be relieved of his administrative duties to devote more time to research in the fields of mineralogy, geophysics, and economic geology.
Dr. Dreyer, who has been an instructor at the University since 1939, succeeded Prof. L. R. Laudon as chairman of the department four years ago. He was granted a four-year leave of absence during World War II when he served with the Navy.
Dr. Dreyer is a fellow of the Mineralogy Society of America and of the Society of Exploration Geophysicists.
"I regret that Professor Dreyer has decided to give up his administrative duties in the geology department," Chancellor Murphy said. "The University is exceedingly grateful for the many accomplishments of the department during his tenure as chairman and his devotion to its interests."
Pick Up Western Civ Appointment Slips
Students enrolled in Western Civilization for the spring semester are to pick up their appointment slips in Strong Annex C from 8:30 a.m. to noon and from 1:15 to 5 p.m. tomorrow.
This is a decline of only 431 from the register at the same period in September, and of 308 from the spring semester of 1951. However, Registrar James K. Hitt expects few more than 50 late enrollments so the difference will be somewhat greater.
Of the total, 5,251 are at Lawrence, and 600 are attending the Kansas City division of the School of Medicine.
Fewer than 500 veterans are studying on the Lawrence campus under the GI bill of rights, Mr. Hitt said, although several hundred more are in school but drawing no deferment benefits.
The comparison between spring and fall semester enrollments appears to be the most favorable of the post-war period. This is an indication of a return to the September- June schedule of study with a great majority of students planning to finish their studies in June.
In comparison with enrollment a year ago, there was a drop of 1,200 students at this time last year. On the other hand, the number of new students enrolling at this time last year was 322, considerably more than this year's figure.
The trend has been established since the decline in enrollment following the departure of the large number of veterans.
University enrollment from 1866 to 1930 is shown for every fifth year in the table below. Yearly enrollment is shown from 1830 through 1955.
1866-67 55
1870-71 227
1875-76 237
1880-81 446
1885-86 419
1890-91 474
1895-96 895
1900-01 1,154
1905-06 1,706
1910-11 2,398
1915-16 2,959
1920-21 4,226
1925-26 5,533
1930-31 5,896
1931-32 5,658
1932-33 4,851
1933-34 4,549
1934-35 4,902
1935-36 5,219
1936-37 5,589
1937-38 5,536
1938-39 5,488
1939-40 5,485
1940-41 5,299
1941-42 4,756
1942-43 4,410
1943-44 5,045
1944-45 3,764
1945-46 6,295
1946-47 10,439
1947-48 10,891
1948-49 9,597
1949-50 8,753
1950-51 7,354
1951-52 6,282
WEATHER
Town Has A Clean Slate
Pontotoc, Miss.—(U.P.)—City police didn't make a single arrest here during a one month period, the first time in 30 years.
Generally fair tonight and Friday,
continued mild. Lows tonight, 30
vest to upper 30's east. High Friday
northeast to 65 west and south.
Kansan Sports 'New Look' Today
Does the Kansan look different to you? It's not the paper—it's still white. It's not the ink—it's still black. (And if you're the critical type you'll say even the news is the same.)
The change is the Kansan's new flag—"nameplate" if you're not familiar with journalistic terminology. If you like it, let the editor know. If you don't, let him know why.
The flag is technically described as having a cursive type face in a member of the Brush family.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 31, 1952
Daily Kansan Editorials
Coaches Poor Examples
The barrage of Allen-Gardner accusations preceding the KU—K-State basketball game last week was just another example of the damage the two coaches do to relations between the schools.
Both men seem to feel they not only must work themselves into a froth before each game, they also must create a bitterness between the schools which cannot help but infect some partisans of each.
Coach Allen several years ago screamed bloody murder when Big Seven officials ruled that Clarence Brannum, a Kansas State star, was eligible for another season. That incident paralleled Jack Gardner's blast at Clyde Lovellette in one important respect; in both cases the coaches attacked not only each other but their players.
Apparently there is less reason to worry about the conduct of the students than there is about the conduct of the basketball coaches. These are the men who yelp constantly about those who attack basketball. They preach that the fair name of the game must not be besmirched.
Coach Gardner's post-game reference to his attack on Lovellette as merely "a little buildup" doesn't excuse the action. Whether or not he and Allen actually hate each other is of little interest to anyone but themselves. The important thing is that their antics engender unnecessary bad feeling between the two schools.
Since 1931 the students of KU and Kansas State have signed annual "peace" pacts, and both student bodies generally have been well-behaved during contests between their respective teams.
—J.W.Z.
They are not very convincing spokesmen.
New Editorial Page Policy
The Daily Kansan editorial page will be under new management for the next eight weeks, and since we will be responsible for its production we think it only fair to explain our aims and the principles under which we will operate.
cupes under which we will be written with an eye toward pleasing the greatest number of readers; neither will they be vehicles for indiscriminate release of personal gripes and prejudices.
Each article will be a product of careful thought and the considered judgment of its writer. Each will contain correct and complete facts, with interpretation based on those facts.
Readers of the page should not expect to find constant and complete accord with their opinions. The goal of Kansan editorials will be to make readers think, not to curry favor by presenting watered-down essays designed for universal appeal. The purpose of editorials is not to force specific opinions on the reader, but to present possibly new ideas for his consideration.
possibly new ideas for his others.
The value of each editorial should be judged by the degree of assistance it gives the reader in thinking things through. If it provides no stimulation to his thought it has failed its sole purpose. If, on the other hand, it leads him to think, and even violently disagree, it has been successful.
Readers are invited to air their views in the letters to the editor column. If space permits, the Daily Kansan will print all letters received, provided they are in good taste and are signed by the writer. Names will be withheld by request, but unsigned letters will not be used.
—J.W.Z.
University Daily Kansan
News Room Student Newspaper of the Ad Room KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU 376
Member of the Kansas Press Assn, National Editorial Assn, Inland Daily Press Ssn,
Associated College Publishing, and The University of Missouri Press by the
U.S. Government Advertising Service of 2021 Madison Avenue, New York City, U.S.
EDITORIAL STAFF
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief Jack Zimmerman
Editorial Assistants Anne Snyder, Joe Taylor
NEWS STAFF
NEWS STAFF
Managing Editor Ellsworth Zahn
Assistant Managing Editors Helen Lou Fry, Ben Holman
Joe Lastelic, Jim Powers
City Editor Jeanne Lambert
Assistant City Editors Johnny Herrington, Phil Newman
Jerry Renner, Katrina Swartz
Telegraph Editor Charles Burch
Assistant Telegraph Editor Max Thompson
Society Editor Diane Stonebraker
Assistant Society Editors Lorena Barlow, Jeanne Fitgerald,
Paulyne Patterson
Sports Editor Jackie Jones
Vivian DeVos
Sports Editor Jackie W.
News Adviser Victor J. Danilov
BUSINESS STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager ... Dorothy Hedrick
Advertising Manager ... Emory Williami
National Advertising Manager ... Virginia Johnstor
Circulation Manager ... Ted Barbers
Classified Advertising Manager ... Eline Mitchell
Promotion Manager ... Phil Wilcox
Business Advisor ... R. W. Doorei
Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
Spirit Lacking
Letters:
An article in the Lawrence daily paper in January 16 made me feel pretty low. It was written by one of the sports editors of that paper, and the text of it boiled down to this—when the K. U. basketball squad returned from beating Nebraska there were, waiting for them at the railroad station, 25 local businessmen and not one student of the University.
Dear Editor:
Now, this is a pretty sad state of affairs. After all, who's team is it anyway, the city of Lawrence's of the University of Kansas? I'm not saying that the businessmen should not have been there. What I'm trying to find out is why weren't there some students there? With those 25 local men, there should have been at least 75 to 100 students there to greet them.
I realize I'm just as guilty as the next person. I realize that it was in the morning and most of us have classes at that time; however, surely there were a few members of the several pep groups, at least one cheer leader, and some other students who could have gone down to the station and let the team know we're behind them all the way and are mighty darn proud of them.
Our team has just been rated first in the nation for the third straight week, something no other team from Kansas or the Big Seven has ever been able to do. With the proper support from the students they could very easily go through the season without a defeat, but they won't unless the student body shows them the kind of pep and spirit they need to accomplish this.
Norman Hogue Pharmacy sophomore
P. S. After writing this I suddenly remembered that there would be no paper again until classes resume again, so by the time this would be printed it might be too late to do anything. Our team might get beaten at Manhattan because of little things like I have tried to bring out in the above letter, and the majority of students won't know anything about it.
Editor's note: Although this letter was received before the KU-K State game we feel it is worthwhile, particularly in view of the embarrassing incident that took place in Manhattan on the evening of Jan. 26. A team may make mistakes, but it should not be forced to shoulder all the blame for a loss.
Short Ones
After you've heard two eyewitnesses to an accident testify, it makes you wonder about history.
An article in the Daily Kansan expressed amazement at 1951 being a "wet year" but anyone who has been around for very long knows that Kansas has not been a "dry" state for a long time.
The difference between driving an ambulance and a private car is that when you're driving an ambulance you have to stop and pick them up.
New fighting flares in Egypt, and apparently the belly dancer's marriage to a Westerner didn't solve anything.
Although retirement is now supposed to come at 65,26 per cent of men and women at that age,and over, according to The American Magazine, are now employed.
Kieger
"Can't understand it. Can't understand it. It worked out fine on paper."
Lettermen Reappear
The Democratic ticket in Missouri might come up with some veteran running mates this year if current speculation becomes fact.
If President Truman seeks re-election, if Gov. Forrest Smith makes a successful bid for the senatorial nomination and if former Gov. Phil M. Donnelly becomes the Democratic candidate for governor, then a team which ran together in 1944 will be reunited.
Mr. Truman then was Roosevelt's running mate for vice president, Donnellly headed the state ticket for governor and Smith was making his fifth race for state auditor. All of them rode along to victory that year.
However, it will be a closely watched race for there is little personal friendship between any of them. Truman and Smith have been supported in the past by opposite factions of the state organization and Donnelly consistently has been independent of all.
A third prominent name, that of Emery W. Allison, has cropped up in recent weeks in connection with the Democratic senate race. Two years ago as President Truman's personal choice to regain a seat then held by a Republican, he lost in the primary by a mere 4,000 vote margin. Many politicos believe that he is anxious to try again.
Governor Smith will have a difficult task ahead of him if he does decide to throw his hat into the senatorial ring. The investigations by the Kefauver committee, the smell raised by the Binaggio-Gargotta slayings and his meddlings with the Kansas City and St. Louis police boards have left him wide open to attack.
Lieut.-gov. James T. Blair also is said to have plans which include the Senate but probably would be happy to settle for moving up into the governor's office this time.
There are others who also are considering entering the Democratic political arena. J. E. (Buck) Taylor, now Missouri's attorney-general, is interested in the senatorial nomination. He has been canvassing the state for some time sounding out support.
Having former Governor Donnelly's name on the ticket would undoubtedly be of benefit to Smith. Donnelly's reputation for honesty and independence would add strength to the ticket in general and would be likely to counteract some of the scandal-talk attached to Smith.
Recalling that as governor from 1945 to 1949 he had approved several measures regulating laborunion activities, it branded him as anti-labor. It was suggested to the President that Donnelly would be harmful to Truman's candidacy in Missouri if Mr. Truman decides to run again.
However, Donnelly himself would not have all easy sledding ahead. He is notoriously weak among the labor element in the urban communities. Recently-organized labor in the St. Louis area made known to President Truman its opposition to him.
News From Other Campuses
Church-related colleges lead in the proportion of graduates who continue their training for the Ph.D. degree in science, according to the results of a special study conducted by Dr. John R. Sampey, professor of chemistry at Furman university.
Ph.D.'s At Church Colleges
Abolition of charges to the public for athletic games has been strongly advocated by the Grinnell college faculty for Grinnell and for all other colleges and universities.
Free Admission Proposed
The days of the "old maid" school teacher are disappearing and the book satchel is being replaced by the grocery bag in America's modern educational system. A survey taken by Southern Illinois university revealed that 54 per cent of the primary grade teachers in its area are married and 80 per cent of them live in their own homes.
'Old Maid' Teacher Gone
Lawrence Washington, a brother of Gen. George Washington, was a Marine officer in one of the three Marine regiments recruited in 1740.
Page 3
FA-379
JET FIGHTERS GUARD CAPITAL—The Air Force has announced that the famed "White House" squadron at Washington, assigned to guard the nation's capital, has been equipped with Lockheed F-94 all-weather jet fighters. The planes can operate around the clock in darkness and bad weather, using radar to find their targets.
Reading Clinic Offers Courses In Reading, Study Methods
During the fall semester many students who enrolled late were unable to get into the General Study Methods classes. Those who want reading and study methods courses for the present semester are urged to enroll at the Reading office as soon as possible.
Classes in General Study Methods begin Tuesday, Feb. 5. These classes meet on Tuesdays and Thursdays for six weeks at 9,10 and 11 a.m.
The individual counselling service, aimed at helping students to develop an effective method of studying, will begin Monday Feb. 11.
The University Reading clinic will offer courses in reading comprehension, reading improvement, and general study methods this semester. It will also provide an individual counselling service to students needing personal help with study problems.
Students may enroll in the Reading clinic any day from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Reading office, 18 Fraser. A weekly appointment will be made for each student.
Counselling will cover areas of reading, not taking, review, preparation and writing examinations. The counselling is not a tutoring service.
Students are not required to take the regular group course in Study Methods before enrolling for individual help. Such a course is valuable as a foundation for getting the maximum benefit from individual counselling.
Classes in Reading Comprehension meet at 8 and 10 a.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday beginning Monday, Feb. 4. A week later two more classes, at 9 and 11 a.m., will be added.
Improvement of Reading Speed will be offered beginning Feb. 11. Monday, Wednesday, Friday for six weeks.
University Daily Kansan
University students are invited to sign up for a low-cost two-month tour of Western Europe which will be sponsored this summer by the College of Emporia.
European Tour To Cost $1,395
Thursday, Jan. 31, 1952
Upon completion of the tour six hours credit in "Contemporary European Life" will be granted by C. of E.
Total cost of the tour, including lodging, meals, transportation, baggage handling and tips, will be $1.395.
Students will leave for New York from Kansas City June 8, and sail for Europe June 11, on the Queen
Name Causes Rank Error
Chanute Air Base, III—U(P)P—air base clerks listed him in the records as Lt. Col. Ray. They searched the files for his first name. Finally they learned that Ray was only a lieutenant and that his first name was Colonel. His title now—Lt. Colonel Ray.
Mary. The group will visit in Scotland and England before going to the continent. The itinerary will include Holland, Belgium, Germany, Switzerland and France.
PRECISE
WATCH
REPAIRS
Dr. Harold McCleave, dean of the college, who conducted student tours to Europe in 1949 and 1951, will be leader this year.
PRECIOSE
WATCH
REPAIRS
Watch Repair
Electronically
Timed
Satisfaction
Guaranteed
Wolfson's
743 Mass. Call 675
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Gustatory note:
Appetite comes
with eating...
but thirst departs
with drinking
Rabelai
You can lose thirst in a
hurry with a bottle of ice-cold
Coca-Cola...and find
sparkling refreshment.
DRINK
Coca-Cola
RED UC PAT OFF
5¢
DRINK
Coca-Cola
REG. U.S. PAY OFF
5¢
BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY LAWRENCE COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.
(SAVE TIME - AVOID THE LINE!)
SUPPLIES
READY MADE KITS
A COMPLETE LINE FOR EVERY COURSE
BOOKS
NEW AND USED
TO SAVE YOU TIME
FULL REFUND
PROVIDED MERCHANDISE IS NOT DAMAGED OR WRITTEN IN AND IF RETURNED BEFORE FEBRUARY 7.
VETERANS
REQUISITION BOOKS HONORED AT BOTH STORES
FREE
BLOTTERS
MATCHES
BOOK COVERS
Booksellers to Jayhawkers
Rowlands
1401 Ohio
PHONE 1401
OVER FIFTY YEARS
A TAX PAYING STORE
1237 Oread
PHONE 492
Booksellers to Jayhawkers Rowlands OVER FIFTY YEARS A TAX PAYING STORE
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 31, 1952
Germany Lacks Even Paper Army
Bonn, Germany—(U.P.)—Despite all the talk lately of German re-armament and the integration of 12 West German divisions into a European army, as yet there isn't even a secretary to mail the draft notice to a single prospective soldier.
Several plans for selecting men for the new German army have been produced by the "security office" of the German government. But the Bonn Parliament has not appropriated a single planning man to meet it likely to do so for another four or five months, at the earliest.
There is not one doctor to tap the draftee on the chest and pronounce him fit or otherwise, not one sergeant to march that draftee from the medical examination to supply room.
Yet it is the intention—or perhaps hope is the better word—of Western planners to have 12 German divisions, including six armored and six highly mechanized infantry units, in the field, manning Europe's dam against the Red flood along the Elbe, by the winter of 1953-54.
In European defense talks in Paris, it has been generally agreed that Germany is to have no military command higher than a division, although obviously there will have to be some kind of central supply and training authority.
It is the Western planners' intention, and that of most of the serious, young, democratic-minded German officials working on this problem, to prevent a reestablishment of the much-feared German general staff.
Strategical command will rest with Dwight D. Eisenhower or his successor, but for every three divisions Germany puts into the field, it will be permitted to name one corps commander. The air force will be tactical only.
The air force presents a special problem. While Germany had many good fighter and bomber pilots during the last war, many of those still alive are too old to fly. The rest
Baker Senior Gets $250 Med Award
John Wesley Heaton Jr., senior at Baker university who will enter the University School of Medicine in the fall, has been awarded the DeForrest F. Piazzek Trust scholarship of $250.
The award is given by a joint decision of the admissions committee of the School of Medicine and the First National bank of Kansas City, trustee of the DeForrest Piazzek fund, on the basis of outstanding scholarship and need.
Heaton was selected unanimously for the award on the basis of straight A scholarship through school and his other personal attributes even though he is not yet working in the School of Medicine.
Two other awards will be made later to two freshman medical students.
Oysters spawn in the summer when the water temperature climbs to 65 or 70 degrees.
PETER SAMS
AGONY AT SEA — Mrs. Belva Hall of Norfolk, Va., reads a note tossed in the sea in a bottle in 1942. The note reads: "This is the end . . middle of nowhere. . Lost compas . . God, O help us . . Goodbye to our loved ones . . Thomas Gowan EM2."
haven't been in a prop-driven plane for six years, much less driven one of the atomic-age jet "gas-pipes" that travel at the speed of sound.
But there won't be any kind of German formations until after the next NATO conference in Lisbon set for Feb. 2; another European defense conference in Paris, ratification by the French, Italian, German and Benelux parliaments of the European defense agreement, and until someone advances the Germans money and arms.
Already the Germans and Americans are arguing about how much the Germans shall pay. At this stage,
the Germans insist they can pay only about $2,025,843,000, while the United States holds they should be able to pay up to $3,095,290,650.
One more problem may cause delay in German rearmament. That is the question of German membership in the NATO. Most Germans feel that if they are to provide 12 divisions—the largest European contingent—for the Western army, then they should have equal say in the NATO body that decides when the fighting starts.
The Socialist opposition demands equality now — before rearming starts. Many members of the Centrist government would be willing to let that issue ride until some soldiers actually are in uniform, but Socialist intransigence may force its hand.
Three craft and drawing courses for faculty members are their wives are available this semester. They are ceramics, silvercraft and sketching.
Faculty Offered New Craft Courses
The ceramics class will meet at 7 p.m. on Tuesdays; silvercraft and sketching will meet at 7 p.m. on Thursdays. There are about a dozen members in each class at the present time but there is room for a few more.
In charge of the classes are Cara Lou Sheets, fine arts senior, William Imeal, graduate student, and Harry Grevel, graduate student.
Those interested in enrolling in the courses are to call Mrs. Maude Ellsworth, associate professor of education.
More Americans participate in bowling than any other ball game. Nearly 20,000,000 bowl with some regularity.
Army ROTC Adds Master Sergeant
The addition of M/Sgt. William R Smith to the Army ROTC staff has been announced by Col. E. F. Kumpe, professor of military science.
Sergeant Smith replaces M/Sgt. Remington Webster who was recalled to active duty in Germany.
Sergeant Smith is a veteran of World War II, having served 45 months overseas in the Aleutians and Rykus Islands, and was stationed at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., before coming to Lawrence.
One cubic foot of solid coal will generate enough electricity to operate a frozen food locker for 31 days.
Travel Service
THE
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
TRAVEL AGENCY
Tel. 30 8th & Mass.
NOW ON DISPLAY
Chevrolet
Brilliantly NEW
for '52!
NEW IMPROVED
POWER-JET CARBURETION
GORGEOUS NEW
EXTERIOR
COLORS
NEW ROYAL-TONE
STYLING
New Centerpoise Power
This great new Styline De Luxe 4-Door Sedan lists for less than any comparable model in its field (Continuation of standard equipment and trim illustrated is dependent on availability of material.)
It's Big...Bright and Beautiful!
CHEVROLET The Only Fine Cars PRICED SO LOW!
Come, see the finest of all Chevrolets . . . brilliantly new for '52 in all these exciting ways:
Vivid New Royal-Tone Styling . . . with Bodies by Fisher that set the standard for beauty.
New Centerpoise Power . . engine is cushioned in rubber to bring amazing new smoothness of
Radiant New Exterior Colors . . . widest and most wonderful array of colors in its field.
Alluring New Interior Colors . . . with two-tone upholstery and trim harmonizing with body colors, in all De Luxe sedan and coupe models.
operation and freedom from vibration to lowcost motoring.
New, smoother, softer ride for all passengers. All these and many other advantages are yours in the '52 Chevrolet at lowest prices and with outstanding economy of operation. They're the only fine cars priced so low. See them now!
Extra-Smooth POWER Glide
with New Automatic Choke, gives finest no-shift driving at lowest cost. (Combination of Powerglide Automatic Transmission and 105-h.p. Engine optional on De Luxe models at extra cost.)
MORE PEOPLE BUY CHEVROLETS THAN ANY OTHER CAR
SEE IT AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER'S
> k[A D T O S ... A]
CRT, IE, not subcount
New C.
Page 5
NAVY TRIES JET HELICOPTER—William Murray of Wilton, Conn., pilots the Navy's experimental helicopter K-225. Instead of using velocity of exhaust gases for forward thrust, the craft uses this power to turn haft of rotor blades. Engine can operate on low grade fuels or on high octane gasoline. Unlike piston engine, the turbine requires neither a cooling fan or a centrifugal clutch. Engine is 175 h.p.
07
Allyn Browne, business graduate now of San Francisco, was chairman of the student committee which raised funds for the pictures in May and June of the past year.
Print Of Photo Sent To Malott
A print of the Karsh portrait of Deane W. Malott, former University chancellor, that hangs in the Union building was sent to Mr. Malotby by the student committee which raised the funds for the Karsh portrait.
Irvin E. Youngberg, secretary of the K.U. endowment association, said today that he had received a letter of thanks for the gift from Mr. Malott who asked that his "very deep gratitude" be expressed to all persons who contributed to the fund for the pictures.
There are over 6,000 plants in North Carolina's natural aboreum.
"I have never seen a picture of me which fills me with any great pride," wrote Mr. Malott, "but the interest of the faculty and students in this project honors me very greatly and for that I am most appreciative."
Thursday, Jan. 31, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Life On A Lonely Island Appeals To U.S. Navy Man
Honolulu—U.P.)—Life on a lonely island appeals to Fred Pobst and his family.
So far he'd increased the island's fish exports, built a new school, introduced farm irrigation and started an industrial expansion program.
Pobst is a chief petty officer in the navy who has been assigned to Chi Chi Jima, in the Volcano islands, as the American military government representative and his nearest neighbors are in Yokosuka, Japan, 500 miles away.
The Pobsts were left on the tiny speck of rock and vegetation several months ago. Pobst reports to the navy in Hawaii that he is getting along quite well in his new job and has been "pretty busy."
Chief Pobst is the first navy enlisted man ever to hold such a post. As the only American on the island he is its governor, business adviser, lawyer, judge, school-teacher, and agriculture expert.
The Pobsts, including Mrs. Pobst and their 12-year-old daughter, Carol, live in an American-style
home that housed the Japanese weather station before the war. The cooking is done on an American range, but from there on out the similarity with modern living ends.
Groceries are shipped from Guam, 1,000 miles away, by ship and the service is monthly. The ship arrivals are headaches for Pobst. He must declare a holiday whenever the vessel arrives.
The Navy selected Pobst for the job because of his unusual Jack-of-all-trades qualifications. Being somewhat of a farmer he has taught the natives how to irrigate their crops and increase the yield. He also is carrying out experiments on the growth and development of various sub-tropical and tropical fruits on the islands.
Being a bit of a mechanic, the navy chief rigged up a refrigerator plant for the islands' fishermen, enabling them to increase their export of fresh fish.
CHESTERFIELD—LARGEST SELLING CIGARETTE IN AMERICA'S COLLEGES
AT MINNESOTA
Campus Food Market
We certify that Chesterfield is our largest selling cigarette by...2...to1
SIGNED Merton R. Burris
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!
Page 6 University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Jan. 31, 1952
Aggies' Defense Halts Jayhawks
By JACKIE JONES
Daily Kansan Sports Editor
The Oklahoma A&M defense, which is rated the best in the nation, proved its worth as the Aggies held Kansas to two points in the last quarter and went ahead to take a 49 to 45 decision from Coach "Phog" Allen's cage crew at Stillwater Wednesday night.
This was the second straight defeat for the Jayhawkers, which had held the number one or two spot in the national basketball ratings for four straight weeks.
A crowd of 10,000 persons saw a Kansas lead of five points at the end of the third quarter fade into a four point deficit as the final gun sounded.
Kansas got away to an early lead and except for a brief 29-28 lead by the Aggies late in the second quarter, the Jayhawkers were on top at the half.
In the third period it was the same story, with Kansas maintaining a slim, but decided margin. They out-scored the Aggies 12 to 8 in that quarter, but in the final stanza the Aggies outscored the team to work and it paid off with a highly prized victory of the fourth ranked team in the nation.
Clyde Lovelette, the All-American center from Indiana, had to
Agg-ravated
G. FT. F.
Johnson 6 6 3
Stockton 1 0 0
Haskins 0 0 0
Miller 0 0 0
Darcey 2 2 5
Mattick 4 4 3
Pager 0 0 0
Sheets 1 2 5
Rogers 2 0 3
Roark 0 2 2
Ward 0 1 4
Okla. A&M (49)
Totals ... 16 17 25
Kay (45)
G. FT. F.
Kenney 2 2 2
Lienhard 1 2 2
Smith 1 1 0
Heitholt 0 0 2
Lovellette 7 4 4
Born 1 0 5
Hougland 2 3 4
D. Kelley 1 3 4
Hong 0 0 3
Keller 0 0 3
A. Kelley 0 0 0
Kansas may have suffered a double blow, as Lovellette was forced to leave the game in the last minute of play with an ankle injury.
Score By Quarters
share his scoring honors with Don Johnson of the Aggies. Both players netted 18 points. Lovellette had been averaging 28.9 points a game, to lead all individual scoring in the major-college ranks.
SCORE BY
Kansas 18 13 12 2 -45
Okla. A&M 15 15 12 11 -49
Free throws missed: Kansas: Kenney, Smith, Lovellette, D. Kelley 3. Oklahoma A&M: Johnson, Mattick 2. Sheets 2.
tosses for a total of six points and Lienhard was able to net only one goal and a pair of free-throws for four.
Bob Kenney and Bill Lienhard, two consistent scorers for Kansas this season were again unable to aid the Jayhawk scoring effort. Kenney scored two goals and two charity
Duquesne 87, Akron 36
Yale 58, Amherst 5 5
Army 83, Brown 64
Michigan 81, Weston U. 59
St. John's (NY) 69, Fordham 56
Penn State 53, Navy 49
West Vae. 67, Pittsburgh 47
On offense the teams were equal, Oklahoma A&M scoring 16 from the field and Kansas 15. The biggest difference between the two clubs was the great last quarter defensive play of the Aggies. They scored eight straight points while Kansas went scoreless, taking over a 40 to 43 lead. From that time on the Aggies had it all the way.
Bill Hougland was the second leading Kansas scorer with seven points and Dean Kelley had five.
Cage Scores
This was the first time that Lovellette has been stopped under 20 points this season. In the last quarter the giant center was limited to only a pair of free throws.
8343
FLYING BOXCAR DROPS HOWITZER—United Nations ground forces in Korea which find themselves in a tight spot can request delivery by air of practically any weapon they might need. Here is a 105MM howitzer being released from a C-119 flying boxcar. Attached to three 100-foot parachutes the 5,000-pound artillery weapon will be lowered gently to the earth.
Weaver
901 Mass.
a world of storage space with Woodcraft Closets $ 2 7^{\prime \prime} \times 2 1^{\prime \prime} \times6 0^{\prime \prime} $ , double door, 9.98
- solid wood frame throughout
- all framing at least 3/4" thick
- three heavy steel hinges screwed in place, not nailed.
- under ordinary conditions won't sag, warp,
bend, or fall apart with constant use
- 2-minute automatic spring lock assembly
- dust proof . . moth proof.
METAL WARDROBE
Weaver's Notions—Main Floor
Seton Hall 70, St. Francis (NY) 60
Clemson 71, Furman 66
Virginia 78, Geo. Wash. 76
Ga. Tech 66, Miss. State 64
Mississippi 68, La. State 65
Stetson 71, Bowling Green 67
Centenary 60, Northwest LA. 57
Youngstown 84, Baldwin Wal. 82
East. Illinois 81, J. Millinik 64
Okla. A&M 94, Kansas 45
Wayne (Mic.) 52, Valparaiso 47
Case 67, Carnegie Tech 47
Lewis 70, Aurora 43
---
YOUR EYES
YOUR EYES
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
眼
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Take the HOPPING
out of SHOPPING
One Stop
One Bundle
Many Savings
Save time! Save steps! Save energy
AND SAVE
buyin
Save time! Save steps! Save energy!
AND SAVE MCNEY Do all your food buying at Cole's and Rusty's and take the hopping out of shopping. Shop all around our markets and enjoy the comfort and convenience of one-stop shopping . . . the economy of many savings.
Fine granulated 10 lb. bag
**SUGAR** 89c
IGA Sno Kreem 3 lb. can
**SHORTENING** 79c
Good Value 1 lb.
**OLEO** 21c
IGA Condensed tall cans
**MILK** 3/39c
Hunt's Blue No. 2½ cans
**PLUMS** 19c
OUR delicious MEATS Rodeo Smoked, half or whole HAMS 49c lb. Our own homemade SAUSAGE 35c lb. Panready FRYERS 63c lb. Wisconsin Longhorn CHEESE 59c lb.
OUR delicious MEATS
The
Farm-Fresh Produce
Calif. Iceberg large heads
LETTUCE 2/25c
Red Ripe Slicing 1 lb. tubes
TOMATOES 2/29c
Calif. Pascal large stalks
CELERY 2/25c
For Winter Health 96's
GRAPEFRUIT 10/49c
Calif. Navel 288's
ORANGES 2 doz. 59c
Snow Crop Fresh 10 oz. pkg.
BROCCOLI 25c
RUSTY'S Food Center 23RD AND LOUISIANA LOW PRICES EVERYDAY OPEN TWENTY THIRD AND SUNDAYS ICA LOTS OF FREE PARKING SPACE COLE'S Food Center 2ND AND LUNCOLN EVERYDAY LOW PRICES
THE HISTORY OF THE ROMAN CITY OF ALEXANDRIA
By J. M. B. S. D. A. S. E. N. O. P. A. G. M. I. U. V. X. Y.
Published in The New York Times on November 18, 2016.
Thursday, Jan. 31, 1952
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
KU Dropped To Fourth By AP Basketball Poll
Kansas State, which soundly trounced the Kansas cage crew in Manhattan Saturday night, moved to the number two spot in the latest weekly, Associated Press basketball poll.
Kansas, which held the number one or two spot for the past four weeks, dropped down two places to fourth.
Kentucky climbed into the top position, but the Kentuckians had only a narrow margin over Kansas State and Illinois, the third-ranked team.
Adolph Rupp's bluegrass quintet totaled 790 points to 755 for Kansas State and 745 for third place Illinois. These three were far out front. Fourth-place Kansas had 523 points and fifth-place St. Bonaventure, one of the two major undefeated teams left, had 457.
The United Press poll gave Illinois the top position, followed by Kentucky, Kansas State and Kansas.
This week's top 10 teams in the poll:
Team Points
1 Kentucky (32) 790
2 Kansas State (25) 755
3 Illinois (16) 745
4 Kansas (1) 523
5 St. Bonaventure (12) 454
6 St. Louis (1) 454
7 Duquense (1) 355
8 Iowa (2) 332
9 Washington (4) 292
10 West Virginia (10) 245
Slugging Henry Wins Bout Easily
Clarence Henry, who weighed 187 pounds compared to 180 for Bob Satterfield, slugged the once durable Chicago battler into complete defeat in one minute and 41 seconds before 6,880 fans in the Chicago stadium.
It didn't take long for the referee to end the battle. Satterfield was draped over the ropes and took an eight count after Henry tagged him with a right hook. Hardly had he recovered before he was on the seat of his pants for a nine count, and he was barely on his feet before Henry drove him a clean left hook which sent him down for another nine. That was enough.
Chicago — (U,P) — A possible successor to boxing's famed Brown Bomber Joe Louis made a setup of a rough challenger Wednesday night.
"Now I'd like to fight the guy who'll give me the biggest gate," Henry said, "and that seems to me to be (Rocky) Marciano."
Denver University Swimmers To Meet Kansas In Robinson
Paced by a wave of fine freestylers, Denver's undefeated swimming team invades Robinson Gym pool at 3:30 p.m. today.
Bob Seymour's Pioneers will be shooting at their fifth consecutive triumph. They already hold wins over the Wyoming Invitational Referee, duals against Colorado and Colorado Mines, and a triangular with Colorado college and Camp Carson.
Don Brown, Colorado Springs freshman, heads DU's free-style brigade. The versatile yearling already has splashed two clockings below present Skyline Eight records in the 100-yard free style and 150-yard individual medley.
He'll get an argument in the '100 from KU's Dick Elfin. The Wichita sophomore recorded a :59.6 in winning that event against Nebraska. He also won the 120-yard individual medley and anchored the Jayhawks' winning 400-yard free style relay foursome.
Against this array, Jayhawker Coach Walt Mikols will field a promising young club which upset Nebraska. 49-44, in its first meet Jan. 12. Kansas will be without the services of a fine breastrooker, Tom Payne, who was called to Naval cadet training at the close of the first semester.
Mahlon Ball, Lawrence sophomore; John Ashley, Topeka junior; Bob Wellborn, Wichita senior, and Sam Perkins, Olathe junior, will join Elfin against the Denver squad.
COLLEGE OF SCIENCES
MICKEY BETHEL
Mickey Bethel, College freshman, left the University at the end of the fall semester to play baseball this spring for one of the New York Yankee ball clubs.
College Student Joins Yankees
BY JERRY RENNER
Mickey, whose home is in Concordia, got his start playing for the VFW town team in the spring of 1950. A salesman saw him play and got him a tryout with a semi-professional ball club, the Superior (Neb.) Knights.
The team tied for 6th place in the national semi-professional tournament in Wichita last summer.
Joe McDermott, Yankee scouter, saw Mickey play in a tournament in Super Bowl XII, asking his right pitching and asked him to play with the Yanks.
The six-foot, 175 pound, youthful pitcher signed with them last fall. This spring Mickey has not yet received his assignment. He may go to Lake Wales, Fla., to a ball school or may be sent directly to a farm club.
"Floyd Stickney, the Knights manager, liked my pitching and signed me up." Mickey said. "My win-loss for the season was 6-3."
"Most of my ball playing will have to come after I'm out of the service. My draft board has me classified 1-A." Mickey said.
NEW STUDENTS... Join the Old
For RECREATION
AT
BRUNSWICKS
SNOOKER POOL
714 Mass.
Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertiser
WELCOME STUDENTS
For Your APPAREL NEEDS
Come To
GIBBS
Where Price and Quality Are On Good Terms
Gibbs Clothing Co.
811 Mass. Street
The Fifth Annual Presentation of the University of Kansas Light Opera Guild
*
*
"THE BARTERED BRIDE"
A COMIC OPERA BY
Bedrich Smetana and Karel Sabina
TUNEFUL MUSIC
GAY DANCES
AMUSING STORY
THE GUILD HAS PRESENTED "THE MIKADO" (GILBERT-SULLIVAN), "THE GONDOLIERS" (GILBERT-SULLIVAN), "SWEETHEARTS" (HERBERT), AND "THE PINK LADY" (KARYLL).
February 4th, 5th, and 8th at 8:15 p.m.
FRASER THEATER
*
Matinee February 7th at 3:15
Admission 75c (State tax included) All Seats Reserved
Ticket Office At Green Hall and Bell's Music Co. Opens Jan. 31
X
C
11-49
2021.1.1
---
Quix
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 31, 1952
Alpha Phi Sorority Announces Engagements Of Four Women
Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Keeney, Elgin, Ill., announce the engagement of their daughter, Virginia, to Robert Heller, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Heller, Arlington Heights, Ili.
Miss Keeney in a fine arts senior. Mr.Heller is a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity at Iowa State college and is a senior in industrial economics there.
Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Coons, Hutchinson, announce the engagement of their daughter, Leola Marie Stewart, to James L. Claussen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Claussen, Teoka.
Miss Stewart is an education
enior. Mr. Claussen is a College
junior and a member of Pi Kapps Alpha fraternity.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Lee Kreger, Miller, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, June, to Henry Botts Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Botts Sr. Carthage, Mo.
Miss Kreger is a fine arts senior. Mr. Botts is a chemical engineering senior at Purdue university.
Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Price, Baxter Springs, announce the engagement of their daughter, Laura, to Lt. Glen H. Beecher, (USAF) son of Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Beecher, Rochester, Minn.
Miss Price is an education senior. Lt. Beecher is stationed at Anchorage, Alaska.
BY DIANNE STONEBROKER
Each spring fashion designers stun
the feminine world with something
just a little different from what
it used to teach. Last spring.
Among the new fads a touch of
white in accessories, and denim for
any occasion are two sure signs of
spring.
A little white is a lot of fashion, so the designers say. Pumps with white binding, white gloves, white butching on handbags, white buttons at the cuff of the shortie glove and white piping on higher-waist-band belts are a few of the uses which will be given to white. White will be featured alone, with grey, with beige, with black or with brown.
Some other hints for spring are: the Middy look will go from blouse to dress, Capezio-styled shoes will walk away with footwear styles, dress-length nightgowns with full skirts will make a debut in night-wear and the spring collection of blouses will be steering clear of sleeves.
A Little White, A Lot Of Denim Are Hints For Spring Fashion
It will not be unusual to go shopping in gray denim tailors, to go to an afternoon bridge party in a
Bv DIANNE STONEBROKER
denim dirndl, to go to a tea in a denim tailored suit, or to go to a formal dance in a black denim gown. Playtime can no longer be exclusive with denim.
The spring fashions aren't drastic, they aren't fantastic, and they aren't ridiculous. They are like combining old recipes to make a new dish. Remember, if they floor you at first, they'll flatter you later. That is fashion.
Virginia Ireland, Pi Beta Phi,
Lawrence, to Robert Beu, Delta
Upsilon, Beloit.
Myra Roesler, Delta Gamma,
Claflin, to John Griffin, Sigma Nu,
Salina.
Plenty of Housing Available Plenty of rooms for students in both private homes and dormitories are still available, Mrs. Ruth Nash, secretary of the housing office, said today. As usual, the demand for apartments and houses still exceeds the supply.
Campus Pinnings
Eighty species of fish have been identified in the 600 miles of streams in the Great Smokies.
Journalism Sorority Initiates Five Women
Plenty of Housing Available
Five women were initiated into Theta Sigma Phi, honorary professional journalism sorority, Tuesday evening at the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority house.
Schildt Undergoes Surgery
They were Jeanne Fitzgerald, Jacqueline Jones, Joan Lambert, Cynthia McKee and Diane Stonebrake, all journalism juniors. Desert was served to the group following the initiation ceremony.
Willard Schuldt, College freshman, who played left end on the football team, entered Watkins hospital Jan. 24 for surgery the following day. Hospital authorities report his condition as "good."
Westhoff-Maxwell Engagement Told
Excellent clinical facilities. Athletic and recreational activities. Dormitories on the campus.
ENGINEERS and PHYSICISTS HUGHES COOPERATIVE PLAN for MASTER OF SCIENCE DEGREES
January 30th is the closing date for indicating your interest. See your Placement Office for details. A formal application will be forwarded to you at your request.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Westhoff, Olathe, announce the engagement of their daughter, Evelyn, to Mr. Gordon Maxwell, son of Mr. and Mrs. George E. Maxwell, Quinter.
REGISTRATION February 25. Students are granted professional recognition by the U.S. Department of Defense and Selective Service.
(Nationally Accredited)
An outstanding college serving a sublid profession.
a spacious profession.
Doctor of Optometry degree in three years for students entering with sixty or more semester credits in specified Liberal Arts courses.
CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY
CHICAGO COLLEGE OR OPTOMETRY
1845-H Larrabee Street
Chicago 14, Illinois
The engagement was recently announced at Watkins hall by Miss Julia Willard, housemother. Judith Tate, accompanied by Dixie Badgell, sang "Because."
Address Correspondence to Hughes Research and Development Laboratories Engineering Personnel Department Culver City, California
Miss Westoff is a College junior. Mr. Maxwell is a Medicine freshman. The wedding will be in the summer.
Munger President Of Delta Gamma
Nancy Munger, College sophomore, was recently elected president of Delta Gamma social sorority. Other officers elected were Betty Berry, vice-president; Pat Roney, landings board chairman; Myraoesler, scholarship chairman; helma Iden, assistant treasurer; Nancy Cater, social chairman; Virginia Cox, ritual chairman, and carolyn Nardyz, intramurals chairman.
(When the University finds it necessary to use a February 15th closing date to assure full student participation, this will be permissible.)
Admission Free Film Showing-Group Discussion Hawk's Nest-Feb.6-7:30 p.m.
EUROPE 1952
All those interested in traveling through Europe this summer are invited to attend a special film showing and discussion in the Hawk's Nest, balcony, February 6th, at 7:30 p.m. Free coke and coffee. Admission free.
Don't delay in making your summer travel plans definite. Space on sailings and flights to Europe are extremely limited. Make reservations promptly. For descriptive literature on tours and places to go, phone 3661 or see—
DOWNS TRAVEL SERVICE
1015 Massachusetts Mrs. Lois Odaffer
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Phone 3661 Mr. Joe Brown
An Open Letter To Veterans
G. I. Joe University of Kansas
Dear Joe:
Let's do a little reminiscing on our life a few years back. Remember that famous saying, "Hurry up and wait?" Remember the time we spent in those long lines, waiting to get shot, get clothes, get food, or get chewed out?
Remember at the end of the line we always found some sour faced non-com or C.O. giving us a bunch of guff? If you look back on these as pleasant times which gave you happy memories then you must have been on the smafu end of the line. On the other hand, if when you were discharged, you swore these things were behind you and as a civilian you were going to spend the least possible time waiting in line and taking guff, then you're with me.
Because of the unpleasant memories mentioned above, we have tried to make civilian life as pleasant as possible for our customers. Through efficiency waiting is kept at a minimum. Through experience our help is carefully chosen, and they realize that their main job is to serve the customers in a courteous, cheerful and friendly manner.
We are authorized to honor vet requisitions for books and supplies and we promise to give you the service which private enterprise has given the American public for years.
As a final thought remember what we were told we were fighting for—the American Way of Life, or Democracy. Private enterprise is said to be the backbone of democracy, and the small businessman is the strength of private enterprise. Why not continue your fight against other forms of government by supporting private enterprise? We appreciate your business.
Sincerely,
Bill Rowlands
1401 Ohio St.,
Lawrence, Kans.
P. S. If you aren't satisfied and have a gripe, call for me. I will be glad to punch your card.
Rowlands
1237 Oread and 1401 Ohiq
Page 9
the sour our look times stories the the these wehe as a as ag ing ou're
mum.
lp is
they
is to
urte-
manor vet sup- you inter- american
member
right-
way of
en-
back-
the
length
not
other
import
ap-
KFKU 'Brain Busters' Quiz Features Faculty Members
By WILLIAM E. STANFILL
The comparison was made because of the many appearances made by Professor Telfel on Brain Busters, one of the several student and faculty participation programs broadcast by University radio.
Emil L. Telfel, associate professor of journalism, was today described as "KU's Oscar Levant" by R. Edwin Browne, director of University Radio KFKU.
Brain Busters is a regular Thursday night feature of the University radio. It is similar to the Information Please program heard over national networks, in which the master of ceremonies attempts to stump a board of experts.
Professor Telfel has made more regular appearances on Brain Busters than any other faculty member.
The board of experts for Brain Busters is composed of University faculty members. The panel is made up of three faculty members and one guest expert chosen from citizens of Lawrence, faculty members wives, or other personalities.
Master of ceremonies for the program is Allen Crafton, professor of speech. He selects many of the questions which are used in the weekly attempt to stump the experts. Students and citizens of the state are encouraged to send in any questions they wish which they believe will baffle the experts.
"If an outstanding student is found that might lend interest to the program he is considered for appearance on the program as one of the panel of experts." Mr. Browne said. The persons appearing on the program receive no remuneration for their participation.
Another University radio program, entirely different from Brain Busters, is the KU Calvacade of Hits It features the five most popular tunes played during the week by University students as determined by a campus-wide popularity poll.
Each organized house has an appointed radio representative who conducts a poll of the five tunes played most in his or her house each week. From the results of these individual polls the five most popular tunes of the peak are determined. Their order of selection is mined by the number of listings each tune receives. Seventy-five houses are represented in the poll.
The KU Cavalcade of Hits includes a short resume of the week's current campus news and the presentation of a student speaker each week who is chosen to present his views on a subject of current student interest.
This is the first program of its type ever attempted by University radio. The idea was originated by Mr. Browne in an effort to provide a program for the students concerning student "life and thoughts."
All phases of the program are student operated but are supervised by Mr. Brown, Announcer for the show is Lynn Oshborn, College senior, and it is engineered by Jack Long, engineering senior. The show is written and directed by William Stanfill, journalism junior.
Memo Pad is written by Mary Cooper, journalism junior, and is a reminder of coming cultural events in the Kansas City, Lawrence, and Topeka area. The events, such as lectures, concerts, and outstanding movies are listed along with the dates, times, and places of the events.
KU Cavalcade of Hits is presented each Tuesday at 7 p.m. and lasts till when another student written program, Memo Pad, is heard till 7:30.
The children haven't been forgotten by the University radio either. From 2:30 till 2:45 p.m. on Mondays, in the Carpet, with an all-student cast pictures great works of literature directed to the children of the state.
Works that are operas, ballets, and symphonies are dramatized into simplified story form which can be performed in the fourth, fifth, and sixth grades.
The stories are adapted and re-written from the original works by Ruby Motta, KFKU script writer and producer.
The casts for the programs are composed of University Radio Player members, who are students interested in gaining well-rounded experience in radio techniques.
3-Day Course Held At Medical Center
A three-day postgraduate course in pediatrics ended yesterday at the University Medical center in Kansas City.
In response to many requests this year's course dealt only with pediatrics, dropping the obstetrics, according to H. G. Ingham, director of the extension program in medicine. New this year was a series of ward rounds each morning and demonstrations of pediatric techniques.
NEW STUDENTS WELCOME TO K. U.
Let Us Handle Your Cleaning Problems.
A. A. G.
University Daily Kansan
We Offer
3 Day Service
1 Day Specials
Phone 75 New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCE
Student Book Store To Move March 1
The Student Union book store will move to a basement room in the west end of Strong hall until the new union addition is completed. L. E. Woolley, union director, said today.
Moving day is scheduled March 1 and the book store should be back in its new quarters in the union by Sept.1.
Thursday, Jan. 31, 1952
Medals Finally Delivered
Hartford, Conn.—(U.P.)—World War II service medals finally caught up with Joseph Adorno, state treasurer. Three medals arrived five years after his discharge from the army.
University Extension Opens New Kansas City Classes
University Extension has opened five new classes at the Kansas City center.
Classes in business and professional speaking, time and motion study, millinery, television production techniques and voice appeal began last week. Interior decoration begins Feb. 6.
Other classes to start this season are: Production control, industrial training, high school guidance program, tool design, tool engineering today's home for today's people, effective advertising, supervision, accounting and mechanical drawing.
A soapy finger dab will silk down stray hairs caused by cold weather.
Plymouth
Your
. . . has a used car priced for you.
Buddy
GALLAGHER 634 Mass. Ph.1000
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
ANNUAL WINTER SALE
BEGINNING FRIDAY, FEB.1
SUITS ... off 25% *
TOPCOATS ... off 25% *
SLACKS ... off 25% *
SPORTCOATS ... off 25% *
TUXEDOS ... off 25% *
JACKETS ... off 25%
(Heavy and Light Weight)
SPORTSHIRTS ... off 25%
SWEATERS ... off 25%
(All Wool, Part Cashmere, Pure Cashmere)
ALL-WOOL ROBES ... off 20%
GLOVES & MUEFELERS ... off 25%
ONE SPECIAL GROUP OF:
Belts, suspenders, underwear, ties. jewelry, shirts, jackets, socks, sportshirts, pajamas
—ALL 1/2 PRICE
- Note: Trouser length will be furnished free. There will be a minimum charge for other alterations.
the
university shop
ACROSS FROM LINDLEY
PHONE 715
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 31, 1952
★
we at STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE
are so sure that this is the finest precision fountain pen at any price under $10, that we give you a . . .
10-DAY MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE *
on the new
PARKER "21"
TRY IT OUT for 10 days!
If you're not completely satisfied with the new Parker "21"—simply return the pen to us within 10 days and you will get a full refund.
*
Here is writing perfection at a popular price. Real Parker beauty. Unsurpassed for style and precision at any price below $10. Your choice of red, black blue, or green, with fine, medium, or broad point. Take yours home today on a 10 day trial . . . with our Money-Back Guarantee.
$5
Plus F. E. Tax
1. Super-smooth Octanium point...resilient, durable.
2. Slip-on metal cap . . no twist, no turn, no threads.
3. Special ink-feed regulator . steady, no-skip even line.
4. Concealed filler . . . faster, easier, cleans as it fills.
5. Pli-glass ink reservoir ... (no rubber parts).
6. Uses dry-writing, superbrilliant, Superchrome ink.
STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE
01 05
1. (1) $ a=3, b=-1, c=2 $
Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone K.U.376
Classified Advertising Rates
day days days
25 words or less 50c $1.99
Additional words ... 75c $1.99
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be sent by mail or courier during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univer- torial Business office. Journalism blight. 24 5/8 p.m. the day before publication date.
RIDERS: From Kansas City, Mo., 63r2
and Brookside, to University, Monday,
Wednesday, Friday, 6:30 a.m. Rheva
Spitcraft, jackson 1936. ^
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether for business or leisurequiries. Mrs. Lois Odaffer, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass.
TRANSPORTATION
COMMUTING: 8-5 daily for K.C. Kan
Car pool or riders wanted. Call Fa. 7878
Ask us about family rates, sky coach,
and round trip reductions. All expense
bills. Fall and winter cruises. Book
on campus. Summer. Call Miss Glesman at
National Bank for information and res-
ervations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30-
BUSINESS SERVICE
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biolog- miscellaneous, Mrs. J. Roscoe. 838 Laf. 4. upstairs. Ph. 2775 after a 4pm.
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses,
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs.
Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode
Island. tf
TYPING—Theses, term papers, matchbooks, letters, etc. Prompt and accurate service. Mrs. Hall. 1344W. 506 West Sixth.
TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention 10 years these typing Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio. FI 1601.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries.
Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6
am, until midnight.
RADIO AND TV repair service on all
masters. Largest stock of finest quality
TVs. We have the finest test equipment.
We also provide efficient service. Bowman Radio and
Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont.
Free pickup and delivery. tff
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 stenil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. tf
CRYSTAL CAFTA serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malls, home-made pies and
Comfort! Convenience!
JAYHAWKER
NEW Push Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
Phone 10 for Sho Time
Now thru Saturday
Frankie Laine
"Sunnyside of the Street"
Late News - Cartoon
Comfort! Convenience!
JAYHAVER
NEW Parkside CUSHIONED CHAIRS
❶
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
Last Times Tonite Open 6:45 p.m. Randolph Scott "SANTA FE" and Rosalind Russell "Woman of Distinction" Friday-Saturday
Thursday, Jan. 31, 1952
THE SON OF DR.JEKYLL
A COLUMBIA PICTURE
MARINE LOUIS HAYARD + PROF EMILIANCE - ALEXANDER KNOX
Lash Larve
cakes. Free parking space for customers.
amidnight. Crystal Cafe, 609 Vt.
FOR SALE
TRAILER HOUSE, 25 feet, 1947, in excellent condition. Reduced to sell immediately. 929 Comm. Phone 2588M. 2-4
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our staff is full of passion for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf
Lash Larue
Renegades"
"Ghost Town
Ch. 11 "Flying Disc Man"
CLOCK, RADIO, and portable radio clearance! Nationally advertised brands are often music to listen to a clock radio. See these values at B.F. Goodrich, 292 Mass.
and
FOR RENT
ROOFS FOR GIRLS at 1216 Louisiana.
Ask for Mrs. Wilson; phone 32483. 1-31
BEDROOM AND study suite for two boys. Private bath, entrance. Linens furnished. Basement. $15 a month. Call 2798M. 2-4
Renegades
VERY DESIRABLE room for student or employed woman. 1232 La. Phone 2681. 2-4
STUDY AND bedroom suite. Private entrance. Instructor or graduate student. Quiet surroundings. Call 3127M.
LARGE COMFORTABLE rooms for boys at reasonable rates: excellent location on bus line. Phone 1671R. 2-6
LARGE. NICELY furnished room in quiet, modern home, convenient to KU and town. To student or employed young No. Smoking: $30 a month. 127. 2-4
ROOM FOR one or two boys. Reasonable and clean. Call 1473R. 2-4
ROOMS FOR MEN, super plain single beds. Can take single, double, or triple in room. Steam heat, large rooms, quiet surroundings on the Hill, 1155 La-2
ROOMS FOR UPPER classmen and graduate students. Quiet, comfortable single rooms, close to campus. For second semester. 1131 Ohio. Phone 1784W.
SINGLE ROOM, clean and quiet location, close to hill. Only one other roomer; close to bath, furnace heat. 407 West 13th. 2-5
VACANCY for boys near campus, 1218
Mississippi. Phone 514. 2-5
TRAILERS FOR RENT, two wheel and four wheels. Have some good used trailers for sale; also a 1983 Ford two-horse truck. Hatchell Truck Rental, 843-21 North 3rd.
ROOM FOR BOYS, vacancy for 2 boys
1122 Miss. Phone 495.
1122 Miss. Phone 495.
STARTS TODAY
...Introducing The "Betty Grable"
SHIRLEY YAMAGUCHI!
University Daily Kansan Page 1
"Why did he have to marry someone like you...!"
T
1
"Don't Call My Wife a Geisha Girl!
The story of a miscegenetic love!
图二
20
EMPIRE MUSEUM
RELEASE
starring Shirley YAMAGUCHI · Don TAYLOR
ADDED: Color Cartoon News
JAPANESE WAR BRIDE
CAMERON MITCHELL · MARIE WINDSOR
STARTS SATURDAY OWL SUNDAY 11:15 p.m.
HE LED ZOO TH
HE LED 200 WOMEN ON AN ADVENTURE
THAT MOST MEN FEARED TO FACE!
WESTWARD
THE WOMEN"
"Battleground"
. . . with that
TAYLOR·DARCEL
ROBERT
GAL!!
Hope EMERSON John McINTIRE
Granada PHONE 946
MISCELLANEOUS
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
buyers. buyers. William J. Van
Almen, 3110R
THE MARKET Research Department of Procter and Gamble has several traveling positions open for young women in grades 9-12 to conduct consumer surveys, sell ages 81-26 in simple arithmetic; drivers license; all courses plus holiday training per semester; provide training per Virginia Weiss, Procter & Gamble, Wgynne Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio. 2-5
WANTED: Woman student to share
pleasant 3-room apartment; private bath;
good location. Call 1474M before 8
a.m.
HORN-RIMMED glasses in red case around Fraser or West Hills. Have nam and KU address in case. Call Joan Carter, 537. Reward.
LOST
WOMAN'S wrist watch found in Memorial Union building. Will owner please write identification to Box 5, University Daily Kansan? 2-5
FOUND
MAN'S light-weight top coat. Found in
Stonligh wall. Owner may identify and
investigate.
pay_for this ad. Call the Kansan, KU 37
HELP WANTED
OLLEGE SENIOR wants to buy or re-
fort trumpet in good condition for u
r children and private welfaes. exce
lent care, guarantee. Cd. di
duray at 1713 between 6 and 7 p.m.
2-4 p.m.
Lawyer's Art Work In Museum Display
HURRY LAST DAY
A colection of 15 water colld landscapes painted by James M Haughey, law '39, is on display in the Museum of Art.
Haughey is now a lawyer in Billings, Mont. In 1949 he was voted the outstanding young man of the year by the Billings chamber of commerce. While attending the University Haughey did art work for several campus publications.
Included in the exhibit are several landscapes done in Montana and a few pictures which were painted on the west coast. The display will remain in the museum the remainder of this month.
Together Again In Each Others Arms!
ROBERT MITCHUM AVA GARDNER
Bob and Ava Are
JACKSON
My Forbidden Past
THE KIND OF WOMAN WHO MADE NEW ORLEANS FAMOUS!
with MELVYN DOUGLAS · JANIS CARTER · Lucile Watson
ZOELE WATSON
AN RKO-RADIO PICTURE
ADDED Color Cartoon and Late News Evening Features: 7:41 and 9:32 p.m.
STARTS TOMORROW
Boy What Collateral!
Boy What a Story!
Boy What Stars!
Boy, It's Just Plain Terrific!
I.O.U.
$7,000-or 7 weeks of my Life...Evie
She didn't have the money...
but she had the cutest collateral in town!
"The Lady Pays Off"
LINDA STEPHEN GIGI
DARNELL·MCNALLY·PERREAU
Matinee Friday 2:30 p.m. Doors open 2:00 p.m.
Evening Features 7:41 and 9:32 p.m.
Continuing Saturday and Sunday.
UI
Continuous Saturday and Sunday from 1 p.m.
New PATEE PHONE 321
Where "KON TIKI" Plays Soon
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 31, 1952
Today's Kansan Is First Issue In New Building
Today's issue of the University Daily Kansan is the first to be published from the new Journalism building. The news-editorial and advertising — circulation departments already have moved in and are conducting business as usual.
However, composing and printing for the Kansan probably will be done in the old building for the entire spring semester, Victor J. Danilov, assistant professor of journalism, said.
Even though the room numbers in the new building necessarily have been changed, the phone numbers remain the same. The new room numbers are as follows:
Business office, 111; news room, 112; Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism, 105; Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism, 108; Victor J. Danielov, 112a; Frances Grinstead, associate professor of journalism, 203.
Emil L. Telfel, associate professor of journalism, 204; Calder M. Pickett, assistant professor of journalism 222; Robert W. Doores, instructor in journalism, 111a, and Robert Wentworth, assistant professor of journalism, 302.
Foreign Students Tour KC Points
After one semester of Americanization at the University, KU foreign students took a new look at American life by an afternoon tour of Kansas City yesterday.
After visiting various cultural centers in Kansas City in the afternoon, the group attended a concert by the Kansas City Philharmonic orchestra in the evening.
Places visited included the William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art, the Mary Atkins Museum of Fine Arts, the Community Christian church, the Country Club Plaza, and the Liberty Memorial.
The field trip was planned by the foreign student committee of which Donald K. Alderson, assistant dean of men, is chairman. This year there are 124 foreign students on the KU campus coming from 42 countries.
This was the second tour arranged this school year for the KU foreign students. Last fall 82 students spent an afternoon visiting industries and the state house in Topeka.
Sophomore Representatives To Plan Parties Tonight
Sophomore class representatives will plan next semester's entertainment schedule at a meeting in the AWS lounge in Strong at 7 tonight.
All sophomores who do not live in an organized house and who did not choose a representative are also invited to attend the meeting.
Chaplin Comedy To Be Shown Friday
"City Lights," a re-release of the Charlie Chaplin comedy produced in 1930, will be shown in Hoch auditorium at 7:30 p.m. Friday.
This is the sixth of 10 movies presented as part of the University film series. Students and faculty members are admitted free.
Alumni Nominating Committees Named
Membership of the two nominating committees that will provide candidates for the annual election of the University Alumni association were announced today by Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary.
Olin K. Petefish, law '35, Lawrence, is chairman of one committee. Serving with him will be Tom W. Poor, 25, Olathe, and Mrs. E. Bert Collard, Jr. (Betty Tholen Collard), 37. Leavenworth.
The opposing slate of candidates will be nominated by a committee of Roy A. Edwards, '42, chairman, Kansas City, Kan.; Prof. George W. Bradshaw, '34, Lawrence, and Mrs. Melvin F. Lindeman (Sue Johnston Lindeman), '42.
Members of the association will vote by mail during the spring with results announced at commencement in June. The annual election of the president, vice president and two directors is expected to produce several thousand votes.
Biology Laboratory Manual Goes Into Third Printing
A third printing of a laboratory manual entitled "Laboratory Directions for General Biology," by Dr Laurence C. Woodruff and Ruth E. McNair of the University of Kansas, has been completed by the William C. Brown company of Dubuque, Iowa.
Although the manual was tailored for use in KU's general biology course, it has been adopted by several other schools.
The first printing was made in 1947 and the second in 1949. The material in the manual has been limited to what the student can cover in one semester, Dr. Woodruff said. It is planned for use in zoological work at the Museum of Natural History and field trips on the campus.
75 Silver Dollars Bewilder Cashier
Most students pay their fees by check but there are the exceptions. The business office was only slightly amazed when Bob Marshall, business junior, pulled out eight ten-dollar bills but imagine the surprise when George Mayberry, sophomore engineer, calmly plunked down 75 silver dollars and a lone half dollar.
The bewildered business office employee didn't even bother to count the pile of silver-at least, not until the line of students shortened.
---
Future speakers and their dates:
February 10, Seba Eldridge, professor of sociology; February 17, Burton W. Marvin, dean of the
Clark To Open New Series Of Sociology On Air Talks
Carroll D. Clark, professor and chairman of the department of sociology and anthropology, will open the new series of Sociology on the Air talks over KLWN Sunday morning. He will speak at 9:45 on "The Challenge of Rural Life."
His broadcast will mark the first anniversary of the series, the only one of its kind sponsored by an American university on a commercial station. The department has also announced the list of speakers for the semester.
For three years Dr. Clark was sociological consultant to Governor Alfred M. Landon's state planning board. Having taught at Cornell, Oregon, Idaho and Connecticut universities, he has been chairman of the department at KU since 1933.
March 16, Hilden Gibson, professor and chairman of the department of human relations; March 23, John D. Bradley, assistant professor of social work; March 30, Nilo Loo Bello, instructor in sociology; April 6, Harold G. Barr, dean of the school of religion; April 13, Tom Yoe, head of the University public relations bureau.
School of Journalism; February 24,
Rhoten Smith, instructor in political
science; March 2, Marston M. Mc-
Cluggage, associate professor of
sociology; March 9, James E. Seaver,
assistant professor of history.
April 20, George Weber, graduate student in sociology; April 27, Rupert I. Murrill, instructor in anthropology and sociology; May 4, Orry Walz, graduate student in sociology; May 11, Melville O. Dalton, assistant professor of sociology and human relations.
200 Persons Attend Kansas UN Conference
More than 200 Kansas teachers, community leaders and representatives of civic, religious, and professional groups attended the fourth annual conference of the Kansas United Nations held Jan. 24 and 25 at the University.
The conference, which was sponsored by the non-governmental organizations section of the UN and University Extension, was an orientation event that provided new techniques of disseminating the information at community levels.
"Technologists have made the world increasingly small." Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy said in his greeting to the conference, "and we are next door neighbors with people from all over the world.
Mrs. Virginia Wilder, Haskell institute, was elected chairman of the Kansas UN for the coming year. She succeeds Mrs. V. B. Ballard, Wichita, who is now vice-chairman
"Leadership is not a comfortable position. It requires sacrifice," he said. "And if we cannot solve problems without resorting to warfare, we are not worthy of leadership."
Other addresses were given by V. G. J. Stavridi, reference director of the UN department of public information; Mrs. Florence Reynolds of the UN food and agricultural organization and Dr. Amiya Chakravarty, former adviser to the Indian delegation to the UN and now visiting professor at the University.
$250 Gift Given To Architecture
An anonymous $250 gift to be use for the advancement of architectural education at the University has been received by the KU Endowment association, Irvin Youngberg, secretary, announced today.
George M. Beal, professor of architecture, said the money has been placed on reserve with interest as no immediate plans have been made for its use. Professor Beal will direct the spending of the fund.
A solar laboratory was obtained through the use of gifts totaling $1,250 from an unknown donor in the past two years.
Professor Beal said the Eiil Saulinen Memorial exhibition of architecture will be on display in Marvin hall until Friday, Feb. 15.
The exhibition of drawings and photographs is being circulated by the American Federation of Arts. It was assembled by the Cranbrook Academy of Art, with which Saarinen was associated for many years.
Official Bulletin
Ph.D. reading exam in German, Saturday, 9-11 a.m., 306 Fraser. All books used in preparation must be turned in at 304 Fraser today.
Radio Players auditions, 4-5:30 and 8-9 tonight, EES building. Come prepared.
Danforth Chapel service, 8:30 a.m.
Sunday, Rev. Norman Brandt,
speaker. Sponsored by Gamma
Delta.
KU Table tennis club, 7:30 to night. Recreation room, Memorial Union.
Gamma Delta cost supper, 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Immanuel Lutheran church. Installation of officers and panel discussion, "The Layman in the Church."
60 County Clerks Attend
Third Annual Clerks' School
More than 60 county clerks from over Kansas attended the two-day meeting of the third annual county school at the University Jan. 18, 17.
The convention opened with a welcoming address by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. Dwight Payton, editor of the Overbrook Citizen, told the clerks that the very best government comes from the local, city and county levels.
Other sessions were given to a discussion of election procedures.
News Roundup
Truman Scratches Name In New Hampshire Race
Washington—(U.P.)President Truman said today that he would have his name removed from the New Hampshire presidential primary, but he added that this was not indicative of his plans for the future.
The chief executive told newsmen that if he decided to become a candidate for re-election, he would not have to enter any primaries.
Mr. Truman said the reason he was withdrawing from the New Hampshire primary was because there was no sense as he saw it in being entered in any preference primary.
The President for the first time in many weeks evidenced some displeasure about playing the question-and-answer game with reporters over his possible 1952 reelection plans.
State department spokesman Michael J. McDermott said that as yet he had no information on why the centers were ordered closed.
Iran Orders Closing Of U.S. Centers
Washington—(U.R.)The State department said today that Iran has ordered all U.S. information service and cultural centers in Iran closed except those in the capital of Tehran.
State department officials said, however, that they were not surprised at the action in view of word that Iran intended to close British centers.
Tackle Last Truce Agenda Problem
Panmunjom, Korea—(U.P)—The United Nations proposed today that Korean truce delegates start immediate discussion of the fifth and last agenda item in a new and definite attempt to end the war soon.
Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy, senior UN delegate, invited Communist Truce Chief Gen. Nam II to submit proposals for the fifth item at an early date to speed the dragging talks.
Agenda item five, called the "catch all" item, calls for "recommendations to the government of the countries concerned on both sides."
It was placed on the agenda primarily to give the Reds an "out" when the Allies refused to consider the question of withdrawing foreign troops from Korea.
UMT Urged On "Modest Scale" Now
Washington—Selective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey urged today that a universal military training program be started immediately "on a modest scale."
Hershey told the House Armed Services committee the draft and UMT "can and must" operate at the same time, but said the first "Umtees" would have to go into active military service after their training instead of into the reserves as originally planned.
However, Committee Chairman Carl Vinson told newsmen enough 18-year-olds could be spared from the draft pool so the "Umtees" could be placed in the reserves for $7\frac{1}{2}$ years after their six months training. Only in this way, the Georgia Democrat said, can a pool of trained reserves be built up so it will be possible to reduce the standing military force.
Washington—(U.P.)—House investigators are concerned by reports of "recriminations" against witnesses who have cooperated in their investigation of Communism.
Sources close to the House Un-American Activities committee said members hope to take steps "to remedy the situation and to prevent its recurrence in the future."
House Investigates 'Recriminations'
"These friendly witnesses," they said, "stand to lose their jobs even though they have broken away from Communism completely and have evidenced their loyalty to their country by coming before the committee to supply valuable information needed by the congress."
Cairo, Egypt—(U.P.)—Premier Aly Maher Pasha is ready to negotiate Egypt's dispute with Britain, a foreign office spokesman said today.
Premier Ready To Negotiate Dispute
The spokesman said the new premier was prepared to "accept any proposals which would satisfy Egypt's national aspirations."
Cairo itself was still tense and a feeling of nervousness persisted among the citizens although there have been no new outbreaks since Saturday's bloody rioting in the capital.
The government shook up the nation's top security posts and warned "unruly elements" that Army and police forces would shoot at the first signs of new disturbances.
Churchill Faces Vote Of Confidence
London—(U.P.)-British Prime Minister Winston Churchill faces a parliamentary vote of confidence today on his conservative government's super-austerity program to cure Britain's economic ills.
The Labor opposition party Wednesday denounced the conservative proposed cuts in the welfare state and challenged Churchill to a vote of confidence.
A vote of non-confidence would mean the fall of the Conservative government, but this is not expected since Churchill seemed assured of liberal support which would guarantee his majority in Parliament.