Kansas State historical society
Khanda obsolete historical society
Topeka, Ks.
Topeka, Ks.
TOMMY HARRISON
TRAIL ROOM'S STAGECOACH—Prof. Raymond Eastwood, head of the drawing and painting department, and George Long, painter foreman, inspect the mural added to the Hawk's Nest during vacation. The work was done by Harry Crain, '52.-Kansan photo by Don Moser.
The Trail room, which is the upper half of the Hawk's Nest, was opened Sunday.
Union Trail Room Opened to Public
The new room will be the social center of the Student Union until hed. Nightly dances will be the main att
A part of the floor will be cleared every night for dancing. The room has soft-colored lights and a complete new paint job.
Friday, workers finished putting up a 47 by $ \frac{4}{12} $ foot canvas mural on the wall. The work depicts life along the trail and includes Indians, trappers, a stagecoach, and a covered wagon.
The painting was done by Harry Crain who received his bachelor of fine arts in August. All the members of Prof. Raymond Eastwood's advanced drawing and painting class entered a contest to do the job.
Prof. Eastwood picked the 10 best paintings and submitted them to the Union operating committee. They selected Mr. Crain's as the one most typifying the spirit of the Trail room.
Prof. Eastwood said the work does not depict any specific trail or time in history, but is more a study of life on the trail than a historical picture.
"The Trail room is just part of the new expanded service the Union will give students," Frank Burge, Union director, explained. Mr. Burge also said that during the day, the Trail room will be used as before for coffee and meals.
UN Conference Slated Jan. 26-27
The University's fifth annual United Nations conference will be held Jan. 26 and 27.
The theme of the conference will be "The United Nations After Seven Years."
The conference is held for representatives of business, civic, professional, religious, and educational organizations. The program supplies information for those who will interpret the UN in their home communities.
influences. The speaker list will include representatives from UN headquarters in New York.
$100 Law Award To Honor Student
Dan Hopson Jr. a third year law student from Phillipsburg, is the first winner of the C. C. Stewart award in law at the University, Dean Frederick J. Moreau announced today.
The KU Endowment association established the $100 award honoring Mr. Stewart, a Lawrence attorney.
Hoppson heads his class schoolally. He is associate editor of the new KU Law Review, which is published three times a year.
Dr. Richard H. Bolt, director of the acoustics laboratory at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, will speak on the nature of sound at 3:30 p.m. today in Strong auditorium.
Dr. Bolt is past president of the American Acoustical society. He is a member of Bolt-Beranek-Newman, acoustical consultants and is an internationally known acoustician.
Acoustics Expert To Talk at 3:30
Speaking o n "Architectural Acoustics," Mr. Bolt will explain the distribution, transmission, and absorption of sound in enclosures and applications to architectural planning.
Students in architecture, electrical engineering psychology, physics, education, and music education will attend the lectures. Also invited to attend the lectures are leading state school administrators. Members of the Kansas City and the Kansas chapter of the American Institute of Architects also have been invited.
Somewhere in Korea—(U.R.)—An American Marine was shot and slightly wounded today when his jeep was ambushed on a northern road to Seoul within 15 miles of the city and some 25 miles south of the battlefront.
Marine Shot Near Seoul
Dailu hansan
50th Year, No. 51
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
More Snow in Sight For Lawrence Area
Monday, Dec. 1, 1952
ID Cards Must Be Punched For Cage Games
Students must have their ID cards punched by Dec. 12 if they expect to see any of this season's basketball games.
In order to insure that all University students will see at least half of the home games despite the inadequate seating capacity of Hoch auditorium, the same card-punching system used in past years was put into effect this morning at the athletic office in Robinson gym.
Each student will be permitted to select one of two sets of games which he wishes to see.
The games on this season's sets as announced today by Athletic Business Manager Earl Falkenstien pre;
Set Number 1
Set 'Num08F
Dec. 19 Southern Methodist
Jan. 17 Kansas State
Feb. 10 Oklahoma
March 9 Iowa State
Set number 2
Jan. 8 Oklahoma A&M
Feb. 7 Missouri
Feb. 14 Nebraska
March 14 Colorado
Elizabeth Townsley, soprano and instructor in voice at the University, will give her first faculty recital at 8 p.m. today in Strong auditorium. The recital is open to the public without charge.
Mexico Inaugurates President
Miss Townsley, is a native of Meade, Kansas. She was graduated from high school there. She joined the KU faculty this fall after speding a year studying in Milan, Italy, on a Fulbright scholarship. Her music degree is from the University of Texas.
Mexico City —(U.P)— Police and army troops patrolled the streets of this tense capital today as Adolfo Ruiz Cortines was inaugurated president of Mexico.
Miss Marian Jersils, instructor in piano, will be the accompanist.
Townsley Recital In Strong Tonight
Miss Townsley will be soloist with the Amarillo, Texas symphony orchestra for a December performance of "The Messiah."
The prospect of more precipitation—either freezing rain or snow—threw a new curve into the already upset local weather pattern.
Powderpuff Gridders Postpone Tilt Again
Slick and snow-blocked roads over the state were blamed for keeping some University students from returning to classes this morning. The same situation prevented homeward trips for many over the vacation period and delayed many more along the way.
The football game between Pi Beta Phi and Kappa Alpha Theta sororities, scheduled for today, has been postponed for the second time. This time because of snow.
Barbara Comstock, president of Kappa Alpha Theta, said the game would be played when the weather permits.
The game originally was scheduled Nov. 24, but was postponed because of rain.
Key Appointees Confer with Ike
New York—(U.P.)-Key figures in President-elect Dwight D. Eisenhower's administrative organization visited his Columbia university residence today.
There were no immediate announcements of the subjects under discussion.
Among the callers were John Foster Dulles, secretary of state designate; Arthur H. Vandenberg Jr., an administrative assistant to Gen. Elsenhower; Harold E. Stassen, who will head the Mutual Security agency; New York banker Winthrop W. Aldrich, new ambassador to Great Britain; and Dr. Gabriel Hauge, who will become a member of the White House administrative staff.
Time Correspondent Tells Journalists Cleanup in Washington Will Be Swift
Mr. Aldrich's appointment was announced yesterday by Mr. Vandenberg. He also announced appointment of a special three-man committee, under the chairmanship of Nelson A. Rockefeller, which will represent Gen. Eisenhower in the development "and review of a study of the organization of the executive branch of the government."
Mr. Aldrich, 67-year-old chairman of the Chase National Bank of New York and an active participant in Gen. Eisenhower's campaign, will succeed Walter S. Gifford at the Court of St. James. Mr. Gifford had advised Gen. Eisenhower and President Truman that he planned to resign, regardless of the outcome of the election.
"The crusade in Europe will be like a shovel, compared to the crusade in Washington," Frank McNaughton, special correspondent for Time and Life, told the Editorial class this morning.
Mr. McNaughton, guest lecturer at the William Allen White School of Journalism, spoke on "Washington: 1853." He has covered almost every government department as a reporter and for two years was a regular member of the "Meet the Press" radio and TV shows.
Mr. McNaughton reported that the first man Mr. Eisenhower finds
The first three months of Mr. Eisenhower's administration will set a pattern of clean government, Mr. McNaughton said. Unlike the previous administration, the president-elect will operate strictly on merit, not rely on friends.
men of big business.
Mr. McNaughton thought the choice of Charles Wilson an excellent one for the post of secretary of defense. Herbert Brownell, the new attorney general, is also an ideal man as he was one of the best lawyers in New York and a ruthless investigator, the lecturer said.
with his hand in the jam pot and with jam on his face will be fired so hard and so far there will be no public doubt of the administration's integrity.
This is where Mr. Truman's trouble started, the lecturer said. If he had immediately fired the 5 percenters instead of sticking by them, he would not have had 60 per cent of his trouble.
In regard to the cabinet, Mr. McNaughton said the president-elect wanted men who represented the interest of the country, not entirely
In summing up, Mr. McNaughton said that the biggest problems facing the president-elect are trimming the budget, the vitalizing of foreign policy, advancing military preparedness, making an effective loyalty program, and stopping the war over civil rights.
On the campus construction work was halted on the Science building Nov. 21. Workers have not yet returned to that project, a layoff of 11 days today.
However, work on the Student Union building, which is in its final stages of completion, was not affected by the storm.
New snow which fell last night had the streets leading to the campus closed during the 8 o'clock rush this morning. However, city street and buildings and grounds crews had sanded the slick spots and most trafficways were open by mid-morning.
Last night's snowfall in Lawrence measured one inch with a moisture content of .13 inches, according to C. J. Posey, volunteer weather observer.
Minor traffic accidents kept Lawrence police and Douglas county sheriff's office deputies busy over the vacation, but no serious accidents involving University students occurred in the area.
A Lawrence policeman was hospitalized and another person injured in a freak collision on Thanksgiving day. This was the only major accident to occur in the area.
One cheerful note in the weather picture was the weather bureau's prediction of clearing skies with rising temperatures tonight and tomorrow. However, the Kansas-Missouri forecast area would probably have to contend with snow turning to freezing rain in many sections today before the situation would improve.
Six students were injured—one seriously—in automobile accidents during the Thanksgiving holiday.
Six Students Are Injured Over Holiday
Constance Hyre, college junior from Topeka, was injured seriously Tuesday night when the car which she was driving skidded on icy pavement and struck a culvert, near Garnett.
Also injured in the same accident were Barbara Lee Thomas, Shirley Samuelson, Dena Marilyn Miller, and Beverly Sue Wright, all college sophomores. Bobby Allen Lay, engineering freshman, the only man in the car, was not injured in the accident.
Miss Hyre is at the University Medical center. She is suffering from broken bones and facial cuts.
Miss Thomas received a fractured vertebrae in the accident and was taken to the hospital at Columbus. The other women involved in the accident received only minor injuries.
Victoria Rosenwold, college junior, was injured last Monday in an accident in Kansas City, Kan. She was a passenger in a car driven by Loren Martin, education freshman. Martin's car collided with another car at an intersection. Miss Rosenwold received two broken bones in her left hand.
Adult Education Workshop Planned for Dec. 12 and 13
An adult education workshop leadership training program for directors of adult education, superintendents of schools and others interested in adult education will be held here Dec. 12 and 13.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan
SDX News Study Will Have Meaning
The present and future prospects for a free press were put under the lights at the recent convention of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity, in Denver.
At lectures and panel discussions such men as Arthur Hays Sulzberger, publisher of the New York Times; Palmer Hoyt, editor and publisher of the Denver Post; Vermont Royster, senior associate editor of the Wall Street Journal, and James Pope, executive editor of the Louisville Courier-Journal considered the problem.
They said the press will never be safe from the threat of censors and will maintain its freedom only if the people are interested enough to keep it free. The people will want a free press as long as it is a responsible press, they added.
SDX is vitally interested in a free press and is dedicated to responsible journalism. It came as no surprise when President Charles Clayton, an editorial writer for the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, proposed a survey sponsored by the fraternity which would investigate coverage of the presidential campaign by newspapers, magazines, television and radio.
In proposing the survey, President Clayton said the fraternity was the "logical group to sponsor such a study." "I am sure the public would have confidence in the findings," he said.
The survey was suggested because of "numerous and grave charges" of a biased press. However, the survey was suggested as an inventory study, not a defense measure.
The resolution, as passed by the convention, called for the investigation of possibilities for such a study. The possibilities are to be studied by the executive council of the fraternity. Several of the country's leading foundations are reported to be interested in conducting such a survey under the fraternity's sponsorship.
"We are the only group which can speak for all phases of news communication and we number within our members the leaders of education in journalism, as well as trained researchers. If there have been failures, the facts can best be pointed out by Sigma Delta Chi," he said.
The proposed survey has already met with criticisms. First among those to pooh-pooh the idea was Roy A. Roberts, president of the Kansas City Star. He described the survey as unnecessary and meaningless. "The notion of newspapers setting up a commission to investigate newspapers is tommyrot," he said.
We see the survey as neither unnecessary nor meaningless. If the press is going to maintain the support of its readers it is very necessary that they perform their news function faithfully and honestly. If certain members of the press are neglecting this duty, it is important that the other members know and correct the fault.
The survey is given meaning by the fact that newspapermen will be doing something about a free press and not just talking.
We hope the executive council will find the "thorough and objective analysis" proposed by President Clayton possible and that the survey will be made. Roger Yarrington.
Labor's Power Should Ebb With GOP Rule
(Editor's Note: This is the fourth in a series of articles dealing with President-Eleonhower's administration's probable attitude toward business and labor.)
Most important labor issue during the last several years has been the oft-maligned Taft-Hartley law, which looks as though it's in for more blast—in the 83rd Congress. Though the GOP is expected to be somewhat friendlier to business than the Democrats have been, the unions aren't necessarily in for a big crackdown.
A decided change in union-government relations is on the way, however. The pendulum that has swung in labor's favor for 20 years is now swinging the other way.
The U.S. labor movement grew from tadpole to big frog with the help of Roosevelt and Truman. The big unions have no experience in living with either neutral or hostile government. They will have some adapting to do. But so will the Republicans.
The Eisenhower administration will have to demonstrate that legitimate and responsible unionism is not threatened by the end of Democratic rule. This the Republicans can do.
Eisenhower has indicated that he wants to push the initiative for settling disputes back on the parties themselves. He wants to keep labor disputes out of Washington.
Nor will the GOP Congress produce anything startling in the way of legislation. Sen. Taft's 1950 amendments to the Taft-Hartley act should be quickly enacted. The two most important of these "liberalizing" amendments are: (1) a provision to enable economic strikers to vote in representation elections—thus answering a principal criticism that the act may now be used to freeze out unions; and (2) a provision that Taft-Hartley boards in emergency disputes be authorized to bring in recommendations for the settling of those disputes—thus answering the criticisms that the emergency dispute section of the law is a dead end.
Study of changes in the Department of Labor also will be undertaken, along the lines of the Hoover Commission report. This department under the Democrats dwindled to something less than bureau status. It will be built up again—probably under Harold Stassen. President of the University of Pennsylvania and former governor of Minnesota, Stassen served as Ike's labor adviser during the campaign.
So all is not unmilitated gloom in the ranks of organized labor. Millions of union members and their families apparently voted for Eisenhower Nov. 4. And their leaders who fought Eisenhower hard and have no claim for favors, will adjust to the change.
The new government won't be anti-union, but it will be sympathetic with the businessman's problem. Mostly it will be an impartial administration and one eager to make good.
The people have made their decision. The results of the change they wanted soon will be seen.
—Dot Taylor.
ONE MAN'S ORMAN
SOAP SKIM
By DON NIELSEN
Gov. Theodore McKeldin of Maryland recently predicted that President-elect Dwight D. Eisenhower will make the Korean war and truce settlements there the foremost item on his agenda. Because of this a lot of Europeans are going to shrug and say, "I told you so."
But Gen. Eisenhower's concern for Korea does not spell the end of financial or military aid to Europe. Spending in Europe will be trimmed, but it will not meet with any disastrous cuts. Eisenhower has a lot of campaign promises to keep, and the one that demands the most attention is the one which he used to get himself elected.
If he should, merely by going to Korea, end the war, or at least bring an armistice, chances are that he could be recognized as a diplomatic as well as a military genius. But he will accomplish little, if anything, by visiting the front.
What can he do? The proposed tour of the Korean battleground is hardly more than a good will tour at its best. He may help morale somewhat by demonstrating his personal concern with the problems in the Far East, but he will accomplish little more.
Could the general bring about a truce? No. Even if the North Koreans and Chinese Communists wanted a truce he could not get one by negotiating with them. They are puppets and nothing more. If there is any negotiation to be done, it should be done with representatives of Russia and not with Russia's tools. The North Koreans are merely stalling for time in Korea.
Perhaps he plans to get some pertinent military information by going to the front. This will accomplish little. Gen. Eisenhower has perfectly capable men at the front, to handle the tactical problems. In his present position as commander-in-chief, Gen. Eisenhower will be concerned with policy and not with field operations.
In other words, Gen. Eisenhower will accomplish little by his trip to Korea except to give the Communists a shot at him.
We only hope that when the general returns without having stopped the shooting, or without having driven the enemy into the Yalu river, the people of America will not lose faith in their leader.
Gen. Eisenhower should not be expected to accomplish miracles. He is a leader, a diplomat, and the backbone of this country for the next four years. Americans have made their choice, now they must stand by it.
Daily Hansan
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New Rise of Hitlerism Seen In Western Zone
---
Hitlerism isn't dead, for again the wild-eyed face of Adolf Hitler is becoming a popular feature in a few German periodicals and is appearing on billboards throughout West Germany and West Berlin.
In the soccer stadium at Verden, Germany, several weeks ago, about 5,000 of Hitler's one-time storm troopers gathered for a reunion. The delegates came from all over Germany and some even from South America.
Hitler's favorite paratrooper, Gen. Bernhard "Papa" Ramcke, 63, was supposed to give a three-minute talk. Instead he launched a savage attack on the "real war criminals"—the Western Allies.
The criminals, Ramcke told the assembled cheering crowd, "are not the German front-line soldiers . . . They are those who made the Versailles Treaty . . . who shattered German cities. . . who dropped atomic bombs on Nagasaki . . . who are producing new atomic bombs."
These are symptoms of neo-Nazism. They need to be watched during this period when West Germany, including West Berlin, is more or less on trial as a nation, theoretically, won over to democracy.
Security officials believe that although the Nazis have little political backing in Western Berlin, they are a potential menace. For desperate men accustomed to the idea of killing under the Hitler regime are fanatically prepared to risk anything to achieve their ends.
Western Berlin police are faced with the problem that if the Nazis are in danger of arrest they can escape across the city's iron curtain border into the Russian sector and defy all attempts to be caught.
—Mary Cooper.
It may as well be recognized that the Hitler spirit still dwells in some Germans. This spirit could develop into a new and dangerous Nazi movement if a majority of the German people and their government do not find some means of keeping it under control.
Gloomy Future Seen For Opinion Pollsters
The future of public opinion pollsters grow gloomier with every presidential election. Twice in a row, the experts have missed in their predictions on who would win.
In 1948, they were wrong because they failed to anticipate the swing of the "undecided portion" of the voters toward the Democrats. In 1952, they were wrong because they did anticipate that swing, and it never occurred.
Until 1948, this idea worked fine. In 1952, it would have worked fine if they had used it. If the pollsters had disregarded the undecided portion, they would have predicted within 1 per cent the plurality given Gen. Eisenhower.
Pollsters base their opinions on the results of their polls, an analysis of regional voting, and the strength of major candidates in certain key areas.
Normally, pollsters disregard the undecided portion of those polled, because that portion usually splits along the same percentage lines as the majority of voters.
It is becoming apparent that they also need some method of ascertaining which way the undecided portion will split. Until they do find such a method, public opinion surveys will have trouble predicting the outcome of elections. Dean Evans.
PROF SNAIRF
"Hello, Coach?-Am I gonna have trouble with someone on your javelin team again this season?"
Topeka, Ka.
Monday, Dec. 1, 1952
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Dec. 1, 1952
Browns, Lions, Rams Lead Pro Conferences
New York—(U.P.)—The Cleveland Brown's, always at their best in December, held undisputed first place in the National Football league's American conference today, while the champion Los Angeles Rams deadlocked the Detroit Lions for the top spot in the National conference.
Cleveland broke out of a three-way tie with the New York Giants and Philadelphia Eagles yesterday by whipping the Washington Redskins, 48-24, as its two close rivals lost.
Detroit took a half-game lead by downing the Green Bay Packers on Thanksgiving day but now shares the top rung with the Rams, who beat the San Francisco Forty-Niners, 34-21, yesterday for their sixth straight triumph.
The Browns owed the Pittsburgh Steelers and Chicago Cardinals a vote of thanks as they closed in on their seventh division title in as many years. Pittsburgh provided yesterday's biggest surprise by walloping New York, 63-7, while the Cardinals unset the Eagles, 28-22.
Los Angeles and Detroit lead the runner-up Forty-Niners and Packers by one game and Cleveland leads the Giants and Eagles by the same margin. Each team has two more regular season contests.
Pittsburgh ran up the highest score in its history while handing New York its worst defeat in 28 seasons. It was the second largest victory margin posted in the league's 33 regular seasons. The most one-sided regular game was Philadelphia's triumph over Cincinnati in 1934 and the biggest title game margin was the Chicago Bears' 73-0 victory over Washington in 1940.
New York was a seven-point favorite but was beaten before it ever got its hands on the ball.
Steeler halfback Lynn Chadnois ran the opening kickoff 19 yards for a touchdown and quarterback Jim Finks zoomed the score with two-touchdown passes to end Dick Hensley and one each to end Elbie Nickel and halfback Ray Mathews. The Steelers intercepted seven Giant passes.
Eddie Lebaron threw touchdown passes to Hugh Taylor and Harry Gilmer to give Washington a 14-0 lead. Then Cleveland's old pros started to roll.
Otto Graham throw scoring passes to end Mac Speedie and halfback Dub Jones and plunged for two other touchdowns. End Dante Laverli made two brilliant catches to set up a short touchdown toss to himself from Jones and Graham's second TD as the Browns cruised into December—a month in which they have lost only once in 71 starts.
The passing of Bob Waterfield and Norm Van Brocklun, the receiving of ends Tom Fears and Elroy Hirsch and the running of Dan Towler, Vitamin Smith and Tank Younger gave Los Angeles its second straight victory over San Francisco. Towler ran for two touchdowns and Smith also ran for one after scoring the first Ram TD on a pass from Van Brocklin.
Pacific Coast League Wants Major Baseball Standing
Ollie Matson scored on a 79-yard kickoff return and on a 13-yard end sweep to keep the Cardinals ahead of Philadelphia.
Phoenix, Ariz.—U.P.—The first "protective" player draft in big league baseball history begins today and its outcome may determine whether there will be another major circuit in the foreseeable future
As usual, major league teams will make player selections from the minor leagues to buy for a barranguee. The team may develop into a $100,000, asset.
But what is different about this manpower lottery, is that the Pacific coast league is largely excluded from if by the protective open classification status it was given a year ago. Clarence (Pants) Rowland presides over all the matches and hopes that "we won't lose any of our players to the maiors."
"This is the first big test for us in our long standing efforts to build up to major league status," Mr. Rowland said. "We have 126 players on our draft list who have signed a contract which forbids their selection by a major league team. In other words we have that many players with faith in our future who want to stick it out and see if we can't make the grade as a major league circuit."
If the "protective" draft works
out satisfactorily, both the American association and International league will petition for similar arrangements in the near future. However, since most of the clubs in those leagues have major league affiliation, players are expected to be reluctant to sign draft pledges. It will prevent them from moving up if they are needed.
Leslie M. O'Connor, chief counsel for the coast league who drafted much of the long range plan for big league status, was not as optimistic as Rowland about the circuit being spared from the draft.
"I think that we're bound to lose some players, particularly from Hollywood, where they have some pretty good major league prospects," he said. "And the fact that it will cost $15,000 instead of $10,000 to draft a player from our league certainly won't hold anybody up if they really want the guy."
Michigan State Takes Unofficial Football Crown
New York—(U.R.)-Except for the bowl "glamour games" on New Year's day, the 1952 football season was all wrapped up for the record books today with Michigan State the apparent national champion and Georgia Tech the only other major perfect-record team.
The mighty Spartans of M-State were just about assured of their title by the final seasonal effort of Notre Dame, which certainly must be called the "spoiler champion" of 1952.
The spoiler Irish finished their season on a high note by upsetting Southern California, 9-0, to wreck the Trojan's perfect record and eliminate them as the chief threat to Michigan State for the mythical national title. The stunning upset succeeded in stealing the final Saturday spotlight from Navy's 7-0 win over Army in the annual service classic.
Certainly the Irish, who wind up with a 7-2-1 record, boast an unusual distinction—they met five teams that won conference championships, beat four of them (Texas of the Southwest, Purdue of the Big Ten, Oklahoma of the Big Seven, and Southern Cal of the Pacific Coast) and tied the other (Penn of the Ivy).
Southern Cal Coach Jess Hill was talking today about the "sucker shift" the Irish used against his Trojans on Saturday. With a first down on the Trojan nine yard line, the Irish went into a strange shift that lured the Southern Cal line into an offensive. That set up the game's only touchdown by Johnny Lattner.
"The play is designed solely to draw the defense off side," charged Hill. "And I note they have never tried the shift farther back than the opponents' 10 yard line. It's a violation, not of the rule, but of the spirit of the game."
Navy's third straight win over Army was the tough battle the classic always is. A crowd of 102,000 in Philadelphia saw the Navy score the game's only touchdown on a 66-yard drive in the first quarter with Phil Monahan plunging one yard into the end zone.
Georgia Tech completed its first perfect season in 24 years with a 3-9 triumph over Georgia. The Engineers have the best perfect record in the nation, 11-0, but three ace backs — Leon Hardeman, Dick Pretz, and Bily Teas—were injured Saturday and may miss the Sugar Bowl game against Mississippi.
Mississippi wound up its season with a 20-14 triumph over Mississippi State with Harol (CQ) Lofton scoring the winning touchdown on a 77-yard gallop. Other games featuring bowl-bound teams saw Tula (Gator Bowl) nick Texas Tech, 26-20, and Alabama (Orange Bowl) trounce Auburn, 21-0.
Other important games Saturday saw Holy Cross score twice in the fourth quarter to beat Boston Col-
Charlie Hoag Plans Knee Operation; May Not See Action Till February
Charlie Hoag, all-Conference halfback in the recent Associated Press Big Seven team, will undergo surgery on his knee this week to remedy a football injury. The operation will keep the senior all-sport star out of basketball until at least the first of February.
Dr. Alexander Mitchell, KU team physician, said that Hoag has a cartilage laceration and an operation will be necessary before further athletic competition is possible.
One other footballer was declared out of basketball drills for some weeks, Gil Reich, the versatile offensive and defensive man, must keep a broken finger in a traction splint for at least two more weeks and then won't be able to practice for some weeks more.
Hoag saw a specialist in Kansas City early last week, and that doctor said that the operation should be performed. Dr. Mitchell listed "about the first of February" as the tentative date for Hoag's availability.
transfer Harold Patterson, wasn't working hard because of a football injury, but two sophomores, John and Bob Forsyth, were drilling, hard.
Patterson is expected to be able to see full service sometime this week.
Hoag last year was the vital "sixth man" in the Jayhawker's drive to court supremacy. He impressed observers at the NCAA finals in Seattle and was a member of the U.S. Olympic squad that won the world's championship in Helsinki.
On the brighter side of the basketball picture, however, was the appearance of three football squadmen on the basketball court last week. One of them, junior college-
Although the Oak Park, Ill., flash missed the last three games of the football campaign this season, he still was named to the all-conference
But despite the disheartening news of the footballers, basketball coach Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen was not pessimistic over his club's chances for this season.
He indicated he was sorry that the boys were not in good shape, but said they will do the best they can and will be a fighting outfit.
The Kansans open the season on Dec. 11 against Tulane at New Orleans.
Gil Reich Makes 'Look' First String
16
GIL REICH Kansas defensive halfback
As the season for naming all-American players came around, three Kansas footballers, Gil Reich, Oliver Spencer, and Charlie Hoag,
Intramural Deadline Friday
lege, 21-7; Fordham crush NYU, 45-0; Wake Forest trounce South Carolina, 39-14; Virginia shade William and Mary, 20-13; Tennessee bury Vanderbilt, 46-0; Louisiana State down Tulane, 16-0; SMU down TCU, 14-7; and Oklahoma trounce the Oklahoma Aggies, 54-7.
Men's intramural basketball and bowling will begin Dec. 8, Walter Mikols, assistant professor of physical education, said today. Deadline for all entries will be 5 p.m. Friday. A meeting of all intramural basketball and bowling managers will be held at 4 p.m. Friday in 204 Robinson.
These are the major conference champions: Ivy — Pennsylvania; Pacific Coast—Southern California; Southeastern—Georgia Tech; Southern—Duke; Southwest —Texas; Big Ten—Wisconsin and Purdue; Big Seven—Oklahoma; Missouri Valley—Houston; Border—Temple, Arizona State; and Skyline-Uttah.
came into national prominence.
Reich, 187 pound quarterback and defensive halfback, was named to the Look magazine first string defensive all-American team. He also was named to the Associated Press all-Midwest football second string defensive team.
Oliver Spencer, 223 pound tackle and co-captain of the Jayhawkers, was named to the all-Midwest second string offensive team. Spencer previously was named to the NEA first team all-American selections.
Charlie Hong, 188 pound left halfback and co-captain of the football team, was given honorable mention in the Associated Press popularity poll. Hoag also was mentioned in the NEA poll.
Hoag was kept from making a greater name for himself by injuries which kept him out of the last three games of Kansas' season. He was on the verge of setting records in rushing, pass receiving, and scoring, when a badly wrenched knee kept him out of further action.
Reich played in 1951-52 for the Cadets from, West Point and transferred to Kansas for his senior year. His quarterbacking in the tight spots and his sterling defensive play both on rushing and pass defense put him up for the all-American nomination. Reich also came in to kick one conversion to add to his four touchowns and bring his scoring total to 25 for the season.
Spencer holds the same spot on the AP all-American team this year as he did last. He won his slot on the basis of hard rushing and good downfield blocking.
Other Big Seven representatives on the Look all-American team were Tom Catlin, Oklahoma, first string offensive center, and Billy Vessels, Oklahoma, first string offensive back.
OFFENSIVE
END—Bernie Flowers, Purdue
END—Tom Stolhsandke, Texas
TACKLE—Kline Gilbert, Miss.
TACKLE—Hal Miller, Ga. Tech.
GUARD—Elmer Willhoite, USC
GUARD—John Michels, Tenn.
CENTER—Tom Catlin, Oklahoma
BACK—Jack Scarbath, Maryland
BACK—Billy Vessels, Okla.
BACK—Gene Flipski, Villanova
BACK—Paul Giel, Minnesota
END—Frank McPhee, Princeton
END—Don Voss, Wisconsin
TACKLE—Dick Modzelewski, Md.
TACKLE—Eldred Kraemer, Pitt.
GUARD—Frank Kush, Mich. St.
GUARD—Harley Sewell, Texas
BACKER-UP-Donn Moawm,
DEFENSIVE
BACKER-UP—George Morris, Ga.
Tech
Tech.
HALFBACK—John Lattner, Notre
HALFBACK- Gil Reich, Kansas
SAFETY-Jim Sears, USC
Final League Standings
Team W L T P T PF OP
Oklahoma 8 8 1.50 850 247 110
Colorado 6 3 2.70 700 214 110
Nebraska 6 2 2.70 700 245 158
Missouri 5 4 1.50 550 123 185
Kansas State 5 5 0 823 158 191
Kansas State 1 9 0.10 120 181 255
SOUTHWEST CONFERENCE
BIG SEVEN CONFERENCE ALL GAMES PLAYED
| | W L T | W L T | W L T |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Texas | 6 0 0 | 8 2 0 | 8 2 0 |
| Rice | 4 2 0 | 3 5 0 | 4 5 0 |
| SMU | 3 2 0 | 4 1 0 | 4 1 0 |
| TCU | 2 2 2 | 4 4 2 | 4 4 2 |
| Baylor | 1 3 2 | 4 4 2 | 4 4 2 |
| Texas A&M | 1 2 1 | 4 4 2 | 4 4 2 |
| Arkansas | 1 5 0 | 2 8 0 | 8 2 0 |
MISSOURI VALLEY
Val. All Gms.
W L W L T
Houston 3 0 7 2 0
Tulsa 3 1 8 6
*Okla, A&M 2 2 3 7 0
*Detroit 1 3 3 6 0
*Wicita 0 3 3 6 1
$ ^{*} $Season completed
PACIFIC COAST CONFERENCE
| | W.L.T. | A.I.W. | W.T. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| USC | 6 0 0 | 9 1 0 | 9 |
| UCLA | 5 1 0 | 8 1 0 | 8 |
| Washington | 3 2 0 | 8 1 0 | 7 |
| California | 3 2 0 | 7 3 0 | 6 |
| Wash. State | 3 4 0 | 4 6 0 | 5 |
| Stanford | 2 5 0 | 5 5 0 | 5 |
| Oregon | 2 5 0 | 2 7 1 | 1 |
| Idaho | 2 5 0 | 4 7 1 | 1 |
| Oregon State | 1 6 0 | 2 7 0 | 1 |
SKYLINE CONFERENCE
| | LEAGUE | W L | W L T |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Utah | 5 | 0 | 6 3 1 |
| New Mexico | 4 | 1 | 6 2 0 |
| Colorado A&M | 5 | 2 | 6 4 0 |
| Wyoming | 4 | 3 | 5 3 0 |
| Utah State | 3 | 3 | 3 6 0 |
| Michigan Young | 3 | 4 | 4 6 1 |
| Montana | 1 | 5 | 2 7 1 |
| Denver | 0 | 7 | 3 7 0 |
SOUTHEASTERN CONFERENCE
Team W L T A W L T
Georgia Tech 6 0 0 11 0 0
*Tennessee 5 0 1 8 1 1
*Mississippi 4 0 2 8 1 2
Alabama 4 0 2 8 1 2
Georgia 4 3 0 6 4 0
Mississippi State 3 4 0 5 4 0
Florida 2 3 0 6 3 0
Kentucky 1 2 3 0 5 2
Tulane 3 5 0 5 5 0
LSU 2 5 0 3 7 0
*Vanderbilt 1 4 1 3 5 2
UConn 1 4 1 3 5 2
Ik G
Se
Jamo
impr
BORDER CONFERENCE
V Eisen eral's
arm how whe from Arm
*Tles are counted half a game won and half a game lost in figuring percentages.
**WONDERFUL**
Conf. W L T All Gls.
ASC Tempe 4 1 1 0 W L T
"TXa Tech 2 1 0 6 7 1
Arizona 3 2 0 6 4 0
Harden-Simmons 2 2 1 5 3 2
Texas Western 2 3 1 5 5 1
NM-A MK 1 4 1 5 1
West Texas 1 4 0 3 6 0
ASC Flastaff 0 1 0 2 4 0
C Flee that Kora dire in tu Flee
P Ir
*Plays North Carolina State at Lubbock,
Texas, December 6.
Th elec actu of-v betv
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Topeka. Ka.
Ike's Korean Survey May Decide Gen. Van Fleet's Future in Army
Seoul, Korea—(U.P.)—The military future of Gen. James A. Van Fleet may hinge on Dwight Eisenhower's impressions of the South Korean army.
Van Fleet, 60, is scheduled to retire in January. Eisenhower, as president, however can delay the general's retirement.
He may do it, too.
Van Fleet has gained a reputation as a builder of armies for nations fighting Communism. Thus, Eisenhower who wants to build the ROK army to the point where it can defend most, if not all, of the Korean front, may want to keep Van Fleet in his job as 8th Army commander until the task is completed.
On the other hand, Eisenhower may feel that Van Fleet would be of greater value elsewhere. He may feel that Maj. Gen. Cornelius Ryan, commander of the Korean military advisory group, which is the unit directly in contact with the South Korean army both in training and field operations, can follow where Van Fleet has pointed the way.
If Eisenhower so reasons, he may decide to make Van Fleet a roving trouble-shooter for the U. S. and UN, sending him where his abilities can be used on a basis.
He might even be worked into the framework of
NATO to help build up the European army.
Van Fleet himself is believed determined to finish out the Korean war if his superiors will let him. He has a personal grudge against the communists now because of his pilot son, James, Jr., who is missing in action from a bombing raid.
He and Van Fleet are not strangers to each other. They were classmates at West Point, for one thing.
When Eisenhower arrives he will find Van Fleet and his staff busy putting together two more South Korean divisions and six additional regiments. From watching this program and from his impressions of the ROK army now in the front lines, Eisenhower probably will make his decision.
Husky Van Fleet has a knack for instilling in a new army a fierce pride in itself. He developed this in such a way that the nations involved become stout Van Fleet supporters.
More than one Greek soldier in Korea has said:
"General Van Fleet, he's our chief of staff in loan to the United Nations."
The South Koreans have become just as affectionate. Reports of his possible replacement recently brought deep concern from President Syngman Rhee and other top-ranking ROK officers and officials.
Page 3
Pro-French Party Wins Saar In International Tug-of-War
Saarbruecken, the Saar—(U.P.)—Saar voters in a huge turnout reminiscent of the days of Hitler went to the polls yesterday to vote against the coal-rich territory's return to Germany, complete returns showed today.
The election was supposed only to elect a new Saar parliament, but actually was a French-German tug-of-war for the territory sandwiched between the two nations.
The French won, despite a last minute intervention by the Catholic and Evangelic churches which advised the Saarlanders they were not morally obligated to vote.
Pro-German parties were barred from the elections. To show Pro-German sympathies, the Saarlanders had to abstain from voting, invalidate their vote, or vote for the Communist party, which also favoured the return of the Saar to Germany.
Ninety-three per cent of the territory's 621,948 eligible voters went to the polls to give President Johannes Hoffmann's Pro-French Christian peoples party a heavy majority.
The total vote was 579,241. Of this
141,903 or 24.4 per cent of the ballots
were invalid.
Since the abstentions, the 24.4 per cent invalid ballots and the Communist 9.4 per cent vote were all that could be taken as Pro-German, the Pro-French Hoffmann faction won a major victory.
The hefty majority of the Christian peoples party will permit Hoffman to form a new one-party government or make up a strong coalition government.
Cold North Grows Hot Crop
Warner, Alta. — (U.P.)— The cold north produces a hot crop. Nearly a million dollars worth of commercial mustard was harvested in Alberta in 1952.
Blanket of Snow Fails to Halt Reds
Seoul, Korea — (U,R)— A blanket of snow fell across the 155-mile Korean battlefront today but Chinese Communists persisted in their small-scale sneak attacks on Sniper ridge.
Driven by an icy Manchurian wind from the steppes of Central Asia, the snow began falling this afternoon. It was still coming down at 9 p.m. (8 a.m. CST).
United Press correspondent Victor Kendrick reported from the Sniper ridge area of the central front that the snow made a "slippery, muddy mess" of the battlefield. He said an earlier rain had thawed the ground, causing the snow to melt as it fell.
There were two inches of snow in some parts of the Sniper ridge sector and on the steep ridges of the mountainous eastern front. The snow was wet and slushy on the western front.
With the acquisition this week of a clavichord, the School of Fine Arts became one of the few in the country able to offer instruction on
Clavichord Completes Keyboards
all keyboard instruments.
The clavichord, a 12th century forerunner of the piano, fills the chronological first place in the
WHY DO IT GOTTA RAIN WHEN US IS LOOKIN' FOR SOME BODY?
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R.A.
OVER BY POST HALL SYNDicate.
POGO
THAT PORKYPINE
COULDN'T GET LOST
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CHARACTER
WHY DO IT GOTTA RAIN WHEN US IS LOOKIN' FOR SOME BODY?
IT'S PART OF THE PITY OF IT ALL.
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12-1 DISTRIBUTION POST-HALL SYNDICATE.
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ANY LOST CRITTUR WE FINDS IN THIS STORM WILL BE RIGHT ENOUGH FOR ME.
The strings are strung from side to side instead of lengthwise as in the piano. Each key extends from the keyboard to its proper pair of strings. At the end is a vertical brass tangent which rises and strikes the strings when the front end of the key is depressed.
The instrument was made in Detroit by John Challis, master craftsman. The money for the instrument came from an anonymous donor through the KU Endowment association.
The clavichord is a shallow box about 5 feet long, 15 inches wide and 5 inches deep. Extending across the left half of the instrument's length is a $4\frac{1}{2}$-octave keyboard. The sharps and flats are tan, while the natural keys are black ebony, the reverse of a piano.
collection. The keyboard collection also includes the harpsichord, piano, several types of organs, and the carillon.
This season Mosser and Wolf photographed 10 football games for the University and exposed approximately 16,000 feet of black and white film and 2,500 feet of color.
"This direct contact between musician and string makes the clavichord a most personal instrument," Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts said.
The instrument was not due here until next summer, but Ronald Barnes, carillonneur who will be charged with the maintenance of the clavichord, was in Detroit this summer and saw the instrument that Mr. Challis was making for himself.
HE MIGHT NOT EVEN BE
THE RIGHT PORKYPINE.
WELL,
PERSONALLY..
The men travel to the out of town games with the team, regardless of whether the team goes by train or plane. It requires about 1,600 feet of film for each game. This amount varies according to the type of game the team plays.
Mr. Barnes was so impressed with the instrument that he persuaded Challis to sell it to the University.
Monday, Dec. 1, 1952 University Daily Kansan Page S
Taken Cashing Good Check
St. Louis —(U,R)—Troy L. Gay, 19,
was arrested here for passing 15
worthless checks. He was picked up
as he was cashing a perfectly good
check.
Each play of the game is photographed, from the time the referee starts the play until the official stops the play. These films are used primarily for coaching purposes.
Mosser-Wolf Shoot Official Football Movies
By MAURICE PRATHER
Each football season two Lawrence businessmen, Russ Mosser and Art Wolf, have a job many people would enjoy doing. Their job is shooting the official movies of all the football games played by the University for the department of athletics.
Through the use of the films the coaching staff is able to detect weak points and to make the necessary corrections. They are also able to plot out the methods used by the opponent.
After the game is over, the films
Dr. C. S. Smith, assistant curator of anthropology, said the display contains select specimens recovered in three expeditions to the area, in the summers of 1950, 1951, and 1952, to uncover archaeological data there before it is flooded by the Fort Randall dam, now under construction near Chamberlain, S. D.
A collection of archaeological specimens from excavations of an Indian village site in South Dakota is the subject of the "display of the month" now at the Museum of Natural History.
The display includes pottery, stone and bone tools, a map of the Talking Crow site, a picture of a restored earth lodge near Bismarck, N.D., ornaments, and an incised stone disc used in religious ceremonies.
The expeditions which uncovered the specimens in the display were sponsored jointly by the University and the National Park service.
Indian Relics Now at Dyche
Specimens here were taken from an area known as the "Talking Crow site," in Buffalo county, South Dakota. The Indians who lived there, around 1700 A.D., were the ancestors of the Arikara Indians, who still inhabit the area.
are rushed to Kansas City from where they are flown to Chicago for processing on Sunday morning by the Eastman Kodak company. The films are then returned to the Calvin company in Kansas City by air-mail.
At the Calvin company a duplicate of the original film is printed for showing to the team on Monday and to the Quarterback club later the same evening.
Following the football seasons the best action scenes out of all the games played during the year are cut from the original films and edited into the "Football Highlights" film produced for the athletics department by Mosser-Wolf.
This year the script of the film was written by Don Pierce, publicity man of the athletic department. Editing of the film is being done by Charles Lacey and Herk Harvey, Mosser-Wolf employees. The film will be narrated by Merle Harmon of the KU sports network.
The film will be first shown at the annual football banquet, the date of which has not yet been set.
Art Wolf started shooting the football films in 1938, pretty much on his own, and was joined the following year by Russ Mosser. Both men were undergraduates of the University at the time. From 1938 through 1941 most of their shooting was confined to home games with an occasional Missouri or Nebraska game thrown in.
Since 1945 the two men have photographed every game played by the University.
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Monday. Dec. 1, 1952
Theater Plans Christmas Play
University Daily Kansan
Rapidly establishing a tradition, the Laboratory theater for the third year will present another Christmas production, "The Second Shepherds' Play," the outstanding English miracle play dating from the 14th century.
The cast includes Max Zent, college sophomore, as the first shepherd. Coll; Bill Means, business junior, as the second shepherd. Gib; Ernest Dade, college sophomore, as the third shepherd. Daw; Mark Gilman, education junior, as Mak; Shirley Strain, college senior, as Gill; Maurice Casey, education junior, as the angel, and Mary Rigor, fine arts freshman, as Mary.
In 1850 "Nativity Play," a compilation of several 16th century church plays, was produced. Last year the speech and drama department and the German department jointly presented a 16th century German Nativity play.
It will be performed at 9 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 6, at the faculty Christmas party in Strong auditorium and twice in the Little theater in Green hall. Dates for the latter performances will be announced later.
Tom Shay, in charge of Lab theater, is directing the play. The cast also includes an a cappella choir of six to eight voices.
The Second Shepherds 'Play.' is so named because it was the second of several plays dealing with the birth of Christ and the adoration of the Shepherds found in an old manuscript in Yorkshire, England.
Toowoomba, Australia — (U.P)
Sister Elizabeth Kenny was buried beside her mother and sisters in a quiet rural cemetery today.
Simple Rites At Kenny Burial
The nurse, world famed for her treatment of polio, died at her home here yesterday at the age of 66. A new drug flown from the United States failed to dissolve a blood clot in the brain.
Hundreds of her fellow queens-
landers packe d Toowoomba's
Methodist church for simple last
rites.
All business activity in this city of 27,000 halted. Newspapers throughout the nation printed expressions of deep mourning.
Coatless and perspiring in sultry summer heat, thousands stood along the 27-mile funeral route to Little Nobby cemetery.
The casket was draped with a Union Jack on which lay chrysanthemums and red roses. Other floral tributes were banked knee-deep around the casket.
Six of Sister Kenny's nephews acted as pallbearers.
In a brief final ecology, the Rev J. Tainton said that those who disagreed with Sister Kenny "nevertheless recognized the honesty and sincerity with which she pursued her goal of achieving long battle to achieve professional medical approval of her polio treatment.
A special shipment of the drug Trypsin, a clot-dissolving enzyme, arrived by plane Saturday night from Jewish memorial hospital in New York. Injections were administered, but proved futil.
Churchill's Cigar Tops 78th Cake
London — (U,P)— Prime Minister Winston Churchill celebrated his 78th birthday yesterday with a 40 pound cake on which there was one candle— in the shape of a big cigar.
The four seasons were depicted on the cake in icing along with the verse:
"While the earth is dressed in solemn white.
A distant bird may start to sing. "Your counsel in peace or strength in the fight.
Page 6
Shall guide us to a new spring." Churchill had a busy birthday. In the morning he worked in his office at 10 Downing street.
63 Fulbright Scholars
More than half of the 121 foreign students now studying at the University are here on Fulbright scholarships, a record for this year. A total of 63 students, 10 per cent more than last year, have the State department grants.
Shall guide us to a new spring."
A foreign student applying for a Fulbright scholarship to this country does so at the university where he is studying. The application goes to a bi-national board in that country for screening.
Final decisions are made by the Board of Foreign Scholars, appointed by the President of the United States. Universities here participate in the final selection of foreign students which they want.
Of the Fulbright students here, eight each are from Austria, Germany, and Japan; five each from India and Norway; four each from France, Italy, and Greece; two each from Cyprus and Iran, and one from the Philippines, China, Belgium, Pakistan, Saar, Luxemburg, Finland, Turkey, Thailand, Denmark, Malaya England, and the Netherlands.
On the other side of the ledger.
"more Fulbright awards have been granted to KU students than ever before," Prof. J. A. Burzle, campus Fulbright adviser, said.
Out of 38 applications received last year, 10 awards were given to University students: Two each to Australia and France and one to England, Austria, Belgium, Luxemburg, India, and Egypt. Between 800 and 1,000 Fulbright scholarships are granted in this country every year, Prof. Burrze said.
About 1,300 seniors still have not had their pictures taken for the 1952-53 Jayhawker, Kenneth Dam, Jayhawker editor, said today.
1,300 Seniors Need Annual Photos Taken
The Jayhawker editor stressed the importance of making appointments at Estes studio immediately to avoid the Christmas rush. The deadline for having pictures taken is Jan. 1.
--should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Attend KU
Thirty-six applications for 12 countries were received this fall, which are now in the hands of the National Selection committee in New York and Washington, Prof. Burzle said. Results will be known sometime in April.
Two scholarships a year are also awarded by a state committee in each state, going to the best-qualified students requesting Fulbrights. Since the inception of the program, the university has had one student selected for Kansas' quota each year, Prof. Burzle said. Last year it was Bruce Joseph, now studying medicine in France.
Art Exhibition to Feature
Paintinets by Wichita Artists
The next monthly exhibition of the Museum of Art will feature a group of paintings, largely water colors, by Wichita artists, Raymond Eastwood, director of the museum, said today.
The paintings, assembled by William Dickerson of the Wichita Art association, will be ready for display today, Mr. Eastwood said.
Stanolind Seeks Engineering Grads
P. D. Manning Jr., division engineer for the Stanolind Oil and Gas Company, will be on the campus Thursday to interview engineering students.
Mr. Manning is interested in interviewing petroleum, mechanical, chemical, and electrical engineers. Engineering activities at Stanolind are highly diversified, including reservoir engineering, well spacing, proration, drilling and production practices, and many others.
At the University, Stanolind sponsors a fellowship in the field of mechanical engineering. Students interested in talking with Mr. Manning may make appointments by signing the interview schedule in the office of the School of Engineering.
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THE DU PONT
DIGEST
Plant and Equipment Design and the Engineer
Design
At Du Pont, men with many types of training translate laboratory developments into full-scale production
Roger Jones, B.S. in Chem, Haverford College 752 (right), and operator check temperature control in the conversion of furfural to furan.
6
It takes ingenuity of a high order to translate a small-scale laboratory operation into all-out commercial production. Design engineers cannot always use purchasable equipment to scale up research findings, even with considerable adaption. About half of the time at Du Pont, entirely new equipment must be designed because of the novelty of the process developed by research.
Among the most interesting fields for engineers at Du Pont is the design of plants and equipment.
For example, a number of unusual problems were involved in designing the equipment and plant for a process in which hexamethylenediamine, one of the intermediates for nylon, is made from furfural, derived from such agricultural by-products as corncobs and hulls of cottonseed, oats and rice.
In this conversion, these steps are involved:
$C_{4}H_{3}OCHO$
furfural $ \xrightarrow[\text{catalyst}]{\text{Heat}} C_{4}H_{4}O $
furan
2H2 $ \xrightarrow[]{} $ C4H8O
tetrahydrofuran
2HC1 $ \xrightarrow[]{} $ C1(CH2)4 C1
dichlorobutane
2NaCN $ \xrightarrow[]{} $ NC(CH2)4 CN
adiponitrile
4H2 $ \xrightarrow[]{} $ H2N(CH2)6 NH2}$
hexamethylenediamine
Here are some of the special problems that were encountered:
1. Design of equipment with close temperature control for converting furfural to furan. The design finally settled on employs a large number of tubes containing a catalyst, with a coolant circulated around them. Special sequence
100
Scale model of a part of the plant where adiponitrile is made from furfural.
timers were devised for operation of the valves controlling production and regeneration cycles.
2. Design of high-pressure agitated autoclaves for the hydrogenation of furan to tetrahydrofuran.
3. Selection of corrosion-resistant equipment for the hydrochlorination of tetrahydrofuran to dichlorobutane at high temperatures.
4. Design of a unique five-step distillation train to obtain high-grade adiponitrile without trace impurities.
Although most of these problems involve a great deal of chemical engineering, also needed on the designing team were mechanical, electrical, civil, metallurgical and industrial engineers. Thus design work at Du Pont is open to men with many types of training, and there is abundant opportunity for all.
JOHN RUBENBERG
E. W. Griffin, B.S. in M.E., Duke; M.S. in Ind. Mgt., Georgia Tech '52 (right), instructs operator in handling of vapor-tight horizontal vacuum filter used in separating adiponitrile from sodium chloride.
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Monday. Dec. 1, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
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506 West 8th. Phone 1344W
STARTS
TUESDAY
It's the Signal for EXCITEMENT! APACHE WAR SMOKE
Gilbert ROLAND
Gilbert ROLAND
Glenda FARRELL • Robert HORTON
Barbara RUICK • Gene LOCKHART
Matinee Tuesday 2:30
Eve. 7:00 and 8:50
Features: 3:12-7:42-9:32
Plus
2 Color Cartoons
Latest News
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwich, chili, homemade pastries.
Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. **tt**
JAYHAWKERS; Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. We offer free pet care for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. **tf**
2 Color Cartoons Latest News
Patee PHONE 131
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks,
sandwiches, malts, home-made plies and
cakes. Free parking space for customers.
Ends Tonite
JUDY CANOVA
"WAC FROM
WALA WALA"
MEN; we have four tuxedos in excellent condition. Sizes 36, 37, 38 and 42. Come in and see them. Comfort Shop, 741 New York. 12-4
FOR SALE
WILL SELL very good 1948 Ford club coupe. 16,000 miles on motor. $820; or best offer. Paschal at 427 Alabama. Phone 2913R. 12-1
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
man, buyers. William J. Van
Almen, 3110R
KODAK monitor camera, f4.5, 1/200, case
and flash, GE light meter, gadget bag,
Price $49. Call Joe Compton, phone
1110R. 12-1
FOR RENT
ROOM FOR one student. Quiet, comfortable, close to KU. Recently vacated by student leaving KU. Very reasonable rate. Phone 1671R. 1151 Ohio. 12-1
LEAVING TOWN. Will rent my two-bedroom residence. Has utility room and dining garage. Desire permanent, reliable furniture. Paschal at 427 A128 11-018 Phone 2913R.
LOST
CHARVIS DRAWING set in 116 Strong or 101 Snow. If found please call Norman Craig 2199R at 1716 La. Reward.
MICROSCOPE (Bausch and Lomb bin-
ocular) in black leather-covered case,
from Haworth hall, Wednesday. Nov. 12.
Reward, no question. Information
formation leading thereto. Phone
Medical school office or Don Woodson
at 552. 12-2
MISCELLANEOUS
Air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. midnight. Crystal Cafe. 609 Vt. tff
RADIO and TV service=same day as service on all makes. Most complete stock of tubes and parts in this area. Bowman TV and TV 239 Vermont. Phone 188 to prompt service.
CONCOC SERVICE-B. Goodrich tires and batteries, complete lubrication service plus expert automatic transmission CONCOC Service, 19th and Massachusetts.
TYPISP: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Penn. Phone 1360M. tf
TRANSPORTATION
RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wichita every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Call Jim Sellers, 31017 evenings. MTW-tt
ASK US ABGUT airplane rates. sky coach. family days, round trip reductions. All expense. All展览. land tours. Cunard and Matson Steenship lines. Call Miss Gleseman at the First National Bank for Mountaineering. 8th and Mass streets. Phone 30. tf
AIRLINE TICKETS. prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international tours. Interfaces. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer. 3661 Downs Travel Service. 1015 Mass.
STUDENTS interested in working new banquet service at Student Union for Mary M. Tomlinson or Miss Harvey or M. Tomlinson between 2 and 4 p.m. on Union cafeteria office.
WANTED
Billings, Mont. — (U.P.)— Gibros Casiandio has been awarded $40 damages here against three barbers who took turns cutting his hair, leaving him only a tuft on top. Casiandio complained he was made to look like a Mohawk Indian.
Damages Given for Hair Cut
Air Force Officer To Start Recruiting
A liaison officer will be at the AFROTC office until Dec. 15 to talk to men interested in joining the 442nd Troop Carrier wing, a reserve unit comprised of men from Kansas and Missouri.
The wing currently is conducting a 30 day drive to recruit 1500 members.
Members of the 442nd spend one weekend each month training at the Olathe Naval Air base. The wing is a tactical organization equipped with C-46 Curtiss Commando aircraft.
The 442nd, nicknamed the MoHawk wing, was reactivated last June at Olathe. Members receive four days pay for each weekend training period, and are eligible for promotions, retirement, and disability benefits.
To join, an applicant must be between 17 and 35, be physically fit, and have no police record except for minor traffic violations.
Men who wish to join will be provided with transportation to Olathe where they will be interviewed, processed, classified, and issued uniforms. Pay for attending the training sessions runs from $10.40 for basic airmen to $84.96 for colonels.
John Ise to Speak At Tax Conference
John Ise, professor of economics,
will speak at the second annual
tax conference in Wichita Wednesday
and Thursday.
The conference, which is sponsored by the School of Business and the Kansas Society of Certified Public Accountants, will be held at the Hotel Lassen.
the Dean Leonard H. Axe of the School of Business will give greetings and announcements at the opening of the conference. W. Keith Weltmert, associate professor of economics, will follow with additional introductory remarks.
University Theatre
Comfort! Convenience!
JAYHAWER
NEW Park Ave. CUSHIONED CHAIRS
8:30 p.m.
Box Office Opens Today
"THE DARK LADY OF THE SONNETS"-G. B. Shaw "A PHOENIX TOO FREQUENT"-Christopher Fry
BOX OFFICE, BASEMENT, GREEN HALL.
OPEN 10 to 12 AND 2 to 4 DAILY
SAT., 10 to 12 ONLY
... a program of two comedies
Students present ID cards for reserved seats General admission, $1.25 (Incl. tax)
Shows 2:30-7-9 CHARLTON HESTON
Wed., Dec. 10-Sat., Dec. 13
Fraser Theatre
News—Cartoon
Paramount's THE SAVAGE COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
NOW thru TUES
VARSITY
THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
Shows 7:00-9:00
THE TAMING OF
MONTANA
TERRITORY
SPECTACULAR!
IN COLOR BY
TECHNICOLOR.
IN LON McCALLISTER - WANDA HENDRIK - PRESTON
ASTER - Written by BARRY SIMPMAN - Produced by COLBERT CLARK
News - Cartoon
NOW thru TUES
VARSITY
THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
for the second production of the year by the
MONTANA
THE FAMING OF MONTANA TERRITORY
SPECTACULAR!
IN COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR
A COLUMBIA POPULAIRE
in LON CALLERIST • WANDA HENDRIX • PRESTON STER • Written by BARRY SHIPMAN - Produced by COBERT CLARK
NOW!
THE QUIET MAN
IS A RIOT MAN!
HE WAS A STORM CENTER...
A TARGET FOR TROUBLE!
HE WAS A
STORM CENTER...
A TARGET
FOR TROUBLE!
Color by TECHNICOLOR
THE
QUIET MAN
starring
JOHN MAUREEN
WAYNE - O'HARA
BARRY
FITZGERALD
THE QUIET MAN
starring
JOHN MAUREEN
WAYNE • O'HARA
BARRY
FITZGERALD
Mat. 2:30. Eve. 7 and 9:30
Features: 2:51, 7:21, 9:51
Movietone News
Granada
PHONE 9146
Coming Soon! "Plymouth Adventure" "IVANHOE"
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Dec. 1, 1952
Fight for Presidency HighlightsCIOMeeting
Atlantic City, N.J. —U.P.P.) The 14th Annual CIO convention opened today on a plea for labor unity by Secretary of Labor Maurice J. Tobin as CIO chiefs fought a bitter behind-the-scenes battle over a new president.
Mr Tobin, in what he described as his "last major address" as a cabinet officer, called on the CIO to "put past bitterness, petty jealousies and personal animosities aside" and join with the rival AFL for a "strong, united labor movement."
Mr. Tobin's call to unity was made in the face of a raging battle among the 35 CIO unions as to who should succeed their late president Philip Murray—Walter Reuther, president of the powerful Auto Workers union or executive vice president Allan S. Haywood.
At the moment, it appeared that the Rubber Workers workers, led by L. S. Buckmaster, might carry the key to the whole situation. The union—unpledged to any candidate—was said to hold the balance of power in the bitter battle.
The fight threatened to carry through the week long convention in corridors and private rooms, and might well break out into the open on the convention floor when the 700 delegates are scheduled to vote for a new leader.
The CIO chiefs were in no mood to discuss unity as they battled neck and neck over the two candidates. Left leaderless by Mr. Murray's death a fortnight ago, they have since split into rival camps over the election issue.
Mr. Reuther's forces appeared to have a definite lead with support of a majority of the bigger CIO unions, as well as the 1,100,000 member steelworkers, the communication workers and transport workers.
The fourth annual principal freshman conference will be held on the campus Tuesday, Dec. 9.
Principals, Freshmen To Meet on Campus
The University has invited principals from all Kansas and Missouri high schools that have three or more freshmen in KU. The principals will spend the day talking with the students from their schools, gathering information that may help the high schools better prepare students for college.
OR
Who Called It a"Free" Election?
That Stuff in the Ballot Box Ain't Hay
W
Once there was a Senior who faced a Financial Impasse, He was, in a word, Boke—due to heavy extra-curricular Operating Expenses. He was discussing with his roommate ways and means of securing a job at Cold Standard, "Simple," said the roommate, "just the Male Parent for an Ad
vance. "Don't be Dull," answered Our Hero, "I'm already four months ahead on my allowance. And besides, the Head of the Clan is in a Grim Mood. He Dropped a Bundle on the election results," Oh-ho," said his side-kick, "listen . . ." Our Boy listened. Twenty minutes later he steamed into the Western Union office, his brain cells bulging with Strategy, and dispatched a vital message. To wi: "Dear Dad—Won broke backup Stevenson. Know you'll understand. Like father, like son. Please wire me fifty. Urges. Love."
The cash arrived within the hour. By West ern Union money order. Our Boy is now working for a Practical Cause—campaigning for presidential elections every year instead of every four.
703 Massachusetts
Telephone 2764 or 2765
The moral? Simply this—when you're Preparing for Pesos, there's no more productive probe than a Telegram. Saves time, saves wear and tear, saves answering embarrassing questions. Try it—and don't overlook Telegrams for Detailing Dates, Spreading Smooth Talk, Making an Impression. You'll be surprised what words via Western Union can do for you.
Engineers Strive For $500 Award
The Mineral Products company of Kansas City, Mo., will sponsor a $500 contest for research papers written by students in the School of Engineering and Architecture at the University, Dean T. DeWitt Carr announced today.
The contest sponsor makes a sintered clay aggregate which gives a concrete weighing about two-thirds as much as conventional concrete.
Details of the competition and the basic bibliography on the general subject may be obtained from Professor Clayton M. Crosier, of the civil engineering faculty.
Engineerettes: 7:45 p.m., 1247 Tennessee, Mrs. Carr's. Bridge and canasta.
Math colloquium: 5 p.m., 211 Strong.
Official Bulletin
German Christmas Carol choir:
rehearsal, 5 p.m., 306 Fraser. Volunteers needed.
TODAY
TUESDAY
Art Education club: 7:30 p.m., 323 Strong.
Radio Amateur club: 7:30 p.m.
2nd floor EE labs, election of officers
and discussion of new constitution.
Zoology club: 7:30 p.m. 206 Snow.
Phi Lambda Upsilon: honorary chemistry society, 7:30 p.m., Faculty club, initiation of new members. All members be refreshments.
University Women's club French group: 8 p.m., Spooner lounge, Jean Gob speaking in French on Jean Anouilh.
WEDNESDAY
WEDNESDAY
Jay James: 5 p.m., 9 Strong.
THURSDAY
KuKu club: 7:15 p.m., 106 Green, election of officers, attendance required.
Engineers to See Jet Film
"The Jet Story" film will be shown at 11 a.m. Tuesday in Fraser theater for engineering students.
Seoul, Korea—(U.P.)—Armored cars patrolled the streets and U.S. Marines, with fixed bayonets, guarded key headquarters in Seoul today in preparation for the visit of President-Elect Dwight D. Eisenhower.
U.S. Forces in Korea Bristle In Preparation for Ike's Visit
Jeeps intended to convey the President-elect's party were armed with machine guns and parked outside 8th Army headquarters. The Marines in battle-dress were stationed outside the headquarters, the 5th Air Force headquarters and the chosen hotel, where a Secret Service party already was said to be staying.
But the Koreans appeared less spirited than the days when welcoming rehearsals were carried out with parades and rallies. There were no such today.
Gaily decorated streetcars, taken off the tracks four days ago when Eisenhower failed to show as expected on Thanksgiving day, were back on the tracks today.
Arrival time of the general was top secret. There was no official word on when he would arrive, and no announcement was expected.
American soldiers and Marines checked the identity of all persons
entering U.S. military compounds. It was reported that some American personnel were refused permission to enter because their identification papers were not in order.
Medical School Sets New Interview Dates
Students who have applied for admission to the School of Medicine beginning with the fall semester, 1953, will be interviewed during the Christmas recess, according to Dr. Kenneth Jochim, assistant dean.
The interviews were formerly strung out over a period of several weeks while school was in session.
Applications for admission to the School of Medicine were due Nov. 1, and students whose applications have been received will be notified by mail. The interviews will be on Dec. 29 and 30, and Jan. 2.
Granny is now eighty
And yet she's spry and pious.
Her motto is a simple one,
Be Happy and Go Lucky!
Darliene Davis
Fresno State College
LUCKIES TASTE
LUCKY STRIKE
luckies always pass the test; They always make the grade - They're cleaner, smoother than the rest Because they're better made!
David M. Burns
Princeton University
COLLEGE STUDENTS PREFER LUCKIES IN NATION-WIDE SURVEY!
Nation-wide survey based on actual student interviews in 80 leading colleges reveals more smokers prefer Luckes than any other cigarette by a wide margin. No.1 reason -Luckies better taste. Survey also shows Lucky Strike gained far more smokers in these colleges than the nation's two other principal brands combined.
AFTER THE GREAT DEATH OF MARY ANN RENEE
LUCKIES TASTE BETTER!
They're made better to taste cleaner, fresher, smoother!
Ask yourself this question: Why do I smoke?
You know, yourself, you smoke for enjoyment. And you get enjoyment only from the taste of a cigarette.
Luckies taste better-cleaner, fresher, smoother! Why? Because Luckies are made better to taste better. And, what's more, Luckies are made of fine tobacco. L.S./M.F.T.-Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco.
Granny is now eighty-three
And yet she's spry and plucky -
Her motto is a simple one,
Be Happy and Go Lucky!
Darlene Davis
Fresno State College
LUCKY
STRIKE
12 ROASTED
CIGARETTES
L.S./M.F.T.
So, for the thing you want most in a cigarette . . . for better taste—cleaner, fresher, smoother taste . . . Be Happy—Go Lucky!
LUCKY
STRIKE
U.S. TOASTED
CIGARETTES
L.S./M.F.T.
A. T. $ \mathrm{C o}_{2} $
An apple used to do the trick,
But grades don't bother me
I give my prof this one sure tip
That L.S./M.F.T.
Edward Siegel
University of Florida
FOR A CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER SMOKE...
Be Happy-GO LUCKY!
PRODUCT OF The American Tobacco Company AMERICA'S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTES
Topeka, Ka.
society
Daily Hansan
UNIVERSITY Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks. Daily Hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
50th Year, No. 52
Tuesday, Dec. 2, 1959
UN Committee Rejects Russian Peace Plan
United Nations, N. Y. —(U.P.) The United Nations political committee threw out Russia's Korean peace resolution today and added one more vote to its overwhelming majority for India's compromise plan.
Lebanon, absent when the committee balloted on the Indian plan last night, today asked that its vote
be recorded as favoring the Indian man. That made the final official count on India's resolution 54-5. Only the Soviet bloc—Russia, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Byelo-Russia and the Ukraine—voted against it and Nationalist China abstained because parts of the measure gave cognizance to the Chinese Communist regime.
Despite the landslide vote for the Indian measure, Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Y. Vishinsky insisted that the committee vote today on Russia's plan. The committee rejected it. 41-5, with 12 abstentions.
Once again, only the Soviet bloc rallied behind Russia, Argentina joined the Arab-Asian bloc in abstaining. The Philippines bolted the bloc to vote against the measure and Yemen was absent.
The Russian resolution would have had the General Assembly establish a Communist-packed commission for "the peaceful settlement of the Korean question," the unification of Korea "by the Koreans themselves" and the repatriation of all prisoners of war, regardless of their desires.
The Indian plan now goes to the General Assembly—possibly tomorrow morning—for final approval.
Plane Missing With 13 Aboard
Riverside, Calif.—(U.P.)—An Air Force C-47 transport plane with 13 persons aboard was reported missing today on a flight from Arizona to March Air Force base here.
Officers at March Air Force base said the plane was last heard from in the vicinity of Palm Springs, about 50 miles southeast of here. It was due at March field at midnight.
Air rescue crews from March field were dispatched to search for the plane, which last reported its position as over the San Jacinto mountains near Palm Springs.
March Field said all of those aboard were Air Force personnel.
Chicago Professor To Speak Thursday
Dr. Everett C. Hughes, chairman of the department of sociology at the University of Chicago, will lecture at 4 p.m. Thursday in Strong auditorium.
Jean Gob, graduate student and native of Antwerp, Belgium, will give a talk in French on the contemporary dramatist, Jean Anouilh, at 8 p.m. today in the Museum of Art. The lecture, which is open to the public, is sponsored by the French conversation group of the University Women's club.
Dr. Hughes will speak on "The Social Drama of Work." He is being sponsored by the KU department of sociology and anthropology.
Dr. Hughes' books, "French Canada in Transition" and "Where People Meet," contain important contributions to knowledge of relations between racial and national groups. In 1950 Dr. Hughes was president of the Society for Applied Anthropology.
French Talk Set for Tonight
Jayhawker
1953
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEW JAYHAWKER COVER- Shown here is the cover of the binder for the 1953 Jayhawker, University yearbook. The first section came out last week.
More Pictures of Students In Jayhawker, Editor Says
"The fall issue of the 1952-53 Jayhawker, now on distribution, features a picture coverage of University students doubling that in the first issue of the previous year's annual," Kenneth Dam, Jayhawker editor, said today.
Compilers of the Jayhawker index who recently completed the index for the fall section of the four issue yearbook listed twice as many students as the corresponding issue last year.
The fall issue contains a coverage of the football season, individual stories on gridiron starters, action pictures of the Olympic basketball games, and a feature by Eob Kenny,
Dec. 5-6 Deadlines For Overseas Mail
Students wishing to take the English proficiency examination this semester must register today or tomorrow.
Christmas parcels to servicemen overseas may reach them by Christmas if air-mailed by Dec. 5 or 6, Lawrence postmaster Harry R. Barnard said today.
All students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Education, School of Journalism, School of Medicine (Nursing), and the School of Fine Arts must take the exam before graduation. Students may register for the test in the dean's office of their respective schools.
Proficiency Exam Registration Today
Packages should be addressed clearly in a heavy box, Mr. Barnard said. Flat rate for air mail packages is 80 cents per pound.
Deadline for regular parcel post Christmas overseas packages was Nov. 15, he said.
Airmail Christmas cards and letters should be sent overseas by Dec. 10, he said.
The exam will be given from 2 to 5 p.m. Saturday. The room and building for taking the exam will be assigned at registration.
versely down the Jayhawker issues from soiling in a new, permanent cover of Kromekute, an enamel paper, which can easily be removed. "The jacket on your Jayhawker will give it years of extra wear," the editor said.
Students may pick up their Jayhawkers at the Jayhawker office on presentation of receipts.
There also is a feature by Jón Ise on the socialization of athletes, a big wheels section big pages, purity sections big images of freshmen women, fraternity and sorority pledges, and new residents in University dormitories.
a member of the 1952 Olympic basketball team, on the trip to Helsinki
ASC to Deal With 3 Bills
Three measures will be taken up at the All Student Council meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in Green hall.
The bill for the non-partisan election of class officers will be read for the first time. This bill is a revision of an earlier bill proposed by FACTS which was defeated.
Light Rain, Snow Seen for Kansas
Winty weather is taking no holiday in Lawrence and the Midwest
occasional light rain or snow and higher temperatures tonight were forecast for most of eastern and southern Kansas.
southern Kansas A new storm front is approaching from the west, but forecasters said the center probably would strike the Dalakots, although Kansas would feel moderate effects tonight.
Wednesday will be cloudy with occasional rain in eastern and central Kansas, mixed with snow in the extreme northeast and north central portions.
No appreciable precipitation fell in Lawrence last night, according to C. J. Posey, volunteer weather observer.
Dingy fog hovered over eastern Kansas today, the west was cloudy and the central section was covered by traffic-snarling ice.
Spitting rain ended in the night, but low temperatures glazed the drizzle and melting snow in central Kansas. The highway patrol said roads were hazardous north and southwest of Topeka and west to Great Bend or Russell.
The condition of city streets was greatly improved today as travel and slightly rising temperatures changed ice to slush.
Professor to Attend Psychology Meeting
M. Erik Wright, professor of clinical psychology, will deliver a paper and participate in a symposium Thursday through Saturday at the Texas Psychological association in Austin.
Prof. Wright will discuss the outlook for clinical psychologists in psychotherapy during a psychotherapy research symposium. His paper is on "Psychological Therapy for the Epileptic Patient."
Will Adams, graduate student and FACTS vice president, said the present bill is expected to win bi-partisan support and probably will be passed at the next meeting.
An amendment to the bylaws concerning the Jayhawker advisory board will be read for the second time and voted upon tonight. The amendment provides an increase in salary for the Jayhawker editor and business manager. Each will receive $50 a month for nine months.
The amendment also states that instead of the Jayhawk advisory board granting bonuses, it must recommend such persons to the ASC. The ASC will have to pass these recommendations before bonuses are granted.
The amendment was originated by Dean Glasco, engineering junior. It is important, Bill Wilson, engineering senior and ASC president, said because undeserved bonuses are being granted.
The third item on the agenda is a report from the charter committee on the voters registration compromise. The bill on voters registration was tabled at the last meeting until a committee could work out a compromise. The bill will be voted on tonight.
Other business at the meeting will be voting on an additional $50 apportionment to Mortar board and discussing the Big Seven Student Government conference at the University of Missouri Dec. 12-13.
Murphy to Speak In Colby Tonight
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will give two addresses in Colby tonight.
The chancellor will speak on "The Mutual Responsibilities of the Citizen and the Public Official," at a banquet for the conference of public officials. The conference is sponsored by the Thomas County National bank in cooperation with the Bureau of Government Research at the University.
Later in the evening Dr. Murphy will address an open meeting of KU alumni. He will speak on "Higher Education in Kansas and the Next Biennium."
Ike Names Democrat to Cabinet Post
New York—(U.P.)—President-elect Eisenhower, having completed his cabinet by naming a Democratic trade unionist Secretary of Labor and choosing a manufacturer to be Secretary of Commerce, scheduled a conference today with one of the new appointees.
Gen. Eisenhower gave the labor post, in an unexpected move, to Martin P. Durkin, 58, president of the United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices of Plumbing and Pipe Fitting Industry of the United States and Canada (AFL).
He awarded the commerce job to Sinclair Weeks, 59, of Boston, chairman of the Republican National Finance committee since 1949.
The appointments were announced late yesterday by Arthur H. Vandenberg Jr., Eisenhower's secretary. Mr. Vandenberg also had appointed Walter Williams of Seattle undersecretary of commerce.
Mr. Weeks, who served briefly as U. S. Senator from Massachusetts during World War II and campaigned actively for Gen. Eisenhower, was one of two visitors who Vandenberg said would visit the President - elect's Morningside Heights residence today. The other was George M. Humphrey, who will become Secretary of the Treasury
The appointment of Mr. Durkin was a surprise because the Chicago labor leader has been a lifelong Democrat. He voted for Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson in the recent election.
Mr. Durkin said in Washington his nomination was "quite a surprise" and that he may find it necessary to become a Republican "now that I'm in the cabinet."
He had served a similar capacity in state government, as Illinois' director of labor, under both Republican and Democratic administrations.
Mr. Durkin, who began his union career as a steamfitter's apprentice, said last night he believed Gen. Eisenhower wanted to erase sections of the Taft-Hartley law which may be "working fundamental labor hardships."
He said in an interview today he
The selection of Mr. Weeks as commerce secretary had been anticipated, as he had been a prominent figure in business and a brilliant strategist in state and national Republican affairs.
He said he would take steps to arrange a meeting between Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio, co-author of the labor law, and major union leaders to discuss revision of the legislation.
1
would attempt to play the role of peacemaker between the new administration and organized labor.
He said last night he would draw on his experience as head of six large corporations and a bank to "stimulate the development of industry," transportation and commerce."
Mr. Williams, who will work under him, was voted Seattle's most useful citizen in 1946. He is a director of the International YMCA and of the Paramount Fire Insurance company and is a member of the national board of directors of the American Association for the United Nations.
28
Page 2 University Daily Kansan
0.00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
Tuesday, Dec. 2, 1952
Battle Looms For GOP Floor Leader
Republican leaders of the incoming 83rd Senate are currently dividing up the chairmanships of the various important Senate committees, and finding it no easy task in some respects.
In most cases the changeover from a Democratic to Republican leadership is an automatic procedure. Majority party Senators with most seniority on a committee automatically will become chairmen. At the same time the Republicans automatically will receive potential control of the committees because they will furnish a majority of the members of each.
This is one of the most powerful results of the election. The slim Republican control in the Senate (1 vote), and House of Representatives (3 votes) will put the party in a position to forward its policies in all areas.
The job will go again to Sen. Styles Bridges of New Hampshire if he wants it. But Sen. Bridges has said that only the threat of a "rough and tumble fight" for the job among fellow Republicans would induce him to try for it again, in order to avert a party fight.
However, there already are evidences of a bitter battle for the position of Republican floor leader, who is chosen by a conference of all Republican senators.
Others mentioned prominently for the position are Sen. William F. Knowland of California, Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio, Sen. Everett Dirksen of Illinois and Sen. Leverett Saltonstall of Massachusetts.
Sen. Bridges would prefer to be chairman of the Senate appropriations committee, on which he is the senior Republican. He feels he cannot carry out the burden of that job as well as floor leader.
Sen. Taft now is chairman of the Republican policy committee, and is in line for chairmanship of the Senate labor committee. He has said that if Sen. Bridges steps aside the race for floor leader will be wide open.
Sen. Knowland has left no doubts as to his desire for the position. Sen. Dirksen is playing a waiting game, saying he will wait until he can confer with Republican leaders before expressing his desire.
Sen. Saltonstall, now the 'party whip, is the least likely aspirant for the position. He says he prefers to be chairman of the armed services
committee, on which he ranks second only to Sen. Bridges.
Two controversial Republicans, Sens. Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin and William E. Jenner of Indiana, are slated to assume committee chairmanships.
Sen. Homer Capehart of Indiana, an outspoken foe of economic controls, is in line for control of the banking committee. Sen. Alexander Wiley of Wisconsin can take over the Senate foreign relations committee if he chooses. He also is ranking Republican on the judiciary committee.
The important tax-writing finance committee should go to Sen. Eugene Millikin of Colorado; the public works committee to Sen. Edward Martin of Pennsylvania, and the interior and insular affairs committee to Sen. Hugh Butler of Nebraska.
To Sen. McCarthy probably will go control of the committee on government operations, the Senate's most important investigating group. This committee has authority to investigate anyone and any agency in the executive branch of the government.
Sen. William Langer of North Dakota should assume control of the post office and civil service committee; Sen. Charles W. Tobey of New Hampshire, of the interstate and foreign commerce committee; Sen. Francis Case of South Dakota, of the District of Columbia committee, and Sen. George D. Aiken of Vermont, of the agriculture and forestry committee.
Sen. Jenner succeeds to the chairmanship of the rules committee, a post Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., of Massachusetts would have held had he not been defeated.
Little Action Foreseen For New GOP Veep
Bob Stewart
Barring the unforeseen, Richard Nixon's role as president of the Senate will be uneventful. This office is largely a figurehead well laid out by parliamentary procedure.
The real power of the Senate lies in the various committees which consider, formulate, and present the bills. Nixon's influence will be felt in the passageways and corridors of the Senate, a suggestion here, a proposal there. But he will not be able to dominate a Senate which has a majority of only two Republicans.
Certainly this man who voted for voluntary civil rights has no chance of getting a civil rights bill through the Senate. Nor is it likely that the Universal Military Training bill which he voted for will pass.
The possibility that Nixon may be called to vote in the case of a tie is more theoretical than realistic. There are too many cases where senators cross party lines.
There is little more he can do on the farm program, for the Republicans plan to maintain it just as they do the Taft-Hartley law. He and his party are against federal aid to education, so there is no chance to be influential in this area.
Possibly in the field of foreign policy Nixon can take a lead. He supported the ECA, the Greek-Turkish loan, the Marshall plan and troops to Europe. Yet internationally minded Eisenhower probably has more drive in that direction than the Californian.
Nixon's future appears to be one of opening and presiding over the Senate, keeping the chicanery to a minimum, guiding the sessions along prescribed parliamentary laws and serving at social functions Ike is unable to attend. —Jerry Renner.
The Magic Carpet trailer was somewhat of a disappointment to our favorite coed who was lured into it expecting to see German war relics or ancient Egyptian mummies.
Short Ones
Stevenson's recent statement that he intends to return to law practice to "start making a living" makes us wonder what he expected to do if elected President.
ONE MAN'S OPINION
SOAP SOAP
Rv DEAN EVANS
One of the gravest international problems of our times is the war in Korea. It will continue to be an international stumbling block until we steel ourselves to the fact that it will cost us to get out of Korea.
Since the start of the truce talks, we have eagerly awaited settlement. It is now obvious to everyone that the Communists intended the talks only to gain time.
By allowing them to stall, we have lost the military initiative that we held a year ago, and any future military action cannot start with any assurance of success until we increase our forces in the field.
We deluded ourselves into believing that we could reason with the followers of a political philosophy that, from its initial climb to power, has been committed to the destruction of our economy, our religion, the very fundamentals of our way of life.
There will be no solution to Korea, or Indo-China, or any other place the Communists threaten us, until we deliver to them such military punishment or economic pressure that it is to their advantage to desist.
Let us not kid ourselves into believing that we can achieve a working compromise with a power intent on our destruction. Neither can we delude ourselves into trusting a power that sees no moral wrong in breaking faith with its enemies.
The only feasible solution to Korea is a military action, aimed at the elimination of the enemy's field forces, and forcing him to abandon the ideologies that led him to war.
There are many persons who cry out against the cost of such a campaign. Yet the patrol actions which have taken place during the current stalemate have cost the U.S. alone 45,000 casualties.
And those casualties were wasted, because the wounding of those men gained the free world nothing.
How long can we stand the strain on our economy of supporting the Korean war?
How long can we pour our young men and our resources into a "minor" action?
Must we always be committed to a policy of containment, which offers us the possibility of loss, but not the possibility of gain?
Paden City, W.Va.—Sheldon Buck,
of West Branch, Mich., who can't
stand the smell of a buck and
chokes at the sight of a doe, plans
to leave for parts unknown next
Monday when hunting season begins here. Buck is allergic to deer
or anyone he has touched one . . .
although he eats venison.
In most of this conflict, we must await the actions of the Communists, because we are governed by moral standards which deny us the possibility of lashing out at our enemy's weak spots.
But in Korea, our enemy has exposed himself to our wrath by an act of vicious aggression. We are morally bound to punish him, and defend the free world against any such acts in the future.
By UNITED PRESS
News Briefs
Toronto—Miss Barbe Fleet, 22,
who penned the tune "A Pair of
Silver Spurs and a Sombrero," and
specializes in weight-lifting, was
sentenced to four months in jail
yesterday for trying to steal a skirt.
***
Claremont, N.H.-Dennis Miller, 5, apparently doesn't expect a very long winter.
Little Man on Campus
When he bruised his arm in a washing machine Dennis told his mother: "I was washing out my bathing suit to have it ready for next summer."
LIBRARY QUIET
COACH
"Whadda ya mean you got examinations--did you come here for an education or ta play basketball?"
Ike's Attorney General Is Clean-up Expert
A front office job is something new for Herbert Brownell Jr., President-elect Eisenhower's new attorney general, although he has masterminded three presidential campaigns.
The 48-year-old New York lawyer has been prominent in politics for years but has chosen to be the behind-the-scenes man in several political campaigns in the last 10 years.
Now he is to be in charge of the Eisenhower clean-up operation.
Mr. Brownell was largely responsible for Gov. Thomas E. Dewey's 1948 campaign in which he planned the "coast into office" strategy with a series of speeches filled with well-rounded generalities which avoided any clenched-fist tactics which might have left post-election bruises.
Mr. Brownell's office is expected to be one of the foremost in the Ike administration because Gen. Eisenhower placed major emphasis on the anti-corruption and "let's clean out Washington" themes.
As a campaign manager, Mr. Brownell began in politics when he and Gov. Dewey started their political careers as doorbell ringers for the Republican organization in the old 10th Assembly district in the Manhattan borough of New York. Later Mr. Brownell was Gov. Dewey's manager in his successful bid for the New York governorship in 1942.
A member of the New York assembly, Mr. Brownell aided Gov. Dewey's gangbusting activities from time to time with the boosting of needed legislation to curb the rackets.
He retired from politics temporarily in 1937 to return to his New York law firm, Lord, Day & Lord, which represents—among other large organizations—the American Hotel association.
As Republican National Committee chairman from 1944 to 1946, he set up for the first time a permanent national organization with a public relations department and particular emphasis on coordination with Congress.
Through Mr. Brownell's planning it also was the first time in 20 years that a GOP headquarters was in Washington instead of in New York.
The son of a Nebraska minister,
Mr. Brownell has been described as a "slim, young-appearing political idealist with a balding dome, a long, thin face, and the eyes of a devotee."
Throughout the current campaign, Mr. Brownell remained relatively behind the scenes, but is considered one of the most powerful factors in the Eisenhower political strategy. He played an important role as an like pusher at the Chicago nominating convention last July and later
during the actual campaign was one of Eisenhower's major "think men."
Many observers think that Mr. Brownell's close association with Gov. Dewey—a New York racket buster himself—should give the incoming attorney general a good deal of insight into how to run some government-cleansing operations.
The scholarly Phi Beta Kappa reportedly looks like anything but a tough guy, but looks can be deceiving and, as Sen. Herman Welker (R-Ida.) put it after hearing of Mr. Brownell's appointment, "a lot of squalid characters around Washington are probably packing their bags already."
—Phil Newman
Letters
To the Editor of the Daily Kansan
First I should like to congratulate you on the fine job you have been doing in publicizing the facts concerning inadequate student housing. I think, however, that the headline in last Tuesday's paper gave an erroneous impression.
Adams Speaks Only for Himself
Perhaps in an autocratically run organization the word of one of its main officers can be taken as the opinion of the party, but in FACTS the party can speak only through its open meetings in which every member has equal voice. Thus the opinion was my own, not that of FACTS; the official party position must await a resolution adopted at a party meeting.
The headline read: "Pach, FACTS Assail Report On Housing." The article then quoted statements by the president of Pach and me.
Will Adams graduate student
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 second-time masters office at Lawrence Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
Topeka, Ks.
Freshmen to See Their Principals
The University, the students, and high schools in Kansas and Missouri all will benefit from the fourth annual principal-freshman conference next Tuesday, Registrar James K. Hitt said today.
The University has invited 100 principals of Kansas high schools and 14 from Missouri high schools to attend the conference and meet with the freshmen from their schools. The principals come from schools having three or more freshmen attending the University. The Missouri schools are being invited for the first time.
Freshmen have the chance to "get the load off their minds" about the transition from high school to college. Their views help the principals to better prepare students for college and the University to better serve the students. Several changes have resulted from the previous conferences.
In conjunction with this year's conference, each principal has been invited to bring along a mathematics field trip to his school to meet with
teacher from his school to meet with the University mathematics department during the day. Two years ago English teachers from the high schools met with the University English department.
Wesley Ticket Sale To End Tomorrow
Sale of tickets for the annual Wesley foundation Christmas dinner will end tomorrow, Betty Southern fine arts freshman and ticket chairman, said today.
The dinner, to be held at 5 p.m. Sunday in the First Methodist church at 10th and Vermont streets, is sponsored jointly by Wesley foundation and Kappa Phi, Methodist girls organization.
Tickets may be purchased at the foundation office in Myers hall or from members of the ticket committee. They are Miss Southern, John Hysom, engineering freshman, and Twila Casterline, fine arts sophomore.
Carillon Program
The carillon program to be played
Wednesday from 7 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
follows:
"Angelus" ... J. Massenet
(arranged for carillon by
Stanford Lehmberg)
French-Canadian folk songs
1. "Dans Tous Les Cantons"
2. "Petit Rocher de la Houte Montagne"
tagne 3. "A La Claire Fontaine"
3. "A La Claire Fontaine"
4. "Les Trois Filles d'un Prince"
"The Swan" C. Saint-Saens
Two Songs S. Foster
1. "Camptown Races"
2. "I Dream of Jeannie"
"All Through the Night"
"Crimson and the Blue" Welsh Air
Western Civilization Optional Exams Set
Western Civilization preliminary examinations will be given at 7:30 to 9 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday.
The examinations are optional. No grades will be recorded although students may discuss the tests later with their proctors.
Two separate tests will be given. One test covering units one through five will be held in 9 Strong. The other test covering units six through ten will be given in 103 Strong.
The tests will be offered both nights in their respective places. No registration is necessary for these preliminary examinations.
'Brief Encounter Fifth Series Film
The fifth of the 1952-53 film series, "Brief Encounter," will be shown at 7:30 Friday night in Hoch auditorium.
The movie, a British production, is described by critics as being one that appeals to the group"that is provoked by the usual run of movies. It is based on a play by Noel Coward, "Still Life," and the screen play is also done by Mr. Coward.
It is an intimate drama limited to a brief and poignant romance of a married woman and a married man. Nearly all of the action takes place in a railway waiting room and in the small English town nearby.
The story is of a middle-class wife, happily married and the mother of two children, a settled doctor, and their short and casual acquaintance that suddenly ripens into deep affection.
Hershey Hears Need Of 19-Year-Olds Told
rection.
Celia Johnson plays the married woman and Trevor Howard plays the doctor.
Washington —(U.P.)— Draft directors of all states and territories met here Monday to report on the troubles they're having in filling military manpower quotas.
Many of them told National Selective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey that they probably will have to start drafting 19-year-olds by March or shortly thereafter.
Hershey, who called the state officials here for a semi-annual conference, said he would confer with each director separately before deciding what to do about his year-old order banning induction of anyone below 20.
His edict was intended to prevent some boards from calling up 19-year-olds while others still had
year-olds while others still had plenty of older men.
Secretary of Labor Designate Calls for Taft-Unions Meeting
Washington—(U.P.)—Secretary of Labor designate Martin P. Durkin called today for an early meeting between Sen. Robert A. Taft (R.-Ohio) and top union leaders to discuss revision of the Taft-Hartley law.
The Democratic appointee to President-elect Eisenhower's cabinet has disclosed that he will try to play the role of pacemaker between organized labor and the new Republican administration.
He urged the AFL and CIO to give Gen. Eisenhower "a fair chance" to prove that he is "sympathetic" to labor.
He declined to say at this time just what changes he personally considers essential, nor would he speculate on how far Sen. Taft might be willing to go in revamping law, but He noted that Sen. Taft has "agreed that there should be amendments" and has promised to introduce new labor legislation in the 83rd Congress.
The 58-year-old former president of the AFL Plumbers' union also held out the olive branch to Sen. Taft, co-author of the labor law whose outright repeal has been the objective of union leaders for years.
"Labor certainly should be consulted in advance on any bill to be introduced in the new Congress
on this subject," he said.
There was no immediate comment from Sen. Taft. The Ohio senator had recommended Clarence E. Manion, former dean of the Notre Dame law school, or former Sen. John A. Danaher (R-Conn.) for the labor secretorship. Some of Sen. Taft's friends suspected that the senator was miffed by the Durkin appointment, but they were not sure whether he would say so publicly.
Mr. Durkin, a Chicago-born Irishman who served eight years as Illinois state director of labor, said he was "completely surprised" when he was notified last Friday night that he was being considered by Gen. Eisenhower for secretary of labor.
He said he is a registered Democrat, and voted for Democratic candidate Adlai E. Stevenson in the recent presidential election. But he added that "I may find it necessary to change" party affiliation now that he has been named to a Republican cabinet.
Tuesday, Dec. 2, 1952
Senior Writes Overture For Dec.10 Production
Before the curtain rises on the opening scene of "A Phoenix Too Frequent" Wednesday night, Dec. 10, an overture composed by Stewart Gordon, college senior, will keynote the spirit of the spark-
P. M. SARAFAYOV
STEWART GORDON
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Kappa Beta: 5:30 p.m. meeting.
Mvers hall.
La Terulia; 4:30 p.m., 113 Strong-
German Christmas Carol choir,
rehearsal, 5 p.m., 306 Fraser. All
interested students welcome.
14PC: 7:30 p.m., Sigma Chi house.
All Student Council meeting: 7:30
p.m., 103 Green.
Art Education club: 7:30 p.m., 323 Strong.
Zoology club: 7:30 p.m., 206 Snow
All interested invited.
Radio Amateurs club: 7:30 p.m. 2nd floor EE labs, election of officers and discussion of new constitution.
Phi Lambda Upsilon: honorary chemistry society, 7:30 p.m., Faculty club. Initiation of new members, all members be present. Refreshments.
University Daily Kansan
University Women's club French group: 8 p.m., Spoon lounge, Jean Gob speaking in French on Jean Anouilh.
WEDNESDAY
Wesley foundation: no cabinet meeting this week.
Jay Janes: 5 p.m., 9 Strong.
Wesley foundation: annual Christmas dinner, Sunday, 5 p.m. Tickets on sale through Wed. Wesley foundation office, Myers hall, 50c.
Kappa Phi: cabinet meeting, 7
p.m. Myers hall.
Page 3
Bacteriology club: 7:30 p.m., 502 Snow. Dr. Werder, "Nonspecific Resistance."
Arnold Air society: 7:15 p.m., MS lounge. Purchase tickets for AAS banquet at meeting.
Froshawk: 7:30 p.m., 101 Snow, constitution will be discussed.
Pre-Nursing club: 4 p.m. Fraser dining room.
National Rifle association: business meeting, 7:30 p.m., 107 MS bldg. All members attend. Bring dues.
HAJAS: 7:30 p.m., Drill hall, MS bldg.
Spanish Club chorus: 4:30 p.m.
113 Strong, to learn carols for the Christmas party. All interested persons invited.
THURSDAY
Cercle Francais; reunion de Noel, sept heures et demie, 131 Strong, Pantomine de Saint Nicholas; Pastorale de Noel.
KuKu club: 7:15 p.m., 106 Green, election of officers, attendance required.
quired.
YMCA: 7:30 p.m., 101 Snow. Jan
Brazda, "I Was a Communist
Prisoner."
Versammlung des Deutsches Verein:
5 uhr, 502 Fraser. Music program.
Ys group: Henley House, 9 p.m.
Mountain club: 7:30 p.m., 402
Lindley. All interested invited.
Jacksonville, Fla. — (U.P.) The city commission ruled recently that no business is to be transacted in any fire station. Mayor Haydon Burns said he received a complaint about a sign on one fire station that read "fresh eggs for sale."
Fire Station Not for Business
ling Christopher Fry comedy.
Gordon's work is not unknown to University theater-goers. Last year he composed incidental music for "The Importance of Being Earnest" and "Twelfth Night" that helped set the tone for both productions.
The overture is for two pianos and percussion. It will be tape-recorded by the University radio, with Alfred Kanwischer, fine arts junior, at the other piano. Paul Worley, education junior, will handle the percussion—bass and snare drums and cymbals.
Dr. John Newfield, director of the University theater, told Gordon the last of September he wanted "a commentary on the play itself rather than on the production."
Approaching it from this angle, Gordon saw only one rehearsal of the production. The overture was finished by the first of November.
"The play itself is very sharp and witty," Gordon said, "but all this sharpness and wittiness is underplayed." These aspects are emphasized in the overture, however, because Gordon feels "there should be no doubt in the audience's mind what they're going to see."
In 1945 Gordon was a scholarship student studying piano in Philadelphia under Madame Olga Samaroff-Stokowski, the late wife of Leopold Stokowski. He also spent three years in Germany studying piano in Walter Gieseking's master class of about 15 students.
A native of Olathe, this is Gordon's second year at the University. He is majoring in speech and drama, and has an NROTC scholarship.
"A Phoenix Too Frequent" and George Bernard Shaw's "The Dark Lady of the Sonnets" will be produced Dec. 10, 11, 12, and 13 in Fraser theater.
Students may now obtain free tickets by presenting ID cards at the box office in the basement of Green hall, which is open 10 to 12 a.m. and 4 to 6 p.m. daily.
Staff Chest Drive Reaches $2,125
The Community Chest drive among University faculty and employees has reached a total of $2,124.75, Prof. E. C. Buehler, chairman of the drive, said today.
Prof. Buehler said a total of 271 persons have contributed to the drive with donations ranging from fifty cents up to $100. He said he feels confident that the goal of $3,500 will be reached.
The drive is only for faculty and employees of the University and does not include the students which have their own separate drive, Prof. Buehler said.
He said that Dec. 10 will be the official closing date of this drive and he hopes all will make their contribution by that time.
Reuther Certain Of CIO Victory
Atlantic City — (U.R) — Walter P. Reuther, 45-year-old boss of the United Auto Workers, appeared certain today of victory in his fight to become president of the CIO.
Mr. Reuther gained the support he needed today when two big unions, previously unpledged, threw their lot with the red-haired union chief.
The two unions' support boosted Mr. Reuther's pledged total well over the 2,800,000 votes required for his election.
Support by the two unions, the United Rubber Workers and the Oil Workers union, gave Mr. Reuther an additional 355.438 votes in his fight with executive vice-president Allan S. Haywood to succeed the late Philip Murray.
The election is scheduled for Thursday at the final session of the 14th annual CIO convention. This issue has overshadowed all other events in the crucial convention and the fight is not over, as Haywood forces are pledged to carry the issue to the election floor.
However, there were recurring reports that the Haywood forces would hack down at the last minute in order to avoid an open fight on the convention floor. The Union chiefs felt an open fight might lead to a permanent break-up of the 35 CIO unions.
Until today, both men have been running neck and neck in a bitter battle to become the CIO's third president. The CIO, founded 15 years ago, was first headed by John L. Lewis who resigned in 1940 to be succeeded by Philip Murray.
Mr. Reuther, if and when he takes over the helm of the CIO, will also continue as chief of the 1,300,000-member Auto Workers, the largest union in the CIO ___
KU Grad Awarded Medicine Grant
Dr. Brooker, formerly of Ottawa, is conducting research on the sympathetic nervous system.
The award of the Dr. Samuel Murdock Jr., fellowship in medicine to Dr. Robert C. Brooker, a resident in general surgery at the University Medical center, was announced today by Dean W. Clarke Wescoe of the Medical center.
The Murdock fellowship, which memorializes a Sabeth physician, was established by his widow. This award is described as one of the highest honors in the KU medical school.
school.
Dr. Brooker holds A.B. and M.D. degrees from KU, the latter received in 1943. After service as a Navy medical officer during the war, he took a residency in pathology at the Medical center in 1947-48. The following year he was with the Thompson Brumm-Knepper clinic, St. Joseph, Mo., and in 1949-50 he taught anatomy on the University campus.
Who are the mysterious little men in Pogo? Transient Democrats?
U.S., ROK Troops Reinforce Seoul to Receive Eisenhower
Seoul, Korea — (0.1)—Re-
guards turned the war-battered
fortress on the Korean peninsula
elect Dwight Eisenhower's visit.
Soldiers and police carefully checked
incoming traffic to guard against the
possibility of Communist agents in-
filtrating the South Korean capital.
Other soldiers patrolled the streets
in armored cars and armed jeeps.
Seoul, Korea — (U.P.)— Reinforced American and South Korean guards turned the war-battered city of Seoul into the strongest fortress on the Korean peninsula today in anticipation of President-
It was reported without confirmation that all military personnel scheduled to take rest leave in Japan were being held until after Gen. Eisenhower's departure.
The President-elect's arrival time was still top secret. Officials refused to discuss the subject.
South Korean government officials, from President Syngman Rheon on down, were all set to greet the next U.S. President. President Rhee said he will tell Gen. Eisenhower the South Koreans will launch an offensive against the Communists-
He told a press conference the South Koreans are not afraid of 400 million Chinese.
alone, if necessary.
"The people and the army have nearly come to the end of their patience"he said.
Mr. Rhee's press conference took place while Seoul anxiously and tensely awaited Gen. Eisenhower's arrival. The war-battered city bore a Christmas-card look because of a one-inch mantle of snow that covered its thousands of tile rooftoped homes and hid much of the rubble.
The place and time of Gen. Eisenhower's arrival were still closely guarded secrets. Armored cars and armed jeeps patrolled the streets and thousands of soldiers and police kept a close watch on passersby.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Dec. 2, 1952
HANNA 2
HANNA 3
HANNA
FIRST STRING CAGE TEAM—These five players will attempt to defend the Jayhawker's Big Seven and NCAA championships. Left to right they are B. H. Born, center; Bill Heitholt, guard; Jerry Alberts, forward; Larry Davenport, forward, and Dean Kelley, guard. Kelley is the only starter returning from the 1952 national championship club. Three other men temporarily are lost due to injuries. Charlie Hoag, Gil Reich, and LaVannes Squires.
Rebuilt Kansas Cage Squad Opens Against Tulane Dec.11
By CHUCK MORELOCK
Kansan Assistant Sports Editor
A rebuilt Kansas team opens its 1952-53 basketball season against Tulane in New Orleans Dec. 11 with only one starter returning from the great 1951-52 squad which swept the Big Seven and NCAA crowns and which placed seven men on the United States Olympic cage team.
Captain Dean Kelley, who saw action in the world basketball tournament in Helsinki this summer, is the lone returnee. Kelley, a clever defender and fine ball handler, developed rapidly during the 51-52 campaign and played outstanding ball in the Jayhawk's stretch drive which saw them edge past Kansas State for the Big Seven championship.
Although not a heavy scorer, Kelley was tough in the clutch and enabled the Jayhawker's to edge Missouri 60-59 at Columbia by hitting a last-minute side shot. He was particularly effective in bottling up opposition scoring stars and held K-State's Jim Iverson and St. Louis's Ray Steiner to their lowest game totals of the season.
Kelley and sophomore Bill Heitholt are the first string guards at present. Sophomores Larry Davenport and Jerry Alberts are the forwards, and junior B. H. Born is the center. Charley Hoag, the sparkplug of the 1952 national championship squad, has to undergo a knee operation and will be lost to the team until February. Hoag has been called the greatest "sixth" man in college
basketball.
Gil Reich, rated a top cage prospect, is still wearing a splint on a finger injured in the Missouri football game and will be unable to practice for at least two weeks.
Heitholt, a battling, aggressive player, saw action in most of the Kansas games last year. He is fast, a good rehounder, and a fair shot,
B. H. Born, who played briefly last year, has the tremendous task of filling Clyde Lovellette's shoes. Lovellette, greatest scorer in KU cage history, broke virtually all national scoring records. Born, at 6 feet 9 inches, the tallest man on the squad, displayed flashes of shooting, ball-handling, and rebounding ability last year, and at present is attempting to perfect a book shot.
Davenport, a good floor man and excellent set shot performer, turned in several fine jobs during the '51-52 season, with a number of spectacular long shots.
Alberts, the greest man on the tentative starting lineup, has a great deal of natural ability and is a good shot. He saw action in nine games as a freshman last year. If he can
develop during the season, the Jay- hawks should have two of the top sophomore forwards in the Big Seven.
LaVannes Squires, guard from Wichita, is out with a lung aliment and is lost to the team indefinitely. Squires is a great ball handler and a good all-around floor man.
The second five has Everett Dye and Wes Johnson at forwards, Al Kelley and Dean Smith at guards, and Eldon Nicholson at center. Reserves are Ken Buller, Marvin Deckert, Harold Patterson, Jack Wolfe, John Anderson, Bob Forsyth, and Jerry Taylor. Patterson, all-American junior college center at Garden City is a good rebound but is hampered by a charleyhorse suffered in the Missouri football game. He probably will be shifted to forward on the KU team.
The Tulane game is the first on an 18 game schedule which includes three other non-conference opponents, Rice, SMU, and Oklahoma A&M. The Jayhawkers also will play in the annual Big Seven tournament at Kansas City Dec. 28-30.
Toughest league opponents from Kansas probably will be Kansas State, favored to take the Big Seven title from the Jayhawkers, Missouri and Colorado. The latter two are much stronger than last year and may upset the Wildcats for the conference crown.
New York—(U.P.)-Three Big Ten teams — Michigan, Indiana, and Iowa—marked up triumphs as basketball took over the center of the collegiate athletic stage today.
Cagers Occupy U.S. Sport Scene
Indiana was a run-away winner by a 95-56 score over Valparaiso in last night's action, but Michigan had to rally in the final quarter for an 80-72 decision over tough Marquette and Iowa led steadily for a 62-52 win over Butler.
Another full schedule of games is on tap tonight, featuring the seasonal debut of North Carolina State, the defending Southern Conference champion, against Furman, an interleague battle between Clemson and Georgia, and Virginia vs. Maryland.
Big Ten fans were especially interested in the Michigan-Marquette battle at Ann Arbor, Mich., because it was the first of three games against Big Ten foes that the hilltopsters from Milwaukee, Wis., play this week. On Friday they meet Wisconsin and on Saturday, Michigan State.
Marquette, winner of the National Catholic Invitation tournament last season, gave Michigan a real reap and was tied at 56-16 at
Rose Bowl Mentors Start Worrying Early
Wisconsin's Ivy Williamson called it a "terrific job." and Southern California Mentor Jess Hill seconded that.
Madison, Wis.—(U.P.)—The Rose Bowl football coaches agreed on one thing today—they've got big jobs ahead preparing their squads for the New Year's day battle.
"That kind of football won't defeat Wisconsin." was his comment on the game that knocked USC from the undefeated ranks.
"We've got a job on our hands, all right." he said.
Williamson, in the stands at South Bend, Ind., said the game was "no discredit" to Southern California.
Hill wasn't happy about the Trojans' 9 to 0 loss to Notre Dame Saturday.
"Frankly," he said, "we haven't thought about Wisconsin yet. We had to concentrate on UCLA and Notre Dame two Saturdays in a row."
the end of the third period. Then the Wolverines caught fire with 24 points to score their first opening game victory in three seasons.
Iowa opened deliberately and had only a 16-14 first quarter lead against Butler. But then the Hawkeyes switched to a fast break and opened to a comfortable margin. Deacon Davis led Iowa with 21 points and Herb Thompson added 18.
Hill squashed the theory that his team dropped the Notre Dame battle because of the impending Rose Bowl encounter, but said he hoped the loss "affects our playing" against Wisconsin.
"The defeat doesn't in any way
The Trojans won 14 to 12 over UCLA, the team which earlier in the season whipped Wisconsin, 20 to 7.
"The outstanding part of Southern California is their over-all defensive strength," Williamson said. He was reluctant to single out any Trojan, but was ready to agree that fullback Leon Sellers played a great game.
take away from the respect we have for Southern California," Ivy said. "They're still a great football team."
Hill, however, mentioned Wisconsin's fullback Alan Ameche, halfback Harland Carl and quarterback Jim Haluska with respect.
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By DON NIELSEN
Kansan Sports Editor
Kansas sports will not see much of a lull before basketball takes over the limelight. The first cage game is on Dec. 11 with Tulane university at New Orleans.
Contrary to what seems to be a prevailing opinion on the campus, however, the Jayhawks are not going to have a poor basketball season. Of course, anything following last year's record breaking basketball season will be anticlimactic. Olympic titles just don't grow on trees.
But that offers no reason to suppose that Kansas is going to go from top dog in the Big Seven and the nation to the bottom of the conference.. Sure, losing the first five men from last year's team will hurt. Still we have five outstanding lettermen returning in B. H. Born, Dean Kelley, Larry Davenport, Bill Heitholt, and Charlie Hoag.
The whole style of Kansas basketball will be changed this year, however, in order better to utilize the speed and precision of the men available. Whereas last year's squad was more or less committed to a style of play which centered around the star center, Clyde Lovevellette, this year's crop of cagemen will be a speedier team with more sharpshooters. This year's first five will consist of a group of men which should be able to hit from anywhere on the floor.
Actually this year's team will be more like those of Kansas' past. Fast moving, accurate teams have been the rule rather than the exception in Kansas basketball.
India
"An introduction to learning"
says J. HILLIS MILLER President, University of Florida
"The Reader's Digest is an introduction to learning. Its variety, brevity, intellectual stimulation, selective mental diet, and good humor whet the appetite for more of the same. It leads to larger fields for browsing and deeper cerebration."
COLUMBUS
To busy students and educators, The Reader's Digest brings each month a sweep of information which otherwise could be obtained only through days and weeks of painstaking research. Selecting and condensing the most significant material from hundreds of periodicals, The Reader's Digest provides the widest collection of facts with the greatest economy of effort.
★ ★ ★
In December Reader's Digest, you'll be interested in *A Bible for the 20th Century*—story of the new Revised Standard Version of the Bible; What You Should Know About Your Eyes—a report on eye care and the commoner eye diseases; England Prepares to Crown a Queen—the $300,000,000 preparations for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II.
Topeka, Ks.
Michigan State Tops Final UP Standings
New York—(U.P.)—Unbeaten and untied Michigan State was the overwhelming choice of the United Press board of coaches today for the 1952 mythical rational college football championship, with Georgia Tech runnerup.
The 35 leading coaches who make up the UP rating board nearly made it unanimous when they named the mighty Spartans the No. 1 team on 32 ballots for the best showing ever made in the ratings. Michigan State's total of 343 points was just seven short of a perfect score.
Georgia Tech was second, 51 points behind the Spartans; Notre Dame third, while Oklahoma and Southern California tied for fourth.
Georgia Tech, Notre Dame and Oklahoma each received one first place vote. Of the three coaches who did not vote the Spartans tops, one ranked them second, another chose them third and the third coach selected them fifth.
By sweeping through their schedule of nine major opponents and learning the top ranking, Coach Biggie Munn's men thus fulfilled the pre-season prophecy of the coaches, who picked them as the best in the land. Michigan State topped all of the 11 weekly listings.
The Spartans had only one tight squeeze this season, topping Oregon State, 17-14, on a last-minute field goal. They rallied to beat Michigan 21-13 in their opener and later topped Purdue, 14-7, but all other victories were one-sided. Michigan State bounced Texas A&M, 48-46; Syracuse, 47-6; Penn State, 34-7; Indiana, 41-14; Notre Dame, 21-3, and Marquette, 62-13.
State, which officially becomes a football member of the Big Ten conference in 1953, now has won 24 straight games.
Georgia Tech, the nation's only other perfect-record team and host eleven in the Sugar Bowl, had 292 points; Notre Dame, which beat or tied five conference champions or co-champions this year, was third
Page 3
with 237 points, advancing three places from last week.
Oklahoma, the Big Seven conference titleholder, and Southern California, the Pacific Coast champion and Rose Bowl host, each had 214 points. The Trojans dropped down from second place after suffering their season's first setback Saturday by Notre Dame.
Wisconsin, co-champion of the Big Ten, barely edged Texas, the Southwest conference king, by one point for a place in the top 10.
Bounding out the top 10 teams in order were UCLA (158 points), Mississippi's Sugar Bowl entry (113), Tennessee's Cotton Bowl invaders (108), Alabama, bound for the Orange Bowl (52) and Wisconsin, headed for the Rose Bowl (51).
The United Press final 1952 college football ratings (with first-place votes and won-and-lost records in parentheses):
Team Point
1. Georgia State (32) (9-0) 241
2. Georgia Tech (1) (11-0) 292
3. Notre Dame (1) (7-2-1) 237
4. Tie Oklahoma (1) (8-1-1) 214
5. California (9-1) 214
6. UCLA (8-1) 158
7. Mississippi (8-0-2) 113
8. Tennessee (8-1-1) 109
9. Ohio State (8-2) 52
10. Wisconsin (6-2-1) 51
Second 10 teams: 1, Texas; 50, 12; Purdue, 18; 13, Maryland; 16, 14; Princeton, 15; 12 (tie) Ohio State and Pittsburgh, 9 each; 17, Navy, 8; 18, Duke, 6; 19 (tie) Houston and Kentucky, 4 each. Others: Pennsylvania, 3; Florida, 2;
Others: Pennsylvania, 3; Florida, 2;
Tulsa and Illinois, 1 each.
Reich, Spencer Get More Grid Honors
The Jayhawks' Gil Reich and Oliver Spencer were named to the Associated Press all-Western football- second team. Reich was named to the defensive team and Spencer to the offensive unit.
Hoag's Operation Set for Wednesday
Charlie Hoag, stellar Kansas halfback, will undergo an operation Wednesday, in the KU medical center in Kansas City, Kan., on a lacerated cartilage in his left knee, suffered during the Kansas - Kansas State football game.
Hong will leave this afternoon for the hospital. The operation is to be performed by Dr. James Weaver, chairman of the department of orthopedics at the medical center.
NCAA Approves Grid Telecasts
The committee, which concluded a two-day meeting yesterday, said that this year's program—televising of only one football game each week—had "worked satisfactorily."
New York — (L.P.)— The NCAA television committee today placed its stamp of approval on the past season's limited screening of college football games and indicated it will recommend the same control plan for 1953.
- and worked slowly.
The decision was reached, the committee explained, on the basis "of opinion surveys and on the overall reaction of the public, press and the colleges themselves."
Although the 10-man committee did not state definitely that a similar program would be followed next year, it endorsed this year's TV setup and it was believed that the same arrangement would be followed next fall.
Hurt Student Returns to K11
A University student was back at school today after suffering a gunshot wound in the jaw while hunting with a friend Thanksgiving day. Don Canady, college junior from Iola, was injured by a .22 calibre rifle shot.
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Dec. 2, 1952
Hoag,Hantla,Leoni Make All-Big Seven
Halfback Charlie Hoag, guard Bob Hantla, and end Paul Leoni won berths on the United Press all-Big Seven first team.
Outside of these three Kansans and Nebraska's Jerry Minnick, the Big Seven roster was dominated by Sooners. Oklahoma won seven places on the first team, one for every year they have been on top of the conference.
Oliver Spencer, tackle; George Mrkonic, tackle, and Gil Reich, quarterback and defensive halfback, made the all-Big Seven second team. Galen Fiss, fullback and defensive linebacker, made the third squad.
The United Press all-Big Seven teams:
FIRST TEAM
Player, School Ht. Wt. Hometown
E. Max Boydston, Oklahoma 6-2 190 Muskogee, Okla.
E. Paul Leoni, Kansas 5-11 188 Chicago
T. Ed Rowland, Oklahoma 6-2 220 Odessa, Texas
T. Jerry Mifmanck, Nebraska 6-4 215 Cambridge, Neb.
B. Bob Hantla, Kansas 6-0 192 Meade, Kan.
G. J. D. Roberts, Oklahoma 5-10 225 Dallas, Texas
G. Tom Catlin, Oklahoma 6-1 195 Ponca City, Okla.
B. Eddie Crowder, Oklahoma 6-0 170 Muskogee, Okla.
B. Billy Vessels, Oklahoma 6-0 185 Cleveland, Okla.
B. Charlie Hoag, Kansas 6-2 188 Oak Park, Ill.
B. Buck McPhail, Oklahoma 6-1 202 Okla City, Okla.
SECOND TEAM
THIRD TEAM
SECOND TEAM THIRD TEAM
Dennis Emanuel, Neb. E Keith Hinway, Ia. St.
Don Branby, Colo. E Bill Schabacker, St.
Oliver Spencer, Kans. T Ed Husmann, Neb.
George Mrkonic, Kans. T Tom O'Boyle, K-State
Jack Lordo, Missouri G Don Boll, Neb.
Bob Castle, Missouri G Dick Bowman, Okla.
Verl Scott, Neb. C Rollie Arns, Ia. State
Gil Reich, Kans. B Zack Jordan, Colo.
Veryl Switzer, K-State B Bobby Reynolds, Neb.
Jim Hook, Missouri B Galen Fiss, Kansas
Bill Rowekamp, Missouri B Ed Merrifield, Mo.
Craft Named
Blue's Boss
Harry Craft, former Cincinnati Reds outfielder, today was named manager of the Kansas City Blues, New York Yankee farm team in the American association.
Two other managers were named for minor league teams at a meeting of 82 minor league clubs in Phoenix, Ariz.
Jimmy Gleason, former Kansas City and Cincinnati outfielder, was rehired as manager of the Binghamton, N.Y., New York Yankee's farm taecam in the Eastern league.
Eddie J. Murphy, first baseman, was hired as playing manager of the Salt Lake City Bees of the Class C Pioneer league.
But only Time will Tell
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Dec. 2, 1952
Page 6
University Women's Club To Hold Party Saturday
The University Women's club will entertain husbands of members and unmarried members of the faculty from 8 p.m. to midnight Saturday. Formal attire is optional.
All three floors of the central part of Strong Hall will be used. The receiving line will stand near the Christmas tree in the rotunda. Dancing will be enjoyed there later in the evening.
The party is arranged so the main door will be blocked and guests will enter by way of the two wings. Class rooms will be open in each wing for wraps. Hostesses will be in charge.
Refreshments will be served on the second floor.
The KU laboratory theater will present "The Second Shepherd's Play" at 8:45 p.m. in Strong auditorium. The play is regarded as the finest example of comedy in the early English religious drama.
Dancing will begin at 10 o'clock. The orchestra will be composed of these faculty members: Profs. Carroll D. Clark, E. O. Stene, Max Dresden, Arthur Johnson, Charles Weinaug, Kenneth Rose, Lawrence Dee, Ray Zepp, Leo Horacek, James Nickerson, and Charles Oldfather.
It is directed by Thomas Shay,
speech and drama instructor. All
who wish to see the play are urged
to attend. The theater will be closed umontly.
Dr. and Mrs. Franklin D. Murphy will be in the receiving line. With them will be Prof. and Mrs. J. W. Twente and Prof. and Mrs. A. J. Mix.
Program—Mrs. John E. Hankins, Mrs.C.F.Nelson,Mrs.F.J.Moreau, Dr. Elin K.Jorgensen.
Committees for the party are:
General chairmen—Mrs. Fritz Heider.
Music—Mrs. Martin Scheeer, Mrs.
Mrs. Erik Wright, Mrs. Robert
Sternfeld.
Decorations—Mrs. Richard Garrett, Mrs. M. C. Slough, Mrs. Gilbert Ulmer, Mrs. A. D. Jacobson.
Refreshments—Mrs. J. D. Stranathan, Mrs. Verner Smith, Mrs. Vincent Valleroy, Mrs. Gordon Wiseman, Mrs. Edwin Stene, Mrs. Milton Steinhardt, Mrs. Irvin Youngberg
Serving—Mrs. Roger Barker, Mrs.
W. D. Thompson, Mrs. A. J. Smith,
Mrs. Parke Woodard, Mrs. Hubert
Ulrich, Mrs. Carlyle H. Smith, Mrs.
William R. Scott, Worth Seagrandollar, Mrs. Donald Thompson,
Nation's Leading Housewives Talk Shop at White House
Washington—(U.R.)—Mamie Eisenhower and Bess Truman, like any other housewives, talked over housekeeping chores at the White House Monday.
mamie is Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower, wife of the President-elect who will move into 1600 Pennsylvania ave. Jan. 20; Bess is President Truman's wife.
Mrs. Truman came out on the front steps to greet the future first lady.
The two women greeted each other genially and posed for photographers before going indoors.
With Mrs. Eisenhower was Mrs Mary Jane McCaffrey, her personal secretary who may be White House social secretary after Jan. 20.
Mrs. Eisenhower was said to feel the visit was a social call, and any details of the visit would have to come from Mrs. Truman.
Mrs. McCaffree said Mrs. Eisenhower was expected to call on a friend or two before returning to New York later Monday after looking over the 100-room White House mansion.
EXPERT WATCH REPAIR
Mrs. Calvin Vanderwurf, Mrs.
Duane Wenzel, Miss Ruth McNeilly.
Hostesses—Mrs. Herbert Wright,
Mrs. Donald G. Wilson, Mrs. O. P.
Backus, Mrs. Holly C. Wagner, Mrs.
Walter H. Schoewe, Mrs. Charles
Warriner, Mrs. Worthie H. Horr,
Mrs. E. B. Phillips, Mrs. W. J. Ar-
gesinger, Mrs. R. H. Wagstaff, Mrs.
Henry Shenk, Mrs. George Baxter
Smith, Mrs. E. B. Stouffer, Mrs.
William R. Terrell, Mrs. Raymond
Zepp, Mrs. L. C. Woodruff, and Mrs.
Gerald M. Carney.
Electronically Timed. Guaranteed Satisfaction 1 Week or Less Service WOLFSON'S 743 Mass.
Delta Delta Delta sorority announces the recent pinnings of four members. Miss Mary Jane Brown, fine arts junior, was pinned to Mr. John Zumalt. Mr. Zumalt is a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity and is attending Kansas State Teachers college at Emporia.
Miss Grace Endacott, fine arts senior, was pinned to Mr. Bill Brooks college sophomore. Mr. Brooks is a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity.
Miss Marguerite Terry, education junior, was pinned to Mr. Richard Morgan. Mr. Morgan is a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity and is attending Washburn university at Topeka.
4 Pinnings Announced By Delta Delta Delta
Miss Darlene Heberling, education senior, was pinned to Mr. Eugene Gooding, engineering senior. Mr. Gooding is a member of Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemistry fraternity.
Maid of Cotton Contest Winner To Get Huge Wardrobe and Trip
Memphis, Tenn.—(U.R.) Almost any young girl would like nothing better than to spend six months traveling all over the world, wearing scads of beautiful clothes and generally living the good life.
That's what awaits the winner of the 1953 Maid of Cotton contest here Dec. 29-30, and Dixie's beauties already are preparing for the competition. Be from Dixie, but each will be from a cotton-growing state, which means that some will come from Arizona, Missouri, or California.
There's no bathing suit parade down a ramp before crowds of people in this contest, but the judges do get a private glimpse of the girls in bathing suits.
Good looks count in the contest, to be sure, but background, personality, poise, and temperament also weigh heavily with the judges. For the winner will represent the cotton industry on her world tour and will be on the go from dawn to dusk.
From January until next July, the winner won't have to worry about spotting another woman in a dress like hers. Her whole wardrobe, filling about 20 pieces of luggage, will be designed especially for her. After her travels end, all those clothes will be the property of the winner.
The candidates are cut to 20 by the time of the two days of final judging here. In the final night of judging, the girls appear in public, tell why they want to be the maid, why they think they would do a good
First it's to New York for a complete wardrobe, modeling courses, visits to famous restaurants, and appearances on radio and television.
job, and answer impromptu questions about cotton. As soon as the judges make their choices the whirl begins.
Then the maid, the tour manager,
and the secretary climb aboard a boat
around the United States, to Europe, South
America, and Canada.
Everywhere she goes, the maid models in fashion shows, and of course, cotton. Naturally, all her clothes are of cotton, from hat to shoes.
In every city, a full schedule awaits the maid, who must be single and between 19 and 24 years of age.
The first contest was held in 1939 with no wardrobe provided and just two short trips to the eastern United States.
The tour gradually grew until the 1947 maid went to France. Then South America was added and this year Canada. About 30 American cities are included on the tour. The maid gets not only the wardrobe, but also a new auto when the trip ends in Memphis.
CADETS
GET YOUR
uniform cleaned for the Military Ball NOW before the week end
Choose your shopping time with care. Now is a good time, for the earlier in the season, the better. There are also less crowded days during the week, and less crowded hours during each day. Be sure to avoid as much as possible the commuters' rush hours.
MILITARY JUNK PANTS
Let department stores do some of your mailing and wrapping. When you do your wrapping, buy rolls of Christmas paper instead of the usual three or four-sheet packages. Don't be afraid to buy large quantities of ribbon. What isn't used now can be used next year.
If you are willing to brave a snow or rain storm, you're almost certain to find stores much less crowded that day than they are on pleasant days. So take advantage of bad weather.
aners chants of APPEARANCE
make use of the mails and the telephone. Check down your list to which gifts can be ordered sight unseen. There are probably more than you think, many more than the obvious ones such as magazine subscriptions and theatre tickets.
Christmas Shopping Hints Help Students With Limited Budgets
Students always have a hard time trying to do their Christmas shopping, especially with their limited time budget. Here are a few hints which may help to relieve the situation.
Don't spurn duplicating. Buying three or four gifts of the same kind takes no more time than buying one. If there are several people of the same age or interests on your list, it is quite reasonable that they might all like the same gift.
First of all, make a list as soon as possible, and start working on it right away. Try to do as much of your browsing as possible in newspapers, magazines, and catalogues instead of in Christmas-crowded stores.
AT
STORIES
everyone needs gift ideas for at least some of the people on a Christmas list; and one of the best ways to get them is by watching the ads. Merchants make a special effort to publicize their most attractive gift items at this time of year. They further smooth the shopping path by telling what department carries each item.
To cover a great deal of ground, make a shopping plan. Man your expedition so that all of the items
Bv MARY COOPER
Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCE
you expect to find in one department, one store, or one part of town are together.
Buy your carry-home packages last. Even though the packages are small, they can be a burden if you have to carry them with you all day.
Watkins, Gamma Phi Engagements Told
Mrs. C. H. Southern of Larned, Kan, announces the recent engagement of her daughter, Betty Joyce, to Mr. Kenneth Folkerts, son of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Folkerts of Timken, Kan. Miss Southern is a fine arts freshman and a resident of Watkins hall.
Gamma Phi Beta sorority announces the engagement of Miss Karen Beardslee, fine arts sophomore, to Robert Asmann, college sophomore. Mr. Asmann is a member of Sigma Nu fraternity. The engagement was announced at dinner at the Gamma Phi Beta house Thursday.
Price-Tobler Engagement Announced by Parents
Miss Price was a freshman at the University last year. Mr. Tobler is a business senior and was formerly president of Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity.
Mr. and Mrs. Prescott Price of Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Priscilla, to Mr. William J. Tobler, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Tobler of Kansas City, Mo.
[ ]
YOUR EYES
图
Te wh be du ce slt na da
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
Wonder Skirt
It's orlon and nylon, yet feels like softest cashmere and when looked at closely it twinkles as will your eyes when you wear this soft! Junior Age skirt that's washable, wrinkle resistant, mildew proof and just plain miraculous. In blonde, grey, brown.
Sizes 9-15 17.95
Weaver's Ready-to-Wear — Second Floor
一、根据图片内容选择正确的选项。
14
Topeka, Ks.
Tuesday, Dec. 2, 1952
University Daily Kansan
"Santa Is Much Too Slow-Use Want Ads-Make Some Dough!"
Page 7
Kansan Classified Ads
Call KU 376
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 Dialler. Books are Journals, not later than 30 a.m. the day before publication date.
Classified dvertising Rates
One day Three days Five days
25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00
Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches--for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360, 1199 Mass. tf
BUSINESS SERVICE
GEORGE HAS a wide selection of tobacco open for free sampling. Pick the kind of tobacco suited just for you. George's Pipe Shop 727 Mass. 12-1
EXPERIENCED baby sitter. For information or appointment call 3271J. 12-1
BEYERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the pack or case, Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. tr
EXPERIENCED Typist. Term papers, notebooks, theses and miscellaneous. Mrs. J. R. Jesoo. 838 Louisiana, Apartment 4, upstairs. Phone 2775-J. **tr**
TYPING WANTED. Prompt, accurate
Pick-up and delivery service
after 6 p.m. and before 8 a.m. Phone
3152R. Mrs. Livingston. tf
RADIO AND TV repair service on all takes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the equipment and thus assuring fast, efficient service. Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. tt
TYPING SERVICE. experienced theses,
reports, etc. Regular rates. Mrs.Hall,
606 West 6th. Phone 1344W. ff
TYPING SERVICE in home. Theses,
themes, notebooks and miscellaneous.
Phone 2417. 12-8
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade
patties. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6
am. until midnight. tr
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malts, home-made pies and cakes. Free parking space for customers. tf
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the field. Their needs are easy. Our one-stop service is everything for our pets and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
Rentals-Ready buyers, William J. Van
Almen, 3110R. tt
FOR SALE
LOST
MEN: we have four tuxedos in excellent condition. Sizes 36, 37, 38 and 42. Come in and see them. Comfort Shop, 741 New York. 12-4
---
CHARVIS DRAWING set in 116 Strong or 101 Snow. If found please call Norman Craig 2199R at 1716 La. Reward. 12-2
K&E SLIDE RULE between Lindley and Student Union Wednesday evening. Nov. 26. Phone Richard Brown. 2042. 12-4
K&E SLIDE RULE in men's room Watson library between 12:30 and 4:00 on Thursday, Nov. 6. Distinguishable by scar or left face. Andrew Jones, 101 12-8
MISCELLANEOUS
MICROSCOPE (Bausch and Lomb binn-
from) in black leather-covered case,
Haworth hall, Wednesday.
Reward, no question asked or for return
or information leaving thereto. Phone
federal school office or Don Woodson
at 552. 12-2
Air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. midnight. Crystal Cafe. 609 Vt. tf
DIO and TV service-same day as service on all mats. Make all of tubes in this room. Bowman TV 85d Vermont. Phone 138 for prompt service.
CONCOC SERVICE-B. F. Gooddry tires and batteries, complete lubrication service, automatic transmission service. Bucchieri Conoco Service, 19th and Massachusetts.
papsa, reports, etc. Accurate work, im-
munize. Mrs. Glinda 1914
Ienn. Phone 1368M.
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term
TRANSPORTATION
RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wichita every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Call Jim Sellers. 31013 evenings. MTW-tt
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation
of item. Experienced personnel to arrange
evenings. US ABCTU airplane rates, sky coach, family days, round trip reductions. All expense. Airlines land tours. Cunard and Matson Steamboil lines. Call Miss Gieseman at the First International Bank for Maritime 8th, Mass streets. Phone 30. **tf**
POGO
THIS PORKYPINE MAY BE SOME BOY WE DON'T MAYBE KNOW.
WE KNOWS HIM GOOD ENOUGH TO GIVE HIM A HAND.
DIST. BY POSTHALL SYNDICATE
12-2
BY JING. IF THIS IS
OUR OL' BUDDY WHY
DON'T HE UP AN'
SAY SO?
A MAN'S OWN
FRIENDS OUGHT
TO RECOGNIZE
HIM.
WELL, HE GOT NO BUSINESS
GITTIN' LOST IN A RAINSTORM.
MORRYIN' US AN' ALL ...
MAYBE HE AINT THE ONLY ONE IS LOST.
MAYBE WHO ELSE AIN'T THE ONLY ONE LOST, HA? HUH? WHO? HEY?
US.
ELSE...
THAT'S WHO.
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THESE HITS
national and international travel whether tours or individual itineraries. Phone Mrs. Lois Odafetter, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass.
WANTED
STUDENTS interested in working new banquet service at Student Union for York College Miss Harvey or Union cambridge union between 2 and 4 p.m. on university cafeteria office.
FOUND
FOUNTAIN PEN on drill field Nov. 25.
Identify, pay for ad to claim. Call F
Ladd, 1814 Michigan. Phone 3036 L-2.
Sociologist Airs Ideas on Problem
Sociology can contribute to the solution of social problems through an understanding of the causal factors in the situation, Marston M. McCluggage, professor of sociology, said Sunday in a radio talk over KLWN.
Dr. McCluggage's topic, "Sociology and Social Problems," was the seventh in this semester's series of Sociology on the Air programs sponsored by the department of sociology and anthropology.
"The sociologists' first interest is to discover knowledge." Dr. McCluggage said. "He can analyze the feasibility of various proposals for reform, indicate what the costs will be, what are the likely consequences and under what conditions a given proposal is likely to succeed or fail."
Most sociologists consider it their function to build up a body of information which will make possible wise decisions, he added. "Problems which are to be solved must first be thoroughly understood."
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"FRESH AIRDALE"
Man Borrows Police Car
Jackson. Miss. — (U.P.) — Bob Thomas, a county patrolman reported his squad car was stolen from the driveway of the court-house here. City police a few minutes later picked up a Negro trusty, David Lee Parker, who explained he merely "borrowed" the car to go home for money to pay a fine to effect his release from jail. Thomas said no harm was done, so Parker was released as scheduled.
NOW!
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RETURN TO TECHNICOLOR
Drawn by
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MAUREEN O'HARA
BARRY FITZGERALD
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University Daily Kansan
Page 8
Tuesday, Dec. 2, 1952
Vandenberg Cites Air Lack in Korea
Washington—(U.P.)—Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg said today that the Air Force does not have enough reserve strength in Korea to fight a war of larger scope than the current conflict.
Cincinnati—(U.P.)—Sen. Robert Taft said today the appointment of Martin P. Durkin as secretary of labor was an "affront" to union members who voted as they chose.
Taft Blasts New Labor Secretary
The leader of the Senate Republican policy committee in his first public disapproval of President-elect Dwight Eisenhower's cabinet appointments called Mr. Durkin's selection "an incredible appointment."
The senator said that in talks with Herbert Brownell, "a key man in cabinet appointments," he had "made several recommendations of qualified men" for the labor post.
Mr. Durkin's appointment, Sen. Taft said, "is an 'errant to millions of union members and officers who had the courage to defy the edict of officials like Mr. Durkin that they vote for Gov. Stevenson."
Mr. Durkin, a registered Democrat in Chicago, supported Gov. Adlai Stevenson, Democratic presidential candidate, in the campaign against Gen. Eisenhower.
"It was never suggested," the coauthor of the Taft-Hartley act said, "that a man would be appointed who has always been a partisan of Truman Democrats, who fought Gen. Eisenhower's election, and advocated the repeal of the Taft-Hartley law."
Anderson to Attend Meeting
Dean Kenneth Anderson of the School of Education will take part in the Governor's conference on "What Is the Future for Kansas Children" Thursday in Topeka.
The Air Force chief of staff said at a news conference that the Air Force is stronger than it was a year ago.
But if a decision were made to expand the Korean war, he said, the Air Force would have to transfer units to the Far East from other important areas.
"Now we are in a much better position if the policy of the United States should involve the use of the Air Force somewhere other than Korea," Gen. Vandenberg said. "But when you stick your head into a hornet's nest you must have something to back it up.
"The back-up over there is surely not enough for an enlarged scope of war."
Gen. Vandenberg recently made a tour of U.S. air bases around the world. He said he is "not completely happy yet" about Air Force strength but is not "alarmed."
He said the Communist Air Force in Korea outnumbers U.S. planes three to one. And, he added, the Communists recently have added a number of Russian-built Ilyushin-28 jet light bombers to their Far East forces.
Gen. Vandenberg said the U.S. Air Force has destroyed all really worthwhile targets in North Korea except lines of communication. He said air power is now being used to supplement the artillery.
Dean Gives Paper To Science Academy
Dr. A. W. Davidson, assistant dean of the Graduate School, has returned from New York where he presented a paper to the New York Academy of Sciences.
The paper, "Equilibrium Constants of Cation Exchange Processes," is the product of joint research by Dr. Davidson and Dr. W. J. Argersinger, associate professor of chemistry.
New Buildings to Hinder Observatory
Rv JIM BAIRD
A. possibility that the department of astronomy may be forced to move to a more secluded location because of construction of new buildings near its headquarters in Lindley hall has been voiced by Prof. N. W. Storer, head of the department.
Light from the proposed fine arts building and the fieldhouse, Prof. Storer said, could illuminate the sky to such a degree that astronomical observations would be greatly hindered, if not altogether impossible.
He indicated that moving the observatory to another location, such as the ecological farm north of the city, would be desirable, but that definite disadvantages exist for any location which now could be considered practical.
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to the chancellor, said he
"It probably represents a very proper desire of his (Storer's)," Mr. Nichols stated.
had had no communication with Prof. Storer on the subject.
Mr. Nichols agreed that the move might be "desirable," but that other factors such as cost, selection of a site, and convenience would need to be considered.
"Any university which uses its telescopes for purposes other than teaching, that is, research, usually has its observatory in some isolated spot, on a hill and away from incandescent lights, where unhappened work can be done," Mr. Nichols said.
"A schedule would have to be worked out whereby athletic events and concerts would not conflict with scheduled astronomical observations, and vice versa," he said.
He said many functions of the School of Fine Arts would not re-
Reds Launch New Offensive On Besieged Sniper Ridge
Seoul, Korea — (U.P.) — Chinese Communists renewed the bloody fight for Sniper ridge early today in two swift attacks that slammed into the central front outpost under cover of a blinding snowstorm.
The sniper attacks and light jabs along most of the rest of the 155-mile battlefront broke a two-week lull in the Korean fighting.
The western front, where UN troops guarded the shortest route to Seoul, remained mysteriously quiet. Some officers believed the Reds were "saving up" for the visit of President-elect Eisenhower.
Snow fell over most of the front today. Risin temperatures melted it almost immediately at the western end of the line, reducing valleys in no-man's-land to lakes of clinging mud.
The Chinese aimed their two attacks on Sniper at Rocky Point, the highest pinnacle on Little Finger Ridge, which juts eastward from Sniper Ridge itself.
Five inches of snow falling on the Eastern and Central fronts gave the
Reds perfect cover for stealthy jabs at UN positions around Anchor Hill and Heartbreak Ridges in the east, and near Old Baldy in the west-central sector.
At Heartbreak, an Allied patrol clashed with a Red outfit deep in enemy territory, killing one Communist and wounding three before withdrawing. Back in safe territory, the patrol discovered three mer were missing.
The weary patrolmen went back after them, fought again with the Reds, killing one and wounding four more. They brought back the missing men.
Clearing skies on the western front allowed weather-bound 5th Air Force fighter-bombers to take off for attacks on enemy rear and front line areas.
Cadet Interviews Today
An officer from the Olathe Naval Air Station will be in the lobby of Strong hall today and tomorrow to interview men interested in the Naval Aviation Cadet program.
eree with telescopes. Parking area illumination could be of low power and shaded, for recitals, night lectures, and so forth.
Practice rooms in the proposed fine arts building will have no windows, Mr. Nichols said, so music students working nights would present no problem to the astronomers.
Prof. Storer emphasized that he did not wish it to appear that he has any objections to the new buildings, but was only indicating a situation which might become a problem. The observatory, he said, is not yet in operation.
Director of ANTA To Speak on Theater
C. R. Kase, a member of the board of directors of the American National Theater and Academy, will talk on American and international theater at 3 p.m. today in the Little theater in Green hall.
Mr. Kase, who is also drama editor of the Quarterly Journal of Speech, is on the campus today as part of a national tour.
The ANTA is a national organization chartered by Congress in 1935 with a board of directors representing the professional, educational, community, and children's theaters. Privately supported through memberships and donations, it performs many services for the American theater.
Storekeeper Needed In Physiology Dept.
An opening for assistant store- keeper in the physiology department was announced today by Dr. Kenneth Jochim, assistant dean of the School of Medicine.
It is a full- or part-time civil service position, and has been paying $136 per month. Students who have taken a civil service examination for such a position will be considered. Prof. Jochim said.
If necessary, the position will be filled on a "provisional basis," that is, someone will be employed on the condition that he take and pass the examination at a later date.
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Pach Mulls Over Kansan's Freedom
Pachacamac yesterday heartily endorsed freedom of the press on the Daily Kansan "as long as the paper stays within its constitution."
Ron Kull, journalism senior, tota party leaders at a meeting in the Delta Chi house that the repeated use of the word censorship is confusing the issue.
He said many students have gotten a false idea that great pressure is being put upon the paper because the Daily Kansan established an editorial board at the time the paper used criticism from the All Student Council and other groups because of its support of Adial Stevenson.
A letter by Bob Stewart, journalism senior and an assistant managing editor of the Daily Kansan, to the student government conference at Missouri university this Friday and Saturday expressing his personal views about the paper, was read at the meeting.
The truth of the matter is the Daily Kansan set up the editorial board because it felt the need for one, he said.
Bill Wilson, ASC president pointed out that establishing the editorial board was purely arbitrary on the part of the Kansan, the same as the proposed editorial board will be.
Wilson said that Pachacamac's stipulation that the Kansan be within its constitution to gain the party's full support was because the Kansan recently had violated its constitution.
The ASC president read a portion of the Daily Kansan constitution stating that the paper would "maintain a semi-conservative policy" and remain "neutral in politics on and off the campus."
In the letter, Stewart recognized that the interdependence and check and balance system between the University paper and the ASC was important and essential. However, Stewart wrote that workers on the Daily Kansan are better trained and more capable of handling its affairs than "ridling politicians."
"The Kansas certainly did not follow its constitution in supporting Gov. Stevenson the way it did," he said.
Wednesday, Dec. 3, 1952
Wilson cited the paper's treatment of the housing situation as an example of the incapability of the Kansan workers. "Anything said in the Daily Kansan about the housing situation is based on a little fact and hearsay," he said. He advised Pach-
Lattimore to Help In Own Investigation
Washington — (U,P)— Far Eastern specialist Owen Lattimore indicated today he is willing to cooperate in the forthcoming grand jury investigation of perjury charges against him.
Daily hansan
acamad not to pay any attention to it.
The Johns Hopkins university professor was apparently undisturbed by Attorney General James P. McGraney's announcement that a federal grand jury here will begin an inquiry tomorrow into Lattimore's testimony before the Senate internal security subcommittee.
The rest of the meeting was devoted to discussing bills coming up at the ASC meeting last night.
Dean Glasco, engineering junior,
announced an ASC housing meeting
at 4 p.m. today in the chancellor's
office.
50th Year, No. 53
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
The scores of the examinations will be sent to the student's local draft board and will be considered in determining eligibility for occupational deferment as a student.
Applicants must have a ticket of admission for the proper testing date and center. To avoid the possibility that any unauthorized persons might take the test, each applicant will be fingerprinted when he reports for the test.
The student should take only the ticket of admission, an official document showing the selective service number and the exact designation, number, and address of his local draft board, and a No. 2 pencil or a pen to fill out certain information before the test.
Ike Aide May Answer Taft
New York —(U.P.)—Gov. Sherman Adams, one of President-elect Eisenhower's top advisers, may reply today to Sen. Robert A. Taft's sharp remarks on the appointment of Martin P. Durkin as secretary of labor.
Gov. Adams, who will become assistant to the President when Gen. Eisenhower takes office Jan. 20, headed a list of callers at the general's Morningside Heights residence.
Applicants are to report to the examination center at 8:30 a.m. The examination begins at 9 and will end at 12:30.
Jayhawker Editors Get ASC Pay Raise
The University will serve as one of the many centers to give the Selective Service college qualification test Thursday morning in the Military Science drill hall.
3 Queen Candidates Picked for Military Ball
The field of candidates for queen of the military ball was narrowed to three contenders last night at a tea.
Deferment Exam To Be Thursday
- Selection was made from twelve contenders by a cadet committee composed of representatives from all three branches of the Reserve Officer Training program here.
The finalists are Janet Gabrielson,
college sophomore; Donna Jean
C. F. C. W.
HENRY BUSSE
Johnson, fine arts sophomore, and Maureen Kelley, fine arts junior.
The queen will be crowned at the ball with an all-silver crown, which will be retained as a permanent institution of future ROTC balls. Her name will be engraved on the crown.
Col. B. M. Atwood, commander of Air ROTC, said more than 2,500 persons are expected to attend. Henry Busse's orchestra is the featured attraction.
Carlson Turns Down Swedish Envoy Job
Topeka—(U,P)—Sen. Frank Carlson (R-Kan.) was offered the post of ambassador to Sweden by President-elect Eisenhower but turned it down, the Topeka Daily Capital said today.
Sen. Carlson, the son of Swedish immigrants, said he preferred to remain in the Senate.
Panhel Workshop Set for Weekend
The annual Panhellenic workshop will be held Friday and Saturday, Virginia Mackey, chairman of the workshop committee, said today.
Martha Gallagher Cox, Kappa Kappa Gamma from Kansas City, will speak at the banquet. Janice Manual, Gamma Phi Beta and president of the Panhellenic council, will preside.
A banquet from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Friday in the Union cafeteria will
precede the workshop's beginning
Saturday morning.
Junior panhellenic council members will be hostesses at a coffee and philanthropy display at 9:45 a.m. Saturday. Following this meeting, sorority members will attend the workshop dealing with phases of the sorority system.
An evaluation of the deferred rushing system will be made at 10:30 a.m. in Strong auditorium by Mrs. James Fishback, Delta Gamma, discussion leader; Virginia Huckey, Kappa Kappa Gamma, panel chairman; Marilyn Hawkinson, P1 Beta Phi; Carolyn Boyd.
Pledge training will be discussed at 1:30 p.m. in Strong auditorium. Leaders of the discussion are Mary Peg Hardman, assistant dean of women, discussion leader; Annaliese Schnierle, Sigma Kappa, chairman; Connie Maus, Alpha Chi Omega; Barbara Bateman, Delta Gamma, and Mary Beal Porch, Kappa Kappa Gamma, panel members. Jeanne Fitzgerald, Theta Phi Alpha, will act as secretary.
Alpha Omicron Pi, and Lucille Defenbaugh, Alpha Omicron Pi, panel members.
Also meeting at 1:30 p.m. will be a group discussion alumni-active relationships in 102 Strong. Leaders of this discussion group are Mrs. D. W. Ferris, Chi Omega, discussion leader; Janet Morrison, Chi Omega, chairman; Mrs. K. R. Jones, Alpha Phi; Mrs. Alan Hack, Kappa Kappa Gamma, and Ann Jackson, Chi Omega, panel member. Donna Arnold, Gamma Phi Beta, will be secretary.
Panhellenic relations will be discussed at 2:30 p.m. in Strong auditorium. Discussion leaders are Elizabeth Evans, head resident at North College hall, discussion leader; Grace Endacott, Delta Delta Delta, chairman; Nancy MacGregor, Delta Gamma, and Leah Ross, Alpha Phi, panel members. Letch Lemoon, Delta Delta Delta, will be secretary.
House management and finance is the topic of the final workshop at 2:30 p.m. in 102 Strong, Leaders of this group are Barbara Comstock, Kappa Alpha Theta, chairman; Mrs. L. C. Woodruff, Kappa Alpha Theta; Diana Foltz, Alpha Phi; Tina Bowman, Kappa Alpha Theta, and Roy Roberts, head of fraternity management.
A luncheon at noon will be held at the Castle Tearoom.
Members of the workshop committee are Virginia Mackey, Kappa Kappa Gamma, chairman; Annaliese Schnieke, Sigma Kappa; Grace Endacott, Delta Delta Delta; Barbara Comstock, Kappa Alpha Theta, and Janet Morrison, Chi Omega.
The All Student Council last night passed amendments to the publications bill to increase the salary of the Jayhawker editor and business manager from $350 to $450 and provide that the All Student Council shall approve bonuses given the two upon recommendation of Jayhawker advisory board.
Farmer Killed Aiding Student
L. L. Kindred, 52, a Eudora farmer, was electrocuted this morning while helping Alvin E. Dufford, graduate student, take a ground water table test.
Dufford was taking the test on the farm of Mr. Kindred, about one mile east and three miles north of Eudora when the accident happened. The test was being made by Dufford for use in his master thesis.
The accident occurred as Mr. Kindred attempted to help Dufford remove a 24-foot drilling rod from the ground. The auger of the drill rod struck an underground 33,000-volt line.
Dufford was knocked to the ground by the line, but was not injured. Mr. Kindred received artificial respiration from the Lawrence fire department for 30 minutes before he was pronounced dead.
Mr. Kindred operated a highly successful 400-acre farm in the Kaw river valley. He was past president of the Kansas Farm bureau and post vice president of the Eudora township. He was a member of the Eudora Methodist church.
Mr. Kindred is survived by his wife Mattie and three children, Louis L., Mrs. Evabella Gerstenberger, both of Eudora, and Mrs. Alice Mary Riodan of Wichita.
CIO Calls Truce To Hear Adlai
Atlantic City, N.J. —(U.P.)—Gov.
Adlai E. Stevenson asked the CIO
annual convention not to consider
the Republican election victory "a
disaster or even a misfortune for
labor."
The defeated presidential candidate joined CIO leaders in honoring the memory of the labor organization's revered leader, the late Philip Murray.
Gov. Stevenson's appearance, and the tributes to Mr. Murray, forced a truce in the fierce fight among CIO union chiefs over a new president.
But as the issue neared a showdown, Walter P. Reuther, chief of the CIO Auto Workers union, seemed to hold an insurmountable lead over Executive Vice President Allan S. Hawwood.
"Perhaps as the defeated candidate, whom you were good enough to support, I can be permitted to say that the election should not be considered a disaster or even a misfortunate for labor." Gov. Stevenson said.
"What would be a misfortune and perhaps even a disaster would be to think so, and lose sight of labor's larger responsibility to a nation which is also groping its way into a new era," the Illinois governor said.
He told the labor leaders, "Your largest task now . . . is the conduct your relations with an industry, always in a framework of the national interest. . ."
Gov. Stevenson said "There are inequities and injustices in our laws that still demand remedy," but added that "labor's long battle for status and recognition has been largely won."
The voters registration bill was tabled for the second time since the charter committee, which is now working out a compromise, had no report.
An amendment to provide non-partisan election of class officers was read for the first time. The amendment states that where there are more than three persons filed for the same office in the general election, candidates shall be voted upon in a non-partisan primary election held simultaneously with ASC primaries.
Dennis Henderson, college junior, suggested that a request be obtained from James K. Hitt, registrar and director of admissions, to distribute cards during the spring registration so that students may register their party preference for the student primary elections at that time.
The cards would request information as to name, address, phone, school, class, and the desire of student to be registered to vote in the primary election of Pachacamac-NOW, FOR, FACTS, or whether he wishes to be registered at all.
Henderson suggested that the ASC office be open two weeks before elections to allow students to change their registration if they wish.
The finance committee headed by Lyle Anderson, business senior, recommended that Mortar Board's request for an additional $50 be granted. Mortar Board originally asked for $125, but received $75.
It was recommended that the $50 be granted on condition that next year Mortar Board set up provisions for assessing its members for needed funds. The Council voted 13-6 not to grant the appropriation.
Bill Nulton, college senior, chairman of the opportunities committee, which has been working with foreign students, pointed out that the feeling among foreign students was that they were treated as guests but never as an actual working part of the University.
Foreign student Rama Krishnan of Ottapalam Madras, India, suggested that foreign students should have a voting representative on the ASC, should be utilized in teaching (non-credit), and should be asked to lead informal discussion groups in various houses on the Hill.
In light of the committee report, Adams moved that the American veterans committee be deleted from Council representation and that a foreign student representing the International club serve on the ASC as organizational representative. The motion carried unanimously.
Under other business, Nulton moved to request the Kansan Board to set forth, in an objective fashion, the functions and effects of the recently instituted editorial policy board. No vote was taken.
Weather
The eastern half of Kansas was soggy from drizzling rain today. Mist
1956 WALT KELLY
and druzzie
extended west to
Russell, and the
weathermen said
said the moisture
probably would
end by tomorrow,
except in t h e
e southeast corner.
Goodland had a chilly 17 degrees
last night. T h e
highest minimum
was 35 at Wichita
DAMP was 35 at Wichita.
The big blizzard of last week remained more than just a memory in the central section today.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 3, 1952
Solution to Korean Problem May Be Key to Future Far East Policy
The key determining the new administration's Far East policy and the policy toward Moscow for the years ahead is the Korean war. Therefore, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's trip to Korea is designed to show the President-elect's interest in that part of the world, as well as for him to get a first hand look at the war and its problems.
The war in Korea will shape the course of Gen. Eisenhower's administration. The American people feel that the Korean war is the biggest problem facing them at the present. This attitude at home, and the evident temper of Americans abroad, makes it plain that if the White House doesn't go to Korea, the war inevitably will be brought to the White House.
Gen. Eisenhower must determine the chances for a truce in Korea. All previous efforts to arrive at the basis for a truce must be rounded up and pressed once again as a new U.S. approach under a new leader. If the Communists refuse to deal on reasonable terms, it is thought that stronger measures will be taken promptly.
War, if it must continue, will be stabilized and localized in Korea insofar as possible. More South Koreans will be trained and armed, but even so, United States troops will continue to bear the brunt of the war for at least a year more. Every effort, however, will be made to reduce the combat burden on American troops. If the Korean war is to be endless, it is hoped that the fighting of that war gradually will be shifted from Americans to Asians.
Every effort will be made to avoid open war with Communist China, herself. It is thought that Chiang Kai-Shek's Nationalist Chinese troops will be gradually utilized. Non-Communist Asia will be encouraged to permit volunteers to be recruited trained, and armed for another war.
Yet, at the present the entire Far East, is in a
ferment. War in Indo-China is turning into a full-scale second Korea, and France wants the U.S. to take over more of the burden of fighting that war.
The United States already has footed one-third of the financial bill for the Indo-Chinese war. It has sent 200 shiploads of modern material, including 228 war planes, 235 naval vessels, 777 combat vehicles, and 13,000 trucks.
Arms aid will continue to be given to non-Communist forces fighting in Indo-China, Burma, Malaya, and elsewhere. Again events in Korea will call the turn. A Korean truce, if found, may provide the principles for a truce in Indo-China and elsewhere. As South Korean troops will be carrying more of the fighting burden, so Indo-Chinese troops, not French, will get more arms to fight their own war.
The attitude toward Japan will depend on Korean developments. If there is to be peace in Korea, Japan may get more trade to replace the war boom of U.S. spending. If war becomes more intense, Japan may be called upon to make greater military contributions. But the rearmament of Japan offers difficulties, for some nations fear this rearmament.
Everything seems to be hinging on what happens in Korea. But no matter what happens, the new administration will be expected to see that the U.S. plays a larger, not smaller, role in the world.
Isolationism will be no more effective in the new Congress than it has been in the recent Congress. Nationalism made few gains in the election, and not many congressmen will be attacking the general thesis that America must have allies and must support them throughout the world.
Freed Nazi Economist May Dream of Empire
An aged but agile German has landed on his feet again after losing a war, being imprisoned, and being generally discredited among responsible society.
Mary Cooper.
Hjalmar Schacht, ex-Minister of Economics for Adolph Hitler, has become financial advisor for several countries which found themselves on the verge of bankruptcy after World War II.
The 75-year-old economist managed to stabilize the German mark during the 1920's, then went on to a job at which he was singularly successful, building the financial base for the Nazi dream of world conquest.
He began to run into trouble during the latter years of the war, was reported to be a member of the group which attempted Hitler's assassination, and was reported to be under house arrest from June, 1943 to Nov. 1944.
After the war, he was indicted as a major Nazi war criminal, but was acquitted by the International Military Tribunal in October, 1946. Then a German court decided that Mr. Schacht needed de-Nazification, and sentenced him to eight years in prison.
He appealed that sentence, and was released after serving only eight months.
Since then, he has steadily increased his following, and has been invited to oversee the financial affairs of such countries as Brazil, Ethiopia, Egypt, Indonesia, Iran, Italy, and Syria.
Actually, he has visited only Egypt, Iran, and Indonesia. What he told them has never been revealed. According to those three governments, he told them only to work hard, increase production, and encourage foreign investments.
Roses to Grounds Crew For Clearing Sidewalks
We would like to hand a bunch of well-earned editorial roses to the buildings and grounds crew for getting the snow off the sidewalks this week before they became slippery.
Germany has long dreamed of an effective German-Arabian coalition. Perhaps the Berlin-to-Baghdad dream is not dead. Hjalmar Schacht may be trying to revive it. —Dean Evans.
Last year several nocturnal snows blanketed the campus and students found themselves alternately slipping and wading across the campus. On one of these unfortunate occasions, the Kansan printed an article in these columns suggesting the buildings and grounds department try to find a quicker method of removing the snow from the walks.
Last weekend the crew did a good job removing the snow before morning classes and we are sure it was appreciated by everyone who remembers from last year what it is like to hurry sleepily to an early class on tricky ice. —Roger Yarrington.
Letters
Campus Chest Brings Remarks
To the Editor of the Daily Kansan:
A recent Daily Kansan editorial in which the writer is quite solicitous lest the Campus Chest fail to meet prompts from students, prompts me to make these remarks
As a charitable effort the drive for funds is to be commended. However, since participation by the entire student body is desired, it would be fitting to have whatever revenues are accrued distributed to all student organizations worthy of support.
The present arrangement makes available 45 per cent of the collection to the YMCA and the YWCA. In addition, the first group annually presents a benefit performance, the "Rock Chalk Revue". What extraordinary qualification raises the "Y" to this exalted position?
Personally, I do not care to contribute to the support of either the YMCA or YWCA on this campus, especially when there are many other organizations in a less-favored position and no less deserving of financial assistance.
Please note that this is not an attempt to magnify or to minimize the merits of any particular organization but rather to call attention to the discriminatory administration of the Campus Chest.
It is quite possible that views such as those expressed above account for the lack of response to solicitations for the Chest.
Joseph J. Baron Jr. graduate student
(Editor's note: It was not the intention of the writer to praise or condemn the campus "Y" groups. Mr. Baron's point is well taken. It illustrates one of the prevalent criticisms to the idea of holding a unified drive. In other words, if a prospective donor holds a grudge against one of the organizations combined in a unified appeal, he will withhold his contribution altogether. An ideal situation would be one in which the organizations represented in a unified drive would appeal to all prospective donors. But, alas, this is not possible. Human nature doesn't work that way. However, we can see denying funds to several other worthy organizations in an effort to spite one or two).
Little Man on Campus by Dick Bibler
GAM CLASS
ECON. II
10 AM
CLASS
ECON. II
SNARSE
V. BERC F.37
"Whadda-va-mean. you don't have today's assignment ready?"
Democrats Not Agreed On Who Is Party Boss
The Democratic party is wide open in the sense that there is no agreement on who is boss.
Many Southern Democrats in and out of Congress reject absolutely the leadership of Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson, their party's 1952 Presidential nominee. They are anxious to get rid of him and to regain control of the party machinery of which they were deprived by Franklin D. Roosevelt.
John N. Garner's grab for the 1940 Democratic Presidential nomination was part of the first organized effort by Conservative party men to seize party controls. Garner, then the vice president, was unable to keep his boomlet alive long enough to present it to the 1940 Democratic national convention. The Conservative rebellion was a political dud.
Mr. Roosevelt maintained the
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Short Ones
The moving business is starting to boom in Washington.
* *
Oklahoma edged past Oklahoma A&M Saturday, 54-7.
MU students didn't get a longer vacation because of their victory over Kansas. What a shame?
party's alliance with the left-wing and labor elements of American politics until his death and President Truman continued the association. The Southerners now are determined to break that association and the rumblings of party conflict can be heard all over.
1 E
Sen. Burnet R. Maybank D-S.C.) refused in a news conference yesterday to say whether he considers Stevenson the head of the Democratic party. But he wholly rejected Stevenson as the party's policy maker. Party policy will be made, he said, by Democratic leaders in the House and Senate.
It is obvious now that the Conservatives have a fight on their hands. Stevenson has just announced in a gentle way that he regards himself as the party leader and intends to be on the job. He did not say it so bluntly. What he did say was that he expects to express himself from time to time on important issues before the country. None can deny him that privilege.
There is no dohbt about Stevenson's purpose to maintain the left-wing and labor alliances inherited from FDR and Mr. Truman. His first important public appearance since the election will be to that end.
Other Congressional Democrats will go further than Maybank to deny publicly that Stevenson is the party leader or policy maker. Likewise, they will reject any claims to authority which may be made in behalf of National Committee Chairman Stephen A. Mitchell. They want their own man in that job and there will be a party ruckus when the committee next meets about that.
But Stevenson added that he would have a part in adjusting what he called weak spots in the Democratic party. When he begins adjusting, Stevenson and the party conservatives will begin their test of strength.
Gov. Stevenson will speak Dec. 3 in Atlantic City at memorial services for the late CIO President Philip Murray to take place during that organization's annual convention.
That engagement is sufficiently in the Roosevelt tradition of left-wing political alliances to warn conservatives of the direction in what Stevenson is determined to lead the party. —United Press
Topeka, Ka.
Page 3
11 Red Czech Leaders Executed for Treason
Vienna, Austria—(U.P.)—Former Czech Foreign Minister Vladimir Clementis, Rudolf Slansky, once the most powerful man in the Czech Communist party, and nine other one-time Czech Red leaders died on the gallows today. Prague radio said.
The 11 one-time Czech Red party and government leaders were hanged less than one week after they were convicted of treason, espionage and murder. They were found guilty of the charges last Thursday following an eight day trial in grim Pankrac prison in Prague.
Prague radio said today the announcement of the execution was released by the Czech justice ministry.
The others executed today with Slansky and Clementis were:
Bedrich Geminder and Josef Frank, former party deputies to Slansky; Rudolf Margolius, former deputy foreign trade minister; Otto Sling, former party chief in the Brno region; Gen. Otto Svab, former deputy minister of security: Lt. Gen.
Bedrich Reicin, former deputy minister of defense and chief of Czech intelligence; Andre Simone, former writer and editor of the *Daily* party newspaper *Dr. Pravc*. Ludvika Olsen, former economic adviser to Red President Clement Gottwald and Otto Fisl, former ambassador to East Germany.
Three other defendants—Vavro Majdu and Arthur London, former deputy minister of foreign trade, were given life imprisonment sentences, according to Prague radio.
The announcement said the executions were carried out immediately after the trial because none of the defendants appealed for clemency.
The executions came only 12 hours after the Czech government announced that Antonin Gregor, min-
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master of foreign trade, had been dismissed, presumably because of the conviction of his former subordinates.
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Washington, D.C. $22.85
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Salt Lake City $22.25
Houston, Tex. $14.70
Phoenix, Ariz. $26.05
Although the Prague radio announcement did not give the time or place of the hangings, Czech practice has been to carry out executions at dawn in Pankrae prison—which was the scene of the 14 Czech's trial.
Search Continues For Missing C-47
Plus tax. Rates even lower on round-trip tickets!
San Bernardino, Calif.—(U.P.)-Reinforced air and ground search parties scanned the snow-bound San Bernardino mountains today for an Air Force transport plane with 13 airmen aboard that vanished Monday night during a thunderstorm.
The transport, a C-47, was approaching March Air Force base near here from Arizona when it disappeared. The last radio report from the plane was received by a civil aeronautics administration radio at Thermal, Calif.
GREYHOUND BUS DEPOT
638 Mass.
Phone 707
Personnel representatives from four companies and two government agencies will be on the campus this week to interview February graduates of the School of Engineering.
Students may obtain information and application forms at the office of the School of Engineering, 111 Marvin hall. The interview schedule may be signed in the same office.
Interviews
Wednesday
Allison Division of General Motors corporation is interested in interviewing aeronautical, mechanical, and electrical engineers.
Thursday
Stanolind Oil and Gas company would like to interview petroleum engineers. They would also like to interview junior petroleum engineers for summer employment.
The United States Corp of Engineers will interview primarily civil engineers, but they will interview all majors in engineering.
Colgate-Palmulve-Peet company will interview chemists, and mechanical, chemical, electrical, industrial and civil engineers.
The Rural Electrification administration will interview electrical engineers.
Friday
Philoe corporation will interview electrical and mechanical engineers.
POGO
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GITTIN' U'S LOST. I IS
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Wednesday, Dec. 3, 1952
Dulles Can Help Ike End Korean Deadlock
New York — (U.P.) — John Foster Dulies has expressed a firm belief that Dwight D. Eisenhower can end the war in Korea, and he's now in the number one position to make that belief come true.
How he expects a peace will be accomplished, Mr. Dulles has not specified, but it certainly will be no surrender to Communists.
Mr. Dulles has warmly supported
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Wesley foundation: no cabinet meeting this week.
Pre-nursing club: 4 p.m., Fraser dining room.
Jay Janes: 5 p.m., 9 Strong.
Wesley foundation: annual Christmas dinner, 5 p.m. Sunday. Tickets on sale today. Wesley foundation office, Myers hall, 50c.
Kappa Phi: cabinet meeting, 7
Myers hall.
Arnold Air society and HJA:
joint meeting, 7:30 p.m., MS bldg.
Bacteriology club: 7:30 p.m., 502 Snow. Dr. Werder, "Nonspecific Resistance."
Froshawk: 7:30 p.m., 101 Snow,
constitution will be discussed.
National Rifle association: business meeting, 7.30 p.m., 107 MS bldg. All members attend, bring dues.
Quill club: 7:30 p.m., 313 Fraser. Everyone welcome.
THURSDAY
Episcopal Holy communion: 7 a.m. Danforth.
Dalamore
Spanish club chorus: 4:30 p.m., 113
Strong, learn carols for the Christmas
party. All interested invited.
has party.
Versammlung des Deutschen Verein:
5 uhr, 502 Fraser. Music program.
*Corcle Francais; Reunion de Noel,*
*sept heures et demie, 131 Strong,*
*Pantomine de Saint-Nicholas; Pastorale de Noel.*
German Christmas choir: short rehearsal, 5 p.m., 306 Fraser. Tenors and basses only.
Christian Science organization: 7 p.m.
Danforth.
Air Force Reserve: recruitment drive, 7.15 p.m., Col. Smith, Kansas City, speaker.
KuKu: 7:15 p.m. 106 Green, election of officers. Attendance required.
YMCA: 7:30 p.m. meeting, 101 Snow. Jan Brazda, "I Was a Communist Prisoner."
Mountain club: 7:30 p.m., 402
Lindley, all interested invited.
Y's group: 9 p.m., Henley house.
FUTURE
Kappa Fli: p. 7m, Friday, Christmas meeting, Chi Omega House.
Hillel-D.S.F.: joint meeting, 3 p.m.
Sunday, Myers hall.
OPEN THURSDAY NIGHT TILL 9 P.M.
Haynes and Keene CHILL CHASER!
AFTER THE WAR
u.s. Gaytees Fashion Over the Shoe
United States and United Nations action to crush the Korean attack, which he saw at its outset as a Communist move aimed at eventual domination of Japan.
Mr. Dulles will have unique advantages both as a shaper and an executer of foreign policy when he assumes in January, the job for which he has been in training for most of his adult life.
A participant in the foreign policy of two Democratic Presidents—Woodrow Wilson and Harry S. Truman—Mr. Dulles has managed to maintain the high esteem as well of all factions of his own Republican party.
In writings and speeches in the last year, Mr. Dulles has criticized the foreign policy of President Truman and Secretary of State Dean Acheson primarily for "dancing to whatever tune the Soviet leaders choose to play."
He has urged that the policy of cold war containment of Communist territories be abandoned for an aggressive, but non-shooting, attempt to split China and the European Satellites from the Russian orbit.
Mr. Dulies has urged that the free world make clear to Russia that it will meet aggression with force and that it build a "retaliary ory striking force" to deter such aggression and, if necessary, to meet it from such bases as Greenland, Okinawa, and North Africa.
Militarily, he has criticized attempts to build a "defense in depth" around the edges of the iron curtain. He has been equally critical of proposals, advanced at one time by Herbert Hoover and some other Republicans, that the United States build a Gibraltar of its own defense perimeters.
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Late News
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 3, 1952
Kansas Rated 19th Illinois 1st By UP
New York—(U.P.)—Illinois, the defending Big Ten champion, today was given the No. 1 spot in the United Press 1952-53 pre-season basketball ratings.
Fourteen of the 35 outstanding coaches who make up the rating board selected Coach Harry Combes' quintet to win the mythical collegiate title in the season and gave the Midwesterners a total of 282 points. In the final ratings for the 1951-52 season, Illinois was in the No. 2 spot behind Kentucky, which has been barred from play this season because of NCAA rule violations.
Kansas State, rate, rudely sixth last season, beat out LaSalle of Philadelphia by six points for the runner-up spot in the pre-season balloting. The Kansas State team was given five first place votes and a total of 228 points; LaSalle had 11 first place votes and 222 points.
Points are scored on the basis of 10 for a first place vote, nine for a second and so on down to one for a 10th.
Washington, North Carolina State,
Oklahoma A&M, UCLA, Indiana,
Seton Hall, and St. Louis rounded
out the select 10 in that order. In
all, eight teams received first place
votes—Washington, North Carolina
State, Oklahoma A&M, Indiana and
St. Louis each getting one, with
the others going to Illinois, Kansas
State and LaSalle.
Only Washington, beside Illinois and Kansas State, finished in the top 10 in the final 1951-52 ratings. The Huskies were rated fifth.
Kansas, which finished third in the final ratings last season, won the NCAA championship and represented the U.S. as the college team in the successful defense of the Olympic basketball championship,
received only 13 points, which put them in a tie with St. Bonaventure for 19th place.
In all, 39 teams were given points with Holy Cross rated 11th followed by Santa Clara, Notre Dame, Duquesne, Wyoming, and St. John's in that order. Brigham Young and Minnesota tied for 17th place.
If the coaches are correct in their pre-season ratings, the 1952-53 conference champions will be:
Big Ten—Illinois
2015 Big Seven—Kansas State Pacific Coast—Washington Southern—North Carolina State Missouri Valley—Oklahoma A&M Wyoming Line Southwest—Arkansas Ivy—Princeton Border—Texas Tech Leading—Lake State or Vanderbilt Leading Press—LaSalle The United Press pre-season basketball ratings (first place votes in parent
Team Point
1-Illinois (14) 282
2-Kansas State (5) 282
3-LaSalle (11) 222
4-Washington (1) 166
5-Nevada Caroli State (1) 159
6-Oklahoma A&M (1) 140
7-UCLA 129
8-Indiana (1) 91
9-Seton Hall 77
10-St. Louis (1) 58
Second Ten-11. Holy Cross, 50; 12. Second Ten-11. Holy Cross, 50; 12.
Duquesne, 26; 15. Wyoming, 23; 16. St. John's, 17; 17 (tie) Brigham Young and
St. Bonaventure, 13 each.
Dr. Forrest C. "Phog" Allen, KU basketball coach, said today the recent basketball rules committee ruling on free throws "will result in a funeral dirge to the free throw line."
'Phog Allen Hits Committee Rule On Free Throws
Others—Western Kentucky, 10; Missouri, 9; DePaul, 8; Arkansas and Idaho, 6; Michigan State, 5; State and Oklahoma, 5 each; Louisiana State, New York University, Tulane, Andreabert, Ilmona and Utah, 4 each; Pauley, 3; Tech, Tulsa and West Virginia, 1 each.
"The ruling whereby a player has another chance for the point if he misses his first opportunity is an endorsement of mediocrity on the basketball court," said the 67-year-old dean of basketball coaches.
City, Mo., and Jess Priscock, Emporia, at forwards; Dick Knostman, Wamgego, center; Bob Rousey, Anderson, Ind., and Peck Mills, Tulsa, Okla., guards.
"The result will be a 15-minute increase of inaction to the game," he said. "The rules committee has shown a lack of imagination and loss of a sense of balance."
Under the ruling, a player who has been fouled must take his free throws.
"Possession of the ball is often more valuable than the point," said Allen.
"That makes basketball the only sport in the world where you can't refuse a penalty. It is as illogical as taking the ball away from a football team every time it commits a foul."
Allen suggested that the team be given the shot plus possession of the ball so coaches "will be forced to start teaching the boys to stop fouling."
Mills is the only sophomore. The game will be 60 minutes long instead of the normal 40 minutes.
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By CHUCK MORELOCK
Kansan Assistant Sports Editor
West coast football supporters are crying that "this is the year" for the Pacific Coast conference representative to end the six year drought suffered in Rose Bowl competition with Big Ten squads, but we look for a Wisconsin victory over USC and win number seven in the series.
The Trojans are rated one of the strongest Pacific Coast teams since the war. They posted the top defensive record in the nation for major college teams and swept to nine straight victories before falling to Notre Dame 9-0 Saturday.
Wisconsin has a modest 6-2-1 record and tied Purdue for the Big Ten title. They were whipped on their home field by UCLA, 20-7, the same team that lost to Southern Cal at Los Angeles two weeks ago.
However, we'll string along with the Badgers, members of what is generally considered to be the toughest league in the nation. Any team that can break even with Big Ten opponents is tops in our book. Winning the Pacific Coast conference is no simple task either, but for consistent top-flight competition the Big Ten is number one.
Stanford and Illinois were rated even before the 1952 contest, but the Illini, having the advantage of playing a stiffer schedule, wrecked the Indians 40-7. We don't think Wisconsin will come close to posting such a one-sided score, but they should have enough to hand the Trojans a defeat.
Southern California will be playing in the Rose Bowl for the first time since Jan. 1, 1948. On that day, the Trojans were swamped by Michigan, 49-0. Wisconsin's 1952 league championship was their first in 40 years. They should score another first on Jan. 1, 1953, a Rose Bowl victory.
Playing six home games, instead of the usual five, Kansas established a new home attendance record of 172,000 during the past football season. This topped by 19,000 the previous high of 153,000 who paid to see the Kansans play five games at Lawrence in 1950. A low road attendance, however, kept the 1952 edition 30,700 short of its all-time seasonal figure of 279,700 erected in 1949.
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K-State Meets Wildcat Frosh
Manhattan—(U.P.)—Kansas State's highly rated basketball team, favored to win the Big Seven conference crown, will test its strength against the Wildcat freshmen here tonight.
Coach Jack Gardner said he prob-
lemmed with crumbs and a sophomore against the fresh.
They are: Jack Carby, Kansas
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Allen Picks K-State To Win Big 7 Crown
Dr. F. C. Allen, KU basketball coach, today picked Kansas State to win the Big Seven championship and Missouri to be runner up in the conference.
"K-State should take the conference and the NCAA title," Allen said. "However, Missouri might beat them once at Columbia."
The 67-year-old mentor discounted his defending championship team from a chance at the title. "We hope to make a fight out of the season," Allen commented, "but we have no height, and little playing experience."
Alen listed Colorado and Nebraska as other possible conference leaders. "Colorado, especially has real power and the fans are hopeful out there," Allen said.
The dean of American court coaches said the Jayhawks would rely on a press and fast break to rattle opponents. "We got no size to argue with them," Allen said, "and the best we can do is to try to destroy the opponent's balance. Any tall center won't find it easy set against us. We'll be committed to a series of sorties once he gets on the court.
Kansas lost five of its regulars through graduation, including All-American center Clyde Lovellette, and veteran Charlie Hoag appears lost to the team with a knee injury.
Allen said the team was strengthened by five additions from the football squad. "The boys are capable of standing the knocks and are real competitors," Allen stated, "and they may help on rebounds. Games are won off the board."
The Olympic coach will start a relatively inexperienced five against New Orleans. Only senior guard Dean Kelley acted in a starting capacity last season. Other probable starters include: B. H. Born, 6' 0" center from Medicine Lodge, Kan;
Bill Heitholt, guard; Jerry Alberts, forward; and Larry Davenport, forward.
Allen can expect late season help from footballer Gil Reich, a top prospect who will be sidelined for three weeks with a broken finger; and Harold Patterson, All-America junior college center at Garden City, Kan. Conceivably both might take over starting roles later in the season.
Loss of Hoag, sparkplug guard and called the best "sixth man" in collegiate basketball, robbed the team of its court dealer.
Air ROTC Wins 5 Way Rifle Meet
The AFROTC rifle team edged four opponents to take first place in a five-way telegraphic match last weekend.
weekend. The KU squad was deadlocked with North Dakota university at 1857 points apiece at the end of the firing, but won since they had a higher standing score.
Other competitors were Creighton university, 1759, South Dakota State, 1750, and the University of Mississippi, 1743.
Pick Up Basketball Tickets in Robinson
Students are reminded that now is the time to select which block of varsity basketball games they want to see. Students should go to the athletic office in Robinson gym to have their ID cards punched for either set one or set two.
Set No. 1 includes games with Southern Methodist university, Kansas State, Oklahoma, and Iowa State. Set No. 2 has games with Oklahoma A&M, Missouri, Nebraska, and Colorado.
Max Embree, college senior, led the KU team with a score of 378.
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Page 5
C. H. KING
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Wednesday, Dec. 3, 1952
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Next time you make a date...
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You'll have more fun over a cheerful cup—it's the lift that puts life into every crowd!
Wherever you go—whoever you take—give yourself a coffee-break!
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University Daily Kansan
Tulsa Leads Pack In All-League Team
Kansas City, Mo.—(U.P.)-Tulsa's Howling Golden Hurricane placed six players on the 1952 United Press all-Missouri Valley conference football team today, including its high-scoring pair of ends.
Houston's Cougars, unbeaten in conference play, landed two berths, as did Oklahoma A&M. Detroit picked up a single place in the tough, five-team circuit.
Sports writers, sports broadcasters and coaches took part in the voting. They liked overwhelmingly Gator Bowl-bound ends Willie Roberts and Tom Miner of Tulsa, who have scored 72 points each to lead the valley.
Ted Marcibroda of Detroit did such a great job for the Titans at quarterback that he came close to being a unanimous choice. It was virtually the same story for fullback Howard Waugh of Tulsa. Tulsa, which got off to a bad start and then
finished very strong, also placed halfbacks Ron Morris and Dick Kercher in the all-star backfield.
Tackle J. D. Kimmel of Houston was a heavy favorite. Lewis Zeigler, Oklahoma A&M, won the other tackle berth but he was contested heatedly by such big men as Tulsa's Bob St. Clair and Jim Prewett.
BM S
Marien Matuszak of Tulsa found a home at guard, along with Houston's Buddy Gillioz. At center, there was a fine contest between F. A. Dry of Oklahoma A&M and Houston's Jack Chambers.
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 3, 1952
Torn Welcome Signs Get Repairs in Seoul
Seoul, Korea—U.P.B.—Workmen roamed the streets of Seoul today repairing "Welcome Ike" banners and signs whipped by a cold Siberian wind during the night. $ \textcircled{1} $
The banners and the large numbers of soldiers and military police in Seoul's streets were the only signs of President-elect Dwight Eisenhower's long-expected visit.
As usual, officials maintained a tight secrecy about any plans concerning the visit. The President-elect's arrival and departure were not even subjects for speculation.
The temperature in Seoul at noon today was 18 degrees and the day was bright with sun sparkling on a thin blanket of crisp snow remaining from yesterday's light snowfall.
Officials said no news of the visit will be released over the 8th Army's special radio teletype equipment until after the President-elect leaves Korea.
... It Isn't Christmas Without Fruit Lake
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Washington — (U.P.)—President Truman and Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson will meet late today to plot strategy for rebuilding their party, which soon will be out of power for the first time in 20 years.
It will be the first meeting between the top Demorats since the election in which Gov. Stevenson was defeated by Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Stevenson, Truman Plot Democrat Strategy
The Illinois governor was scheduled to arrive in Washington late this afternoon after addressing the CIO convention at Atlantic City,
N. J. He will be a White House guest until Friday.
The main political conference will take place during the day tomorrow around the President's desk. Democratic National Chairman Stephen A. Mitchell will also participate.
After conducting the inevitable post-mortem on the reasons for their defeat, the Democratic leaders are expected to devote most of their time to planning a party comeback in the 1954 congressional elections.
Gov. Stevenson, who will retire to private law practice in Chicago
next month, has said he wants to have a hand in "strengthening some of the weak spots" in the party. Mr. Truman is known to have ideas of his own on that subject.
The main challenge to Gov. Stevenson's position as chief Democratic spokesman comes from Congress, where Sen. Richard B. Russell (D-Ga.), Sen. Burnet R. Maybank (D-S. C.) and other southern Democrats already have served notice they intend to make Democratic policy during the next four years.
Plane Crashes Take Heavy Toll
By UNITED PRESS
Military and civilian plane crashes from Nov. 7 to Dec. 1 took a toll of 235 dead and missing. With 13 more airmen missing Tuesday in an Air Force C-47, the total reaches 248 men, women and children.
Planes involved in the mishaps included four C-119s, the "flying boxcars" of the Air Force, and one C124, the giant "Globemaster" air transport.
The chain of disasters began with the crash of an Air Force C-119 on Mt. Silverthrone, Alaska, Nov. 7, killing 19.
Nov. 12, a Navy Privateer crashed at Shelton, Wash., with a toll of 11 dead.
The chain of disasters continued:
Nov. 14—A C-119 went down near
Seoul, Korea, 44 dead.
Nov. 15—Off Korea, 11 missing in a C-46 that disappeared at sea.
Nov. 15—Twenty persons missing aboard a C-119 that disappeared on a flight between Anchorage and Kodiak.
Nov. 17—Another C-119, crashed near Billings, Mont., with 8 persons missing and presumed dead.
Nov. 22—An Air Force C-124 disappeared with 52 aboard during a flight between McChord air base, in Washington, and Anchorage, Alaska.
Nov. 28—An Air Force C-54 crashed near Tacoma, Wash., killing 36 persons.
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Wednesday, Dec. 3, 1952 University Daily Kansan
"Santa Is Much Too Slow-Use Want Ads-Make Some Dough!"
Page 7
Kansan Classified Ads
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Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be delivered to you at 8 a.m. during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kernel office. Journals do not later than 4 p.m. the day before publication date.
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BUSINESS SERVICE
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CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, maltos, home-made pies and cakes. Free parking space for customers. tf
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DRESSMAKING, formals, alterations, an experienced dressmaker. See Thelma Zanneton, 1633 Phone 1477M. 1-6 stairs apartment.) Phone 1477M.
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Veterans are urged to attend a meeting to discuss the 442nd Troop Carrier Wing reserve program at 7:15 p.m. Thursday in the Military Science building.
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Col. Maurice R. Smith is conducting a recruiting drive aimed at obtaining 1500 reserve officers and airmen for the Mo-Hawk wing, comprised of Kansas and Missouri men. Service in the wing fulfills obligations included in the Selective Service law which requires veterans to remain in the reserve for six years.
Lt. Conrad H. Isenberg will interview non-veterans in room 7 of the Military Science building.
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Members of the 442nd train one weekend a month at the Olathe Naval Air Station. They receive four days pay for each training session and are eligible for promotion, retirement, and disability benefits.
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Ross A. Smith on drill field Nov. 26.
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12-4
KU Can Develop All Types Of Theater, Official Says
"In this area, the University of Kansas has a great opportunity to develop all types of theater," C. R. Kase, a field secretary of the American National Theater and Academy, said in an interview Tuesday.
Mr. Kase was on the campus conferring with Dr. John Newfield, director of University theater, about developing the theater in Kansas.
"University and community theater have kept the theater alive in the United States," Mr. Kase said. Traveling troupes are meager and Broadway productions are largely limited to people in the New York area, he added.
Through the community and educational theater, there is more participating theater in this country than any place in the world. Mr. Kase pointed out.
Kase praised
Asked if university theater tends to lead or follow professional theater, Mr. Kase indicated a schedule of this year's University Theater's productions and commented, "A program like that is certainly not following."
Chartered under an Act of Congress in 1935, ANTA is in the process of reorganizing so that a national theater can be established with a broad local and regional base, rather than a single center as in European countries.
One project which the organization has undertaken recently is a pilot project in Delaware in which theaters sell student-rate tickets for
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Page 8 University Daily Kaussn Wednesday, Dec.3, 1957
Dulles, Acheson Iron Out Policy
Washington—(U.P.)—John Foster Dulles talked over his new job with Secretary of State Dean Acheson today and then predicted the foreign policy transition "will take place without any interruption or prejudice to the vital business of the United States."
The 64-year-old New York attorney, who will be Secretary of State in the Gen. Eisenhower cabinet, said "the loyal servants of our government have nothing to fear."
However, he said in a statement that employees of the foreign service would be checked carefully for their dedication to the foreign interests of this country.
Mr. Dulles visited Mr. Acheson in the secretary's office for 30 minutes. The two men posed for photographs and smiled and joked as the photographers jumped around Mr. Acheson's desk.
Mr. Dulles then went immediately to the Defense department for talks with Defense Secretary Robert A. Lovett.
Another member of the Gen. Eisenhower cabinet also arrived here for briefings in his new post. George M. Humphrey, 62-year-old Cleveland, Ohio, industrialist who will take over the Treasury department Jan. 20, conferred with outgoing Secretary of the Treasury John W. Snyder.
Mr. Dulles said that his talk with Mr. Acheson was in general terms although they did discuss the United Nations' action on approving the Indian resolution calling for peace in Korea.
He said he did not have time to share in foreign policy responsibilities during the transition period and that he did not plan to take an office in the State department before Jan. 20.
Makes TV First Day
Denver, Colo. — (U.P.)—Gordon Campbell Kerr, who is not quite a day old today had the distinction of being the first baby in the world to utter his first cry before an audience estimated in the millions.
Televiewers from coast to coast, along with 2,500 doctors gathered in Denver for the sixth annual clinical session of the American Medical association, saw and heard doctors care for the child immediately after his birth.
He was delivered by Caesarean section at Colorado General hospital here. His mother is 38-year-old Mrs. Lillian Kerr, wife of Sgt. John Kerr of Fitzsimmons Army hospital near Denver.
Hospital authorities said early today that mother and son were doing fine.
Venezuelan Declares Himself President
Caracas, Venezuela —(U.P.)— Defense Minister Col. Marcos Perez Jiminez, a member of the three-man ruling junta, proclaimed himself provisional president last night "by decision of the armed forces."
4 Officials Discuss Industry Growth
Four government reclamation experts met with the University Business Research bureau Tuesday to discuss methods of surveying the developmental possibilities of the Arkansas-White river basin.
The University had previously surveyed a 16 county area in the south central part of the state to determine water supply in relation to an anticipated industrial growth in the next 20 years. Also included in his survey were studies on food control and recreational developments.
The four government men represent the Arkansas-White river basin committee consulted in a daylong meeting with the Business Research bureau to determine effective methods of carrying out their survey which will include the southern half of the state.
Representatives of the basin committee were Wallace McMartin, economist with the U.S. Department of Interior; Walter J. Ware with the U.S. Corps of Engineers; Dr John Clark, with the U.S. Department of Commerce, and Dr. O. J. Wheatly, head of the Department of Commerce. All the men were from Tulaa.
Chicago Professor To Give Dains Talk
Dr. Wilbert H. Urry, professor of chemistry at the University of Chicago, will deliver the fifth annual Frank Burnett Dains Memorial lecture, at 4 p.m. Thursday in 305 Bailey. His topic will be "Modern Aspects of the Reaction of Free Radicals in Solution."
Dr. Urry is presented under the joint sponsorship of the department of chemistry and Alpha Chi Sigma fraternity.
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Seoul, Korea—(UIP)—Tough South Korean riflemen scrambled up the icy slopes of Sniper ridge last night and recaptured the crest after hours of savage hand-to-hand fighting against Chinese Communists who had held it for less than a day.
ROK Troops Recapture Sniper Ridge 18th Time
American Sabre jets shot down two Communist MIG-15 jets as new air battles flared in northwest Kokraea's clearing skies.
Republic of Korean troops, battered off dominating Pinpoint hill on Sniper Tuesday night, launched a powerful counterattack at 2 p.m. yesterday (11 p.m. CST) and surged back to the top after four hours of battle in freezing weather.
It was the 18th time in six weeks that the ROKs have recaptured Sniper after losing it to massed Red attacks. Yesterday was the first time since Nov. 15 that they had lost the crest, a vital central front height guarding the invasion route to Seoul.
Members of the Accounting Systems class, under Prof. Howard L. Stettler, will take an all day field trip to Kansas City Thursday to study accounting systems and methods, and accounting machine installations.
Accounting Class to Visit Two Kansas City Firms
The class will visit Remington-Rand in the morning, and will be guests of the International Business Machines corporation for a luncheon and tour in the afternoon.
Durkin Faces Cabinet Trouble
Washington — (U.P.)—Secretary of Labor-designate Martin P. Durkin faced trouble enough before Sen. Robert A. Taft angrily objected to his inclusion in the new Eisenhower cabinet.
Durkin will find himself next month the junior member of a business-minded Cabinet dominated by industrialists and lawyers of a conservative turn of mind. That is, assuming he is confirmed by the Senate.
The Ohio senator's anger may cool before the new administration takes office Jan. 20. Taft had some hard knocks this year and his patience is worn.
Taft and Eisenhower got together, however, and agreed on general political principles sufficiently to enable the Senator to make an all-out campaign for the Republican Presidential ticket.
BABY BROWN'S 40TH ANNIVERSARY
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KU, K-State to Get $200,000 for TV Broadcast Stations
An offer of $100,000 each to the University and Kansas State college for the development of educational television has been made by the Fund for Adult Education, an independent agency established by the Ford foundation, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy and President James A. McCain announced today.
Under the television plan now being worked out by a joint committee of the University and Kansas State, half of the programs would originate at each school. Both would have transmitters, joined by a micro-wave length.
The offer provides that both in-9 institutions must add $200,000 each before Jan. 31. Chancellor Murphy said this morning that the bulk of this will be requested from the 1953 legislature, with other funds hoped for from private sources.
"One of the important provisions of the Fund for Adult Education in making grants is that proposed
"The joint television project is another example of the determination of our institutions to cooperate in assuring that the people of Kansas will have quality educational services provided efficiently," Chancellor Murphy said.
The Federal Communications commission reserved 242 ultra-high frequency channels for noncommercial educational TV when it lifted the freeze on TV stations in April. However, these must be claimed by June 3, 1953, or they will be released again, Mr. Browne said.
educational TV stations have facilities so that quality programs can be filmed and exchanged," R. Edwin Browne, director of University radio, said.
It was decided at a meeting of the TV committee Monday that the University will file immediately for channel 11, assigned to Lawrence for noncommercial educational TV, Mr. Browne, chairman, said.
Kansas State was the first school in the country to be granted this type of assignment, channel 8.
WSB Head Resigns After Coal Ruling
Washington—(U.P.)—Chairman Archibald Cox resigned from the Wage Stabilization board today in protest against President Truman's approval of a $1.90 daily wage increase for coal miners and the whole wage program came to a standstill.
Industry members of the board, hopping mad at being overruled by the President, threatened to resign en masse.
Mr. Truman touched on the revolt late yesterday when he ruled that soft coal miners could get the full $1.90-a-day increase negotiated for them by United Mine Workers Chiefain John L. Lewis. Industry and public members of the wage board had ruled in October that any increase above $1.50 would be inflationary.
Mr. Truman said he acted to avoid passing on "any major economic disturbance" to the incoming Republican administration—a clear reference to Mr. Lewis' threat of a strike if the full pay increase was not approved.
At the same time, Mr. Truman stated his "firm intention to continue a strong stabilization program" and asserted that his decision would not have "serious inflationary effects upon wages and the economy generally."
Industry members of the tripartite wage panel called an emergency meeting today to review Mr. Truman's announcement and decide whether to resign in protest.
Convention Gives Reuther Lead in CIO Pre-Balloting
Atlantic City, N.J.—(U.P.)-Youthful firebrand Walter P. Reuther seemed sure to be elected president of the CIO today as opposition crumbled in front of the Auto Workers chief's victory steamroller.
Two more CIO unions—the Brewer-ry Workers and the American Radio assn...switched to the Reuther camp early today—leading his supporters to predict a win by more than 500,-000 votes over his rival candidate, Executive Vice President Allan S. Hawwood.
9. The election of a successor to the late Philip Murray was scheduled to climax the frenzied week-long 14th annual CIO convention. Up to the last minute, the spotlight was centered on the fierce battle over a new president.
With just a few hours left before
Weather
The week-long siege of fogy, misting weather in eastern Kansas finally will end today, forecasters will
LOEWS AND CO. MIDDLEBURY
said. Clouds will linger longest in northeast Kansas, and it may be late afternoon or night before skies clear. The threat of an Alaskan cold front reaching Kansas now has all but disappeared. The weather will be mostly fair tonight and Friday.
FAIR
Not much temperature changes ex- pressed. Lows tonight 20 northwest to 30 southeast and highs Friday in the 40s.
However, there were recurring reports that Heywood would bow out before the fight reached the floor for what would be the first roll call election in the CIO's 15-year history.
A 16th century German Nativity play and the singing of traditional German Christmas carols by a student choir will mark the German department's Christmas program, Wednesday, Dec. 12, in the Little Theater of Green hall.
the showdown, Haywood backers pledged to carry the fight to a roll call vote on the convention floor.
Nativity Play Marks German Christmas
The play cast and the chorus, all students of German, are being coached in their pronunciation by Mrs. Helga Vigliano, assistant instructor in German, and Sidney M. Johnson, instructor in German.
Dr. J. A. Burzle, head of the department, announces that John Newfield, director of the University theater, will be in charge of the staging of the play. ___
Champ Goes for $4.55 Pound Chicago — (U.R.)— Ohio Special II, grand champion steer of the International Livestock exposition, sold today for $4.55 a pound. He is headed for platters at a Chicago steakhouse.
Daily hansan
50th Year, No. 54
Thursday, Dec. 4, 1952
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
LAWRENCE, N.J.
The Kansas Air Male, Air Force ROTC newspaper, was published today.
MILITARY QUEEN FINALISTS—One of these three finalists will be crowned queen of the Military Science ball Saturday night in Hoch auditorium. The name of the queen will not be revealed until intermission of the dance. The other two will be named attendants. The judging took place at a tea at the Castle Tea room. Finalists are Janet Gabrielson, sophomore, Chi Omega; Donna Jean Johnson, sophomore, Delta Delta Delta, and Maureen Kelley, junior, Alpha Chi Omega.
Adlai Pledges Cooperation With Ike Rule
Washington—(U.P.)—Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson pledged himself and President Truman today to cooperate with the Eisenhower administration "insofar as it is compatible with the views of our party."
He said neither he nor Mr. Truman will try to boss the Democratic members of Congress or needle them into obstructing the Republicans just to obstructing. He said the "instrument" of exercising "a constructive and wholesome influence in our public life will, of course, be the Democratic leadership in Congress."
The eight-page paper was published by the Arnold Air society. The paper features pictures, news and feature stories. Clarke Keys, journalism junior, is editor. Bob Longstaff, journalism senior, is managing editor.
The defeated Democratic presidential nominee discussed the future role of the party with newsmen at the White House where he is spending two days as the guest of Mr. Truman.
He said be regarded the party's campaign deficit, which he reported at more than $500,000, to be the No. 1 problem facing the Democratic party now.
To questions about the role of the Democratic minority in the new administration of President-elect Eisenhower, Gov. Stevenson replied that Mr. Truman and he both agreed that party concerns "must be subordinated utterly to the dispatch of public business."
Gov. Stevenson reiterated that Democratic National Chairman Stephen A. Mitchell will remain in his post and said he did not expect any change.
ROTC Newspaper Published Today
He also repeated that he was not willing to spend in the forthcoming period money on radio and television speeches—as titular head of the party—until the campaign deficit had been erased.
Gov. Stevenson said he always believed that "good government is the best politics." A political party, he must, "subordinate pyrrhic victories and skirmishes to the long-term interests of the United States."
He said his party must recognize that it can recapture public confidence and esteem only by working to promote the national interest.
Murphy Stresses Need In Housing Meeting
The need for the active support of the student body in the University's efforts to secure better student housing was re-emphasized yesterday by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy before a meeting of the student housing committee.
Dr. Murphy stressed that the people of Kansas and their elected representatives need to be made aware of the problem which exists here. "After all, this is their University," he said.
Other points brought out were: The individual student could help greatly in this by informing persons in his own community of the need and the desire of the student body for more and better living facilities.
These advantages include living and working with other students, learning the techniques of leadership and fellowship, and gaining a better understanding of human nature through the closer contacts established through group living.
Advantages of group living which would be achieved in a dormitory could be pointed up.
Another means which the student can use to further the program is support of the Alumni and Endowment associations when their campaign opens in the spring. This campaign will be nation-wide in scope and could produce a sizable portion of the wherewithal to do some of the needed building.
Urging that more toys are needed, Treadway said, "Apparently the hazardous travel conditions last week caused many students to forget to gather their old toys while they were home."
ISA Campaign Nets 250 Toys
Students going home for a weekend before vacation are urged to bring toys with them when they return, or to send home for them. Houses receiving toys are asked to phone George Leinmiller, collection chairman, to have them picked up. A bin will also be placed at the information booth Friday where the toys may be left any time before vacation.
"Around 250 toys, games, dolls and puzzles have been given to the ISA March of Toys so far," David Treadway, college senior and chairman of the drive, reported today.
Margaret Smith, college freshman, reported that the campaign opened in Lawrence this week. "The cub scouts will aid the drive with a door-to-door canvass of the town for contributions." Miss Smith added.
Lewis Clum, Independent Student Association president, said the March of Toys will become an annual project for the ISA. "It is a very worthy effort, and should be repeated each Christmas," Clum said.
Plans for a 200-unit men's dormitory are now in the final stages of completion in the State Architect's office in Topeka, the committee was told.
Minor alternations could adapt this plan to one which could house from 100 to 290 women, it was pointed out.
They represent a board of regents request for a blueprint which would be a prototype for dormitories for all of the state's institutions of higher learning. The first of these structures will be at Kansas State Teachers college at Pittsburg.
The chancellor said that two years ago a plan, in its final stages of preparation, for a men's dormitory had to be scrapped because building costs had surpassed the amount of money available for the project during the time it took to draw up the blueprints.
Dean of Men Laurence C. Woodruff called upon the committee to produce a concrete plan for getting correct information about the situation into the hands of the students, and through them to the people of Kansas.
The committee was also asked to prepare a short, concisely worded statement on the situation for the House Ways and Means committee of the State Legislature.
Mortar Board Plans Party
A party honoring sophomore and junior girls that were on the honor roll last semester has been planned by Mortar Board for Dec. 11.
"Approximately 84 girls have been invited to attend the party from 9-10 p.m. at the Kappa Alpha Theta house." Jane Heywood, president, said.
Committees for the party are Jannith Lewis, education senior, chairman; Virginia Mackey, journalism senior; Grace Endacott, fine arts senior, and Jane Heywood, business senior, entertainment; Jeanne Fitzgerald, journalism senior; Louise Swigart, fine arts senior; Vinita Bradshaw, education senior, and Carolyn Oliver, college senior, invitations; Patricia Lloyd, college senior; Kay Conrad, college senior, and Dot Taylor, journalism senior, refreshments.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Dec.4, 1952
Wilson's Charge Lacks Evidence
ASC President Bill Wilson at a Pachacamac meeting Tuesday night found it necessary to bring up the issue of the editorial board again. As far as the editorial staff of the Daily Kansan was concerned, the issue was closed.
The new board has been working efficiently for the past three weeks. It is not purely arbitrary as Wilson contends. His attack on the Daily Kansan was made without any checking and without any evidence to back his statement.
The board, consisting of the editor-in-chief, his editorial assistants, the city editor, the managing editor, the Kansan Board chairman, the editorial faculty adviser and the dean of the School of Journalism have met every Tuesday since the board's inception to discuss the editorials for the coming week.
At these meetings the editorial policy for the coming issues was discussed and, if necessary, voted on. The board and vote is completely in the hands of the students. Neither faculty member has a vote on any editorial decision.
Rather than being arbitrary, the board has proved an aid to the editorial staff and the dean of the school. It has relieved the dean of the task of reading carbon copies of all the editorials written, and it has given the editorial staff a chance to have a broader coverage on the editorial page of the paper.
Wilson in his blind attack has not only condemned the editorial board but also the review board which is not supposed to function until the Spring semester. The function of this board will be to get an all-student consensus of Daily Kansan news coverage and their suggestions for improving the paper.
Rather than give either board a fair chance, he has felt it his duty to stir up the agitation which spread through many newspapers all over the country. As ASC president, Wilson seems to feel that it is his duty and privilege to spread as much discontent as possible in the Daily Kansan issue.
The Daily Kansan does not mind criticism that has some basis, but an attack such as this is pure nonsense.
We feel that with the setting up of the board the issue is closed; we hope to keep it closed. But anytime that we are blasted with as unjust an attack as that of Bill Wilson's, we will find it our duty to answer it. Don Moser.
Housing Reporting Is Based on Fact
Bill Wilson, president of the ASC, has accused the Daily Kansan of carelessness, incapability, inaccuracy, and inefficiency in relation to the treatment of the recent housing situation. In fact, he even advised Pachacamac not to pay any attention to what the Daily Kansan has to say.
This writer is indeed surprised that such a statement has been attributed to Bill Wilson, and it is sincerely hoped in the future that he, too, will be sure that his observations are not based on little fact.
The Daily Kansan based its entire coverage of the housing situation on specific facts and figures. The pictures taken were not put-up jobs, but accurate representations of actual conditions. A visit to any one of the halls where these pictures were taken will reveal the true facts.
Wilson seems to have missed the fact that unless the Daily Kansan had begun a campaign, there would have been no recognition of the problem, and no chance of a possible solution. The status quo would have continued, perhaps indefinitely. Maybe Wilson thought of this, and perhaps his thinking was influenced by the inconvenience of having to attend housing meetings, appoint committees, and hear factual statements.
The Daily Kansan has done its best to present an even-keel picture of the entire situation. Students who live or have lived in below adequate housing are best qualified to give facts concerning the housing situation. Their letters published by the Daily Kansan proved that they didn't think the paper's treatment was based on "a little fact and heresay."
It is the purpose of a newspaper to report facts as they exist, and it is the privilege of the editorial page to comment on these facts as the individual editorial writers interpret them.
—Mary Cooper.
Short Ones
Read in the paper the other day that Gen. Harry Vaughan has asked for "inactive" duty.
★ ★ ★
The much-publicized whooping crane is one of a very rare species, almost as rare as two prominent campus birds, the Sour, Owl and Jayhawker magazines.
Many students became concerned for the first time this year over the University when they realized they might not be able to leave it for Thanksgiving.
- * *
The Army is considering general installation of "spud peeler" machines, and it would have no trouble deciding for the machines if the votes of KU senior men were counted.
ONE MAN'S OPINION
SOAP SOAP
Bv CHARLES BURCH
The ASC has finished another typical example of its work. This time the Council showed its great speed and ability at analyzing campus problems and situations. And as usual little if anything was accomplished. Even the two campus political parties, at least part of their leaders, have taken time out from their continual feud to condemn the ASC housing committee's report.
It took the five-man committee appointed by the Council almost a week to compile the facts and figures obtained from supposedly extensive research and to come up with the startling conclusion that, "the present housing problem exists because increasing enrollment forces more students into already over-crowded houses and some into substandard houses."
In all fairness to the diligent members of the committee, I think anyone who had sat down and thought about the situation could come up with the same conclusion. The students have been aware of this problem for quite some time, even the freshmen and new students realize the housing problem, so it really wasn't necessary for the ASC to have such an "exhaustive report" compiled.
The committee, however, should be given some credit as its members, at least according to the report, "recognizes the fact that only new University housing would alleviate these crowded conditions and improve the housing situation."
However, it seems the committee members did have trouble finding time to work on it as only three of the five members were present at one of the committee's main meetings.
This lack of time or interest may explain why the report is almost a duplicate of the report compiled recently by FACTS. The only difference is that FACTS did a much more complete and detailed job.
The ASC committee did such a poor job of organizing the information that it had "gathered" that a journalism student not on the committee had to organize the facts and actually write the report before it could be printed.
When the committee had completed its job the report was a jumpled mass of facts and details collected from the dean of men's office, dean of women's office, the housing office, the chancellor and mainly, if not entirely, from the FACTS report.
The committee no doubt worked in good faith but what did it accomplish? Actually nothing was gained from it except that the members of the committee, none of whom were from the "critical housing areas" probably became a little more aware of the acute housing situation that exists.
Again this looks like another example of the caliber of work that can be expected from the present ASC. Lots of noise but what has it really accomplished? One might also ask, "What can it do about housing even if it wanted to?"
Comments
A question on our favorite professor's weekly current events quiz was, "Who was named most valuable player in the American League?" The Kansan Sports editor missed it.
Greeks Defy Reds in Papagos' Popular Win
Dick Tracy shot himself out of another close call Sunday. Evidently his shooting arm wasn't impaired by his long illness.
Another military man, who also campaigned on the theme "It's time for a change," won an important election recently.
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 Saturday and Sunday. University holidays and examinations occur. Class missit September 17, 1910, at Lawrence Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
To this veteran of the battlefields the Greeks have now turned in their hope for their first stable government since the end of World War II and an end to ruinous inflation and unemployment.
time for a change, won an important He is 69-year-old Field Marshal Alexander Papages of Greece, scourge of Greek Communists, twice a hero of Greece and staunch friend of the United States.
Besides being a personal triumph for Papagos, it also was a victory of far-reaching consequences for the west.
Not a single Communist won a seat in the election, despite Iron Curtain support via clandestine radio broadcasts and a last-minute effort on the part of the left-wingers to join up with the Progressives and Liberal parties in a popular front.
Papagos' Greek rally party, which is only a little more than a year old, won approximately 240 out of 300 seats in the Greek parliament and polled more votes than the Progressive and Liberal coalition and the left-wingers put together.
Among the milder epithets applied to Papagos by the Communists during the campaign were "traitor," "executioner," and "agent of Americanocracy."
But despite their poverty, the Greeks wanted no part of the siren call of the Reds.
The Papagos victory cements more firmly than ever the 185,000-man, highly-trained Greek army into Western defense plans and, with Yugoslavia and Turkey, presents the Reds on their southern flank with about 1,000,000 of some of the toughest fighting men in Europe.
Internally, Papagos faces his greatest task. Economically, Greece's situation could hardly be worse. Approximately 40 per cent of her meager incomes goes into armament.
She imports more than five times the amount she is able to export, and actually has been able to exist only through American help. But that American help, in turn, has been reduced because as the Greek economy sank lower and lower, the Greeks were unable to carry their share of the burden. Inflation, blackmarkets and unemployment have flourished.
American aid now, however, may be increased.
Papagos is the type to appeal to the American business man. He knows he needs help, but he has been a constant critic of inefficiency in previous Greek governments and he believes the Greeks must not
come to rely wholly and forever on U.S. help.
As Greek elections go, this last one was a rather tame affair. The Greeks had gone through three elections in three years and they were tired of them. The chief issue was Papagos himself.
—United Press.
Letters
Jayhawker Raises Okay Poor Work
Pachacamac, in pushing through an all Student Council bill for praises to the Jayhawker editor and business manager, has expressed its thanks for an editorial program of mismanagement and mediocrity.
To The Editor of the Daily Kansan:
Even the Jayhawker staff says that last year's issues left something to be desired. Editor Kenneth Dam boasts, in publicity preceding the first issue, that "the fall issue
Despite hints of past financial corruption and general editorial inability (enhanced by the Jayhawker's "caste" system of promotion), Pachacamac lifted the heavy cloak off its coffers of student money and dolled out $100 pay raises to the present heads of the yearbook.
The reward came despite a vaguely explained 50 cent rise in price to the purchaser of the 1952-53 editions, and the harshly proclaimed inadequacies of last year's book.
... features a picture coverage of University students doubling that in the first issue of the previous year's annual."
This improvement would seem (to this critic) to bring the "cover age" to just below normal.
But Pachacamac, ever faithful to its own, has rewarded good intentions. Overlooking a past tainted with ill-planned, Greek-heavy editions, and the yet unfulfilled promise of a policy clean-up, Pachacamac has put its time-dulled stamp of approval on the 1952-53 Javahawk and those to come.
It is a donation that is best accompanied by criticism from those who care where their money goes.
William B. Dickinson III college senior
Little Man on Campus
by Dick Bibler
STUDENT
PARKING
FACULTY
PARKING
ONLY
Pierce P-35
"How come the faculty has so dang much parking space when they can't even afford cars?"
RENOBAS
Topeka. Ka.
Page 3
'Turnabout' Is Fair Play to Student
5
By AL TRALDI
Many University students would like to see tall 23-year-old Robert M. Rose, photographer, behind a frame with indication of his height, with a number on his chest and an abstract expression on his face, and take his photograph.
In his Photographic bureau, Rose processed five copies for each student, a total of 30,000 pictures in a couple of weeks.
CX
This would be only fair, since Rose and his helpers have done the same to all the students.
The picture taking method is only too well known. Students wait in a silent queue at the end of the enrollment line. Against the wall is a double frame—records show it as the only double-picture system in American universities.
q'
Students try to look natural but they show the dullest faces of their repertoire.
Two students take their places between wall and frame, like ridiculous passengers in a two-seater vehicle.
"Try to keep your eyes open and your mouths shut," replies the photographer. "Just . . . look like you are."
"What . . . what are we supposed to do?" asks freshman 2639.
Rose says that most University men and women hate to have their pictures taken. Perhaps each has
Durkin Not Angry At Taft Criticism
New York —(U.P.)—Secretary of Labor-designate Martin P. Durkin had only kind words for his sharpest critic, Sen. Robert A. Taft, today as he came to pay his first visit to President-elect Eisenhower's headquarters.
Mr. Durkin was expected to make his call at the Commodore hotel shortly after arriving from Chicago, where he has been handling a business matter for the AFL Plumbers union which he heads.
Sen. Taft, in his first attack on Eisenhower cabinet appointments, had described the general's selection of Mr. Durkin, a Democrat who had supported Illinois Gov. Adlai Stevenson for president, as "incredible."
But Mr. Durkin declined yesterday to discuss Sen. Taft's criticism.
day to discuss Sen. Taft's criticism.
"Senator Taft's remarks about my appointment were not a personal attack on me," Mr. Durkin said.
Sen. Taft, whose own recommendations for the labor post had been ignored, made it clear at the time he criticized the Durkin appointment that he was not attacking the Chicago labor leader's character.
The Ohio Senator, who had failed three times to win the Republican presidential nomination but joined the Eisenhower forces following the GOP convention in Chicago last July, remarked that Mr. Durkin had advocated outright repeal of the Taft-Hartley labor law.
Mr. Durkin said yesterday, however, he has "no intention of trying to scuttle" the law which Sen. Taft co-authored.
co-author(s) also declined to discuss a possible fight by Taft supporters to prevent confirmation of his appointment. ___
Chemist to Speak Here Twice Today
Dr. Wilbert H. Urry, professor of chemistry at Chicago university, will speak at 4:30 p.m. today on the "Modern Aspects of the Reaction of Free Radicals in Solution" in 305 Bailey.
Bailey. This is one of the Dains memorial lectures. It was established in memory of Frank Burnett Dains, professor of chemistry, who died in 1948.
1943.
To Urry will speak at 6:30 p.m.
today in the Hearth tea room, 17
East 11th street. Thirty persons are
expected to attend.
The dinner is sponsored jointly by the department of chemistry and Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemistry fraternity.
a mental picture of himself and expects the photograph to show the actual rough copy. ID pictures are not retouched and d—incorrigible liars—our naturalooks are changed.
Photographers cannot capture any expression better than our usual one, they just need a good straight-forward picture. To get the best photograph, a person should simply stand in front of the camera and remain unaware that an eternal image is going to be created.
Look at the lens as you would look at your shoe. Smile only if you feel like it.
Kose says that boys are getting to be more particular than girls, more boys want to primp before the picture is taken. On the contrary, bobby soxers and existentialists pull their hair over their eyes or put it into their mouths.
This didn't happen for the 30 candidates of the Homecoming Queen contest, whose pictures were also taken by the bureau. From a photographer's view, semi-finalist
Arnold Air Society Plans Saturday Fete
The Arnold Air society will have a dinner in the Student Union cafeteria Saturday night before the military ball.
The dinner is to be attended by members of the Arnold Air society, 40 members of the HAJAS, the basic cadet auxiliary of the Arnold Air society, their dates, and all the ROTC officers of the university. The dinner will be held from 6 to 8 p.m.
In time of rush work the bureau has up to ten persons on the payroll. If you go there now you'll see only Rose "photographer 1" with Steve Carter "processor 2" or Mrs. Diane Fisher who keeps the books.
Jane Henry was perhaps the best.
The University will establish an Extension division in Colby, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy told a conference of public officials there Tuesday night. The chancellor said that the board of regents has approved a plan to establish a division there and that a representative would be in Colby soon after the first of the year.
The representative sent to Colby will act as a coordinator for various University activities in the northwestern part of the state. The center will organize the area for classes, conferences, institutes, clinics, and the like.
Extension Division Plans Colby Office
University Daily Kansan
The University operates such centers in Kansas City, Garden City, and Wichita.
Girls Go to Harvard Rooms
Cambridge, Mass. — (U.P.)—Harvard students have been given permission to entertain woman visitors in their rooms until 11 o'clock on Saturday and holiday evenings following a student request for recognition of the "maturity and responsibility of Harvard undergraduates."
California Robber Grandma Might Be Robber Grandpa
Dr. Albert Sturtevant, professor emeritus of Germanic languages and literatures, was honored by the recent publication of a book by the Committee on Humanistic Studies at the University.
Los Angeles—(U.P.)—Police questioned a 60-year-old man today in the belief he may have have on skirts and blouses to pose as the "sweet little old lady" who has robbed three banks of about $3,500.
Studies as in honor of Albert Mory Sturtevant, "assembled by J. N. Carman, professor of Romance languages, is a collection of studies by one Norwegian and 10 United States scholars in the field of Scandinavian languages and history.
languages and history. Other KU faculty members who made contributions include P. M. Mitchell, assistant professor of German, and L. R. Lind, associate professor of Latin and Greek.
The book was printed by the University Press. ___
Hunter Shocked—Bird Gone
Omaha, Neb. —(U,P)— A proud hunter received a shock when he opened the luggage compartment of his car to show friends the gaudy pheasant he had bagged. The bird—only stunned by the shot—had revived on the trip home and hopped out of the compartment and went winging down an alley.
Calendar on Sale Later This Week
Officers became suspicious that the notorious "grandma" bank bandit might really be a "grandpa" in disguise when they found a woman's wardrobe in the hotel room of Alfred N. Hughes after he
The 1953 calendar, a project of the senior class, will have 74 pages, including 26 pictures and nine cartoons drawn by students.
The calendar will be sold at the Union bookstore, the information booth, in organized houses, and at some spots downtown.
The largest KU calendar in history will go on sale for $1 per copy this week at several campus and downtown locations, Charles Burch, calendar editor, said today.
The pictures in the calendar show campus life and campus scenes. The calendar queen, Christine Johnson, chosen during the senior day festivities, is featured in the book.
University Prints Sturtevant Book
FBI agents, meanwhile, were wondering about the authenticity of a note which they said may have been written by the pistol-packing grandma.
Capt. Didion said Hughes, who refused to talk about the clothes, was of slight build, with soft features that could easily be utilized for masquerading as an elderly woman.
was arrested for attempted robbery
ast night.
The costume found in the elderly man's room generally fits the description of "grandma's" sedate attire, said Robbery Squad Capt. Harry Didion.
The writer of the note which may have been composed by a crank, said she is indeed a grandmother and is robbing banks to build a "nestegg" for her son fighting in Korea.
Thursday, Dec. 4, 1952
Housing Director Voices Plea For Student Apartments
A housing shortage at the University today prompted Mrs. Bert Nash, director of the University housing office, to appeal for information on apartments which will be available by the spring semester. The shortage of furnished and un- $ ^{ \textcircled{4}} $
The shortage or furnished apartments is the most acute in five years according to Mrs. Nash. She lists only six furnished apartments and four unfurnished apartments in Lawrence. Only one of the six furnished apartments is open to families with children, and that apartment rents for $85 a month, a rate which most student families are unable to pay.
The cheapest of the unfurnished apartments is $60 a month plus utilities. Mrs. Nash explained that student families usually are not able to pay over $45 a month for an unfurnished apartment.
A few out-of-town apartments, both furnished and unfurnished, were included on Mrs. Nash's list of available housing. Few students can afford cars, the housing director said, therefore apartments must be within walking distance of the campus or near a city bus line.
The demand for apartments will increase with students who are being married at Christmas and will
be looking for a place to live, Mrs. Nash said.
Inquires have been made by newlyweds and by graduate students who will be coming to the University for the first time for the spring semester. "If I don't have any housing to offer them, the University may lose some prospective students." Mrs. Nash said.
"I believe that there are several apartments in Lawrence which could be made available to students, but landlords have neglected to list them with me," the housing director said. She asked that listings be made immediately to help with the demand for second semester housing.
Refund of $25 Refunded
Knoxville, Tenn. — (U,P)—Roy Blair explained away reckless driving charges and was “returned” a $25 cash bond. But he couldn't sway officers who caught up with him after finding that Blair had posted no bond at the time of his arrest.
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan
Republicans Agree on Ike's Blunder
Washington —(U,P)—Key Republicans agree that Gen. Eisenhower's headquarters made an "incredible" blunder in not tipping Sen. Robert A. Taft on the pending appointment of Martin P. Durkin as secretary of labor.
They denied, however, that an open split had occurred between President-elect Eisenhower and the Ohio senator.
The word "incredible" used by Sen. Taft in blasting Gen. Eisenhower's appointment of Mr. Durkin was banded about in GOP circles, but in a different context. There was general agreement that the Eisenhower camp should have given Sen. Taft notice that he was being handed a bitter pill to swallow.
One result of the Taft blow-up, according to several Republicans who did not want to be quoted, was to make it more probable that Sen. Styles Bridges of New Hampshire will grab the Senate Republican; floor leadership to head off a battle for the post between Sen. Taft and
Grand Jury Hits Casey, Morris
Washington — (U.P.) The surplus tanker deals of former Rep. Joseph E. Casey (D-Mass.) and one-time corruption hunter Newbold Morris were headed today for a grand jury airing.
Attorney General James P. McGranery announced yesterday that a federal grand jury here will begin an investigation next week into the 1847-48 surplus tanker sales which were the target of a Senate investigation last spring.
At no point is his brief announcement did Mr. McGranery mention either Mr. Casey or Mr. Morris by name. But the Republican New York attorney and the Democratic Casey played the leading roles in the hectic Senate hearings on the tanker scheme.
Both Mr. Morris and Mr. Casey were sharply criticized by the Senate committee in its May report.
The committee also said that a group, headed by Mr. Casey, made a quick $32,500 profit, in the purchase and re-sale of eight surplus tankers, with an original investment of only $101,000.
Three of the tankers later were sold to the United Tanker corp., a Chinese-financed company represented by Mr. Morris' law firm. This company, in turn, came under the control of the China International Foundation, inc., a non-profit organization headed by Mr. Morris.
Mr. Morris has contended—and he reiterated his contention last night—that he made no profit from the tanker deals. But the committee said his law firm received about $150,000 for handling the sale of the tankers for United, of which Mr. Morris should have received about $30,000.
Prof. Smith Speaks To Phi Beta Kappa
H. T. U. Smith, associate professor of geology, will be the speaker at the annual winter meeting and initiation of the Kansas Alpha chapter of Phi Beta Kappa at 4 p.m. Friday in the University Women's club rooms in Museum of Art. His topic will be "Uses of Air Photos in Earth Science."
Prof. Smith was chairman on a section of photo interpretation at the International Photogrammetries congress in Washington, D.C., last summer. Prof. Smith, a past vice president of Photogrammetrics, is author of the book "Aerial Photographs and Their Applications."
The program will also include a social hour at 4 p.m. with Miss Maude Elliott, assistant professor of Spanish in charge.
There will be the initiation of four college seniors at 4:30 p.m. They are Stanford Lehmberg, Anne Louise Longsworth, Carolyn Oliver, and Kermit Sewell.
A business meeting will follow the initiation.
pro-Eisenhower Republicans.
There was a good deal of finger- wagging, started by Sen. Taft himself, in the direction of Herbert Brownell Jr., Gen. Eisenhower's attorney general-designate and a close adviser on cabinet appointments.
Even staunch Eisenhower men said the usually suave Mr. Brownell should have passed advance word to Sen. Taft that an AFL official, who was a Democrat to boot, was being named secretary of labor.
Sen. Taft's friends said it was Mr. Brownell who got Sen. Taff's recommendations of two other men for the labor post, and, actually got
Sen. Taft to do spade work on investigating the fitness of some of those suggested for cabinet posts.
Both sides were in agreement that Sen. Taft's blast does not mean open political war.
The Eisenhower men said it removed for good any suggestion that the incoming president is "Taft's man."
Taft men said that they still believe that Gen. Eisenhower is in dead earnest about getting along with Sen. Taft. They said Sen. Taft means it, too, and they are betting that hereafter there will be better liaison work between the two.
Truman, Stevenson Confer Prepare for Party Comeback
Washington—(U.P.)—President Truman and Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson worked together today on plans to get the Democratic party out of debt and into fighting stance for a political comeback.
Money, the organization of the Democratic National committee and the party record in Congress were the most urgent problems facing the two top Democrats at their first meeting since their election defeat. Looking farther ahead, they also had to worry about rebuilding the party for the 1954 Congressional elections and the 1956 presidential contest.
Reports circulated in Democratic circles that former price stabilizer Michael V. DiSalle might be tapped for a key job in reviving the party, as executive director of the national committee.
The Illinois governor flew into Washington last night after his address before the CIO convention at Atlantic City, N.J.
When he arrived last night, Gov. Stevenson said only that he came at Mr. Truman's invitation and assumed they would "talk about the Democratic party." He was greeted at the airport by a crowd of about
The Public Affairs Press, Washington, D. C., has announced the publication of a new book by Seba Eldridge, professor of sociology.
Sociology Professor Has Book Published
The book, "The Dynamics of Social Action," is a guide and handbook for persons preparing for cooperation ni organized citizen-group action.
Dr. Eldridge's book represents something of an innovation in the treatment of social problems and is the outgrowth of many years of professional study and active participation in civic affairs.
Dr. Eldridge has written five other books dealing with sociology.
200 persons, some of them chanting,
"We Want. Adlai!"
He responded to their cries for a speech by saying that he was "grateful" for their reception but that he was "not coming for four years"—a wry joke about his own defeat.
St. Helens, Ore. —(U.P.)— A young mother, who ignored the advice of American physicians and went to Japan to serve as a "human guinea pig" in a polio cure experiment, was back home today, still on crutches.
'Guinea Pig Waits for Cure
Mrs. Rhoda Pennington, 36, said, however, "there is a chance the future may be brighter."
In a great gamble to regain the use of her polio-crippled leg, she flew to Japan last June, at her own expense, to try the treatments being offered by Prof. Yoshito Nishizawa at the Osaka Medical University hospital. During her stay she underwent 120 spinal injections of glutamine-Choline and vitamin B-1.
Each injection was potentially fatal.
She said she could see no difference in the nerves or muscles of her leg and that "it is just as bad now as it was in June."
But she was clinging to the hope that Dr. Nishizawa might have been right when he reported there had been some "clinical improvement" since the treatment and that the improvement would continue.
If you are interested . . .
... in a career in petroleum
Plan to see P. D. Manning, Jr.
division engineer of Stanolind Oil and Gas Company, who will be on the Kansas campus today. Manning will interview men majoring in petroleum, mechanical, chemical, and electrical engineering for jobs with Stanolind.
Stanolind is one of the five leading producers of crude oil, natural gas and natural gas liquids in the U.S. The company has producing operations in 13 states, providing excellent opportunities for capable, qualified engineers. You should investigate Stanolind before making any job decision.
STANOLIND GAS & OIL CO.
For an appointment to see Manning, contact Dean T. DeWitt Carr, School of Engineering and Architecture.
State Department Takes Applications
Sam Moskowitz, foreign service officer of the U.S. State department, will interview students interested in working for the state department Friday in 204 Strong.
He will primarily interview students interested in becoming a foreign service officer. The foreign service officer examinations will be given Sept. 14-17, 1953. They are open to men and women between the ages of 21 and 30 who have been
American citizens for 10 years.
The successful candidates will be stationed at any one of this country's 300 embassies, legations and consulates in 77 countries. Duties will consist of serving as consular officials, cultural, political, or economic officers.
Opportunities for positions with the State Department are also available to clerks, typists, nurses, and in many other fields.
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Appeal of Fry Plays Hailed by Top Critics
By JERRY KNUDSON
The work of Christopher Fry, English playwright, whose meteorite rise to fame has left critics open-mouthed, is returning to the University for an encore engagement. "A Phoenix Too Frequent" will be seen with George Bernard Shaw's "Dark Lady of the Sonnets" Dec. 10 through Dec. 13 in Fraser theater.
It's an encore well merited. University audiences were dazzled with Mr. Fry's "The Lady's Not for Burning" presented here last year.
Page 5
"Phoenix" was the first Fry importation produced in this country. This, together with the fact that the one-act poetic drama was badly coupled with a sensational racial prejudice one-act play, caused it to be withdrawn after five performances in April 1950.
Critics were lukewarm to cold in their reviews, but all recognized Fry's genius with words. In retrospect, most are agreed that "Phoenix" is one of his best plays.
Typical comments were:
"Fry writes to the heart more than to the head, with a controlled, compassionate irony that rates love above every other human emotion." (Time).
"... a dialogue full of tinkling charm and refined bawdy." (New Republic).
"... for truly poetic drama, this new man can write rings around T. S. Eliot" (Saturday Review of Literature).
"Here at last we have poetic drama which the theater can take to itself and the reader can delight in as poetry." (Nation).
Mr. Fry, born in 1907 and a member of T. H. Auden's generation, was an unknown entity until the production of "The Lady" in 1949. The public appreciated his epigrammatic brillance so much that by 1950 four of his plays were running simultaneously in London.
His other plays include "The First-born" (a solitary tragedy), "Thor and the Angels," "The Boy with the Cart," "Venus Observed," and "Rings Around the Moon." The last two were also produced in this country. His most recent is "A Sleep of the Prisoners."
"I lay the acceptance of poetry in the theater nowadays to two things. One is the reaction to the long hold of 'surface realism' . . . The other is that the world seems rather cut down a bit, . . . and poetry proves something people lack and wish for: a richness and re-affirmation."
Mr. Fry does his writing quietly in a small cottage in an Oxfordshire village. He explains his success this way:
Perhaps Nation magazine sums up the poet-playwright most incisively: "Christopher Fry gaily, cleverly, triumphantly offers us not despair or renunciation, but life and poetry seasoned with as much philosophy as we may care to add."
YWCA to Hold Christmas Bazaar Friday, Saturday at Henley House
The traditional YWCA Christmas bazaar will be tomorrow from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Henley house.
The purpose of the bazaar is to provide a chance for students and Lawrence residents to buy Christmas gifts. "This year the bazaar will feature a snack bar where persons can eat various assortments
Taft Mum On Durkin
Washington —(U.P)— Sen. Robert A. Taft said in a telephone interview he did not know whether an attempt would be made next month to prevent Senate confirmation of Martin P. Durkin as secretary of labor.
The Ohio Republican speaking from Cincinnati refused to comment on the varying interpretations placed by editorial writers and commentators on his denunciation of Mr. Durkin's selection for the cabinet.
Mr. Durkin is a Democrat who voted for Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson for President. He opposes the Taft-Hartley act. Mr. Durkin was president of the American Federation of Labor Plumbers' union when tapped for the cabinet.
Sen. Taft's failure in response to questions to say Mr. Durkin would be confirmed on schedule is circumstantial evidence, at least, that the senator will challenge him next month. That is his right. The Constitution provides that cabinet officers shall be nominated by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate.
When all is sweetness and light, these nominations are confirmed in a matter of minutes without reference to committees. That is accomplished by unanimous consent suspending the rules requiring reference to committees. A single senator can balk any unanimous consent proceeding.
Sen. Taft may examine Mr. Durkin in committee. But Sen. Taft probably could not prevent his confirmation. Few Republican senators would follow him on that and few Democrats would vote against a fellow Democrat for a spot in a Republican cabinet.
Adest Protestant institution for women in the United States is said to be Moravian college.
of homemade foods at any time of the day, Miss Helen Pendleton chairman, said.
Bazaar committee members are Mary Taggart, college sophomore; Mary Mitchner, college sophomore; Tina Maduros, college sophomore; Barbara Becker, college sophomore; Elizabeth Wohlgemuth, college sophomore; Iris Barsby, education junior, and Kay Coolidge, college sophomore.
Members of each organized house made some type of article to be sold. The items include felt Christmas socks, felt glasses cases, sweater bags, dolls, and pot holders.
Advisory board bazaar committee members are Mrs. H. A. Ireland, Mrs. J. B. Bravo, Mrs. Paul Roofe, Mrs. Eugene Alford, Mrs. E. C. Buehler, and Mrs. Marvin Tripp.
Spanish Club Chorus: 4:30 p.m.,
113 Strong, to learn carols for the Christmas party. All interested invited.
Official Bulletin
Christian Fellowship: 7:30 p.m., 22 Strong, Richard Burson, speaker.
TODAY
Versammlung des Deutsches Verein: 5 uhr, 502 Fraser. Music program.
German Christmas Choir: short
rehearsal, 5 p.m., 306 Fraser, tenors
Christian Science organization:
n.p. Danforth.
Air Force Reserve: recruitment drive, 7:15 p.m., Col. Smith, Kansas City, speaker.
KuKu club: 7:15 p.m., 106 Green, election of officers. Attendance required.
YMCA: 7:30 p.m., 101 Snow. Jan Brazda, "I Was a Communist Prisoner."
Mountain club: 7:30 p.m., 402 Lindley. All interested invited.
Y's group: 9 p.m., Henley House FRIDAY
Christian Fellowship Missionary meeting: 12 noon, Danforth.
Christian Fellowship cabinet meeting; 5 p.m.
Kappa Phi: Christmas meeting, 7 p.m. Chio Omega House.
Upstream: dinner panel on "General Education", 6 p.m., Sunday, Community bldg. Tickets $1. Call 1534R, 2464, 1387R for reservations today.
FUTURE
Hillel-D.S.F.: joint meeting, 3 p.m. Sunday, Myers hall. Speaker: Dean Harold Barr, Rabbi L. Cashdan and Dr. Amiva Chakravarty.
Math Colloquium: 5 p.m., Monday,
203 Strong.
DurkinCancels Ike Meeting
Chicago — (U.P.) — Secretary of labor-designate Martin P. Durkin cancelled his plans at the last minute today for his first visit to President-elect Eisenhower's headquarters in New York.
"Strictly confidential" business will keep him in Chicago throughout the day. Mrs. Durkin said.
She declined to reveal the nature of Mr. Durkin's business, but said he would not be available to reporters all day.
Mr. Durkin has been handling a business matter in Chicago for the AFL plumbers union which he heads.
He has had only kind words for his sharpest critic, Sen. Robert A. Taft, and it was not believed Sen. Taft's attack on Mr. Durkin's appointment was involved in the cancelation.
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ORANGE JUICE 2 for 25c
Heart of Ozarks, Frozen 12 oz. Pkgs.
STRAWBERRIES 29c each
In Shell Lb.
PECAN NUTS 49c
THESE PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU DEC. 16
University Daily Kansan
A&PSuperMarkets THE GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA COMPANY
Thursday, Dec. 4, 1952
Christmas Display Travels In Freshman's Car Window
A traveling Christmas display has brought the Christmas season to the campus early this year with the imagination of a freshman responsible for the lighted panorama.
The display is in the back window of a car driven by Carroll Eary, engineering freshman. The display is much like those found in many homes during the holidays, including lighted pirate ships of Santa Claus, reindeer, a snowman, and background scenery. Plastic trees, dogs, and miniature fences surround houses on the snow-covered landscape (cotton that is.)
The display is built on a layer of wooden boards that prop the scene up to the window level. The lights are the usual home Christmas lights, but Erys converted them for use on his car battery. The figures are glued and nailed to the boards to keep them in place.
"My biggest difficulty was installing a fan at one side of the display," Esry said. "I hadn't planned
on it, but I discovered that when several people got in the car the windows began to cloud up with steam, ruining the effect of the display. The fan keeps the window defrosted."
Forbes Colonel Promoted
This is the second year for such a display for Esry. Last year the display attracted so much attention at a Texas air base that he had to turn off the lights on the display.
Topeka—(U.P.)—The promotion of Joseph D. C. Caldara, commanding officer of the 55th Strategic Reconnaissance wing at Forbes Air Force base, from colonel to brigadier general was announced today by Air Force headquarters.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Dec. 4, 1952
No Kansans Make UP All-American
New York, Dec. 4.—U.P.)—The 1952 United Press all-America football team (under the point system a player receiving the first place vote of every person participating in the nation-wide balloting would get 2,860 points):
Pos. Player School Home Town Points
E. Bernie Flowers, Purdue, Erie, Pa. 1,200
T. Dick Modzelewski, Maryland, West Natrona, Pa. 1,947
G. Elmer Willhoite, Southern Calif., Merced, Calif. 1,332
C. Donn Moomaw, UCLA, Santa Ana, Calif. 1,585
G. John Michels, Tennessee, Philadelphia 997
T. Hal Miller, Georgia Tech., Kingsport, Tenn. 625
E. Frank McPhee, Princeton, Youngstown, Ohio 1,069
B. Billy Vessels, Oklahoma, Cleveland Okla. 2,138
B. Jack Scarbath, Maryland, Baltimore 1,631
B. John Latttner, Notre Dame, Chicago 1,327
D. Donald McAuliff, Michigan State, Chicago 1,172
SECOND TEAM
THIRD TEAM
Pos. Player School Points
E. Meilinger, Kentucky 623
T. Atkins, Tennessee 594
G. Eisenhauer, Navy 951
C. Catlin, Oklahoma 278
G. Kush, Mich. State 605
T. Meadows, Duke 568
E. Stolhandske, Texas 622
B. Cameron, UCLA 1,140
B. Hardeman, Ga. Tech 979
B. Giel, Minnesota 896
B. Olszewski, Calif. 887
Bell, Pennsylvania 516
Van Doren, So. Cal. 367
Athey, Baylor 581
Tamburo, Mich. State 831
Sewell, Texas 571
Lapradd, Florida 360
Perry, Michigan 814
Heinrich, Wash. 854
Sears, So. Cal. 649
Amche, Wisconsin 618
Crowder, Oklahoma 432
Baseball Clubs Haggle At Annual Convention
Phoenix, Ariz.—(U.P.)The age-old rumor factory, spinner of many fantastic yarns, worked over-time today as the annual major and minor league baseball convention finally officially got under way.
With the drafting deals all completed and official, the gossip-moners came up with these tidy tidbits:
General Manager George Weiss of the New York Yankees conferred with General Manager Charley Gehringer of the Detroit Tigers and the speculation was that Weiss wanted Art (Hard-Luck) Houtteman, the pitcher with an 8-20 record last year.
There was speculation over a deal brewing between the Chicago White Sox and the Cleveland Indians. Cleveland reportedly wants shortstop Al Carrasquell, but the Indians won't give up either outfielder Larry Doby or third baseman Al Rosen—so there is a stalemate to date.
The Brooklyn Dodgers are trying to wangle pitcher Warren Spahn away from the Boston Braves, but haven't come up with the right bait yet.
"Trouble is," said Dodge Vice President Buzz Bavasi, "that you have to give up something to get something."
The Washington Senators have been listening to overtures from the White Sox, too. The Windy City club wants Cuban pitcher Chico Fernleies; and it would take outfielder Gil Coan if the price was right.
Manager Bucky Harris of Washington, who has a way with ex-Yankee pitchers, would like to get pitcher Tommy Byrne, a recent White Sox acquisition.
There was a report circulated, too, that Ellis Ryan, president of the Cleveland Indians, was attempting to sell his interests in that club.
Manager Charley Dressen of the Dodgers told a reporter that Wayne Belardi, former Santa Clara college star, "might" be playing first base for the Dodgers next year—and that immediately led to renewed speculation that the Dodgers might put Gil Hodges on the trading block, a rumor that has been going the rounds for many months.
Hoag May Not See Action Until Early February
After his operation yesterday at the University of Kansas Medical Center, Charlie Hoag, Kansas half-back on the Associated Press Big Seven team, will be out of action until at least February.
Dr. James Weaver, the surgeon that operated on Hoag's right knee joint, revealed that the ligament was ruptured. The ligament was not repainable and was removed.
Hoag will have normal use of the knee, but the surgeon said that he could not make any attempt to
STADIUM
CHARLIE HOAG
test the knee for athletics until late January.
Hoag came through the operation in satisfactory condition and will remain in the hospital ten days to two weeks.
The knee was reinjured in the first play from scrimmage of the Missouri-Kansas football game last month. Despite missing the last three games this year, Hoag was named to the all-conference team.
The Oak Park, Ill., flash has had a brilliant 3-year career at the University. He lettered in three sports and was on the United States Olympic basketball championship team at Helsinki last summer.
The 21-year old business senior set an all-time rushing record for the football team. This year he received honorable mention on the NEA's all-American football squad even though hampered by injuries.
Tigers. Browns Pull First Player Tradee
Phoenix, Ariz.—(U.P.)The Detroit Tigers traded Virgil Trucks, their double no-hit right hander, and two other players to the St. Louis Browns in return for three other players today in the first major trade puller at the winter baseball meetings.
to St. Louis, while outfielder Bob Nieman, catcher J. W. Porter and second baseman Owen Friend of the Browns will join the Tigers.
Pitcher Hal White and outfielder Johnny Groh will accompany Trucks
A Brownie spokesman announced the three-for-three deal shortly after midnight. He said it was a straight cash trade and that the teams had come to an agreement after dickering "all week."
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Big Seven Officials Review Bowl Ban
A review of the post-season competition rule and the presentation of policies concerning academic standing, scholarships, recruiting, subsidization and other matters pertaining to athletics are the top items of the Big Seven conference being held today through Saturday in Lincoln.
Presidents, faculty representatives, athletic directors, football coaches, and business managers of the representative schools will take part in the meeting.
The big question will be centered around the post-season competition rule now existing in the conference. The rule at it now stands forbids all post-season competition. A review of that stand is to be held, and a change is entirely possible. As it now stands, no member school could take part in the NCAA basketball plavoffs held in March.
Of equal importance is the presentation to the presidents of recommendations to align the loop's policies with the desires of the American Council on Education and the North Central association of Colleges and Secondary Schools.
The football coaches are expected to petition for larger traveling squads. The present rule restricts the number of players to 36. The conference's freshman rule also will come up for discussion. Any football player coming into the conference must lose a year's eligibility if he has played freshman ball, while in the conference, freshman can play two games without the loss of any eligibility.
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Fraley Assails Sauer As NL Most Valuable
New York—(U.P.)—Don't faint, you Chicago Cub fans, but Fearless Fraley is not one of those people who would rather be right than be president.
That $75,000 a year intrigues me no end, as does a private battleship, a personal B-36, a box seat at the Army-Navy game and a family secret service escort to protect the public from my kids. Although none of mine have shown any tendency toward strangling a high C.
However, my political chances seem rather dull at the moment. The only offer at hand is a bid to run for delinquent poode-snatcher on the ticket of the society for prevention of cruelty to cats in my clam and catboat precinct on Long Island.
Anyhow, four years is too long to wait. So I'm gonna have to be dog-matically right today and insist that Hank Sauer of the Cubs never should have won the National league most valuable player award.
What brings this up is a list of lettered complaints longer than a boarding house reach in a basketball players' dormitory. The kindest remark was that I was "all wet," which is no surprise to a man who bathes faithfully every spring and fall.
One of the most inspired attacks came from J. V. Stone, my sports editor friend of the Mesa, Ariz., Tribune. His voluminous letter said simply: "Sauer grapes." Neat coinage, but whether he spells it "sauer" or 'sour' I agree whole-heartedly.
'Brandy' to Play In North-South Tilt
Bob Brandeberry, first string left halfback for the 1951 and 1952 football teams and an all-conference selection in 1951 has been invited to play for the north squad in the annual north-south game at Miami, Fla. Christmas day.
Brandeberry was notified of his
A. W.
BOB BRANDEBERRY
selection by Stu Holcomb, head coach of Purdue and the north team. He will fly to Miami on Dec. 18.
Brandeberry is the fourth Jaya-
hawker player to be invited to the
game but the first to be selected
for the northern team. The others
were tackle Hugh Johnson, 1948;
halback Forrest Griffith, 1949;
and halback Wade Stinson, 1950,
who played on the Rebel teams.
And grapes to you, too.
From Watertown, Wis., sports editor Joe Toman Jr., of the Daily Times sends along a brief letter of some 1,500 words penned by 16-year-old Jim Brodee. The lad signs himself as "a very loyal Cub fan," and I can assure everybody at Wrigley field that he is, indeed.
K.U.
CALENDAR
MONDAY
Young Jim must be in training to be a CPA because he gave more figures than ever showed up at Atlantic City for the combined beauty pageants. None of which was news to me, I might add. But he made me happy by saying I was "brooding" because one of my eastern friends didn't get the award.
I
Thanks, son. Didn't know I had any left. I'm no Abe Lincoln but I try to be honest on the typewriter. One result is that I have to send myself a Christmas card so we won't get shut out at the Christmas mail box.
Don't be fooled, either, Jimmy, by the picture of that handsome young fellow with hair on the sports page of the Daily Times. That was dropped off at Watertown by the pony express.
League Officials Seek Some Sort Of Bonus Rule
Phoenix, Ariz. — (U.P.)— Minor league baseball officials will decide today whether big league club owners can continue paying gigantic bonuses to untried kids without placing them under certain strict and special regulations.
That was the key item on the agenda as the club owners went into closed session to vote on matters which could alter the entire structure of baseball.
President George Trautman of the minor leagues urged the delegates to vote for some kind of bonus legislation reminding them that nearly $500,000 was spent last year on youngsters who never had played an inning of professional ball.
Although many veteran minor league club owners were predicting that neither of the proposed bonus rules would pass by the required three-quarters majority, Trautman said "I personally am very optimistic."
New York, Chicago and Detroit rank in that order among American cities in total factory payrolls.
>
electrical engineers
physicists
mechanical engineers
>
>
Page 7
HUGHES
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
LABORATORIES
CULVER CITY, LOS ANGELES COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
RADAR LABORATORIES
-----------------------------------------
GUIDED MISSILE LABORATORIES
-----------------------------------------
ADVANCED ELECTRONIC LABORATORIES
----------------------------------------announce openings on their staffs for those receiving Ph.D., M.S. or B.S. degrees during the year
ELECTRON TUBE LABORATORIES
FIELD ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
FOR WORK IN RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
Solid-State Physics
Diodes
Transistors
Test Equipment Design
Miniaturization
Electro-Mechanical Design
Radar Systems Electro-Mechanical I
Servo Mechanisms Gyros
Computers Hydraulics
Systems Analysis Subminiaturization
Information Theory Mechanical Design
Automatic Controls Instrumentation
Physical Analysis Telemetering
Microwave Tubes Antennas
Pulse Circuitry Waveguides
FOR WORK IN ENGINEERING
University Daily Kansan
Technical Writing
Missile Field Engineering
Engineering Administration
Radar & Missile Instruction
Radar Field Engineering
Patent Law
See your Placement Office for appointment with members of our Engineering Staff who will visit your campus DECEMBER 10, 1952.
personal interviews . . .
Wallace Seeks Bivins Rematch
Detroit — (U,P)— Coley Wallace, rapidly rising New York heavyweight, wanted a rematch with Jimmy Bivins or a bout with Rex Layne today following his crushing sixth round knockout over Bob Dunlap last night at Olympia arena.
The 24-year-old Bronx boxer, who ranked fifth among heavyweight contenders before losing to Bivins two months ago, regained much of his prestige by knocking out Dunlap.
Although it was a roundhouse right that finished Dunlap, the bout actually was decided much earlier when Wallace tagged his Salt Lake City rival with a solid left in the first round.
Wallace had two paramount advantages and made good use of both. He held a wide edge in weight, 199 pounds to 177, and also had a longer reach.
Good Old Siwash is hogwash now
FOR A LONG TIME we've suspected that today's college man would no longer "gladly die for dear old Siwash." Neither does he play ukuleles and sing "Alma Mater" at the drop of a beanie.
We believe, too, that when it comes to sportshirts the college man is no different from his older brother in town. He doesn't go for
fads and screwball styles. But he does go for smartness, good workmanship . . . and above all, value.
That is why we believe you'll like the new selection of sportsshirts by Manhattan®. For they have all these qualities, plus a distinctive air that sets them above the ordinary shirt.
So ask for *Manhattan*... the college man's sportshirt.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Dec. 4, 1952
Religious Notes
Mennonite Fellowship
Reservations for the Mennonite fellowship Christmas banquet must be made by Saturday. The banquet is at 6 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 13, at Memorial hall in Debote.
Canned food or toys to be given for Christmas to needy families in Lawrence may be brought to the banquet as part of the fellowship's project for this semester.
Tickets, $1.25 per plate, may be purchased from Mrs. Wilmer Harms, 1646 Tennessee st., or Willard Kaufman, KU Medical center.
Roger Williams
A student panel on "Effective and Satisfactory Christian Living" and vocal music by Carroll Smith, pharmacy senior, will be featured at the Roger Williams fellowship meeting Sunday at the First Baptist church, 801 Kentucky st. The program will follow a supper at 6 p.m.
Jim Gleason, college sophomore, will be the speaker at the University group church service at 7:30 p.m.
***
Wesley Foundation
The Rev. Herbert H. Duenow, pastor of Ivaneh Park Congregational church, Kansas City, Mo., will review Thomas Costain's latest novel, "The Silver Chalice," at the Wesley foundation Christmas dinner at 5 p.m. Sunday in the First Methodist church, 10th and Vermont streets.
A capacity number of 200 is expected at the dinner, sponsored annually by Wesley foundation and Kappa Phi, Methodist girls organization.
Centerbury Association
Tom Wilkerson, college sophomore, will speak on "The Life and Rule of St. Benedict" at a Canterbury association meeting Sunday at the Episcopal church, 1011 Vermont st. His talk will follow holy communion at 9 a.m. and a coffee hour at 9:30 a.m.
KU Christian Fellowship
KU Christian Fellowship
The Rev. Richard Burson, Hutchinson, will speak to the KU Christian fellowship at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday in 32 Strong hall.
Congregational Youth
Two movies on better racial understanding, "Boundary Lines" and "The Meaning of Brotherhood," will be shown for the Congregational Youth group Sunday at the Congregational church, 925 Vermont st. The movies will follow a supper at 5:30 p.m.
Gamma Delta
Chaplain Howard Mueller, hospital social worker, Kansas City,
Ma., will speak on "The Work of a Chaplain in the Church." at a Gamma Delta meting at 5:30 p.m. Sunday in the City building, 8th and Vermont streets.
- * *
YMCA
Jan Brazda, graduate student from Czechoslovakia, will speak on "I Was a Communist Prisoner" at a YMCA meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 101 Snow hall.
Brazda was active in YMCA work for several years in Czechoslovakia and has been working with the University chapter since he came here. The meeting is open to the public.
Westminster Foundation
- * *
A fellowship supper will be held by Westminster foundation at 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Westminster house, 1221 Oread ave. It will be followed by a vesper service with sermonette by Dr. John Patton, foundation director, and commission study groups.
Groups to Entertain Foreign Students
Foreign students and their wives will be the guests of the Hiliel foundation and the Disciple Student fellowship at a joint meeting Sunday in Myers hall, 1300 Oread.
The theme of the program will be "The Binding Force of Religion." Speakers will be Rabbi Louis Cashan, associate rabbi of Congregation B'nai Jehudah, Kansas City, Mo.; Dean Harold Barr of the School of Religion, and Dr. Amiya Chakravarty, visiting professor of humanities from India.
The program will include: 3 p.m. a panel discussion led by Rabbi Cashdan and Dr. Barr; 4:30 p.m. recreation; 5 p.m. supper consisting of foods from other countries, and 6:30 p.m. closing address by Dr. Chakravarty.
Anyone interested may attend.
Color Added to New England
Color Added to New England Boston —U.P. New England's traditional white houses are treated by rising tint of colored paint, in Massachusetts gray and yellow are becoming the most popular new shades. Elsewhere red, blues, greens and even pinks are reported.
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CLUSTER PEARLS — Just the right gift for Christmas for the smart college woman who knows smart jewelry when she sees it. Clusters and multi-strands of all kinds of simulated jewels are right for holiday celebrations season-lightweight jewelry with the weighty look.
Kappa Phi Sorority Pledges Forty Women
Kappa Phi, Methodist student women's group, pledged 40 women this fall.
weighty look.
They are Diane Brown, Mary Sue Crum, Shirley Dean, Jean Dumler, Donna Dixon, Norma Lu Eshelman, Carole Fisher, LaVonne Godwin, Barbara Hampton, Carolyn Hawkins, Marjorie Heard, Carol Hill, Diane Hollis, and Margaret Howard.
Dorolyn Humbarger, Julianne Keeter, Jacqueline Kimmel, Irma Lou Kalterman, Joyce Lundry, Carleen Mears, Joan Moherman, Margaret Moore, Delores Myers, Carolyn Neff, Norma Jean Nelson, Barbara Norrie, and Patricia Norrie.
Elaine Ochrie, Lorna Plummer,
Donna Robinson, Ethlyn Sejkora,
Marietta Shannon, Marilyn Sorem,
Phyllis Springer, Shirley summers,
Rosalie Thorne, Gloria Kay Vetterick,
Joan Zimmerman, Mary Schroeder, and Martha Taylor.
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Hubby May Not Realize Wife Does $7 Worth of Work a Day
By HARMON W. NICHOLS
United Press Staff Correspondent
Washington—(U.P.)—Maybe we working guys don't realize what the little woman is worth. But the big thinkers in the government have figured it out for us. Mama, in her apron, mop in hand, is worth $7 a day.
Let us have nobody in apromp charging my way with broom handles at the ready. I'm coppered on my facts.
The experts have figured that the average home-maker scrubs her fingers to the bone a minimum of 50 hours a week.
Our government experts in the Bureau of Labor Statistics figure that domestic help runs around $7 a day. So, you can put it down: The little wife-mate saves us around $7 a day, discounting overtime. And that runs into something like $35 for a five-day week. That adds up to $1,820 a year.
I do buy my wife her duds. And they come to a pretty penny above $199 a year.
The government claims that a man spends something like $199 for his wife's clothes, "which he would not have to supply to a paid maid."
I would like to submit for the record that aprons, dust caps, and assorted other clean-up wearing gear around the house, alone, run into more than $199 a year. And this is not counting girdles, at around $20 a 'gird', nylons by the dozen, gowns for house parties and some dress-up—not to mention a coat of coats.
The government isn't very clear on this point. Some folks supply their maids with uniforms. I don't because I don't have a maid. But
Point is, the government apparently has not dressed many wives.
There are, I learned to my astonishment, some 45 million American housewives. The government says that if you counted wives at $25 a week, it would run into something over a billion and a half a year in wifely wages.
But let not us male characters mention same at the dinner table tonight.
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TOMATO SOUP 4 for 29c
Crescent Sliced Lb.
BACON 39c
Chase's Chocolate Covered Lb.
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Swift's Cooked Half or Whole Lb.
HAMS 59c
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ENGLISH WALNUTS 39c
Florida Sweet and Juicy 5 Lb. Mesh Bag ORANGES 35c
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.
WEEKDAYS 9 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.
SUNDAYS 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
M hall from the be Man Thner.
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Weekend Social Events
Thursday, Dec. 4, 1952 University Daily Kansan Page $
Monchonsia, Kanza, and Hopkins halls will hold a Christmas dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday at the Eldridge hotel. Chaperones will be Miss Martha Peterson, Miss Mary Peg Hardman, Miss Lenora Thornton, and Mrs. Astrid M. Dohner.
- * *
Delta Gamma sorority will hold a formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Mrs. Arthur Little, Mrs. B. A. Weber, Mrs. Andrew McKay, Mrs. J. H. Kreamer, and Mrs. C. H. Wentworth.
Twin Pines co-op will hold a dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday at Twin Pines. Chapersones will be Miss Jeannine Cass, Mr. Frank Burge, and Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Kennedy.
The pledge class of Alpha Tau Omega will give a party from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Mrs. John Skie, Mrs. Harry Ryan, Mrs. Ralph Park, and Mrs. R. G. Roche.
Alpha Omieron Pi sorority will hold its Christmas formal from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday at the chaperouse. Chaperones will be Mrs. Agnese Underwood, Mrs. Dana Anderson, Mrs. L. L. Williams, Mrs. E. H. Turner, and Mrs. D. I. Denham.
Phi Gamma Delta fraternity will hold a rush party from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house. Mrs. Butcher will chaperon.
The Army, Navy, and Air Force ROTC units will hold their annual Military ball from 8 p.m. to midnight Saturday in Hoch auditorium. Chaperones will be Capt. John Collard, Lt. Joe D. Faull, and Capt. Bernard Turkla.
- * *
Carruth hall will hold a formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday at Carruth. Chaperones will be Miss Gloria Fierce, Mr. Herbert Taylor, and Mr. Arnold Freed.
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will hold a formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the Eldridge hotel. Chaperones will be Mrs. Kenneth Whyte, Mrs. W. S. Shaw, Mrs. A. C. McKay, Mrs. Arthur Little, and Mrs. B. A. Weber.
Delta Chi fraternity will hold a formal dance from 8 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Mrs. R. L Blume, Mrs. Thomas A. Clark, Mrs. Frank M. Baird, Mrs. L. L Williams, Mrs. James A. Hooke, and Mrs. Hazel J. Henkins.
Corbin hall, fourth floor, will hold
a dance from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. Friday in the livingroom of North College hall. Chaperones will be Miss Jane Moorman, Miss Joan Fink, and Miss Melen Maduros.
**
Locksley hall will hold a formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the Eldridge hotel. Chaperones will be Mrs. Louis Stanley, Mrs. Dean Nite, Miss Julia Willard, and Mrs. Althea Galloway.
Acacia fraternity will hold its annual winter formal from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the Community building.
- * *
The growth of various projects of the church was traced by Mrs. P. A. Petitt, a member of the General Assembly council of the Presbyterian church, at the annual Westminster praise service Sunday.
Mrs. Petitt especially emphasized women's organizations, stressing the fact that it is up to each individual to carry on the work of the church, since no organization is stronger than its individual members.
The Kansas City Alumni association of Theta Phi Alpha sorority will honor the new fall pledge class of Iota chapter at the University at a tea at 2 p.m. Sunday in Kansas City, Kan. The whole chapter and the Mothers' club have been invited to the tea.
Church Official Tells Of Growth of Projects
Chi Omega sorority announces the recent pinning of Miss Delores Decker, college senior, to Robert Trego, first year law student. Mr. Trego is a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. Miss Decker's home is in Concordia, Kan., andMr. Trego's home is in Merriam, Kan.
The service was sponsored by the Westminster Women's guild, with Joan Guthridge, college junior, in charge of the program.
The Education Wives plan to entertain their husbands and the faculty staff women at a coffee from 2:30 to 5 p.m. Monday in the University Women's club lounge in Spooner-Thayer museum.
Chi Omega Announces Decker-Trego Pinning
Education Wives to Entertain At Coffee for Husbands, Staff
The women will be entertained with a program at 3 p.m. The husbands of the Education Wives are invited to come at 4 p.m. General chairman for the coffee is Mrs. Clayton Krehbiel. Mrs. Margaret Hahn and Mrs. J. W. Twente are in charge of the program.
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By JEANNE FITZGERALD Kansas Society Editor
On the Hill
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity entertained members of Chi Omega sorority at a dessert dance Tuesday evening at the chapter house. Chaperones were Mrs. J. R. Scott and Mrs. J. I. Hollowsworth.
\* \* \*
Jane Heywood, president of Mortar Board, senior women's honor society, and several other members of the group plan to attend a sectional conference of the national organization Saturday and Sunday at Columbia, Mo. The Missouri university chapter of Mortar Board will be hostess.
The University club will hold a square dance at 8 p.m. Saturday in the club rooms with music and calling by Pat Beedles. Hosts will be Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Calvin and Mr. and Mrs. William Bray.
About 20 foreign students were guests of Lawrence families for Thanksgiving dinner during vacation. Arrangements were made by the YMCA. Each student went to a different home.
The pledge class of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority held a dinner party Tuesday night at the Dine-A-Mite inn.
Delta Upsilon fraternity will entertain members of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority with a dessert dance from 6:30 to 8 p.m. today at the fraternity house. Chaperones will be Mrs. James A. Hooke and Mrs. Ralph Rosebrough.
Kappa Sigma fraternity entertained the members of Alpha Delta Pi sorority with a dessert dance Tuesday at the fraternity house. Chaperones were Mrs. Edna Stewart and Mrs. Thomas A. Clark.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100.
Campus capers call for Coke
When grades are posted, get hold of yourself—maybe the news is good. Anyway, there'll always be problems ahead, so start now and face them refreshed. Have a Coke.
DRINK
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REG. 14,4,0,0,0FF
BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY
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"Coke" is a registered trade-mark. © 1932, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY
Duane, Arch Unruh Display Artistic Talent in Strong Hall
By EILEEN FOLEY
Proof that football players can be artistic, too, may be seen on the third floor of Strong hall. Twins Arch and Duane Unruh, quarterback and end on the University football team, feel that they need hobbies to fill their spare time. Copper relief and woodearving are the result.
University fine arts faculty noticed their work exhibited at the Kansas Free fair in Topeka this fall, and thought it would make a good display. The largest piece in the display, about 12 inches by 18 inches, is a copper relief of a cougar. Arch got the idea from a magazine ad, which is the source of much of his work. He did the piece this fall in 35 hours between classes and football practice.
Duane's wood sculpture of the fighting wild stallions he drew himself. The finished product took about 60 hours. Another piece, the horse's head, was suggested by the cover of a book which his parents got at the Kentucky Derby last summer.
Arch is a senior in physical education and Duane is a senior in pharmacy. Both men are practice teaching at Shawnee Mission high school in Mission, Kan. Neither of the men has had any formal art training.
Arch, who concentrates on relief work, also does leather tooling and is swamped right now with Christmas orders for billfolds, purses, and belts. Wayne Replogle, assistant football coach, incited Arch's interest in leather tooling in 1949.
Arch first started doing the relief work in 1950 when he wanted a hobby for the summer. From a kit which he bought to start the work he has progressed to designing his own reliefs from ideas in advertisements and movies. Both of the men now sketch most of their own designs.
Copper relief is done by pressing the design onto a sheet of copper foil from the back by using a felt pad. The trick is to keep the background smooth during the process.
Arch says that the relief work is not difficult. "A lot of people who don’t think they are talented could do it" of work if they wanted to," he said.
He hasn't sold any of his work yet because copper foil is so difficult to get due to its use in war production, and because he doesn't want to part with any of his present designs.
Duane began wood-carving after
seeing a demonstration during the annual Hobby Day in his home town, Clay Center. The veteran hobbyist explained the process to him, and from there he began on his own. He usually uses mahogany and walnut, although he is trying black ebony now.
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Deposit a small amount each week for 50 weeks and you will be able to give finer Christmas gifts next year.
Start your saving now in convenient denominations of 50c, $1.00, $2.00, or $5.00.
The first payment is due now, December 1 to December 6, so stop in to see us for further information about this Christmas Savings Club.
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"THE BANK OF FRIENDLY SERVICE"
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Telephone 3200
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 4, 1952
1-Year Temporary Substitution Balloons Into Full-Time Orchestra Job for Wiley
Bv KEN COY
What began as a temporary substitution 10 years ago has turned into almost a full-time job for Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra.
Prof. Wiley became director of the KU Band in 1934, a position he still holds, but in 1942 he was asked by the School of Fine Arts to substitute as director of the Symphony orchestra while Karl Kuersteiner was on leave.
Before his leave had expired Mr Kuersteiner resigned. The next year Prof. Wiley was asked to continue with the orchestra for another year, and according to Prof. Wiley, "that year has turned into nine."
The orchestra will present the first concert of its 10th season under the direction of Prof. Wiley, 8 p.m. Monday in Hoch auditorium.
Prof. Wiley said he has enjoyed his 10 years with the orchestras because "it has given me an opportunity to work with young people of exceptional talent and ability."
In this time a complete symphony orchestral program, which amounts to a concert series on a professional level, has been established.
A good example of programs of this type, according to Prof. Wiley, is a concert which opens with an overture. This is usually followed by an orchestral work such as a symphonic poem.
A complete concerto comes next and the program usually closes with a symphony.
a song.
He said that of the 30 or 40 "really great overtures" the orchestra has presented about 20. Some of the most outstanding have been "Meistersinger Overture" by Wagner, "Lenore No. 3" by Beethoven, "Russian and Ludmilla" by Glinka, "Aca-
domic Festival" by Brahms, "Marriage of Figaro Overture" by Mozart, "Tannhauser Overture" by Wagner, "Le Carnaval Romain Overture" by Berlioz, and "Russian Easter Overture" by Rimsky-Korsakoff.
Among the symphonies performed there are: "No. 4, No. 5, and No. 6" by Tchaikowsky, "The Scotch, the Italian, the Reformation" symphonies by Mendelssohn, "Symphony No. 1" by Mahler, "No. 1, No. 3, No. 5, No. 6 and No. 7" by Beethoven, "No. 1, No. 2, No. 3, No. 4" by Brahms, and "The Classical Symphony" by Prokofieff.
The solo position on the program has always been a coveted one, regardless of the work involved. Prof. Wiley said. Although it often involves learning almost a complete orchestral score it is still a much wanted honor.
The soloist usually is a graduat-
ing senior. Martha Heck, fine arts
senior, will be the soloist in the Monday
concert. Miss Heck is a pupil
of Paul Snyder, associate professor of piano.
Prof. Wiley described the position of an orchestra conductor as "an enviable one." It is like having a great keyboard before you, he explained.
"Each person represents a key, full of life, and all it needs is activation by the conductor. With a movement of the hand, to the right or left, the keys become an integral part of the music. A clairten, a flute, a trombone, or a cello—all are waiting for a command," he said. ...
However, he warned, "the conductor must keep himself in obscurity, so the attention of the audience will be focused on the orchestra and not the antics of the conductor."
The concert Monday will include
"Concerto No. 1" in C major by Beethoven, "Symphony No. 2" by Brahms, "Magic Flute Overture" by Mozart, and "A Midsummer Night's Dream" by Mendelssohn.
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New York — (U.P.)— Joseph D. Nunnan Jr., former top man in the U.S. Internal Revenue bureau, denied through his attorney today that he short-changed the government on his own income tax.
A federal grand jury in Brooklyn Monday indicted Mr. Nunan on charges of evading payment of $91,864 in income taxes between 1946 and 1950. He allegedly fraudulently income tax returns which failed to report $127,251 of his income.
Mr. Nunan's attorney, Richard J. Burke, said "the charges against Mr. Nunan are without justification. He has never evaded the payment of any taxes. We are confident that he will be completely vindicated when the case is tried in open court."
U. S. District Judge Mortimer W. Byers ordered Mr. Nunan to appear for pleading Dec. 10.
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LATE NEWS — CARTOON
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
Water Well Drillers Meet Next Week
LAST TIMES TONITE
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The fifth annual meeting of the Kansas Water Well Drillers will be held in the offices of the Federal and State Geological Surveys in Lindley hall Dec. 12-13.
The program will include talks, some of which will be illustrated, on topics ranging from "This is Kansas" to techniques of water-well drilling and geology and groundwater as applied to well drilling
A featured talk of Friday afternoon will be "Recent Developments in Cable Tool Drilling," by Harold J. Ruttenberg, president, Stardrill Keystone company, Akron, Ohio.
Education Fraternity to Hold Pledging, Initiation Services
A pledging service for newly elected members of Pi Lambda Theta, honorary education fraternity, will be held in the home economics dining room in Fraser at 5 p.m. today.
Initiation and initiation dinner will be held at the Castle Tea room Tuesday. Members wishing reservations for dinner should call KU 386 before Friday.
Engineering Junior To Head Radio Club
George Frye, engineering junior, was elected president of the Amateur Radio club Tuesday night.
Other officers are Lon Duncan,
engineering junior, vice president;
Joan Alice Johnson, education
junior, secretary; and John Hengen,
engineering sophomore, treasurer.
1952
The purpose of the Amateur Radio club is to promote interest in amateur radio operating, and to help members obtain their Federal Communications commission operators licenses.
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Thursday, Dec. 4, 1952
Topeka, Ks.
University Daily Kansan
Page 11
"Santa Is Much Too Slow-Use Want Ads-Make Some Dough!"
Kansan Classified Ads
Call KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be delivered during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University office. Journals billed, not later than 5 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One day Three days Five days
25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00
Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
BUSINESS SERVICE
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360.1199 Mass. tf
BEVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. t
EXPERIENCED Typist. Term papers
workbooks, theses and miscellaneous. Mrs
E. J. Roscoe. 838 Louisiana, Apartment
14 upstairs. Phone 2775-7. tl
TYBING WANTED. Prompt, accurate service. Pick-up and delivery service after 6 p.m. and before 8 a.m. Phone 3157R. Mrs. Livingston. tf
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment in this area and our efficient Roman Bombian Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. **tt**
TYFING SERVICE. *experienced thasus*
506 West 6th. Phone 1344W. Mrs. H.
8:20AM
TYPING SERVICE in home. Theses, themes, notebooks and miscellaneous. Phone 2417. 12-8
JAXHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jawhawk' pet shop. We have everywhere 'Jawhawk' field. Their need is great business. Our shop has everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418.
15
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For Your Christmas List
The Giant — Edna Ferber
East of Eden — Steinbeck
Silver Chalice — Costain
The Caine Mutiny — Wouk
Steamboat Gothic — Keyes
Wonderful Country — Ellis
Old Man and the Sea—
Hemingway
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwich, chili, homemade pasries.
Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves chickens, steaks,
cakes. FREE parking space for customers.
FOR SALE
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K&E SLIDE RULE in men's room Watson library between 12:30 and 12:45, pass by cov. 6. Distinguishable by scar on left face. Andrew Jones, 101 Oredall hall.
HANDWROUGHT silver jewelry, handwoven articles, and pralines at YWCa bazaar and ood sale. Friday. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Henley House.
Air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. midnight. Crystal Cafe. 609 Vt. tf
RADIO and TV service-same day as service on all mills. Most complete stock
of tubes and parts in this area. Bowman
128 Vermont. Phone 128 for prompt service.
DRESSMAKING, formals, alterations. by an experienced European dressmaker. See Thelma Zanneton, 1633 Vermont (down-stairs apartment.) Phone 1477M. 1-6
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CONOCO SERVICE--B. F. Goodrich tires and batteries, complete lubrication service plugs, automatic transmission Buchstein, Buchstein Conooco Service, 19th and Massachusetts.
TYPISP: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Phone 1369M. tf
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether Murray Falls, Lois Odaffer, Mass., Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass.
TRANSPORTATION
ASK US ABOUT airplane rates, sky coach. family days, round trip reduce American Express land tours. Cunard and Matson Steamship lines. Call Miss Glesemann, national Bank for reservations, 8th and Mass. streets. Phone 30.
BABY SITTER for 2 Simanee cats during Christmas vacation Dec. 22-29. Sitter gets runs of house and financial remuneration. Phone 3198W. 12-10
STUDENTS interested in working new banquet service at Student Union for this committee. Miss Harvey or Milton will inclnion between 2 and 4 pmt. Union cafeteria office.
12-4
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Washington — (U,P)— The State department says that even if a prospective United Nations employee is an American, it is "not in a position" to tell the UN whom it should hire.
The department noted that it had identified for UN Secretary General Trygge Lie Americans on the secretariat of the world organization whom it "believes to be Communists."
The department made the statement in reply to a federal grand jury charge in New York that it had cleared UN officials who were the "most flagrant and obvious cases of disloyalty."
Mr. Lo Bello, a former newspaperman from New York City, joined the faculty in the fall of 1950. He is a graduate of Queens College and of New York university. He is the author of an article entitled "Probation and the Newspaper" which appeared in a recent issue of the Federal Probation Quarterly.
Nino Lo Bello, instructor in sociology, will give the eighth talk in this semester's Sociology on the Air broadcasts. He will speak at 4:15 p.m. Sunday over KLWN on "The Tragedy of Old Age."
"In response to a request from the grand jury, the department identified for the grand jury 28 persons previously departed from the UN or now suspended," it said.
The grand jury said the State department, by refusing to name its officials responsible for the "faulty evaluations," hampered its efforts to learn the reason for the department's "misleading evaluations" of American employees of the UN.
State Department Defends Position
Nino Lo Bello to Give Sociology Broadcast
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3 Architects Win Awards
Three awards in the annual Scarab, national architectural fraternity, sketch exhibit competition went to University students. First prize of $25 went to Gregory Gunn. Robert L. Jones won third prize and Ben Bieri won second honorable mention.
Five students and a professor from the department of architecture of the School of Engineering attended the annual convention of Scarab, at Pennsylvania State college. Nov. 21, 22, and 23, where the prizes were given.
Sees Teacher After 50 Years
Robert J. Koppes, engineering senior, was the official delegate to the convention. Other students attending the convention were Jones, Bieri, George Emrich, and Harold Stover, all seniors in engineering.
Verner R. Smith, associate professor of architecture and national secretary-treasurer of Scarab, was the faculty member who attended the convention with the students.
Memphis, Tenn. — (U.P.)—Dr. Marshall Wingfield, vacationing in Virginia, knocked at a door to ask directions and was greeted by a former teacher he had not seen for 50 years.
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 4,1952
50 Principals To Meet Here
Principals of 50 Kansas and Missouri high schools have notified the University that they will attend the fourth annual principal-freshman conference here Tuesday. Several more acceptances are expected.
Principals of 100 Kansas and 14 Missouri high schools having three or more freshmen in KU this year were invited. The principals are to meet with the freshmen to discuss problems in the transition from high school to college. Thus the high schools can better prepare students for a higher education, the University can find new methods to help students, and the students have a chance to get things off their minds.
Kansas schools indicating they will come are Arkansas City, Atchison, Baldwin, Beloit, Concordia, Dickinson County, Dodge City, El Dorado, Emporia, Eudora, Great Bend, Halstead, Haskell, Highland Park (Topeka), Horton, Junction City, Kinsley, Lawrence, Leavenworth, Lincoln, Louisburg, Lyons.
Manhattan, Marysville, Minneapolis, Newton, Osawatomi, Pittsburgh, Russell, Sabetha, Salina, Sedan, Shawnee-Mission, Sublette, Topeka, Troy, Turney, Washington (Bethel), Washburn Rural, Wellington, Wichita East, Wichita North, Winchester, Winfield, and Yates Center.
Missouri schools represented will be Barstow, North Kansas City, and Sunset Hill.
Recreation Head For Union Named
Bascom Fearing, 1211 Vermont st. began work Tuesday as the new recreational director of the Student Union.
Mr. Fearing will be in charge of the bowling alleys, billiards, and table tennis sections. Fearing has had considerable experience in military and recreation programs.
Mr. Fearing is a graduate of the University and has his master's degree from New York university in physical education. He is also a graduate of the National Recreation School of New York City.
Sultry Strippers Stop Slinky Shedding
Chicago —(U,P)— Sultry but ambitious strip-teasers, forced out of work by a labor dispute, hoped they could start taking 'em off again today so they can earn some cash for Christmas shopping.
Not a zipper was unzipped along the honky-tonk rows in Chicago and suburbs last night.
The American Guild of Variety Artists ordered the entertainers to stop work in four night clubs to back up AGVA demands that $2.50 a week for each performer be paid into a union "welfare fund."
The resolution asked the AGVA to withdraw its order against the four night clubs so that harmony could be re-established in the business and the girls could go back to peeling tonight.
The Chicago Cafe Owners' association retaliated by ordering all its members to refuse employment for their strippers.
A plan for the future nitrogen plant in Lawrence involving the exchange of Kansas-made lubricating oil for German-made equipment was presented before the Consumers Cooperative association today in Kansas City, Mo.
Howard A. Cowden, president and general manager of the giant cooperative, said exchange of oil for machinery for the Lawrence plant, if it developed, would involve shipment of oil from the CCA refinery at Coffeyville to a Swedish cooperative.
Oil Exchange Plan Set for New Plant
The Swedish concern would buy German equipment and forward it to CCA. Such a deal, he said, would get around the Swedish and German dollar shortages.
The cornerstone for the $15,000,000 plant was laid yesterday in a ceremony held in connection with the association's three-day convention in Kansas City. The session was to end today.
A representative of CCA recently returned from Germany with a report of the possibilities.
Lab Theater to Present 'Second Shepherd's Play'
Others in the cast are Max Zent, college sophomore, as the first shepherd, Coll; Bill Means, business junior, as the second shepherd, Gib; Ernest Dade, college sophomore, as the third shepherd, Daw; Maurice Casey, education junior, as the angel; Mary Rigor, fine arts freshman, as Mary, and Kenneth Plumb, college freshman, as Joseph.
The 14th century "Second Shephers' Play" to be presented by the Laboratory theater under the direction of Tom Shay, instructor of speech, will be greatly different from the usual Christmas play.
As the introduced farce elements diverged more and more from the religious motif, the church felt it should no longer present them. Town guilds took over the plays, and eventually monks set them down in writing.
This play, found in a series of miracle plays in old manuscripts in Yorkshire, England, was originally given in churches as an expansion of mass, Mr. Shay said.
The play will be performed at 8:45 p.m. Saturday for the faculty Christmas party in Strong auditorium. It will be given for the public at 3 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 14, and at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 16, in the Little Theater in Green hall.
As years went by, humor was added as lay people began to act in them. Casts got too big and the plays were moved to the church's steps.
"The latter part of the play is a very sincere, religious adoration scene." Mr. Shay said, "but in the early part two definitely farce characters are introduced in addition to the three shepherds."
Mark Gilman, education junior,
plays Mak, and Shirley Strain,
college senior, plays his wife, Gill-
the two comic characters.
Dan Palmquist, instructor in
speech, and John White, graduate student, are doing the lighting. The setting "will be in flavor, but not imitation" of the 14th century, Mr. Shay said.
An angel choir of six to eight voices will be made up of members of the University Women's glee club. Wardrobe mistress is Patricia Dialab, college freshman. John Hankins, professor of English, is adviser.
United Nations, N.Y.—(U.P.)—Secretary General Trygeye Lie warned a group of close-mouthed Americans employed by the United Nations they must decide today whether they want to answer senate committee questions on Communism or lose their jobs.
'Talk or Quit,' Lie Tells UN Reds
Informed sources said Mr. Lie handed down the talk-or-be-fired ultimatum in letters sent to employees who had refused to answer certain questions asked by the McCarran Internal Security subcommittee.
Mr. Lie said he wanted the unwilling witnesses to notify him by letter today they had informed the McCarran group they would answer questions they previously had ducked.
The informants said Mr. Lie was
heeding the advice given last Sunday by a team of three eminent jurists who recommended the firing of any employee belonging to the U.S. Communist party or refusing to talk about alleged subversive activities in this country.
A grand jury in New York also issued a presentment Tuesday charging there is a "concentration of disloyal Americans" in high U.N. positions.
The grand jury also charged that the Justice department had interfered with its investigation. Shortly afterward, Chairman Frank L. Chelf (D.-Ky.) said his House subcommittee investigating the Justice department had begun an inquiry immediately into the grand jury's charges.
chell of the U.S., Sir Edwin Herbert of Great Britain and Prof. Paul Veldekens of Belgium—had advised Mr. Lie to dismiss employees who:
Delegates reported on this year's convention which was held at Manhattan. The purpose of the convention was to discuss the possibility of getting new members for the national organization. Those attending the convention were Grace Endacott, fine arts senior; Betty Cole, college sophomore, and Kay Lambert, college junior.
1. Belong to the U.S. Communist party or any other organization declared subversive by the U.S. government.
London — (U.P.) Prime Minister Winston Churchill announced today that Britain will have to cut back its defense production program for 1953 and must cancel or reduce some military contracts already placed.
Plans for the election of two national Phi Sigma Chi officers to direct next year's national convention were outlined at Jay Jane meeting yesterday.
The cutback will particularly affect aircraft production,Mr. Churchill said.
Britain Will Cut Defense Output
A nomination committee was appointed to select the candidates, to be elected at next week's meeting. Members of the committee are Marese Ball, education senior, chairman; Shirley Thomson, education senior, and Jane Heywood, business senior.
Phi Sigma Chi Plans Election
The Kansas chapter of Phi Sigma Chi has charge of the convention next year. Eight schools belong to the national organization and each year the host school elects the president and corresponding secretary
Mr. Churchill made his announcement to the House of Commons.
2 Are engaged or are likely to engage in activities regarded by the U.S. as disloyal, but any employee so dismissed should be permitted to "state his case" before a review panel.
Output of present military planes will be reduced, he said, while the government concentrates on introduction of newer and more advanced warplanes.
3. Refuse to testify about activities outside official UN duties on the ground that such testimony might incriminate him.
the jurists—William DeWitt Mit-
Mr. Churchill explained that his government still has not overcome the country's financial difficulties.
4. Are convicted of a "crime involving disloyalty" by the courts of their own country."
Sinatra's Ex-Wife Finds Gems Missing
Hollywood — (U,P)— Mrs. Nancy Sinatra, former wife of crooner Frank Sinatra, reported to police last night that she was robbed of jewelry worth an estimated $30,000 while she was out of town.
French Club Holds Christmas Party
PIPE BOX
from $5.00 to $7.50
ORIGINALLY PRICED
SAVE UP TO $5.35
Fine Arts students giving solos in the program are Dale Moore, junior; Robert Parke, sophomore; Mary Loveless, junior; Greta Reetz, sophomore, and David Dinnen, graduate student.
A pastoral showing the three episodes of the nativity will be presented Thursday at a celebration by Le Cercle Francais of Saint Nicholas day and Christmas.
Those participating in the pantomime are Joseph Meek, fine arts sophomore; Ardelle Anderson, college freshman; Adelaide Miller, college freshman; Jill Ogilvy, college senior, and J. Neal Carman, professor of Romance languages.
Depicting Christmas of today in France, the "Reveillon," midnight supper after mass, will be celebrated by the Yule log cake for refreshments.
She said she would make a careful inventory of the loss today, but she believed the missing gems included a diamond ring, necklace, and bracelet.
NOW ON SALE
SPECIAL OFFER
For $2.45
If you bring in this ad, you can have your choice FOR ONLY $2.15 Gloved. Boxed, and Gift Wrapped
Mrs. Sinatra noticed the loss when she opened her jewel box to show her gems to friends.
ON FRENCH and ENGLISH IMPORTED PIPES
The shepherd dance will be given by Larry Johnston, Melvin Cox, Bill Patterson, and Wayne Knowles, all college juniors.
George's Pipe Shop
727 Mass.
Mary Lou Ecklund and James York are accompanists.
Hollywood—(U.P.)The future of RKO motion picture studio was was the principal source of gossip in filmland today as indications grew that airplane manufacturer Howard Hughes might buy back the controlling interest he sold in September.
French Vote Lauds Pinay
Paris —(U.P.)— Premier Antoin
Pinay's "save the france" government won its first formal confidence test today on his record $11 billion budget.
The National assembly approved his demand to start discussing the controversial budget measure immediately.
The unofficial 312 to 205 victory for Mr. Pinay was assured immediately before the vote was taken when Jacques Soustelle of the French People's Rally of Gen. Charles de Gaulle announced its 85-member faction would abstain.
Trade journals said members of a syndicate that bought Hughes' interest in the studio were anxious to sell it back to him and the fate of the big studio might be decided within a few days.
The vote automatically substituted a general debate on the budget for a scheduled foreign policy discussion.
Hughes May Re-buy Big RKO Studios
But it does not assure Mr. Pinay of success in his fight to push his record French budget through as it stands.
The crucial test of his control will come next Tuesday on a scheduled confidence vote when Mr. Pinay attempts to force the assembly to discuss his budget projects without change.
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Murphy to Crown Military Ball Queen
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will crown the queen of the 30th annual military ball to be held from 8 to midnight in Hoch auditorium Saturday with a special silver crown adorned with pearls and rhine-
Pianist to Play In Fall Concert
Martha Heck, fine arts senior, will be the piano soloist in the first concert of the year by the KU Symphony orchestra at 8 p.m. Monday in Hoch auditorium.
The orchestra will be directed by
IRELAND
MARTHA HECK
Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra.
Miss Heck is a pupil of Paul Snyder, associate professor of piano. She will play "Concerto No. 1 in C Major" by Beethoven.
Other selections on the program will include: "Magic Flute overture" by Mozart, "Scherzo," from "A Midsummer Night's Dream" by Mendelssohn, and "Symphony No. 2 in D Major" by Brahms.
Students will be admitted on presentation of their ID cards. Tickets for the performance may be bought at the box office the night of the concert for 50 cents.
Club Hears Student Sing German Songs
German songs by Dale Moore, fine arts junior, was the highlight of the German club meeting yesterday He was accompanied by James York, fine arts junior.
A medieval German Nativity play by students from German classes and singing of German Christmas carols by a student chorus are scheduled for the Christmas program of the department. Dr. John Newfield, director of the University Theater, is in charge of staging the play.
The German club has been active this semester with a regular membership of 35 and the attendance of many guests and exchange students.
A lecture on German literature will be given at the last meeting of this semester.
stones.
The crown, which was hand made by Jack Barley, fine arts junior, will become a part of the tradition of the military ball. The queen's name will be inscribed on the crown each year.
Lockets will be given to each of the three finalists which will be displayed with the crown at the foot of the bandstand during the dance preceding the crowning of the queen.
Queen finalists Janet Gabrielson college sophomore from Hutchinson; Donna Jean Johnson, fine arts sophomore from Salina, and Maureen Kelley, fine arts junior from Independence, Mo., will enter the auditorium carrying bouquets of roses. They will be escorted by the commanding officers of the ROTC units, Col. Lynn Moore, Air Force; Col. Edward F. Kumpe, Army, and Capt. William Terrell, Navy.
Lie Suggests Firing UN Reds
United Nations, N.Y.-Secretary General Tryge Lie advised the United Nations today that he has accepted a legal recommendation that known or suspected American Communists should be fired from the UN.
Mr Lie circulated to the 60-member countries of the UN a copy of the report made by three outstanding lawyers he recruited last month to advise him on cases of American employees who refused to testify before the Senate Internal Security subcommittee on whether they belonged to the American Communist party or were engaged in subversive activities.
There was no official word whether Mr. Lie had yet fired nine UN employees, slated to be dismissed today for ducking questions before the McCarran committee and hiding behind the protection of the fifth amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Mr. Lie said "it is my earnest hope" that under the new policy "it will be possible for the UN and the host country by mutual efforts to maintain harmonious relationships on matters affecting the staff of the secretariat."
The nine employees due for discharge had spurned a second-chance ultimatum under which Mr. Lie gave them until noon yesterday to agree to answer the committee's questions or be fired.
This was in line with the recommendation of the jurists to Mr. Lie.
Mr Lie will not dismiss Ruth Elizabeth Crawford, publications officer of the UN Children's fund and the only Senate witness who admitted that she had been a member of the Communist party.
Tokyo —(U.P.) A Far East air force weather officer said today a tropical storm reported near Wake Island has moved out of the path of Trans-Pacific airlines and was expected to dissipate.
Storm Leaves Airline's Path
Daily Hansan
50th Year, No. 55
Friday, Dec. 5, 1952
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Ike Ends Korean Tour. Urges More U.S.Aid
Cover-Up Staged For Korean Trip
To keep up the pretense, and keep the news flowing from the Eisenhower headquarters, new cabinet members and other appointees held news conferences daily.
Throughout, reporters cooled their heels and wet their insteps in the snow and drizzle on the wind-swept corner outside the Morningside Heights residence.
Tonko ten Have, professor of political and social science at the University of Amsterdam, left here today after spending four days conferring with members of the departments of psychology, sociology and social work.
New York—(U.R.)—President-elect Eisenhower's "42nd street White House" in the Commodore hotel, where the new administration has taken shape, staged a week-long drama of deception as a cover-up for Gen. Eisenhower's trip to Korea.
Today, they could relax. There weren't any visitors scheduled.
An assortment of bigwigs would go through the Morningside mansion front door at their appointed hour. Newsmen covering headquarters passed the time speculating what these visitors did to kill a half hour in the house with no one of importance to talk with.
Important visitors came and went—both at the 6th-floor hotel headquarters and at the Eisenhower residence at Columbia university. The cabinet was completed, and the announcement of the last two cabinet officials—handed to the press by Secretary Arthur H. Vandenberg two days after Gen. Eisenhower had left—started out:
"President-elect Dwight D. Eisenhower announced today . . ."
The announcement was that Martin P. Durkin had been named secretary of labor, Sinclair Weeks secretary of commerce, and Walter Williams under secretary of commerce.
Professor Leaves After Conferences
The last important visitor whom Gen. Eisenhower saw in this country was Mr. Durkin, who visited the Morningside Heights residence the night before the departure for Korea. Gen. Eisenhower left Saturday morning, and it was immediately apparent at headquarters that certain key personnel were missing.
Dr. ten Have also conferred with members of the administration on the possibility of an exchange of students between Holland and Kansas.
En route Home With Eisenhower—(U.P.)—President-elect Eisenhower started home last night after getting the "feel" of the Korean war in a top secret three-day tour which included conferences with top commanders and chow with fighting men in sight of the battle line.
"Much can be done to improve our position," he said. "Much will be done."
He was convinced that American aid to South Korea should be increased, but he was equally convinced that the war should not be allowed to spread.
C. R. PARKER
DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER
He added that he had arrived at "no panaceas, no trick ways of settling any problems."
Two of the men who will be among Mr. Eisenhower's top aides in his new administration accompanied him on his tour.
They were Charles E. Wilson, his designate as defense secretary, and Herbert Brownnell who will be his attorney general. Also with him was Gen. Omar N. Bradley, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff.
the join causes of his Mr. Eisenhower's trip, from his de-
Weather
Clear skies came to Kansas again today, and weathermen issued an optimistic forecast for more of the
EARTHS
STUDIO
CLEARING-
same. Fog and drizzle which had beset the e a s t most of the week cleared out late yesterday. T h e temperature last night ranged from a low of 19 at Goodland to 33 at Wichita. As a reminder of last week's blizzard,
still had 1 inch of snow cover today, and drifts had not melted in several areas.
parture from his New York head-quarters right to the battle line, was conducted behind a curtain of secrecy.
News of it was not released until after he had left Korea and his military air transport service consellation was safely out of the reach of Communist fighters. He arrived in Korea Tuesday night, via San Francisco, Hawaii and Iwo Jima, and left at 9:01 p.m. today (6:01 a.m. CST).
In Korea, he spent hours conferring with Supreme Far Eastern Commander Gen. Mark Clark and Eighth Army Commander Gen. James A. Van Fleet.
Those conferences were inside the compound of Gen. Van Fleet's Seoul headquarters, behind a wall of machine guns and rifles.
Then he went up to the snow-covered forward areas where he talked with jet pilots just back from scouring the sky at 30,000 feet in search of Communist MIG-15s, and with GIs just off the line.
He ate porkchops off a plastic plate with three enlisted men of the U.S. 3rd division within sight of the fighting.
Mr. Eisenhower told his son about the three grandchildren, John's children, and John's wife Barbara.
He saw his son John, a major stationed in Korea as an assistant operations officer with the 3rd division.
He inspected South Korean divisions, which he has said should take over most of the fighting, and praised them highly, particularly their new skill with artillery.
Gls in general welcomed him.
Said Corp. Paul Morrissey of
Trenton, N.J., who is attached to the
3rd ROK division:
"I hope his trip out means the end of the war, but if it doesn't let's go the hell on into Russia and get this thing over once and for all"
In Seoul, Mr Eisenhower saw Korean school children trudging to school, their faces scarf-wrapped against the zero cold. And along the streets, among the shell-wrecked buildings of the dismal capital, he saw women bearing neck-breaking loads on their heads, and old men with their incredible loads of wood or war salvage.
"Now I have a feeling for this situation," Mr. Eisenhower said, when his tour was over.
In a briefing before more than 100 correspondents at Gen. Van Fleet's headquarters he said that he was "far from a defeatist in this business of the future of Korea," and that he believed "passionately" that the forces of Communism could "not conquer or squelch the struggle of the democracies for the right to live in freedom."
Ike Skips Korean Welcome In Secret Tour of Country
Seoul, Koreas—(U.P.)-The nine-
vehicle convoy moved swiftly,
silently through the dark streets of
Seoul.
Seoul.
President-elect Dwight D. Eisenhower had kept his campaign promise to come to Korea.
He had arrived in the deepest secrecy—it was the best kept secret of the Korean war.
It was known he was coming. But so jealously was the secret kept that the South Korean government, most United Nations officials, and correspondents were astounded to know he was really here.
Three United Press correspondents, out of more than 100 newsmen in Seoul to cover the visit.
were the only ones to meet and join the Eisenhower convoy. Six other correspondents accompanied the party from New York.
A small party, with a colonel as ranking officer, met the Eisenhower party which included Defense Minister-designate Charles E. Wilson, Attorney General - designate Herbert Brownell and Gen. Omar Bradley, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff.
Gen. Eisenhower's plane landed about 8:30 p.m. Tuesday at an air field near Scoul.
the group piled at once into Army and Air Force sedams for the drive into Seoul, where Gen. Mark W. Clark, commander in chief, and
Gen. James A. Van Fleet, commanding the 8th Army, awaited at 8th Army headquarters. Leading the convoy was a jeep filled with military police.
Then came Gen. Eisenhower's sedan, followed by a second MP jeep. The jeep's headlights were turned off so they would not shine on Gen. Eisenhower's sedan.
No extraordinary security measures—which would have been obvious to a possible enemy spy—were taken to guard Gen. Eisenhower's party. Its lack of drama was its best protection.
The convoy moved rapidly through war-battered Seoul. The only light came from a nearly-full
moon. No red lights shone on the vehicles. The MP sirens were silent. The convoy commanders were careful to obey all traffic regulations, including the speed limit, so as not to call attention to it.
It was bitter cold. A stiff north wind whipped the banners. Some were torn loose from their moorings.
On the way from the air field, Gen. Eisenhower passed banners, street arches, and posters welcoming him to Seoul.
Few civilians were on the streets of Seoul. It was close to the 9 p.m. curfew. Those who did see the convoy did not give the nine vehicles a second glance.
At scattered points along the route Army sedans were parked with lights off and motors running—presumably filled with guards.
It was 8:53 p.m. when the convoy speed through the gates of Gen. Van Fleet's headquarters and rolled to the building where he has his offices. A platoon of soldiers stood at attention a short distance from the building.
Gen. Van Fleet and Gen. Clark greeted Gen. Eisenhower as he stepped from his sedan.
South Korean plans to welcome the general never got a chance to get going. Even next morning, few Korean officials knew he was in their country.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan
Friday, Dec. 5, 1952
Library Index in Need of Revision
Robert Vosper, the new director of libraries, has promised many policy changes in the operation of Watson library. If Mr. Vosper is open to ideas, we have one suggestion that would ease a situation that has been one of the main grips of library users for years.
The way that the card catalog is set up now there is no possible way to tell if a book is on the reserve list or not. This inadequacy in filing causes not only delay and bother for the borrower, but much extra work for the librarians.
As a hypothetical case let us say that a student has to have a paper turned in the next day and wants to check out books on a certain topic. He looks up the titles of three books in the catalog, fills out the slips, and gives them to the person behind the circulation desk.
If the book is not in the stacks on the main floor, the librarian has to go down stairs and carry the books back up. Then, as will happen, nine times out of ten, when the student is given the books, he is told that at least two of them are on reserve and cannot be taken out of the library. Now he has to go back and look up two more books, the librarian has to take the reserve books back, and the student and librarian have to hope that the next selections are not on reserve.
The solution of this problem should not be too difficult. With all those mysterious little numbers on the catalog card, one of them should pertain to the reserve status of the book. If it does, very few students know about it; and, so it seems, none of the librarians know about it.
We hope that all it would take is a clarification of this number system. If not it would probably mean a revision of the catalog system. This would be a lot of work, but it would result in a lot of grateful students. —Don Moser.
News from Home Can Cheer Gl's
A letter from three GFs in Korea has been received by the dean of men asking if any students here would exchange letters and snapshots with them. They have been stationed there quite some time and for the past three or four months have received very little mail.
Their addresses are:
Their addresses are.
Pfc. James H. Iler Pfc. Reynold Zimmermain
Pic. 55-159-410 R.A. 17314189
Co C 62nd E-CB
Pfc. Raymond Lateu APO 301 co PM
Pic. 55-153-011 San Francisco, Calif
We have been unable to find why these fellows chose to write to KU. It may have been a good idea. We are suggesting that anyone who is interested write at least one letter. A new friend might be made and certainly a good deed will have been done.
When a person is a long way from home, a letter with a little news is wonderful. Certainly the fact that the receiver is in the middle of a war and wondering if anyone at home ever thinks of him adds to the letter's value.
We doubt if everyone is going to be interested enough to write these three fellows but surely everyone on the campus has relation or a friend in the forces if not in Korea. Have you been thinking of them as often as you should?
Especially at Christmas time, when away from home, things can look mighty gloomy. Right now is a good time to write a Christmas letter for delivery overseas.
A few minutes of your time can bring a lot of happiness to someone who may be very lonesome.
—Roger Yarrington.
Post-Season Ban May Be Lifted
Presidents, faculty representatives and athletic directors from the Big Seven schools are now meeting in Lincoln. The main piece of business which will be considered at the meeting is the rule preventing post-season competition by league members.
A change in the post-season ban on bowl games and tournaments is entirely possible. As it now stands, it would prevent a Big Seven team from competing in the NCAA basketball tournament which begins in March. KU won the tourney last year and K-State has a very good chance of going a long way in it this year if the rule is changed.
Judging from past statements, Chancellor Murphy and Coach Allen are going to oppose any such change. Both favor a good athletic program but do not favor post-season competition.
We can see arguments both for and against the ban. But, those arguments supporting the ban fail to overcome our hope that it will be done away with. In two years KU may be ready to go to another NCAA tournament. We hope when the time comes the team will be free to go. —Roger Yarrington.
ONE
MAN'S
OPINION
FOAF STUDIO
Bv DON MOSER
Rep. Clare E. Hoffman (R-Mich.) recently suggested tightening the ring of censorship that surrounds the people of this country. His plan was to curb the amount of editorial space a newspaper may use in backing a political candidate for election.
If Rep. Hoffman's plan, which he suggested to a special House committee considering loopholes in the election expenditure law, were to be carried out, Congress would have to pass a law that would tell the editors of all the papers in the nation just how much space they would be allowed to use in backing a candidate for office.
By suggesting this plan, he is asking Congress to vote on a bill that is as flagrantly unconstitutional as any bill ever planned. The first amendment to the Constitution of the United States declares that the Congress shall make no law . . abridging the freedom of speech or of the press."
Why a man who has been as conservative and as great an isolationist as Hoffman should come out with an idea as unconstitutional as this is hard to figure out. Anything that seemed in the least bit socialistic has turned into Constitution, he has voted against in the House.
Rep. Hoffman voted against a raise in social security benefits, government ownership of tidlands, government power lines and public housing. He has consistently voted against any type of other extension for foreign affairs. Yet, he wants the government to control the press.
Whether Hoffman had a personal grudge against a certain newspaper, a want of publicity, or just made a rather inane statement is hard to tell.
Whatever motivated his action, the whole business makes one wonder just how far certain Congressmen and Senators will go to destroy American liberty in order to attain their devious ends.
Comments
What amazes us is the consistency with which storms arrive in Kansas at the same time vacations start.
**
Notre Dame is being raked over the coals for its sneak play, which causes the opponents to jump offside. Guess who will be using it next fall?
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn.), Inland Daily Press, National Business Association Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, N.Y. City,
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas Student Newspaper
News Room KU 251 Ad Room KU 373
NEWS STAFF
EDITORIAL STAFF
TORTALS SYSTEM
Editor-In-Chief Roger Yarrington
Editorial Assistants Charles Burch
Managing Editor .. Diane Stonebaker
Assst. Mgr. Editors .. Mary Cooper, Boa
Stewart, Chuck Zuegner
Max Thompson
Denn Evan
City Editor .. Jeanne Fitzgerald
Society Editor .. Don Nielsen
Sports Editor .. Clarke Keys
Asst. Sports Editor .. Chuck Morelack
Telegraph Editor .. Phil Newman
Picture Editor .. Daron Sarten
News Advisor .. Victor Danilov
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager ... Clark Akers
Advertising Mgr. ... Elbert Spivey
National Mgr. ... Virginia Mackey
Circulation Mgr. ... Patricia Vance
Tom Biederman ... Tom Biederman
Promotion Mgr. ... Don Landes
Business Advisor ... Dale Novotny
Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5.40 a year (add $1) if in Lawrence. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Entered second class matter Sept. 8th of a Lawrence Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
Liberal GOP Senators Will Aid Senate Unity
In spite of the fact that the Republican majority in the Senate is very slight, nobody seems to be very concerned about unity in the Upper House.
This is due in some measure to the fact that a good many of the "Old Guard" Republicans were replaced by the "New Guard" Republican senators. However, the retention of some of the liberals in the Senate is another important factor in forming what seems to be a better united Congress.
Sen. William F. Knowland of California is one of the Republican "liberals." In other words, he is a middle-of-the-roader. He has been classified with such others as Sen. William Langer of North Dakota and Sen. Wayne Morse of Oregon, who bolted the Republican party in order to support Gov. Adlai Stevenson for the presidency.
Sen. Knowland has been accused by some of being a conservative, largely on the basis of his stand against some of the major Democratic liberal issues. He has supported some Democratic and some Republican measures, and follows no definite party line.
On the conservative side, he supports the Taft-Hartley act, the Republican stand on Tidelands oil, and the Republican viewpoint on wage and price controls.
On the liberal side of the picture, Sen. Knowland favors the Democratic civil rights programs. He has indicated a preference for such Democratic reforms as anti-lynch, anti-poll tax, and FEPC legislation. When the FEPC bill was introduced in 1948, it was being filibustered to death, but Sen. Knowland joined in the vote to pass a cloture of the filibuster.
He has a decidedly liberal point of view on most international relations, including a strong advocacy of admitting Hawaii to statehood.
Thus, with such men as Sen. Knowland in the Senate, political debates will be between liberals and semi-liberals instead of between liberals and conservatives. There is a much shorter distance to go to reach a compromise with such a situation.
—Don Nielsen.
Short Ones
At Missouri's request, the Tigers and Kansans have switched their original March 7 basketball date in Columbia to March 12. Barring a meeting in the Big Seven tournament the Columbia affair will be the 135th between the two ancient foes.
The roughest part of the school year is the interlude between Thanksgiving and Christmas vacations.
- * *
Question of the week is why the Kansas ice and snow storms seem to time their arrivals to the first days of student vacations.
A University professor thinks a schedule should be worked out so athletic events and concerts will not conflict with scheduled astronomical observations. Just imagine holding up Halley's Comet for a previously scheduled basketball game with K-State.
Taft's recent explosion at Eisenhower's labor secretary appointment still leaves room for doubt as to who's really head man—Bob or Ike?
- * *
Martin P. Durkin, only Democrat appointed to Ike's new cabinet, must feel as unwanted as a Democrat on the KU campus.
Little Man on Campus
by Dick Bibler
12
ASST.
COACH
SUPPLY &
LOCKERS
24
Bilge
GY22
"Hey, Coach!"
Topeka, Ks.
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
14
允
UN Bombers Blast Reds; ROKs on Sniper Ridge
喜
Seoul, Korea-(U.P.)-United Nations medium and light bombers attacked Communist targets from the Yalu river to the battleline today as South Korean and Red troops resumed the "twilight war" on the snow-frozen slopes of Sniper Ridge.
Okinawa-based E-29 Superforts flew through 100-mile-an-hour winds to the approaches of the Manchurian Yalu river sanctuary, bombing military targets for the second day in a row.
American Sabrejets shot down one MIG yesterday.
during the Thunderjets and Mustangs flew more than 200 sorries north of Kumhwa and Chorwon yesterday. The bombers flashed in on the camouflaged Red positions in low-level relays, destroying 10 gun positions, five bunkers, 10 shelters and sealing six s supply caves.
On the freezing battlefront, South Korean infantrymen drove off Red harassing probes at Pinpoint hill and Rocky point on the Sniper hill mass.
The big bombers blasted a "faming square" at Cholsan. Pilots reported "good to excellent" results.
superforts unloaded 100 tons of 500-pound bombs at Cholsan, a huge Communist communications center only 25 miles from the gigantic MIG base at Antung.
Black - painted B-26 bombers struck during the night at Koksan in North Central Korea and southeast of Yangdok. Other marauding light bombers set up aerial roadblocks from Yongpori to Namchomjom in Central North Korea, destroying 90 Communist trucks.
battlefield positions in the Kumhwa ridge sector of the central front were shaken by bomb runs during the night.
To Seek $500,000 For Athletic Plan
The Chinese sent only squad-size
Spokane, Wash. — (U.P.) The National Amateur Athletic union may appeal to the American public next year for a $500,000 fund to finance an expanded amateur sports program, it was indicated today.
AAU Secretary Dan Ferris, of New York, said the proposed half-million dollar fund would be 10 times the organization's present budget and would go toward a stepped-up program and establishment of full or part-time offices in each of the nation's 47 district associations.
Plans for the unprecedented appeal were approved yesterday by the national AAU executive committee, thus virtually assuring passage by some 300 delegates to the group's 64th annual convention now under way.
Friday, Dec. 5, 1952
units against the South Korean positions as the battle of the Kumhwah ridges went into its 52nd day. ROK troops captured vital Pinpoint hill from the Chinese for the 18th time last Wednesday.
Museum Shows Bird Collection
A wildlife collection containing 325 mounted bird specimens of Kansas will go on exhibit tomorrow at the Museum of Natural History.
The birds are mounted in lifelike poses on panels which cover the entire west wall of the museum's second floor. The exhibit has been in preparation for several years and was completed last month by George Young, resident taxidermist, and Dr. Harrison B. Tordoff, assistant curator of the museum.
The collection includes birds of four categories: waterfowls, upland game birds, shore birds, and perching birds. They are representative of all the birds that either nest in Kansas or migrate through the state.
Prof. Fulmer Mood of the University of Texas will present a series of lectures on "The Structure of American Historiography" at 4 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday in 205 Journalism.
Kansas or more Varieties of ducks, geese, quail, prairie chicken and other game birds of interest to sportsmen are included in the display. The exhibit will be used in biology classes and will be useful to public school groups and junior Audubon clubs.
in American
The topic of the first lecture will be "Some General Historians: George Bancroft to Edward Chaning." The lecture Wednesday will cover "Frederick Jackson Turner: Sectionalist" and the final lecture will be on "Pluralistic Localism."
Texas U. Historian To Talk Tuesday
Thursdays.
Prof. Mood is an authority of American history, and author of many articles and studies on several aspects of the Turner Thesis of the significance of the frontier in American History.
Anyone interested is invited to attend the lectures, which are sponsored by the department of history.
Jack Jill
Choose a
RONSON for the man or woman of your choice
So many models to choose from- at a price for every pursuit Every light will be a reminder of your thoughtfulness.
RONSON
RONSON
ADONIS
Priced from $6.95 to $200.
Lighter shown in reduced size.
Chromium plate. $11.60 Engine-turned.
The assassination and curfew came as the United Nations General Assembly opened debate—which the French boycotted—in New York on complaints by 13 Asian and Arab states against the French Tunisian administration.
Other Adonises from $10.95 to $200.
The French authorities ordered an 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew banning all non-authorized persons from the streets.
Gustafson
Tunis, Tunisia — (U.P.)— Ferhat Hached, powerful Tunisian nationalist leader of the General Workers union, was assassinated last night and French authorities clamped a curfew on Tunis today to squash any Arab revenge revolt.
The bullet-riddled body of the 47-year-old leader of the largest union in the Arab world was found on a near-desert road leading to Zaghouan, a mining town 30 miles south of Tunis.
Hached's car was found 10 miles from Tunis, near Rades on the gulf of Tunis. It was punctured by more than a dozen bullets.
Phone 911
COLLEGE JEWELER
Tunisian Nationalist Shot; May Influence UN Debate
809 Mass.
French Resident General Jean de Hautecloque left Paris immediately by plane when he learned of the assassination.
Gen. Pierre Garbay, tough commander of the 25,000 French forces in the protectorate immediately
ordered the curfew.
Carillon Program
The carillon program to be played 3 p.m. to 3:45 p.m. Sunday follows:
"Notre-Dame Paraphrase" for carillon
Clement
"The Girl With the Flaxen Hair"
Debusy
Four Welsh Folk Tunes:
"Terry w hotel"
Military posts throughout Tunisia were reinforced and heavily armed patrols were put into the streets of the capital and other major cities.
1. "Ton-y-botel"
2. "All Through the Night"
3. "March of the Men of Harlech"
4. "The Ash Grove"
"The Bells of Berghall Church".
Bisellu
"Gigue" .Couperin
"Passing By" .Purcell
"Fleming Dance for Carillon" .Nees
"Crimson and the Blue"
French officials refused to give any details of the assassination which was expected to effect profoundly the protectorates' population and the United Nation's Tunisian debate in New York.
All telephone and telegraph communications between France and Tunis were cut abruptly this morning. Later partial telegraph service was restored with cables being delayed for hours.
The French foreign ministry in Paris announced Hached's assassination.
Hached, 47, was one of the top leaders in the Neo-Destour (new independence) party which has waged an unremitting campaign of violence against the French in an effort to win freedom from French rule.
As secretary general of the General Workers union, he directed the activities of 80,000 Arab workers.
During the past year, Arab terrorist attacks have left 116 persons killed, 620 wounded and an estimated $30 million in damage to property.
Pro-French elements in the protectorate were reported recently to have organized a counter-terrorist "Red Hand" organization to "fight fire with fire."
Plymouth Congregational Church
925 Vermont St.
DALE E. TURNER, Minister
SUNDAY SERVICES
9 - 11 a.m. Sermon
5:30 p.m.. College Age Youth Meeting
8 p.m. Bible Class
1501 N.H.
Church Of Christ
W. TAYLOR CARTER, Evangelist KEITH BARNHART, Music Director
10:00 - Bible Study
11:55 - Communion
11:00 - Sermon
6:45 - University Class
7:45 - Evening Service
1953 K.U. CALENDARS
NOW ON SALE AT
- Information Booth
- Union Building
- Business Office in the Journalism Building
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University Daily Kansan
Page 4
Friday. Dec. 5. 1952
Constructive Role Seen By Truman, Stevenson
Washington—(U.P.)—President Truman and Gov. Adlai E. Steven son agreed that Democrats should refrain from needling the Eisen hower administration until it is comfortably settled in office.
That much of the party strategy, which they worked out during two days of White House talks was disjointed. They put statements from both too Democrats.
They also agreed that Stephen A. Mitchell, the political amateur picked by Stevenson to run his campaign, should remain as chairman of the Democratic National committee.
What else they decided was their own secret as Stevenson wound up his brief visit to the executive mansion.
The President told reporters he will be just as happy as anybody else if the Republicans do a good job in control of the government. But, he added, if they make any mistakes, the Democrats will certainly point them out.
Mr. Truman's remark that everyone should give Eisenhower a chance to operate before criticizing his administration may have been intended, in part, as a shot at the President's old ode, Sen. Robert A. Taft.
The remark came only a moment after a reporter had asked Mr. Truman whether he agreed with Taft that Gen. Eisenhower made a mistake appointing Martin P. Durkin as Secretary of Labor.
Mr. Truman replied that he had
no comment on that, but then added that he considered Mr. Durkin a very fine gentleman.
The retiring chief executive gave a blanket endorsement to statements which Mr. Stevenson had made to reporters earlier about the need for the Democratic party playing a "constructive" role when it lapses into the minority for the first time in 20 years.
Japanese Strike Causes Rail Tieup
Tokyo — (U.P.) — Government railways slashed passenger and freight services by 25 per cent today because of the 48-day nationwide coal strike.
A complete transportation tie-up in the Tokyo area was threatened as six private railway and bus company unions scheduled walkouts unless they are granted wage increase and year-end bonuses.
Some 3,000,000 persons in Tokyo depend on public transportation. Government gas corporations have rationed gas to six hours daily because of the coal shortage. The striking miners demand higher wages.
Walter Reuther, CIO President Alludes Organized Labor 'Crusade'
Atlantic City, N.J., —U.P.)—Walter P. Reuther, battling young new president of the CIO, served notice on the nation today that organized labor is going on a "great human crusade."
In the aftermath of his dramatic
Mr. Reuther fired warnings on industry and government that the 4 million-member CIO, under his leadership, would aim to "recapture the crusading spirit."
An exhibition entitled "Children's Books from Fifty Countries" will be displayed on the second floor of Watson library from Monday through Sunday. Dec. 28.
Library Displays Children's Books
The collection, which contains 130 volumes, includes books of such widely separated places as Greece, Australia, Burma, Formosa, Haiti, and New Zealand.
This exhibition will be augmented with a selection of fifty children's books from the KU library. These will be books printed in the United States about foreign countries.
The exhibition, which was obtained from the Smithsonian institute in Washington, D.C., is sponsored by the Children's Library association of the American Library association and the Information Center service of the United States department of state.
Bette Davis Stubs Throat As Singer
New York—(U.R.)-For years Hollywood writers and directors put Bette Davis through practically every human suffering in movie shots, but none of them ever thought of afflicting her with a $700,-000 case of laryngitis.
It remained for Broadway to do that—in real life.
The star, who gained fame as a heavy dramatic actress in films, returned to the stage Thursday night, after an absence of 22 years, as a song-and-dance star of a musical revue, "Two's Company."
A few hours before the opening, doctors decided she couldn't work and would have to rest for "several days" to clear up throat trouble that started plaguing her almost eight weeks ago in rehearsals.
During a six-week tour to break in the big show, the star's throat never was thoroughly healed. Sometimes it was worse than others. Her momentary collapse on opening night in Detroit Oct. 19 was due, however, to general exhaustion from long rehearsals.
There was $700,000 in the box office of the Alvin theater here when the troupe moved in this
week after the last road date in Boston.
Unofficially, it is expected that the show will not be able to open now until Dec. 15. This means the loss of 11 performances and the return of approximately $65,000 to customers. Keeping everyone standing by and rehearsing will cost the producers another $50,000 or more.
Miss Davis's threat troubles may be explained in part by the fact that using the voice on a stage is vastly different than on the movie sets to which she has been accustomed for so long.
In addition, she is not only engaging in the boisterous dialogue of revue sketches but also is singing in this show. Bette, never a singer, is unaccustomed to this strain on the vocal chords.
Lloyd Nolan went through a similar ordeal two summers ago after a long absence from the stage when he attempted the leading role, and some singing, in "Courtin' Time." Mr. Nolan bowed out before the show came to New York. Conversely, an opera singer such as Ezio Pinza, who had a lot of vocal ills in "South Pacific," may have trouble adding the unaccustomed speaking to his singing routine.
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election victory yesterday over rival CIO candidate Allan S. Haywood, the 45-year-old president of the United Auto Workers said that "failing to get economic justice . . . We shall march together on the picket lines of America getting what is rightfully ours."
Mr. Reuther pledged a new militancy to the CIO and warned that labor was out to get "economic justice." But the boyish-looking scrapper, head of the powerful auto union the past six years, set his sights on wider, international goals.
He promised that the CIO would "stand and work with free men everywhere . . . You cannot make freedom secure in the world as long as hundreds of millions of people are denied the necessities of life, as long as millions and millions of people are committed to belong to the have-not nations . . ."
But Mr. Reuther vented most of
New York —(U,P).— A New York attorney said today he will go to Tokyo to defend an Air Force sergeant charged with trying to sell military secrets to Communists.
N.Y. Lawyer Plans Airman's Defense
Stephen Biesicke of Poughkeepsie said he had been retained by the family of Sgt. Gluspee Caskey and 14-44-year-old Addie at his fortnomning military trial.
Mr. Biesieck said he would present evidence that a Veterans Administration doctor diagnosed Mr. Cascio in 1946 as "a dangerous paranoid and psychiatric case." This doctor, the attorney says, believes Mr. Cascio should not have been allowed to re-enlist in the Air Force.
5 Mineral Men Attend Lindley Hall Talks
Five members of the mineral industries council of the State Geological survey attended the annual meeting held in Lindley hall this week.
At the meeting, reports by division heads of the Geological survey were presented on ceramics, oil and gas, geo-chemistry and industrial minerals, petroleum engineering, subsurface geology, ground-water resources, coal resources, petrographic mapping, coal resources.
his feelings against "our enemies" in a summary of his program as president of the CIO. He said these were the "fat men on the plush cushions
Mr. Reuther stated his program in an hour-long address to the convention after his election and one critic promptly remarked:
the 'tire hell on the plus. . . . in the Union League clubs and millionaires' clubs all over America . . . who would drive us back and rob us of our hard-won social and economic gains."
"He'll be using the platform of the CIO to make that speech all across the country."
While holding the esteem of his fellow union members, Mr. Reuther is not considered "one of the boys." After the election, it was announced that the non-smoking, non-drinking Mr. Reuther would "drink a beer" to his victory.
But the betting was that the beer was never downed by the purposeful labor chieftain.
Mr. Reuther has been battling for labor since the age of 15 when he went to work as an apprentice tool and die maker. He was fired soon after for organizing the workers against Sunday work.
In 1926, Mr. Reuther first tangled with the auto industry and seven years later was again fired for union activity. He climaxed his early fight in leading the sit-down strikes at the auto plants in the middle 30's and rose to vice president of the Auto Workers union in 1942.
On his way up, Mr. Reuther made a lot of enemies. In 1948, while sitting in the kitchen of his Detroit home, an unidentified assailant fired a shotgun blast through the window and seriously injured his right arm.
Mr. Reuther, still partially paralyzed from the attack, has since been accompanied by a bodyguard.
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Friday, Dec. 5, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Sikes Aids in Coaching Tough Western Team
J. V. Sikes, Kansas football coach and an assistant coach for the west team, will help drill a 25 man squad loaded with talent when practice for the annual San Francisco east-west Shrine game starts Dec. 20.
Head coach is Howie O'Dell of the University of Washington and the other assistant is Chuck Taylor of Stanford. The game will be played in Kezar stadium Dec. 27.
The west will field a tremendous backfield with Billy Vessels and Eddie Crowder, Oklahoma, Bobby Reynolds, Nebraska, and Don Heinrich and Johnny Olszewski of Washington and California.
nation
vs. Weis, the leading Big Seven soccer for 1952, received the Heisman trophy as the outstanding football player in the nation last week.
Heinrich was the nation's leading passer and Olszewski has been named by many experts as the top fullback in college football.
in college football. Reynolds, an all-American selection in 1350, was hampered by injuries during his junior and senior years and was unable to perform effectively. Crowder, brilliant Sooner quarterback, wrecked Jayhawker hopes for a Big Seven title in 1952 by leading Oklahoma to a 42-20 victory.
The line, reinforced with Jay-hawker tackles Oliver Spencer and George Mrkonic, should be tough. Other standouts are Bill Forester, SMU tackle, Bob Blair, TCU end, and Don Rhoden, Rice linebacker.
Team members will tour San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Hollywood and will be guests at the Rose Bowl game. Gate receipts will be used for the benefit of crippled children in San Francisco.
COACH JULES V. SIKES
Coach Sikes said that the west team "has some fine boys" and that they should do "a real good job."
Five Big Seven Cage Teams To Open Seasons Saturday
By UNITED PRESS
Five of seven members of the Big Seven conference made final plans today for their initial tests of the new basketball season tomorrow night.
Every team in the loop except Missouri and Kansas, defending NCAA champions, were slated for baptismal action.
States at Ames, Ia.
Kansas State. rated the No. 1 choice to succeed Kansas as conference champion, will be host to Drake's Bulldogs in Manhattan.
Other games will pair Iowa U. and Oklahoma at Norman; Utah State and Colorado at Boulder; South Dakota U. and Nebraska at Lincoln, and South Dakota State and Iowa
Kansas will make its bow against Tulane in New Orleans Dec. 11, and Missouri will open against the Fort Leonard Wood Soldiers in Columbia Dec. 13.
Dec. 13.
The first round pairings for the Big Seven tournament have been announced as follows:
Dec. 26: Kansas vs. Nebraska;
Iowa State vs. Missouri.
Iowa State vs. Missouri.
Dec. 27: Kansas State vs. Oklahoma;
Colorado vs. Yale.
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North-South Game to Climax Grid Career For KU's All-Big Seven Bob Brandeberry
Bob Brandeberry's transition from eighth string fullback to all- Big Seven halfback has been climaxed by his appointment to the north squad for the annual North-South game at Miami, Fla., Christmas night.
Brandeberry received notice of his selection the day after the Missouri game. He was visiting Jerry Taylor, first string left end at his home in Carrolltown, Mo., when he was called by Stu Holcomb, head coach of Purdue and the northern team. Brandeberry said that the honor was a "surprise to me, I haven't figured out why I was selected."
He will fly to Miami Dec. 17 to participate in practice sessions before the contest. The team will remain until Dec. 27 and will receive $5 a day expenses. Brandeberry said that he has not been told the details of the trip but that the players will proba
trip but that the BRANDEBERRY players will probably be entertained
by sight-seeing in Mimai.
Brandeberry came to the University in the fall of 1948 and made the freshman football squad—just barely. He was fullback for the eight string backfield.
Since the 1949 varsity was loaded with fine halfbacks, Brandeberry was held out of the season. He was shifted to right half in 1950 and played his first game against Oklahoma A&M. He started his varsity career by scoring two touchdowns in three minutes in the Jayhawker's romp over the Aggies, 40-7.
He developed into a great half-back in the 1951 season and was picked on the all-conference squad upon completion of the campaign. Brandeberry said that the "realization that the load was on my shoulders" marked the turning point in his KU football career.
New York - (U.P.) - Native Dancer, Alfred G. Vanderbilt's unbeaten colt, gained another important honor today when he was named "American Champion of 1952" by the Thoroughbred Racing association.
He has carried the load more than adequately.
Native Dancer Wins EquineAll-American
It marked the first time in history a two-year-old was awarded the title of champion of champions.
Native Dancer received 19 votes of the 37 cast by racing secretaries of the TRA tracks. Mrs. Walter M. Jeffords' One Count was named on 14 ballots, while Calumet Farm's Real Delight attracted the remaining four votes.
The turf's newest champion won all of his nine starts this year and set an all-time money winning record for a two-year-old by earning 5230,495. He climaxed his brilliant campaign with a smashing victory in the Belmont futurity.
T 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.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Dec. 5, 1952
20 Teams See Action In Women's Intramurals
By JACKIE JONES
The women's intramural basketball season opened this week with 20 teams going into action in the first round of play. No upsets were recorded, and the teams considered to be contenders for the championship crown performed as expected.
Alpha Chai Omega, Delta Delta Delta, Jayettes and Kappa Kappa Gamma should be the 'teams to beat' this year, and all came through with impressive victories in play Tuesday and Wednesday.
In Tuesday's games the Alpha Chi Omega team swamped Theta Phi Alpha, 56 to 20; Delta Delta Delta topped Watkins, 33 to 15; Jayettes defeated NC 1-2, 14 to 13; Miller for-failed to Chi Omega; Gamma Phi Beta defeated No-Co, 37 to 15, and the College Aces defeated Sellards, 28 to 14.
Wednesday evening Kappa Kappa Gamma rolled up the highest score of the week by topping Temruth, 60 to 34; Phil Beta Phi trounced Locksley, 56 to 21; Corbin Jays took a narrow margin of victory over Alpha Phi, 23 to 20; Alpha Delta Pi defeated Sigma Kappa, 24 to 21, and the Corbin Hawks defeated Kappa Alpha Theta, 17 to 8.
Such stars from last year as Ernestine Dehlinger, and two 4-year varsity players, Shirley Mickelson and Barbara Quinn have graduated, leaving their positions vacant.
Besides the fight for the Hill championship, last year won by a powerful Foster team, strong competition looms for the positions on the mythical varsity squad.
One of the strongest contenders for varsity honors is Mary Ann Mahoney, Alpha Chi Omega's little scoring machine, who averages about 40 points per game.
In the Alpha Chi's victory Tuesday, Mahoney poured through 41 points to lead her team. She received strong support play from Joan Leonhardt and Connie Maus. Rose Lozenski led the Theta Phi scoring with 14 points.
As usual, Pat Garrett led the tri-Delt scoring getting 13 points against Watkins. Marilyn Marhofer had 12. They were backed up by Zimmerman, Carter, McKibben, Loveless, and Quinn.
In the Jayettes victory over the freshmen, Joan Woody led the winners with 16 points. Geneva Fleshman, Joyce Jones, Virginia Brooks, Joan Grone, Barbara Barnes, Ro Norris, and Jackie Jones finished out the lineup. Ann McFarland led the scoring for the freshmen.
Laura Shutz led the Kappas scoring against Temruth with 18 points, and Flavia Robertson, who moved to a forward spot in the second half, registered 17.
Schmidts Outnumber Smiths
Milwaukee — U.(P.)— Proof of Milwaukee's strong German background is found in the current telephone directory. The Schmidt outnumber the Smiths, 892 to 854. These totals do not include such variations as Schmitt, Schmit or Schmid and Smith or Smthe.
Robinson Loses Boxing Crown
New York- (U.P.)-The New York state athletic commission vacated Sugar Ray Robinson's world middleweight title early today and the wheels immediately were set in motion to determine his successor.
Robinson's title was officially vacated at 12:01 a.m. because he failed to defend his crown within six months of his last defense. The announcement was made by New York state commission chairman Robert K. Christenberry. Christenberry's action held on only New York, which is not a member of the National Boxing association, but NBA commissioner Abe J. Greene announced that he would hold a "round-robin" discussion today to determine the course of action his body would take
Robinson, meanwhile, who intended to announce his future plans through Letters which were to have been made public by Christenberry or the NBA by noon today, was enroute by train to Boston when he lost his crown.
Should Robinson's letter, mailed yesterday by George Gainford, his manager, announce his intention to continue his boxing career, Sugar Ray would not automatically regain the title.
In order to regain the title, at least in New York state, Robinson would be required to participate in a tournament or else fight the winner of it. The tournament would be arranged by the four bodies which govern boxing—the New York State commission, the NBA, the European Boxing board and the British Board of Boxing Control.
The official reason for Robinson's loss of the crown was his failure to defend it within the stipulated six months. Sugar Ray last defended his crown on May 13 when he outpointed Carl (Bobo) Olson of Hawaii in San Francisco.
He was to have been required to defend again by Nov. 13 but was granted an extension until Dec. 1. Then he was granted a second extension, which Sugar Ray apparently believed to be at noon today but which Christenberry interpreted as until midnight last night.
Since defeating Olson, Robinson has embarked on a new career as a tap dancer and master of ceremonies in night clubs. He was enroute to Boston with his manager last night to begin a run in a Boston night spot.
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Reich, who was spending the Thanksgiving vacation at his home in Steelton, Pa., joined the group in Chicago with six other players from the West and Middle-West.
Gil Reich, Kansas football star, made the long trip to New York to join 21 other players from the nation, selected to the all-American football teams by Grantland Rice and the Football Writers association.
The players will have a busy three days in New York with dinners, radio and television appearances, tours, and numerous photographs taken with Miss America, Neva Jane Langley of Macon, Ga.
Reich still is wearing a splint on his right index finger which was broken in the final game against Missouri and expects to continue wearing it for two weeks.
727 Mass.
Reich Travels With All-Stars
As soon as he is able, Reich will report to Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen, head basketball coach, for basketball practice. While in Chicago, Reich turned down a bid to appear on Don Sparks' club program because it would have jeopardized his remaining eligibility in basketball.
He explained the show is sponsored and it might have been construed that he was receiving compensations for appearing. A senior athlete, who had completed eligibility, appeared in his place.
Phi Delta Theta fraternity will play the pledge class of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority in a football game to be held Wednesday, Dec. 10, on the intramural fields.
Girls Gird For Gridiron
The Kappas set the rules for the clash, one of which requires the men to walk instead of run. Officials for the contest will be Korki Wahlberg for the Kappas and Hugh Buchanan for the Phi Delts.
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By DON NIELSEN
Kansan Sports Editor
Big Seven officials are meeting to review conference policies on post-season athletics and other matters pertaining to intercollegiate athletics. There is an outside chance that the ban on post-season athletics may be abolished.
Going by what Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy and Coach Jules V. Sikes have said in the past, however, they will do their utmost to see that the rule against post-season athletics stays in effect. We hope they lose.
The rule as it now stands would prevent Big Seven teams from playing either in bowl games or in post-season basketball tournaments such as the NCAA tournament or Olympic playoffs. Kansas was fortunate enough to get in under the wire last year and go to the top in intercollegiate basketball play. Why should not other teams in the Big Seven be given the same opportunity?
It may be a while before Kansas has another chance to "go for broke," but when and if the chance comes, we don't want to see the Jayhawkers kept from getting a little national prestige by some arbitrary and discriminatory rule.
University officials constantly are crying for favorable publicity. The best excuse for intercollegiate sports is that they get publicity on a national scale. Last year the Kansas intercollegiate and Olympic championship basketball team rated more renown for the University of Kansas than any number of fine, new dormitories could have. Nevertheless, it was decided to do away with this opportunity to influence public opinion.
Another major argument against bowl games is that they keep players out of classes longer, and stretches the period for varsity sports interminably.
It is true that players will be kept out of classes. But how much actual time will they miss? In order to participate in a bowl game, a football player need miss very little class time because games usually are played at the end of a vacation. Thus, there would be ample practice time during the vacation if after-class practices were deemed insufficient.
As for the fact that it would make the athletic season much longer we say, "so what." People are crying for school spirit and an interest in athletics. Remember the rallies before, during, and after the triumphant 1951-52 basketball season? People started gripping then that KU students were too spirited.
People sure are hard to please.
Six of Nation's Top Twenty Teams Meet in Basketball Games Tonight
New York—(U.P.)-Six of the teams rated among the top 20 in the nation head a big program of college basketball tonight with Washington's highly-touted Huskies meeting Utah in a headliner.
Other highly-ranked teams in ac- tion will be UCLA, Seton hall, Wyoming, St. John's, and Brigham Young.
The Washington-Utah clash will be the season opener for both clubs. The Huskies, who are rated fourth nationally in the pre-season rankings of the United Press board of coaches, own one of the nation's top stars—six foot, seven-inch Bob Houbregs, a hookshot ace who averaged 18.6 points per game last
year in earning a spot on the United Press all-America third team.
UCLA, defending Pacific Coast conference champion and ranked seventh nationally, will meet Oregon State in a league game. In another loop clash, Stanford plays once-beaten Oregon.
Seton hall, ranked ninth and fresh from a win over St. Francis
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of Brooklyn, will be a heavy choice over Loyola of Baltimore. Wyoming, defending Skyline conference champion ranked 15th, meets Montana State. St. John's, eastern NCAA champion ranked 16th, makes its season's debut against Roanoke. Brigham Young, ranked 17th, plays the first of two games in two nights against Los Angeles State.
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Mrkonic, Spencer Get All-Star Slots
Two more Kansas football players have been selected to play in post-season games. Oliver Spencer and George Mrkonic have been picked on the west squad for the east-west Shrine game in San Francisco Dec. 27. Spencer has also been selected to play on the north team in the Senior bowl game Jan. 3.
Spencer, co-captain for the Jayhawkers for the 1952 season, has been named to the all-Big Seven team the past two seasons. In 1951 he was selected on the Associated Press all-American second team and was picked on the NEA first string all-American team for 1952.
Spencer, 6 feet 2 inches (tall, and weighing 224 pounds, saw little action in his sophomore year in 1950 but developed rapidly last season to gain all-conference and all-American recognition.
Mkronic has been a first string tackle for three years, playing both offensive and defense. In 1951 he was named to the International News Service offensive all-American squad. He was all-conference in 1952.
Western players will be flown to San Francisco, and will practice at Stanford University. The eastern squad will drill at Santa Clara.
Spencer will fly to Mobile, Ala.,
for the Senior Bowl, after the game.
The contest, started two years ago,
matches seniors from the north and
south. Members of the winning team
will receive $500 and the losing
team members $400.
Spencer and Mrkonic have played
R3
GEORGE MRKONIC Kansas Tackle
key roles in helping the Jayhawks post a 15-5 record for the 1951 and 1952 seasons.
Spencer provided great blocking power in the 1951 offensive line which saw Kansas run up one of its highest scoring seasons in KU football history. In 1952, he and guard George Helmstadter were the only returning men from the offensive line and the Jayhawk attack fell off, although Spencer continued his fine blocking.
Mrkonic was a standout in the 1952 defensive line which was tough throughout the season. Defensive power enabled the Jayhawkers to shut out TCU, Iowa State, and SMU, 13-0, 43-0 and 26-0. Santa Clara, Kansas State, and Oklahoma A&M were held to one touchdown and Nebraska and Colorado were restricted to two.
Blood Needs Year Build-Up
McCook, Neb. —(U.P.)—Albert (Toad) Harmon faces a year's lay-off in his campaign to keep the Red Cross blood banks flourishing. Harmon, who had donated 104 pints of blood, was told by doctors to allow a year for red corpuscles and hemoglobin to build up.
Page 7
Friday, Dec. 5, 1952
University Daily Kansan
MARTIN CAMPBELL
OLIVER SPENCER Kansas Tackle
Phoenix—(U.P.)—The minor leagues wound up one of their most momentous conventions today with a plea to the major leagues to "help us before you destroy us."
President George M. Trautmann, who presided over the passage of legislation which could give the minors a break if the majors will support it in their big meeting next Sunday, said "we can only ask for a little cooperation."
The majors, beginning their meetings today in separate American and National league sessions will be asked to consider legislation which minor league officials think could "make or break the minors."
Minors Close Convention With Plea To Majors for Part of TV Receipts
"I have great hopes that the major leagues will discover some day that there is in this country a minor league system that can be destroyed." Trautmann said. "We can't demand.
And the majors had a little fight brewing on that in their own back yard before they ever consider proposals by the minors to give them a share of the receipts.
In the American league, six clubs, all but the Browns and White Sox, voted to continue an agreement whereby the home club can set up all of its own broadcasting and televisi- ing arrangements—as in the past.
First of all, the "have-not" big league clubs in smaller population areas and with less gate appeal, are demanding that the big guys like the mighty Yankees give them a share of their television receipts.
As it stands now, there would be no broadcasting or televising when the Browns and White Sox make a visit, but the other six clubs proposed an amendment to the league constitution which would force the others to comply. Since it takes a
nure-quarters majority to pass such a rule, it appeared that the Browns and White Sox would be cut out of their plan to black out broadcasts.
The National league had a similar problem but it was complicated by the fact that three or four clubs—the Cardinals, Reds, Pirates and perhaps the Braves—would hold the line against the so-called big city clubs in their vaster audiences.
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Big Ten Demands More Practice Time
Chicago — (U.F.) - Big Ten faculty representatives were expected to approve today a plan passed by conference coaches and athletic directors increasing spring football training from 20 to 30 days.
The coaches, meeting in Chicago, passed the proposal yesterday to prevent injuries because "the kids were not thoroughly prepared" and to give them more time to work with undeveloped talent.
The plan must be approved by the National Collegiate Athletic association convention before it can be put into effect.
Read the Kansan's Classified.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Dec. 5, 1952
Russia Seeks to Advance Industrial Output
London—(U.P.)—Russia is trying to catch up with the industrially- advanced western countries.
She is making a strong effort to establish automatic production methods in the Soviet industrial machine.
The Soviet planners are building push-button factories for basic industrial materials. They hope to reach during the next 10 years a level of production which will solve most of Russia's economic problems.
that is the conclusion of experts here after analyzing instructions to
State Farmer Income Rises
Kansas farmers received a record-breaking $222,265,000 from cash farm marketings during August, according to recent findings of the bureau of business research at the University.
This amount surpassed the previous record set in July, 1947 by nearly $3 million dollars.
The bureau said this was a 103 per cent increase from the total received by Kansas farmers in August 1951 and a gain of 10.3 per cent from the July high of $201,-522,000.
According to the bureau this would indicate that current income through August was 9.2 per cent higher than in the same months of 1947.
During the first eight months of this year cash farm income was $385,259,000, compared with the $820,087,000, previous high for the same months in 1947.
This income has not been distributed evenly among all farmers for those engaged in crop production have had a 116.1 per cent increase while farmers dealing in livestock products have found their incomes dropped 4 per cent below the same months of 1951.
The report stated that national increase in cash farm incomes fell short of the increases registered in Kansas.
'Brief Encounter' In Hoch Tonight
"brief Encounter," the fifth of the 1952-53 film series, will be shown at 7:30 tonight in Hoch auditorium.
The story is about a brief romance between a married woman and a married doctor she meets in a small English railroad station.
The movie is taken from Noel Coward's play, "Still Life." The screen play was written by Mr. Coward.
the 1950-55 Soviet economic plan presented by the chief planner, M. Z. Saburov, to the 19th Communist Party congress. Other material also has been made available during the same period.
In his report to the party congress, Saburov said the output of electric power in the Soviet Union will increase by 80 per cent in 1955, compared to 1950. That, he said, "will permit us to raise the level of electrification of industry and to introduce an extensive automatization of production techniques."
Saburov said that during the present five-year plan "the methods of oil extraction will become, on the whole, automatic."
He called for greater mechanization of all stages of coal production and said "the building of precision machinery must undergo a serious further development."
Soviet technicians have installed
automatic serial production of certain automobile and tractor parts at the Stalin automobile works in Moscow and the tractor plant in Gorki. Aircraft plant No. 39 in Moscow is also producing aircraft parts in the same way.
The production of ball bearings, which are now being rapidly introduced on Soviet railways, has been "automated." However, the ball bearings until now appear to be "not quite satisfactory."
As for the growth of basic Soviet production, Secretary Georgi M. Malenkov and the planner, Saburov, this time made no secret about it.
Malenkov said that the Soviet Union will produce this year 25 million tons of pig iron, 35 million tons of steel, 27 million tons of rolled steel, 300 million tons of coal, 47 million tons of oil and 117 billion kilowatt hours of electricity.
KANU Radio Schedule
The new KU radio station, KANU, heard at 91.5 megacycles on the FM dial, will broadcast the following programs this week:
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday
1:45-2:00 Previews Previews Previews Previews Previews
2:00-2:15 Uncle Dan Let's Find Out Distant Lands Tales from the Four Winds
2:15-2:30 News News News News Growing Up
2:30-2:45 Childrens News Reporter
2:30-3:00 Art by Radio Playtime Adventures in Music Land Time for a Story
2:45-3:00 This is KU
3:00-4:00 Time to Visit Time to Visit Time to Visit Time to Visit Time to Visit Time to Visit
4:00-4:30 Music You Want When
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'Social Drama' of Work Told To Sociology Group Here
Dr. Everett C. Hughes, chairman of the department of sociology at Chicago university, yesterday told of several aspects of what he called the "social drama" of work, in a visiting lecture before students and faculty of the department of sociology here.
By JIM BAIRD
In certain jobs, like that of a doctor, one person is doing routinely a job which resolves a crisis for another person, Dr. Hughes said. The doctor tries to make a smooth day's work out of other people's emergencies.
"Wherever you find people at work, you find an essential difference between those doing the work and the one receiving the services," the sociologists were told. "You expect a professional man to be vital interested in your ease of working." The competent and objective. Therein lies a dilemma.
Dr. Hughes dealt briefly with the hazards of professions, which he termed "occupational nightmares."
"There are some professors," he pointed out, "in which a man is successful if he does not do so but is unsuccessful or in instance, a successful engineer is someone who doesn't engineer any more. Instead, he's an executive."
"These people likely have nightmares about not being able to do the job from which they were promoted. There's the one about the big-shot engineer who, in front of all his subordinates, was handed a blueprint he couldn't read."
Dr. Hughes pointed out that mistakes bother the professional man first from a standpoint of his own conscience and also from the standpoint of what's going to happen to him if he does make a mistake.
"The lay public tends to be absolute in its judgments of professional mistakes," he said. For that reason professional people like to retain the right to say what is a mistake and what isn't. They realize that skill is relative.
For that reason, and also in order to have a medium in which to discuss professional problems frankly and safely, professional people develop vocabularies peculiar to their particular jobs.
"We live in a society in which people are judged very much by their work," he continued. "The worst thing you can say about anyone is that he's lazy."
"There are some persons who
935 Mass.
work in a climate of relative isolation, but even a shepherd has some difficult decisions to make. Your actions on the job continually affect other people.
"Sociologists can do interesting work on the problems of work, and perhaps even better than interesting work on some," was Dr. Hughes' concluding remark.
Crow Caller Sends Messages
Memphis, Tenn. — (U.P.) Shirley Williams spends much time looking up at skyscrapers and blowing on a crow-caller, but he isn't off his rocker. Williams operates a window-cleaning company and uses the crow-caller to communicate with his men high up on buildings.
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Page 9
University Daily Kansan
THE WEEKLY SUNDAY NEWS
REHEARSAL AT HOME—In one of their rare moments together, Wilson and Dorothy O'Connell go through their lines for the University Theater production to open Wednesday in Fraser theater. Wilson plays Bill Shakespeare in George Bernard Shaw's "The Dark Lady of the Sonnets," and Dorothy plays Doto in Christopher Fuys's "A Phony Too Frequent."—Kansas photo by Jerry Knudson.
Friday, Dec. 5, 1952
KU Has Own Lunt and Fontaine Team
Someone quipped the other day that KU drama has its own Lunt and Fontaine—Wilson and Dorothy O'Connell, man-and-wife student actors who will appear in the University Theater's double-bill production of Christopher Fry's "A Phoenix Too Frequent," and George Bernard Shaw's "The Dark Lady of the Sonnets," which will open Wednesday night in Fraser theater.
Bv JERRY KNUDSON
But the catch is that the O'Connells do not appear in the same play. Wilson plays Will Shakespeare in "Jack Lady," and Dorothy will be seen as Doto, a comic nurse-companion in "Phoenix."
"Since rehearsals began the first part of November, it seems like we've seen each other only at mealtimes," Wilson said.
"We say 'HI' as we pass each other going to and from rehearsal," Dorothy said. "Dark Lady" is usually rehearsed 7 to 9 p.m. and "Phoenix" 9 to 11 p.m.
Wilson is an assistant instructor in speech, working on a master's thesis, "Censorship in the American Theater." Dorothy is an education junior, majoring in speech correction.
The couple met in a community theater play, "Ramshackle Inn," produced at Hutchinson in 1943. Wilson was a policeman; Dorothy, a "gangster's moll." They were married in August, 1951.
Wilson makes love to Queen Elizabeth in the Shaw play, and Dorothy does likewise with a young soldier in the Fry comedy. Wilson said that they are professionally mired about it all "especially since there are no kisses called for."
As Shakespeare, Wilson has a difficult two-page continuous speech that calls for the best in acting skill. "Sometimes I wake up at night dreaming about that scene," he said. The Bard is portrayed as "an unmitigated ham" in the Shaw play, Wilson said.
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Mary Beth Moore, college senior, will alternate in the role of Doto in "Phoenix." Also cast in this play are Cornelia Harrington, college senior, as the widow Dynamene; Bob Londerholm, college senior, as the soldier Tegeus.
cast are Bonnie Royer, graduate student, as Queen Elizabeth; Patricia McGhee, fine arts junior, as the Dark Lady, and Charles May, college freshman, as the Beef-eater.
Students may obtain free tickets by having their ID cards punched at the box office in the basement of Green hall, open daily from 10 to noon and 2 to 4 p.m.
Other members of the "Dark Lady"
New Wage Stabilizer Faces Board Walkout
Washington - (U.P.) A new chairman took over the Wage Stabilization board today, but a threatened walkout by its industry members kept the administration's whole economic control program teetering on the edge of collapse.
President Truman installed Charles C. Killingworth as chairman to succeed Archibald Cox, who resigned yesterday with an angry blast at the White House ruling which granted John L. Lewis' coal miners a $1.90 daily wage increase.
The six industry members of the board, who have boycotted its sessions since the coal wage decision was announced Wednesday, scheduled a private caucus to consider resigning en masse.
herited, but agreed to meet reporters today.
Mr. Cox said Mr. Truman's decision would lead either to favoritism for a "powerful few" unions or to general relaxation of the whole line against wage increases. The wage board had held that any increase for the miners above $1.50 would be inflationary.
Mr. Killingworth, a 35-year-old economics professor at Michigan State college who had served previously as vice chairman of the board, declined immediate comment on the turbulent situation he in-
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Czech Studet Tells Escape from Reds
By MARY BET7
"An 'enemy of the people' arrested by the Communists usually is an enemy of about 10 per cent of the people—the Communists," said Jan Brazda, graduate student from Czechoslovakia, last night at the YMCA meeting in Snow hall.
Lie Detector Test Refused
such an "enemy" Brazda spent❶
As such an "enemy" Brazda spared a year in a Communist concentration camp in northern Czechoslovakia, being forced to work in the uranium mines there.
Fargo, N. D. —(U.P.)—Newspaperman Newell Anderson, who said he was run out of Mississippi because he was a "Yankee" has refused to take a lie detector test, the Tupelo, Miss., police chief said today.
A student at the University of Prague and a known anti-Communist, he was one of the first to be arrested when the Communists took over his country in February 1948. With 30 others, mostly students, he was sent to a Russian investigation center in eastern Ger-
ame here to give the test to Mr. Police Chief D. B. Crockett who Anderson, said that the newspaperman had backed out "because his mother doesn't want him to" take the test.
The 26-year-old circulation manager originally agreed to take the test today on his story that hooded terrorists forced him to flee Mississippi. Chief Crockett said.
Gov. Hugh White of Mississippi was branded as a "haox" Mr. Anderson's story that two hooded men threatened him with a razor and told him "Yankees aren't wanted in Mississippi."
Mr. Anderson was circulation manager of the Tupelo Journal before his "wild night ride" during which he said "two masked men" slashed him with a razor and threatened his family unless he left Tupelo.
DRY CLEANING
He and his wife have begun living with his parents here since he fled Tupelo last month.
Elmer E. Walker, warned that if the industry members block operation of the board, it would result in a nationwide wave of "quick, spontaneous strikes."
Mr. Walker, vice president of the AFL Machinists Union, said there is a large backlog of wage increase cases still pending before the board in which the unions have "patiently bided their time" awaiting board approval.
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many, where for 15 days there was "no eating, but lots of beating" to force them to talk.
Brazda had been working in the Czech underground movement, but such groups were small, had no known leaders, and members knew each other only by assumed names.
Although he made no confession, he was sent to the labor camp as a "political prisoner." Frequent cave-ins, water seeping through the porous mine walls, and absence of ventilators made life miserable for the workers.
"No matter how long one could exist otherwise, it was only a matter of time until he became ill and died from the effects of the radio-active uranium rays." Brazda said.
These very rays, however, enabled him to escape.
After a year with a tumor developing on his neck from the rays, he was sent to a famous Czech health resort, now run by Communists, for an operation.
The operation left him "near dead," and he was left by his guard. Underground workers smuggled him from the hospital. Hidden near Prague for seven weeks, he was then driven 300 miles to the west German border.
There, during the two or three minutes required for a change of guard, he made a dash for the border line and wriggled through the barbed wire into Germany and freedom.
KuKu Pep Club Elects Sloan, Pool
Courtney Sloan, engineering junior, was elected president of KuKu's for the coming year last night. Barney Pool, engineering junior, was elected vice president.
Other KuKu officers elected were Max Smith, college senior, secretary; Eugene Brubaker, education senior, treasurer; and Bill Foster, college senior, corresponding secretary.
Jay
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Retrial for GI Asleep at Post
Fort Meade. Md.-U(JP)-An Army court martial board today opens a retrial of Pvt. Warren G. McConnell, sentenced to 10 years in prison for sleeping on sentry duty in Korea.
Friday, Dec. 5, 1952
The court of military appeals ordered the retrial of the 21-year-old soldier from Alloway, N.J., who was convicted of falling asleep on the night of Nov. 14, 1951, while on guard in the front lines. The retrial was open to the press.
Pvt. McConnell's father, Dorsey, charged after the first trial that the soldier had not slept for 72 hours when he was assigned to sentry duty. Army records show that during the first court martial, which was held in Korea, Pvt. McConnell made no mention of going without sleep for an extended period.
Ine retrial originally was scheduled to be held at Camp Cooke, Calif., but was transferred here at the request of Washington attorney Myron Ehrlich, who is defending Pvt. McConnell. Mr. Ehrlich said most of the defense witnesses live in this part of the country.
Pvt. McConnell, who was sentenced to serve his term at hard labor, enlisted in the Army Jan. 15, 1951. He holds the combat infantryman's badge, presidential unit citation and campaign star for service in Korea.
The Department of Agriculture estimates that 45,000,000 persons in the United States are at least 10 per cent overweight.
Page 10 University Daily Kansan
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Russia Reported Building Atom Bomb Air Carriers
London—(U.P)]-Russia is producing a huge super-bomber, capable of carrying atom bombs to the United States.
The giant planes—ratated among most formidable striking weapons in the authoritative James "All the World's Aircraft."
Here is the description of new Soviet super-bomber, pieced together by James' from known facts, reports circulating on both sides of the Atlantic, and the publication's own intelligence sources;
It is powered by six jet or turboprop engines.
It has swept-back wings
It has swept back wings Its speed and range are considerably greater than the American Superfort.
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It is larger than the American wartime B-29 but not so large as the U.S. B-36.
It is about 167 feet long and has a wingspread of 223 feet.
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1:45 - 3:40 - 5:30 - 7:25 - 9:20
3.1 | 3.2 | 3.3 | 3.4 | 3.5 | 3.6 | 3.7 | 3.8 | 3.9 | 4.0 | 4.1 | 4.2 | 4.3 | 4.4 | 4.5 | 4.6 | 4.7 | 4.8 | 4.9 | 5.0 | 5.1 | 5.2 | 5.3 | 5.4 | 5.5 | 5.6 | 5.7 | 5.8 | 5.9 | 6.0 | 6.1 | 6.2 | 6.3 | 6.4 | 6.5 | 6.6 | 6.7 | 6.8 | 6.9 | 7.0 | 7.1 | 7.2 | 7.3 | 7.4 | 7.5 | 7.6 | 7.7 | 7.8 | 7.9 | 8.0 | 8.1 | 8.2 | 8.3 | 8.4 | 8.5 | 8.6 | 8.7 | 8.8 | 8.9 | 9.0 | 9.1 | 9.2 | 9.3 | 9.4 | 9.5 | 9.6 | 9.7 | 9.8 | 9.9 | 10.0 | 10.1 | 10.2 | 10.3 | 10.4 | 10.5 | 10.6 | 10.7 | 10.8 | 10.9 | 11.0 | 11.1 | 11.2 | 11.3 | 11.4 | 11.5 | 11.6 | 11.7 | 11.8 | 11.9 | 12.0 | 12.1 | 12.2 | 12.3 | 12.4 | 12.5 | 12.6 | 12.7 | 12.8 | 12.9 | 13.0 | 13.1 | 13.2 | 13.3 | 13.4 | 13.5 | 13.6 | 13.7 | 13.8 | 13.9 | 14.0 | 14.1 | 14.2 | 14.3 | 14.4 | 14.5 | 14.6 | 14.7 | 14.8 | 14.9 | 15.0 | 15.1 | 15.2 | 15.3 | 15.4 | 15.5 | 15.6 | 15.7 | 15.8 | 15.9 | 16.0 | 16.1 | 16.2 | 16.3 | 16.4 | 16.5 | 16.6 | 16.7 | 16.8 | 16.9 | 17.0 | 17.1 | 17.2 | 17.3 | 17.4 | 17.5 | 17.6 | 17.7 | 17.8 | 17.9 | 18.0 | 18.1 | 18.2 | 18.3 | 18.4 | 18.5 | 18.6 | 18.7 | 18.8 | 18.9 | 19.0 | 19.1 | 19.2 | 19.3 | 19.4 | 19.5 | 19.6 | 19.7 | 19.8 | 19.9 | 20.0 | 20.1 | 20.2 | 20.3 | 20.4 | 20.5 | 20.6 | 20.7 | 20.8 | 20.9 | 21.0 | 21.1 | 21.2 | 21.3 | 21.4 | 21.5 | 21.6 | 21.7 | 21.8 | 21.9 | 22.0 | 22.1 | 22.2 | 22.3 | 22.4 | 22.5 | 22.6 | 22.7 | 22.8 | 22.9 | 23.0 | 23.1 | 23.2 | 23.3 | 23.4 | 23.5 | 23.6 | 23.7 | 23.8 | 23.9 | 24.0 | 24.1 | 24.2 | 24.3 | 24.4 | 24.5 | 24.6 | 24.7 | 24.8 | 24.9 | 25.0 | 25.1 | 25.2 | 25.3 | 25.4 | 25.5 | 25.6 | 25.7 | 25.8 | 25.9 | 26.0 | 26.1 | 26.2 | 26.3 | 26.4 | 26.5 | 26.6 | 26.7 | 26.8 | 26.9 | 27.0 | 27.1 | 27.2 | 27.3 | 27.4 | 27.5 | 27.6 | 27.7 | 27.8 | 27.9 | 28.0 | 28.1 | 28.2 | 28.3 | 28.4 | 28.5 | 28.6 | 28.7 | 28.8 | 28.9 | 29.0 | 29.1 | 29.2 | 29.3 | 29.4 | 29.5 | 29.6 | 29.7 | 29.8 | 29.9 | 30.0 | 30.1 | 30.2 | 30.3 | 30.4 | 30.5 | 30.6 | 30.7 | 30.8 | 30.9 | 31.0 | 31.1 | 31.2 | 31.3 | 31.4 | 31.5 | 31.6 | 31.7 | 31.8 | 31.9 | 32.0 | 32.1 | 32.2 | 32.3 | 32.4 | 32.5 | 32.6 | 32.7 | 32.8 | 32.9 | 33.0 | 33.1 | 33.2 | 33.3 | 33.4 | 33.5 | 33.6 | 33.7 | 33.8 | 33.9 | 34.0 | 34.1 | 34.2 | 34.3 | 34.4 | 34.5 | 34.6 | 34.7 | 34.8 | 34.9 | 35.0 | 35.1 | 35.2 | 35.3 | 35.4 | 35.5 | 35.6 | 35.7 | 35.8 | 35.9 | 36.0 | 36.1 | 36.2 | 36.3 | 36.4 | 36.5 | 36.6 | 36.7 | 36.8 | 36.9 | 37.0 | 37.1 | 37.2 | 37.3 | 37.4 | 37.5 | 37.6 | 37.7 | 37.8 | 37.9 | 38.0 | 38.1 | 38.2 | 38.3 | 38.4 | 38.5 | 38.6 | 38.7 | 38.8 | 38.9 | 39.0 | 39.1 | 39.2 | 39.3 | 39.4 | 39.5 | 39.6 | 39.7 | 39.8 | 39.9 | 40.0 | 40.1 | 40.2 | 40.3 | 40.4 | 40.5 | 40.6 | 40.7 | 40.8 | 40.9 | 41.0 | 41.1 | 41.2 | 41.3 | 41.4 | 41.5 | 41.6 | 41.7 | 41.8 | 41.9 | 42.0 | 42.1 | 42.2 | 42.3 | 42.4 | 42.5 | 42.6 | 42.7 | 42.8 | 42.9 | 43.0 | 43.1 | 43.2 | 43.3 | 43.4 | 43.5 | 43.6 | 43.7 | 43.8 | 43.9 | 44.0 | 44.1 | 44.2 | 44.3 | 44.4 | 44.5 | 44.6 | 44.7 | 44.8 | 44.9 | 45.0 | 45.1 | 45.2 | 45.3 | 45.4 | 45.5 | 45.6 | 45.7 | 45.8 | 45.9 | 46.0 | 46.1 | 46.2 | 46.3 | 46.4 | 46.5 | 46.6 | 46.7 | 46.8 | 46.9 | 47.0 | 47.1 | 47.2 | 47.3 | 47.4 | 47.5 | 47.6 | 47.7 | 47.8 | 47.9 | 48.0 | 48.1 | 48.2 | 48.3 | 48.4 | 48.5 | 48.6 | 48.7 | 48.8 | 48.9 | 49.0 | 49.1 | 49.2 | 49.3 | 49.4 | 49.5 | 49.6 | 49.7 | 49.8 | 49.9 | 50.0 | 50.1 | 50.2 | 50.3 | 50.4 | 50.5 | 50.6 | 50.7 | 50.8 | 50.9 | 51.0 | 51.1 | 51.2 | 51.3 | 51.4 | 51.5 | 51.6 | 51.7 | 51.8 | 51.9 | 52.0 | 52.1 | 52.2 | 52.3 | 52.4 | 52.5 | 52.6 | 52.7 | 52.8 | 52.9 | 53.0 | 53.1 | 53.2 | 53.3 | 53.4 | 53.5 | 53.6 | 53.7 | 53.8 | 53.9 | 54.0 | 54.1 | 54.2 | 54.3 | 54.4 | 54.5 | 54.6 | 54.7 | 54.8 | 54.9 | 55.0 | 55.1 | 55.2 | 55.3 | 55.4 | 55.5 | 55.6 | 55.7 | 55.8 | 55.9 | 56.0 | 56.1 | 56.2 | 56.3 | 56.4 | 56.5 | 56.6 | 56.7 | 56.8 | 56.9 | 57.0 | 57.1 | 57.2 | 57.3 | 57.4 | 57.5 | 57.6 | 57.7 | 57.8 | 57.9 | 58.0 | 58.1 | 58.2 | 58.3 | 58.4 | 58.5 | 58.6 | 58.7 | 58.8 | 58.9 | 59.0 | 59.1 | 59.2 | 59.3 | 59.4 | 59.5 | 59.6 | 59.7 | 59.8 | 59.9 | 60.0 | 60.1 | 60.2 | 60.3 | 60.4 | 60.5 | 60.6 | 60.7 | 60.8 | 60.9 | 61.0 | 61.1 | 61.2 | 61.3 | 61.4 | 61.5 | 61.6 | 61.7 | 61.8 | 61.9 | 62.0 | 62.1 | 62.2 | 62.3 | 62.4 | 62.5 | 62.6 | 62.7 | 62.8 | 62.9 | 63.0 | 63.1 | 63.2 | 63.3 | 63.4 | 63.5 | 63.6 | 63.7 | 63.8 | 63.9 | 64.0 | 64.1 | 64.2 | 64.3 | 64.4 | 64.5 | 64.6 | 64.7 | 64.8 | 64.9 | 65.0 | 65.1 | 65.2 | 65.3 | 65.4 | 65.5 | 65.6 | 65.7 | 65.8 | 65.9 | 66.0 | 66.1 | 66.2 | 66.3 | 66.4 | 66.5 | 66.6 | 66.7 | 66.8 | 66.9 | 67.0 | 67.1 | 67.2 | 67.3 | 67.4 | 67.5 | 67.6 | 67.7 | 67.8 | 67.9 | 68.0 | 68.1 | 68.2 | 68.3 | 68.4 | 68.5 | 68.6 | 68.7 | 68.8 | 68.9 | 69.0 | 69.1 | 69.2 | 69.3 | 69.4 | 69.5 | 69.6 | 69.7 | 69.8 | 69.9 | 70.0 | 70.1 | 70.2 | 70.3 | 70.4 | 70.5 | 70.6 | 70.7 | 70.8 | 70.9 | 71.0 | 71.1 | 71.2 | 71.3 | 71.4 | 71.5 | 71.6 | 71.7 | 71.8 | 71.9 | 72.0 | 72.1 | 72.2 | 72.3 | 72.4 | 72.5 | 72.6 | 72.7 | 72.8 | 72.9 | 73.0 | 73.1 | 73.2 | 73.3 | 73.4 | 73.5 | 73.6 | 73.7 | 73.8 | 73.9 | 74.0 | 74.1 | 74.2 | 74.3 | 74.4 | 74.5 | 74.6 | 74.7 | 74.8 | 74.9 | 75.0 | 75.1 | 75.2 | 75.3 | 75.4 | 75.5 | 75.6 | 75.7 | 75.8 | 75.9 | 76.0 | 76.1 | 76.2 | 76.3 | 76.4 | 76.5 | 76.6 | 76.7 | 76.8 | 76.9 | 77.0 | 77.1 | 77.2 | 77.3 | 77.4 | 77.5 | 77.6 | 77.7 | 77.8 | 77.9 | 78.0 | 78.1 | 78.2 | 78.3 | 78.4 | 78.5 | 78.6 | 78.7 | 78.8 | 78.9 | 79.0 | 79.1 | 79.2 | 79.3 | 79.4 | 79.5 | 79.6 | 79.7 | 79.8 | 79.9 | 80.0 | 80.1 | 80.2 | 80.3 | 80.4 | 80.5 | 80.6 | 80.7 | 80.8 | 80.9 | 81.0 | 81.1 | 81.2 | 81.3 | 81.4 | 81.5 | 81.6 | 81.7 | 81.8 | 81.9 | 82.0 | 82.1 | 82.2 | 82.3 | 82.4 | 82.5 | 82.6 | 82.7 | 82.8 | 82.9 | 83.0 | 83.1 | 83.2 | 83.3 | 83.4 | 83.5 | 83.6 | 83.7 | 83.8 | 83.9 | 84.0 | 84.1 | 84.2 | 84.3 | 84.4 | 84.5 | 84.6 | 84.7 | 84.8 | 84.9 | 85.0 | 85.1 | 85.2 | 85.3 | 85.4 | 85.5 | 85.6 | 85.7 | 85.8 | 85.9 | 86.0 | 86.1 | 86.2 | 86.3 | 86.4 | 86.5 | 86.6 | 86.7 | 86.8 | 86.9 | 87.0 | 87.1 | 87.2 | 87.3 | 87.4 | 87.5 | 87.6 | 87.7 | 87.8 | 87.9 | 88.0 | 88.1 | 88.2 | 88.3 | 88.4 | 88.5 | 88.6 | 88.7 | 88.8 | 88.9 | 89.0 | 89.1 | 89.2 | 89.3 | 89.4 | 89.5 | 89.6 | 89.7 | 89.8 | 89.9 | 90.0 | 90.1 | 90.2 | 90.3 | 90.4 | 90.5 | 90.6 | 90.7 | 90.8 | 90.9 | 91.0 | 91.1 | 91.2 | 91.3 | 91.4 | 91.5 | 91.6 | 91.7 | 91.8 | 91.9 | 92.0 | 92.1 | 92.2 | 92.3 | 92.4 | 92.5 | 92.6 | 92.7 | 92.8 | 92.9 | 93.0 | 93.1 | 93.2 | 93.3 | 93.4 | 93.5 | 93.6 | 93.7 | 93.8 | 93.9 | 94.0 | 94.1 | 94.2 | 94.3 | 94.4 | 94.5 | 94.6 | 94.7 | 94.8 | 94.9 | 95.0 | 95.1 | 95.2 | 95.3 | 95.4 | 95.5 | 95.6 | 95.7 | 95.8 | 95.9 | 96.0 | 96.1 | 96.2 | 96.3 | 96.4 | 96.5 | 96.6 | 96.7 | 96.8 | 96.9 | 97.0 | 97.1 | 97.2 | 97.3 | 97.4 | 97.5 | 97.6 | 97.7 | 97.8 | 97.9 | 98.0 | 98.1 | 98.2 | 98.3 | 98.4 | 98.5 | 98.6 | 98.7 | 98.8 | 98.9 | 99.0 | 99.1 | 99.2 | 99.3 | 99.4 | 99.5 | 99.6 | 99.7 | 99.8 | 99.9 | 100.0 | 100.1 | 100.2 | 100.3 | 100.4 | 100.5 | 100.6 | 100.7 | 100.8 | 100.9 | 101.0 | 101.1 | 101.2 | 101.3 | 101.4 | 101.5 | 101.6 | 101.7 | 101.8 | 101.9 | 102.0 | 102.1 | 102.2 | 102.3 | 102.4 | 102.5 | 102.6 | 102.7 | 102.8 | 102.9 | 103.0 | 103.1 | 103.2 | 103.3 | 103.4 | 103.5 | 103.6 | 103.7 | 103.8 | 103.9 | 104.0 | 104.1 | 104.2 | 104.3 | 104.4 | 104.5 | 104.6 | 104.7 | 104.8 | 104.9 | 105.0 | 105.1 | 105.2 | 105.3 | 105.4 | 105.5 | 105.6 | 105.7 | 105.8 | 105.9 | 106.0 | 106.1 | 106.2 | 106.3 | 106.4 | 106.5 | 106.6 | 106.7 | 106.8 | 106.9 | 107.0 | 107.1 | 107.2 | 107.3 | 107.4 | 107.5 | 107.6 | 107.7 | 107.8 | 107.9 | 108.0 | 108.1 | 108.2 | 108.3 | 108.4 | 108.5 | 108.6 | 108.7 | 108.8 | 108.9 | 109.0 | 109.1 | 109.2 | 109.3 | 109.4 | 109.5 | 109.6 | 109.7 | 109.8 | 109.9 | 110.0 | 110.1 | 110.2 | 110.3 | 110.4 | 110.5 | 110.6 | 110.7 | 110.8 | 110.9 | 111.0 | 111.1 | 111.2 | 111.3 | 111.4 | 111.5 | 111.6 | 111.7 | 111.8 | 111.9 | 112.0 | 112.1 | 112.2 | 112.3 | 112.4 | 112.5 | 112.6 | 112.7 | 112.8 | 112.9 | 113.0 | 113.1 | 113.2 | 113.3 | 113.4 | 113.5 | 113.6 | 113.7 | 113.8 | 113.9 | 114.0 | 114.1 | 114.2 | 114.3 | 114.4 | 114.5 | 114.6 | 114.7 | 114.8 | 114.9 | 115.0 | 115.1 | 115.2 | 115.3 | 115.4 | 115.5 | 115.6 | 115.7 | 115.8 | 115.9 | 116.0 | 116.1 | 116.2 | 116.3 | 116.4 | 116.5 | 116.6 | 116.7 | 116.8 | 116.9 | 117.0 | 117.1 | 117.2 | 117.3 | 117.4 | 117.5 | 117.6 | 117.7 | 117.8 | 117.9 | 118.0 | 118.1 | 118.2 | 118.3 | 118.4 | 118.5 | 118.6 | 118.7 | 118.8 | 118.9 | 119.0 | 119.1 | 119.2 | 119.3 | 119.4 | 119.5 | 119.6 | 119.7 | 119.8 | 119.9 | 120.0 | 120.1 | 120.2 | 120.3 | 120.4 | 120.5 | 120.6 | 120.7 | 120.8 | 120.9 | 121.0 | 121.1 | 121.2 | 121.3 | 121.4 | 121.5 | 121.6 | 121.7 | 121.8 | 121.9 | 122.0 | 122.1 | 122.2 | 122.3 | 122.4 | 122.5 | 122.6 | 122.7 | 122.8 | 122.9 | 123.0 | 123.1 | 123.2 | 123.3 | 123.4 | 123.5 | 123.6 | 123.7 | 123.8 | 123.9 | 124.0 | 124.1 | 124.2 | 124.3 | 124.4 | 124.5 | 124.6 | 124.7 | 124.8 | 124.9 | 125.0 | 125.1 | 125.2 | 125.3 | 125.4 | 125.5 | 125.6 | 125.7 | 125.8 | 125.9 | 126.0 | 126.1 | 126.2 | 126.3 | 126.4 | 126.5 | 126.6 | 126.7 | 126.8 | 126.9 | 127.0 | 127.1 | 127.2 | 127.3 | 127.4 | 127.5 | 127.6 | 127.7 | 127.8 | 127.9 | 128.0 | 128.1 | 128.2 | 128.3 | 128.4 | 128.5 | 128.6 | 128.7 | 128.8 | 128.9 | 129.0 | 129.1 | 129.2 | 129.3 | 129.4 | 129.5 | 129.6 | 129.7 | 129.8 | 129.9 | 130.0 | 130.1 | 130.2 | 130.3 | 130.4 | 130.5 | 130.6 | 130.7 | 130.8 | 130.9 | 131.0 | 131.1 | 131.2 | 131.3 | 131.4 | 131.5 | 131.6 | 131.7 | 131.8 | 131.9 | 132.0 | 132.1 | 132.2 | 132.3 | 132.4 | 132.5 | 132.6 | 132.7 | 132.8 | 132.9 | 133.0 | 133.1 | 133.2 | 133.3 | 133.4 | 133.5 | 133.6 | 133.7 | 133.8 | 133.9 | 134.0 | 134.1 | 134.2 | 134.3 | 134.4 | 134.5 | 134.6 | 134.7 | 134.8 | 134.9 | 135.0 | 135.1 | 135.2 | 135.3 | 135.4 | 135.5 | 135.6 | 135.7 | 135.8 | 135.9 | 136.0 | 136.1 | 136.2 | 136.3 | 136.4 | 136.5 | 136.6 | 136.7 | 136.8 | 136.9 | 137.0 | 137.1 | 137.2 | 137.3 | 137.4 | 137.5 | 137.6 | 137.7 | 137.8 | 137.9 | 138.0 | 138.1 | 138.2 | 138.3 | 138.4 | 138.5 | 138.6 | 138.7 | 138.8 | 138.9 | 139.0 | 139.1 | 139.2 | 139.3 | 139.4 | 139.5 | 139.6 | 139.7 | 139.8 | 139.9 | 140.0 | 140.1 | 140.2 | 140.3 | 140.4 | 140.5 | 140.6 | 140.7 | 140.8 | 140.9 | 141.0 | 141.1 | 141.2 | 141.3 | 141.4 | 141.5 | 141.6 | 141.7 | 141.8 | 141.9 | 142.0 | 142.1 | 142.2 | 142.3 | 142.4 | 142.5 | 142.6 | 142.7 | 142.8 | 142.9 | 143.0 | 143.1 | 143.2 | 143.3 | 143.4 | 143.5 | 143.6 | 143.7 | 143.8 | 143.9 | 144.0 | 144.1 | 144.2 | 144.3 | 144.4 | 144.5 | 144.6 | 144.7 | 144.8 | 144.9 | 145.0 | 145.1 | 145.2 | 145.3 | 145.4 | 145.5 | 145.6 | 145.7 | 145.8 | 145.9 | 146.0 | 146.1 | 146.2 | 146.3 | 146.4 | 146.5 | 146.6 | 146.7 | 146.8 | 146.9 | 147.0 | 147.1 | 147.2 | 147.3 | 147.4 | 147.5 | 147.6 | 147.7 | 147.8 | 147.9 | 148.0 | 148.1 | 148.2 | 148.3 | 148.4 | 148.5 | 148.6 | 148.7 | 148.8 | 148.9 | 149.0 | 149.1 | 149.2 | 149.3 | 149.4 | 149.5 | 149.6 | 149.7 | 149.8 | 149.9 | 150.0 | 150.1 | 150.2 | 150.3 | 150.4 | 150.5 | 150.6 | 150.7 | 150.8 | 150.9 | 151.0 | 151.1 | 151.2 | 151.3 | 151.4 | 151.5 | 151.6 | 151.7 | 151.8 | 151.9 | 152.0 | 152.1 | 152.2 | 152.3 | 152.4 | 152.5 | 152.6 | 152.7 | 152.8 | 152.9 | 153.0 | 153.1 | 153.2 | 153.3 | 153.4 | 153.5 | 153.6 | 153.7 | 153.8 | 153.9 | 154.0 | 154.1 | 154.2 | 154.3 | 154.4 | 154.5 | 154.6 | 154.7 | 154.8 | 154.9 | 155.0 | 155.1 | 155.2 | 155.3 | 155.4 | 155.5 | 155.6 | 155.7 | 155.8 | 155.9 | 156.0 | 156.1 | 156.2 | 156.3 | 156.4 | 156.5 | 156.6 | 156.7 | 156.8 | 156.9 | 157.0 | 157.1 | 157.2 | 157.3 | 157.4 | 157.5 | 157.6 | 157.7 | 157.8 | 157.9 | 158.0 | 158.1 | 158.2 | 158.3 | 158.4 | 158.5 | 158.6 | 158.7 | 158.8 | 158.9 | 159.0 | 159.1 | 159.2 | 159.3 | 159.4 | 159.5 | 159.6 | 159.7 | 159.8 | 159.9 | 160.0 | 160.1 | 160.2 | 160.3 | 160.4 | 160.5 | 160.6 | 160.7 | 160.8 | 160.9 | 161.0 | 161.1 | 161.2 | 161.3 | 161.4 | 161.5 | 161.6 | 161.7 | 161.8 | 161.9 | 162.0 | 162.1 | 162.2 | 162.3 | 162.4 | 162.5 | 162.6 | 162.7 | 162.8 | 162.9 | 163.0 | 163.1 | 163.2 | 163.3 | 163.4 | 163.5 | 163.6 | 163.7 | 163.8 | 163.9 | 164.0 | 164.1 | 164.2 | 164.3 | 164.4 | 164.5 | 164.6 | 164.7 | 164.8 | 164.9 | 165.0 | 165.1 | 165.2 | 165.3 | 165.4 | 165.5 | 165.6 | 165.7 | 165.8 | 165.9 | 166.0 | 166.1 | 166.2 | 166.3 | 166.4 | 166.5 | 166.6 | 166.7 | 166.8 | 166.9 | 167.0 | 167.1 | 167.2 | 167.3 | 167.4 | 167.5 | 167.6 | 167.7 | 167.8 | 167.9 | 168.0 | 168.1 | 168.2 | 168.3 | 168.4 | 168.5 | 168.6 | 168.7 | 168.8 | 168.9 | 169.0 | 169.1 | 169.2 | 169.3 | 169.4 | 169.5 | 169.6 | 169.7 | 169.8 | 169.9 | 170.0 | 170.1 | 170.2 | 170.3 | 170.4 | 170.5 | 170.6 | 170.7 | 170.8 | 170.9 | 171.0 | 171.1 | 171.2 | 171.3 | 171.4 | 171.5 | 171.6 | 171.7 | 171.8 | 171.9 | 172.0 | 172.1 | 172.2 | 172.3 | 172.4 | 172.5 | 172.6 | 172.7 | 172.8 | 172.9 | 173.0 | 173.1 | 173.2 | 173.3 | 173.4 | 173.5 | 173.6 | 173.7 | 173.8 | 173.9 | 174.0 | 174.1 | 174.2 | 174.3 | 174.4 | 174.5 | 174.6 | 174.7 | 174.8 | 174.9 | 175.0 | 175.1 | 175.2 | 175.3 | 175.4 | 175.5 | 175.6 | 175.7 | 175.8 | 175.9 | 176.0 | 176.1 | 176.2 | 176.3 | 176.4 | 176.5 | 176.6 | 176.7 | 176.8 | 176.9 | 177.0 | 177.1 | 177.2 | 177.3 | 177.4 | 177.5 | 177.6 | 177.7 | 177.8 | 177.9 | 178.0 | 178.1 | 178.2 | 178.3 | 178.4 | 178.5 | 178.6 | 178.7 | 178.8 | 178.9 | 179.0 | 179.1 | 179.2 | 179.3 | 179.4 | 179.5 | 179.6 | 179.7 | 179.8 | 179.9 | 180.0 | 180.1 | 180.2 | 180.3 | 180.4 | 180.5 | 180.6 | 180.7 | 180.8 | 180.9 | 181.0 | 181.1 | 181.2 | 181.3 | 181.4 | 181.5 | 181.6 | 181.7 | 181.8 | 181.9 | 182.0 | 182.1 | 182.2 | 182.3 | 182.4 | 182.5 | 182.6 | 182.7 | 182.8 | 182.9 | 183.0 | 183.1 | 183.2 | 183.3 | 183.4 | 183.5 | 183.6 | 183.7 | 183.8 | 183.9 | 184.0 | 184.1 | 184.2 | 184.3 | 184.4 | 184.5 | 184.6 | 184.7 | 184.8 | 184.9 | 185.0 | 185.1 | 185.2 | 185.3 | 185.4 | 185.5 | 185.6 | 185.7 | 185.8 | 185.9 | 186.0 | 186.1 | 186.2 | 186.3 | 186.4 | 186.5 | 186.6 | 186.7 | 186.8 | 186.9 | 187.0 | 187.1 | 187.2 | 187.3 | 187.4 | 187.5 | 187.6 | 187.7 | 187.8 | 187.9 | 188.0 | 188.1 | 188.2 | 188.3 | 188.4 | 188.5 | 188.6 | 188.7 | 188.8 | 188.9 | 189.0 | 189.1 | 189.2 | 189.3 | 189.4 | 189.5 | 189.6 | 189.7 | 189.8 | 189.9 | 190.0 | 190.1 | 190.2 | 190.3 | 190.4 | 190.5 | 190.6 | 190.7 | 190.8 | 190.9 | 191.0 | 191.1 | 191.2 | 191.3 | 191.4 | 191.5 | 191.6 | 191.7 | 191.8 | 191.9 | 192.0 | 192.1 | 192.2 | 192.3 | 192.4 | 192.5 | 192.6 | 192.7 | 192.8 | 192.9 | 193.0 | 193.1 | 193.2 | 193.3 | 193.4
Topeka, Ks.
Friday, Dec. 5, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Page 11
“Santa Is Much Too Slow—Use Want Ads—Make Some Dough!”
Kansan Classified Ads
5
Call
Terms; Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly, and must be sent to Kansan University at 10 a.m. (e.g., except Saturday) or brought to the University Dally Kansan University. Journals may be delivered later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One day Three days Five days
25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00
Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
BUSINESS SERVICE
STUDIING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sandwiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360.1199 Mass. tf
BEVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 618 Vt. tr
EXPERIENCED Typist. Term papers, books, theses and miscellaneous. Mrs E. J. Roscoe. 838 Louisiana. Apartment 4. upstairs. Phone 2775-J. tf
THING WANTED. Prompt, accurate service. Pick-up and delivery service after 6 p.m. and before 8 a.m. Phone 3157R. Mrs. Livingston. tt
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment in this area with fast, high definition. Rowman Radio and television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery.
TYPING SERVICE in home. Theses
themes, notebooks and miscellaneous.
Phone 2417. 12-8
TYPING SERVICE. experienced theses reports, etc. Regular rates. Mrs.Hall. 506 West 6th. Phone 1344W. tf
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything! field. Their needs are business. Our own products have everything for our fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries.
Free parking 600 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight.
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-Rentals-Ready buyers. William J. Van Almen. 3110R. tf
FOR SALE
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choices steaks sandwiches, maits, home-made pies and cakes. Free parking space for customers.
TUX, like new; size 38; excellent condition. Worn only a few times. Phone 3470J. 12-10
CHEVROLET, 4 door sedan, $650, 1946
Stylemaster with radio and heater. Runs perfectly. Come at once to 1234 Oread.
12-10
LOST
LONGINES WRISTWATCH with no straps and crystal broken. Reward. 4 Strong. Annex E. 12-10
MISCELLANEOUS
Air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. midnight. Crystal Cafe, 609 Vt. tf
HANDWROUGHT silver jewelry, hand-
woven articles, and pendants in ba-
zar and satchel cases. Friday 8 a.m.
to Saturday 9 a.m to 6 p.m., at
Harley House.
RADIO and TV service-same day as service on all makes. Most boxes of tubes and parts in this box. Bowman TV and TV25 Vermont. Phone 138 for prompt service. tr
DRESSMAKING, formals, alterations, by experienced dressmaker. See Themis Zannetto, 1633 Vermont (downstairs apartment.) Phone 1477-6.
◯NOGO SERVICE - B. F. Goodrich tires and batteries, complete lubrication vice pumps, automatic transmission to Burckel Conco Service, 19th and Massachusetts.
NEWTON
V P B.
KU376
FYISTP: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Penn. Phone 1396M. **tf**
TRANSPORTATION
ASK US ABOUT airplane rates, sky coach, family days, round trip reductions and American Express land tours. Cunard and Matson Steamship lines. Call Miss Glesseman at national Bank of America streets and reservations. 8th and Mass. streets. Phone 30.
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel for business interests. Phone: Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661 Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass.
WANTED
BABY SITTER for 2 SIamese cats during Christmas vacation Dec. 22-29. Sitter gets runs of house and financial remuneration. Phone 3198W. 12-10
STUDENTS interested in working new banquet service at Student Union for thy coming visit. Miss Harvey or union caterer between 2 and 4 p.m. Union cafeteria office.
FOUND
MAN'S BROWN billfold December 3 by Strong annexes—owner may phone Bob Becker, 3410 to claim; and pay for ad.
FOR RENT
ROOMS FOR undergraduate girls in very nice house. Available for second semester. Very close to campus. Phone 3712W. 12-10
Editor Hits Charge Against Reporter
Chicago — (U.P.)—The executive editor of the Chicago Sun-Times, protesting the reindictment of a reporter who used a ruse to obtain files of the Senate Crime committee, said today the action "is but the last gasp of a decadent and discredited administration."
Editor Milburn P. Akers said in a statement published in today's editions of the Sun-Times that the reindictment of newsman Ray Brennan by a federal grand jury indicated the Democratic administration was "bent on reprisal against a newspaper which withdrew its support."
The Sun-Times endorsed Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower in the recent presidential campaign.
The Justice department charges that Mr. Brennan obtained copies of secret testimony taken by the so-called "Kefauver" Senate Crime Investigating committee by presenting himself at the offices of the court reporting firm which recorded the testimony and posing as the committee's "office manager."
refer. If the applications are accepted, men will be notified by letter from the commandant of the school concerned. Those selected will be enlisted in the army for three years and will be sent to the school upon completion of basic training.
University men have an opportunity to be selected to Army trade schools by submitting applications to the commandants at the Army and Air Force recruiting station in Lawrence.
Army Trade Schools Open to Draft Bait
The complete list of the 54 schools and their locations is available at the recruiting station. ___
Ellensburg, Wash. —(U,P)— Dr. Maurice Petitt, dean of men at Central Washington college, said today three male students have been hired as "house mghers" for college dormitories.
Men Are 'Housemothers'
Dr. Pettit said the men preferred to be known as "councilors."
33. 9 0.25 7 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
Interviews
Personnel representatives from nine industrial organizations will be on the campus next week to interview February graduates of the School of Engineering.
Interested students may obtain application forms and information at the School of Engineering office, 111 Marvin hall. Students may sign the interview schedule in that office.
Monday and Tuesday
The Carbide and Carbon Chemicals company will interview chemical, mechanical, electrical, metallurgical, and civil engineers; and engineering physicists. They will also interview chemists and physicists.
General Electric company and Hanford Works is interested in interviewing aeronautical, electrical, mechanical, and chemical engineers. They would also like to interview engineering physicists, physicists, and chemists.
Hughes Aircraft company would like to interview electrical and mechanical engineers and also physicists.
Wednesday
Natkin and company would like to interview mechanical, architectural, electrical, and civil engineering.
The Maytag company is interested in interviewing chemical and mechanical engineers. However, they would also like to interview all types of engineer majors.
Thursday
Westinghouse Electric corporation will interview mechanical, industrial, electrical, and aeronautical engineers.
Thursday and Friday
Thursday and Friday Atlantic Refining company is interested in interviewing geologists and electrical, civil, mechanical, petroleum, and chemical engineers. They would also like to talk to mathematicians, physicists, and physical chemists.
Friday
Chance-Vought Aircraft corporation would like to interview aeronautical, mechanical, and electrical engineers. They are also interested in physicists and mathematicians.
Black-Sivalls and Bryson would like to interview chemical and mechanical engineers.
Artist Shuns $100 Checks
San Francisco—(U.P.)-Vera Chase,
a 26-year-old waitress, was arrested yesterday for cashing 110 bad checks, each for $85.
"A $100 check would have looked suspicious," she said.
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ARTHUR KENNEDY • JOHN IRELAND
SAT. 1 - 3 and 7 - 9
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A PARAMOUNT PICTURE Color by TECHNICOLOR
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CH. 11— "CAPTAIN VIDEO"
LATE NEWS EVENTS
"CANDID MIKE"
SUN. - MON. - TUES.
SUN. - MON. - TUES.
CONTINUOUS SUN. 1:00 pm
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TAKE CARE OF
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LATE NEWS EVENTS
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Complications Promised For Journey to Outer Space
State College, Pa.—(U.P)—Traveling to the moon or other planets isn't going to be a simple matter of getting into a space ship and blasting off.
Pennsylvania State college scientists, who have been studying the characteristics of outer atmosphere, say the ship will have to stand the stress of greatly varied temperatures, deadly cosmic and ultra violet rays and absence of air pressure.
Dr. Marcel Nicolet and Phillip W. Mange of the ionosphere research laboratory said the dangers revolve around the low density of molecules in outer space.
They explained that temperatures will vary as the distance from earth is increased. As an example, a 70 degree temperature on the earth's surface will drop to minus 150 degrees 50 miles up and climb to about 3,500 degrees 250 miles away from the earth.
The lack of molecules in space, the scientists revealed, also will increase the power of deadly ultra
Search Continues For Lost Airplane
San Bernardino, Calif — (U.P.) — Search for a missing Air Force transport bearing 13 men ranged from Bakersfield south to the Mexican border today after two days of intense aerial reconnaissance failed to disclose any trace of the plane.
Some 75 search planes, directed by the air rescue unit at nearby March Air Force base, flew high and low level patterns over hundreds of snow-bound hills yesterday in a futile attempt to locate the twin-engined transport which disappeared Monday night during a severe storm.
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violet rays discharged from the sun. Ordinarily, the damaging effects of ultra violet is filtered by the molecules in our atmosphere.
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01 02 03 04 05 06
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Dec. 5, 1952
Ex-Siberian Prisoner To Give Newman Talk
An East German priest who was deported by the Russians into Siberia as a slave laborer will address the Newman club in the basement of St. John's Catholic church after the 10 a.m. mass Sunday.
The Very Rev. Msgr. Gerhard A. Fittkau, executive director of the American branch of the St. Boniface society and former pastor of Suessenberg in East Germany, will talk about his experiences in a Siberian labor camp.
Msgr. Fittkau was kidnapped by Soviet secret police in February, 1945, when the Russians marched into East Prussia, and deported to a slave labor camp in Arctic Siberia. He was released in 1945.
He was sent to the United States in 1949 to take charge of the American branch of the St. Boniface society in New York City. The society is trying to re-establish the church among 4 million destitute Catholics who have been expelled from their homes in East Germany.
A. M. B.
BALL FINALIST—Janet Gabrielson, Chi Omega sophomore and one of the three finalists for queen of the Military ball, was incorrectly identified as Cynthia Krehbiel, Alpha Chi Omega sophomore, in a picture in Thursday's
paper.
Peiping Rejects UN Truce Plan
Tokyo—(U.P.)—The Chinese Communist radio Peiping rejected the Korean truce plan proposed by India today because it "supports the attitude of the U.S. military leaders in Korea."
It was Peiping's first direct comment on the truce formula adopted Wednesday by the United Nations. The broadcast obviously took its cue from the attack on the plan by Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Vishinsky at the General Assembly.
Peiping said the proposal meant that unrepatriated prisoners of war would be transferred in effect to American forces instead of to the UN. Peiping repeated its demand for repatriation of all prisoners of war.
"The Indian delegate, V. T. Krishna Menon, said. . . That he spoke as a representative of the people of Asia," Peiping said. "However, no one except the U.S.-dominated bloc has given the Indian delegate such authority."
The broadcast said Menon gave no reason for opposing the Soviet Truce plan.
"The Indian delegate's attitude shows clearly that the persons who proposed the plan and those delegations which supported it do not want to end the war in Korea, but intend to continue their hostile actions."
Menninger Director Speaks
Dr. Gardner Murphy, director of research at the Menninger foundation in Topeka, spoke Wednesday before the graduate colloquium of the department of psychology.
4 KU Debaters Enter Iowa Meet
Four members of the University debate squad and director Kim Giffin are at the University of Iowa in Iowa City today for the annual invitational forensic meet.
Those taking part are Dick Sheldon, college junior; Bill Crews, business junior; Ann Ivester, college senior, and Don Hopkins, first year law student. About 30 schools from over the country will participate. E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, said.
Prof. Buehler said the basis of the meet is a debate tournament with oratory, extemporaneous, discussion and after-dinner speaking events included.
The teams of Sheldon and Crews and Miss Ivester and Hopkins will debate.
WAA Initiates 37 Presents Awards
Initiation of new members and awards were highlights of the annual WAA hockey dinner last night.
Skits were presented by the 37 initiates as part of their initiation ceremony.
Ruth Hoover, associate professor of physical education, presented letter awards to the girls who had earned 550 points in intramurals and blazer jackets to those who had earned 1,000 points.
Those receiving letters were Lorraine Godding, journalism senior; Bettie Muir, engineering junior; Joan Grone, education senior; Susan Forney, education junior; Mary Demeritt, education sophomore; Gwendolene Morrison, education senior; Shirley Smith, education junior, and Elva Sutton, education sophomore.
Those receiving blazer jacketse were Shirley Thompson, education senior; Marian Miller, college senior; Betty Clergy, education senior; Mary Ann Mahoney, education junior; Pat Garrett, education junior; Joan Squires, education junior; Jean Michaels, education senior, and Virginia Brooks, education junior.
Hollywood —(U.P.)— Shapely Marilyn Monroe, whose attractive figure got her a collection of rare books, looked around today for some "deserving university" to give them to.
Monroe's Figure Wins Book Auction
This "figure," however, was not the one which helped her on the road to moviand success, but the figure of $1,335 for a collection of 178 Regie books used by the late Max Reinhardt, noted German producer.
Regie books are manuscripts used by a director in preparing a production and upon which he writes personal notes of changes in dialog, action and scenery.
Mr. Reinhardt, who died in 1943, scribbled many marginal notes in the books which are regarded as
of considerable value to drama students and other Reinhardt admirers
The actress surprised a group of rare book dealers Wednesday night when she turned up at the auction and took part in the bidding.
Murphy to Discuss KU Financial Aid
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will discuss the place of grants and other financial aid in the over-all University picture in a broadcast interview over KANU at 8:45 p.m. Sunday.
The chancellor will talk also about the $100,000 Fund for Adult Education grant announced Thursday.
BREWER
We Serve Your Favorite Seafood
ENJOY AN EXPERTLY PREPARED SEAFOOD
DINNER AT DUCK'S TONIGHT
- Soft Shell Crabs
- Florida Pompano
- Swordfish Steaks
- Shrimp
I love it!
- Scallops
DUCK'S Sea Food TAVERN
Brush Up For Examinations!
College Examination Series
- Botany
- Chemistry
- Sociology
- Economics
- American Government
STUDENT Union Book Store
of Plain and Solid Analytic Geometry and Differential and Integral
Schaum's Outlines Theory & Problems
Calculus,
for students of
College Chemistry College Physics.
Barnes & Noble COLLEGE OUTLINE SERIES
ATLAS OF HUNAN ANATOMY. 1.75
ACADEMICITY, Ancient 1.75
ALGEBER, General 1.25
AMCERIAN, Collegiate & Revolutionary History 1.25
AMERICAN, Collegiate & Revolutionary History 1.25
ANCIENT, MEDIENAL & MODERN HISTORY 1.25
ANTHROBIOLOGY, Outline of General 1.25
ANTHROBIOLOGY, Principles of Genetics 1.25
BIOLOGY, General 1.25
BODY, General 1.25
BUSINESS SCHOOL 1.25
CHEMISTRY, First Year College 1.75
CHEMISTRY, Mathematics for General 1.75
CHEMISTRY, General 1.25
CORPORATION FINANCE 1.75
DOCUMENTED AWARERS, Writing 1.50
Economics, Diclinics, Principles of 1.50
Economics, Diclinics, Principles of Readings in 1.50
Education, History of 1.75
ENGland, History of 1.60
EUROPE, 1948-1949, History of 1.60
EUROPE, 1915-1949, History of 1.60
EXAMINATIONS, How to Write Better 1.60
EXPERTISE 1.60
PRINTING GRAMMAR 1.25
GEOMETRY, Practice of 1.25
GEOMETRY, Analytic 1.25
GEOLOGICAL, Problems in Reading 1.25
GIRMAN GRAMMAR 1.25
GOVERNMENT, American 1.00
GRAVENUM, Diclinics and Practice of 1.25
HYDRAULICS for Fleman 1.25
HUMAN RESOURCES REELATIONS 1.25
JOURNALISM, Survey of 1.25
LATIN AMERICA, History of 1.25
LATIN AMERICA, Civilization, Readings in 1.25
LATIN AMERICA, Economic Development 1.25
LITERATURE, America 1.25
LITERATURE, English, Dictionary of 1.25
LITERATURE, English, History of, since Millennium 1.25
LITERATURE, English, History of, since Millennium 1.25
LOCHARITIMA & Trigonometric Tables 1.25
MIDDLE AGES 300-1500, History of 1.25
MONOGRAMS 1.25
MUSIC, History of 1.25
MUSIC, History of 1.25
PHILOSOPHY, Readings in 1.50
PHILOSOPHY, Readings in 1.50
PHYSICS, without Mathematics 1.25
PLAY PRODUCTION 1.50
POSITIVE DISCIPLINE 1.50
POSITIVE DISCIPLINE of America 1.25
PSYCHOLOGY, Educational 1.75
PSYCHOLOGY, General 1.75
PRINCESSIA 1.25
RISSIA, History of 1.50
SKRAMESPAREMATA, Discourses, Dictionary of 1.25
SLIDE RULE, Practical Use of 1.75
SLIDE RULE, Practical Use of 1.75
SPANISH GRAMMAR 1.25
STATistical Methods, Tailors for 1.25
STUDY, Best Methods of 1.25
STUDY, Best Methods of 1.25
TUDOR AND STUART PLAYS, Outlines of 1.25
UNITED STATES, to 1868, History of 1.25
UNITED STATES, she 1865, History of 1.25
UNITED STATES, she 1865, History of 1.25
ZOOLOGY, General 1.28
PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE
Topeka, Ks.
Speeding
The accident season is on!
Failing to Yield Right of Way
With America's drivers well into the winter months, accidents have already begun to take their annual increase. The frequency of serious wrecks jumps sharply during the period from November through February with the holiday periods accounting for a great number of highway deaths.
Slick roads, poor visibility, more hours of darkness are all factors that couple with the usual accident rate to make this time of the year one of the worst.
The pictures on this page were taken of wrecks occurring within the last year in the Lawrence area alone. Speeding, failing to yield the right of way to oncoming traffic, and passing on a hill were the causes of the wrecks pictured here.
The accidents pictured here represent six deaths and four persons seriously injured. Two of the dead were University students.
Picture Story by Rich Clarkson
Passing on Hill
Dec. 5, 1952 Daily Kansas Picture Supplement Page 2
ian students display native costumes of countries from come. From left to right: Rama Krishnan, in India dress; Egon Sohmen, in his Austrian Slonek in Tyrolian lederhose; Haruke Himono; and her countryman, Dra Sinha in Calcutta's Sherwani cloth-"dhoots,"
Marie Claudia certain, with in a "hot dog confused Mini known in Hart Frankfurt, G know
MISS JOHN WILLIAMS
Professor Roger Tomaselli, of the University of Pavia, Italy, is doing work on Phytoecology for the University. He is pictured as a foreign professor with a typical scene in a foreign classroom—everybody neatly dressed and listening attentively. Asking a question, and standing at strictest attention, is Rama Krishnan, India. Near him, to his right, are Mrs. Marianne Meyer, Miss Charlotte Peter, both of Switzerland; Geoffrey Weston, in the row behind them and shown peering at the professor between the two young ladies; Egon Sohmen, Austria; Yves Goudichaud, Bordeaux. France, and Marie Claude Ber-
hese, India; and Gunter Kreuter, Saar.
Here's something foreign students do understand. For relaxation its chess and Chrus B. Samii, Iran, matches wits with Walter Scholtfeldt, Germany. "If he loses," Samii said smilingly, "he has to chauffeur me around in my car. If he wins, then he wins the use of my car." At the time of this picture, Samii had Scholtfeldt booked up solid "as my chauffeur for the next two weeks."
Two months later foreign students appear thoroughly Americanized. Miss Charlotte Peter and Mrs. Marianne Meyer, both from Switzerland give Tom Donnelly, as the American professor in this bit of satire, a little attention. Behind them, in various stages of relaxation are, Akire Kato, Japan; Jean Gob, Belgium, trying to get some attention by raising a hand; Yves Goudichaud, France, having a coke; Karl Koeppel, Switzerland; and Walter Scholtfeldt, Germany, displaying his shoe
PASCAL MONTAGUE
size
---
Converting Fore Students Into Jf
Many foreign students at the University are amazed and delighted with collegiate attitudes toward education in this country.
At least that's the impression this writer received after working for three weeks with Al Traldi of Italy on this layout. Traldi worked tirelessly, as an interpreter, and actually rounded up students to use as subjects
"In European and Asiatic universities, formal dress is required in all classes. Here in this country you wear levis and T-shirts," he said wonderingly.
But food is something else. "That's one of the hardest transitions for a foreign student to make," Al once said in a confidential tone. He wasn't being derogatory "If you should visit a foreign country after becoming accustomed to menus here, you'd see clearly what I mean," he said in further explanation
But he's all for it. In fact,it would be a difficult process to try and point out a foreign student in an American classroom today They have learned our clothing styles fast
In taking the pictures it was inevitable that new acquaintances would be made. But this writer honestly feels he found a friend in each student with whom he became acquainted. They are sincerely interested in American philosophy. And they are eager to make friends.
It isn't necessary to know their language to converse with them. As mentioned before—all of them have a fine command of English. And they're here to learn even more.
But most of all they want to know America. We can help them. They are our guests. Let's make them feel at home.
—Picture Story by Don Sarten and Al Traldi
bertran
aid
Heid
Bertra
urg. S
many,
rankl
Yves Goudich
Grand, Paris,
MACROBON & TOM 50.73
HOT DOG
20¢
Bertrand, Paris, France, is attempting to make a aid of a dictionary that there are no "dogs" Heidi Cohrs, Hamburg, Germany, has already Bertrand by stating that hamburgers are un-urg. Still another student, Mrs. Helga Vigliane, many, not pictured, added that so far as she frankfurters are unknown in Frankfurt.
/HAWKERS
irelies
1. Bodealx, France, and Marie Claude Bernt quite figure out an American cigarette vending machine.
Keyboard-time at KU
JANE BROWN
The School of Fine Arts received a clavichord last week and became one of few schools in the nation to offer instruction in all keyboard instruments.
board instruments.
Instruction is now offered in piano, clavichord, harpsichord, organ, and carillon.
The clavichord and harpsichord are both early forerunners of the modern piano with the 12th century clavichord used before the harpsichord. The clavichord is also somewhat smaller than the horpsichord. The harpsichord, purchased last year, was made in Paris. The clavichord was manufactured in Detroit and purchased for the University by an anonymous donor.
Instruction in carillon is taught in the University's 53-bell memorial Campanile, which has both a regular keyboard and practice one located approximately half way up inside the tower. Donald M. Barnes, University carillonneur and instructor in music history, is the instructor.
instructor. The various instruments making up the University's complete keyboard instruction are pictured on this page.
Picture Story by Phil Newman
Marian Jersild, instructor in piano, plays the recently-acquired clavichord, which is kept in the office of Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts.
Ronald M. Barnes, University carilloneur and instructor in music history, plays the 53-bell Memorial Campanile from his office near the top of the tower. Entrance to the small room is gained by a steep, winding stairway.
Marian Jersild, instructor acquired clavichord, which Thomas Gorton of
Marian Jersild, instructor in piano, plays the recently-acquired clavichord, which is kept in the office of Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts.
Ronald M. Barnes, University carilloneur and instructor in music history, plays the 53-bell Memorial Campanile from his office near the top of the tower. Entrance to the small room is gained by a steep, winding stairway.
Laurel Everette Anderson, professor of organ and theory, instructs Louis Long, special student in the college, on the
in piano, plays the recently-
h is kept in the office of Dean
the School of Fine Arts.
Laurel Everette Anderson, professor of organ and theory, instructs Lewis Long, special student in the college, on the
Laurel Everette Anderson, professor of organ and theory, instructs Lewis Long, special student in the college, on the organ in Hoch auditorium
Dec. 5, 1952
Dec. 5, 1952 Daily Kansan Picture Supplement Page 4
The joy of cooking is taught in home economics labs. First comes the cooking as the girls in the background are doing. Then the joy, when each girl gets to eat her own delicious meal.
Testing the specific gravity of a piece of wood are (left to right) Brauch Fugate, engineering sophomore, Sutton Graham, engineering junior, and Charles Moon, engineering sophomore, in Physics 5 lab.
Ronald Dobbins, journalism junior, sets type in a stick during printing lcb.
Gotta Lab?
Jim Sellers, pharmacy junior, prepares an oil test in pharmacy lab.
"What are you doing this afternoon?" "Gotta lab."
And who hasn't got a lab at one time or another during the school week. The pictures on this page are just a few of the labs that take place every day, and probably aren't representative of the many different types offered or required of the undergraduate student.
For instance, there are English labs, editing labs, Spanish labs, chemistry labs, law labs, and labs of every type in every school and department.
Many times a lab is considered by the school or department as only a small portion of the course, but any student can tell you that they take the most time. But the lab has its good points—that's where the student puts into practice what he has learned from reading and lectures.
Picture Story by David S. Arthurs
Walter Ash. engineering sophomore, puts threads on a bolt with the aid of a lathe in mechanical engineering lab.
Inspecting the skull of an alligator (or was it a crocodile) are a few members of the advanced comparative anatomy lab. They are (left to right) Bob Tanner, college junior; John Esther, college senior; Keever Greer, college junior; Bob Swisher, college senior, and Lee Duggan, college junior.
Here five electrical engineers set up a frequency modulation test in a "double E" lab. They are (left to right) Bob Hill, Dick Greg, Richard Callabuse, Larry Kravitz, and Russ Yohe, all engineering juniors.
Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ka.
Sophomore Reigns at ROTC Ball
Donna Jean Johnson, fine arts sophomore, was crowned queen by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy at the 30th annual Military ball Saturday in Hoch auditorium.
About 1,300 cadets of the three ROTC units, and their dates watched the chancellor place a silver crown on the winning candidate.
The crown, inscribed with Miss Johnson's name, will become a part of the tradition of the military ball. She was the candidate of Delta Delta Delta sorority.
Miss Johnson was one of three finalists chosen from a field of twelve candidates. Her attendants were Janet Gabrielson, college sophomore, and Maureen Kelley, fine arts junior.
All three finalists received lockets. The queen's crown, made by John Barley, fine arts junior, was decorated with pearls and rhinestones. The crown and lockets were displayed before the ceremony at the foot of the bandstand.
Student commanders of the three ROTC units were escorts. They were Wilson Liggett, Army; Edward House, Navy, and Darrell Kellogg, Air Force.
Henry Busse and his band played dance music from 8 to midnight.
Murphy Explains Need for Aid
Gifts which the University receives from private sources are "the icing on the cake" of the bulk of finances furnished by the legislatures and fees, Cancellor Franklin D. Murphy said in a broadcast interview Sunday over university station KANU.
Private contributions "make the difference between a great university on one hand and an extraordinary university on the other," the chancellor said.
Chancellor Murphy pointed out that "well over 50 per cent" of funds to finance the total research effort on the campus and at the Medical center come from outside sources.
"Probably 25 per cent of the total value of the buildings on the campus represent gifts to the people of Kansas," Chancellor Murphy said, citing the Memorial stadium, Student Union, Watkins Memorial hospital, Spooner-Thayer art museum, the president's home, the new Journalism building, FM radio station KANU, and "a large number of dormitories."
Dollar-wise, the largest amount of private contributions are in buildings, he added, but of the total number more go into loan and scholarship funds.
"We are not entitled to make tax money available for scholarships" Chancellor Murphy explained. The annual income from privately donated funds totaling $200,000 is used for this purpose, he said.
--going to Congress for 250,000 acres pay for the school.
Plans for KU Started 96 Years Ago Today
W. F. M. Arny may have visualized an institution such as the University when he wrote a letter suggesting the establishment of such a school 96 years ago.
Mr. Arny, a member of the State Board of Education for the state of Illinois in 1856, wrote a letter dated Dec. 8 of that year to Gov. John W. Geary of the Kansas Territory giving him his views on education in Kansas, where he was soon going to move.
He suggested the establishment of a normal school to train teachers, an agricultural and horticultural school, a mechanical school, and others for law, medicine, etc. He also suggested apply to Congress for 250,000 acres
BROOKLYN
THE QUEEN REIGNS—Donna Jean Johnson, fine arts sophomore, gives the audience a big smile Saturday night after being crowned queen of the Military ball by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. Looking on with approval are Maureen Kelley, fine arts junior attendant; Edward House, engineering senior and Navy ROTC battalion commander; Darrell Kellogg, college senior and Air Force ROTC wing commander; Wilson Liggett, business senior and Army ROTC regimental commander, and Janet Gabrielson, college sophomore, attendant—Kansan photo by Bob Longstaff.
Daily hansan
Monday, Dec. 8, 1952
50th Year, No. 56
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Frosh Meet With Principals
University freshmen will visit with their high school principals during the fourth annual Principal-Freshman Conference tomorrow.
All freshmen are invited to discuss University problems with their principals during the meetings which will begin at 9 o'clock. The places where the principals will meet the students can be found elsewhere in today's Daily Kansan.
The principal-freshmen conference sessions will run from 9 until 10:30 a.m. and from 11 a.m. until 12:45 p.m. The principals will be guests at a complimentary luncheon at the Memorial Union cafeteria.
The on 53 Courses Ready
the bulletin of the university, containing announcement of courses for the sessions 1952-53, is now available to students at the registrar's office.
See page 6 for place and time of conferences.
A conference of mathematics teachers from Kansas high schools is being held in conjunction with the principal-freshman activities. That group will hear Prof. G. Baley Price, chairman of the mathematics department, Prof. Albert S. Palmerlee, chairman of the department of engineering drawing and freshman engineering advisor; and Miss Kathleen O'Donnell, mathematics instructor.
Purpose of the annual day is to enable freshmen to talk over problems at the University with someone they know. They may also offer suggestions for the improvement of high school courses with a view towards preparation for college.
Ike Conferring With Aides On Korean War Solution
French Troops Kill 20 In Morocco Insurrection
Varsity Athlete Taken To State TB Sanatorium
Casablanca, French Morocco—(U.P.)—French colonial troops killed 20 Arab nationalists and wounded more than 50 today in breaking up a howling mob of 5,000 white-robed Arab nationalists who had beheaded two Frenchmen.
LaVannes Squires, business junior and member of the varsity basketball squad, has withdrawn from school and was taken to the state tuberculosis hospital at Norton Saturday for further examination of a chest inflammation which will prevent the Wichita player from rejoining the KU team this season.
Aboard Cruiser Helena with Eisenhower—(U.R.)—President-elect Eisenhower conferred in mid-Pacific today with five designated members of his cabinet on ways and means to crack the Korean stalemate without involving the United States in a costly expanded war.
The death toll of 20 they inflicted on the mobsmen was said to be a
The small detachment of police inside the station held off the attackers and called for reinforcements.
As wave upon wave of Arabs, total of 5,000 surged into the attack, tough Goum Berber tribal troops came to the rescue.
The Goums, drawn from the mountain Berber tribes and by centuries-old tradition bitter enemies of the town-living Arabs, charged into the mob on horseback and afoot, with carbines, pistols and swords.
The exact diagnosis of the disease would not be made for about two weeks yet, Dr. R.I. Canuteson, University Health service director, said this morning.
"In the course of routine examinations for varsity athletic competition about four weeks ago, X-rays showed signs of a chest inflammation." Dr. Cautescon explained. "We have kept him in the University hospital for examination and tests until Saturday when doctors from the state hospital suggested his transfer there."
Disorder broke out last night when two native policemen and one nationalist were killed and two policemen kidnapped.
This morning a mob of 600 Arabs stormed a police station in a suburban area. Two unidentified Frenchmen were trapped in the midst of the attackers and bheaded.
minimum.
Troops took over from police at key points throughout the city.
Under a pre-arranged emergency plan, martial law was declared at once in Casablanca.
Inter-Faith Group Hears Dean Barr
Squires, who made about half of the trips with last season's NCAA championship basketball team and played in 14 games, was a candidate for a starting position with this year's Javhawk team.
His loss was the second blow to Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen's defending conference and national champions. Footballer Charlie Hoag was sidelined, probably for the season, as the result of a football injury in the Missouri game and a subsequent knee operation last week.
"KU's School of Religion is a binding force in which men who do not agree on basic points nevertheless work together in a common cause." Dean Harold G. Barr of the School of Religion said yesterday in an inter-faith meeting of the Disciple Student fellowship and Hiliel foundation.
"Although men are separated into races and nations there is a universalism—a binding force for all men—in religion," Rabbi Louis Cashdan, associate rabbi of Congregation B'nai Jehudah, Kansas City, Mo. said in the same discussion.
"Transcending language difficulties may be overcome by acts of goodness which speak for themselves." Dr. Amiya Chakravarty, visiting professor of humanities, said in the closing address.
Chicago Designer Visits Workshop
Ben Rose, of Chicago, nationally known designer of wallpaper and textiles, will be on the campus Monday and Tuesday as a consultant in a two-day workshop sponsored by the department of design.
He will talk on correlating wall-papers and textiles, decorating trends in interior design, and preparing for a career in desig.
Mr. Rose is recognized as a leader in the field of interior design, Dessa Jane Bush, assistant professor of design, said.
Gen. Eisenhower met with John Foster Dulles, the next secretary of state; George Humphrey, who will be treasury secretary; Interior Secretary-designate Douglas McKay; Attorney General-to-be Herbert Brownell, and Defense Secretary designate Charles E. Wilson.
Dulles. Brownell, Humphrey and McKay boarded the cruiser early today off Wake Island. They and other aides were flown to the cruiser in helicopters.
After a general discussion at lunch the conferences moved into the salon for an afternoon of talks. On the table was a long list of requests and recommendations from South Korean President Syngman Rhee asking both increased economic assistance and a wider scale war against the Chinese communists.
Before leaving for Korea, Gen Eisenhower expressed fears there is a "grave risk of expanding the war." He gave no indication that the recommendations from Rhee and the South Korean government, now under study, changed the President-elect's mind.
The fact that Mr. Eisenhower was not inclined to say anything publicly at this time about Korea and the forthcoming paper work indicated preparation of early presidential messages and speeches on foreign policy.
The presence of Hughes and Jackson—who wrote some of the General's campaign speeches—also indicated a possible foreign policy speech.
Eisenhower and his party are scheduled to arrive in Honolulu Thursday morning. He will stay at Pearl Harbor until Saturday, which makes his return to the U. S. unlikely before Sunday.
Hagerty was asked if a definite military plan had come out of the shipboard conferences.
"I can't say anything definite has come out of it," he said.
Powder Puff Bowl Tilt Set for 4 p.m. Today
The Powder Puff bowl game, postponed because of bad weather, will be played at 4 p.m. today on the intramural fields. Barbara Comstock, Kappa Alpha Theta president, said today.
The game between the Pi Beta Phi and Kappa Alpha Theta sororities was first scheduled for Monday, Nov. 24. The next date set for the game was Dec. 1.
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Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, Dec. 8, 1952
Let's Play Santa To A Needy Family
Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus. But each one of us has to be that Santa Claus to someone else.
It's an old, old story that millions of men, women and children are dying due to starvation and neglect throughout the world. But far too many people think of this condition as existing only in the far reaches of the world, in places too remote from them and their immediate influence.
This is not so, for even here in a medium sized Kansas town, there are many families who will not have a happy and cheerful Christmas unless given some encouragement and help.
Although the United States is better off financially than it has been for a long time, there are many families who have not shared in this prosperity. Families, who because of personal troubles and disasters are down on their luck, and need a little help to put them back on their feet.
The holiday season is traditionally one full of love and cheer. Would it be too much for a house or organization to adopt a family for Christmas, to make one or two families a bit happier because someone thought of them at a time when happiness and encouragement were needed?
The Independent Student association has sponsored a March of Toys on the campus. Used toys collected by students will be distributed by the ISA to orphanages throughout the state. This group has added to the holiday spirit by sponsoring a project advocating the idea of "good will to men."
If groups feel that they would like to undertake such projects, further information concerning the adoption of Lawrence families may be gotten from Miss Mildred Watson, welfare director at the Court House, phone 975.
Yes, Virginia, there is no doubt that there is a Santa Claus. But it should not be just one which caters only to small folks, but rather many who answer their neighbor's needs.
Mary Cooper
Kansas Tests Prove Speed Does Not Pay
The minute your foot pushes down on the accelerator and the speedometer climbs past 50 miles an hour, you are asking for trouble.
Out of every 100 highway accidents, 33 of them occur at speeds ranging from 40 to 50 miles an hour. As soon as the speed goes above this mark, your chances of accident are doubled. Seventy-seven accidents out a 1,000 occur at speeds over 50 miles an hour.
Speed does not pay. An automobile driven over 295 miles of Kansas highways with a top speed of 65 miles an hour maintained an average of 46 miles an hour and had to pass 126 vehicles.
The same car driven over the same stretch of road with a top speed of 50 miles an hour maintained an average speed of 43 miles an hour and had to pass only 62 vehicles.
By traveling at the faster speed, the driver made the trip in 6 hours and 25 minutes instead of 6 hours and 50 minutes. For the 25 minutes saved, he increased his chances of having a serious accident substantially and lost 11 per cent on gasoline and 50 per cent on oil consumption.
When you start your next trip remember that by increasing your speed to 65, you will have to drive steadily for six hours to save 25 minutes. Is that extra saving of four minutes an hour worth your life? —Don Moser.
Off-Campus Projects Have 2-Way Benefits
A few campus organizations have accomplished some worthwhile off-the-campus projects this year which certainly deserve considerable credit.
These projects were not taken on in the interest of the organizations but as efforts to help others. However, such activities often receive little publicity compared to that given "panty raids" and other so-called "typical college stuts."
Three outstanding examples are the Independent Students Association's March of Toys which is now in progress; the Inter-Fraternity council's clothing drive for an orphans home, and the Inter-Fraternity Pledge council's program of inviting boys from orphans home to some of this year's football games.
Continued efforts by these and other campus organizations will help in two ways. They are of benefit to the groups or individuals receiving the help. And secondly, they help show people that college students think of other things than parties and football games.
Charles Burch.
Short Ones
Anybody stopped to figure what'll happen to this country if something happens to General Eisenhower?
My, but it's quiet on the Western Front.
ONE MAN'S ORIENTAL
SOAP SCAM
President Truman and Gov. Adlai Stevenson have been formulating a "constructive" policy for the Democratic party when it becomes the minority next January.
Bv ROGER YARRINGTON
One of the first steps in this admirable policy was taken last week when Gov. Stevenson spoke before the CIO convention in Atlantic City. The election of a Republican president, he said, was not necessarily a misfortune for labor.
He spoke of labor's responsibilities rather than its enemies and future fortunes. He urged unions to put the national welfare first above all else.
"Labor's long battle for status and recognition has been largely won," he said. "The bigger job of the future is the proper exercise of organized labor's responsibility, not just to the working man but to the country. Some of the attitudes, habits of thought and methods of the past are not longer relevant," he said.
Gov. Stevenson's approach was a direct contrast to the pessimistic tone adopted by Labor Secretary Maurice Tobin who warned his listeners of a new administration that would be "a lot more hostile" to labor than the Democrats had been.
During the past 20 years of Democratic rule, the minority party became one of the most unresponsible in history.
The Democrats under the leadership of Gov. Stevenson appear to have made a good start toward being a constructive minded but effective balance to the new Republican regime.
If this policy can be maintained, despite the trial of being a minority party, it will be a victory in itself and the Democrats will have provided the most valuable type of opposition.
To the Editor of the Daily Kansan:
Despite the fact that I'm a journalism major, and perhaps should be more sympathetic to the whims and inconsistencies—and party affiliations—of the reporters the Kansas sends to the Pachacamac meetings. I'm becoming a little tired of being misquoted.
Letters
J-Major Tired Of False Quotes
Where the Daily Kansan reporter got the idea that I was criticising the editorial board of the Kansan—either positively or negatively—is more than I can understand. As a matter of fact, I didn't mention the "editorial board," "great pressure," "support of Adlai Stevenson," or any other portion of the statement attributed to me.
I merely asked that Pachacamac-NOW-FOR endorse freedom of the press as a means of settling arguments over censorship in the ASC meeting since this issue had caused no little bickering, both within and between parties, in the last meeting. The representatives did this. And I sat down.
Just for the information of the tongue-in-cheek-opposition, I was misquoted on my stand on the housing argument in a previous story. But since the reporter who wrote up this little journalistic curio has been replaced we won't go into that.
Ron Kull
journalism senior
Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 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 second class master Sept. 1910, at Lawrence Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1979
Jayhawker Policy Needs Clean Up
A good yearbook is fun to read and remember. It's also fun to help plan and assemble. It is a slick scrapbook full of memories for alumni, a record of times and things contemporary for undergraduates. Its booster articles and gay pictures are the best publicity a university can have.
A good yearbook is big business too, as near professional as is possible extracurricularly.
extracurricular. The Jayhawker, fall issue, is hot off the press with "picture coverage of University students doubling that in the first issue of the previous year's annual."
Still, the addition of a few extra picture pages of a few Greek parties—doesn't seem to exhaust the possibilities for complete student coverage. Certainly the students are paying enough for a good book.
Subscription rates were raised 50c this fall. Seniors who want their pictures in the commencement issue pay $2.81 for the privilege. Organizations and houses that want to be included in their respective sections pay $79 per page.
It's widely rumored that this yearbook is a successful business venture. Last year the Jayhawk earned $1,000 profits—pretty good for an activity run by and for students.
It's common knowledge too that the editor and business manager are well paid for their exhaustive labors. Last year each received a salary of $350 not counting liberal bonuses and expense accounts. The bonuses were given last summer without the approval of a full Jayhawker board and were not considered by the ASC.
At the Council meeting last week a Pachacamac amendment to the publications bill was passed increasing the salaries to $450 apiece.
Granted that has the Jayhawk editor editor "the biggest student job, financially speaking on the campus," and that he is responsible for the smooth running of a $27,000 enterprise, much larger than that of many retail stores.
It was argued that the editor's pay hadn't been raised in 10 years and that after all there was an inflation, you know. The bill passed by a close vote of 12-11 without too much opposition expressed.
Still we question the whole principle of the thing. Why are the Jayhawker editor and manager the only paid student activity positions on the hill?
Council members didn't seriously question the basic assumption. "It's traditional" said the advocates for the raise and the argument was dropped.
This writer feels that work on the yearbook is an "activity". Students should participate in this activity, as they would in any other—and that they need not be paid for it.
If not, the Council should be consistently generous with the students' money. They should have annual salaries for cheerleaders ASC members, editors of the Daily Kansan, and presidents of the Student Union and AWS. We hear that they do a lot of work too.
A chosen few at top positions are paid for the work they do. It is not laboratory experience but a closed shop. No one knows exactly how things are run. How much money does the book bring in and where does it go? Why aren't $1,000 profits channeled into the making of a better book instead of going into the pockets of the staff?
The point is, the Jayhawker seems to be on a little cloud all by itself. It is not an all-student annual.
The Jayhawker should represent all the students. It should be worth the price they pay for it and the University it represents.
—Dot Taylor
Little Man on Campus
by Dick Bibler
OLD WEEKLY DAILY FOR OLDBROOK, NY
"Well, SOMEONE must have circulated a rumor last quarter that I teach a snap course."
Monday, Dec. 8, 1952
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
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University Daily Kansan
Loop Lifts Tourney Ban Upholds Bowl Ruling
The Big Seven conference lifted its ban upon team and individua participation in NCAA sponsored post-season athletic events, but retained the conference rule prohibiting football bowl games at the Big Seven meeting in Lincoln,Neb.,Friday.
Elimination of the ban allows conference teams and individuals to participate in NCAA basketball and baseball tournaments and track meets. The ban had gone into effect this summer.
Reaves Peters, Big Seven executive secretary, said that questions concerning recruiting and subsidization will be given further consideration at the conference meeting in Kansas City, Feb. 27-28. The freshman rule also is expected to be discussed at the meeting. A proposal has been made to permit competition by freshmen in the conference or to permit participation equal to that in other conferences.
The conference voted unanimously to abolish the football platoon system and will request the NCAA to change the substitution rule in order that a ban can come into effect.
Mr. Peters said that there was no discussion of enlarging the membership of the conference. Oklahoma A&M previously submitted an application for membership into the Big Seven, and there had been rumors that the University of Utah would seek admission.
The conference hit at recruiting by adopting a rule prohibiting the issuance of complimentary tickets to athletic events to prospective athletes, except for games on the home campus of the school giving the tickets.
Leagues to Study Effects of Media
Phoenix, Ariz.—(U.P.)The majors and the minors, probably in closer accord than they have been in many years, prepared for a joint survey on the effects of national television and broadcasting of major league baseball games.
Taking cue from George Trautman, head of the minors, and Sen. Edwin C. Johnson, president of the Western league, who warned that the majors might threaten the enforcement baseball if there wasn't close cooperation among majors voted to form a committee to study the situation.
Sen. Johnson had presented a resolution to the joint major league meeting asking that a share of television and radio receipts be divided among the minors. He blamed the national cases for the attendance dwindle in the minors. He pointed
Browns Gird For 7th Title
New York —(U,P)— The Cleveland Brown's prepared today to lock up their seventh consecutive pro grid title while the Los Angeles Rams and Detroit Lions battled for the right to meet the hardy old champs in the National Football League's championship game.
The Browns clinched at least a tie for the American division with a 10-0 victory over the Chicago Cards yesterday. The Philadelphia Eagles remained a game behind them with a 38-21 triumph over the Dallas Texans. The New York Giants bowed out of the race when upset by the Washington Redskins, 27-17.
In the National conference, the Rams routed the Green Bay Packers, 45-27, while the Lions romped over the Chicago Bears, 45-21, to remain deadlocked for the lead. The Pittsburgh Steelers toppled the San Francisco Forty-Niners, 24-7.
Otto Graham passed 56 yards to Dub Jones for a touchdown on the third play of the game and Lou Groza kicked his 17th field goal of the season in the third period to account for the Brown's scoring.
The Eagles rolled up 391 yards rushing and passing to sweep over the Texans. End Bud Grant costarred with quarterback Bobby Thomason, who completed 10 of 14 passes, including two for touchdowns.
Eddie Lebaron threw four touchdown passes as the Redskins eliminated the Giants. End Hugh Taylor gathered in three touchdown passes for the second straight week.
Two pass interceptions enabled the Rams to strike for three touchdowns in the third period against Green Bay. Bob Waterfield starred for L.A., passing for one touchdown, running for another, kicking a 42-yard field goal and adding six extra points.
out that attendance had dropped from a high of 43,700,000 in 1949 to 26,305,328 in 1952.
However, a major league spokesman said that major league turnstile count had fallen off on a comparable basis.
Trautman set the tempo with a plea in which he asked: "Give us a little help before you destroy us"
The majors listened and agreed.
Everett Dye, Jayhawk Cager Enjoys Great Bunch on Team
Everett Dye, business junior from Independence, Kan., says he gets a great feeling playing on a squad with a "great bunch of fellows."
The 20-year old gamester is playing his second year with Dr. Phog Allen's cagers. Against Nebraska last year he had his greatest basketball thrill. The Jayhawkers tied the school scoring record by 90 points. Dye scored with only five $\textcircled{9}$ seconds left, when the Jayhawkers |
The six foot two inch speedster enjoys basketball under Dr. Allen and Dick Harp, assistant coach, not only from playing but for the fine character of his teammates.
had no points, to help set the record.
Dye looks for a close race in the Big Seven with Kansas State and Missouri having strong teams. Drake gave the Wildcats a big scare before losing last Saturday.
Before coming to the University, Dye played under coach Walter Emmett at Independence high school. He lettered two years there and played on the team that went to the state high school playoffs.
Dye considers Dick Knostman of Kansas State one of the great players in the country. He first saw Knostman play at Manhattan in 1950. Knostman has come a long way since that time, Dye says.
Dye has shown definite scoring punch, and is a clever ball handler.
Besides playing basketball, Dye likes to shoot golf. Even though he likes golf for the pleasure of the game he is a sharp player. The high school squad on which he played finished fourth in the state. His favorite professional linkster is Jackie Burke.
After graduating from the University, Dye will be in the Air Force for two years. He hopes during this time he can play a game with some basketball in the service.
With the adaptation this year of a speedy team, Dye should fit well in the team's plans. Dr. Allen probably will use more than ten players in games this year.
24 Teams Open IM Basketball Season Today
Dye feels that basketball games should be kept on the campus. He cited the poor facilities at the Municipal auditorium in Kansas City as very discouraging for the players. On their trip last year, the Jayhawkers had to dress at the Hotel Muehlbach before going to the auditorium.
Approximately 1,260 men, playing on 126 teams, will participate in the intramural basketball season which opens today in Robinson gymnasium and Robinson annex. This is 14 more teams than entered last year, but is short of the record of 150 teams that played in the 1950 season.
The schedule is divided into three divisions. Any organization may enter one team each in the "A" and "B" divisions, and as many teams as they want in the "C" division. The Hill champions last year were Beta Theta Pi in the "A" and "B" divisions, and the Varsity House in the "C" division. All teams that played in last year's play-offs are seeded by lot into separate divisions for this year's schedule.
Intramural basketball started here in 1920 with 100 men playing on 14 teams. In 1930, with 51 teams participating, a second division was added. A third division was added in 1939 when 64 teams entered.
Walter J. Mikols, director of men's intramurals, said a few more officials are needed for the season. Anyone interested in officiating intramural basketball can contact him at the men's intramural office. Officials are paid $1 per game.
TODAY'S SCHEDU
Robinson annex
4 p.m. Beta Theta PI—Delta Tau Delta
5 p.m. Beta Theta PI—Epsilon Episson
6 p.m. Beta Theta TI—Framingo
7 p.m. Kappa Sigma—Phi Kappa Tau
Fraternity "B"
Fraternity "B"
8 a.m. Beta Theta Pl—Lambda Chi Alpha
(east court) Phi Gamma Delta—Kappa Alpha
Phi Gamma Delta—Kappa Alpha Psi (west court)
9 a.m. Delta Upsilon—Delta Tau Delta (east court)
Phi Delta Theta—Phi Kappa Sigma (west court)
Robinson gymnasium mitt. G'i
8:30 p.m. p.M. Gamma Delta—Delta Tau
Delta II (east court)
Debta I (est court)
Lambda Chi Alpha -Sigma Chi II
Lambada Chi Alpha-Sigma Chi II
(west court)
0123456789
15 p.m. Alpha Tau Omega—Delta Upsilon II (east court)
Beta I - Phi Delta Theta (west
belt)
Tomorrow's schedule Robinson annoy
Robinson annex
Fraternity "C"
4.p.m. Phi Delta Theta I—Sigma Chi II
(not court)
Phi Kappa Psi I—Sigma Chi III (west court)
Independent Indian University
5 p.m. Stephenson—Battenfeld
Independent "A"
5 p.m. Stephenson—Battenfeld
8:30 p.m. AFROTc I—Gamma Delta
(OTC TCT)
Rooinson gymnasium Independent. "B"
Independent "B"
3:00 p.m. AFROTC I-Gamma D
9:15 p.m. NROTC—Know Nothing's (east court)
Jollife—Sterling-Oliver (west
9:15 p.m. AFROCT II—Tired Five (west court)
Conference approval has been given to Gil Reich, Kansas defensive star named to the Look magazine first string defensive all-American squad, to appear on radio and television programs as long as he does not receive compensation.
Reich Gets Approval For Radio, TV Bits
Reich, who was in New York this weekend for the Look all-American football dinner, has been turning down radio and TV appearances because he feared a Big Seven rule night jeopardize his eligibility in basketball.
CHRISTMAS SHOP IN LAWRENCE
15 DAYS LEFT
Santa Claus is ready for the holiday season.
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By DON NIELSEN
Kansan Sports Editor
The list of gripes for today includes:
The result of the Big Seven conference meeting. The decision to abolish the ban on all post-season games except football is rank discrimination. Why should football be made an exception? As far as we can see, basketball takes as much time, draws as many spectators in the long run, and involves as many players as does the gridiron sport.
Of course, Oklahoma is going to be especially bitter at the result of the conference meeting since it seems somehow to be directed at them. The Sooners are perennial contenders for bowl bids. The decision to retain the bowl ban looks suspiciously like a case of sour grapes.
More on the results of the meeting of Big Seven officials. The unanimous vote against the platoon system of substitution puzzles us. The game of football is a game of specialists. The only thing the conference will gain is in the number of football scholarships it will have to grant. The game will suffer, in our opinion, by the removal of the unlimited substitution rule since players who are superior on offense, let's sav, will be sacrificed for players who are fairly good both ways.
The time factor may have weighed heavily in the minds of the officials, since the game will be considerably shortened by using players for 60 minutes instead of running platoons on and off the field.
Kansas State's moral loss to Drake. The fact that the Wildcats failed to live up to the great expectations held for them during the first game of their season does not necessarily mean that they have gone to pot. It does, however, indicate that there is a chance that the Big Seven conference will be a little closer than has been expected.
The credit side of the picture includes:
Evansville, Ind. — (U.P.)—Western Kentucky's Hilltopers made their first college football bowl appearance a success Sunday when they rolled over defending champion Arkansas State, 34 to 19, to win the fifth annual Refrigerator Bowl game.
Feix, who completed 16 of 25 passes for 182 yards, also won the most valuable player award.
Hilltoppers Win First Bowl Tilt of Season
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All Big 7 Teams Defeat Cage Foes
Every Big Seven team that played in a basketball game over the weekend won. Kansas State edged Drake 79-73 in overtime, Colorado beat Utah State 81-64, Iowa State beat South Dakota State 70-47, Oklahoma edged Iowa 63-62, and Nebraska trimmed South Dakota 65-53.
K-State 79. Drake 73
The Kansas State Wildcats, rated as the No. 2 team in the nation by United Press, had a close call before beating the Drake university Bulldogs in overtime. The Wildcats were led by the high-powered scoring of all-American center Dick Knostman, who poured in 32 points.
The Bulldogs tied the score in the last minute. The Wildcats put to use the new foul rule allowing an extra free throw if the first one is missed to help down Drake in the overtime.
Colorado 81, Utah State 64
The Colorado Buffaloes ran over the Utah Aggies easily as two men poured in 45 points for the Buffers.
Art Bunte and Frank Gompert scored the Colorado attack with 23 and 22 points respectively. Colorado led all the way in the contest as the Buffs tied up the Aggies and controlled the boards.
Oklahoma 65, Iowa 84 Oklahoma won a close victory over Iowa when a free throw by guard Sterling Jones clicked. There were 25 seconds remaining in the game.
Oklahoma 63. Iowa 62
I-State 70, South Dakota State 47 Iowa State trimmed South Dakota State in its season opener by a lopsided score. The Cyclones dominated play throughout the game.
Coach Chick Sutherland used nearly all his men to give the squad experience.
Ken Buckles, Iowa forward, sent the game into a 62-62 deadlock by a 20-foot shot down the center. The lead changed hands eight times in the contest.
University Daily Kansan
Nehraska 65. South Dakota 53
The Cornhuskers opened their season by an easy win over South Dakota. The first team played only about half the contest for Nebraska.
The Huskers jumped to a 14-5 first
Final Bowl Rosters Set
There is the complete list of 1952 post-season football games;
JANUARY 1
Rose Bowl, at Pasadena, Calif.: Southern California vs. Wisconsin.
Georgia Tech vs. Mississippi.
Crowd Bowl at Dallas Texas vs. Ten-
Sugar Bowl, at New Orleans; Georgia
Teach - Mississippi
Cotton Bowl, at Dallas; Texas vs. Tennessee.
Orange Bowl, at Miami; Alabama vs. Syracuse.
syfacuse.
"Gator Bowl, at Jacksonville, Fla." East
Salad Bowl, at San Diego, Calif.; San Diego NTC versus Division.
Sun Bowl, at El Paso, Texas; Mississippi Southern, vs. College of Pacific.
Blue-Gray game, at Montgomery, Ala.
Mound north and south of Mason-
Dixon line.
East-West game at San Francisco: Siena from east and west of Mississippi River.
Shrimp Bowl, at Galveston. Texas: Sam Houston State vs. Northeast Oklahoma State
DECEMBER 25
North-South game at Miami: Seniors
from north and south of Mason-Dixon
DECEMBER 20
Cigar Bowl, at Tampa, Fla.: Lenoir Rhyne vs. Tampa.
DECEMBER 13
Poinsettia Bowl, at San Diego: Teams still not selected.
Oldster Named League Chief
Lions Bowl, at Salisbury, N. C.; Clarion (Do) Teachers, e.V. East Carolina.
quarter lead and never were threatened. The game was played under an experimental rule permitting each player six fouls, three in each half. Only one man fouled out, but 58 fouls were committed during the game.
Phoenix — (U.P.)— A fellow who was playing professional baseball before the National Association of professional baseball leagues was organized more than a half century ago, takes over as president of the Western International league this year.
Little Rose Bowl, Pasadena, Calif.: Bacone Junior College (Muskogee, Okla.) vs. Hartnell Junior College (Salinas, Calif.).
His name is Bob Brown and as far as he is concerned the "good old days" don't compare with 1952. "Why, when I played football at Notre Dame, we didn't even have helmets," says Brown, a spry oldster of 76.
Brown was a baseball teammate of the immortal Jock Tinker on the Portland club of 1901 in the old Northwest league. Prior to that he played football at Notre Dame, took a year out to do a little battling in the Spanish-American war, then came back to finish his college education and go into professional baseball.
He has been connected with it one way or another ever since. Until recently he owned the Vancouver, B.C., franchise in the Western International loop. Vancouver, a city of 500,000 drew only 137,000 at the gate last season.
"That isn't very good," he says. "We drew nearly that many in 1910 when we had only 150,000 population. But then, last year was an off-season all over the country.
Topics to be discussed and demonstrated are the zone defense, defensive patterns, the fast break, shooting techniques, and use of tall players around the basket. Clinic officials said the pointers would not interfere with a coach's individual system.
The clinic, sponsored by the Missouri State High School Activities association, the NIAA, and the Kansas City Star, is open to all high school, college, industrial, church, or any other organized teams.
Forrest C. (Phog) Allen, Kansas basketball coach and dean of the nation's cage mentors, will head a six-man teaching staff at the fifth annual Kansas City basketball clinic Dec. 20 in Municipal auditorium.
Allen Heads Staff For Cager Clinic
Other coaches on the faculty are Bob Vanatta, Springfield State, whose team won the NIAA championship in 1952; Milton Jowers, Southwest Texas State; Jim Torson, University of Portland; Ralph Allan, Millinik university, Decatur, Ill., and Cam Henderson, Marshall college, Huntington, W. Va.
Illinois, Kansas Lead Pack Into Tough Schedule
New York—(U,P)P—the debut of Illinois — the nation's top-ranked team, the opening of the Big Ten season, and several blue-ribbon intersectional games highlight college basketball play this week.
Most of the big-name teams appearing this week are meeting "tuneup" foes, but the Illini are starting right in Wednesday night against a tough team—Loyola of Chicago.
Hailed the nation's No. 1 squad in pre-season ratings by the United Press board of coaches, the Illini are missing only all-American Rod Fletcher from the prilliant team that won the Big Ten crown last season. Loyola's Ramblers have won three out of three, including a seven-point win over Creighton.
Saturday triumphs were scored by third-ranked LaSalle, fourth-ranked Washington, fifth-ranked North Carolina State, sixth-ranked Oklahoma A&M, seventh-ranked UCLA. 12th-ranked Santa Clara, 17th-ranked Minnesota, and Brigham Young, also ranked 17th.
Kansas State, the No. 2 ranked team nationally, plays host to Indiana in the top intersectional game of the week. Indiana's Hoosiers, currently ranked eighth nationally, are burning to win this one to make up for last Saturday's surprise loss to Notre Dame, 71-70. Kansas State narrowly escaped a similar fate, beating Drake by only 79-73.
The first official action in the Big Ten takes places at Iowa City Saturday night when Michigan and Iowa, neither figured as a title contender, clash.
Kansas, the NCAA champion last year, makes its debut Thursday in another top intersectional game against Tulane. The Jayhawkers, however, have lost almost all the men from the team that represented the United States in the Olympics last summer and are re-building.
Notre Dame, ranked No. 13, established itself as a top independent team by its win over Indiana, following on the heels of a 21-point win over Creighton.
Other top intersection games include Oklahoma-Texas on Wednesday, Minnesota-Nebraska, North Carolina State-Rhode Island, and Seton Hall-West Texas State on Thursday, Brigham Young-San Francisco, Bowling Green-Duquesne, and Southern California-Utah on Friday, and Duke-Tennessee, Oklahoma-Southern Methodist, and St. Louis-Washington State on Saturday.
Louisville will test three teams in intersectionals—Pur d u e tonight, Manhattan on Thursday, and Temple on Friday.
St. Louis, like Indiana, was a major upset victim on Saturday. The Billikens, ranked No. 10 nationally, were whipped by Ohio State, 81-71. Paul Eberts scored 19 points to lead the Buckeyes, who now must be rated as possible Big Ten title contenders.
LaSalle scored an impressive 87-76 win over Niagara as Fred Ielie sank 27 points, Tom Gola 26, and Norm Grekin 22.
Minnesota blasted Bradley, 79-63; Brigham Young routed Los Angeles State, 56-37; North Carolina crushed Davidson, 82-47; Santa Clara downed Fresno State, 77-59; Oklahoma A&M aTnformed Eastern New Mexico, 70-38; Wyoming won easily over Montana State, 47-48.
20 MPH
Monday, Dec. 8, 1952
Uclan Wins 1952 UP Best Lineman Award
New York—(U.P.)-All-American Donn Moomaw of UCLA, a rarity among modern college football centers in that he was a star both on offense and defense, today was chosen the 1952 United Press lineman of the year.
Anationwide poll of 254 sports writers and radio broadcasters voted Moomaw the award by a wide margin. The 220-pound, six-foot-four UCLA star received 67 votes--more than double that of his closest rival, offensive center Tom Catlin of Oklahoma.
Catlin attracted 28 votes, while tackle Dick Modzelewski of Maryland had 23, and line-backer Dick Tamburo of Michigan State and guard Elmer Willhoite of Southern California had 18 each.
Moomaw, tabbed "an all-American in every way" by his coach, Henry (Red) Sanders, played 250 minutes during the course of UCLA's tough nine-game schedule—an average of nearly three-quarters of every game.
"Drive carefully the life you save may be mine—I'm walking"
Toward the end of the season, Sanders tried to save Moomaw primarily for defensive duties, but every time UCLA needed some extra offensive push in the middle of the line, the coach sent in big Donn.
Moomaw's two-platoon tasks are considered remarkable because the Bruins used the single-wing attack. Thus, on offense he was required to snap the ball accurately to a ball-carrier several yards behind the line, in contrast to much easier snap-back duties of a T-formation center.
Moomaw, a football, basketball, and track star in Santa Ana, Calif. High school, was an end when he came out for football at UCLA, Sanders promptly switched him to center because he was so agile for a man of his size. Moomaw did not like the shift at first but now relishes line-backing because "I'm in every play."
The 2-year all-American is a B-average physical education student who also is active at UCLA as one of the leaders in the Campus Crusade for Christ. His ambition is
to play professional football and later coach. He is known to be highly-sought by several National Football league teams.
In all, 40 players received consideration in the voting. After the top five, guard Steven Eisenhauer of the Navy had 17 votes; linebacker George Morris of Georgia Tech had seven, while end Bernie Flowers of Purdue and handman Steven Meilinger of Kentucky each drew six.
Here is how the rest of the votes were distributed:
Guards John Michels of Tennessee and Harley Sewell of Texas, and tackle Ed Meadows of Duke, five votes each.
Ends Tom Stollshandke of Texas and Drank McPhee of Princeton, tackle Doug Atkins of Tennessee and guard Jim Alessandrini of Notre Dame, four each.
Tackle Charley Laprad of Florida and ends Ed Bell of Pennsylvania and Lowell Perry of Michigan, three each.
Salas Gets Underdog Rating
Boston —(U,P)— Former light-weight champion Lauro Salas was an underdog today for his first fight since losing the championship—a 10-round battle with cocky Tommy Collins of Boston before a sellout crowd at Boston Garden tonight.
The tough little Monterrey, Mexico, mauler was on the short end of 10-4 odds.
FOUR EYES
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
A.
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After Six
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the university shop
After Six
BY RUDGIFKEN
the university shop
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Dec. 8, 1952
Frosh Conference Schedule
High School
Arkansas City H. J. Clark 9:15-10:15 104 Strong (George Anderson)
Atchison Armin Soph and Ed Hines 9:15-10:30 104 Fraser (Frank Stockton)
Baldwin Robert Randel 9:15-10:15 220 Strong (Martha Peterson)
Barstow Richard H. Sears 9:00-10:30 127 Lindley (Kenneth R. Hit)
Beloit E. M. Chestnut 9:00-10:30 122 Strong (James K. Hit)
Chapman W. F. Kuiken 11:00-12:00 137 Lindley (Kenneth Rose)
Concordia Arthur Mastin and Arley Bryant 9:15-10:15 223 Strong (George H. Smith)
Dodge City Frank B. Toalson 9:15-10:15 122 Strong (James K. Hit)
El Dorado William M. Staerkel 9:15-12:20 228 Strong (Don Alderson)
Emporia G. C. Elkermann and Mary Petty 9:15-12:20 284 Martin (Verner Smith)
Eudora D. E. Kerr 11:00-12:00 220 Snow (A. E. Leonard)
Great Bend R. E. Gunn 9:15-12:30 21 Strong C Western Civ. (Hilden Gibson)
Halstead C. M. Shenk 11:00-12:20 229 Strong (Martha Peterson)
Haskell Inst. W. Keith Kelley 9:15-10:15 105 Fraser (E. E. Bayles)
Highland Park Barney Hays 9:15-11:40 305 Martin (J. M. Kellogg)
Horton Ernest E. Barnard 11:00-12:00 3强 C Western Civ. (Hilden Gibson)
Junction City H. D. Karns and Curtis Stoll 9:00-12:30 204 Winni (A. S. Palmerlee)
Kinsley Charles A. Gibson 11:00-12:20 9强 C Western Civ. (Hilden Gibson)
Lawrence Neal M. Wherry H. C. Stuart Helen Cornwell R. E. Wood E. J. Logsdon Helen Cnewning William D. Wolfe 9:00-12:30 1强 (Alfred Baldwin)
Leavenworth Howard L. Tole and Mildred Potter 11:15-12:15 104 Strong (George Anderson)
Lincoln Harold C. Pitts 11:00-12:20 9强 C Western Civ. (Hilden Gibson)
Louisburg Ross F. Taylor 11:00-12:20 104 Martin (Ralph Tait)
Lyons John Buller 11:15-12:15 105 Fraser (E. E. Bayles)
Manhattan Herbert H. Bishop and Ralph Rogers 9:15-10:30 3强 C Western Civ. (Hilden Gibson)
Marysville Richard F. Rowland 9:15-12:20 Union Building, Cafeteria floor, south end of hall.
Minneapolis Eli Boucher 9:00-10:30 24 Lindley (J. O. Maloney)
Newton M. D. Morris 9:15-12:00 Union Building, Cafeteria floor, south end of hall.
North Kan. City Robert F. Whaley and Nelson Kerr 9:15-10:15 419 Lindley (Walter Schewee)
Osawatomie Edwin G. Lyon 9:00-10:30 101 Lindley (Kenneth Rose)
Bradford Kingman Bradford Kingman 9:00-12:15 223 Strong (George B. Smith)
John L. England 9:00-12:30 101 Fraser (Keenness Andersor)
Russell William Glenn 9:15-10:30 9强 C Western Civ. (Hilden Gibson)
Sabetha Albert Unruh 9:00-10:30 Aero Eng Quonset Hut (Ammon Andes)
Salina O. E. Hodgson 9:00-12:30 228 Strong (Laurence Woodruf)
Sedan T. N. Millard 11:15-12:15 122 Strong (James K. Hit)
Shawnee-Mission Howard D. McEachern Palmer Snodgrass Elise Lemon Elizabeth Boys Robert Johnson Ralph L. Duncan 9:00-12:30 1强 (Alfred Baldwin)
Sublette Ralph L. Duncan 11:00-12:20 124 Lindley (J. O. Maloney)
Sumner S. H. Thompson 11:00-12:30 4强 C Western Civ. (Rupert Murrill)
Sunset Hill Ellen C. Green 9:15-11:40 244-246 Lindley (C. F. Weinaug)
Topeka E. B. Weaver Kenneth Meyers Annabel Pringle Leonard Moulden Perdue Graves 9:00-12:30 Strong B Guidance Bureau (Gordon Collister)
Troy Rural C. W. Trogdon 9:00-10:30 14 Marvin (Lee Haworth)
Turner T. R. Palmquist 9:15-10:30 4强 C Western Civ. (Rupert Murrill)
Washburn Rural W. A. McElroy 9:15-12:00 208 Marvin (G. W. Bradshaw)
Washington (Bethel) Claude Huyck 9:00-12:30 228 Strong (Paul B. Lawson)
(Continued on page 8)
Make His CHRISTMAS HAPPY
• ELGIN • HAMILTON
• WITTENAUER
Reusch-Guenther Jewelry
Miss Dutton and Miss Olds will visit a few of the women's residence halls and sororities during the morning. During the afternoon they will be available to other women undergraduates in the lobby of Strong hall and will attend the AWS tea to be held in the ASW lounge in Strong hall from 4 to 4:30 p.m.
Phone 903
In the program University women attend two summer classes at Bainbridge, Md., while in college. Upon graduation they are commissioned as ensigns in the U.S. Naval Reserve.
Official Bulletin
Lt. Nancy Dutton and Ensign Sally Olds from the office of the commandant of the Ninth Naval district in Great Lakes, Ill., will visit the University Wednesday to explain the Navy's reserve officer candidate program to interested women here.
Wave Officers To Visit KU
MONDAY
Math colloquium: 5 p.m., 203
Strong
ISA: 7:30 p.m. meeting, 3rd floor Journalism building.
TUESDAY
Student Religious council: 4 p.m.
Myers hall B
Campus Affairs committee: 7:30 p.m. 222 Strong, subject: Campus Publications.
German Christmas choir: 5 p.m.
rehearsal, 306 Fraser.
WEDNESDAY
Chess club: 7:30 p.m., 20 Strong.
The first air mail service, begun in 1918, was confined to the Eastern seaboard of the United States.
University Theater To Present Shaw Play
Shaw versus Shakespeare—that could well be the summing up of George Bernard Shaw's stimulating and famous introduction to "The Dark Lady of the Sonnets" which will be presented by University Theater Wednesday through Saturday in Fraser theater with Christopher Fry's "A Phoenix Too Frequent."
The Shaw play was written on the $ ^{\textcircled{8}} $
The Shaw play was written on supposition—disproved at the time—that the Dark Lady to whom Shakespeare addresses 25 of his sonnets was Mary Fitton, one of Queen Elizabeth's maids of honor.
Mr. Harris wrote a play on Shape speare some years before Mr. Shaw wrote "The Dark Lady" in 1910. In the introduction to his play, Mr. Shaw seultles—or attempts to many of Mr. Harris' and other conventional interpretations of the bard's life.
was anything but idolatrous, and that his pessimism was—if anything—the result of having to write some popular plays for a British public that did not understand him.
Mary Fitton is described by G. B. Harrison as "a lively lady who became the mother of three illegitimate children by different men, but afterward married richly and died very respectably."
The late, caustic Irish playwright says this in his introduction:
"Frank Harris conceives Shakespeare to have been a broken-hearted, melancholy, enormously sentimental person, whereas I am convinced that he was very like myself: in fact, if I had been born in 1556 instead of in 1856, I should have taken to blank verse and given Shakespeare a harder run for his money than all the other Elizabethans put together."
Mr. Harris contended that Shakespeare's pessimism was caused by the bitterness of the Dark Lady affair. Mr. Shaw retorts that the bard's passion for the Dark Lady whose identity is still unknown,
If Mr. Harris' interpretation is accepted, then Shakespeare becomes a pitiable, tragic figure with his irony and gaiety lost, Mr. Shaw continues. "Take these away and Shakespeare is no longer Shakespeare: all the bite, the impetus, the strength, the grim delight in his own power of looking terrible facts in the face with a chuckle, is gone." Mr. Shaw says.
Most "bardolaters" approach Shakespeare as a god and not a man, Mr. Shaw criticizes. Without rejecting every un-god-like scrap of information about the bard's life as the "bardolaters" do, a picture, of a man can be pieced together, but he emerges "not a respectable man."
Mr. Shaw says he believes that "Shakespeare died game, and, indeed, in a state of levity which would have been considered unbecoming in a bishop," referring to the tradition that Shakespeare's death was hastened by a drinking bout with Jonson and Drayton.
Mr. Shaw concludes the introduction and intimates why "The Dark Lady" was written by saying "Why was I born with such contemporaries? Why is Shakespeare made ridiculous by such a posterity?"
Undergraduates Offered Enlistment Break
Undergraduate men who are leaving the University at the end of the semester without their degree still have a chance to enlist in the Army or the Air Force at a rank somewhat above that of recruit, according to SFC Jack C. Dodd, of the local recruiting station.
The method by which this would be accomplished is known as a "grade determination," Sgt. Dodd explained. Men who so desire can ask for a grade determination in whatever branch of service they desire.
A grade determination permits a man without a degree and yet with a substantially good education to
The local office has already done this for some men. Sgt. Dodd said.
ask some division of the armed services for permission to enlist at a non-commissioned level at which he could make use of his college training.
Commissions are very scarce at the present time and the chances of a civilian without a sheepskin of getting one are very slim, due to the ample supply of officers being supplied by the ROTC programs.
When a man asks for a grade determination, the local recruiting office sends his school record, letters of recommendation, and any other information which might be available to the headquarters of the particular branch of service in which he wants to enlist. They send back permission for that man to go in as corporal, for example. Or they may deny the request.
THE BUS (Adv.) by Bibler
RAPID TRANSIT @
TAKE A TOUR ON KU'S Beautiful Campus!
TICKETS
BUS LEAVES EVERY 10 MIN.
SEE! Beautiful KU.
RIDE THE BUS!
J.Bike
"He's been doing this ever since he saw those Los Angeles Touring Busses."
Sgt. Dodd urged men faced with this situation to ask for their grade determination shortly, in order that they may have it before they are out of school and subject to the draft.
A nautical mile, 6.060 feet, is equal to one minute of longitude at the equator.
You Don't Find Dates on a Christmas Tree
OR
What Are You Doing New Year's?
Once there was a Girl who was the Prettiest Pigeon in Town. She stood out like a well-constructed Swan amid 'a Gaggle of Geese. So, during the Christmas holidays, Our Girl had a hatful of invitations. Eighteen just for the big New Year's Eve dance. Her Problem was which. Swish to account
CHRISTMAS TREE
"Chick," she said, "she is a lesson in Practical Psychology. See these eighteen invitations? Only one is from a man of Poise, Personality and Perception. Masterful . . considerate . . enterprising . . subtle . sophisticated . . a man of Promise. Do you know which one it is?"
She summoned her small sister, aged 10.
"Jeeps no," said the woe Sister, "I don't."
From the heap Our Heroine selected One Invitiation—on a yellow Blank. "Always," she said, "pick one that comes by Telegram." The Small Fry gulped. "Golly, can you tell all that from a Telegram?"
The point to remember; when you're Lining Something Up for Yule or anytime send a Telegram. It flatters the Sender; gives your approach a Man-of-the-World touch that makes it Something Special. *Whenever you want to Do Better . . . on anything from a Date to a Job Interview . . . stake your claim via Western Union.*
Big Sister closed one lustrous Eye. "Never forget it," she said. "You can't miss."
Telephone 2764 or 2765
703 Massachusetts
---
V
Monday, Dec. 8, 1952
University Daily Kansan
"Santa Is Much Too Slow-Use Want Ads-Make Some Dough!"
Page 7
Kansan Classified Ads
H
HARRY POTTER
Call KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be received on time during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journals must be submitted by 45 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One day Three days Five days
25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00
Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
BUSINESS SERVICE
THERE are only 11 days to replace Auto glass until Christmas vacation begins.
Auto Wrecking and Junk Co., 712 E. 9th.
Phone 954. 12-11
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etn. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka. 1911 Tenn. Phone 1369M. MWF-ff
BEVERAGES. ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. tf
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sandwiches--for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360, 1190 Mass. tf
EXPERIENCED Typist. Term papers, notebooks, theses and miscellaneous. Mrs. E. J. Roscoe, 838 Louisiana, Apartment 4, upstairs. Phone 2775-J. tf
TYING WANTED. Prompt, accurate service. Pick-up and delivery service after 6 p.m. and before 8 a.m. Phone 3157R. Mrs. Livingston. tf
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment and the most efficient service. Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. tf
TYPING SERVICE. experienced theses.
Mrs. H. Hill
906 West 6th. Phone 1344W.
808 North 7th. Phone 1344W.
TYIPING SERVICE in home. Theses
notebooks and miscellaneous
phone 3417
POGO
H'LO PORKY--- WHAT'S YOU DON'T OVER HERE?
I IS BUSY BEIN' LOST---AN' IS STARVIN' TO DEATH, BUT IS COMFY OTHERWISE.
12-8
I IS LOOKIN' FOR
A PARTY WHAT GOT
A BIRTHDAY ON
HALLOWEEN...
HAPPEN TO BE
HALLOWEEN
OVER HERE?
I IS LOOKIN' FOR A PARTY WHAT GOT A BIRTHDAY ON HALLOWEEN... HAPPEN TO BE HALLOWEEN OVER HERE?
NOPE... IT WENT THAT WAY.
DIST. BY POST-HALL.
H'LO PORKY...
WHAT'S YOU
DOIN' OVER
HERE?
I IS BUSY BEIN'
LOST...AN' IS
STARVIN' TO DEATH;
BUT IS COMFY
OTHERWISE.
I IS LOOKIN' FOR
A PARTY WHAT GOT
A BIRTHDAY ON
HALLOWE'E EN...
HAPPEN TO BE
HALLOWE'E EN
OVER HERE?
NOPE...
IT WENT
THAT WAY.
12-8
PAGE BY POST-HALL.
SYNDICATE.
PICK BY POSTHALL
SYNODICATE.
WILL... LIV ON
ATHRYN B. KIN
SPARE A LIL'
BUTTLE
THIS.
A CHILE'S CAKE
IS MEANT TO BE
SPOILT...JES'
DON'T TAKE
LIFE TOO SERIOUS
I ALLUS SAY.
NOPE...IT
AIN'T NOWON!
PERMANENT.
THANK
KATHRYN B,
SON.
COPY. JIM O'GARA WALT KELLY
ON BIG SCREEN TV!
(Will Not Be On Home TV Sets)
METROPOLITAN GRAND OPERA
"CARMEN"
Live Telecast Direct from N.Y. Met. Opera
RISE STEVENS
Starring
Robert Merrill - Richard Tucker - Nadine Conner
THURS. DEC. 11 AT 7:30 P.M.
ASHLAND THEATRE
Kansas City, Mo. - 24th and Elmwood
ALL SEATS RESERVED
Prices: $1.22 - $2.44 - $3.66 Incl. All Tax
Orders for Tickets Now Taken At The
Granada Theatre
IAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet store. We have everything in our one-stop pet shop has everything for fur, fur, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tt
MYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
inners, sandwiches, chili, homemade pasries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6
am. until midnight. **tf**
CRYSTAL CAFE serves chickens steaks
cakes. Free parking space for customers.
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
timen, 31016 buyers. William J. Van-
lumen. 31016
FOR SALE
CAMERAS. Leica Camera IIC with or without
lens. For camera case included. Phone 2674M.
12-11
CLARINET, Paris Selmer, wood, Beecham
CIRCLE, 7 rings, 9 cards
Phone 26748M. **15-11**
CHEVROLET, 4 door sedan, $650, 1946
Stylemaster with radio and heater. Runs
perfectly. Come at once to 1234 Oread.
TUX, like new; size 38, excellent con-
tainer. Worn only a few times. Phone
34701.
SAX, baritone, Conn, brass lacquered,
with case. Phone 2674M. 12-11
LONGINES WRISTWATCH with no straps
and a broken broken. Reward 4. Strong,
Imex E.
Imex E.
MISCELLANEOUS
LOST
Air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. midnight. Crystal Cave. 600 Vt. tf
RADIO and TV service-same day as service on all makes. Most complete stock of tubes and parts in this area. Bowman 136 & 136 Vermont. Phone 138 if prompt service.
DRESSMAKING. formalis, alterations, by an experienced European dressmaker. See Themis Zannetou, 1633 Vermont (down-stairs apartment). Phone 1477-1. 1-6
CONCOO SERVICE-B. F. Goodrich tires and bitterles, complete lubrication service service, automatic transmission service. Bucheim. Conoco Service, 19th and Massachusetts. 19th
TYPE:IST. Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Penn. Phone 136M. tf
TRANSPORTATION
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STUDENTS interested in working new banquet service at Student Union for Mc Tomlinson between 2 and 4 p.m. in Union cafeteria office.
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Professor Invents Snow Ball Gun
Fittsburgh —(U.P.)— The atomic age has finally caught up with the ancient, juvenile sport of tossing snowballs.
A Pittsburgh teacher, of all people, is the man responsible.
James W. O'Dell, an economics and accounting teacher at Westinghouse High school, has invented a snowball gun, a devilish invention that promises to revolutionize the winter sport completely.
12-8
"It shoots as fast as you can pull the trigger," Mr. O'Dell said with pride. "It shoots seven times without reloading, up to 50 feet and costs nothing to shoot."
Three master woodcarvers in Grand Rapids, Mich., are among the nation's few who still practice ecclesiastical carving.
MANS BROWN billfold December 3 by
Becker, 3410 to claim; and pay for ad.
Doyle, 2456 to claim.
ENDS TONITE
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"WAY OF A GAUCHO"
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Dec. 8, 1952
Putnam Seeks Price Controls Solution
Washington—U(P)The administration today sought to salvage its tottering stabilization program in the face of new strike threats and mounting pressure for decontrol of wages and prices.
Economic Stabilizer Roger L. Putnam, confronted with the disintegration of the wage board over the weekend, went into a huddle with his legal experts to determine if he has authority to carry on the wage stabilization program on his own.
The economic stabilizer is determined to keep wage controls functioning despite the walkout of the seven industry members of the board in protest over President Truman's decision granting coal miners a $1.90 daily pay increase. The board had held that anything above $1.50 would be inflationary.
Putnam's determination reflected Mr. Truman's commitment to hand over a functioning controls program to the incoming Republican administration. It would then be up to the Republicans to determine whether to lift the lid on prices and wages.
Fall Concert Set For Hoch Tonight
The Symphony orchestra will present its first concert of the season at 8 tonight in Hoch auditorium.
Martha Heck, fine arts senior, will be piano soloist on the program. The orchestra will be directed by Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra.
Students will be admitted on presentation of their ID cards.
Miss Heck will play "Concerto No. 1 in C Major" for piano by Beethoven. Other selections on the program include: "Magic Flute overture" by Mozart, "Scherzo," from "A Midsummernight's Dream" by Mendelssohn, and "Symphony No. 2 in D harp" by Brahms.
Heavy Air Attack Hits Red Lines
Seoul, Korea —(U.P.)— American Sabre jet pilots yesterday knocked down their eighth Communist MIG-15 in two days while allied fightbombers smashed six rail and road bridges in heavy strikes at Red supply routes.
American commanders on the snow-covered central front reported Chinese were maneuvering with ski troops near Sniper ridge, where South Korean defenders were braced for expected new assaults.
On the ground, South Korean rifleman shattered a rash of Chinese attacks on the central front while UN artillery and tanks blocked Communist punches on the eastern front.
The 155-mile Korean battleline was wrapped in snow, ice and bitter cold, as infantry prowled through the darkness last night and early today to throw harassing jabs at UN positions. Only the western sector escaped the Red nuisance raids
The fourth probe was thrown at Rocky Point, which juts eastward from the main ridgeline. It lasted one hour, then broke up.
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will meet with Lawrence City Manager Jim Wigglesworth Thursday afternoon to discuss the operation of the Lawrence airport.
Airport Talk Set Thursday
The two will discuss the possibility of the University taking over the local airport. Mr. Wigglesworth was instructed to contact the chancellor about such a meeting by the Lawrence city commission following the defeat of a bond proposal for airport improvements in the Nov. 4
election.
Although the University would take over the operation of the airport under the city's proposed plan, it probably would leave the facilities open to the public. Such a plan is presently being followed at Columbia, Mo., and Ames, Iowa, where Missouri university and Iowa State operate city airports.
The present Lawrence airport site is owned by the University and leased to the city.
Frosh Conference Schedule
(Continued from page 6)
(Continued from page 6)
Wellington U. H. Budd 9:00-12:30 12 Strong B Guidance Bureau (Gordon Collister)
Wichita East Walter Cooper Floyd Farmer Flora Stebbins 9:00-12:30 Upton Building, Cafeteria floor, south end of hall. (Frank Burge)
Wichita North C. E. Strange 9:00-12:30 15 Strong G Western Civ. (Hilden Gibson)
Winchester Rural I. T. Dirks 11:15-12:15 223 Strong (George B. Smith)
Winfield Arthur R. Partridge 9:00-12:15 224 227 Snow (A. B. Leonard)
Wyandotte R. C. Johnson 9:00-12:30 221 Snow (A. B. Leonard)
Center Clarence S. Martin 9:15-10:30 103 Marvin (Ralph Tait)
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"I always smoked Chesterfields in college just like my friends" says New York secretary, Elizabeth Lydon,"and here in New York it seems like almost everyone smokes them."
AND NOW- CHESTERFIELD FIRST TO GIVE YOU SCIENTIFIC FACTS IN SUPPORT OF SMOKING
Elizabeth Lydow DUKE '51
At the beginning and end of the six-months, each smoker was given a thorough examination including X-rays, and covering the sinuses, nose, ears and throat. After these examinations, the medical specialist stated . . .
A responsible consulting organization reports a study by a competent medical specialist and staff on the effects of smoking Chesterfields. For six months a group of men and women smoked only Chesterfield-10 to 40 a day-their normal amount. 45 percent of the group have smoked Chesterfields from one to thirty years for an average of ten years each.
"It is my opinion that the ears, nose, throat and accessory organs of all participating subjects examined by me were not adversely affected in the six-months period by smoking the cigarettes provided."
Remember this report and buy Chesterfields . . regular or king-size.
Buy CHESTERFIELD LARGEST SELLING CIGARETTE in AMERICA'S COLLEGES
Daily hansan
Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
50th Year, No. 57
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
New Riots Erupt in Casablanca
Tuesday, Dec. 9, 1952
Tension ran high throughout all French North Africa—Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria—as a result of the murder of a Nationalist union leader in Tunisia last Friday.
Casablanca, French Morocco— (U.P.) — Five-thousand French troops stood guard today against fresh outbreaks of Nationalist rioting that took a reported 50 lives yesterday.
Reinforcements of French marines, mounted Berber Goumiers, fierce Senegalese, famed Foreign Legionnaires and regular army battalions poured into Casablanca. All army and police leaves were cancelled.
French officials charged Communist-Nationalist agitators were using the murder as a pretext to provoke bloodshed and influence United Nations debate on the protectorates.
This important Atlantic port's native districts were ringed with tanks and troops. Infantrymen and police guarded the European quarter as authorities considered imposing marital law on the entire 700,000 residents of the city.
The city already was under a dusk-to-dawn curfew after the biggest anti-European riots by Arab mobs since the riff war of 1925-26.
Europeans from isolated districts were being hastily evacuated under heavy guard to the center of the city where the 250,000 European populations was concentrated. Emergency housing was provided in hotels and public buildings.
The latest official count put the number of dead at more than 50, including eight Europeans, and an official spokesman warned the final figure might be higher.
The city was calm last night but officials feared new disturbances during funeral ceremonies for Morocans killed in yesterday's rioting.
Tunisia was reported relatively calm this morning despite a direct charge by the oldest son of the Bey of Tunis, Prince Chadly, that French terrorists were to blame for the murder of Ferhat Hached, leader of the most powerful labor union in the Moslem world.
The Prince told a press conference yesterday, "The struggle between Tunisia and France is now open."
Chorus to Sing Yuletide Music
The Christmas season will start musically at 8 p.m. Wednesday when the University chorus presents a Christmas recital.
The chorus is the largest musical organization on the campus with 250 mixed voices, and will be directed by Clayton Krehbiel, assistant professor of music education.
The chorus will present "A Fantasia on Christmas Carols," by Ralph Vaughn-Williams, often called dean of British composers, and "Litanes a la Vierge Nore," a work which was inspired by a statue of the Virgin at Rosamadour, France.
Several miracles have been attributed to the statue and it has been the object of many pilgrimages. "A Stopwatch and an Ordnance Map," by Samuel Barber, with text by Stephen Spender, and "Puer Nobis" by Pfautsch, will represent American composers on the program.
There will be no admission charged.
"Lift Up Your Heads Ye Mighty Gates," by Leisring, "Tyrley Tylow," by Balualou, and the "Sycamore Tiks" by Peter Warlock, will also be included on the program.
THE STACKED TREE
CHRISTMAS LIGHT PATTERN—Lights on the huge revolving Christmas tree in Strong hall rotunda form an unusual circular pattern when photographed with time exposure. Inspecting mechanism in base of tree are Don Nielsen, journalism senior, and Larry Ferrill, college senior.—Kansan Photo by Phil Newman.
54 Principals Confer With Former Students
Although Mr. Vishinsky customarily leaves the annual assembly sessions at approximately this time, his departure now was taken as foreshadowing a flat, official rejection of the UN's Korean peace plan by the Communists and North Koreans.
Mr. Vishinsky sailed for Le Havre with 13 Russian colleagues aboard the French liner Liberte. He and two top aides sailed first class, nine others had second class bookings and were in tourist class.
Freshmen met with their high school principals this morning on the campus for the fourth annual Principal-Freshmen conference and what might well be the most successful meeting in the series.
United Nations, N.Y.—(U.P.)-Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Y. Vishinsky sailed for home today declaring that the United Nations general assembly "as an instrument for peace is not satisfactory."
Principals from 54 high schools in Kansas and Missouri attended the conference, Registrar James K. Hitt said this morning. While it was not the largest turnout, it had the largest percentage of attendance.
Indications were that the freshmen were just as enthused about the meetings as were the school officials. Principals found nearly all of their former students coming to the meeting places on time to talk about the transition from high school to college.
Several principals thought that the advantages of the previous conferences are already beginning to show themselves. Students seemed to have less mutual complaints about the
Vishinsky Leaves In Huff Over UN
In conjunction with the conference, mathematics teachers from many of the high schools were on the campus meeting with the University mathematics department to discuss mutual problems.
One phase of early freshman life drew most fire from the students. With the actual coming to the University for the first time being what it is, many of the freshmen thought that the hustle and bustle of Orientation week was a little too much.
transition than in years before. Instead, the problems seemed to be more of an individual nature.
The general feeling was that the University is helping the new student more than before and that the high schools are helping the student get ready for college with the aid of these conferences.
Officials all said that they take what the freshmen say to their schools and try to help the students still in high school.
Plans Being Made For 200-Man Dorm To Be Built in '53
Keith Lawton, administrative assistant to the chancellor, reported to the housing committee yesterday that blueprints for a 200-unit housing project for men are almost completed and contracts will be
Talks Hushed Aboard Ike Ship
Aboard USS Helena —(U.P.) —President-elect Eisenhower discussed Korean war policy with key cabinet members today in an atmosphere of secrecy rivaling that which surrounded his trip to the battle zone.
Gen. Eisenhower's press secretary, James C. Hagerty, refused to give any information about the talks to curious newsmen aboard this 17,000-ton cruiser and the men who have been designated cabinet members shunned questioners.
The conference began yesterday when John Foster Dulles, Gen. Eisenhower's choice for Secretary of State, aboard the cruiser. He was followed by Gen. Eisenhower's chosen Treasury Secretary George Humphrey, Interior Secretary Douglas McKay and Attorney General Herbert Brownell.
Though Mr. Hagerty was uncommunicative, there were indications that the President-elect was blueprinting some of the messages and speeches on foreign affairs he will give following his inauguration.
The talks were kept in a hush-hush category by Gen. Eisenhower. Gen. Eisenhower does not want to issue any statements on public policy until he becomes president, at which time he will be able to back what he says with action.
This is just a preliminary to another phase of the conference which will start when the Helena reaches Pearl Harbor Thursday.
Weather
Cooler weather came to Kansas today and in the northeast the familiar overcast of last week returned.
Scattered clouds hovered in the west was generally clear.
COPE 1972 WATERLOO
The temperature dropped to 23 last night at Goodland, and the lows ranged up to 40 at Wichita, following day time peaks from 53 at Good-
MILD
land to 62 at Emporia and Chanute
A trace of rain fell at Garden City during the night. Forecasters said temperatures tonight would range from 15 in the northwest to around 35 in the southeast and highs tomorrow were predicted at 40 to 50 degrees.
let soon.
Construction probably will begin this summer, Dean Glasco, engineering junior, chairman of the housing committee, said. The new dormitory will be situated between Memorial drive and West Campus road, Glasco reported, at a cost of $3,500 for every student who will live in the house.
The housing chairman said there is a strong possibility of getting a women's dormitory a little later.
The dormitories will be built like an "L", Each wing will contain accommodations for 100 persons, with one kitchen.
The housing committee is preparing to meet with the board of regents and state ways and means committee to answer any questions they wish to ask about housing and give the philosophy behind the desire for dormitories.
Bill Wilson, All Student Council president, said the University planning committee feels the purpose of the new dorms is not to provide a roof over students' heads or three meals a day, but to give students living in the dorms an experience in group living.
Wilson said meeting with the regents was particularly important, for the regents are keenly aware of student sentiment. It was the board of regents that made the Union building possible after the election that had taken two votes to prove the students desire for the building.
The committee will work with he Alumni and Endowment associations this spring in pushing the housing project.
Christmas Play Slated Dec.14
Two performances of "The Second Shepherd's Play", a production of the Laboratory Theater of the Speech and Drama department at the University, will be given in Green theater next week.
The production will be directed by Tom Shay, instructor of speech. Members of the cast will be Mark Gilman, Maurice Casey, Ernest Dade, Max Zent, Bill Means, Shirley Strain, Mary Rigor, and Kenneth Plumb.
The play is a traditional English Christmas play concerning the nativity which has been presented for hundreds of years. Although it was performed earlier, the first manuscript dates from the early 1400's.
Disastrous London Fog Lifts
London - (U.P.) - London's worst soot-laden fog in modern history, which in five days has caused more than 100 deaths and an estimated $28 million damage, began to lift today.
Christmas Vespers Slated for Sunday
Three hundred persons and all departments of the School of Fine Arts will present two performances of the traditional Christmas Vespers, including the famous tableaux, Sunday.
The vespers, now in its 28th year,
will be given in Hoch auditorium
at 4 and 7:30 p.m. They are open
to the public without charge.
The major musical organization participating will be the robed A Cappella chair led by Donald M. Swartouth, the University symphony orchestra directed by Russell L. Wiley, and the combined glee clubs Krebshen and participants will be hired Evente Anderson, University organist; Ronald Barnes, University carillonneur; and a brass double quartet.
The four tableaux will be "The Christmas Feast." "Gloria in Excelsis Deo." "Good King Wenceslas" and "While Shepherds Watched."
They were designed by Prof. Robert Green.
A recital on the memorial carillon and Christmas carols played by the double brass quartet on the auditorium's outer balcony will precede both afternoon and evening programs.
KFKU, the University's AM radio station will broadcast the afternoon vespers from 4 to 5 p.m.
The choir will sing four numbers and make the colorful candle-light processional and recessional. The orchestra will play Mozart's overture and the procession of the Grail from Wagner's "Parsifal."
Soloists with the A Cappella Choir will be Joyce Wellborn, Lyndon; Barbara Barnes, Hutchinson; William Oldham, Kansas City, Kan.; Dale Moore, Olathe, and Gretta Reetz, Linwood.
In the scene "The Christmas
Feast" the merry gathering will be portrayed by Ann Reitz, Kansas City, Mo.; Carole Royer, Oklahoma City; Sue Summerville, Kansas City, Kan.; Kay Magers, Parkville, Mo.; Riederer, Holton; Bill Hancock, Kansas City, Mo.; Ronnie Hickman, Topeka, and Russell Short, Goodland.
the tableau "Gloria in Excelsis Deo" will show Marjorie Brown, Kansas City, Kan., as Mary; Richard Markle, Hutchinson, as Joseph, and Donna Francis, Kansas City, Kan., as the angel.
In the scene 'Good King Wenceslas,' Jim Irwin, Topeka, will appear as the King; Jim Crates, Kansas City, Kan., as the old man; and Tal Streeter, Manhattan, as the servant.
The final tableau, "While Shepherds Watched," will show Richard Wallace, Venetia, Pa., as the shepherd.
1987
---
University Daily Kansan
Page 2
Tuesday, Dec. 9, 1952
Kansas Defends Negro Segregation
Complacent Kansans are apt to think the racial question is confined to the southern portion of the United States, but the state attorney general is sending an assistant to Washington next week to present the case for the Kansas segregation law to the Supreme Court.
Court. Most persons never realize that Kansas has a law which allows first class cities to segregate Negro children from whites in elementary schools. It is an old law, adopted in 1879. It provides that cities may segregate by building schools of equal facilities.
The law is wrong in spirit, even if it does not violate the Constitution. The federal district court, in a hearing on the Brown v. Topeka Board of Education, declared that the segregation was detrimental to the education of the Negro children.
The argument was based on the fact that segregation is intended to keep a race considered inferior from mingling with their supposed superiors. And such a policy of denoting the inferiority of a certain race by legal act tends to give those children discriminated against a sense of inferiority.
a sense of inferiority.
We know that persons differ in ability and talent. But our government is predicated on the belief that individuals should have equal opportunity to develop their abilities and talents.
equal opportunity to develop this Any law which sanctions or encourages segregation is harmful to that belief. Say what you like about equal facilities, we think different facilities in themselves, make it unequal.
Dean Evans
Senator Thye's Victory Resulted from Service
There will be an "era of good feeling" in the 83rd Congress. The Eisenhower landslide, carrying with it a slim Republican majority in both the House and the Senate, is now history. Not only were the Republicans' "safe" seats insured in the Senate but the Crusade's surprise ending also found GOP standard bearers in places long held by Democrats.
But one of the Republican victories came as no surprise to Minnesota. In the North Star State where 37 per cent of the voters are classed as "independent" and where both the steelmakers and farmers' cooperatives wield great power—there was general agreement that the 56-year-old Edward J. Thye, incumbent senator, would win easily over the uphill fighting state legislator, William E. Carlson.
Minnesota—spectacularly varied, proud and handsome—has a progressive political tradition. The state went for Roosevelt all four times he ran and for Truman in '48. But there wasn't any doubt this year about its Republican leanings. Sen. Thye won with no trouble, and Gen. Eisenhower carried the state by a big margin.
The Minnesota senator was too popular to beat. His record was classified as "liberal and internationalist" by even the New Republic which, in general, found many more knaves than knights among the GOP cruders.
Prior to the Washington assignment, Minnesota's senior senator had served his state as lieutenant governor, and in April, 1943, had succeeded Harold E. Stassen, when the latter resigned to enter the U.S. Navy. In the autumn of 1944 he was re-elected for the full two years' term by the largest majority ever accorded a Minnesota governor.
The future governor and senator was initiated into public life through his local government and regional activities. He had held several county offices and when his young friend Harold Stassen defeated Elmer Benson for the governorship, Thye found himself, in 1939 appointed dairy and food commissioner and deputy commissioner of agriculture.
When Gov. Stassen was commissioned in the Naval Reserve, Thye was designated his successor, ran for lieutenant governor and took over Stassen's position to continue the latter's policies.
The old Farmer-Labor party lost ground and in April, 1944, merged with the Democratic party. But the combination failed to defeat Thye, who was re-elected governor that fall, even though Roosevelt led Dewey in the state's presidential contest.
In 1945, Thye contested the renomination for a fourth term in the U.S. Senate of the veteran isolationist, Hendrick Shipstead.
They won. "In Washington," wrote Richard L. Stout in the Christian
Science Monitor just after the Minnesota primaries, "The Thye victory reminds conservative GOP leaders that they must reckon with the liberal-internationalist wing of the party.
The new Minnesota senator, who was assigned to the Agriculture and Forestry, Civil Service and Expenditures in Executive Departments committees, after taking his seat in the 80th Congress, became in March, 1947, one of 16 new senators to sign a round robin demanding a greater voice in party policymaking.
With the defeat of Republican Sen. Joseph H. Ball by Democrat Hubert J. Humphrey in November, 1948, Thye became in the next Congress the senior senator from Minnesota.
The "big, broad shouldered six-footer" from Minnesota has consistently voted with liberal Republicans and Democrats on foreign aid and has favored forward-looking housing, education, and health programs. He is an advocate of the St. Lawrence Seaway and has been particularly interested in agriculture and appropriations legislation during his six years in the Senate.
Thye, ranked 42nd out of 95 senators by a New Republic poll of political scientists, was re-elected by a progressive state that he has served well.
ONE MAN'S OPINION
SOAP JOAN
News Room KU 251 Ad Room KU 373 Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., Associated Collegiate Press Assn., Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, N.Y. City.
Daily Hansan
EDITORIAL STAFF
FORUMIER
Editor-in-Chief Roger Yarrington
Editorial Assistants Charles Buch
Bv DOT TAYLOR
University of Kansas Student newspaper News Room KU 251 Ad Room KU 373
This is an editorial about the All Student Council. But it's not blasting the "piddling politicians" or "corruption in high places."
The Kansan in its editorial leadership hopes to be as quick to compliment as to criticize.
NEWS STAFF
And here we would like to point out that the ASC wranglings, like other manifestations of our imperfect but struggling democracy have resulted in some creditable things along the way. Sometimes we just don't hear about them.
**NEWS SUPPLEMENT**
Managing Editor ___ Diane Stonebraker
Asst. Mgr. Editors ___ Mary Cooper, Bob
Stewart, Chuck Zuegen
Max Thompson
City Editor ___ Debra Evans
Society Editor ___ Jeanne Fitzgerald
Sports Editor ___ Nielsen
Asst. Sports Editor ___ Clarke Keys,
Tectograph Editor ___ Chuck Morelack
Picture Editor ___ Phil Newman
News Advisor ___ Don Sarten
News Advisor ___ Victor Danilov
At last week's Council meeting Bill Nulton's opportunities committee reported that foreign students have felt like guests at KU. They're treated with respect and a little awe, but they're "foreign" to most students and student groups.
In an effort to make these guest members feel like a working part of the University, the Council voted unanimously that a foreign student representing the International club be elected to serve on the ASC as an organizational representative.
We also hope that individual students will take advantage of the opportunities here at KU for meeting and getting to know students from other countries.
The deans and foreign student faculty committee have a fine program of field trips and orientation programs for our international guests. Women's clubs and church groups in the area invite the students to tea and to speak at their meetings. But often they aren't made to feel "one" of us as students.
This writer hopes that this will be the lead for more campus organizations to follow. We hope that more special efforts to include foreign students in University programs and activities will be made.
And finally we hope that the new international member of the Council will see a picture of good student government in action. We hope he sees grown-up American college students working for the good of the University as a whole.
We hope he sees less petty partisan haggling and more basic issues discussed, and that he sees campus politics as a real training ground for responsible citizenship.
RHSINESS STAFF
News Briefs
Business Manager Clark Aikers
Advertising Mgr. Elbert Spivey
National Mgr. Virginia Mackey
Circulation Mgr. Patricia Vance
Classified Mgr. Tom Wiesendahl
Business Advisor Don Landes
Business Advisor Dale Novotny
Detroit—Joseph Rykowski, 57,
hailed a passing 'police car
and when officers got out to see what he
wanted. Rykowski threw a rock
through the plate-glass window of
a coffee shop.
Enroute to the police station for malicious destruction of property Rykowski said he had eaten breakfast there and it hadn't agreed with him.
Paris—Roger Duchet, minister of posts, telephones and telegraphs, complained to the Ministry of Interior that someone was tapping his personal telephone.
***
Oakland, Calif.-City Councilman Lester Grant has been giving city jailers a bad time since he was sentenced to serve five days for speeding.
The ministry advised Duchet to ignore it. It's just the secret police.
Saar Elections May Widen European Split
The French have won a victory in the Saar, but the future of the coal-rich Saar is as much in doubt as ever.
Grant said the 'food was "dull, monotonous and repetitious" and complained there were cockroaches "all over the place."
Nonetheless, the French were jubilant over the results of the Saar's parliamentary elections in which a vast outpouring of Saarlanders apparently endorsed French policies and rejected German pleas to refuse to vote.
And, more to the point, so is ratification of the European army plan and the West German peace contract.
The Germans had hoped that the Saarlanders either would refuse to vote or would invalidate their ballots as a protest against French control of their economic and foreign affairs.
The city health director had the whole jail sprayed with DDT. The diet wasn't changed.
The French and German tug-of-war over the Saar has taken on an importance far greater than its 900-square-miles would seem to warrant.
squares works it is a matter of economics, plus a frank distrust of the Germans.
Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1) if in Lawrence. Published in Lawrence, Kan, every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Entered second class master thesis. Post Office 1010 West 1st Street, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
To the Germans, it is first of all a matter of national pride.
The Saar, they say, is German and must remain so. Ninety per cent of its population is German-speaking.
Both nations, particularly the French, have worked themselves to such a pitch that failure to settle the Saar question very well might mean the collapse of the whole post-war European structure.
Nevertheless, the actual outcome was as disappointing to the West Germans as it was encouraging to the French.
The West German parliament had announced in advance it would not recognize the results of the Saar election.
Which is to say the collapse of the plan for European unity, which includes a pooling of iron and steel, and a joint army.
Strangely, however, both sides believe there is new reason for French and German talks on the subject on which up to now they have been stalemated.
Both sides seem to agree in principle on ultimate "Europeanization" of the Saar but they disagree on method.
In effect, the French want another Luxembourg. Meanwhile, however, they insist on retaining their 50-year control of the Saar mines which produce 15,300,000 tons of coal annually.
The Germans charge that the ban on pro-German parties in the Saar and the arbitrary economic link with France is a denial of the whole principle of democracy.
They want the Saarlanders to determine their own future, and suggest that meanwhile the area can be administered under the Schuman coal and steel authority. They also want guarantees to safeguard German interests—United Press.
Short Ones
- * *
A gangster has been picked up in California for putting two-bit slugs in a pay telephone. Police want him in connection with a series of murders, and the FBI wants him for draft dodging. We'll wager that he'll get a bill from the telephone company, too.
We see where Princess Margo is free to marry anyone except a divorcee or a Catholic. Such restrictions would crush an American girl.
***
If any Kansas wheat springs up next to Washington's cherry trees, we'll know "cronyism" isn't dead.
***
Christmas won't mean very much to the Republicans. They got their Christmas early this year.
- * *
This is the time of year when merchants jack up prices for the Christmas rush. Then they will drop them back to normal after New Year's, and call it a sale. They get us suckers coming and going.
- * *
West Germany's chancellor is having trouble getting the peace treaty ratified by the legislative body. Give him some advice, Harry.
- * *
\* \* \*
A congressional committee is after the publishers and writers of "pornographic material." They try to stop the mailing of such salacious literature. All we can say is "duck, Mickey."
Republican leaders claim that no national political campaign can be conducted within the national law, which limits expenditures by national political committees to $3 million. You should know, boys.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Ise Discusses KU As Trade School
The University of Kansas is becoming more and more a trade school and not an institution in which to obtain a liberal education, according to John Ise, professor of economics, a member of the panel on "Liberal Education" at the Upstream dinner Sunday night.
Other members of the panel included M. D. Clubb, professor of English; Max Dresden, associate professor of Physics; Ann Ivester, college senior; John Gagliardi, college junior, and Ann Mari Buitrabo, graduate student. John Klewer, fine arts freshman, was the moderator.
Professor to Address Pre-Medical Society
Students are more interested in learning a trade than getting a liberal education, Prof. Ise said. Liberal education is taught in the college, and as the University has expanded from a college to the University with its different schools the trend is toward these schools.
L. R. Lind, chairman of the department of Latin and Greek, will present one of four addresses to be given in a program Dec. 28 discussing the role of the classics and the social sciences in pre-medical education.
The program is part of the national meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, to be held in St. Louis.
Mr. Lind's invitation is from H.E. Sutterfield, president of Alpha Epsilon Delta, national pre-medical honor society. It comes as a result of an article concerning the classics and medical schools published by Mr. Lind three years ago.
UNESCO Conference Set
Clayton Crosier, assistant professor of engineering and chairman of the Douglas county UNESCO, Mrs. Paula Glover, the Rev. Harry Smith, and Mrs. F. R. Smith will attend the state UNESCO conference at Emporia Friday and Saturday. Anyone interested in attending may contact one of these persons.
The education and planning committee for the school met here Saturday. The school is designed to help circulation managers of Kansas weekly and daily newspapers with their problems.
The Kansas newspaper circulation school for publishers and circulation personnel will be held here May 8 and 9.
Debate Team Wins Second
Hopkins tied with a Nebraska debater for the top single debater rating in the tournament. He received a 4.8 rating with a 5 rating maximum. Hopkins also received the highest honor in four rounds of discussion on "How Can We Most Effectively Combat Communism?"
Circulation School Slated for May 8,9
Miss Ivester received an excellent or 4 rating in the discussion contest. Crews placed first in the ex-temporaneous speaking division with a rating of 5.
Four members of the University debate squad tied with Illinois for second place, winning 6 out of 8 debates, at the annual invitational forensic meet held at the University of Iowa at Iowa City Friday and Saturday.
Fourteen schools, mainly from the Big Seven and Big Ten conferences, participated in the meet. Nebraska won the event, losing only one debate.
Bill Crews, business junior, and Dick Sheldon, college junior, debating on the negative side, defeated Iowa and Missouri and lost to Illinois and Indiana.
Ann Ivester, college senior, and Don Hopkins, first year law, were undefeated in four rounds of debate on the affirmative side. They downed Wisconsin, Northwestern, Michigan State, and Kansas State.
Dean Burton W. Marvin of the School of Journalism, and E. A. McFarland, director of Lawrence extension, were at the Saturday meeting.
eight members of the All Student Council will attend the Student Government conference Friday and Saturday at Missouri university.
Two members will be voting delegates at the conference. The conference will discuss and vote on activities concerning academic affairs, student organizations and social events, student government organizations, athletics, and public relations and alumni.
Attending the conference are Will Adams, graduate student; Dana Anderson, college freshman; Kay Conrad, college senior; Hubert Dye, business junior; Norma Falletta, college junior; Bill Wilson, engineering senior, and Joe Woods, pharmacy junior.
The Christmas celebration of the Spanish club will feature singing of three Villancicos, typical Spanish Christmas songs dating back to the 18th century, by a chorus of 12 Spanish students, at 4:30 p.m. Thursday in Strong auditorium.
Spanish Club Plans Christmas Gathering
A short play, "Auto do los reyes magos," one of the oldest known pieces of Spanish literature, also is on the program. It shows Christmas in Spain and will be given by students, directed by Eduardo Betoret, Spanish instructor.
ASC Sends Eight To Conference
Christmas in Mexico will be represented by a program showing a posada. This will be given by Spanish 1 students, directed by A. V. Ebersole, assistant Spanish instructor. They will sing the song of the "Pinata." The entire group will participate in the ancient Spanish tradition of breaking the pinata, a large gayly decorated ball filled with candy and nuts.
The program will start with group singing of familiar carols in Spanish.
Doctors conducting a preliminary study believe ordinary gelatin in the diet may prevent cracked and weak fingernails.
Vanity Fair
Concerto Highlights Concert
Bv KEN COY
Highlighted by a piano concerto played by Martha Heck, fine arts senior, the first symphony orchestra concert of the season was presented last night.
High spot of the hour and 40 minute program was Miss Heck's playing of "Concerto No. 1 in C Major," by Beethoven. She presented the concerto brilliantly in an effort that reflected a large amount of work.
A particularly impressive part of the concerto was the transition from the first movement to the second. Miss Heck accomplished this with great ease and exhibited an ability to change moods rapidly and effectively.
After the long and difficult piece
Mountain Air Rescue Fails
Americans are now buying canned meats at the rate of one and a half billion pounds annually.
San Bernadino, Calif.—(U.P.)—Air Force rescue officials abandoned attempts to reach a crashed C-47 transport high on snowcapped Mt. San Gorgonio by air today and launched a slow but steady ground expedition toward the wreckage.
Miss Heck answered three curtain calls. In the major orchestra work of the evening the orchestra played "Symphony No. 2 in D Major," by Brahms.
Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra, showed his abilities as conductor particularly in this composition. He controlled the orchestra easily with little effort.
The orchestra also presented "Magic Flute Overture" by Mozart, and "Scherzo" from "A Midsummer Nights Dream," by Mendelssohn.
Although the audience was small, the program was well received.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Dec. 9, 1952
Hantla, Kay Appointed Team Captains for'53
Linebacker Merlin Gish was awarded the Ormand Beach memorial trophy as the outstanding senior football player for 1952 and Bob Hantla and Morris Kay were named co-captains for the 1953 season at the annual Downtown Quarterback club banquet at the Eldridge hotel last night.
About 350 attended the banquet, given in honor of the Jayhawk football squad. Principal speakers were Frank McDonald, club chairman, Kansas coach J. V. Sikes, and L. R. "Dutch" Meyer, veteran TCU football mentor.
Gish, first string linebacker for three years, received little publicity during his KU career but consistently played outstanding ball from the difficult linebacking position. He saved several games for Kansas by making timely tackles in the clutch.
Athletic director A. C. "Dutch" Lonborg told members that the KU football teams "are getting no breathers" and that Kansas fans will have to get used to occasional defeats because of the "constantly rough schedules."
Sikes received a standing ovation after being introduced by Lonborg. He thanked members for their support during the 1952 season and said that although the team lost three games, "I still say that this is the best team we have ever had. I know of no team who had harder luck but
who kept on trying even in the last five minutes."
He emphasized that the Jayhawkers would have finished among the top ten teams in the nation at the close of the 1952 campaign with a little luck. He said that he was proud of the senior members of the team and said, "I hate to see them go."
Meyer praised Sikes and said "he is teaching football as it should be taught." He said that he had enjoyed the football relationships between the schools traveling to Lawrence for games.
He said that the dinner the Jay-hawkers held for the TCU team after the contest in September was a "grand idea" and that the players had an opportunity to intermingle and create friendships that will last throughout their lives.
Oliver Spencer and Jerry Hoag, father of Charlie Hoag who is in a Kansas City hospital recovering from a knee operation, were presented leather traveling kits. Other squad members will receive them in the KU athletic office.
Illini Top 1st UP Cage List
New York — (U,P)—Strictly on the strength of their potential, Illinois' defending Big Ten champions were ranked tops in college basketball today in the first weekly ratings of the United Press board of coaches. LaSalle was second and Kansas State third.
Although the Illini do not open their 1952-53 season until they play Loyola of Chicago Wednesday night, the 35 leading coaches who make up the UP rating board figured Coach Harry Combes' men were best in the country.
ratings( first place votes in parentheses):
The United Press college basketball
Team Point
1. Illinois (14) 331
2. LaSalle (4) 225
3. Kansas State (1) 217
4. Washington (2) 198
5. Oklahoma A&M (2) 128
6. North Carolina State 126
7. UCLA 112
8. Seton Hall 103
9. Minnesota (1) 86
10. Holy Cross 55
201. Seed 10 teams - 11. Notre Dame, 53; Siena, 48; Rutgers, 49; Purdue, 42; ture, 66; 14 Indiana, 23; 15 Louisiana State, 21; 16 St. Louis, 20; 17. Brigham J. College, 21; 18 Stanford, 20; 19. Santa Clara, 15 each; 20. NYU, 10.
Pi Phi's Win Powder Puff Tilt In Overtime
Tied 6-6 after the regulation game, the Pi Phi's rolled up nine yards in four extra downs to gain the decision over the Theta's who lost five yards in their series.
The game, played before an estimated crowd of 500, had been twice postponed, once because of rain and once because of snow, but the two teams found perfect weather for their frolic yesterday.
Just like women, putting things off until the last! The Pi Beta Phi sorority waited until after the first Powder Puff bowl game Monday to win the contest with the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority.
The Pi Phi's had the better of things throughout the first half, but couldn't punch across the final white stripe. In the second half the Theta's began to control the game. From deep in her own territory, Janet Francis of the Theta's heaved a pass to Patty Wiley who gathered in the ball and raced nearly 60 yards for a score. The kick for the point struck the cross-bar and bounced back.
With the Theta's leading 6-0 and threatening again with only seconds to play, the Pi Phi's pulled the game out of the fire with an interception. Margery Null of the victorious Pi Phi's intercepted a Theta pass and outraced everyone to go the length of the field for the score. A pass play for the point was incomplete.
The game ended shortly after and
The game ended shortly after and the play-off was held.
Both Cage Series Still Open
Students have until Friday to choose the series of varsity basketball games they want to see. They may choose either set one or two, each with four games. After this week any tickets left over will be placed on sale to the public.
Theodore Roosevelt, at 42, was the youngest president of the United States.
A Program of Two Comedies in the University Theatre
"THE DARK LADY OF THE SONNETS"
By G. B. Shaw
"A PHOENIX TOO FREQUENT"
By Christopher Fry
Wed., Dec. 10 through Sat., Dec. 13 Fraser Theatre 8:30 p.m.
Students present ID cards for reserved seats General admission, $1.25 (Incl. tax)
BOX OFFICE, BASEMENT, GREEN HALL.
OPEN 10 to 12 AND 2 to 4 DAILY
SAT., 10 to 12 ONLY
Dean Smith Provides Hustle for KU Cagers
When the chips are down in the rough basketball season the Jayhawkers are facing, they can count a lot of support from Dean Smith, one of the returning lettermen.
Bv KEN COY
It doesn't matter if it is fighting$ the backboard for a rebound or smoothly working the ball down-court, Dean will make the guard position on the KU team an important one.
After the loss of all-American Clyde Lovellette, Bill Lienhard, Bob Kenny, John Keller, and Bill Hougland, the team is going to depend more and more on hard, fast ball playing. Height will be largely replaced by hustle.
Dean is a senior in education from Topeka.
Hustle is exactly what Dean excells in. Although small, (5 feet, 10 inches) he more than makes up for lack of height with his speed and court mastery.
As Dean says, "So much of the game these days depends on height we will have to make up for a lot of that by really trying hard."
Although it is early in the practice for this season, Dean says, "I don't think people should count us out yet because we might really surprise some of those people."
"Now we know the team will have to come through and we are really going to put a lot more into the game because of that," he continued. However, he warned it wouldn't be wise for anyone to go counting on any "Cinderella" team.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 5
4 Victories Mark IM 'A' Cage Play
Kappa Sigma, Delta Upsilon, Beta Theta Pi and Phi Delta Theta were the victors in the first round of intramural Fraternity "A" basketball yesterday at Robinson annex.
In a game that was a thriller right down to the final gun, the Kappa Sig's nosed out Phi Kappa Tau 33-31. Scoring honors in the game were taken by Phi Kappa Tau's Harry Fuller with 12 points. Don Stewart was high for Kappa Sigma with 11 points.
Kappa Sig 33-Phi Kappa Tau 31
with a well balanced scoring attack, the DU's beat Sigma Phi Epison 35 to 24. Sig Eg's Gilbert Pruyn was high scorer in the game with 15 points. John Hysom led the D U's with 8 points.
D U 35-Sigma Phi Epsilon 24
D U 35-Sigma Phil Epson
Jerry Brownlee, with 20 points, led the 43-strike hill champions, to a 44-37 victory over Delta Tau Delta in a good game. Paul Guess scored 16 points to lead the Delt team.
Other Scores:
Beta 44-Delta Tau Delta 37
The Triangles were able to score only two field goals as they were snowed under by a strong Phi Delta Theta team 70-8. The Phi Delt's Hugh Buchanan was high scorer with 20 points.
Phi Delta Theta 70-Triangle 8
Fraternity "B": Delta Upsilon 43-
Delta Tau Delta 26; Beta Theta Pi
76-Lambda Chi Alpha 9; Phi Delta
Theta 61-Chi Kappa Sigma 15; Phi
Santee to Run 13 Miles Against His Fraternity
Wes Santee, distance star, will run 13 miles Saturday against 26 of his Acacia fraternity brothers.
The race is the result of a bet made last spring. Santee bet his brothers that he could whip them in a relay race.
In the race, Santee will run the full distance while the other boys, as a relay team, each will run a half mile. The race will be held on U.S. highway 24-40 from Tonganoxie to Lawrence.
One reason Santee agreed to run is that he is determined to redeem himself in the 1956 Olympics. He is convinced that he must work on longer and longer distances to compete against such incredible Europeans as Emil Zatopek of Czechoslovakia.
Farrel Schell, Acacia president, is certain they can beat Santee.
---
Christmas Books of Special Interest To All Kansans
Morning in Kansas Kenneth S. Davis
Leave It To Miss Annie Georgia Tucker. Smith
The Honor of Your Presence Ruby Holland Rosenberg
Plow the Dew Under Helen Clark Fernald
Gamma Delta 37-Kappa Alpha Psi 14.
Autobiography of William Allen White
This Place Called Kansas
Charles C. Howes
Cyclone In Calico
Nina Brown Baker
Autobiography of
Walter White
Fraternity "C"; Beta Theta Pi I 67-Phi Delta Theta 15; Sigma Chi I 45-Lambda Chi Alpha 39; Phi Gamma Delta 38-Delta Tau Deltai II 16; Alpha Tau Omega 39-Delta Upsilon 23.
Sketchbook of Kansas Landmarks
Margaret Whittimore
Coach "Phog" Allen's
Sports Stories
Tree In the Trail
Holling C. Holling
Little House on the Prairie
Laura Ingalls Wilder
TODAY'S SCHEDULE Robinson annex
Come in and see them at
Friederity
4 p.m. Phi Delta Theta I-Sigma Chi II
(event court)
Phi Kappa Psi I-Sigma Chi III
(west court)
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. Tel. 666
Jolliffe-Sterling-Oliver (west
Indepen.
8:30 p.m. APROTC I-Gamma Delta (east coast)
independent 5 p.m. Stephenson-Battenfeld
Robinson gymnasium Independent "B"
9:15 p.m. NEOTC-Know Nothings (east court)
Independent "C"
1:15 p.m. AFROTC II-Tired Five (west court)
---
Vessels Wins Player of Year Award
New York —(U.P.)— Billy Vessels, Oklahoma's star halfback, today was named Player and Back of the Year in the annual United Press poll of sports writers and broadcasters.
With a total of 260 ballots cast, Vessels won the player of the year award with 37 votes against 26 for Jack Scarbath, Maryland quarterback; 23 for Donn Mowaw, UCLA's great linebacker, and 22 for Paul Giel, Minnesota's speedy halfback.
But in the Back of the Year voting, Vessels ran away with the honor, receiving a total of 75 votes against 30 for Scarbath and 27 for Giel.
Waugh, who gained 1,372 yards in 164 rushes for an average of 8.37 yards per carry, received two votes in the Back of the Year balloting, none
Vessels, who already has won the Heisman trophy and the Cleveland Touchdown club award as the nation's outstanding player for the 1952 season, was the second leading rusher in the college ranks this season. In 161 carries he gained a total of 1,072 yards for an average of 6.66 yards per carry. That mark was exceeded only by Howie Waugh of Tulsa.
in the Player of the Year poll.
Following Vessels, Scarbath, Moomaw and Giel in the player of the year voting was Tom Catlin, Oklahoma's offensive center with 19 votes; Jimmy Sears, Southern California halfback, 11; John Lattner,
Notre Dame halfback, 10 and Steve Mellinger, end and later quarterback of Kentucky, and Paul Cameron, UCLA halfback, with nine each.
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In all, 46 players received votes in the player of the year balloting.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Dec. 9, 1952
Bogii Becomes Colony Of Theta Chi Fraternity
The Bogii fraternity, established at the University in October, 1951, was inducted as a colony of Theta Chi fraternity with the initiation of 18 men Saturday afternoon.
The men who were initiated into Theta Chi fraternity are Richard D. Godfrey, college senior; Don E. Belden, college sophomore; Jimmy Simmons, president of the colony, engineering junior; Robert J. Austil, engineering senior; Duane L. Krug, Prentis H. Kidd, business junior, and O. Keith Knitig, college freshman.
Members of the induction committee were William Frantz, Theta Chi grand chapter member and national counselor; James W. Hunt, field secretary of Theta Chi; Richard H. Buskirk, instructor in economics; Dale L. Johnson, graduate student, and Herbert Wilms, president of Alpha Upsilon chapter of Theta Chi at the University of Nebraska.
Benny D. Croyle, college sophomore; Wayne L. Tiemier, college sophomore; Edwin C. Johnson, engineering senior; Vernon M. Diel, college junior; Tony G. Pagedas, pharmacy freshman; Jack Smith, college freshman; Morris H. Kramer, pharmacy freshman; Don D. Stiller, engineering freshman; R. Stanley Wilson, engineering junior; A. Joseph Steinbacher, engineering freshman, and V. Ronald Haught, engineering senior.
A banquet was held Saturday night at the Castle Tea room following the initiation and induction ceremonies. Speakers were the Rev. Norman Brandt, William Frantz, and Jimmy Simmons.
Other guests were Robert Becker, Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, Kenneth Merrill, president of Interfraternity council; Louis Helmreich, executive member of Inter-fraternity council; Farrell Schel, president of Acacia fraternity; Bruce Green, Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity; Richard Buskirk, William Leonard, instructor at Kansas State college, and Dale L. Johnson.
The University is the 110th campus represented by Theta Chi fraternity, with the induction of the new colony. Theta Chi fraternity has a membership of almost 35,000. It is considered to be one of the oldest social fraternities, since it was founded April 10, 1856. It was the first fraternity to have a definite set of objectives and was the first to officially recognize Mothers Day.
Thirty Newcomers and Guests Attended Pre-Party Dinner
Thirty Newcomers, their husbands, and escorts attended a dinner at the Faculty club Saturday night preceding the University Women's club party at Strong hall.
Mrs. Milton Vanderwers gave a short humorous speech following the dinner. Mrs. Henry Gibson, Mrs. J. Carl Cabe, and Mrs. John Lamb were in charge of general arrangements and the seasonal table decorations.
On the Hill
BY JEANNE FITZGERALD Kansan Society Editor
Alpha KappaLambda fraternity entertained Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority with a dessert dance Thursday at the chapter house. Chapersones were Mrs. W, W. Brown and Mrs. E. M. Peet.
--with her wedding. Her reply to the stock Hollywood query about when she plans to get married is a sweet, "When I fall in love," which could mean any time between now and 1990.
Theta Phi Alpha sorority and Delta Gamma sorority will entertain each other with an exchange dinner at 6 p.m. Wednesday.
--with her wedding. Her reply to the stock Hollywood query about when she plans to get married is a sweet, "When I fall in love," which could mean any time between now and 1990.
Lt. Col. and Mrs. Bayard Atwood announce the birth of a 7 pound 8 ounce girl at 3:50 p.m. yesterday in Lawrence Memorial hospital. Col. and Mrs. Atwood have not yet named the baby.
***
Theta Phi Alpha sorority will give a Christmas tree trimming party from 8:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. Wednesday at the chapter house. Entertainment will consist of singing Christmas carols as well as putting up Christmas decorations.
--with her wedding. Her reply to the stock Hollywood query about when she plans to get married is a sweet, "When I fall in love," which could mean any time between now and 1990.
Mortar Board, senior women's honor society, will entertain junior women who made the dean's honor rolls last semester with two Smarty Parties Thursday night. Half of the women invited will attend the 7:30 p.m. party and the other half will attend the 9 p.m. party. Both parties will be held at the Kappa Alpha Theta house. Entertainment will consist of a skit and singing of Christmas carols. Refreshments will be served.
- * *
Alpha Phi sorority will hold an informal tree trimming party Sunday evening in the chapter house. A buffet dinner will be served.
***
Theta Phi Alpha sorority will hold its annual Christmas dinner at 6 p.m. Thursday in the chapter house. Guests will be Miss Martha Peterson and Miss Mary Peg Hardman.
Ankerholz-Tkach Pinning Announced
Alpha Phi sorority announces the pinning of Miss DeNean Ankerholz fine arts junior, to Mr. Stephen Tkach, college senior, Thursday night at the Alpha Phi house.
Attendants to Miss Ankerholz were Donna McCall, fine arts junior; Laura Lee Calkins, education senior; and Marian Jenkins, college senior. Miss Ankerholz received an orchid corsage and the attendants received carnation corsages.
The pinning was followed by a party at the Stable. Mr. Tkach is a member of Phi Kappa fraternity.
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Alpha Delta Pi sorority announces the engagement of Miss Joan "Mike" Turner, college senior, to Ens. L. Blaine Hardesty, U.S. Navy.
Phi Kappa Fraternity Elects Jerome Lysaught President
Turner-Hardesty Engagement Announced by Alpha Delta Pi
Miss Turner's home is in Freeport,
Ill. Her parents are Dr. and Mrs.
A. A. Turner. Ens. Hardesty is with
the U.S.S. Boxer in San Francisco.
He graduated from the University in
1952. His home is in Kingman, Kan.,
and his parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Hardesty.
Kappa's, Alpha Chi's Announce Pinnings
THURS. DEC. 11 AT 7:30 P.M.
MISS JOAN TURNER
Jerome Lyasught, college junior, was recently elected president of Phi Kappa fraternity for the coming year.
ASHLAND THEATRE Kansas City, Mo. - 24th and Elmwood ALL SEATS RESERVED
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority announces the pinning of Miss Mary Ann Deschner to Mr. Floyd Grimes, Phi Kappa Psi fraternity, Dec. 1. Miss Deschner is a fine arts senior. Mr. Grimes graduated from the University last year and is now in business in Kansas City.
Alpha Chi Omega sorority announces the pinning of Miss Cynthia Krehbiel, college sophomore, to Mr. Joe Schroebel, Phi Delta Theta fraternity. Miss Krehbiel's home is in Topeka, Kan. Mr. Schroeder, whose home is in Topeka also, is attending Washburn university.
Prices: $1.22 - $2.44 - $3.66 Incl. All Tax Orders for Tickets Now Taken At The
Other officers elected were: Richard Verbrugge, engineering senior, vice-president; Lawrence Mercier, engineering sophomore, recording secretary; Alvin Schmid, engineering junior, corresponding secretary; Lawrence Loftus, college sophomore, treasurer; John Greley, college senior, sergeant at arms; Robert Herzog, engineering sophomore, historian, and Marvin Weishaar, business junior, editor.
B. H. B.
Granada Theatre
Mr. Olson gave his well known gun shot opener for the party that left the guests with their ears ringing. Mr. Olson, a midget, a elown, two women roller skaters, and Mr. Olson's son, J. C. Olson, were guests of the fraternity at the dinner party, as well as rushees, the men's dates, and several Sigma Chi alumni.
"I'm just not ready to settle down. I don't want any beaus who are domestically inclined, either. All my dates are strictly for laughs."
This information comes straight from the horse's mouth-starlets Mary Murphy and Debbie Reynolds
There's no shortage of men in Debbie's life, but any of them would have to talk pretty fast to lead her to the altar.
Hollywood—(U.P.)Just about any young gent with wavy hair, a good line, and plenty of money in his jeans can tour the saloon circuit with Hollywood's most beautiful girls. But if he has marriage on his mind, the chances are that he'll strike out.
Ole Olson, nationally known comedian, and several of the entertainers in his troup that is playing in Kansas City, literally started the Sigma Chi buffet dinner off with a bang Sunday night.
Any Young Gentleman in Hollywood Can Date the Beauties, But Not Marry Them
Miss Murphy, who jumped to the screen from the package wrapping room of a department store and just landed her first role, is perfectly happy as a bachelorette and aims to stay that way for a spell.
Sigma Chi Dinner Opened With a Bang
"I haven't got marriage on my mind nor am I worrying myself to a frazzle trying to find the right guy," she said firmly on the set of "Main Street to Broadway."
Mr. Olson was made an honorary member of the Wollbybaggers, a fun-loving organization which has grown up within the Sigma Chi chapter. Mr. Olson is a Sigma Chi from Northwestern university.
"You can't be a careerist and a wife at the same time," she explained. "It's not fair to the husband. A woman should step over and let her mate take center stage, but right now I'm the one who must make the decisions and not the man in my life."
Mary shares an apartment with two other career girls and says they get along nicely without men around the house.
"Even falling in love isn't enough."
she explained in her dressing room
Debbie isn't quite so stunny opposed to wedded bliss. But she intends to make sure she gets bliss with her wedding ring.
HOW 'BOUT IT. WILLOW McWISPER?
IS YOU A GOOD TRAIL BLAZER?
AS A FIREFLY,
BY TRADE, I IS
SET 22 FOREST
FIRES IN MY
TIME.
FIRST BY ADD-HALL SYNDICATE.
12-9
POGO
WE MEANS IS YOU GOOD AT FINDIN' FOLKS? ON ACCOUNT YOU IS FRANUGHT WITH WOODSY LORE.
I GOT RATES,
IT DID PEND
ON WISDOM
IS LOST.
WELL, US IS 'BOUT AS LOST AS THEY COME.
YOU IS FOUND!
THAT'LL BE 79¢ EVEN... 50 CENTS PLUS 12¢ TAX.
DOGBONE! US AINT NO
FOUNDER THAN US WAS!
YOU GOTTA FIND OUR WAY
HOME.
THAT
WASN'T IN TH'
CONTRACK...
1 WANTS MY
$1.29
at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. "You've got to iron out a lot of big problems first. Then that only leaves you a few thousand problems to straighten out after you're married.
"Otherwise, you wind up with that I can't work because I'm so unhappy' stuff and after that the divorce bit, and that's not for me."
Like Mary, the pert little song and dance girl has her eyes on stardom instead of the kitchen, and she's also saving her old $100 bills for a trip to Europe next summer. So she's playing it cool with the menfolk.
Theta Tau Pledges Three
"Most nights I just go home, eat dinner and hit the sack," she chirped.
Theta Tau, national professional engineering fraternity, announces the recent pledging of Herbert Wahaus, engineering sophomore, William McKay, engineering junior, and Donald Creighton, engineering senior.
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Tuesday, Dec. 9, 1952
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
"Santa Is Much Too Slow—Use Want Ads—Make Some Dough!"
Kansan Classified Ads
Call KU 376
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Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be sent to you by mail during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univernal Office. Journalism bldg., not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five day days days
50 75 $1.00
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25 words or less ... 75c $1.00
Additional words ... 10c $1.00
BUSINESS SERVICE
THERE are only 10 days to replace Auto glass until Christmas vacation begins.
Auto Wreaking and Junk Co., 712 E. 9th.
Phone 954. 12-11
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, ePs. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Teen. Phone 1396M. MWF-U.
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360, 1199 Mass. tf
BEVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. tf
EXPERIENCED Typist. Term papers, notebooks, theses and miscellaneous. Mrs. E. J. Roscoe. 838 Louisiana, Apartment 4. U. ajuries. Phone 2775-7. tt
TYPING WANTED. Prompt, accurate service. Pick-up and delivery service after 6 p.m. and before 8 a.m. Phone 3157R. Mrs. Livingston. tf
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipments available for efficient service. Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. tf
TYPING SERVICE. experienced theses.
609 West 8th. Phone 1344W. Mrs. Hasl
609 West 8th. Phone 1344W.
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Theft needs are easy, and we can provide everything for fur, fln, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tt
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CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
inner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastry.
Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m.
until midnight.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves chicks, steaks.
Cakes. Free parking space for customers.
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
man buyers. William J. Van
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FOR SALE
TWO NICE blond Cocker puppies A.K.C. registration. Six weeks old. Sired by Arcadian's The Whistler. Dam Taffy of Lawrence. See at 345 Mississippi street, Lawrence. Will hold till Christmas time if desired. Mrs. E. E. Alexander. 12-15
CAMERAS. Leica model IIIC with or without coated Elmer 3.5 lens. Eveready case included. Phone 2674M. 12-11
CLARINET, Paris Selmer, Wood, Beecham
CLARINET, 7 rings, case include
Phone 26744M. **12-11**
TUX. like new; size 38; excellent con-
tainer. Worn only once. Phone. 34701.
34701.
SAX, baritone. Conn. brass lacquered,
with case. Phone 2674M. 12-11
CHEVROLET, 4 door sedan, $650, 1948
Stylemaster with radio and heater. Runs
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12.10
MISCELLANEOUS
RIDE WANTED to Mexico. Two exchange
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1851 12-15
Air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. midnight. Crystal Cave. 609 Vt. iff
RADIO and TV service-same day as service on all makes. Most complete stock radio parts in this area. Bowman Radio and TV 138 Vermont. Phone 138 for prompt service.
DRESSMAKING, forms, alterations, by an experienced European dressmaker. See Themis Zametno, 1633 Vermont (downstairs apartment). Phone) 1477M. 1-6
CONCOC SERVICE-B. F. Goodrich tires and batteries, complete lubrication service B. automatic transmission service. Buchheim Conco Service, 9th and Massachusetts.
TYPSHIP: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Penn. Phone 1396M. tf
TRANSPORTATION
ASK US. ABGUT airplane rates, sky coach, family days, round trip reducences. American Express land tours. Cunard and Matson Steamship lines. Call Miceman at the preservation Bank for 8th and Wase streets. Phone 30. **tf**
ARLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel. Divisional literaries. Phone Mrs. Lols Odaffer. 3661 Downs Travel Service. 1015 Mass. **tf**
WANTED
BOY TO SHARE apartment with two
application 19 W 11th Phone
3481M-12-11
STOP WISHING, start looking woman with car, age 25-45 needs to make $75.00 in a week. Permanent position. Best working hours 5 to 9 p.m. No parties, no canvassing. Write V. Biggs, Holton, Kansas. 12-11
BABY SITTER for 2 Siamese cats during Christmas vacation Dec. 22-29. Sitter gets runs of house and financial re-muneration. Phone 3198W. 12-10
STUDENTS interested in working new banquet service at Student Union for the coming year. Miss Harvey or between 2 and 4 p.m. Union cafeteria office.
LOST
MAROON SHEAFFER PEN. initials PAC.
MAROON SHEAFFER PEN.
Finder please call 900. 12-11
| WISEWATCH AT robinson gym saturation cracked. robbinson Gaugh, 1756J. 12-11
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Professor Performs With Chicago Group
Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice, sang again Monday night as soloist with the University of Chicago choir and orchestra in a production of Handel's "The Messiah." The first performance was Sunday. Before joining the University faculty three years ago, Professor Schmidt was one of the leading oratorio singers in the midwest.
LONGINES WRISTWATCH WITH no straps
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Annex E- 12-10
FOR RENT
ROOFS FOR MEN, newly decorated,
well heated, spacious closets. Garage
available. 938 Missouri street. 12-15
ROOBS FOR undergraduate girls in very nice house. Available for second semester. Very close to campus. Phone 3712W. 12-10
FOUND
ONE Pair of glasses at West end of Strong hall. Inscribed on case: Lovely Optical Service, Kansas City, Mo. Phone 3865. 12-9
PARKER PENCIL in front of Strong, 1066. Owner insists have by pay for ad.
Old Age Problem Told by Sociologist
Society is forcing members over 65 to lose self-respect and making old age a fearful experience, Nino LoBello, instructor in sociology, said Sunday in a radio talk over KLWN.
This problem of old age can be met by a reorientation of our thinking, he said. Modern advancements in science should help society form a constructive attitude toward old age.
"There is a shortage of clinics and social services devoted to the aged," Mr. LoBello said.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Dec. 9, 1952
GOP Brass Anticipate Conference With Ike
Washington—U.P.)—Key Republicans said today President-elect Eisenhower may confer with top congressional leaders soon after his return from the Pacific. ◎
It was anticipated that Mr. Eisenhower will give his legislative lieutenants a briefing on his findings in Korea, plus some inking of what he has in mind to improve the situation on the fighting front.
Vice President-elect Richard M. Nixon and Sen. Frank Carlson (R-Kan.), a top Eisenhower campaign assistant, said there has been considerable discussion of a get-together, probably in New York, soon after Mr. Eisenhower's return.
While Mr. Nixon and Mr. Carlson expected that such a meeting would deal primarily with the legislative program for the new Congress, other Republicans said a review of the Korean situation—as seen through Gen. Eisenhower's eyes—would be "inevitable."
This would be doubly true if the General, as a result of his visit, decides to ask Congress for increased funds with which to equip and train more South Korean troops.
Mr. Nixon, meanwhile, told reporters he is "sure" a majority of the members of Congress will support the next President's legislative
$50 Scholarship Offered by ISA
The Independent Student association is offering a $50 scholarship for the spring semester for independent students.
The award will be given on scholastic standing, need, and leadership of the student. The student doesn't have to belong to ISA to be eligible
Applications may be secured from the dean of women's office or from Ron Sammons, ISA scholarship committee chairman, at Battenford hall. The deadline for applications is Monday.
The winner of the scholarship will be announced before the Christmas vacation.
program, once it is formulated.
He indicated that Republican strategists are counting strongly on the votes of a bloc of Southern Democrats to give them an actual "working majority," since by count, their margin will be in 49-47 in the Senate with a similarly small, Republican voting margin in the House.
UN Airmen Bomb Reds
Seoul. Korea—(U.F.)-Allied bombers in round-the-clock raids have smashed Communist supply lines again today as ground fighting slackened apparently due to a Communist shortage of frontline supplies.
Allied Sabrejets shot down a Communist Mig-15 jetfighter—their ninth in three days—while flying fighter cover today for bombers on daylight raids.
The slack in the ground war, Allied officers said, could mean that the day and night. Allied bombings were pinching the Reds' front line supplies.
B-29 Superforts and B-26 invaders ranged deep into North Korea during the night to search out and blast trucks headed for the Red frontlines with ammunition and other supplies. Air Force crews said they destroyed about 160 trucks.
Superforts also hurled a night assault against an ore-processing plant a supply center, and a military staff officers' center.
Dive bombers took over the day shift. They ripped up a rail line on the West coast of Korea and dropped explosives into a transportation and supply center at Singe. At least six supply-laden trucks were wrecked and two secondary explosions were touched off.
Official Bulletin
Student Religious Council: 4 p.m.
Mvers hall B.
German Christmas Choir; rehearsal. 5 p.m., 306 Fraser.
TODAY
Stateswomen Club: 5:30 p.m.
Hawk's Nest.
University Players: candidates
15. p.m., Green theater.
Campus Affairs Committee: 7:30 p.m., 222 Strong, subject: Campus Publications.
WEDNESDAY
Lutheran Student association:
morning matins service, 7:30 a.m.
Danforth.
Jay Jane: 5 p.m., 9 Strong.
Phi Mu Alpha: 7 p.m., 32 Strong,
pledging ceremony for new members.
All acts required to attend.
Sociology club: 7 p.m., Strong An-
Chess club: 7:30 p.m. 20 Strong,
Froshawk: 7:30 p.m. 102 Strong.
Quill Club: 7-8 p.m. 205 Fraser.
Come and pick up copies of Trend.
THURSDAY
El Atenco: se reuniria el jueves a las cuatro y media de la tarde en Strong auditorium. Programa de Navidad. Que vengan todos.
Lutheran Student association:
Bible study, 4 p.m. Myers hall.
Deutscher Verein: no meeting.
Play cast meet in Little Theater.
Green hall. 5 p.m. Chorus meet in
108 Fraser. 5 p.m.
Red Peppers: 7 p.m., North College living room.
Christian Science organization: 7 p.m.
Danforth.
KuKu club: 7:15 p.m., 10! Green.
Student Chapter of American Society of Tool Engineers: 7:30 p.m.
Fowler Shops.
Delta Sigma Pi: 7:30 p.m., Strong Hall Annex F, room 3, Speaker, Joseph Garrison, member of Garrion and Gressor.
State Rep. Bentley Reveals Alleged $50,000 Graft Effort
Topeka—(U.P.)-State Rep. Howard Bentley, Republican of Kinsley, has charged that John Harvey, Representative of a Topeka architect and engineering firm, offered him a $50,000 personal payment if Pep. Bentley secured the contract for a multi-million dollar state office building.
Bakersfield, Calif. (U.P.) —A propeller from a B-29 sliced through a home here today, narrowly missing a family of five.
MP's Guard Prop After It Hits Home
Military officials were reported to have thrown a cordon around the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Cowle shortly after they told police the propeller sheered through a corner of the house, burying itself in the ground.
UNESCO to Show 2 Films
Two films, "A Time for Greatness" and "People Next Door," will be shown at 7:30 p.m. today in the Congregational church, 925 Vermont st. The films are sponsored by the Douglas county council for UNESCO. The public may attend.
Entomologist Plans Trip
Ellis B. Hayden Jr., graduate entomology student, will join a six-month expedition to the Bahama islands in Charleston, S.C., Dec. 18.
The expedition, known as the Van Voast-American Museum of Natural History, Bahama Islands Expedition, will make the first comprehensive entomological and herpetological collection from that area.
Although this is Hayden's first field trip of this sort, he has collected various groups of flies, and more especially, those associated with aquatic environments, while in the marines Oct. 1950 to April '52.
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STUDENT Union Book Store
Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
Dailu Hansan
Wednesday, Dec. 10, 1952
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
50th Year, No. 58
THEATRE
WILL AND LIZ—Will Shakespeare, played by Wilson O'Connell, chides Queen Elizabeth, portrayed by Bonnie Royer, in a scene from the George Bernard Shaw comedy, "The Dark Lady of the Sonnets," which opens at 8:30 tonight in Fraser theater. Also on the double bill is Christopher Fry's "A Phoenix Too Frequent." Kansas photo by Jerry Knudson
Two One-Act Comedies Open in Fraser Tonight
Fraser theater lights will dim shortly before 8:30 tonight for the second University Theater production of the year, two sparkling one-act English comedies. They are George Bernard Shaw's "The Dark Lady of the Sonnets" and Christopher Fry's "A Phoenix Too Frequent."
"The Dark Lady" first on the bill, has rarely been performed. It was last seen on the stage of the Old Vic theater in London in 1943. Mr. Shaw has a great deal of fun with a fictitious meeting between Will Shapepear and Queen Elizabeth which turns into a verbal bout.
The dark lady, subject of 25 of Shakespeare's sonnets, which are in turn tender and acid, is introduced into the scene as a means of Shavian comment on the bard's character. In England at the turn of the 17th century, brunettes were considered the most unlovely of women.
Wilson O'Connell, assistant instructor of speech, plays the conceived, flattering Shakespeare envisaged by Mr. Shaw. Others in the cast are Bonnie Royer, graduate student, as Queen Elizabeth; Patricia McGehee, fine arts junior, as the dark lady, and Charles May, college freshman, as the Beef-eater, keeper of the queen's watch.
"Phoenix" is the story of a beautiful Roman widow, Dynamene, who attempts to die by fasting in her husband's tomb—because it's more or less the fashion—in order to reunite with him in Hades. She is aided, abetted, and amused by her companion, Doto. The entrance into the crypt of a personable young Roman soldier, Tegeus, somewhat alters the widow's plans.
Cornelia Harrington, college senior, is Dynamene, and Bob Londerholm, college senior, plays Tegeus. Dorothy O'Connell, education junior, will play Doto tonight and Friday, and Mary Beth Moore, college senior, will play the part Thursday and Saturday nights.
Dr. John Newfield, director of University Theater, is directing both plays, helped by Jeanne Aldrich, assistant to University Theater. Stewart Gordon, college senior, has
composed a five-minute overture for two pianos and percussion for "Phoenix."
Pianist to Give Recital in Hoch
Gina Bachauer, Greek pianist, will be presented in a concert 8:20 p.m. Monday, Dec. 15, in Hoch auditorium by the University Concert course.
Mrs. Bachauer has been a favorite of concert audiences in Europe and the Middle East since she made her debut before World War II in Athens as soloist with an orchestra under the direction of Dimitri Mitropoulos.
Since that time she has toured in France, Italy, Austria, Yugoslavia, and Greece. She returned home, but when the Germans took the country she fled with her husband to Alexandria, Egypt.
Students will be admitted to the concert on presentation of their ID cards.
In October of 1950 Mrs. Bachauer came to the United States to give her first recital in New York's Town Hall. She was engaged by Dimitri Mitropoulos, conductor of the New York Philharmonic symphony, as guest soloist for the fall of 1951.
During the war years she gave concerts for the armed forces. In 1946 she resumed her concert tours and embarked and made a debut in England.
This is her third tour this year and she will play more than 80 concerts in six months in the United States, Canada, and the Caribbean area.
Ike to Listen To MacArthur's Plan for Peace
Aboard USS Helena —(U.P.) —President-elect Dwight D. Eisenhower turned an ear today toward Gen. Douglas MacArthur, saying he is "looking forward" to hearing the former Far Eastern commander's plan to end the Korean war.
Gen. MacArthur announced last Friday night, in a speech before the National Association of Manufacturers in New York, he had conceived a "clear and definite solution." He indicated he wanted to present it to Gen. Eisenhower.
The President-elect's interest in the secret MacArthur strategy pleased Gen. Eisenhower's one-time superior officer and military mentor.
It marked the first time, Gen. MacArthur said, that anyone had shown official interest in his way of thinking since President Harry Truman fired him because of his views on the war in Korea.
Gen. MacArthur had told the manufacturers his plan could be carried out "without either unduly heavy price in friendly casualties or any increased danger of provoking" a third world war.
He said, too, that a "change in conditions" had caused him to revise, in part, the blueprint for ending the war which Mr. Truman dramatically rejected as untenable 20 months ago.
"There has been a material change in conditions from those of 20 months ago when I left the scene of action, and the solution then available and capable of success is not now entirely applicable." Gen. MacArthur told the NAM.
Sub-freezing temperatures came to all of Kansas last night, but the statewide cold snap brought no
Weather
The original plan by Gen. Mac-Arthur which caused President Truman to deprive him of his command, called for economic and military blockade of the Chinese mainland, UN attacks on Manchuria and use of Chiang Kai-shek's National Chinese forces in an invasion of the mainland.
LAUREN CAMPBELL MUSIC HALL
needed moisture for the 1953 wheat crop. In spite of last night's cold, the temperatures have been averaging 5 degrees above normal for the season the past several days. Fair skies will remain over Kansas through
forecast called for temperatures from 20 to 30 tonight and in the 50s Thursday.
Thursday. The for temperatures light and in the
ASCHousingGroup To Go to Regents
The All Student Council housing committee drew up plans last night to meet with the board of regents and the senate ways and means committee.
Revue Script Deadline Friday
They are John Prosser, assistant producer, Beta Theta Pi; Max Murray, stage manager, Phi Kappa Psi; Charles Goldenberg, publicity chairman, Alpha Tau Omega, and Neal Anderson, business manager, Battenford hall.
Deadline for Rock Chalk revue scripts is Friday, Dick Klassen, producer, said today.
The script for the annual show, to be presented March 13 and 14, should be submitted to Klassen or any member of the Rock Chalk revue staff.
Eight scripts, four submitted by men's groups and four by women's groups, will be chosen from entries for the show which is sponsored by the YMCA. They will be judged by Dallas Williams, director of the University theater, University of Nebraska.
First place winners of both men's and women's groups will be awarded trophies which they will keep for one year. Both first and second place winners will receive trophies to keep permanently.
Plaques will be presented to other groups participating in the revue in Hoch auditorium.
Last year an audience of over 3,000 viewed the performance. Klassen said attendance had increased yearly since the show began in 1950.
About 500 students are expected to participate in the revue making it the biggest student production on the Hill.
"With the large number of groups reported to be working on scripts," Klassen said, "the show looks like it will be bigger and better than ever."
Man, 20, Killed In Cycle-Bus Crash
Federal History Emphasized States Neglected Texan Says
A motorcycle rider was killed today when his vehicle struck the rear of a Haskell bus early this morning.
The victim was Robert Eugene Webb, 20, an employee of the Kansas Color Press. Webb was driving his machine eastward on 6th street when it collided with the city bus which was crossing the intersection of 6th and Maine sts.
Webb was killed instantly. He was the son of Mrs. C. E. Williams, Reading, Kan. The driver of the bus was Albert Chandlee, 28 Elm st. No charges were filed against the bus driver.
The development of American history writings with emphasis on federal history and neglect of the history of the states was the central theme of a lecture presented yesterday by Fulmer Mood, professor of history at the University of Texas. His topic was "Some general historians - George Bancroft to Edward Channing."
Prof. Mood briefly sketched the writing of history during the Colonial period to 1824 and centered his lectures on the larger historical works of the period between 1834 and 1825.
This was the first of three lectures to be presented by Prof. Mood on "The structure of American historiography."
He spoke about historians Bancroft, Richard Hildreth, George Tucker, Herman von Hoist, James Schouler and Channing.
The second lecture will be presented at 4 p.m. today in 205 Journalism. His topic will be "Frederick Jackson Turner, sectionalist." "Pluralistic localism," the last lecture, will be presented tomorrow.
Anyone interested is invited to attend the lectures.
Fred Rice, college sophomore, was appointed to find out the date of the board of regents and senate ways and means committee meetings so the committee can present its case.
Members of the committee will spend the rest of the week working on individual reports stating the philosophy behind the housing project—the benefit derived from group living. Winifred Meyer, college sophomore, will talk to a sociology professor to get a professional statement concerning the assets of group living.
Jane Snyder, engineering freshman, who will be working out how the committee can work with the Endowment and Alumni associations in raising funds, suggested a letter be written to various universities asking how they have handled their own housing problems.
The committee is studying the housing report in order to be able to answer any questions the board of regents, senate ways and means, or any students have.
The committee urges students to submit suggestions, questions, or complaints to the group. The housing committee office is in the new south addition to the Union building.
Toy Drive Hits 1,000 Mark
"We now have collected more than 1,000 items, and the girls of the home economics department added them to their Christmas projects," he said.
The March of Toys drive got off to a slow start but has gained momentum the past few days, George Leimmiller, engineering freshman and collection chairman for the drive. said today.
Betty Clinger, education senior, said that several houses have indicated they will turn over toys received at their Christmas present exchange parties to the drive.
The Rev. Dale Turner of the Plymouth Congregational church said that he has asked 200 children in youth groups to give at least one toy. He said that he has asked the Lawrence Cub Scouts to do the same and to aid with door-to-door collections.
The drive, sponsored by the Independent Student association, ends Dec. 17.
7 Feared Drowned In Ship Collision
Rotterdam, The Netherlands,—(U.P.) The Holland-America passenger liner Maasdam collided with a German tanker today and seven persons aboard the tanker were feared drowned.
The 285-ton tanker Ellen turned upside down and the seven persons were believed trapped.
No casualties were reported aboard the 15,015-ton liner which was leaving Rotterdam harbor on a regular passenger run to New York.
The collision occurred in the Nieuwe Waterweg (new waterway) leading from the harbor.
Probation Officer to Speak
George Winter, Lawrence probation officer, and a graduate of the University sociology department, will be the speaker at the meeting of the Sociology club at 7 p. m. today in 11 Strong Annex E. Harry Crockett, Jr., president, will preside. Refreshments will be served.
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 10, 1952 Letters
Little Man on Campus
by Dick Bibler
MARRIAGE & FAMILY
RELATIONSHIPS
EXAM TODAY
G-50
"Hey, you in th' back row—no cheating."
Editorial Board Was Explained
A note from Dean Glasco of the ASC has been received by the Daily Kansan editor advising that a council "motion" was passed at the last meeting which read:
"The ASC requests a statement to appear in the Daily Kansan presenting in an objective fashion the newly instituted function and effect of the Kansan editorial board."
Says Mr. Glasco's note, "It was pointed out that several Kansans had presented the material in some degree but it was felt that the student body as a whole was not fully cognizant of the situation."
The Kansan board approved the editorial board on Nov. 13. The Nov. 14 issue of the Kansan carries not only a front page news story reporting the passage of the bill, but also an editorial which attempts to explain how the bill was passed.
As for objective treatment, the same issue of the Kansan carries the full text of the amendment which created the board. The text is printed below the editorial on page 2. That is an objective presentation in our minds.
We sincerely regret that the board, its function and its success are not clear issues to all of the students. We believe, however, if the Nov.14 presentation is carefully read, the function of the board can be understood. Its success will only be determined by time.
The Daily Kansan will be happy to supply back issues to any-one wishing them. —Roger Yarrington.
Supreme Court Hears School Racial Problem
The Supreme court took up one of the most explosive issues in American life Tuesday at an historic hearing on the constitutionality of racial segregation in public schools.
Two famed attorneys, one Negro and one white, are pitted against each other in the courtroom drama which climaxes a 30-year legal fight by Negro groups.
Before the high tribunal are five separate cases, all raising the same question: Does the mere fact of segregation put the stamp of inequality on Negro students, even if they are provided school facilities as good as those provided for white children?
The oral arguments will run into Thursday. On the court's decision—which may not come for several weeks—depends the continuance of the South's time-honored doctrine of "separate but equal" educational systems for the two races.
The intensity of the feeling which the court test has aroused in the South was indicated last month when South Carolina voters repealed the section of the state constitution requiring the maintenance of free public schools. Gov. James F. Byrns sponsored the repeal, asserting that the state must be ready to abolish
The first of the five cases to be argued arose in Kansas. This state does not require segregation but permits it in cities of more than 15,000 population.
its public school system if the Supreme court should require nonsegregation.
Other cases come from South Carolina, Virginia, the District of Columbia and Delaware.
either, white-haired John W. Davis, New York, one-time Democratic candidate for president, represents South Carolina. Davis won one of the most far-reaching decisions of modern times last June, when the court struck down President Truman's seizure of the steel industry.
Key Negro lawyer is Thurgood Marshall, 44, New York, representing the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
一
The "separate but equal" doctrine stems from the famous "Plessy vs. Ferguson" decision handed down in 1896. The court then held that state
To the Editor of the Daily Kansan:
I was glad to see your editorial "Library Index in Need of Revision" in the Daily Kansan because it assures me that some of our recent work and discussion here in the library is along the right track.
Library Director Promises Change
we have recognized that the problem you present is an awkward one for students and that it extends even beyond books on reserve. The same case generally holds for books in the reference room and books in other libraries on campus (such as Lindley hall library).
You will be interested to know that my colleagues recently started a program to correct this situation. At present we are in the midst of a project of adding a location symbol for books in the Reference room.
We have already agreed on a similar pattern for books that will be in our new open-stack Undergraduate library (in the present Reserve room). Since that development, which will get underway this academic year, will alter the character of the reserved book set-up, we probably won't try to give location symbols.
At that time we plan to take care of reserve books. The next move will be in the direction of books in other campus libraries.
In the meantime please always feel free to ask for help and advice at any of the public desks, and particularly at the reference desk in the main reading room. The Reference staff is there especially for this purpose.
Robert Vosper Director of Libraries
Short Ones
The new name for the upper portion of the Hawk's Nest seems appropriate considering the trail of coffee that is spilled there every morning by drowsy students.
Understand that the Taft-Eisenhower split was really completed when the Ohio senator scraped his "I Like Ike" stickers off his car windows.
---
Read where a Pittsburgh teacher invented a snowball gun. Wonder if it were for police or retaliation action?
\* \* \*
Let's hope the basketball team doesn't have the same high casualty rate as the football team.
***
The Pentagon considerately has abandoned the word "casualty" but it's doubted that this will help much.
Daily Hansan UNIVERSITY
EDITORIAL STAFF
University of Kansas Student Newspaper News Room KU 251 Ad Room KU 373 Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Committee of Collegiate Press Assn., Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, N.Y. City,
NEWS STAFF
Editor-in-Chief Roger Yarrington
Editorial Assistants Charles Bessel
Managing Editor ... Diane Stonebaker
Asst. Mgr. Editors ... Mary Cooper, Bob
Stewart, Chuck Zuegner
Max Thompson
City Editor ... Don Eaton
Society Editor ... Jeanne Fitzgerald
Sports Editor ... Don Nielsen
Asst. Sports Editor ... Clarke Keys,
Chuck Morelok
Telegraph Editor ... Phil Newman
Picture Editor ... Don Sutton
Victor, Paul Philip
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager ___ Clark Akers
Advertising Mgr. ___ Elbert Spivley
National Mgr. ___ Virginia Mackey
Circulation Mgr. ___ Patricia Vance
Administration Mgr. Tom Bonsignore
Promotion Mgr. ___ Don Landes
Business Advisor ___ Dale Novotny
Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or
month, with a cancellation fee (unless
published). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every
afternoon during the University year except
Saturdays and Sundays. Subscription periods.
Entered second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at
Lawrence Kan, Post Office under act of March 3.
South May Lead Senate Minority
segregation laws "do not necessarily imply the inferiority of either race to the other, and have been generally, if not universally, recognized as within the competency of the state legislatures in the exercise of their police power." — United Press
Several Southern senators are expected to lead the minority Democratic party in the 83rd Congress after the GOP capture of vital committee chairmanships in both House and Senate.
Foremost among the names of Senate leaders mentioned are Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas and Sen. Richard Russell of Georgia, a candidate for the Presidential nomination the past summer.
In Texas, Senator-elect Price Daniel issued a statement recently in which he endorsed Sen. Johnson for the post of majority leader in the new Senate. Democratic Senators Earle C. Clements of Kentucky, J. Allen Frear, Jr. of Delaware, Thomas C. Hennings, Jr. of Missouri, Theodore F. Green of Rhode Island, and Sen.-elect Mike Mansfield of Montana have all voiced approval of Sen. Johnson for the position.
the position. In statements, several said they were backing Sen. Johnson because they believed he'd be a "unifying factor" in the party.
Sen. Russell—who also has seniority over Sen. Johnson—probably could have the minority leader job if he wanted it. However, he's understood to have passed word to other Southern senators that he would support Sen. Johnson for the leadership.
Sen. Ernest W. McFarland of Arizona, present majority leader, lost to GOP Sen. Barry Goldwater in his bid for re-election.
Generally, the Democrats in the upper house are split on domestic policy with 16 senators, mostly Southern, backing Gen. Eisenhower and 19 in the middle.
Getting around to other Senate committee positions, Sen. Walter F. George of Georgia is ranking minority leader on the foreign relations committee. Seventy-four years old, he's the ranking Democrat in the Senate, having served since Nov. 8, 1922. His present term expires in 1957.
New Mexico Sen. Dennis Chavez is ranking minority leader of the public works committee which is vital to aid in reclamation work in many sections of the West including Sen. Chavez's home state, Nearby Arizona's Sen. Carl Hayden, 73, is ranking minority leader of the Senate rules and administration committee.
election. Democrats in the House were dealt a blow by the death of the House ranking member, Rep. Adolph J. Sabath of Illinois just two days following election to his 24th consecutive term.
The leadership of the Senate committee on interior and insular affairs is to be taken by Nebraska's Sen. Hugh Butler after former leader Sen. Joseph C. O'Mahoney of Wyoming lost in his bid for reelection.
days following election to his Bomar position.
Meanwhile, the ranking Democrat of the interior and insular affairs committee of the House is Rep. Clair Engle of California. The 39-year-old Rep. Engle is in ranking position because of the defeat of Rep. John R. Murdock, Arizona, for re-election.
Rules committee ranking minority leader is to be Rep. E. E. Cox of Georgia. Rep. Francis E. Wood of Pennsylvania is expected to be leading Democrat in the House Un-American Activities committee because Rep. John S. Wood of Georgia did not seek re-election.
Head of the veterans affairs committee minority is to be Texas' Rep. Olin E. Teague who will replace Rep. John Rankin, Mississippi's old war horse of white supremacy who was finally ousted from the House.
While he's mentioned by some Democrats for the job, Rep. Carl T. Durham of North Carolina predicted recently that Rep. Sterling Cole, New York Republican, would be the next chairman of the Joint Atomic Energy committee. Rep. Durham, who became acting head of the group when another famous Democrat, Sen. Brien McMahon of Connecticut, died last summer. Evidently trying to back away from the job, Rep. Durham has referred to his Republican rival as having "a very friendly attitude toward the atomic energy expansion program." —Phil Newman
POGO
THINK YOU COULD LEAD US TO FIND OL PORKPINE, WILLOW MCWISPER?
BEIN' A FIREFLY I WAS A GUIDIN' LIGHT FOR OL' "BRESH COUNTRY" DODD, THE HOT WATER BOTTLE KING.
AN' OL' DODD WAS ALLUS LOST.
HE WAS NOT! HE JES' LOOK THAT WAY...WHEN WE WAS ON A BIG SAFARI, I USE TO HEAT HIS BOTTLE AN' GIVE HOT-FOOTS TO ALLIGATORATS FOR HIM.
12-10 MUST. BY POST-NALL SYNDICATE.
ALLIGATORS NEVER GIT COLD FEETS, SO HOW COULD ...
HOW'D YOU LIKE TO TAKE OFF YOUR COAT, STEP OUT-SIDE AN GIT LOST?
COPYRIGHT WALK WELL
BACK OFF, SON... HE IS GOT YOU OUTNUMBERED IN THE AIR.
ALBERT IS UP IN THE AIR ENOUGH FOR ALL BOTH OF US.
Wednesday, Dec. 10, 1952 University Daily Kansan
---
Page 3
Navy, AF Blast Reds Near Russian Border
Seoul, Korea—(U.P.)—United States carrier fighter-bombers in their biggest air raid of the Korean war blasted four major Communist rail centers close to the Soviet and Manchurian borders, the U.S. Navy announced today.
The raid sent Navy planes farther north than any bombers ever have been during the Korean war. Some of the raiders swept as close as 15 miles to the Soviet Union border.
The fighter-bombers from the carriers Essex, Bon Homme Richard and Oriskanby of task force 77 yesterday blasted Hunyung, on the Tumen river, the most northerly point ever hit, Najin, 15 miles from the Soviet frontier, Hyesanjin and Musan also on the Tumen river.
Pantherjets, Skyraiders and Corsairs flying from the carriers in the Oriskany sea flew 252 sorties yesterday in blasting the key rail terminals in another blow against the Red transportation system.
One Corsair was lost. The pilot ditched his plane in North Korea, but was picked up by a helicopter
South Carolina Gives Segregation Defense
Washington — (U.P.)—South Carolina defended its segregated school system before the Supreme court today in an historic test of state's rights versus the rights guaranteed to Negroes by the U. S. Constitution.
The state, which already has taken preliminary steps toward abolishing its public schools if segregation is outlawed, was represented in the dramatic arguments by white-haired John W. Davis, the famed Constitutional lawyer who persuaded the court last year to strike down President Truman's seizure of the steel industry.
from the cruiser Los Angeles.
While the Reds still quaked from the pulverizing Navy raid, U.S.B-29 Superforts dromed to within five miles of the Manchurian border to slam tons of explosives on a military-industrial area at Yongpong.
On the ground the entire front was relatively quiet.
The B-29's met heavy anti-aircraft fire, powerful searchlights and Red night fighters as they swept over the important target.
The Navy said rail lines were destroyed and eight railroad repair buildings; two locomotives and 30 boxcars were wrecked.
No details were announced of the attack on Najim.
Paris—(U.P.)-Gen. Mathhew B. Ridgway said today the 50 Allied divisions now stationed in Western Europe are far short of the minimum necessary for defense against Communist aggression.
Allied Forces Inadequate, Ridgway Says
American Adm. Lynde D. McCormick, overall NATO naval commander in the Atlantic, said the massive "operation mainbrace" naval maneuvers in the Atlantic in the fall showed considerable progress toward assuring success in any new battle of the Atlantic.
Gen. Ridgway and Adm. McCormick made their reports to the chiefs
But, he emphasized, his Allied fleets need strengthening in face of Russia's reported fleet of 500 submarines builjt or building.
Scrambles at Wrong Time
Memphis, Tenn. —(U.P.) Three-year-old Gloria Miller turned down a dinner of scrambled eggs, saying "eggs are made for breakfast."
Campus WEST
For your shopping convenience Campus West will Remain Open Thursday Night Until 8:30
of staff of the 14 NATO countries. Gen. Ridgway, accompanied by his chief of staff American Gen. Alfred M. Gruenther, warned the chiefs of staff that the figure of 50 Allied divisions now ready to face a Russian attack is misleading.
Some of the 50 divisions actually are reserve divisions, Gen. Ridgway
Targets set at the Lisbon conference called for 25 divisions to be ready for instant action against any Russian thrust to the west. The other 25 were to be in specified states of readiness for combat within the 30 days after an attack.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday,Dec.10,1952
Bitter Allen Takes KU Against Tulane
A gloomy Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen, beginning his 43rd year as a basketball coach, left Kansas City Tuesday with a 13-man traveling squad for the Jayhawkers' season opener Thursday against Tulane and a followup Saturday against Rice in Houston.
The age-old head mentor said he fully expects this will be the most dismal season of his career at Kansas. Pointing out the lack of experience and size of his rebuilt squad, Allen was especially disappointed following Monday night's workout.
He will have the services of only one regular from last year's NCAA and Olympic champions for duty for the opener. That regular, captain Dean Kelley, also is the only senior in the starting line-up. In fact, there are only three last-year men on the traveling squad.
Seven men still are fighting for a starting berth, although five of them have been working with the
first five nearly all fall. Sophomores Larry Davenport and Jerry Alberts have running on the starting quintet for the most part. But Harold Patterson, a late-comer because of football and an injury, and Allen Kelley have been pressing hard.
B. H. Born, a junior, will open at center while Kelley and sophomore Bill Heitholt will get the guard nods. The rest of the traveling squad: Eldon Nicholson, sophomore center; Ken Buller, senior forward; Dean Smith, senior guard; Everett Dye, junior forward; Wes Johnson, junior forward, and John Anderson, sophomore guard.
5 Games Open IM Independent Cage Play
By DON TICE Kansan Sports Writer
ae independent intramural basketball season opened last night with 10 teams playing in all three divisions.
In the only "A" game, Steph Stephenson had a well-rounded attack, led by Bill Hoffman with 10 points. Paul Enos was high for Battenfeld with 8 points.
In the "B" division, Jolliffe and Sterling-Oliver played a close first half, but Sterling-Oliver's lack of reserves was apparent in the second half as Jollife went on to win 40-20. Richard Smiley led the Jolliffe team with 12 points.
In the other two "B" games, Dick Bradley, with 21 points, led the Know Nothings to a 40-10 victory over NROTC, and AFROTC I displayed excellent teamwork as they downed Gamma Delta 34-25. Gamma Delt's Charles Bether was high in that game with 11 points.
In the only "C" games yesterday, the Tired Five lived up to their name as they were defeated by AFROTC 42-13. Harold Finch, with 18 points, led the scoring for the Air Force.
TODAY'S SCHEDULE Robinson Annex
Independent "A"
5 p.m. Jim Beam-I.S.A.
Bobinger University
8:30 p.m. Phi Beta Pi-Kappa Eta Kappa
9:30 p.m. Oread-AFROTC II
Phi Delta Theta-Sigma Chl and Phi Kappa Psi-Sigma Chl “C” games post-
TOMORROW'S SCHEDULE Robinson Annex
Fraternity A
5 p.m. Lambda Chi Alpha-Sigma Alpha
6 p.m. Alpha Tau Omega—Pl Kappa Alpha
6 p.m. Apna Tau Omega-PI Kappa Apta
Mpa Tau Kappa Apta
7 p.m. Phi Kappa-Tau Kappa Epsilon
8 p.m. Sigma Nu-Sigma Chi
9 p.m. Phi Kappa Sigma-Delta Chi Robinson Gymnasium
8:30 p.m. Phi Kappa-Kappa Sigma (east)
Chi Chi Phi Kappa, Kel (west)
8.50 p.m. Kapra Chi-Phi Kappa Psi (west)
Sigma (chip)
9:15 p.m. Phi Kappa-Tau Kappa Epsilon (earst, court)
9:15 p.m. Phil Kappa-Rau Happ
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New York — (U.P.)— Fighter Rocky Marciano and writer George Barton have been voted unanimously the top ring awards for 1952, the Boxing Writers association announced today.
Marciano, Sports Writer Win Ring Awards.
Unbeaten Marciano of Brockton, Mass., won the annual Edward J. Neil memorial plaque for having contributed most to the sport during a year featured by his dramatic
Sports columnist Barton of the Minneapolis Star - Tribune was voted the annual James J. Walker memorial award for long and meritorious service to the sport.
capture of the heavyweight crown from Jersey Joe Walcott.
Barton, 67-year-old president of the National Boxing association and chairman of the Minnesota state
Gesundheit With Fractures
athletic commission, contributed to sport for a half-century as fighter, writer, instructor and official.
Boston — (U,P)— Philip J. Camerlenge, city assessor, sneezed and landed in the hospital. The sneeze brought about a recurrence of a rib fracture sustained in a fall.
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A Tasty Suggestion for Giving or Getting
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Wednesday, Dec. 10, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Newton Places Another Cage Star
The latest in a long line of Newton roundball players will go to Tulane university's center circle in New Orleans Thursday to start his first collegiate ball game and help the Jayhawks to open the 1952-53 basketball season.
Nineteen-year-old Larry Davenport will be one of three sophomores picked by Kansas' veteran cage coach, Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen, to fill the positions vacated by the graduating starters of last year's NCAA championship outfit. Along with Bill Heitholt and Jerry Alberts, the 6-2 Davenport is being counted on to fill a big gap in the Jayhawk basketball machine.
But the Newtonian, following in the footsteps of the Railroader's Bill Lienhard, is highly rated by a year-old dean of basketball mentors.
"I think that Larry is going to have a great future," the Phogger predicted this week. "Besides being a good shooter, he's a fine passer, moves well, and is a nice rebounder for his size." he added.
Davenport, who played in 22 varsity games last year as a freshman was considered as one of the best if not the best outside shooter on the conference and national championship team. His perfectionistic finesse prompted Allen to tab Davenport "poetry in motion" before the "1951-52 season was a month old.
But despite the fact that Dave, as he is called by his teammates, made all but one of the varsity trips last year and saw considerable action, he will go into the coming season with hardly enough varsity experience to be called an old hand at college ball. And, like most other sophomores, Davenport will have a lot of game time ahead of him before he will graduate from the ranks of the green hands.
Davenport has shown continued improvement throughout fall practice sessions. While he was thought of only as a deadly-accurate shooter last season, he has shown a new
aggressiveness this fall that comes as a welcome addition to the Jayhawk talents.
He lettered three years in high school basketball and two in baseball while playing for John Ravencroft's Newton teams. The Railroaders rolled to the state class AA prep championship in basketball during his sophomore year and lost in the finals both his junior and senior years. As a senior, Davenport fired away for a 16-point season average to earn first team all-state honors.
Davenport, who is majoring in commercial art, is amazed at the big difference between high school and college ball.
"Playing in a collegiate league like the Big Seven is much rougher than I ever thought it would be," he explained. "The competition is much rougher and it takes a lot more stamina to keep going."
Dave was one of two members of last season's team who were sent to Helsinki for the Olympic games as the result of money raised by the Governor's "On to Helsinki" committee. He and Center B. H. Born were given all-expense paid trips to the games following four warm-up exhibition games played in late June at Hutchinson and Peoria, Ill.
Davenport, Born, and Heitholt all played in the exhibition games between the KU team and the Peoria Caterpillars and were alternates on the Olympic basketball team.
Leisure in Name Only
St. Louis — (U.P.) The bill that would shorten the working time of certain city employees was placed before the Board of Aldermen by the right man—Alderman Raymond Leisure.
Post-Season Athletics Ban Removed From All NCAA Sponsored Events
The KU representative said that there was little discussion of the freshman rule and that it would be considered further in the NCAA meeting next month. He explained that Gil Reich of Kansas and Bill Rowkemp of Missouri, West Point transfers, completed their eligibility in football this fall since both played freshman football at Army.
He said that they would have had another year of eligibility if they had been members of a Big Seven freshman squad, who play a two-game schedule, but were ineligible since the West Point team played a full schedule.
Elimination of the Big Seven ban upon participation in NCAA-sponsored post-season athletic events enables conference teams and individuals to compete provided they have the approval of the school president, Dean T. DeWitt Carr, KU faculty representative for the Big Seven, explained today.
he said that elimination of the platoon system would "even up competition" since big schools are able to field two fresh squads and therefore can wear down opponents without the system.
Dean Carr, of the School of Engineering, said that the ban upon post-season football bowl games is still in effect since they are not sponsored by the NCAA. He pointed out that the conference at Lincoln, Neb., last week voted to support the NCAA program and the activities which it sponsors such as basketball and baseball tournaments and track meets.
Dean Carr said that the vote to recommend abolishment of the platoon system at the NCAA meeting in Washington Jan. 8-10 was unanimous. He said that two factors led to the agreement—the increased cost which results in fielding two complete teams and the inability for a defensive player to play on the offense, and vice versa.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 10, 1952
SALMONS
STUDENT ART DISPLAY—A display of student art in the Student Union cafeteria is inspected by Curt Harris, graduate student. The display includes wood carvings, paintings, and copper relief work done by KU
University Theater in Double Trouble
BY JERRY KNUDSON
Trouble has been coming in assortments of two for members of the technical staff of the University Theater's production which opens tonight in Fraser theater, because in the double-bill comedy presentation two sets, two wardrobe layouts, and two lighting schemes are needed.
But the technical personnel have been giving concerted effort for almost a month to convert those tribulations into triumphs. These are the students who are only names on a program to the audience. Although they are never seen on the stage, a major production would be impossible without them.
Robert Green, assistant professor of drawing and painting, has designed the sets for both Christopher Fry's "A Phoenix Too Frequent" and George Bernard Shaw's "The Dark Lady of the Somets" which will be presented through Saturday.
Prof. Green has composed the tableaus for the annual Christmas vespers for the past several years, but this is the first major play stage designing he has done.
"A Phoenix Too Frequent" takes place in a Roman tomb which calls for two pilasters, part of a ruined wall, steps leading to the outside, a
stone bench, and a marble burial chamber.
The setting for "The Dark Lady of the Sonnets" is on the terrace of Queen Elizabeth's palace, and is highlighted with a bannister and a few steps, and the back of a huge statue of the queen.
"The costume design for the statue of Queen Elizabeth is basically authentic with one of the portraits of her." Prof. Green said. He added the initials ER (Elizabeth Rex) on the arm of her gown, however, and a monkey in the pattern of her dress "for a humorous touch."
Allen Long, architecture senior, who did the sets for "The Morning Star," helped with scenery painting, John White, graduate student, and Dan Palmquist, instructor of speech, did the lighting.
Dick McGhee, college junior, is in charge of the new University Theater workshop located in the basement of the old journalism building. Kirt Walling, college senior, is stage carpenter and head of the stage crew which includes Dee Ann Price, fine arts sophomore, and Jim Wallace, fine arts freshman.
Beverly Dodds, graduate student,
is stage manager and will handle
props and prompting. Don Jensen,
fine arts senior, made some paper-
mache ceramics used in "Phoenix." Shirley Strain, college senior, will head the ushers.
Dr. John Newfield, director of both plays, designed the historically accurate Roman and turn-of-the-17th-century English costumes. They were cut, sewn, and fitted by Darlene Heberling, education senior, and Mary Evan Holte, college senior.
Bonnie Royer, who plays Queen Elizabeth in the Shaw play, doubles as charge d'affaires in the box office in the basement of Green hall where students may obtain free tickets by having their ID cards punched from 10 to noon and 2 to 4 p.m. daily.
Senate Probe Asked On Nevada Election
Washington — (U.P.) — Democrat Thomas B. Mechling asked the Senate elections subcommittee today to investigate the Nov. 4 Nevada senatorial contest in which he lost Republican Sen. George W. Malone.
Mr. Mechling told the committee that in some places fewer voters were cast for senator than in other federal contests; that more voters were registered than population figures indicated, and that in some precincts more votes were cast than the number of registered voters.
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Paintings by eight Wichita artists are on display in the Museum of Art and will be there through December in two galleries to the right and left of the second floor landing.
Eight Artists Show Paintings
Pat Rowley, former instructor in the Kansas State college art department, two oils; Oscar Larmer, '49, artist for Boeing aircraft, two oils and two watecolors, and Enrique Riveron, a native of Cuba, two abstractions in oil.
William Dickerson, director of the Wichita Art Association school, three watercolors. Mr. Dickerson has exhibited in the Mid-America show in Kansas City and in the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
. . . A timely tip for Christmas gifts. Smartly tailored leather-covered traveling clocks will keep you on time wherever you go are a handsome desk accessory at home or school.
Mrs. Betty Dickerson, '29, a watercolor and two pastels; Tom Dickerson, a student at the University of New Mexico, a watercolor; Robert Aitchison, vice president of the McCormack-Armstrong Press, two oils; Ted Hawkins, commercial artist and exhibitor, two oils.
The majority of the paintings are for sale, Prof. Raymond Eastwood, director of the museum, said. All are landscapes with the exception of the two abstractions and one portrait.
Student Art Display Exhibited In Union
Mr. Riveron, a cartoonist and caricaturist, formerly worked for Walt Disney and is now with Beech aircraft.
$7.50 up
Represented are:
A display of student art including weaving, watercolors, oil paintings, woodcarvings and copper relief, is being presented in the Student Union cafeteria.
The display is sponsored by Delta Phi Delta, art sorority. Many of the paintings in the exhibition have been returned from displays in various parts of the country.
Balfour's
411 W. 14th
The woodcarving and copper relief were done by Archie and Otto Unruh, seniors in education. The weaving displayed in the various panels was done by Elizabeth Marshall, fine arts junior. The watercolors were done by Mary Ann Forman, education senior, Tom Schlotterback, fine arts junior, and Sally Freeman, fine arts senior.
The display was arranged by Nancy Dennen, fine arts senior.
---
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Senior Displays Water Colors
An exhibition of water colors by Frank M. Hamilton, architecture senior, sponsored by the department of architecture is on display in the architectural library, Marvin hall.
The public is invited to see the colorful work which will be on display until Dec. 19. 19. The studies, done this summer by Hamilton during summer travels, are chiefly scenes of the west coast of California and of the Caribbean area.
In October these water colors were exhibited in a one-man show sponsored by the Allied Arts club at Fullerton, Calif.
"His scenes of buildings, docks and boats, and city streets," said the club, "are authentically decorative. The discriminating visitor will find refreshing stimulation in an exhibition which carries a note of youth plus extraordinary skill."
Carillon Program
The carillon program to be played from 7 to 7:30 p.m. Wednesday by Ronald Barnes, University carillonienne of the Carillon program. J. Lawson "Minuet in U," L. van Beethoven "Le Cou Cou" C. L. Daquin "Romanza" from "Eine Kleine Musik" W. A. Mozart Selections from "Hansel and Gretel" H. Ulmerdicken
TYHCOSEX
1. "Dance"
2. "Folksong"
3. "Prayer"
4. "Crimson and the Blue"
Read the Kansan's Classified.
YOUR EYE
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
---
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MORE for the Holiday
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Boston, Mass. $28.95
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Salt Lake City $22.25
Houston, Tex. $14.70
Phoenix, Ariz. $26.05
Plus tax. Rates even lower on round-trip tickets!
---
GREYHOUND BUS DEPOT
638 Mass.
Phone 707
a1C=01002
2021.4.18 40分
Wednesday, Dec. 10, 1952 University Daily Kansan
1
"Santa Is Much Too Slow-Use Want Ads-Make Some Dough!"
Page 7
Kansan Classified Ads
市
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid by mail during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journals are 5 p.m. the next publication date.
Call KU 376
Classified Advertising Rates
One day Three days Five days
50c 75c $1.00
1c 2c $1.30
25 words or less Additional words
BUSINESS SERVICE
THERE ARE only 9 days to replace Auto glass until Christmas vacation begins. Auto Wrecking and Junk Co., 712 E. 9th, Phone 954. 12-11
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Term. Phone 1368M. MWF-U
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360. 1109 Mass. **tf**
EXPERIBENCDR Typist. Term papers, notebooks, theses and miscellaneous. Mrs. E. J. Roscoe, 838 Louisiana, Apartment 4, upstairs. Phone 2775-1. tf
BEVENAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. tf
TYBPING WANTED. Prompt, accurate service. Pick-up and delivery service after 6 p.m. and before 8 a.m. Phone 037R. Mrs. Mvlington. tf
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment in this area amd our own equipment. Roman radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. If
TYPING SEEVICZ. experienced thases.
500 West 67th. Phone 1344W. M. Hr.
500 West 67th. Phone 1344W. M. Hr.
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are as diverse as anything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chill, homemade pastries.
Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6
am. until midnight. ¹³
CRYSTAL CRAFT serves choice steaks, sandwiches, mals, home-made pies and cakes. Free parking space for customers. ff
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
persons buyers. William J. Vance
Almen, 3110R
FULL LINE OF TREES AND ORNAMENTS
THE
Barteldes Seed Co.
804 Mass.
FOR SALE
940 PLYMOUTH, new tires, new motor,
adapter, two heaters, new clutch, new
generator. $175.00. Contact Box 4, University Daily Kansan. 12-12
TWO NICE blond Cocker puppies A.K.C.
registration. Six weeks old. Sired by
Arcadian's The Whistler. Dam Taffy of
Lawrence. See at 345 Mississippi street,
Lawrence. Will hold till Christmas time
if desired. Mrs. E. E. Alexander. 12-15
CAMERAS. Laica model IIIC with or
case included. Leica 2674M.
12-11
CLARINET, Paris Selmer, wood, Beeham
6127, 7, rings, case include
Phone 26744M. 12-11
SAX, bartone, Conn, brass lacquered,
with case. Phone 2674M. 12-11
TUX, like new; size 38; excellent con-
tainer. Worn only a few times.
34701. 12-10
CHEVROLET. 4 door sedan, $650, 1946
Stylename with radio and heater. Run
perfectly. Come at once to 1234 Oread.
12-10
MISCELLANEOUS
RIDE WANTED to Mexico. Two exchange
would save share expenses
1831 12-15
Air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. midnight. Crystal Cake, 609 Vt. tf
RADIO and TV service-same day as service on all makes. Most complete stock item is parts in this area. Bowman Radio and TV Vermont. Phone 138 tu prompt service.
DRESSMAKING, formalis, alterations,
an experienced European dressmaker. See
Themis Zannetou. 1633 Vermont (down-
stairs apartment). Phone 1477-1. 16
CONCOO SERVICE-B. F. Goodrich tires and batteries, complete lubrication service service, automatic transmission service. Bucheit Concoo Service, 19th and Massachusetts.
TYPE: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Penn. Phone 1396M. if
TRANSPORTATION
RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wichita every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Call Jim Sellers, 31013 evenings. MTW-tt
WANT A RIDE to New Orleans and back during the Christmas holidays. Will share drive and expenses. Please call Arnold Kottwitz, 2855 R, after 3:00.
Ike May Ditch Yacht and Shangri La
Aboard USS Helena—(U.P.)—President-elect Dwight Eisenhower was reported today to be giving some thought to getting rid of two presidential luxuries after he takes office.
They are the White House yacht' Williamsburg, and Shangri La, the Maryland mountain hideaway used President Roosevelt and Truman.
The subject of federal economy
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel for their friends. Phones Mrs. Lols Odafter, 518. Downs Travel Service. 1015 Mass. **tf**
ASK US ABGUT airplane rates, sky coach. family days, round trip reducers. American Express land tours. Cunard and Matson Steamship lines. Call Moss Gleeson at the national Bank for Mass. streets. 8th off Mass. streets. Phone 30.
WANTED
LEGUARD for Robinson Swimming Pool to work from 7-9 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Apply Henry Shenk, 107 Robinson. 12-16
BOY TO SHARE apartment with two
Location 19 W 11th W 12th
Phone 34811
STOP WISHING, start looking, Woman with car, age 56. Permanent Permission, Best working hours 5 to 9 p.m. No parties, no canvassing. Write V. Biggs, Holton, 12-11
BABY SITTER for 2 Siamese cats during Christmas. vacation Dec. 22-29. Sitter gets runs of house and financial remuneration. Phone 3198W. 12-10
STUDENTS interested in working new banquet service at Student Union for Miss Harvey for Ms Tomlinson between 2 and 4 p.m. at uni cafeteria office. ff
LOST
BLUE LEATHER BILLFOLD in Watson
Margaret Breinbock at 980. 12-12
Margaret Breinbock at 980. 12-12
MAROON SHEAFFER PEN. Infinitie PACL.
MAROON SHEAFFER PEN. Infinitie PACL.
Finder please call 900. 12-11
SWISW WATCH at Robinson gym satur-
died. Ronald Gaughan, 1758J.
Ronald Gaughan, 1758J.
12-11
LONGINES WRISTWATCH with no struts
longinel bad broken. Reward. 4 Strikes.
Annex I 12-18
FOR RENT
ROOMS FOR MEN, newly decorated,
available 933 Mosier street.
12-15
ROOMS FOR undergraduate girls in very nice house. Available for second semester. Very close to campus. Phone 3712W. 12-10
ANOTHER BIG ONE
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"PLYMOUTH ADVENTURE"
COMING TO THE GRANADA
figured in Gen. Eisenhower's continued shipboard conferences with his chief policy makers. In his campaign, Gen. Eisenhower preached frugality for all branches of government.
Operating a big sea-going, air-conditioned luxury yacht like the Williamsburg apparently would not set well with Gen. Eisenhower's theories of economy.
Another factor possibly influencing his thinking is that the next President is not keen about following so closely Mr. Truman's way of life.
Shangri La is located in the Catecet mountainains near Thurmont, Md., 75 miles north of Washington. Mr. Roosevelt established it during World War II.
Mr. Truman used Shangri La infrequently, but members of his staff like to take guests there in summer.
Gen. Eisenhower reportedly would like to have a small fishing camp much like Hoover's Rapidan where he could spend weekends. He probably will look for one this spring.
Read the Kansan's Classified.
HELDOVER THRU SATURDAY - 7 BIG DAYS SPECIAL PRE-RELEASE ENGAGEMENT!
TECHNICOLOR
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SIR WALTER SCOTT's Famed Novel
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ROBERT BENDER
TAYLOR TAYLOR
JOHN FONTAINE
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Dec. 12th CAPTURE THE
New PATEE PHONE 321
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Dec. 10, 1952
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Jay Janes: 5 p.m., 9 Strong.
Sociology club: 7 p.m., Strong Annex E, room 11.
Phi Mu Alpha: 7 p.m., 32 Strong, pledging ceremony for new members. All activities required to attend.
Quill club: 7-8 p.m., 205 Fraser
New Tax Record Expected in 1953
Washington — (U.P.)— The federal government now is taking from the taxpayers about $9.50 for each $1 of taxes collected the year the Japanese hit Pearl Harbor. That was 11 years ago.
As federal taxes have increased, so has federal spending. Both have established new records for income and outgo over the years without ending the series of federal deficits which rarely has been interrupted since 1930.
Federal taxes jumped nearly $15 billion from 1951 to 1952. The 1952 collections set a new record for the take of government from its tax-payers. The sum was approximately $65 billion. But that record is to fall when 1953 figures are in with an expected tax take of nearly $69 billion.
Navy Commissions Offered Seniors
Navy commissions are available to graduate and senior college men and women who have or are within 120 days of receipt of degree.
The Office of Naval Officer Procurement of Kansas City, Mo., will have an information team at the University on Monday for the purpose of interviewing interested students and to issue the application forms to those considered qualified.
This team, composed of Lt Carl B. Short and Lt Zelda Carde, will be in the lounge of the Military Science building from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
The general qualifications required for commissioning in both the regular Navy and Naval Reserve are that the applicant be a citizen of the United States, in good physical condition, and not have received an induction notice from the Selective Service system.
Interested applicants are requested to contact the team at this time. They will not return to the campus this semester.
---
Make it Merry...
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TERRILL'S
THURSDAY
Come and pick up copies of Trend
Froshawk: 7:30 p.m., 102 Strong.
Chesskaw: 7:30 p.m., 102 Strong.
Episcopal Holy Communion: 7 a.m., Danforth.
803 Mass.
Radio Players and candidates: auditions for "Bethlehem", 4-5:30 p.m. today and Friday, Studio A, radio station.
Lutheran Student association:
Bible study, 4. p.m. Myers hall.
El Ateneo: se reuira el jueves en las cuatro y media de la tarde en Strong auditorium. Program de Navidad. Que vengan todos.
Deutscher Verein: no meeting today. Playcast meet in Little theater, Green hall, 5 p.m. Chorus meet in 106 Fraser, 5 p.m.
Christian Science organization: 7 p.m. Danforth.
Red Pepper: 7 p.m. meeting, North College living room.
KuKu club 7:15 p.m., 106 Green.
Delta Sigma Pi 7:30 p.m., Strong.
A room F 3. Speaker, Joseph
Garanson, from a public accounting
firm.
ASTE student chapter: 7:30 p.m.
Fowler shops. Movies and refreshments.
Y's group: 9 p.m. Henley house,
"Are We Being Educated?"
FRIDAY
Game night: 8-11 p.m. Union Trail room, bingo, cards, checkers. Everyone invited. Sponsored by ISA.
SATURDAY
International club: Christmas party, 8-midnight, Trail room, Union. All invited.
Darby Asks Post for Kansan
Washington —(U.P.)—Harry Darby, Republican national committeeman for Kansas, said today President-elect Eisenhower should give recognition to his "home state" by backing Wesley Roberts for the chairmanship of the GOP national committee.
Capt. W. R. Terrell, professor of Naval science, announced today that vacancies still exist in both the Marine Corps officer candidate and the platoon leader's class.
2 Marine Classes Have Vacancies
In the former course, senior men or graduates take a 10-week training course at Quantico, Va., then go to Marine Corps basic school for a five-month comprehensive officer's course.
Visual requirements for the officer candidate course have recently been lowered.
The platoon leaders class requires two six-week summer training periods prior to graduation with no academic study during the school year. Men enrolled in either program receive a draft deferment immediately.
Sophomore women or those who will be graduated in June may enlist in the Marine women officers' training class. The training consists of two separate six-week summer sessions at Quantico, Va.
Applicants may contact Maj Herman Poggemeyer Jr., for further information or applications.
Reds Get Protest On Airmen Ransom
Washington — (U.P.) The United States is sending Moscow and Budapest a scathing protest against the "outrageous imprisonment and ransom of four American airmen a year ago, it was learned today.
The twin notes, scheduled for delivery today, represent this country's first formal indictment of the incident which plunged U. S.-Hungarian relations near the breaking point in the fall of 1951.
American tempers flared when the government had to pay $120,000 to ransom the fliers who were jailed more than a month and given a drum-head trial after Soviet fighters forced their lost plane down in Hungary.
Weavers
POI James.
Weaver's
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nothing will
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like...
Stocking Stuffer
by Charles of the Ritz
CRF
She'll love this glittering stocking stuffer - even before she discovers it contains a Charles of the Ritz lipstick in her favorite shade. Better have a couple of extras on hand as Christmas favors for well-wishers who drop in. Gift wrapped without charge.
$1.50 (plus tax)
Weaver's Cosmetics — Main Floor
The following interviews will be held at the School of Business this week. Interested persons may sign the interview schedule in the Business Placement bureau, 214 Strong.
Interviews
Today
Chet Baker and R. H. McCulley of the U.S. Rubber company will interview February graduates with any major in the School of Business for positions as sales trainees.
Sears, Roebuck and company will interview accounting, marketing and general business majors.
Thursday
Hall Brothers, Inc., of Kansas City will interview business administration majors and College majors for positions as management trainees, production supervisors, general office personnel in secretarial, sales, and merchandising. Also openings for creative positions such as lettering, designing, cartooning and verse writings are available.
Friday
Jerry L. Cowan of Owens-Corning Fiberglas corporation will interview February graduates in business administration and the College for the general training program.
Baby, It's Cold Inside
Concord, N.H. — (U.P.)—The New Hampshire chapter of the Refrigeration Service Engineering Society recently adopted a resolution to strip hinges and latches from discarded refrigerators. The action followed several mishaps in which children were trapped in abandoned refrigerators.
Ad Groups to Hold Party for Children
A roller skating party for about 100 Lawrence school children will be held at 9:30 a.m. Saturday at the Lawrence skating rink under the sponsorship of two professional fraternities.
Gamma Alpha Chi, professional advertising fraternity for women, and Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternity for men, are sponsoring the party as a service project.
Reckless Driver Hits Jackpot
R. Willard Doores, assistant professor of journalism and advisor of Gamma Alpha Chi, said the skating rink is being donated by the rink owner and transportation will be furnished by the Rapid Transit company.
LaFayette, Ind. — (U.P.)— Donald D. Parker, 18, was given a ticket for reckless driving. Fourteen minutes later his car figured in a wreck and police gave him another ticket —for reckless driving.
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Thursday, Dec. 11, 1952
FOR CHRISTMAS VESPERS—Robert Green, assistant professor of drawing and painting, and John Armstrong, instructor in drawing painting, put finishing touches to part of a set to be used in one of many tableaux in the 28th annual Christmas Vespers to be given at 4 and 7:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch auditorium. The program—free to the public including students—is sponsored by the School of Fine Arts. Kansas photo by Phil Newman.
40 Varsity, 43 Freshmen Receive Monogram Awards
Forty varsity letter winners were announced today by Athletic Director A. C. "Dutch" Lonborg. $ ^{ \textcircled{4} }$
Among the monogram winners are ten seniors who won their third letters. Five of these men who have been starters for three years are safety Hal Cleawinger, fullback Galen Fiss, center Merlin Gish, halfback Charlie Hoag, and tackle George Mrkonic.
The list of varsity letter winners includes:
A roster of 43 freshman football numeral winners was also announced.
John Anderson, Hugh Arnstrong, Don Aumst, Lester Bierley, Jerry Bogue, Michael Katz, Jeffrey Cleavinger, Joe Fink, Galen Fiss, Merlin Gish, Robert Hanlla, George Heimstader, Dennis Hesse, Charles Hong, Morris Leibert, Mark Hampson, Paul Leoni, Joe Lundy, Bobby Mayer.
Gil Reich, Clay Roberts, Jerry Robert-
tis, John Simons, Oliver Spencer, Jerry
Taylor, Arch Unruh, Dunne Unruh
ginnatile, Warren Woody, Wayne
Woofkil
George Mrkonic, Pat Murphy, Harold Paterson, Orville Pople, Dean Reagan,
Named for freshman numeral awards are:
Robert Allison, Robert Babcock, James Barth, Dale Birney, Bali Blasi, Richi Budrich, Beverly Bullard, Pressler, Dudley Spencer Carter, Robert Conn, Jim Curry, Frank Frank, John Fink, Lauterne Fiss, Jerry Fogle, Robert Heath, Leo Helman, Larry Horner, Albert Hyer, Albert Jaso, Richard Kramer, Louis Landers, Carl Lathrop, Don Williams, Nieder Don, William Nieder, Don Pfruetneuther, Gilbert Priuy, Norman Redd, George Rembsberg, Myron Rogers, John Rothrock, Smith, Stan Stringer, Richi Thornton, Darrell Walker, and Duane Wurek
Opening Night Audience Applauds Shaw, Fry Plays
A fairly large opening night audience in Fraser theater last night observed a tour de force by seven student actors challenging two masters of the English language, George Bernard Shaw and Christopher Fry.
By JERRY KNUDSON
Throughout a laugh-studded evening, they competently presented Shaw's "The Dark Lady of the Sonnets" and Fry's "A Phoenix Too Frequent," directed by Dr. John Newfield.
In "The Dark Lady" Wilson O'Connell, graduate student, was magnificently hammy as Will Shakespeare. Bonnie Royer, graduate student, was regality itself every movement as Queen Elizabeth.
Patricia McGehee, fine arts junior,
conveyed the self-degradation felt
by the Dark Lady. Charles May,
college freshman, played the Beef-eater with good-humored insight.
Dorothy O'Connell, education junior, as the comic female companion, Doto, was a genuinely funny character in "Phoenix." Mary Beth Moore, college senior, will play Doto tonight and Saturday.
Cornelia Harrington, college sen-
ior, was superb as the beautiful
widow, Dynamame. Miss Harring-
ton handled masterfully the transi-
tion from the self-pitying widow
Both plays will be presented at 8:30 p.m. today, Friday, and Saturday. Students may obtain free tickets at the box office in the basement of Green hall, open daily from 10-noon and 2-4 p.m., or at the theater after 7:15 p.m.
The two sets were prepared by Robert Green, assistant professor of drawing and painting. Stewart Gordon, college captain, captured the spirit of "Phoenix" in an overture which he composed.
Spring semester class schedules are now at the state printers and will not be available until after vacation, Registrar James K. Hitt, said today. The University bulletin, now available for 1952-53, merely describes courses offered by the University.
Schedules Out After Vacation
seeking to die to the radiant widow wanting to live and love. Bob Londerholm, college senior, gave the precise touch to the worldly-wise Roman soldier, Tegueus.
Reds Retake Korean Hill
Seoul—(U.P.)-The Chinese Communists, hurling their biggest mass assaults in two months at UN battle line positions, smashed to the top of Little Nori hill tonight for the second time in 20 hours of savage fighting.
An estimated 3,000 screaming Chinese opened attacks on South Koreans defending six key positions on the Western front Northwest of Yonchon shortly after midnight.
The South Koreans repulsed five of them before dawn but the Reds stubbornly persisted in the attack on Little Nori until they gained the top. The ROKs won it back this afternoon.
Just after nightfall, 500 Communists surged from their trenches on Big Nori hill one mile Northeast and again drove to the top of Little Nori, recapturing the crest beneath violent artillery and mortar barrages from their own guns.
The South Koreans had to withdraw an hour after the attack began. United Nations artillery fired a thunderous bombardment at the crest and the Reds replied with one of their own.
Front line officers reported the Reds were widening their arc of fire, indicating possibly they planned to expand their gains.
Today's attacks marked the biggest concentration of Communists on the front since Oct. 6 when the Reds threw 12,000 men against White Horse mountain and Arrowhead ridge on the central front.
ROTCs Drill At 4 Today
A combined Army, Navy, and Air Force ROTC review will be held on the intramural fields at 4 p.m. today as preparation for a federal review to be held in the spring.
The review consists of four parts: formation of troops, retreat, march in review, and presentation of awards.
Commanding officers of the three cadet branches and their staffs will be the reviewing officers and will select the best Air Force squadron and the best Army and Navy companies. The cadet commanding officers are Air Force, Darrell Kellogg, college senior; Army, John Musser, business junior, and Navy, Ed House, engineering senior.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Brig. Gen. W. E. Potter of the corps of engineers revealed other details of the super runway, 4,000 feet longer than any now in use at Forbes. Construction of the runway will start "early in 1953," he said at his office in Omaha, Neb.
Topeka—(U.P.)—A new 12,000-foot runway designed to carry the Air Force's heaviest jet bombers will make Forbes Air Force base here a major link in the strategic air command's global chain of bomber bases, the Air Force said today.
Col. Lynn R. Moore, Capt, William R. Terrell, and Col. Edward F. Kumpe, head of the Air Force, Navy, and Army ROTC units, will also be present in the reviewing box.
Jet Bomber Field To Be Built at Topeka
The Air Force band will provide march music.
Harold C. Urey, professor of chemistry at the University of Chicago and 1934 Nobel prize winner, will lecture on the origin of meteorites Feb. 6 in 305 Bailey.
Chicago Chemistry Professor
To Talk Here in February
His talk will be sponsored by the Alpha Rho chapter of Phi Lambda Upsilon, honorary chemistry society.
Military Talks Set For Ike in Hawaii
Aboard USS Helena-(U.P.)-President-elect Dwight D. Eisenhower, nearing the end of his historic trip to the Korean battlefront, arrived in Pearl Harbor today for high-level military talks before returning to New York.
This 17,000-ton heavy cruiser pulled into Pearl Harbor from Wake Island shortly before 8 a.m., HST, (noon CST) and was expected to dock at about 8:30 a.m.
Gen. Eisenhower will continue to New York this weekend and will meet with Gen. Douglas MacArthur to hear the former Far East commander's formula for ending the Korean war.
Gen. Eisenhower and key members of the administration who go into office with him in January, military leaders and staff members who have been leap-frogging across the Pacific by plane and ship will meet in Hawaii today.
There were no formal naval salutes, but the President-elect will leave the ship to a musical salute from a Navy band and he will accept a salute from a Marine Corps armored guard.
Military discussions presumably will include speculation about the nature of Gen. MacArthur's "clear and definite solution" to the Korean war.
The best judgment of persons close to Gen. Eisenhower was that the President-elect's expression of interest in Gen. MacArthur's plan did not mean he was considering giving the former Far East commander a post in the government or sending him back to the Orient.
Then he will parade in a motorcade through Honolulu, where 150,-000 citizens were expected to be lining the streets to cheer his arrival. The secret service insisted the size of the motorcade be limited.
Gen. Eisenhower told Gen. Mac-Arthur yesterday in a cable that he wanted to obtain "the full benefit of your thinking and experience."
Gen. Eisenhower and his staff, who began their voyage aboard the Helena last Friday at Guam and who were joined by more of his cabinet at Wake, wound up nearly a week of intensive conference yesterday afternoon, confident they had drawn up the basic blueprint for the next administration.
AtomSplitting Gun Built at Stanford
Stanford, Calif. (U.R.)—A new atom splitting "gun," which fires electron bullets at the highest velocities ever attained, was expected today to open new fields in atomic research.
And a 6-foot version of the "gun" built here by Stanford university is now under construction as a weapon against cancer.
Known as an electron linear accelerator, it was unveiled yesterday and is comparable to the cyclotron, synchrotron and cosmotron. Research scientists working at Stanford university's microwave laboratory said they expected it to expand atomic research.
KU Calendar on Sale After Week's Delay
The KU calendar, a project of the class of '53, went on sale today at several campus and downtown locations after a delay of several days caused by a binding shortage.
The calendar, which sells for $1,
contains 74 pages which include
26 pictures, 9 cartoons, and lists
of major activities for each month.
They are currently being sold in most of the organized houses, at the Student Union bookstore, Information booth, business office of the Daily Kansan, and also will be available at several additional places next week.
Bribery Charge Still Stalemated
Topeka, Kan.—(U.P.)A state representative's charge that an agent of a Topeka architectural firm offered him $50,000 to secure contracts for the state office building remained staled today.
A spokesman in the office of Attorney General Harold R. Fatzer said a letter signed by Rep. Howard Bentley, Kinsley Republican, may have arrived, marked "personal" for Mr. Fatzer, but that nothing had been received which could be discussed.
Mr. Fatzer was at Sea Island, Ga., where he was elected president of the National Association of State Attorneys General yesterday. His office said he was due Monday.
the office building commission chairman, Sen. Riley MacGregor, ordered Rep. Bentley's letter sent to Mr. Fatzer "for such action as he sees fit." Charles Marshall, secretary of the commission, said he mailed the letter Tuesday night.
Rep. Bentley charged that John Harvey had offered him "10 per cent of the total architectural fees, or roughly $50,000" if Rep. Bentley would help secure contracts for the $8,000,000 structure for Mr. Harvey's firm.
Thomas W. Williamson and Victor Loebsack, who employed Mr. Harvey two months as special representative for their Topeka architectural and engineering firm, have made no further statement since Mr. Williamson last Monday night declared "I believe John Harvey is an honest man, and it will have to be proved differently before I believe otherwise."
Mr. Harvey denied Rep. Bentley's charge as "ridiculous and unfounded in fact."
Morocco Outlaws Communist Parties
Casablanca, French Morocco — (U.P.)—French authorities outlawed the Communists and powerful Nationalist Istigal Moroccan parties today and expelled 12 Communist leaders to France.
The outlawing of the two parties and expulsion of the Communists climaxed a roundup of more than 1,000 Communists and Nationalists. The arrests deprived the Istiqlal and communist parties of their leadership.
The two parties had been accused by the French of "collusion" in bloody Nationalist riots this week in the French protectorate.
Weather
Nothing but blue skies over Kansas today. And weatherm说了
COPE 1923 WAN KENYA
that even though clouds may cross the state by tonight they prob- release any rain. Winds will rise this afternoon and evening. A weak cold front is expected to bring nothing more than brief cloudiness,
COLDER
COLDER. with temperatures
tonight around 20 in the northwest
and 30 to 35 in the southeast. The
forecast says it will be generally fair
tonight and Friday and a little colder
tonight and in the east Friday.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 11, 1952
Death in Traffic Strikes Swiftly
Death, when it comes in traffic, comes swiftly.
At 7:40 a.m. yesterday Robert Webb was driving his motorcycle down 6th street on his way to work at the Kansas Color Press. At the same time, two buses stopped at the corner of 6th and Maine streets. One picked up passengers, the other proceeded on its way.
At 7:43 the lifeless body of Robert Webb lay entangled in his machine, covered with gasoline and broken glass.
When he left his home yesterday morning, Webb was not expecting an accident. One minute he was driving down the street, the next minute he was dead. These things are not planned ahead of time; they just happen.
Traffic accidents are not selective, anyone can be involved in them. The only preventive is care. Care alone in driving your car is not enough. You must be cognizant of everything around you. A hasty estimation on your chances of getting across an intersection can cost a life, yours or the one you take. —Don Moser.
China too Dependent On Russia to Break
A so-called Chinese "third force" claims that Red China is so exhausted by the war that she is becoming more and more dependent on Russia and that Russian "advisers" are taking over both in government offices and industry.
This "third force" has its expression in a mimeographed sheet called "Freedom Front" and has its headquarters in Kowloon, Hong Kong, which is on the Chinese mainland just outside the barbed wire barriers to Red China.
It is a force which has opposed both the Chinese Communists and the Nationalist regime of Chiang Kai Shek.
Its sources of information are considered good, and therefore its observations are interesting.
It reports there is no such thing as Chinese "Titoism" at the moment, which might split the Chinese Reds from their Russian teachers. The Chinese are too dependent on Russia for that and are becoming more so.
The publication says that as result of Premier and Foreign Minister Chou En-Lai's September visit to Moscow, the Russians agreed to supply more jet fighters, Stalin tanks, howitzers and other weapons to enable new Red drives against the United Nations forces in Korea.
These drives, however, will not be intended as a push against Seoul or any attempt to push straight down the war-ravaged peninsula to Pusan.
Rather, "Freedom Front" claims, they will be intended to inflict more casualties of the U.N. forces and thus shake morale at home, particularly in the United States.
The publication said that because of heavy American bombing attacks against North Korea since last June, the Chinese have moved their North Korean headquarters to Mukden in Manchuria, with a field command post at Antung, across the Yalu river from North Korea.
The Reds, it is claimed, have suffered about 600,000 casualties in North Korea, and as result now are split among themselves as to future policy. One wing regards the Korean war as a white elephant, wants to get out and to concentrate on reducing Chiang Kai Shek's forces in Formosa.
Another faction, entirely under the influence of Russia, wants to continue the Korean conflict.
The Reds, however, it is said, still fear an attack by Chiang's forces on the mainland. Orders have been issued for burning of buildings and supplies in event of an attack-United Press.
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In The Editor's Eye
By ROGER YARBINGTON
We have found that there are numerous comments which we would like to make on this page that cannot be facilitated in either the editorial columns or in the Short One-type paragraphs.
Assuming the need is great enough, this writer intends to utilize these comments at regular intervals in this space and under this same heading.
The comments contained in the column will be confined to campus matters or news concerning the University.
THE BIG 7 ACTION on post-season games has proven very disappointing. To lift the ban on NCAA tourney participation but to continue to deny members the privilege of playing in football bowl games seems very inconsistent.
\* \* \*
The partial lift is, however, a step in the right direction and we hope the next meeting on the conference will see another step taken which will go all the way and eliminate the ban on bowl competition.
A CAMPUS POLITICO has paid the UDK another one of his frequent visits. He protested certain statements that were attributed to him in a recent Pach story.
- * *
It was suggested to him that he prepare a typed statement in duplicate the next time he wishes to go on record. The same person then turned to an editor and suggested that three reporters be sent on the next assignment. One would take the guy's statement and the other two could verify it.
- * *
It seems last spring's steel strike is still holding up the special pieces which are required before the buildings can go any further.
Ron Kull, editor, says it will appear just as soon as the Allen press can get around to it.
NOW THAT BASKETBALL is here again many students are going to be wondering whatever happened to the million-dollar plus gymnasium and armory that is supposed to be under construction in the lower southwest corner of the campus.
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to the chancellor, says the completion which was originally hoped for in 1954 has no doubt been delayed by at least one year.
米 晾 逸
The first issue will probably appear next week. The magazine began as a monthly publication but seems to have evolved into a bi-yearly.
SPEAKING OF MYSTERIES, some may be wondering what has become of the Sour Owl, campus humor magazine published by Sigma Delta Chi.
A KANSAN REPORTER received a call from a Pach person who stated that many of the things the reporter repeated in a story were spoken as "off the record" comments in the meeting. Her reporting everything that was said at the meeting was called the biggest "lack of cooperation" the party had ever experienced.
The reporter replied in her sweetest voice that if the person had no further news, she would like to bid him good evening.
Mail subscription rates; $3 a semester or $4.50 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 second class master Sept. 9, 1910, at Lawrence Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1870
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THEM SORCERERS GIVE A BLOKE THE 'DOG BLAKES.'
COR.
COPR. 1982 WALT KELLY
Senior Proposes New Plan For Jayhawker Salaries
To the Editor of the Daily Kansan:
Student discussion following the recent action of the All Student Council in approving salary increases for the Editor and Business Manager of the Jayhawker annual seems to have brought out a very important idea, namely, that if any financial compensation is to be given to the Editor and Business Manager of the Jayhawker, it should be given on the sole basis of a job well done in producing a reasonably economical and genuinely representative student annual.
Letters
Perhaps a method of putting this idea into practice is embodied in the following plan:
(2) But that such compensation would be given only if the Jay-hawker had shown a profit on the year's operations.
(1) That the Jayhawker Editor and Business Manager could be given compensation for their work, but only after completion of that work.
(3) Further, that such compensation would be given only as a
The effects of this plan would be to provide that the Editor and Business Manager could receive compensation for their work (admittedly some of the most time-consuming on the Hill); That such compensation would come only after the Editor and Business Manager had conducted the Jayhawker "enterprise" in a profitable manner; That the size of such compensation would depend upon whether the Editor and Business Manager had produced an annual which was economical enough and representative enough as to meet with widespread acceptance by the student body, as that acceptance was expressed through student subscription purchases.
The person who suggested this plan recommended that we see what response the students would give to it before presenting it for ASC consideration.
Bill Nulton college senior
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Topeka Journalist Speaks at Dinner
Jim Reed, executive editor of the Topeka Daily Capital, will be the principal speaker at the annual Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity, dinner Saturday night at the Castle Tea room.
An initiation ceremony for eight pledges will be held before the dinner. Journalism students to be inducted into the fraternity are Clarke Keyes, Richard Clarkson, Jerry Knudson, Jim Baird, Charles Morelock, and Dean Evans, juniors; Charles Zuegner, graduate student, and Bill Stanfill, senior.
Student Undergoes Operation
Joseph W. Terrill, engineering sophomore, underwent an emergency appendectomy operation Wednesday night at Ransom Memorial hospital in Ottawa. His condition this morning was satisfactory, according to his mother. Terrill commutes to KU daily from his home in Ottawa.
KANU Auditions Set For Nativity Play
Auditions will be held from 4 to 5:30 p.m. today and Friday in studio A of University radion station KANU for a nativity play, "Bethlehem," by Laurence Housman. Auditions are open to Radio Players and candidates.
Page 3
Mrs. Ruby Leneve Mota, script writer and producer, has adapted the play for radio. It is done in verse in the style of a Greek chorus.
Gamma Phi Beta sorority is again making an annual $100 Christmas award to some University woman "on the basis of scholarship and need," Janice Manuel, president, said today.
Gamma Phi Sorority Offers $100 Award
Any woman is eligible, and applications should be in the Dean of Women's office by Monday, Miss Manuel said.
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Boston 172.62
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TRAVEL AGENCY
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Trend, a magazine published by the Quill club, is on sale today and tomorrow at the information booth, the Student Union building, and Fraser and Strong halls. It contains the fall literary prize winners.
Trend Magazine On Sale Today
The 40-page publication is the "best in campus writing for the campus reader," Jerry Knudson, journalism junior and a member of the Trend editorial board, said today. It costs 35 cents.
The magazine also has a parody on Mickey Spillane plus light and serious short stories, poetry, and campus notes. It has been two years since the magazine was last published.
Besides Knudson, other members of the editorial board are Bob Londerholm, college senior; Wanda Strimple, college junior, and Philip Hahn, college junior.
Texas Professor Explains Historian
The first general historian to introduced an original design into the structure of American historiography was Frederick Jackson Turner, Fulmer Mood, professor of history at the University of Texas, said yesterday in the second of a three-lecture series.
Turner, first of the general historians to come from the Midwest, was dissatisfied because history was limited to the North and the South. He wanted to balance this and put the role of the West into its proper place in American history. Prof. Mood said.
Prof. Mood will present the last of his lectures, "Pluralistic Localism," at 4 p.m. today in 205 Journalism building
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Radio Players and Candidates: 4:5-30 p.m. today and Friday, auditions for
the Radio Players Festival
Lutheran Student Association: 4 p.m.
Bible study, Myers hall.
E Alteno: se reunira el jueves a las cuatro y media de la tarde en Strong auditorium. Programa de Navidad. Que ven todos.
Deutscher Verenin: no meeting today.
John Hahn: basketball ball and chorus in 306 Fraser, 9p.m.
Christian Science organization: 7 p.m.
Danforth
Red Peppers: 7 p.m., North College living room.
Delta Sigma Pi 7:30 p.m. Strong An-
number of public accounting, speaker, spee-
chers.
ASTE Student Chapter; 7:30 p.m.
Fourier video movie.
Ys' Group: 9 p.m. Henley House—Are We Being Educated?
University Daily Kansan
**Game Night:** 8-11, Trail Room Union,
bingo cards, checkers, Everyone in
view, and ISA.
FRIDAY
Special Hillel Chanukah service: 7:20
p. Danforth chapel. (This is correct mea-
ter.)
SATURDAY
Three out of four traffic accidents happen in clear weather on dry roads.
Hillel Chanukah party 3 p.m. First Methodist church, 1946 Vermont.
International Club: Christmas party,
– midnight Trail room, Union. All
invited.
SUNDAY
SUNDAY,
Hillel Chanukah Party
December 14,3 p.m.
First Methodist Church
Thursday, Dec. 11, 1952
EVERYONE WELCOME
946 Vt.
One of Year's Best Musicals Given by University Chorus
By KEN COY
Hoch auditorium, decked in night, was the scene of one of grams this year.
It was the concert of the 250-voice University chorus, directed by Clayton Krehbiel, assistant professor of music education. Highlight of the concert of Christmas music was the singing of "A Stopwatch and an Ordinance Map."
The Women's chorus sang "Litanies a la Vierge Noire" by Poulenc. They were accompanied by Mrs. Marian C. Replogle, organ.
This number was sung by the Men's chorus accompanied by kettle drums. The timpaniists were P. K. Worley, education junior and Richard Chatelain, college freshman.
The combined groups sang three
its new Christmas decorations last the most outstanding musical pro-
carols by Warlock, and started the program with the spirited "Lift Up Your Heads Ye Mighty Gates," by Leisring.
One of the three carols by Warlock was "Balalawel," which was perhaps the most beautiful number on the program. Judith Tate, fine arts sophomore, sang the solo part with a great deal of feeling, blending perfectly with the chorus.
Dale Moore, fine arts junior, substituted as soloist for Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice, in the final number on the program, "Fantasia on Christmas Carols," by R. Vaughn-Williams. Prof. Shmidt was ill and unable to sing in the concert.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday,Dec.11,1952
KU
Opens Cage Season
Jayhawks Face Tulane In New Orleans Tonight
By CHUCK MORELOCK
By CHUCK MORELOCK
Kansan Assistant Sports Editor
A graduation and injury-battered Kansas basketball team opens defense of its NCAA championship title by meeting the Green Wave of Tulane at New Orleans tonight.
The green Jayhawker squad, which has only one starter returning from the great 1952 team, Captain Dean Kelley, will face a Tulane team that has posted an 88 point average in its first three games of the 1952-53 season. The Green Wave has swamped Birmingham Southern, 91-42; Southwestern Tennessee, 94-32, and Pensacola Navy, 79-49.
Tulane will field an experienced squad which possesses tremendous speed and great ability in executing the fast break. Although the team is comprised entirely of sophomores and juniors, most of them saw considerable action last year which saw the Green Wave post a 7-7 conference record and 12-12 season mark. The Cliff Wells-coached crew is one of the favorites to take the Southeastern conference crown this season.
Kansas prospects for a successful '52-'53 campaign, which were dim following the loss of five key men from the 1952 Big Seven and NCAA championship club, became more gloomy this fall with the loss of Charley Hoag and LaVannes Squires. Hoag was forced to undergo an operation on his football-battered knee and will probably be unavailable until February. The speedy Oak Park, Ill., senior was the sparkplug of the 1952 titleholders and has been called the "greatest sixth man in college basketball."
Squires, clever Wichita forward, contracted TB last week and had to withdraw from school. He played briefly last year, and although he did not letter, he was rated a top prospect because of his ball handling and all-around floor play.
Football star Gil Reich, one of the mainstays of the 1950-51 West Point basketball team, broke a finger in the Missouri football game and won't have the cast off until Saturday. He is expected to start cage drills Monday and may be available for the Big Seven preseason tournament in Kansas City Dec. 26-30.
Probable starters for the Jayhawkers tonight are Larry Davenport and Jerry Alberts at forward, B. H. Born, center, and Dean Kelley and Bill Heitolt, guards. Born, 6 foot 9 inch Medicine Lodge junior, represents the only real height on the starting lineup. Heitolt is next at $6-3\frac{1}{2}$, followed by Davenport and Alberts at 6-2 and Kelley at 5-11.
Kelley, the only veteran in the lineup, is a fast, clever, ball handler and is an excellent defender. He developed rapidly last season after seeing little action in 1951 and received national recognition by being named to the NCAA all-tournament squad.
Only 12 DAYS LEFT
Born, who played briefly behind all-American Clyde Lovellette last year, is being named the key man in the Kansas attack. He showed promise last year by his defending and ball handling, and could provide the difference between a first division and cellar finish.
Till Christmas
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In
LAWRENCE
Heitholt, Davenport, and Alberts,
all sophomores, are outstanding
prospects but have little varsity
experience. Heitholt, a fast, aggressive battler, is a good rebounder and a good scorer.
Davenport, all-state at Newton in 1951, showed unusual poise for a freshman in 1952 and made a number of middle and long distance set shots in the clutch. He showed promise as a defender and playmaker.
Harold Patterson and Allen Kelley have been pressing for starting berths in practice sessions this week. Patterson, all-American junior college center at Garden City, has been shifted to forward and is an excellent rebounder and hustler. Kelley owns good speed and is a good hustler on the floor and around the backboards.
Alberts, the greenest man on the starting lineup, broke into only nine varsity games last season. He is a good jumper and is a potential outside shooting threat.
Tulane probably will open with Dick Brennan and Pat Prowen, forwards, Fritz Schultz, center, and Dick McGowan and Hal Cervini, guards. In addition to having great speed, all are good rebounders and dangerous scoring threats.
The Starting Five
The rest of the KU traveling squad includes Eldon Nicholson, center, Ken Buller, forward, Dean Smith, guard, Everett Dye, forward, John Anderson, guard, and Wes Johnson, forward.
A.
NASHVILLE
N.Y.
KANSAS STARTERS—Left to right are Larry Davenport, forward; Capt. Dean Kelley, guard; B. H. Born, center. Bill Heilholt, guard, and Jerry Alberts, forward.
1984
Illini Earn Raves By Edging Loyola of Chicago in Opener
New York—(U.P.)-The first returns are in, and it looks like it's true what they said about Illinois.
YOUR EYES
The Illini, with a 6-foot, 9-inch center named John (Red) Kerr who is expected to be one of the nation's best players, were hailed as the country's No. 1 team before they appeared in a single game. They finally made their debut last night and made good on their "rave notices" by thrashing Loyola of Chicago, 71 to 57.
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Loyola, a green but capable crew that had won three straight games, found itself trailing from the opening moments and simply overpowered in scoring and rebounding.
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The gigantic Kerr finished the night with a whipping 34 points on 14 field goals and six free throws, while Irv Bemoras led his assistants with 17 points. Bob Collins was tops for Loyola with 18. Loyola made one spirited drive, pulling up to a 50-47 deficit at the end of the third period. But the Illini went on a 21-point spree in the fourth quarter to win in a breeze.
CAMERAS - PROJECTORS - EXPOSURE METERS VIEW MASTERS - GREETING CARDS
Ernie Beck of Pennsylvania, like Kerr, rated an outstanding all-America candidate, almost matched Kerr's point total as he scored 33 points to lead his mates to an 85-73 victory over Muhlenberg. He got 10 of those points within a four-minute space during the fourth quarter to bring Penn from one point behind into a 77-67 lead.
LaSale, the nation's No. 2 ranked team, had no trouble at all in gaining its third win of the year, walloping Albright, 101-63. The Oklahoma Aggies, ranked fifth nationally, racked up their fourth straight win, 68-57, over Creighton.
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Page 5
Three Independent 'A' Games Mark IM Card
By DON TICE
ansan Sports Writer
Only three Independent "A" intramural schedule.
A last-half scoring spree by Larry Kravitz enabled Kappa Eta Kappa to defeat Phi Beta Pi 29-26. The Phi Beta's led 11-10 at the half, but Kravitz made 11 points in the last half to lead the Kappa Eta Kappa rally. He was high man in the game with 15 points, followed by Phi Beta's Kendrick Davidson with 12.
John Perry scored 13 points to lead the AFROTC II team to a 36-29 victory over Oread hall. The Air Force featured good ball handling to keep Oread on the defensive most of the time.
The Jim Beam quintet scored 33 points in the first half as they went on to defeat ISA 38-24. Bob Trego scored 8 points to lead the Jim Beam attack.
TODAY'S SCHEDULE
BORINSON ANNEY
ROBINSON ANNES
Fertility ("A")
games were played yesterday in
Fragranty LamBla Ch1 Alpha-Sigma Alpha Epsilon
6 p.m. Alpha Tau Omega-P1 Kappa Alpha
7 p.m. Phi Kappa-Tau Kappa L...on
8 p.m. Sigma Nu-Sigma Chi
9 p.m. Phi Kappa Sigma-Delta Chi
**ROBINING** *SENSUM*
*FRIEDRICKLY*.
8:30 p.m. Phl Kappa-Kappa Sigma (E)
8:30 p.m. Sigma Chi-Phl Kappa Psi (W)
9:15 p.m. Pl Kappa Alpha-Tau Kappa
9:15 p.m. Alpha Kappa Psi-Delta Chi (W)
19.50 p.m.
(W)
TOMORROW'S SCHEDULE
ROBINSON ANNEX
Independent "A"
4 p.m. Sterling-Oliver-Don Henry
4 p.m. Pearson-Jollery-Lou
4 p.m. Laura Chance
7 p.m. YMCA-Theta Tau
9 p.m. Optimests-Skyliners
9 p.m. Hodder-Pharmacy Five
ROBINSON GYMNASIUM
m
Fraternity "R"
8:15 p.m. Sigma Nu-Thета Chi (E)
8:15 p.m. Sigma Alba Epsilon-Sigma
P₁ (w)
9:15 p.m. Triangle-Sigma Phi Epsilon
Independent "B"
9:15 p.m. Stephenson-East Side (E)
Three members of the University's Big Seven Conference indoor and outdoor championship track team won positions on the 1952 all-American track and field team selected by the NCAA track and field rules committee.
3 Kansans Place on NCAA Track Team
Herb Semper and Wes Sante made the team as 5,000-meter runners and Bob DeVinney as a 400 meter hurdler.
Herb Semper, the Forest Park, Ill., speedster, holds just about every Big Seven two-mile mark and was a standout miler in addition to winning the national four-mile cross-country run two years in a row. He's been termed by Track Coach Bill Easton "the best man I ever handled."
Wes Santee was the toast of the Kansas and Drake relays last spring. In addition to being a standout performer with the indoor and outdoor teams. He qualified for the Olympic team in the 5,000 meters but never got past the qualifying round at Helsinki. He hopes to return to the Olympics in 1956.
DeVinney, a 1952 senior, is one of the finest hurdlers ever to come to Kansas. He captained the 1952 team and was a versatile athlete,
able to broad jump and run the dashes from the 100 to the 440- yard events.
Phi Delts Win 'Sexy' Contest
Phi Delta Theta fraternity won the "battle of the sexes" football game Wednesday by defeating Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority 6-0.
The Phi Delts scored their touchdown in the fourth quarter on a 15-yard pass from Dick Sandifer to Larry Greiner. The Kappas threatened only once when they moved to the Delt 20 yard line in the last quarter.
Rules for the bizarre contest were altered somewhat from the ordinary touch football regulations.
THE BUS (Adv.)
by Bibler
Now, you may as well stop pouting, Reginald. You can
sit on the new husses every day.
Along the WAYHAWKER trail
By DON NIELSEN Kansan Sports Editor
The Jayhawks put an international title on the line tonight in the season's first basketball scrap, but Coach F. C. Allen is not the least bit optimistic about the results.
The Phogger has his reasons, though. The Jayhawks are a poor risk for second or third in the conference. Kansas State, according to all indications is a cinch for first in the league, while second is halfway conceded to Missouri or Colorado. Other loop teams which looked pretty sharp in the final game are with both ran over South Dakota State in its opener, 70-47, and Nebraska, which defeated South Dakota, 65-53.
These teams probably should not be judged too hastily in the basis of their first games, but the fact that so many of the Big Seven
KU
teams started their seasons with wins, that the conference looks nearly as tough as the Big Ten this year.
Therefore, a win by the Jayhawks tonight could show that they are still very much in the running in the conference. A loss would not necessarily be soul-shattering, however, since the Green Wave of Tulane is one of the toughest teams in the Southwest conference. The outcome of tonight's game might well show the relative merits of the two conferences.
Actually, the Kansas team which will hit the court tonight will bear little resemblance to last year's championship squad, since only one of the starting five, captain Dean Kelley, is a starter this year. It will, however, be a team fairly well representative of Big Seven basketball.
University Daily Kansan
Gay Books for Your Christmas List
There Are Ladies Present Helen Hokinson
Cartoons of Cobean
Come As You Are Abner Dean
New Yorker Album
Monster Rally Charles Addams
How to Travel Incognito Ludwig Bemelmans
Ill Tempered Clavichord Perleman
Gamesmanship, Lifemanship,
One-Upmanship
Stephen Potter
A For the Ark Roger Duvoisin
Drop in and see them
THE BOOK NOOK
Thursday, Dec. 11, 1952
1021 Mass. Tel. 666
166 Golfers Enter Miami Competition To Wrest Title from Slammin' Sam
Miami, Fla.—(U.P.)—A field of 166, including nine former champions but not defending champion Sammy Snead, was scheduled to tee off today in the first round of the annual $10,000 Miami open golf tournament.
Snead, along with U.S. open champion Julius Boros, passed up this four-day competition at the palm-studded Miami spring course in order to make a movie in Hollywood, Calif.
In their absence, E. J. (Dutch) Harrison, the veteran "Arkansas traveler" was a slight favorite. Harrison won this tournament in 1944 and last week showed that he is in top form for the start of the winter tournament trail by winning the Havana open in Cuba.
Other former champions entered are Willie Klein, Tommy Armour, Johnny Revolta, Steve Warga, Henry Picard, amateur Frank Stranahan, and Freddie Haas. Haas is the co-holder of the tournament record of 264, a mark that is considered safe this year since the course has been lengthened for this renewal. Haas set his mark in 1949 when he and Bob Hamilton tied after four rounds, Haas going on to win the title in a playoff.
Acacia 'Thinclads Run Time Trials
The Acacia "cross-country, relay team" started trial trials yesterday in preparation for their 13-mile race against Wes Santee, varsity distance runner, starting at 2 p.m.
Santee, who expects to average six minutes per mile in the jaunt from Tonganoxie to Lawrence, said he thought he could defeat his 25 fraternity brothers if they didn't average over three minutes per man in their half-mile stints.
In their time trials yesterday, four Acaians ran 880's under the three minute mark, while two others ran slightly over.
When asked how he would run the race, Santee said, "If I win, it will be on strategy, so I'm not telling anyone."
Farrel Schell, Acacia president, said, "I think we can beat Wes, but we're going to have to do a lot of work before Saturday.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Dec. 11, 1952
Religious Notes
Wesley Foundation
Westminster Foundation
Communion service will be held Sunday at the Wesley foundation, First Methodist church, 9th and Vermont streets. Members may come any time between 5:30 and 7 p.m. No supper will be served.
Westminster foundation members and foreign students will join their sponsors, Dr. and Mrs. John Patton, in Christmas decorating, a tree lighting ceremony, and a supper at 5 p.m. Friday in Westminster house, 1221 Oread ave. Frances Hanna college sophomore, is in charge of arrangements.
Canterbury Association
Tom Regnary, college senior, will speak on "The Early English Church" at a meeting of the Canterbury association Sunday at the Episcopal church, 1011 Vermont st. His talk will follow Holy Communion at 9 a.m., and breakfast and a business meeting in the rectory at 9:30 a.m.
Hillel Foundation
The Festival of Lights celebration, Chanukah, will be held at 3 p.m. Sunday by the Hillel foundation at the Methodist church, 946 Vermont st. Dr. Joseph Nospitz, chief psychiatrist of the children's section, Topeka State hospital, will speak on "Modern Aspects of Chanukah."
The program also will include kindling of the Chanukah lights by Dr. Noshnitz and Sam Wilen, Hillel president; "The Story of Chanukah," a play presented by children of the Jewish Sunday school; Chanukah hymns; "The Pillars of Faith," a skit presented by Hillel members; Chanukah refreshments, and folk dancing.
Congregational Youth
A special Chanukah service will be held at 7:20 p.m. Friday in Danforth chapel.
Maj. Karl Limbacher, Lawrence serviceman recently returned from overseas, will speak on "What's Happening in Korea" to the Congregational Youth group Sunday at the Congregational church, 925 Vermont st. His talk will follow a supper at 5:30 p.m. and a worship service.
Roger Williams Fellowship
Tom Shay, instructor in speech, will present a dramatic Christmas reading, and Karolyn Holm, education senior, and Kathryn Cook, nursing junior, will sing a duet at the Roger Williams fellowship meeting Sunday at the First Baptist church, 901 Kentucky st. The program will follow supper at 6 p.m.
The group will go caroling Friday
night, and after that have a Christmas party. Each member is to bring a 25-cent gift for a grab bag.
Lutheran Students
Holy Communion will be held for Lutheran Student association members at 6:15 p.m. Sunday, after a supper at 5:30 p.m. at Trinity Lutheran church, 13th and New Hampshire streets.
After the meeting the group will go to the vespers program, then caroling. Refreshments will be served later at the home of Dick Preis, student counselor.
Alpha Phi Sorority Initiates 16 Women
Alpha Phi sorority held formal initiation services for 16 women Sunday, followed by a banquet, in the chapter house.
Those initiated were: Caroly Smith, college sophomore, Kansa City, Kan.; Shirley Dodd, fine art sophomore, Kansas City, Kans.; Su Epperson, fine arts sophomore, Cof feyville, Kan., and Elva Sutton, college sophomore, Sugar Creek, Mo.
Donna Cooke, education sophomore, Salina, Kan.; Marilou Selvig, college sophomore, Russell, Kan; Babette Cooper, college sophomore, Kansas City, Mo.; Jane Murdock, college sophomore, Joplin, Mo., and Marlen Gray, college sophomore, Chanute, Kan.
Nancy Echols, college sophomore,
Fort Sill, Okla.; Donna McCall, fine
arts junior, Kansas City, Mo.; Diane
Cruse, fine arts sophomore, Abeline
Kan.; Kathleen Temple, college
sophomore, Hoisington, Kan.; Carol
Burchfield, college sophomore,
Mitchell, S. D.; Sally Yoder, fine
arts sophomore, Kansas City, Mo.
On the Hill
Corbin hall announces the pinning of Miss Norma Eshelman, college freshman, to Mr. Wesley Whitney, education junior. Mr. Whitney is a member of Delta Upsilon fraternity. His home is in Newton, Kan. Miss Eshelman's home is in Sedgwick, Kan.
By JEANNE FITZGERALD
Kansan, Society, Editor
Alpha Delta Pi sorority announces the pledging of Miss Nancy Krimminger, college sophomore from Lawrence.
--and Sally Foster, engineering sophomore. Webster Groves. Mo.
Alpha Delta Pi sorority and Delta Chi fraternity entertained each other at an exchange dinner Dec. 4. Part of the members of each house were the guests of the members of the other house.
***
Delta Delta Delta sorority will serenade the various fraternities on the Hill Wednesday and Thursday nights.
- * *
Phi Kappa fraternity will hold a scavenger hunt with Sigma Kappa sorority at the fraternity house from 7 to 8 p.m. Tuesday.
- * *
Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity will hold its formal Christmas dinner Tuesday night at the chapter house. Exchange gifts among the boys and gifts to the house and housemother will be distributed following the dinner. Guests will include Dean and Mrs. Laurence C. Woodruff, Miss Martha Peterson, and Miss Mary Peg Hardman.
Phi chapter of Alpha Chi Omega and their Lawrence maeumae chapter enjoyed a Christmas desert together at the chapter house Wednesday.
Nancy Echols was the honor initiate of the group.
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Phi Lambda Upsilon, honorary chemistry society, initiated seven students Tuesday.
Phi Lambda Upsilon Initiates Seven Grads
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The speaker of the evening, Dr. Gilbert Haight, professor of chemistry, discussed methods of teaching chemistry in the various universities he has attended.
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Theta Tau Elects Delegates
Theta Tau, national professional engineering fraternity, elected byshall Brown, engineering sopmore, delegate, and Milor Childers, engineering senior, alternate, to attend the 19th Biennial Convention of Theta Tau Dec. 29 to 31 at Purdue university, West Lafayette, Ind.
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7
Thursday, Dec. 11, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
"Santa Is Much Too Slow—Use Want Ads—Make Some Dough!"
Kansan Classified Ads
GREAT BRITAIN
Call KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid by the time the order is received during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Magazine business office. Journals may be mailed 25 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One day Three days Five days
25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00
Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
BUSINESS SERVICE
THERE ARE only 9 days to replace Auto glass until Christmas vacation begins. Auto Wrecking and Junk Co., 712 E. 9th. Phone 954. 12-11
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360, 1109 Mass.
BEVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. tf
EXPERIENCED Typist. Term papers.
notebooks, theses and miscellaneous. Mrs.
J. E. R. Jacose, 833 Louisiana, Apartment
4, upstairs. Phone 2775-1. tf
TYPING WANTED. Prompt, accurate service. Pick-up and delivery service after 6 p.m. and before 8 a.m. Phone 3151R. Mrs. Livingston. tf
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment in this area thus assuring efficient service and warranty and. Phone 128. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. tt
TYING SERVICE. *experienced theses,
Mrs. Hale West 9th. Phone 134W.
JAYHAWKERS; Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are ours, one-stop all-time. Our something for one-stop and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1211 Conn. Phone 418. tr
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REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
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CLOTHING; Pink, short-style coat, size 14. Was $39, now $25. Dressy, black faille skirt, size 26, $10. Both like new. Worn once. Phone 1894-W. 12-17
1940 PLYMOUTH, new tires, new motor,
radio, two heaters, new clutch, new
generator. $175.00. Contact Box 4, University Daily Kansan. 12-12
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TWO NICE blond Cocker puppies A.K.C. registration. Six weeks old. Sired by Arcadian's The Whistler. Dam Taffy of Lawrence. See at 345 Mississippi street. Lawrence. Will hold till Christmas time if desired. Mrs. E. E. Alexander. 12-15
CAMERAS, Leica model IIIC with or without coated Elmer 3.5 lens. Eveready case included. Phone 2674M. 12-11
CLARINET, Paris Selmer, wood, Becham
phone 26743. 7 rings, case include
phone 26743.
SAX, baritone, Conn, brass lacquered,
with case. Phone 2874M. 12-11
MISCELLANEOUS
RADIO and TV service-same day as service on all makes. Most complete stock radio and TV parts in this area. Bowman Radio and TV 63 Vermont. Phone 133 for prompt service.
DRESSMAKING, formalis, alterations, by an experienced European dressmaker. See Themis Zannetou, 1633 Vermont (downstairs apartment). Phone 1477M. 1-6
Air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. midnight. Crystal Cafe, 609 Vt. tff
CONCOO SERVICE-B. F. Goodrich tires and batteries, complete lubrication service and automatic transmission service. Buchelin Conoco Service, 19th and Massachusetts.
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Penn. Phone 1396M.
TRANSPORTATION
RIDE WANTED to Mexico. Two exchange students would share expenses. 12-15
RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wilhita every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Call Jim Sellers, 3101J evenings. MTW-tt
WANT A RIDE to New Orleans and back during the Christmas holidays. Will share drive and expenses. Please call Arnold Kottwitz, 2955 R, after 3:00.
WANTED: Ride for 2 to Florida, leaving for Christmas vacation around Dec. 9. Will help drive and share airport luggage? Please call Arthur Burnham, 1691. 12-15
ASK US ABUT airplane rates, sky coach, family days, round trip reductions, American Express land tours. Cunard and Matson Steamship lines. Call Miss Gleseman at the First National Bank for information on destinations. 8th and 9th streets. Phone 30.
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international tours. Phone Mrs. Lols Odafer, 3661 Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass.
WANTED
LIFEGUARD for Robinson Swimming Pool to work from 7-9 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Apply Henry Shenk, 107 Robinson. 12-16
BOY TO SHARE apartment with two
application 19 W 11th Phone
48418M 12-11
STUDENTS interested in working new banquet service at Student Union for Miss Hassan has hired Mr. Mv Tomlinson between 2 and 4 p.m. at University cafeteria office.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 8
Thursday, Dec. 11, 1952
HST Sniffs at MacArthur Panacea
Washington — (U.P.) — President Truman today expressed doubt that Gen. Douglas MacArthur has a workable plan for ending the Korean war, but said that if the deposed Far East commander does have a solution he should come forward with it like any decent man.
But he said that both Gen. MacArthur and President-elect Eisenhower have a duty to come forward immediately with any solution they may have which will end the conflict and save American lives. He said Gen. MacArthur could come in any time he wants to because he (Mr. Truman) would not be discourteous to anybody.
Mr. Truman told a news conference he does not want to see Gen. MacArthur, the war hero he fired abruptly 20 months ago, nor has he seen any reason for soliciting Gen. MacArthur's views.
Mr. Truman said that Gen. Mac-Arthur has a particular duty to come forward with any proposal for a Korean solution since he, as a five star general, is on active duty and will be for all his life.
Expressing doubt that Gen. Mac-Arthur has anything worthwhile, however, Mr. Truman said he traveled 14,400 miles to see the
KANU to Present Basketball Games
The University FM radio station, KANU, will broadcast all basketball games this season. University Radio and the Athletic association announced this morning.
Ted Andrews of radio station WTPS in New Orleans will cover the game with Tulane university tonight, relaying it to the campus KANI by phone line, Merle Harmon, sports editor for KANU, said.
This year KANU will thus originate all basketball broadcasts for the KU sports network.
The broadcast will begin at 8:05 tonight. KANU is located at 91.5 megacycles on FM receivers.
Four Initiated in Owl Society
Four new members have been initiated into Owl society, honorary organization for junior men, according to Hubert Dye, business junior.
The four new men are John Simons, college junior; Jim Graves, engineering junior; Joe Woods, pharmacy junior, and A. B. Collom, college sophomore.
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former Pacific commander at Wake island once and all he got was a lot of misinformation. The Wake island trip was in October 1950.
He said the information was to the effect that Chinese Communists
would not enter the Korean conflict; it would be possible to send a division from Korea to Germany for occupation purposes, and that the war in Korea was practically over.
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Daily hansan
50th Year, No. 60
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Friday, Dec. 12, 1952
28th Christmas Vespers To Be Held Sunday in Hoch
The 28th annual Christmas Vespers will be presented again in Hoch auditorium Sunday afternoon.
The program will be presented at 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.. The Vespers originated in 1924 when D. M. Swarthout, professor of piano, supervised the first program.
Since that time the Vespers have attracted capacity crowds from the entire area. The number of people who attend the Vespers in one day has reached 7,000.
Highlighting the Vespers will be four tableaux. The sets have been designed by Robert Green, assistant professor of drawing and painting. Members of the department of design have prepared the costumes and props.
"Gloria in Excelsis Deo" will portray the feeling of happiness and thanksgiving after the birth of Christ. The characters will be Mary, Joseph, and an angel.
The first scene, "The Christmas Feast," will show a merry group enjoyng a Christmas dinner. The scene will be set in a semi-medieval hall.
The next tableau, "Good King Wenceslas," will show the age old story of the kindly king giving gold to the poor beggar at the foot of a mountain.
The last scene will be "While Shepherds Watched." It will show a lonely shepherd beside a pool of water tending his flocks on a lonely hillside.
This year the Vesper program will involve about 300 persons, representing all departments of the School of Fine Arts. The organizations taking part in the Vespers include the A Cappella choir, the Symphony orchestra and the combined Glee clubs.
Special carillon programs will be
Murphy to Comment On Housing Sunday
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will discuss the housing problem at the University in a 15-minute interview to be broadcast over University station KANU at 3:45 p.m. Sunday.
This is a regular series of interviews on KANU in which R. Edwin Browne, director of University Radio, asks Chancellor Murphy to comment on current issues.
given before each performance. Ronald Barnes, University carillonneur, will play.
Christmas carols also will be played from the balcony of Hoch auditorium before each performance by the brass quartet. The 4 p.m. performance will be broadcast over station KFKU.
Union Slates Official Debut
The Union building will be officially opened Feb.27, it was learned today.
Most of the construction work is completed, but some wiring and finishing work remains.
The Union operating committee will sponsor an open house on Feb 27. There will be recreation and dancing.
The third floor will have a balcony that surrounds the ballroom and should be finished by Jan. 5. This floor will include the Kansas room which has been extended to three times its original size. It will be used for dinners and dances. A terrace, with a fireplace for picnics, is in this area.
The main floor, nearly complete, is the lounge. It has been increased to twice its original size. There will be carpeted areas and furnishings of functional-modern furniture.
Large men's and women's lounges will be near the main lounge. The second floor will be the ballrom with room for 1,000 couples to dance.
Women students interested in residence scholarships for next semester should apply immediately at the dean of women's office in 220 Strong.
Women Scholarships Open
Killer of Six Executed Today
San Quentin. Calif. —(U.P)—Sullen and defiant William E. (Billy) Cook, brutal murderer of six persons, was executed in San Quentin's gas chamber today.
The squat, 24-year-old Joplin Mo., youth entered the prison's green-walled gas chamber at noon. He was strapped into the chamber's heavy wooden execution chair and the lethal cyanide pellets dropped. He was pronounced dead at 12:15 p.m. (CST).
Today's execution brought an end to the life of a man whose defiant creed was—"I hate their guts, everybody." The "mad dog" had his epitaph tattooed across his knuckles. It read: "Bad Luck."
Cook's brief career of ruthless murder and kidnapping brought death to an Atwood, Ill., family of five, and a Seattle, Wash., salesman.
Cook, completely unemotional, entered the gas chamber flanked by two guards with one guard bringing up the rear. He was helped into the heavy jacket while he were strapped in looked around the eight-sided room without any sign of recognizing the presence of some 50 witnesses.
When the chamber's door was shut he looked around disinterestedly, his hands clenched. As the fumes began to fill the room his hands remained clenched and the words "bad luck" across his knuckles were clearly visible.
Last Chance to Get Season Cage Tickets
Today is the last day for students to get ID cards punched for basketball games this season. Tickets not given to students will be sold to the general public.
Students have a choice of either of the two series of tickets. ID cards will be punched at the athletic office in Robinson gymnastium.
The flag bearer is presenting the sword to the center. The other four men are standing in front of him, maintaining a steady posture.
BEST UNITS HONORED—A ribbon was presented to the best unit of each of the three services following a full dress ROTC parade yesterday. Receiving the ribbon for their units are (Left to right) Thomas Richmond, commander of B company, Army; Kenneth E. Merrill, commander of A company, Navy, and Don M. Hess, commander of E squadron, Air Force. Guidon bearers are (!left to right) Theodore C. Wilkinson, John C. Dicus, and Ronald Johnstone. Presenting the ribbon is John Musser, representing reviewing officers—Kansan photo by David S. Arthurs.
K U CALENDAR 1932
KU CALENDAR COVER—The 1953 KU calendar, a project of the class of '53, went on sale yesterday. Edited by Charles Burch, journalism senior, the calendar was originally to have been available last Friday but was delayed at the printer's. The cover features a photo of Lynn Burton, fine arts junior, and Delores Myers, education junior, as "tumultuous KU students." Kansas photo by Phil Newman.
"tvpical KU students."—Kansan photo by Phil Newman.
Big, Bright, Durable KU Calendar on Sale
The KU calendar, which went on sale yesterday, is a project of the class of '53 and represents one of the largest issues of the calendar in recent years.
The cover shows two coeds on the campus, Lynn Burton, fine arts junior, and Dolores Myers, education junior. There are nine series of cartoons in the calendar which were drawn by 12 seniors.
Christine Johnson, education senior, is featured as Calendar queen. She was selected by members of
About 25 students worked on the calendar this year. The calendar is protected by an enamel paper, Kromekote, which will give it much longer wear.
the senior class and crowned at the Oklahoma A&M football game.
Proceeds from the sales will go into the senior fund. The calendar is being sold in most of the organized houses, at the Student Union bookstore, Information booth, business office of the Daily Kansan, and several locations downtown.
The calendar sells for $1. It contains 74 pages, with 26 pictures, and lists of major activities for each month.
News Blackout Shades Arrival of Ike Aides
Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.—(U.P.)The Air Force threw a tight news blackout over this jet aircraft testing base today as a group of President-elect Dwight D. Eisenhower's cabinet members-to-be and advisers stopped briefly on a flight from Hawaii.
Nearly two hours after the Lock heed Constellation carrying the party touched down here for refuelling, the public information office confirmed that it landed at 6:46 a.m. (PST).
Officers would say only that the plane remained here for about an hour before taking off again and that two unidentified members of the party disembarked to make telephone calls and then got back aboard the plane.
In Honolulu President-elect Eisenhower showed marked displeasure—through his staff—of President Truman's charge that his Korean trip was the outgrowth of campaign demagoguery.
Gen. Eisenhower himself had nothing to say publicly about the President's broad swipe at his three-day visit to the snow-covered battlefront, but his aides left no doubt that he viewed Mr. Truman's remarks with something approaching contempt.
James C. Hagerty, Gen. Eisenhower's press secretary, was asked yesterday about a report published in the United States that Gen. Eisenhower would be willing to turn over MacArthur's plan to solve the
Korean stalemate to Mr. Truman.
Korean stalemate to Mr. Truman.
"As long as it refers to Mr. Truman, we have less than no comment," Mr. Hagerty said.
Earlier, another member of Gen. Eisenhower's staff was shown a copy of Mr. Truman's remarks at his news conference. He said, "throw it in the sewer."
Weather
Light snow fell early today at Goodland and Hill City, leaving 2 inches on the ground at Goodland
COPE 1952 WAT KELLY
MILD
City. Skies began to clear and forecasters s aid the snow was over. Fair weather was predicted for tonight and Saturday, with little change in temperature. The cast called for fair weather in the east and partly
cloudy west tonight. Saturday increasing high cloudiness with slowly rising temperatures. Low tonight 18 to 25, high 45 to 50.
University Daily Kansan Friday, Dec. 12, 1952
by Dick Bibler
Kenya Nationalism Erupts Spilling Explosive Mixture
A roaring, spitting volcano has erupted in Africa, spewing hate, violence, and death.
The volcano is Kenya, richest of the British East African colonies. Spilling out in the eruption is a hot explosive mixture of nationalism, discrimination, superstition, and resentment—with a pinch of Communist propaganda to fan the flames.
Directly, rebellions and slaughters have been caused by the Kikuyus, Kenya's largest native tribe, which has campaigned since 1945 for more political power.
Terrorist activities of the tribe—including slaughter raids with panga (machete) knives—the work of the Mau Mau, a secret tribal society chief seeking to drive some 15,000 British from their 12,000-square-mile "White Highlands." Comparatively, about a million Kikuyus are crowded into a 2,000-square-mile reserve.
Britain obtained Kenya at the end of the nineteenth century, when it, as well as other European powers, was waging a race for African possessions. The British stamped out intertribal warfare and slavery, reduced a gigantic death rate from tropical diseases, and built a 600-mile railroad to relieve paralyzed transportation conditions.
The British, in general a mixture of large-scale farmers and retired upper class, fail to understand the desire for land of the Kikuyus. The whites employ about a half million native Negroes. Other Kikuyu demands are for more land, higher wages and better education, and votes for all Negroes who pass a literary and property test.
The British dominate Kenya politics, possess the best land, and are reluctant to share it. Indians control commerce and retail trade, but are politically powerless. Africans, who outnumber Europeans about 160 to 1, have no political power.
From this seething tri-racial setup outbreaks began in October. The Mau Mau instigated a series of bloody raids into the British sector.
British retaliation came fast. Thousands of Kikuyus were arrested. Native schools operated by Jomo (Burning Spear) Kenyetta, the uncertained king of Kikuyu, were closed down, and Kenyetta was imprisoned.
The British, deciding to fight suppression with superstition, used a "Wizard of Oz," a witch doctor, to try and cleanse native laborers of oaths they had taken to support the anti-white movement.
Violence continued. The British Colonial office, trustee for Kenya's millions, rushed more troops to the scene, while authorizing local administration to suspend civil rights, make mass arrests, and use collective punishment.
A possible solution is an $18.9 million development program outlined by Sir Evelyn Baring, governor, to include housing, welfare, hospital and agriculture projects. But, this has been stalemated by the governor's warning that these improvements could not be carried out until the "atmosphere of unrest" was lifted.
Repression measures apparently aren't the needed solution. Even the British fear that such measures might drive docile Kikuyu into the Mau Mau society.
1. The country would fall into the hands of the Indians—and not the Africans—if the Europeans left. The Indians are much better organized and educated than the Africans, and have a tight grip on all trade.
Kenya Communists, rooted deeply in Indian settlements, have demanded that Europeans clear out, leaving Kenya to the Africans and Indians. But, Britain knows this wouldn't solve the nationalism problem for two reasons:
1. The country would collapse without European-dominated government, foreign trade, and transportation.
The Kenya volcano should continue to fume for some time, and the Communist-backed drive for elimination of the British should bear watching.—Bob Stewart.
Compliments Due To Quill Magazine
About half of the 500 copies of the new Trend magazine have already been sold. The Quill club's little magazine came out only yesterday and already it seems to have taken hold.
For two years the Quill club, a campus literary organization, has not had its own magazine but has helped with another campus publication—Upstream. The new Trend is a revision of a magazine published by the Quill club several years ago.
We would like to compliment the club on the attractiveness of their new publication. A "first" is always difficult to get out and the Quill club seems to have done a very nice job despite that disadvantage.
Considering the inevitable improvements that come with experience, Trend will no doubt become a valuable addition to the campus publications. We hope the early sales are an indication of the club's future success. —Roger Yarrington.
PLACES YOU LEADS US,
FIREFLY, JES' PUTS OUT
MY SEEGAR.
DO YOU WANT
TO FIND YOUR
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OR NOT?
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Chest Described As Discriminatory
Letters
To the Editor of the Daily Kansan:
In a previous communication to the editor it was pointed out that the schedule for the distribution of Campus Chest funds was discriminatory. This assertion brought to light a fundamental campus problem which the Kansan has been reluctant to treat editorially or otherwise. In view of the apparent unwillingness of this paper to alter the status quo there remains no alternative but to state the case unequivocally.
This university, through its student body, should not be placed in the precarious position of giving preferential treatment to any sectarian group; therefore, the All Student Council hereby is requested to review this entire situation. In fairness to all concerned, the council has but two alternatives; namely, either to distribute the campus fund to all sectarian organizations or to withhold these funds from all such groups.
All of the funds retained for the use of campus organizations have been allotted to either the YMCA or the YWCA. There seems to be no valid reason for this arrangement.
A check of the 1952-53 student directory reveals that on this campus there are 16 sectarian organizations of one form or another. The YM and the YW constitute just two of these. Whose function is it to decide that two shall have and fourteen shall go without?
Joseph J. Baron Jr. graduate student
What with all the editorial boards and whatnot for the Daily Kansan, our favorite coed thinks someone should read the movie ads before they're printed.
A Daily Kansan classified ad reports a lost Longines wristwatch with no straps and crystal broken. No wonder!
Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 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 second class master Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence Kan., Post Office office of March 3, 1879.
Little Man on Campus
TRI-DEDOP SORDRITY
E. 32 Dillea
'Oh little town of Bethlehem ...'
'Lame' Period to Slow Paris NATO Session
One of the bulwarks of United States foreign policy is the North Atlantic Treaty organization.
Next week the foreign and defense ministers of the 14 nations banded together for the defense of the North Atlantic and free Europe hold a "Lame Duck" session in Paris.
It is "Lame Duck" in that it falls in the period of changing U.S. administrations, and must postpone important decisions until President-elect Eisenhower and his new government are in a position to participate and make them binding.
However, the Dec. 15 meeting will be of interest because it will receive reports of progress made thus far in building defenses against Communist aggression, and also will set up some signposts for the future.
It will be told for example that the 50-division goal for Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway's European army during 1952 largely has been met—25 in being and 25 in position to be called up within 30-days after the start of any hostilities.
The program for the building of military airfields has been successful, with 126 built or building.
Defense strategy has been revised to include Greece and Turkey.
The U.S. and Britain are in agreement or near it on a compromise solution to their agreement over an Eastern Mediterranean command—British Admiral Lord Louis Mounbatten to receive command of convoy routes but with an American in charge of ground support operations.
NATO forces now are strong enough to provide a "shield" against any Communist attack, although far short of being able to meet any all-out assault by Russia's 175 European divisions.
The United States now apparently shares the generally held European belief that 1954 no longer is the "year of decision" which now may be farther off by a year or more.
By and large, the report on 1952 will be encouraging.
It had been hoped that by the end of 1953 Ridgway's army would have 75 divisions. That figure will be cut back to a probable 63.
As Russia's "peace" offensive accelerates, there are signs that Western Europe will lose a corresponding amount of will to rearm in its own defense. The European nations, led by Britain, are pleading poverty and are pressing for development of new, cheaper weapons rather than mass production of conventional types.
In this they are opposed by the United States which says, despite its leadership in atomic development, that a push-button war still is years away.-United Press.
Short Ones
At the rate "queen" contests are springing up around the campus, there will soon be more royalty here than in England.
GOP papers are pooh-poohing the idea of any Ike-Taft split—simply because Taft has seen fit to criticize the General's taste in cabinet personnel. They are annoyed, however, at having to defend their idol before he even gets into office.
A campus political wheel recently accused the Daily Kansan of printing news stories without facts. He's right. The paper does quote him frequently.
---
Page 3
New ROK Division Ready, Van Fleet Says
Seoul, Korea—U.K.P—Gen. James A. Van Fleet disclosed today a newly-trained South Korean army division is almost ready to replace an American division on the Korean battlefront.
Gina Bachauer, a pianist relatively unknown in the United States until a few years ago, will be featured in the second Concert course program at 8:20 p.m. Monday in Hoch auditorium.
Piano Concert Set for Monday
Mrs. Bachauer, born in Greece, made her debut at the Town House in New York in 1550. Since that
M. L. M. S. P. R.
GINA BACHAUER
first United States concert she has been extremely popular here.
She was guest soloist for the New York Philharmonic symphony in 1951. This will be her third tou this year. She will play more than 80 concerts in Canada, the Caribbean area, and the United States.
ID cards will admit students.
TU Historian Says Local Factor Vital
History of localities is as important as the history of the states and of the nation. Prof. Fulmer Mood, of the University of Texas, said yesterday in a lecture on "Pluralistic Localism."
It was the last of three lectures presented by Prof. Mood on "Structure of American Historiography." The lectures were sponsored by the department of history.
Localities is a new approach to history and views it in a new light, according to Prof. Mood. It focuses attention on the inhabitants of an area and their relationship with those of a neighboring area.
TWELFTH DECEMBER
CHOOSE A RONSON
for the
MAN or WOMAN
OF YOUR CHOICE
$\textcircled{6}$ Gen. Van Fleet said the division is one of two activated on the eve of the American Presidential election. The ability of the ROK army to take over more of the battlefront was a hot campaign issue.
"I feel one division will be ready in a very short time to take any assignment I give it, including replacement of an American division on the Line." Gen. Van Fleet told a press conference.
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"The other will be ready a short time thereafter," he said.
He did not say whether such a replacement actually is planned or what would happen to any American division replaced by South Koreans.
Asked if he believed the Communists would throw a major offensive at the 8th army this winter, Van Fleet replied:
He added he believed the Reds' being the winner, and that his winter than at any other time.
Gen. Van Fleet said the Communists now have "quite a few over 1,000,000 men" in their army, two thirds of them Chinese.
"No, I wish they would. We'd finish them off."
"I'd estimate 300,000 of these are North Koreans," he said.
However, Gen. Van Fleet did not believe a major offensive was likely because of the difficulties of operating in the bitter Korean winter. On the contrary, he pointed out, the 8th army is "fully equipped and capable of conducting winter warfare."
"Three-quarters of them are combat troops and the other quarter are support. The enemy could throw 75 per cent of his men into the line."
"It's far superior." he added.
Most of his soldiers are unused to winter warfare, but he said the 8th army started preparing them early in the fall. So far, only 58 cases of frostbite have been reported.
Denver — (U.P.) — Colorado's Gov. Dan Thornton today capitulated to Utah's Gov. J. Bracken Lee in an old election bet and announced he would mop out the Salt Lake City statehouse.
Colorado Governor Mops Floor on Bet
The two chief executives had wagered the services of each as a janitorial experts on the turnout of registered voters in their respective states in the Nov. 4 general election.
Both had loudly claimed victory following the election, but Gov. Thornton said today, "I have come to the bitter conclusion I have lost my wager."
Irish Scholar To Speak Here
T. R. Henn, an Irish scholar from England, will lecture on "Poetry and Painting" in Fraser theater at 4 p.m. Wednesday. The department of English is sponsoring the lecture.
The lecture will be illustrated with slides. Henn's extensive studies of pictorial images as used by poets provide the material of the lecture.
Henn is senior lecturer in Englisn at Cambridge university and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. He is an authority on the poetry of W. B. Yeats and in 1950 published "The Lonely Tower," a study of Yeats' career and his poetry. Other books he has written include such diverse titles as "Practical Fly-Tying," "Longinus and English Criticism," and "The Apple and the Spectroscope."
A colonel on Gen. Eisenhower's invasion planning staff during the recent war, Henn was awarded the Legion of Merit, one of the highest U.S. decorations, for his war services.
University Daily Kansan
Henn has been working at Yale university this fall, and is coming to Lawrence in the course of a tour to gather research materials.
Wreckage Believed Sighted
Maj. C. W. Grace of Stead Air Force base near Reno, flying a search plane, radioed to Hill Air Force base near Ogden, Utah, that there was no sign of life at the wreckage, at an 11,000-foot elevation on the side of a mountain in the Humbolt range.
Wells, Nev.—(U.P.)—Wreckage believed to be that of an Air Force C-47 missing since Wednesday was sighted today 18 miles southwest of here.
It was last heard from Wednesday near Lucin, Utah, 100 miles west of Salt Lake City.
T, Hart, 43, which left Winnemucca Nev., early Monday enroute to Spanish ranch about 25 miles north of here.
Also missing a 170 a privately-owned Cessna-170, piloted by Ivan
Air Force, Navy and Civil Air Patrol rescue craft from four states stood by to resume the search for the two planes.
Mr. Hart's disappearance was not discovered until yesterday when his wife, Dori, became worried when she learned he was not still at Winnemucca as she had thought.
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Kansas Special Education Facilities Set for Expansion
Facilities are going to be expanded to help Kansas children with emotional maladjustments and hearing, speech, and vision needs. Dr. L. B. Sipple, director of the division of special education of the Kansas state department of public instruction, told a speech therapy seminar here yesterday. $ ^{*} $
Dr. Sipple spoke on "Recent Developments in Special Education in Kansas." The seminar was held at the Faculty Women's club.
Thirty special rooms have been set up in the state in the past year to aid these children, and services have also been provided for the home-bound child. Dr. Sipple said.
The division of special education hopes to set up demonstration projects to show the people of Kansas what can be done in this respect, he added.
"The division of special education is three years old, but definite progress has been made, especially in providing help for the slow-learning child," Miss Margaret Anderson, associate professor of speech, said.
Beer Causes Long Life
London — (U.P) — Mrs. Jemina Plucknett, celebrating her 100th birthday, said she attributed her long life to sharing a pint of beer a day with her 90-year old husband.
Gilchrist Elected Phi Sigma Chi Head
National Phi Sigma Chi includes eight schools. Each year the school which is to be host for the convention elects the president and corresponding secretary, who plan the convention.
Nancy Gilchrist, education junior, was elected president and Vernie Theden, business junior, corresponding secretary of national Phi Sigma Chi at a Jay James meeting this week.
Other business included getting volunteers to usher at the Christmas Vespers and a concert. The group voted to invite two foreign students to join.
The next meeting is to be a dinner meeting at the Hawk's Nest, with Anna Jean Holyfield, education senior, as chairman of the arrangements.
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Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont St. DALE E. TURNER, Minister SUNDAY SERVICES
SUNDAY SERVICES
9 - 11 a.m. Sermon
5:30 p.m. College Age Youth Meeting
8 p.m. Bible Class
Church Of Christ 1501 N.H.
W. TAYLOR CARTER, Evangelist KEITH BARNHART, Music Director
10:00 - Bible Study 11:55 - Communion
11:00 - Sermon 6:45 - University Class
7:45 - Evening Service
Trinity Episcopal Church
9 a.m. Holy Communion for Collegians.
Breakfast and Canterbury meeting immediately following in Rectory, Tom Regnery will lead discussion on the early English Church.
---
2015-07-23T14:52:22
Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, Dec. 12, 1952
U.S. Seeks to Assist Lie in Weeding Reds
Washington—(U.P.)—The State department is trying to devise some method of supplying secret U.S. loyalty reports to Secretary General Trygve Lie to help weed American Communists out of the United Nations Secretariat, it was learned today.
The study is in line with a recent jurist commission report that the UN needs more information from U.S. loyalty-security files to deal effectively with subversive employees.
Sen. Alexander Wiley (R-Wis.) charged last night that the department has been deliberately withholding the information even though Mr. Lie is authorized to receive it. He also warned that the problem could lead to a financial boycott of the UN by the United States.
The state department vigorously denied it was withholding loyalty information. It said regulations specifically forbid it from revealing security data even to Congress, much less to an international organization.
Sen. Wiley said Congress, when it votes money next year for the UN might be inclined to prohibit the use of the funds "unless adequate security procedures have been worked out to guarantee that the UN and its organs do not remain a base for espionage and subversion."
TODAY
This posed a real threat to the UN's financial structure. Of the $49 million budget for the main UN organization, the United States is due to contribute 35.12 per cent next year.
Hillel Chanukah: special service.
7:20 p.m. Danforth.
Official Bulletin
SATURDAY
Game Night: 8-11, Trail room,
Union, bingo, cards, checkers.
Everyone invited. Sponsored by ISA.
WARREN
SUNDAY
International club: Christmas party, 8-midnight, Trail room. Union. All invited.
Hillel Chanukah: party, 3 p.m. First Methodist church, 946 Vermont.
MONDAY
Holy Communion: 9 a.m., Trinity Episcopal church, followed by breakfast and Canterbury club.
Math Colloquium: 5 p.m., 203 Strong.
YWCA: cabinet members and house representatives, Christmas party instead of regular meeting. 4-5 p.m. Henley house.
U. S. Naval Research Reserve Unit 9-20: 7:30 p.m., 101A Haworth, movie.
Engineerrettets; Christmas party,
7:45 p.m., 1317 Rhode Island. Bring
500 kitchen item for exchange.
Men Decide It's No Use
Washington—(U.P.) The all-male association of state and territorial health officers shuffled to a pigeonhole today a resolution urging all-out research to find out why females are born stronger and live longer than males.
Dulles Favors Stronger UN
Denver, Colo—(U.P.)—John Foster Dulles, in his first public statement as the nation's next secretary of state, said this country should work toward strengthening an inadequate United Nations.
Mr. Dulles, in a recorded address for the first biennial assembly of the National Council of Churches meeting here, last night described the UN as a great beginning of a plan for world order and justice.
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The speech was broadcast over the Columbia Broadcasting system's network. Mr. Dulles, himself, was at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, with President-elect Eisenhower.
Mr. Dulles said that "world opinion, as marshalled by the United Nations, was one important restraining influence" that prevented Russian aggression "at a time when it had overwhelming military power in Europe and Asia."
"The United Nations is just a beginning." Mr. Dulles said. "It is inadequate and faulty as all great beginnings are. There are few substitutions for learning by trial and error. The lesson is to persevere."
Lutherans to Present Christmas Program
The annual world-wide Christmas program, sponsored by Gamma Delta, Lutheran student group, together with members of the Immanuel Lutheran church, will be held at the Lawrence Community building at 6 p.m. Sunday.
Foreign students from nine countries have been invited to the dinner, and they will present some of the Christmas customs and carols of their lands.
Power of the Pen is Proven As Police Race to Answer
Jersey City, N. J.-(U.P.)-Three squad cars, five radio cars and an emergency truck raced to the trust company of New Jersey yesterday when the burglar alarm sounded.
Surprised bank officials discovered that a book had fallen off a shelf and landed on the alarm button.
KANU Radio Schedule
The new KU radio station, KANU, heard at 91.5 megacycles on the FM dial, will broadcast the following programs next week:
podcast the following events
| Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1:45-2:00 | Previews | Previews | Previews |
| 2:00-2:15 | Uncle Dan | Let's Find Out | Distant Lands | Tales from the Four Winds |
| 2:15-2:30 | News | News Childrens News Reporter | News | News |
| 2:30-2:45 | | | | |
| 2:30-3:00 | Art by Radio | Playtime | Adventures in Music Land | Time for a Story |
| 2:45-3:00 | | | | |
| 3:00-4:00 | Time to Visit | Time to Visit | Time to Visit | Time to Visit |
| 4:00-4:30 | Music You Want When You Want It | Music You Want When You Want It | Music You Want When You Want It | Music You Want When You Want It |
| 4:30-5:15 | Concerto Concert | | | |
| 4:30-4:45 | | Stories and Stuff | | Southland Serenade |
| 4:45-5:00 | | | Fifteen Steps |
| 5:15 | Opera Recital | | | |
| 4:30-5:30 | Concerto Concert | Bard of Avon | People Under Communism | American Folkways |
| 5:00-5:30 | | Masterworks from France | | This is Music | Keyboard Concert |
| 5:30-5:45 | Jazz Concert | Jazz Concert | Jazz Concert | Jazz Concert |
| 5:45-6:00 | Sports | Sports | Sports | Sports |
| 6:00-7:00 | Candle-light Concert | Candle-light Concert | Candle-light Concert | Candle-light Concert |
| 7:00-7:30 | The People Act | Symphony Hall | Jeffersonian Heritage | Concert Mall | Music from O'read |
| 7:30-7:45 | Ballet Music | | | Jayhawker Locker Room Club | Phog Allen Scrapbook |
| 7:45-8:00 | Invitation to Read | | Broadway Rhapsody | Instrumental Interlude |
| 7:30-8:00 | | Jazz Story | Organ Concert | | |
| 8:00-9:00 | Music of the Barogue | FM Concert | Starlight Symphony | Chamber Music | Opera Is My Hobby |
| 9:00-9:15 | News Signoff | News Signoff | News Signoff | News Signoff | News Signoff |
| 9:15 | | | | | |
Programs from 2:30 to 3 p.m. and 7 to 7:30 p.m. can be picked up on A.M.
Library Director To Give 2 Talks
Robert Vosper, director of libraries, is scheduled to deliver two lectures in Kansas City.
Tomorrow he will address the Kansas City chapter of the Special Library Associations. His subject will be "Books and Libraries at the University of Kansas." This meeting will be held in Clendening library at the KU Medical Center.
On Monday, Mr. Vosper will return to the Clendening library to address the faculty and staff of Dr. Mahlon Delp in the department of medicine. The subject of this talk will be "Recent Developments in Libraries."
Illinois has less waste land in proportion to total area than any other state.
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Publicity School Set Here Feb. 20-21
A Kansas school for public relations directors will be held here Feb. 20-21.
Public relation directors of state industrial, educational, and governmental organizations will attend.
Dean Burton W. Marvin of the School of Journalism, Tom Yoe, director of public relations, and George H. Brooks, assistant to the dean of University Extension are committee members.
French Brace For New Riots
Casablanca, French Morocco — (U.P.)— French authorities braced for possible new violence today amid a general strike called by the underground to protest outlawing of the Communist and Nationalist movements.
Arabs began gathering for Moslem Sabbath services in mosques throughout the French protectorate. Muslim priests took over the anti-French struggle after arrests and expulsions of Nationalist and Communist leaders forced their movements underground.
Shutters rolled down in Arab quarter shops and workers walked off their jobs yesterday when word circulated that the underground had ordered a three-day general strike. An urgent appeal by the Pasha of Fez failed to hait the walkout, the second this week.
At least 60 persons, including eight Europeans, have died so far in this week's rioting. An estimated 233 have been wounded.
The worst violence since the Riff wars of 1925-26 occurred during the 24-hour general strike Monday to protest the assassination of a powerful Nationalist union leader in Tunisia last Friday.
Hillel
Hillel Chanukah Party
SUNDAY,
December 14,3 p.m.
Christmas Is Almost Here
First Methodist Church 946 Vt.
EVERYONE WELCOME
DECEMBER
but don't worry about those last minute gifts. Get a Brownie Hawkeye camera-a gift anyone will be sure to love-and it's just $7.20. For a special gift give the flash attachment, it's $3.39.
721 Mass.
Hilton STUDIO
Phone 41
University Daily Kansan
Page 5
AFROTC to Greet Vets
A 100-member caravan from the University will provide entertainment Saturday at a welcome-home party for the 442nd Troop Carrier wing, recently returned from Korea, at the Olathe Naval Air station.
The Arnold Air society and the AFROTC are sponsoring the entertainment. The Arnold Air society "Angels Flight" will put on a variety show, the AFROTC band will play, and 10 women who are honorary colonels for the society will be hostesses.
Other students participating in the program will include Jerry Hodgden, engineering senior; Dietrich Klassen, business senior; William McClelland, education senior; David Platter, business senior; Joan Guthridge, college junior; George Michale, business junior; Fredricka Voiland, fine arts freshman; Richard Thornton, fine arts freshman, and Jo Anna March, college junior.
Junior.
The North College chorus will present two dances. Maj. General Harry A. Johnson, commanding general of the 10th Air Force, will speak after the show. ___
The competitive examination will determine the boys who will be allowed to take physicals and later be interviewed by the Kansas State Selection committee in March for appointment as cadets in the ROTC,
Those who succeed in passing al. the examinations and the committee, will be given a four-year scholarship which includes all their college books and tuition, all ROTC uniforms, and $50 a month living expenses.
108 Preps Seek Navy Scholarships
One hundred and eight high school seniors will take the written examination for the Navy ROTC scholarship in the Military science building Saturday.
The Navy unit accepts about 32 scholarship students each year. After completion of the course at the University the students will be commissioned as Ensigns in the regular Navy and serve actively for about two years.
U.S. Ambassador To China Resigns
Washington — (U.P)— J. Leighton Stuart, an "old China hand" who sought unsuccessfully to end China's civil war, has submitted his resignation as ambassador to Nationalist China, it was learned today.
The White House was expected to announce today the resignation of the 76-year-old missionary, educator, and ambassador.
Stuart became ill late in 1949, suffered a stroke, and never took his post on Formosa after the Chinese Nationalists had been driven from the mainland by the Chinese Communists.
During his long recovery in this country he helped in top-level state department policy discussions about China, but his health prevented him from taking a vigorous role.
A Connecticut junk dealer purchased for $2 in 1951 a 14-inch bust of Abraham Lincoln which has been appraised as being executed from life by Franklin Simmons and valued now at $15,000.
DeLuxe Cafe
DeLuxe Cafe OPEN SUNDAYS
711 MASS.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PHONE 2045
TOMMY AND JIM
TWO CONNIVERS AND A SHEEP—Shirley Strain, college senior, as Gill, and Mark Gilman, education junior, as Mak are shown hashing up some skulduggery in the farce portion of "The Second Shepherds' Play," 14th century English miracle play. It will be presented at 3 p.m. Sunday and 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Little theater in Green hall.
—Kansan photo by Jerry Knudson.
'Second Shepherds' Play To Be Presented Sunday
By JERRY KNUDSON
"The Second Shepherd's Play," written in the 14th century but performed before then, is unique among Christmas plays. This is the third annual Christmas production of the Lab theater, under the direction of Tom Shay, instructor of speech.
It will be presented at 3 p.m. Sunday and 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Little Theater in Green hall. The Sunday performance will be over in time for people to attend the Christmas Vespers at 4 p.m., Mr. Shay said. No admission will be charged.
Mr. Shay said, "The first part of the play is an English farce of sheep-stealing intrigue, and from there it turns directly to a very sincerely, religious scene of the adoration of the Christ child."
The three shepherds appear throughout as the scene switches from the Yorkshire moors to Bethlehem. The extreme farce-religious contrast adds emphasis to the manger scene, but the play was not written that way for that specific purpose.
The play's title comes from the fact that it was the second of a series of 32 plays found in an old manuscript in Yorkshire, England. These plays were a cycle of pageants or miracle plays that told the Biblical story from creation to the day of judgment.
They were originally given in churches as an expansion of mass, Mr. Shay said.
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Friday, Dec. 12, 1952
Shirley Strain, college senior, as Gill; Mark Gilman, education junior, as Mak; Maurice Casey, education junior, as the angel; Mary Rigor, fine arts freshman, as Mary, and Kenneth Plumb, college freshman, as Joseph.
The cast includes Max Zent, college sophomore, as the first shepherd, Coll; Bill Means, business junior, as the second shepherd, Gib; Ernest Dade, college sophomore, as the third shepherd, Daw.
An angel choir of six to eight voices will be made up of members of the University Women's glee club under the direction of Clayton Krehbiel, assistant professor of music education. John Hankins, professor of English, has given historical and other advice.
CIO Fights Government Over Taft-Hartley Law
Washington—(U.P.)—The government and the CIO squared off today for a constitutional battle over a key provision of the Taft-Hartley law, sparked by the government's bid to obtain an antistrike injunction at the American Locomotice company plant at Dunkirk, N.Y.
The Justice department went ahead with plans to seek a court injunction against the three-month-old strike despite the CIO Steel-workers' threat to make the case a test of the legality of the Taft-Hartley law's anti-strike clause.
A department spokesman refused to say in what federal court or when the injunction would be sought. But he said the department is working on it now, indicating the government would move swiftly.
President Truman ordered the Justice department to seek the court injunction late yesterday after receiving a report from a Presidential fact-finding board that the strike is seriously delaying production of atomic weapons needed for national defense.
The strike has been under way at the Dunkirk plant since Aug. 29 when 1,500 workers walked off their
jobs in a dispute over a new wage contract.
The strike has tied up production of nickel plate which the atomic energy commission says is vitally needed for expansion of its facilities at Savannah River, S.C., and Paducah, Ky.
The Steelworkers union promptly served notice it would fight the government's action all the way to the Supreme Court in an attempt to have the Taft-Hartley injunction provision declared unconstitutional.
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Dinner This Sunday at the Union Cafeteria
will feature these selections:
ROASTING TURKEY
- U.S. Choice Leg of Lamb with Mint Jelly
- U.S. Grade Prime Rib, Au Jus
Roast Turkey and Dressing
Baked Ham with Fruit Sauce
- Buttered Noodles
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday. Dec. 12. 1952
KU
63-50
Beats Tulane
Tight Defensive Play Highlights Women's IM
By JACKIE JONES
Tight defensive play in the second week of the women's intra-
mural basketball program held scoring in most of the games to a
minimum, forcing the offensive units to play a better brand of ball ___ $ than in the preceding week.
PETER E. BAYER
DR. F. C. ALLEN Kansas Basketball Coach
New York —(U.P.) Dr. Forrest Allen said his Kansas basketball team wasn't going to be very strong this year, but maybe "Phog" was only "phooled."
Court fans had good reason to suspect that today after Kansas, the defending NCAA basketball champion, opened its season with an impressive 63 to 50 victory over Tulane at New Orleans last night.
Phog Predicts Poor Season
than in the preceeding week
Dr. Allen, the famed tactician now in his 43rd year as coach of the Jayhawks said last week that his team would be full of scrap, but weak on power and they'd "be lucky to win one of our first four games." A glance at the roster seems to bear him out, since Dean Kelley is the only returning member from last year's first five that represented the United States in the Olympics.
But the first appearance of the Jayhawks was a huge success. They trailed at the end of the first period, 14-11, but went ahead midway in the second period and stayed there. Showing the way was B. H. Born, a 6-foot, 9-inch skyscraper who dominated the backboards in a style reminiscent of Clyde Lovellette, the huge star of last season's Kansas team.
Born and Kelley each scored 13 points to lead Kansas, while Fritz Schultz and Pat Browne scored 11 each for Tulane, which suffered its first loss after three victories.
In other leading games last night; Manhattan edged Louisville, 65-63, although Charley Noble scored 20 points for the losers; Hardin-Simmons nicked Southern Methodist, 56-55; Baylor shaded Lamar State, 45-31; Georgia defeated South Carolina, 57-50; Oklahoma City trounced New Mexico & M, 74-40; Rice beat
Three highly-ranked teams came through with expected victories last night. Sixth-ranked North Carolina State bounced back from its surprise loss to Wake Forest to overwhelm Rhode Island, 105-66. Eighth-ranked Seton Hall rolled up a 24-8 first period lead and went on to wallop West Texas State 69-46 as 6-foot, 11-inch Walt Dukes tallied 26 points to run his four-game total to 107, an average of 26.7 per game. Louisiana State, ranked 15th, gained its fourth win by a handy 86-58 count over Miami of Florida.
Two teams, Alpha Chi Omega and Gamma Phi Beta, tied for scoring honors of the week with only 36 points each. This was far short of the 60 points which the Kappas rolled up last Wednesday against Truthm.
The best defensive play of the week was made by a sharp Corbin Hawk freshman squad, which held Chi Omega to two points in the first half of their contest, and another pair in the last session. The three guards for the Hawks were Janet Matkin, Allois Twigg, and Connie Orr. Meanwhile Liz Radar, Ruth Simpson, and Billie McClure tallied 20 points for the victors.
In the overall game picture for the week, Sigma Kappa defeated Foster-Hodder, 22 to 15; Kappa Kappa Gamma defeated Delta Gamma, 27 to 14; MokaHops lost to Miller by default; Alpha Chi Omega beat the College Aces, 36 to 26; Temtruth took a close decision from North College, 30 to 28; Watkins won from Alpha Phi, 27 to 18; Locksley defeated Alpha Delta Pi, 21 to 12; Alpha Omicron Pi lost to Delta Delta Delta by default, and Gamma Phi Beta defeated Sellards. 36 to 19.
In one of the two games lost by default, the tri-Delts held a big margin over the AOPi's when the losers roster was reduced to four players. A game must be lost by default when a team loses enough players on fouls to reduce their number to four. In the other game the MoKaHops were leading Miller by an 18 to 14 score, but in the final quarter two of their six players fouled out.
The College Aces suffered their first defeat at the hands of Alpha Chi Omega Tuesday, but the freshmen played a consistent brand of basketball. Cleta Schmazeidr, Laverne Kalb, and Anne Burton led the scoring for the losers, while Mary Ann Mahoney led the Alpha Chi scoring. She brought her season total for two games to 67 points, as she poured through 26 counters. The rest of the winners lineup included: Joan Leonhart, Jean Michaels, Helen Stealey, Connie Maua, Connie High, Llewellyn K iewe, and Judith Ringer.
The second highest seeror in intramurals this season, Esther Harms of Temruth brought her season total to 43 as she scored 22 points Wednesday, in leading Temruth to a very close victory over North College. Good supporting play came from Mary Deines, Lois Meils, Frances Samson, Jane Fox, and Emmalou Burbank. Phyllis Springer led North College with 16 points, while Ann McFarland scored 9, and Mary Kincaid tallied three.
Watkins had little trouble in defeating Alpha Phi, but had to depend upon the accurate shooting of Shirley Thomson. The senior forward picked up 11 points, and was followed closely by LaVonne Godwin and Mary Betz who had eight points each. Helen Boring, Rosemary Scheuerman, and Dorris To兰 played a good defensive game for the winners.
UCLA, ranked seventh nationally, tackles Pacific Coast conference rival Washington in one of the top games on tonight's schedule. It's the first of two games in two nights between the two teams.
Sam Houston State, 75-59; and
Xavier outscored Marshall. 96-91.
Santa Clara, ranked 18th, will try to bounce back from its loss to Oregon by beating Oregon State. Brigham Young, ranked 17th, shoots for win No. 5 against San Francisco. LaSalle, ranked second, should have little trouble winning its fourth against Westchester State.
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By CHUCK MORELOCK
Kansan Assistant Sports Editor
The Jayhawkers convincing victory over Tulane last night may have lifted a lot of eyebrows among Big Seven basketball fans and coaches.
Kansas was a slim favorite before the contest in spite of the fact that three sophomores were in the starting lineup. But few persons expected the green KU squad to post such a wide margin of victory. Tulane had an 88 point average in its first three games and was rated as a racehorse, fast - breaking outfit loaded with heavy scorers.
The fact that the Jayhawkers held them to 50 points makes the KU defense look outstanding. Perhaps Phog Allen is concentrating on the defense this year in order to balance the loss of Clyde Lovellette, greatest scorer in Kansas history, and Bob Kenney, Bill Lienhard, and Bill Hoagland, three prolific out-side shooters.
One game doesn't make a season, but on the strength of their opening win, we think the Jayhawkers will fool a lot of experts throughout the season. The team is young, fast, and has everything to gain and little to lose. They'll make mistakes, plenty of them, but won't be any pushovers.
The Kansas offense, although ragged, still managed to score 63 points. And the scoring was evenly distributed among the three-year reign of Lovelletta.
There won't be any more 3 a.m. rallies and bonfires on Massachusetts street, but Kansas fans should see a lot of good basketball before the campaign ends.
Yankees Sign Babe Herman, Ex 'Daffy' Player, as Scout
Bv OSCAR FRALEY
United Press Sports Writer
New York—(U.P.)—The amazing performances of a "clown" named Casey Stengel may be a basic reason, but the fact stands today that there is very little jocular comment over the hiring by the New York Yankees of Floyd Caves (Babe) Herman as a scout.
The "Babe," in case you don't remember, was one of the Brooklyn Dodger "daffiness" boys two decades ago.
Jayhawk Defense Stifles Greenies
One of the case history gems
He's the fellow who invented three men on a base and countless other baseball belly-splitters.
The first round was played in a 25 mph north wind that chilled the players, and the same conditions were expected to prevail today.
East Chicago, Ind. (U.P.)—Twelve-year-old Edmund Mc陵 Jr., turned to watch would-be tacklers as he carried the ball in a sandlot gridiron. He crashed into a mailbox and broke his nose.
No less than 21 players were within in four strokes of Ford, who set the pace through yesterday's opening round by shooting a three-under-par 67 over the Miami Springs course.
Mailbox Tackles Halfback
Miami. Fla. (U.P.)—Consistent Doug Ford of Harrison, N.Y., was in first place as the field teed off in the second round of the $10,000 Miami Open Golf tournament, but his lead was far from secure.
Doug Ford Leads In Miami Open
Tied for second place at 68 were Art Wall Jr., of Pocoon Manor, Pa. and Johnny Palmer of Charlotte, N.C. At 69 were two pros—Jack Burke of Houston, Texas and Ed. Furgol of St. Louis, and two amateurs—Dick Chapman of Pinehurst, N.C., and John Cusano of Coral Gables.
Dick Chapman of Pinehurst, N.C., and John Cusano of Coral Gables, Fla.
By DON NIELSEN Kansan Sports Editor
KU
Coach Phog Allen's Jayhawk basketball squad downed a mighty scoring machine 63-50 last night in the opening game of the KU basketball season.
Kansas controlled the backboards to a great extent defensively, and kept the Tulane five bottled up effectively during the whole game.
concerns the time he asked a writer for a match as he whipped a cigar butt from his pocket. Then, puffing experimentally, the Babe nonchalantly told the startled writer:
The Jayhawker scoring was distributed pretty evenly with forward Allen Kelley and center B. H. Born taking top honors with 13 points, Guard Bill Heitholt and forward Larry Davenport followed with 11 and 7 points respectively.
The Jayhawks starred defensively to hold the Green Wave to the lowest point total they have gathered this season. Previously the Tulane five had averaged 88 points per game in downing Birmingham Southern 91-42, Southwestern Tennessee 94-32, and Pensacola Navy 79-49.
"Never mind, it's lit."
And another related his angry retort when a salesman tried to sell him a set of encyclopedias:
In 1949, B.C., meaning "Before Casey," tales like those got a lot of yuks. But baseball people are inclined to agree, since Stengel the "Clown" won four world championships in a row, that the line between daffiness and genius is thinner than the ham in a drug store sandwich.
"Listen, my kids is all healthy and can walk to school!"
"I hate to spoil好 stories," the Babe says as he looks back on his checkered career, "but a lot of that stuff they tell on me is untrue. Say, like that story about taking the cigar out of my pocket."
But if he doesn't come up with at least one new Joe DiMaggio in the next four years, I, for one, am going to defy the Stengel precedent. The Babe was much more fun the way he is!
Poor fellow. You can see now that the Babe was just a target, like Stengel, of a bunch of unscrupulous baseball writers.
"Well, just the tip of it was lit," the Babe hems. "I thought it was out and stuck it in my pocket for a few moments. Then when I put it back in my mouth, you see, I didn't need a match. It was still lit deep inside."
Didn't it happen?
The first quarter saw little scoring, but the Tulane Greenies took a lead at the end of the period. Tulane had many scoring opportunities during the quarter but was unable to hit, then the Kansas defense started to click.
As the second quarter opened, the Jayhawks started to pull away, and, sparked by the shooting of Al Kelley, the Kansas quintet moved to a 31-25 halftime lead.
With about two minutes gone in the fourth quarter, Born fouled Tulane forward Hal Cervini for his fifth miscue and left the game. In the last period the Greenies scored 16 points to KU's 14, but never drew nearer than within 10 points of the Jayhawks.
During the first half, Kansas managed to hit 45 per cent of its shots from the field, but, on the whole, play was ragged for both teams.
In the third quarter, Kansas forged ahead to stay. The Jayhawks held the Green Wave to 9 points in the third quarter. Born sparked the third quarter surge with some fine feeding and backboard work. At the end of the period, the Jayhawks led 49-34, and never were threatened thereafter.
Kansas moves to Houston, Tex., tomorrow for a Saturday night contest with Rice. The Owls are a much improved squad, and a great deal of enthusiasm has been aroused over the impending contest.
Totals 21-53 21-28 24 63
TULANE (50) G-GA F-FA FF 93
Brennan 3-14 4-5 2 10
Browne 4-11 3-5 4 11
Sullenger 0-2 1-1 0 1
Schulz 4-12 3-6 5 1
Kriebel 0-1 3-7 0 3
Cerbiln 2-8 4-6 4 3
Stoll 0-4 1-3 1 1
McGowan 2-9 1-2 2 5
The Kansas lineup may suffer some shuffling before the Rice contest as a result of last night's game. Allen Kelley has been threatening to break into the lineup throughout the week's practice, and on the basis of his scoring spree against Tulane well may break into the first five.
Totals ... 15-61 ... 20-35 ... 18 ... 50
Halftime score: 31-25, Kansas.
Officials: Helveston and Wilson.
Harold Patterson, former grid star, also may break into a starting forward slot. He dumped in 6 points against Tulane last night, and also has been pressing for a starting spot.
KANSAS (63) G-GA F-FA PF TT #
Davenport 1- 3 2- 2 3 4
Born 3- 6 1- 3 1 7
Burn 5-14 3- 5 5 13
Nicholson 1- 1 1- 1 1 3
D. Kelley 2- 6 2- 4 1 6
Heltholt 3- 6 5- 6 5 11
Smith 0- 0 0- 0 2 0
A. Kelley 4-11 5- 5 3 13
Patterson 2- 5 2- 2 3 6
Sooners to Watch Orange Bowl Game
Norman, Okla. —(U.P.) The University of Oklahoma football team, barred from playing in the Orange Bowl by Big Seven conference rules, will see the Miami, Fla., game Jan. 1 as spectators.
The junket by 28 lettermen, wives of the married players, and members of the Sooners' coaching staff was approved yesterday by the school's regents, despite a warning from university president George Cross that the trip also might be in violation of the circuit's rules.
Page.7
Landslides Mark IM Cage Play
Nine games, in Fraternity "A" and "B" divisions, were played yesterday in the intramural-basketball schedule. The winners in the "A" division were Sigma Nu, Delta Chi, Alpha Tau Omega, Phi Kappa, and Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Sigma Nu 56. Sigma Chi 18
Bud Bixler and Alex McBurney,
with 19 points apiece, led Sigma Nu to
a 56-18 victory over Sigma Chi. Sigma
Nu led 26-14 at the half, and then
held Sigma Chi to four points in the
second half. Bill Witers led the Sigma
Chi scoring with 11 points.
Friday, Dec. 12, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Delta Chi 37, Phi Kappa Sigma 22
Delta Chi took an early lead and then coached to a 37-22 victory over Phi Kappa Sigma. Earl Knauss led the Delta Chi attack with 15 points. Gordon Ewy was high for Phi Kappa
KJ
COACH J. V. SIKES
Sikes Sought At Arkansas
Jules V. Sikes, head football coach the University, was mentioned yesterday as possible choice for new head coach at the University of Arkansas.
His name was brought up to an advisory committee which is seeking a successor to Coach Otis Douglas. He resigned recently. The committee was to "ask these men being considered just how interested they are."
When contacted this morning Coach Sikes said, "I have not been approached by any members of the committee concerning the position and I have not approached them."
"It is nice to know you are being considered for a position like that," he added. Other names mentioned by the committee include Paul Bryant, Kentucky; Jim Tatum, Maryland; J. B. Whitworth, Oklahoma A&M; Bowden Wyatt, Wyoming; George Sauer, Baylor, and Murray Warmath of Mississippi State.
No time to lose-
3
Sigma with 9.
it's time to choose!
GIBSON
CHRISTMAS CARDS
We Do Monogramming
Alpha Tau Omega 47, Pi Kappa Alpha 18
POLICE DELIVERY
Gowlands
Alpha Tau Omega steadily built up its lead throughout the game to defeat Pi Kappa Alpha 47-18. The half-time score was 21-10. Bob Toalson and Don Stephenson, with 13 and 11 points respectively, led the Alpha Tau Omega scoring. Walt Hicks, with 11 points, was tops for Pi Kappa Alpha Phi Kappa 39. Tau Kappa Epsilon 25
Phi Kappa and Tau Kappa Epsilon played a see-saw first half, with the lead changing hands four times, but the Phi Kap's came back strong in the second half to win 39-25. Bob Meisenburg fired the Phi Kappa rally with four points at 30 seconds eary were the Phi Kap's Tim McHugh with 17 points, and Bill Crow with 14 points for the TKE's.
Lambda Chi Alpha over SAE by
Forfeit
Lambda Chi Alpha had to forfeit a game to Sigma Alpha Epsilon last night. Lambda Chi was leading late in the game, when it was discovered that Morris Kay was ineligible because he wasn't a legally registered player.
Other Scores:
Prentice Hall
Sigma Chi 19, Phi Kappa Psi 45.
Tau Kappa Epsilon 37, Pi Kappa
Chi 19.
Alpa 19:
Alpha Kappa Lambda 41, Delta
Cm 14.
Kappa Sigma 39, Phi Kappa 28.
Kappa Sigma 39, Phi Kappa 28.
Robinson Annex
Independent "A"
4 p.m. Sterling-Oliver - Don
Henry
5 p.m. Pearson-Jollife
6 p.m. AFROTC-Last Chance
7 p.m. YMCA-Theta Tau
8 p.m. Optimests-Skyliners
9 p.m. Hodder-Pharmacy Five
Fraternity 'B'
8:15 p.m. Sigma Nu-Theta Chi (E)
8:15 p.m. Eigma Alpha Epsilon-
Sigma Pi (WE)
9:15 p.m. Triangle-Sigma Phi
Independent B
9:15 p.m. Stephenson-East Side
The Intramural office had no schedule available for the week-end.
Santee Shapes Up for 13 Mile Stint
Coach M. E. (Bill) Easton is confident that Wes Santee, Kansas University track star, will win the much-heralded marathon race against 27 of his Acacia fraternity brothers starting at 2 p.m. Saturday.
"Wes has been running crosscountry about an hour every night since the fraternity accepted his challenge and he's in fine shape," Easton said. "He should take this pretty easily."
Easton estimates that the race will take about an hour and a half—"depending on how fast Wes wants to run," he said. "As a mater of fact, I figure he can go along at about six minutes a mile. At that rate he could finish in an hour and 20 or 25 minutes," he said. "But knowing Wes, he'll probably be running along teasing the runners most of the time.
P.A.
WES SANTEE
Farrell Schell of Amarillo, Tex., the Acacia president, said the official length of the race is $13\frac{1}{2}$ miles and that 27 men, each running approximately a half-mile, will compete for the fraternity. While he isn't as confident of his team as Easton seems to be of Santee, the engineering senior still believes the relay teams stands a good chance of winning. The starting point is a spot just south of Tonganoxie, along Highway 24-40. The race is to end at the north side of the Kaw River bridge in Lawrence.
One of the men running for Acacia will be Clement Blakelese, a
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whole chapter. The matter was dropped then, but when he returned from Thanksgiving vacation, he found complete plans had been made for the event.
8th and Mass. St.
Leadoff man for the fraternity will be freshman Ralph Moody of Minneola, a backfield star for this year's freshman football team. Running the last lap will be John Quarrier, from Kansas City, a quarter-miler on the freshman track squad.
freshman from Wichita. Although practically blind, Blakeslee has some light perception, and will be guided along his part of the course by chapter members.
Telephone 30
"This is a real good gag," Easton said with a grin. "I admire the boys for trying to show Wes up, but I'm afraid he'll run off and leave them if he wants to, and nothing unforeseen comes up. Most of those guys are going to go along okay for the first 300 yards or so of their laps, but they'll start dying a thousand deaths, wait and see."
Easton will follow Santee throughout the race in a station wagon equipped with a public address system. He will check Santee's time and holler instructions and encouragement to him as he runs.
The idea for this race was born last spring when, after receiving a lot of ribbing from his fraternity brothers because of his press clippings, he said he could outrun the
The rest of the team will consist of Farrel Schell, Donald Tice, Jim Glass, Lee Breckenridge, Lyle Boutwell, Gene Cayot, Stan Hamilton, Strickler Smith, Paul Fotopolos, George Claunch, Kenneth Beck, Dick Lindstrom, Murryl Layman, Larry Tougaw, Dick Roshong, Ted Weidman, Albert Calkins, Clement Blakeslee, Charles Calnan, Harlan Conic, Vic Webber, Bob Keefer, Ronald Duphorne, Harry Sprague, and Dave Treadway.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Dec. 12, 1952
Weekend Social Events
* *
Delta Delta Delta sorority will hold a formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Mrs. W. S. Shaw, Mrs. Bert A. Weber, Mrs. Andrew C. McKay, and Mrs. C. H. Wentworth.
Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity will hold a formal Christmas dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday at the Eldridge hotel. Chapernes will be Mrs. Edna M. Stewart, Mrs. James A. Hooke, Mrs. Hazel H. Jenkins, and Mrs. Frank M. Baird. The fraternity will be aided by Alpha Phi sorority in decorating for the dance Friday afternoon.
* *
Gamma Phi Beta sorority will hold a formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Mrs. C. A. Thomas, Mrs. Thomas H. Stuart, Mrs. Astrid M. Dohner, and Mrs. Raph Park.
**
Phi Kappa Psi fraternity will hold a dance from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday at the chapter house with Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Chaperones will be Mrs. Arthur H. Little and Mrs. Edwin B. Peet.
***
Phi Delta Theta fraternity will hold a dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Mrs. J. H. Kreamer, Mrs. Bert A. Weber, Mrs. Andrew McKay.
**
The Independent Students association will hold a game party from 8 to 11 p.m. Friday in the Trail room of the Memorial union building. Chaperones will be Mrs. Leone Wenzel and Mrs. Lester Jeter.
***
Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity will hold a party from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Mrs. Alberta Frye and Mrs. Spearman.
* *
The fraternity will hold a dinner at the Memorial Union building and a dance at the chapter house from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday. Chap- ones will be Mrs. Irene Spencer, Mrs. Carl White, and Mrs. Alberta Frye.
Jolliffe hall will hold a party from 6:30 to 11:30 p.m. Saturday at the hall. Chaperson will be Mrs. Althea Galloway, Mrs. Lester Jeter, Mrs. Leone Wenzel, and Mrs. Edward H. Turner.
Kappa Alpha Theta sorority will hold its annual tree trimming party from 4 to 6 p.m. Friday at the chapter house. Mrs. Ralph Rose-brough will chaperon.
Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity will hold its annual tree trimming party from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. Sunday at the chapter house. Mrs. Frank M. Baird will chaperon.
Delta Sigma Pi professional fraternity, will hold its Christmas formal from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday in the Eldridge hotel. Chaparones will be Mr. and Mrs. Max Fessler, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Howey, and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Buskirk.
Alpha Phi sorority will hold its annual tree trimming party from 6:30 to 11 p.m. Sunday at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Mrs. Thomas A. Clark, Mrs. Richard L. Blume, Mrs. Edwin B. Peet, and Mrs. Edward Dicks.
Triangle fraternity will hold its annual Christmas party from 7 to 10:30 p.m. Sunday at the chapter house. Mrs. Dean S. Nite will chaperon.
***
Phi Kappa fraternity will hold its annual Christmas formal from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house. Shaperones will be Mrs. D. I. Denham, Mrs. Claude Double, Mrs. E. H. Turner, Mrs. Agnese Underwood, and Mrs. Dana Anderson.
Alpha Phi sorority will hold its annual Christmas formal from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the Eldridge hotel. Chaperones will be Mrs. Richard B. Blume, Mrs. Fanny DeLozier, Mrs. Thomas A. Clark.
Mrs. J. I. Hollingsworth, Mrs. L. L. Williams, and Mrs. Frank M. Baird.
- * *
Acacia fraternity will hold its annual Christmas party from 4 to 7 p.m. Sunday at the chapter house Mrs. Edna Brown will chaperon.
* *
Sigma Chi fraternity will hold its annual winter formal from 9 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. Saturday at the chapter house. Chapelones will be Mrs. Bert Nash, Mrs. Kenneth Whyte, Mrs. Eugene Alford, and Mrs. Ralph Van Bebber.
***
Pearson hall will hold a dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday at the hall. Chaperones will be Mrs. Edward Dickes, Mrs. Astrid M. Dohner, Mrs. Edna Brown, and Mrs. R. H. Wilson.
- * *
Miller hall will hold a formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the hall. Chaperones will be Mrs. H. P. Ramage, Mrs. Edna Brown, Mrs. Joe H. Hope, and Mrs. R. G. Roche.
**
Theta Tau fraternity will hold its annual Christmas formal from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Miss Martha Peterson, Miss Marcia Baty, and Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Dimond.
Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity will hold a party from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Mrs. Alice Hester, Mrs. Cecarmal Stone, and Mrs. Arvella Young.
* *
***
* *
Don Henry Co-op will hold its annual Christmas formal from 8 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the house. Chaperones will be Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Flemming, Mr. Edward Sarcine, and Mr. Abe Lipshitz.
Kappa Eta Kappa, professional engineering fraternity, will hold a party from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday at the chapter house. Chaparones will be Prof. and Mrs. E. L. Sordsen, Dr. and Mrs. L. W. Shagondollar, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lindsay.
Watkins hall will hold its Christmas formal from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the hall. Chaparones will be Miss Julia Willard, Mrs. R. H. Wilson, Miss Carletta Nellis, and Mrs. Elizabeth Stanley.
Kappa Psi fraternity will hold a formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday in the basement of the Community building. Chaparones will be Dr. and Mrs. Duane Wenzel and Dr. Ray Hoponeman.
Templin hall will hold its Christmas formal from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the hall. Chaperones will be Miss Mary Peg Hardman, Miss Murial Johnson, Miss Marie Zepplin, Miss Mary June Carter, and Dr. and Mrs. Van Eck.
Stephenson hall will hold a dance from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. Friday at the hall. Chaperones will be Miss Adelle McCllelland, Mrs. R. G. Roche, Miss Julia Willard, and Mrs. H. P. Ramage.
Phi Kappa Tau fraternity will hold a house party from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Mrs. Carolyn B. Waggoner, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Beasley, and Mr. and Mrs. Carlyle Smith.
Batterfield hall will hold a semiformal dinner-dance from 6:30 p.m. to midnight Friday at the hall. Chaperones will be Miss Carolina Nellis, Mrs. Lela Whiteford, Mrs. E. R. Hooper, and Mrs. Elizabeth Stanley.
Corbin, North College, Foster, and Hodder halls will hold a joint formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday at North College hall. Chaparones will be Miss Jane Moorman, Miss Elizabeth Evans, Miss Lynn Wingett, and Miss Adelle McClelland.
***
Sigma Kappa sorority will hold a Christmas party from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. Friday at the chapter house.
Members of Delta Chi fraternity and their dates danced to the music of Harlan Livingood's band at the fraternity's annual Christmas formal Saturday night at the chapter house.
Delta Chi Fraternity Lists Party Guests
Guests present were Donna McCall, Barbara Baker, Joan Mokerman, Kay Coolidge, Anne McLaughlin, Janet Libby, Cecel Perry, Burr Rubris, Mary Garvey, Irma Lou Kolterman, Frannie Mason, Carol Landis, Gloria Savage, Eleanor Bell, Evalyn Eyer, Shirley Summers, and Bonnie Metz.
Sylvia Marshall, Janet Gabrielson, Barbara Brammer, Gretchen Youse, Betty Rieger, Connie Tatum, Lela McKeep, Marty Garrett, Mary Kay Schneider, Shirley Tungett, Sue Holbert, Kathy Rohwer, Jo Smith, Joane Manney, Marilyn Schianost, Audra Bullinger, and Donna Hinds.
Dee Ann Price, Tina Maduros, Pat Howell, Eugenia Ferguson, Jane Edwards, Jo Cladfeltter, Margaret Steinke, Evelyn Thomas, Marilyn Stueck, Jo Ann Anderson, Sheila Moskan, Jo Vogel, Virginia Certain, Juanita Brown, Jennie Walker, Jan Stone, and Maureen Kelley.
Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity
Elects Kirkpatrick President
Chaperones were Mrs. Frank M.
Baird, Mrs. Hazel H. Jenkins, Mrs.
Fanny DeLozier, Mrs. Thomas A.
Clark, Mrs. Richard L. Blume, and
Mrs. L. L. Williams.
C. H. Kirkpatrick, college senior, was recently elected president of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity for the coming year.
Other officers elected were Bill Schmidt, business senior, vice president; Ned Rooney, business junior, treasurer; Dick Foster, college sophomore, secretary, and Lee Tatum, engineering junior, historian.
Chaperones will be Mr. and Mrs.
R. G. Mahieh, Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Lawton, and Mrs. Hazel Hawbecker.
* * * *
Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity will hold a formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Mrs.Hazel H. Jenkins, Mrs.John Skie Sr., Mrs.Edwin B. Peet, Mrs.Ralph Rosebrough, and Mrs.Edward Dicks.
Delta Tau Delta fraternity will hold its annual Christmas formal from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house. Chapelones will be Mrs. Dean S. Nite, Mrs. John R. Scott, Mrs. C. H. Wentwroth, and Mrs. B. A. Mayher.
Alpha' Kappa Lambda fraternity will hold a party from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday at the Eldridge hotel. Chaperones will be Mrs. Edward H. Turner, Mrs. Dean S. Nite, Mrs Edwin B. Peet, and Mrs. W. W Brown.
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A snack tray made from a large, wooden drawer-divider is a useful gift. Cover the outside of the tray with a bright wallpaper or patterned fabric and paint the inside a harmonizing color. Add brass curtain rings at each end for handles and waterproof the whole tray with two coats of clear varnish. Your drawer-divider has now become the perfect tray for serving popcorn, potato chips, and crackers.
And the most fun of all is giving gifts you make yourself. In no time at all you can whip up several gay and original gifts for your family and friends.
Half the fun of Christmas fills the few weeks before when every body's busily preparing for the big day.
Friends Enjoy Christmas Gifts You Make From Odds and Ends
For instance, a trio of brightly painted skilllets would add a decorative touch to any kitchen wall. Buy small, inexpensive skilllets. Paint all but the handles with white enamel, and when dry, add gay Pennsylvania Dutch designs to the inside of the skillet.
Sellards hall announces the engagement of Miss Eleanor Ormond, college sophomore, to Mr. William Adams, graduate student. Miss Ormond's home is in Kansas City, Kan., and Mr. Adams' home is in Kansas City, Kan., also.
Ormand-Adams Engaged
Denim with a dash is the latest thing in aprons. With a piece of light-weight denim 24x30 inches you can make a practical gift. Gather one of the 24-inch sides. Stitch around the other three sides $ _{1/2} $ inch from the edge, and fringe the material to the stitching. Sew the gathered side to a 2-inch-wide double band about 30 inches long and fringe the ends.
KU Christian Fellowship
Pull 6 threads for each bottom stripe, then weave white cotton rug yarn through the openings. Above the stripes, make rooster designs of cotton rug yarn. Each rooster is simply a series of long, vertical
Miss Alice Kitchen, sophomore in the School of Medicine and former Inter-varsity Christian fellowship staff worker, will speak to the KU Christian fellowship group at 7:30 tonight. 32 Strong hall.
A woman's suffrage law was passed in the territory of Wyoming Dec. 10, 1869.
stitches forming a silhouette. Add a row of small, vertical stitches between the roosters for the "grass."
D
Inexpensive undecorated glasses and plain white napkins can be transformed into an individual gift set by painting a simple design on them. Cut 9-inech white squares and pull threads around the edges to make a fringe. Cut out a stencil of the design to be used and apply the pictures to napkins with washable textile paint. For the glasses, fasten the design to the inside of the glass with scotch tape and use it as a guide in painting the design.
A box of homemade holly cookies is anther gift appreciated by young and old. Include a set of cooky cutters and your favorite recipe with the gift. Or with crepe paper and cotton you could make a filled cookie jar look like Santa himself.
Danger! Slick Roads Ahead
Good-enough-to-eat gifts are fun to make and give, too.
Hobo packs and clown's caps are "different" ways to give goodies. For the hobo pack cut bright cheese-cloth into squares, paste stars on the outside and tie around an assortment of popcorn balls and nuts. A clown's cap of white cardboard with holiday stickers can be filled to the brim with popcorn balls tinted red and green. Tie on a ribbon handle.
Have a merry time this Christmas and give homemade gifts that are pretty and practical and that take little of your time. No, gift means more to the receiver than the one you've made yourself.
11 DAYS LEFT
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Page 9
Spectacles Marked Distinction Among 17th Century Monks
"Brother, put on your spectacles!"
That order, issued in 17th century Europe by the leader of a religious sect, was considered by the young student to whom it was addressed as the highest honor that could have been bestowed on him for faithful service. He felt as though he had been knighted.
Spectacles, in the 17th century, were a mark of superior learning and social status. Proportionately as a person's fortunes rose, he increased the size of his spectacles, and wore them higher on his nose.
As man progressed through the ages, so did the art of making lenses and spectacles. The modern eyeglasses 60 million Americans wear today are the end product of thousands of years, according to a history of the art of spectacle making compiled by an American optical company.
Although there is no definite proof of the exact time or place of the origin of spectacles and lenses, the history indicates that it is believed that as early as 2233 B.C. a Chinese emperor used lenses made of rock crystal, quartz, topaz, or amethyst to observe the stars.
No one is certain how far into antiquity the conception of glasses as a means of protecting the eyes goes, but it has been established that primitive tribes in various parts of the world decorated their bodies with goggles, with an external slits to admit a minimum of light, before they had knowledge of glass.
The existence of many specimens of ancient glass, dating back several thousand years,places manufacture of the product as one of the oldest of men's industries.
The ancients employed bulbs of glass filled with water to concentrate the rays of the sun for cauterization and for kindling fires. The use of the bulb, placed before the eye, to magnify small and difficult lettering was mentioned by early historians. The earliest lenses known were used as hand glasses, held close to the object viewed. Only gradually were methods devised to
support the lenses before the eyes.
But, because the need was not felt,
no further steps were taken in antiquity to develop lenses. And in
the dark ages, spectacles were all but forgotten.
The first historical data pointing
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to the revival of spectacles is that glasses were known in China and Europe in the 13th century. During this period, old people in China used lenses to distinguish small lettering. These glasses were of different design than the early European forms. They were large and oval shape, rather than round.
necessarily imply lenses. Even until recent times frames without lenses were used as an affectation, and denoted social success.
It was at this time in China that the tortoise shell frames gained prominence. The tortoise was a sacred reptile to the Chinese, and tortoise shell frames were considered symbols of good fortune and long life. Frames, however, did not
In Spain in the middle of the 17th century, young ladies wore great spectacles on their noses and fastened to their ears, but, as one observer wrote: "They made no use of them where it was necessary; they only discused while they had them on." This was done to help the young ladies to appear grave.
Roger Bacon, English monk-philosopher, is credited as a pioneer lens designer. In his Opus Magnus (1268) he treated on the science of optics in general and lenses in particular.
Spectacle making as an industry did not get under way until after the invention of printing in 1440.
Ability to read and write was possessed by the learned few, and costiness of glasses made them prohibitive. But, with the advent of printing, a constantly increasing number of persons demanded the instruments that could help them to a better understanding of the times in which they lived.
through the land, keeping the spectacle industry alive, selling their wares to alleviate visual faults.
The similarity of spectacles in Europe after this time shows that while they may not have been derived from a common source, they must have developed under the same influences. As early as 1465, the Spectacle Maker's guild took part in a review of merchants and craftsmen before the French king. With the elimination of guilds, peddlers became the chief source of glasses for the public. They traveled
In the early 19th century, a great advance was made in the application of lenses for correction of errors in refraction, when a British scientist, Thomas Young, demonstrated the condition of astigmatism in 1801.
Shortly thereafter, in 1804, Wollaston, an Englishman, advocated the use of meniscus form lenses. He gave them the name "perisopic" because such form provided a wider, useful field of view.
Other developments, including the standardization of curves for meniscus lenses, brought the making of spectacles up to the fine precision known today.
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan
Student Labor Board To Help with Problems
By ROZANNE ATKINS
With approximately 72 per cent of all students working full-time or part-time, the need for a student labor committee to hear and iron out labor problems has long been recognized.
A permanent student labor committee was organized last week and is ready to help any student who wishes to submit a problem.
The labor committee includes Wendell Walker, graduate student, chairman; Shirley Thomson, education senior, secretary; David Hills, college senior, treasurer; Harold Miller, graduate student; Jill Woods, college junior; Robert Lee, faculty member, junior and a faculty member not yet chosen.
The committee is divided into three subcommittees to deal with labor relations, discrimination in employment. and low wages.
The student labor relations board composed of Walker, Woods, Miller, a University administration representative and a Lawrence business man will investigate any dispute arising between student employees and employer and make recommendations for a settlement.
A hearing before the board may be obtained by filing a statement with the chairman.
The student fair employment practices commission will hear complaints concerning discrimination in employment on the basis of race, religion, residence, or other grounds. A written report of all complaints will be drawn up by this committee and presented to the labor relations board.
Walker, Miss Thomson, Reed, and the faculty advisor will serve on the committee.
The labor research division includes Hills and paid research assistants. The duty of this division is to gather information needed by other divisions.
The division is especially concerned with wages of University-employed labor. It will provide the student labor committee with appropriate material on which to base an appeal to the bi-annual University budget committee hearing for greater allotment for student wares.
In order that these committees will be standing committees one half of the appointments to replace old members will be made in the fall and the other half in the spring.
KU Opera Scene in Paper
The most recent issue of Opera News, published by the Metropolitan Opera Guild, contains a picture of a scene from the 1952 KU Light Opera Guild's production of "The Bartered Bride." It appears in a survey of standard opera performances at educational institutions.
German Program To Feature Drama
The German department's Christmas program Wednesday, Dec. 17, will feature an example of 16th century German miracle plays, caroling by a student choir and the music of an instrumental trio, Dr. J. A. Burzle, chairman of the department, said today.
The play is a simple presentation of Christ's birth, and it includes, as other miracle plays of that century did, bits of crude humor. The cast of the play are all students of German, Dr. Burzle said. Dr. John Newfield of the University theater is supervising the play's staging.
Musical direction is the responsibility of Elin K. Jorgensen, associate professor of music education. The trio is Martha Heck, fine arts senior, piano; Olga Zilboorg, fine arts freshman, cello, and Don Stewart, assistant instructor of English, violin.
Carillon Program
Ronald Barnes, University carli-
lonneur, will present two programs
preceding the Christmas Vespers
programs. The program will be
played at 2:45 to 3:15 p.m. Sunday.
C. L. Dauquin
"Come All Ye Shepherds!"
Boheman Carol Traditional Christmas carols
2. "O Little Town of Bethellem"
3. "Dear Mister Night Clow"
4. "Joy to the World"
*Wassall, Wassall!* *Old English Carol*
*Angels We Have Heard on High*
from 6-45 to 7-15, n.m. follows;
The program to be played from 6:45 to 7:15 p.m. follows:
"Good King Wenceslas" "Polish Carol"
"My Sheep We were" ... German, 17th Century
Old English Christmas Carols
1. "Deck the Halls"
2. "The Coventry Carol"
3. "The Ivy"
4. "God Rest Ilya Gentlemen"
5. "Wassail, Wassail"
"Silent Night, Holy Night" .. Gruben
ISA Game Session Set Tonight in Union
A game session will be sponsored by the Independent Student association from 8 to 11 tonight in the Trail room of the Student Union.
Checkers, bingo, dominoes, bridge,
and other card games will be sponsored
and provided. Anyone interested in learning any of these games
will have an opportunity to do so.
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Clark to Discuss Intelligence Drop
Frosh Conference Meets with Success
"This is probably due to two main factors," he said. "First, the high schools are better preparing the students for the transition to college life, and second, the University has been making changes to help the new student fall into the swing of things quickly and easily."
BY CLARKEN MENE
Freshmen entering the University now have an easier time of it than ever before, Registrar James K. Hitt said today after hearing some of the reports on the fourth annual Principal - Freshmen conference Tuesday.
And while the registrar didn't take the credit for these advances for the principal-freshmen meetings, the consensus of opinion among the high school officials was that the conferences have done much to aid the student going from high school to college.
Prof. Carroll D. Clark, chairman of the department of sociology and anthropology, will present the ninth of a series of "Sociology on the Air Broadcasts" at 4 p.m. Sunday on KLWN. His topic will be "Is Intelligence Declining?"
Bv CLARKE KEYES
Campus Chest Head Praises Cooperation
Dr. Clark, a former president of the Midwest Sociological society and the Southwest Sociological society, was sociological consultant three years to Gov. Alfred M. Landon's State Planning Board. Dr. Clark has taught at Cornell, Oregon, Idaho, and Connecticut universities.
Thanks for "magnificent cooperation" on the campus Chest drive was expressed today by E. C. Buehle, professor of speech and chairman of the drive.
He is co-author of such books as "Major Problems in Democracy," "People of Kansas," and also "Hand-book of Kansas Social Resources" in addition to many articles in professional journals. Dr. Clark has been chairman of the department since 1933.
The response has been very good," Prof. Buehler said, "and I think we will probably reach or surpass our original quota of $3,500." Friday is the deadline and late contributors may make their contributions to Prof. Buehler.
Principals of 54 Kansas and Missouri high schools had informal chats with freshmen from their high schools during the conference. While most of the principals got together to compare a few notes after the conference, nothing definite came of the meeting. The principals will send a written report to the registrar later telling what they found out from their former students.
When all the reports are in, Mr. Hitt said, then the University can get some idea how it can help the new student even more.
"Just from talking with some of the principals we've found that individual problems, rather than universal ones, are causing what trouble students might have," he said.
Principalis contacted all expressed a high regard for the conference. H. J. Clark of Arkansas City said that he finds the talks most helpful to the high school. Problems faced by students entering KU are not much different than those of other schools, although his school doesn't send many students to KU, the conference helps him with all students going to college.
Barney Hays of Highland Park High school in Topeka agreed with the consensus of opinion that the conference was a very fine and helpful idea.
"Each year we come to the conference, we find the students are having things a little easier than before, and I think it is due mainly to these conferences," he said.
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Several freshmen from Highland Park seemed to think that Orientation week was a bit too hectic. One fellow thought that if he could have talked with some older student for advice it might have been easier.
"Our biggest mutual problem seems to be the difference in study habits between high school and college." Mr. Hays said.
Principal Neal M. Wherry of Lawrence High, who annually has one of the larger freshman groups on the campus, said that the Lawrence advisers were finding that each student seemed to have an individual problem, if one at all, rather than one that everyone had.
Freshmen as a whole weren't too sure that the conferences or what they had to say would help too much, but all seemed happy to be able to meet with their high school officials again.
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LATE NEWS — COLOR CARTOON "CLOWN ON A FARM"
Friday, Dec. 12, 1952
University Daily Kansan
Page 11
"Santa Is Much Too Slow-Use Want Ads-Make Some Dough!"
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THIS IS THE BIGGEST MUSEUM IN THE WORLD
Call KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be processed within 30 minutes during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University, and by the University Journal. Journals can be billed, not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date.
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BUSINFSS SERVICE
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Phone 1368M. MWF- tf
THERE ARE only 7 days to replace Auto glass until Christmas vacation begins.
Auto Wrecking and Junk Co., 712 E. 9th.
Phone 954.
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sandwiches--for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360.119 Mass. tf
BEVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. tf
TYBPING WANTED. Prompt, accurate service. Pick-up and delivery service after 6 p.m. and before 8 a.m. Phone 3157R. Mrs. Livingyin. tf
EXPERIENCED Typist. Term papers, notebooks, and miscellaneous. Mrs. E. J. Roscoe, 838 Louisiana, Apartment 4, upstairs. Phone 2775-1. **tf**
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality tents. We have the finest test equipment. Best customer service. Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. S26 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. tt
TYPING SERVICE. experienced theses.
Mrs. Hirsch
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445-721-8920. www.thesis.com
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are met. They can shop everything for fur, no, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1128 Conn. Phone 418. tf
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries.
Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6
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REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
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CLOTHING; Pink, short-style coat, size 14. Was $39, now $25. Dressy, black faille skirt, size 26, $10. Both like new. Worn once. Phone 1894-W. 12-17
TWO NICE blond Cocker puppies A.K.C. registration. Six weeks old. Sired by recrident's The Whistler. Dam Taffy of Lawrence. See at 345 Mississippi street, Lawrence. Will hold till Christmas time f desired. Mrs. E. E. Alexander. 12-15
1940 PLYMOUTH, new tires, new motor,
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generator. $175.00. Contact Box 4, Uni-
diversity Daily Kansan. 12-12
MISCELLANEOUS
RADIO and TV service-same day as service on all makes. Most complete stock tubes and parts in this area. Bowman TV and TV 236 Vermont. Phone 138 tt prompt service.
DRESSMAKING, formals, alterations,
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tairs apartment). Phone 14778. 1-6
MY SINCERE THANKS to the person
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Air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. midnight. Crystal Cafe. 609 Vt. tf
CONOCO SERVICE—B. F. Goodrich tires and batteries, complete lubrication service, automatic transmitting service, Buchheim Conoco Service, 19th and Massachusetts.
TYPE:P, Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenm. Phone 1396M. tf
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TRANSPORTATION
RIDE WANTED to Mexico. Two exchange students would share expenses. Call 1851. 12-15
WANT A RIDE to New Orleans and back during the Christmas holidays. Will share drive and expenses. Please call Arnold Kottwitz, 2955 R, after 3:00.
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'Shadow Box' Adds Reality to Panorama
Visitors to the Museum of Natural History now will be able to experience an even greater sensation of reality while viewing the 570-foot long panorama of North American mammals.
A "shadow box" has been installed under the viewing window on the third floor of the museum. This gives observers the impression of looking down as from a mountaintop on the animals in the panorama, which appear to be on a nearby but slightly lower elevation.
WANTED
LIFEGUARD for Robinson Swimming Pool to work from 7-9 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday, Apply Henry Shenk, 107 Robinson. 12-16
STUDENTS Interested in working new banquet service at Student Union for Miss Harvey or Mr Tomlinson between 2 and 4 p.m. on Union cafeteria office.
LOST
BOXER PUP 10 months. Brown color
cust and paws. Please call
or 3029. 12-12
BLUE LEATHER BILLFOLD in Watson library. Reward. Finder please call Margaret Breinholt at 980. 12-12
Engineering Group To Meet Saturday
The third annual conference on Soil Mechanics and Foundation Engineering sponsored by the civil engineering department will be held Saturday, Prof Thurmal F. McMahon said today.
Discussion time for the presentation of problems by individual engineers is included in both the morning and afternoon program periods.
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will welcome the group in Strong hall auditorium at 10 a.m. Reports will be given on "Clay Minerals" by Miss Ada Swineford of the KU staff and on "Problems of Fine Grained Soil Stabilization" by James C. Johnson of the Asphalt Institute, Oklahoma City.
Prof. M. G. Spangler of Iowa State college will speak on "The Mechanics of Frost Heave and Frost Boil" to open the afternoon's program. R. G. Fehrman of the Corps of Engineers, Kansas City, Mo., will conclude the conference speaking on "Kansas City Municipal Levees—Piles of Dirt or Designed Earth Structure."
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Moreau Agrees With Frankfurter
Dean F. J. Moreau of the School of Law today agreed with Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter that the segregation in the schools issue before the court is a matter of precedent.
Justice Frankfurter, a former Harvard professor, said the "separate but equal" yardstick in racial matters has been firmly entrenched over the years by long practice, state laws, and decisions of both state and federal courts.
"This historic structure cannot be casually struck down," he said.
Dr. Moreau agreed with Justice Frankfurter said said the precedents in the matter are that the court has always said segregation is proper if facilities are equal.
"The court has been called upon to reanalyze a very momentous question," the dean said, "which everyone knows must be interpreted in the light of changing times."
Dr. Moreau referred to a statement by Supreme Court Justice Harold H. Burton who said that the Constitution is a "living document which ought to be interpreted in the light of changing times." He suggested that a different situation might make unconstitutional in 1952 what was not so in former years.
The Supreme Court took under advisement yesterday five cases challenging the constitutionality of racial segregation in public schools. The state of Kansas is involved in one of the cases. The others are South Carolina, Virginia, Delaware, and the District of Columbia.
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which spearheaded the four state cases, wants the nine justices to find that segregation is unconstitutional in itself, no matter how excellent a particular school may be.
State education authorities hope the bench will agree to perpetuate the present system by ruling that the issue is one for legislative bodies, not the courts, to decide.
ROK Troops Gain, Lose Nori Hills
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Dec. 12, 1952
Seoul, Korea—(U.P.)—Weary South Korean infantrymen recaptured Big and Little Nori hills on the Western front today in savage, close-quarter fighting only to lose them three hours later to 700 screaming Chinese.
Both Communist attacks hit the ROK's last night after a thundering Red artillery barrage.
South Korean troops had won Little Nori hill earlier in their sixth counter-attack of the day. They reported victory after bloody, hand-to-hand combat with knives, knees, and fists in enemy-held bunkers and trenches.
In each fight, the Koreans held their posts until after the Chinese moved into the trenches for close-quarter combat.
Other ROK's crept northward to Big Nori hill nearby and assaulted the peak from the side while the Communists were preparing to reinforce retreating Reds on Little Nori.
Red, green, and blue flares sent up by the South Koreans illuminated the battlefield after the twin defeat to prevent unobserved infiltration by
On Big Nori, the South Korean defenders lasted 20 minutes against the Communist onslaught. ROK troops trying to hold Little Nori fell back after 18 minutes.
Educators Top Grad School List
Education for educators has been the largest single area of activity in graduate training at the University.
Of the 4,889 graduate degrees granted by the University through 1952, 26.45 per cent were in some phase of education, said Dean Kenneth E. Anderson, writing in the fall issue of the KU Bulletin of Education.
However, the 1,292 persons earning these degrees often drew upon subject areas other than education itself.
the Communists toward the UN main line.
The Communists had captured Little Nori early yesterday in an assault by 3,000 men against that sector of the Western front, the biggest mass attack by the Reds against the UN in two months.
$500 Essay Prize Opento Engineers
A $500 essay contest for engineers sponsored by the Association of Petroleum refiners was announced this week by the School of Engineering.
The contest is open to all students and professors of the School of Engineering. The essays must not be shorter than 1,000 words or longer than 2,000 words. Manuscripts must be written only on one side of each sheet of paper.
Students and faculty members who want to enter the contest and need more information may write to the Contest Committee, Association of Petroleum Re-refiners, 1917 Eye street, N.W., Washington 6, D.C. Closing date for the contest is March 31, 1953.
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Rock Chalk Script Deadline Today
They are John Prosser, assistant producer, Beta Theta Pi; Max Murray, stage manager, Phi Kappa Psi; Charles Goldenberg, publicity, Alpha
Tau Omega, and Neal Anderson business manager, Battenfeld hall.
Green Grows the Grass
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BANT 25
TALL TIMBER AHEAD—Tulane Forward Dick Brennan (with ball) is stopped on the baseline by Kansans B. H. Born (25) and Jerry Alberts as the Green Wave player attempted to score a lay-up in Jayhawks' season opener in New Orleans Thursday. Kansas won the opening game 63-50, but fell before Rice in Houston Saturday night.—Kansan photo by Righ Clarkson.
Two Capacity Crowds For Christmas Vespers
Rv KEN COY
More than 300 students made the 113th annual vespers one of the most stimulating and beautiful programs presented in Hoch auditorium Sunday.
Appearing before a "packed' mouse twice, once in the afternoon and once in the evening, the Christmas vespers contained music and moods to fit all tastes.
After a candle lighting ceremony the A Cappella choir made its entrance to the strains of "O Come All Ye Faithful" played by the Symphony orchestra directed by Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra.
Silver streams of candle light outlined the chair as they marched down two aisles of the semi-dark auditorium to the stage. The breathless attitude of the audience indicated that the processional was the most impressive event in the hour and 15 minute program.
Four tableaux, with the A Cappella choir and choral ensemble providing music, followed. The choir was directed by D. M. Swarthout, professor of piano. The choral ensemble was directed by Clayton Krehbiel, assistant professor of music education.
One of the favorites of the audience was the tableau "Gloria in Excelsis Deo." This set achieved its effect with excellent lighting.
The scene contained Joseph and Mary kneeling before the manger. Above them stood an angel behind a triangular shield of semi-transparent material.
English Chairman Undergoes Surgery
The highlight of the A Cappella choir numbers was "Behold the Star." This number featured solos by Gretta Reetz, fine arts sophomore, and William Oldham, education senior.
James L. Wortham, chairman of the department of English, underwent surgery yesterday at Lawrence Memorial hospital. He is reported in a "satisfactory" condition today.
ton today.
Prof. Wortham had been ill for several days before being taken to the hospital Friday.
Formerly an assistant professor at the University of California at Los Angeles, Prof. Wortham was named professor and chairman of the English department July 1, 1956.
Steel Ease No Help Here
The National Production authority's relaxed restrictions on the use of metals for construction work will have no effect on the construction of the KU fieldhouse, Keith Lawton, administrative assistant to the chancellor, said today.
The government authority last week eased regulations on steel and copper for homes, schools, recreational and entertainment facilities and the like. However, the University has had the priority for the steel for the fieldhouse since June and the problem here is obtaining the steel from the steel companies, Mr. Lawton said.
Steel that could be used for such projects without a permit was increased from five to 25 tons under the new order. The KU building will have 2,700 tons of steel.
49 Believed Killed in Mine
Manila—(U.P.)-Forty-nine miners were believed killed when a gold mine tunnel collapsed at Paracale in southeastern Luzon, a spokesman for the United Paracale Mining company said today.
The 1952 fall semester attendance at the University shows a 4.1 per cent increase over the 1951 figures, according to the official report released today by James K. Hitt, director of admissions. An 11 per cent increase in the non-veteran enrollment was recorded to bring that figure to an all-time high.
KU Attendance 4.1% Over'51Figures
The November report shows 6,779 students, with 6,177 enrolled at Lawrence and 602 at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City. These are actual attendance figures and do not include students who have withdrawn from classes, Mr. Hitt said.
KU and the percentage increase is approximately the same for both groups. The 5,623 non-veteran students is a new record, up 575 or 11 per cent over 1951. The number of veterans, 1,156, represents a 21 per cent decrease.
There are 4,693 men and 2,086 women attending
There are 1,747 students classified as freshmen. The distribution of the remainder is surprisingly even: 1,264 seniors, 1,247 juniors, 1,291 sophomores; and 1,259 in the graduate school, in medical service courses or special students.
Daily hansan
The College is the largest of the 10 schools with 2,503 students, followed by engineering and architecture, 1,167; graduate, 857; and Medicine, 747.
50th Year, No. 61
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
"The graduate girl residents of Henley house will be special guests of the 'Y' members who will trim a tree and decorate the house in real holiday fashion," said Mrs. Betty Walz, executive secretary.
Ike Plunges Into Blueprinting For Korean Peace Plan
YWCA cabinet members, commission and committee chairmen, and house of representatives members will hold a Christmas party at Henley house, 1236 Oread, at 4 p.m. today.
Ike Plunk For Kore Greek Pianist Performs Tonight
'Y' Cabinet Members To Hold Party Today
Monday, Dec. 15, 1952
Mrs. Bachauer is the second program on the golden anniversary of the Concert course. Other selections to appear in the Concert course this year will include: the Kansas City Philharmonic orchestra, the Ballet theater, and Robert Rumseville, leading tenor of the New York Opera company.
The School of Fine Arts will present Gina Bachauer, internationally known Greek pianist, in a concert at 8:20 tonight in Hoch auditorium.
She was engaged by Dimitri Mitropoulos, conductor of the New York Philharmonic symphony, as guest soloist for the fall of 1951.
Students will be admitted by presenting their ID cards. Mrs. Bachauer, relatively unknown in the United States until a few years ago, has been extremely popular since her debut in the Town House in New York in 1950.
NEW YORK
he was toured in France, Italy,
Austria, Gugloslavia, and Greece.
She returned to her country when
the second World War started but
left soon after the Germans began
to sweep across Greece.
She fled with her husband to Alexandria, Egypt. During the war years she gave concerts for the armed forces. In 1946 she resumed her concert tours on the continent and made a debut in England.
Mr. Stassen said he and Gen. Eisenhower discussed the mutual security program "in general."
There was speculation that the President-elect soon will meet with Gen. Douglas MacArthur to get Gen. MacArthur's new plan for a "clear and definite solution" to the Korean stalemate.
George Eisenhower said his long journey to the embattled Far Eastern peninsula "marks not the end but the beginning of a new effort to conclude honorably this phase of the global struggle."
global struggle.
Gen. Eisenhower said he was confident a "satisfactory solution in Korea can be speeded."
New York —(U.P.) President-elect Eisenhower plunged today into the work of knitting his administration together and blue-printing his program aimed at inducing the Communists to make peace in Korea.
Returning after a 22,000 mile trip to Korea Gen. Eisenhower conferred with Harold E. Stassen, who will be director for mutual security in the new administration.
Gen. Eisenhower made it clear in talk that he went to Korea as an American to see Americans. He pointed out that the Korean operation is a United Nations affair and he did not try to "tell them how to run it."
Housing Group To Meet Tonight
Illness of Dean Glasco, chairman of the All Student Council housing committee, forced postponement until tonight of a scheduled meeting of that committee. The group will meet at 7:30 p.m. tonight in Green hall.
Members have been devoting time this week to research in various phases of the project. It is expected that the results of this work will be placed before the group.
The purpose of the meeting was described as an opportunity for committee members to exchange information and to acquaint themselves more thoroughly with KU's housing situation in order to present their case better when they meet with the board of regents and the senate ways and means committee of the Kansas legislature.
Housing Shortage Ease 'In Prospect'
The University has a $200,000 gift for building a dormitory and $500,-000 “in prospect” for constructing two more scholarship halls. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy disclosed "without further identifying the sources" in a 15-minute interview broadcast Sunday over University station KANU.
Reviewing the housing problem at the University, the chancellor said "Even if 2,000 or 3,000 dormitory rooms are built in the next six to eight years, we would still have the problem we have today" in view of an annual average enrollment of 10,000 expected by 1960.
However, the University is "definitely committed" to have dormitory facilities for 3,000 students by
that year, Chancellor Murphy said. One of his objections to constructing more than this was that they would be empty in the event of depressions.
From 400 to 500 new dormitory units will be in construction on the campus during the next 12 to 18 months, on the revenue bond plan, Chancellor Murphy emphasized.
Three ways of financing housing include direct state appropriation, gifts, and revenue bonds, the chancellor said. "It seems fairly clear that the bulk of state appropriation will be needed to keep the physical plant in operation," he added.
No dormitory buildings have yet been constructed on a basis of retiring bonds with the income from
Referring to the committee on housing, the chancellor said, "I am delighted to see the student body demonstrate their sense of initiative and responsibility."
the facilities constructed.
"Understanding the background of the problem is important." Chancellor Murphy said. "The philosophy that the university has a responsibility other than academic has been a recent one in the Midwest and Far West states."
The "recent notable strides" made by the University in the completion of the freshman girls' dormitories two years ago and the three new scholarship halls opened this fall should not be overlooked, he added.
Students to Train At Institutions
The State Board of Social Welfare has approved a plan under which seniors in the School of Medicine will receive mental health training at the state's five mental institutions.
Dr. William Clarke Wescoe, dean of the School of Medicine, was directed by the board to plan immediately the program which may be in effect by next spring.
Under the plan 15 medical students will receive five and one-half weeks training in the state hospitals, under supervision of the clinical director.
Another phase of the program will provide senior residency doctors, persons who have earned their medical degree and are completing internship in specialized fields, the final three or four months of residency in the mental hospitals.
82 Red Prisoners Killed in Uprising
Pusan, Korea—(U.P.)-UN guards killed 82 communist civilian internes and wounded 120 others at Pongam island off Southern Korea yesterday when the prisoners locked arms and marched deliberately into machine-gun fire, it was disclosed today.
The riot broke out simultaneously in six or eight compounds in enclosure No. 2. About 3,600 of the island's 9,000 prisoners were involved. Two Americans and two Koreans were injured in the riot.
A spokesman for the UN prisoner of war command said American and South Korean guards fired riot guns, carbines and machine guns in six mutinous compounds "to keep prisoners from advancing and breaking out all over the place."
Weather
Slightly warmer weather returned to Kansas today after a weekend
KOPE HOME WALT DELLY
SNAPPY
turned a weekend during which the mercury shot to 5 below zero at Goodland a n d snow fell in the east. Skies cleared over Kansas by m i d - morning Sunday, and have remained t h a t way since. Weathermen said temperatures tonight probably would
not dip below 20 in the northwest and would be around 35 in the southeast. Tuesday will be warmer.
Page.2 . University Daily Kansan . Monday. Dec.15, 1952
SWISH
Army Offers Tips For Safe Driving
Friday and Saturday thousands of student motorists will start home for the Christmas vacation. Many drivers will have between 500 and 2,000 miles to cover before they reach home.
The United States Army has come out with some tips that might make your trip home a lot safer. Their main advice for a safe trip is to take a 10-minute coffee stop at least once every two hours.
The Army believes that these periodic interruptions of long trips for coffee and rest are largely responsible for the sharp drop in military highway accidents over the past six years. Using the coffee break and four other suggestions, the Army has dropped their accident rate from 2.6 accidents every 100,000 miles to 1.7 for each 100,000 miles. The average civilian rate for the same distance is 2.5 accidents.
To protect the driver when he feels fatigue and drowsiness coming upon him, the Army offers the following suggestions.
Keep car windows open and breathe deeply; drink coffee or other alert beverages every two hours; where possible, change drivers every two hours, and for the driver who finds himself too tired for safe driving, the Army has a sure-fire remedy. Pull off the road and rest until physically fit to continue.
These suggestions aren't guaranteed to get you home safely, but by following them, chances are you will get to your destination in one piece. —Don Moser.
Short Ones
The head of the Republican National committee said recently he'd "hesitate a long time" before going along with a proposed Congressional limit on the amount of editorial space a newspaper may use in backing a political candidate. The shoe now seems to be on the other foot in regard to freedom of the press.
Little Man on Campus
by Dick Bibler
ANCIENT HISTORY
LECTURE TO COVER
MESOPOTAMIAN CULTURE
"I suppose it's good we have a student newspaper—It gives 'em something to read during class."
MacArthur's Plan Probably Not New
It doesn't seem to happen often but President Truman probably has the right idea concerning Gen. MacArthur's "clear and definite solution" for bringing the Korean war to a successful conclusion.
If the talented general is capable of figuring out such a plan, and maybe he is, it also would seem that he would be intelligent enough to realize the need for putting it into operation immediately.
The general, of course, was removed from his command the last time he suggested a plan to end the Korean war which would explain his reluctance in presenting his "new solution" to the President.
President Truman probably feels that Gen. MacArthur has nothing really new to offer and is merely seeking to find an ear which might be more willing to listen to him than was he.
It is doubtful that the general has actually been able to formulate a better solution for the Korean problem while sitting around the conference tables of the Remington corporation than while he was in Japan, which is much nearer to the war.
However, the fact that President-elect Eisenhower is going to talk with Gen. MacArthur is no reason to assume that he will accept any proposals that might be advanced. Gen. Eisenhower has said in effect that he is willing to talk to Gen. MacArthur or anyone else who thinks he has an answer to the Korean problem.
Politics also figures into the forth-coming talks between the generals as the Taft faction of the Republican party has favored the would-be politician on several occasions.
So as President Truman would probably say, "Well, Mac, if you've really got the solution, let's have it now. Otherwise why don't you content yourself with 'fading away' and working for Remington?"
Charles Burch.
Ike-MacArthur Talks WorryWestern Europe
President-elect Eisenhower's decision to consult Gen. Douglas MacArthur on the Korean war will send a shiver of fear through Western Europe.
All the West was fearful when Eisenhower decided to visit the Korean theater. There was editorial applause in the great continental and British newspapers when Eisenhower had completed his survey and had shown again he was not eager to spread the war area.
The minority Socialist parties in Great Britain and on the continent were especially suspicious of Eisenhower's motives. For their own political purposes, a considerable number of British Socialists keep drumming away that Americans as a whole are trigger-happy and not to be trusted as co-makers of foreign policy involving the use of force.
That was the party line of the whole Socialist campaign during last year's British elections. Winston Churchill was tabbed as a warmonger in cahoots with the Americans. The implications of what responsible British Socialists said in that campaign was that Churchill's election would be followed by an atomic-bomb free-for-all.
A lot of them really believed that and so did many a continental European. They were scared. Nomination of Eisenhower and Gov. Adlai Stevenson for president quieted their fears, but Eisenhower's campaign alliance with Sen. Robert A. Taft (R.-Ohio) frightened them again.
Entry of MacArthur into the picture will give a lot of Europeans the shudders and give the Socialists some handy, new war scare propaganda. But viewed from Washington, instead of from London or Paris, the forthcoming Eisenhower-MacArthur conference looks like something very much different.
It looks like a move to get MacArthur to put up or to pipe down, or even to join the team. That remains to be seen. For the present no one knows the nature of his new ideas about Korea or whether Eisenhower will like them in whole, in part or not at all. But so long as MacArthur was on the sidelines with a plan to end the Korean action honorably, a great many Americans would want to know why his experience and wisdom were not being used.
On his recent trip to Korea, Gen.
Eisenhower piled up rotation points
faster than any other GI since the
shooting started.
Short Ones
Must all U.S. ambassadors to Great Britain be bankers?
***
Wonder if there were any hidden ball plays in that Powder Puff bowl game recently?
---
***
Note to Corbin and North College women! Only a few more days of school until Christmas vacation, and we hope you are as prepared for it as your song indicates.
President Truman made a martyr of MacArthur, in some people's eye, by abruptly rejecting his services and his advice. Eisenhower strategists do not intend to repeat on that. They know that only the judgment of future historians can decide who was the United States' greatest World War II general. But MacArthur unquestionably is among the nominees, despite his current low rating in Europe—United Press.
ONE
MAN'S
OPINION
SCAP JOB
Bv ROGER YARRINGTON
From week to week, we usually find ourselves admiring the fine column of Ernest K. Lindley titled "Washington Tides" which is printed in Newsweek magazine.
Last week's issue, however, carried a column by Mr. Lindley which had us puzzled for half its length. Writing on "Eisenhower, Durkin and Taft," he managed to expand half his space to an improbable and hypothetical supposition.
"Iimagine that Adlai Stevenson had been elected. Suppose the president of NAM had suggested that he appoint an officer of that organization to his cabinet. Suppose that Stevenson, concealing his astonishment at the approach had appointed the man recommended . . ."
Continuing in this manner, Mr. Lindley tries to set up a situation where Gov. Stevenson might have been led to make a similar appointment to that made by Gen. Eisenhower. The entire point is to show, although the situation is unusual, the move is as advantageous for Ike as it would have been for Adlai. The need for making such a point is not clear.
Having finally arrived at the point, Mr. Lindley says the Durkin appointment will help Eisenhower in two ways:
1. It will give the new GOP administration an added potential with a new and strong ally in the form of organized labor.
2. It will increase Eisenhower's leadership in the Republican party. Taft's outcry was not echoed by his Senate pals and Mr. Lindley guesses it might have cost him the majority leadership.
These conclusions seem quite evident. It is disappointing that Mr. Lindley saw fit to lead his reader through such a jungle of "supposes" and "imagines" only to arrive at the obvious.
It takes Jupiter almost 12 years to make a revolution around the sun.
Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 year (add 1$ 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 second class matter Sept. 1910 at Lawrence Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1870
POGO
I DO BLEEVE THEM RASCALS IS LOOKIN'
FOR ME...IT'S FLAT-
TERIN ENUFF SO I
GUESS I'LL GIVE
'EM A HOLLER...
DANE BY FOUR HALL
12.15
IT'S COMIN' ON DARK...
CAN'T YOU GLOW A LIL' BRIGHTER? IT'S KINDA GLOomy...
US FIREFLY TYPES CAN'T GLOW ON A EMPTY STOMACH FRIEND.
YO' CAN'T BURN A CANDLE
ON BOTH...
HALLOOOOO
ULP
IT MUST IS FRIGHTY FO' OL' PORKY OUT HERE ALONE WITH SUCH GHASTLY NOISES GOIN' ON.
WITHOUT THE COMFORT OF BRAVE COMPANIONS
CODE 1529 YOUR FEELS
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Russell Stover
CANDIES
The gift everyone enjoys!
Gift Wrapped
Ready to Mail.
Stowit's Rexall
Drug Store
837 Mass.
---
BEST FRIENDS
Russell Stover
CANDIES
The gift everyone enjoys!
Gift Wrapped Ready to Mail.
Stowit’s Rexall Drug Store
837 Mass.
You Should See What Reusch-Guenther has On Page 6
RE-UPHOLSTERING
BEFORE and AFTER
and Expert Furniture REPAIR
DINGMAN’S FURNITURE
1803 Mass. Call 1503
Special Purchase
Men’s Wool Quilted Interlined Jackets
Sold Originally For $14.75
NOW ONLY $998
LITWIN'S
EVERYTHING • TO • WEAR
831 Mass.
Breakfast DINNER and Lunch
Try a Delicious STEAK and you’ll come back to the Crystal Cafe 609 Vt.
DO YOUR Christmas Shopping IN Lawrence
You’ll want to come back for more Homemade Soups and Chili at the GRANADA CAFE
One Door South of the Granada Theatre - Open 6 a.m.-7:30 p.m.
Closed Sundays
The Perfect Gift for Him!
2 TEX-TAN, MEEKER, or BOSCA Billfolds from Filkin’s 820 Mass
CHRISTMAS the season of traditions, good cheer and giving
Give her jewelry from Samples. From simple earrings to glittering necklaces, you will find the gift for her at Samples Jewelry 914 Mass.
Hitch Up the Sleigh, Ma
... only seven days left to do our CHRISTMAS GROCERY SHOPPING
Log Cabin Market
1827 La. Phone 910
STOP TAKING CHANCES
ZOOK’S STANDARD SERVICE
21st and Louisiana
LET US WINTERIZE YOUR CAR TODAY
FOR IDAID
A GIFT for the CAR
From BRIDGE Standard Service
601 Mass. Phone 3380
You
Should
See
What
Reusch-
Guenther
has
On
Page
6
RE-UPHOLSTERING BEFORE and AFTER
RE-UPHOLSTERING
BEFORE and AFTER
and
Expert Furniture
REPAIR
DINGMAN'S
FURNITURE
1803 Mass. Call 1503
BEFORE and AFTER
Special Purchase
Men's Wool Quilted
Interlined
Jackets
Sold Originally
For $14.75
NOW ONLY
$998
LITWIN'S
EVERYTHING • TO • WEAR
831 Mass.
Breakfast DINNER and Lunch
Breakfast DINNER and Lunch
Try a Delicious STEAK and you'll come back
to the Crystal Cafe 609 Vt.
DO YOUR Christmas Shopping IN Lawrence
A
The Perfect Gift for Him!
The Perfect Gift for Him!
2 TEX-TAN,
MEEKER, or
BOSCA Billfolds
from
Filkin's 820 Mass
CHRISTMAS
the season of
traditions, good
cheer and giving.
Give her jewelry from
Samples. From simple
earrings to glittering
necklaces, you will find
the gift for her at
Samples Jewelry
914 Mass.
Lo
STOP TAKING CHANCES
LET US WINTERIZE YOUR CAR TODAY
FOR DAD
A Gift for
the CAR
From BRIDGE
Standard Service
601 Mass. Phone 3380
TIME IS RIGHT
It's Time To Eat
The Best Steak in Town down at the Old Mission Inn
1904 Mass.
Open
Monday-Saturday
Steam Shovel & Rig ... $8.69
Wrecking Truck ... $3.29
"Hough" Payloader ... $7.69
Deluxe Van Truck ... $9.89
Grocery Truck ... $1.29
TOYS
For Every Child On Your Christmas List
Sportball Kits ... $2.89
Bowling Alley ... $2.89
Peg Table Set ... $4.69
Desk & Chair Set ... $23.79
18 inch "Horsman" Doll ... $7.79
715 KIRKPATRICK SPORT SHOP
Mass.
Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, Dec. 15, 1952
33 Cage Games Mark Weekend IM Schedule
Thirty-three games, including nine in the "A" division, were played in the intramural schedule over the weekend.
Phi G. Delta 49, Alpha Phi A.22
In the only Fraternity "A" game of the weekend Jim Potts, with 11 points, let Phi Gamma Delta to a 49-22 victory over Alpha Phi Alpha. Churby Clowers was high for Alpha Phi Alpha with 8 points.
AFROT C I 41. Last Chance 29
AFROTIC 41. Last Chance 29
Louis Martinez congratulates
her with 10 points apiece, sparked the AFROTC I attack as they defeated
Last Chance 41-29.
Phi Kappa Outcasts 30, NROTC 17
The Phi Kappa Outcasts defeated
Navy ROTC 30-17. Marvin Weishaar paired the outcasts with 13
Marcin Brennan and Gerald Hartmetz scored honors for the Navy with 7 apiece.
Jolliffe 37. Pearson 23
Joliffe hall, led by Henry Feuer-
born with 16 points, defeater Pearson
37-23. LeRoy Herold, with 8
points, was high for the Pearson
team.
Liahona Fellowship 27, Geol. Club 12
Liahona Fellowship held the
Geology club to two points in each
of the second and third quarters, as
well as a high man for Liahona with 9 points,
Hodder Annex 61. Pharm. Five 20.
Hodder Annex displayed a very good scoring attack as they defeated the Pharmacy Five 61-20. Dick Grey was the big man for the Hodder team with 19 points.
YMCA 39. Theta Tau 9
YMCA 33. Theta Tau 9
YMCA displayed a very tight defense as they held Theta Tau scoreless in the first half, and went on to win 39-9. John Biegert led the YMCA scoring with 7 points.
Optimists 42. Skyliners 19
John Fagan and Noye Johnson, with 15 and 14 points respectively, led the Optimists to a 42-19 victory over the Skyliners.
Don Henry 38, Sterling-Oliver 26
Don Henry jumped off to an 8 point first-quarter lead as they went on to defeat Sterling-Oliver 38-26.
Jarlan Unruh led the Don Henry live with 14 points.
OTHER SCORES Fraternity "B"
Alpha Tau Omega 59, Phi Kappa Tau 20
Kappa Sigma over Lambda Chi Alpha* 01
Kappa Sigma over Lambda Pi 30
Theta Chi 40, Sigma Ni 35
Sigma Phi Epsilon 38, Triangle 27
Phi Kappa Psi 21, Beta 27
Sigma Chi 35, Sigma Alpha Epsilon 20
Fraternity "C"
Alpha Tau Omueq II 47, Pi Kappa Tau 24
Kappa Sigma II 25, Beta Theta PI 18
Pi Gamma Delta 72, Tau Kappa Ep. 9
Delta Chi 40, Tau Kappa Ep I 18
Delta Upsilon 50, Alpha K Lambda 24
Delta Phi 36, Alpha K Theta*
Delta Psi 34, Sigma Nu 23
Beta Theta Pi over Alpha Ep. Pi*
Kappa Sigma I 28, Bones' Boys 27
Sigma Phi Epsilon 28, Delta Epsilon 18
Pi Delta Theta 33, Sigma Alpha Ep. 27
Independent "B"
Oread, over
AFC20 FU, Twin Pines 12
Gip Group 49, Nu Sigma Nu 21
Pearson 36, Stephens on 28
Independent "C"
AFROTC 10 K
Lard Job 26. Pearson 16
TODAY'S GAMES
Mohun
Roland Gymnasium
4 p.m. Alpha Phi Alpha-Acacia
5 p.m. Sigma A. Ep.-Sigma Phi Ep.
6 p.m. K.L-Phi Kappa Psi
9 p.m. Pi Kappa Alpha-Triangle
Independent "B"
8 p.m. Stephenson-East Side (W)
Fraternity "C"
p p.m. Phi Delta Theta I-S, Ch II (E)
S p.m. Phi Delta Theta I-W (W
Rohmian Gymnastics
8:15 p.m. Delta Chi-Kappa A. Psl (E)
8:15 p.m. Phi G. Delta-Tau K. Epi (W)
8:15 p.m. Alpha K. L.-Pi K. A. (E)
8:15 p.m. Delta U. Pi (W)
TOMOIS
Robinson Annex
Fraternity "A"
4 p.m. Phi Delta Theta-T.K. Epsilon
5 p.m. Kappa Robinson Gymnasium Kappa
6 p.m. Robinson Gymnasium Kappa
8:15 p.m. Theta Chi-Delta T. D. (E)
8:15 p.m. Sigma Nu-Sigma A. Ep. (W)
8:15 p.m. P.K.T, K. Sigma (E)
8:15 p.m. P.D. Theta-Sigma P. Ep. (W)
Basketball 'Big Three' Face Tests This Week
New York—(U.P.) Illinois, LaSalle, and Kansas State, hailed in early-season ratings as the "Big Three" of college basketball this year, face stern tests in games that headline this week's court program.
Illinois, easy winner over Loyola of Chicago in its only game to date, defends its No. 1 national ranking tonight against Michigan in the opening Big Ten game for both, and then Saturday faces the tough Butler team that upset Ohio State.
La Salle, ranked No. 2, is making a national tour this week. The explorers got off to a shaky start last night with an overtime, 73-64 victory over Dayton, and the schedule calls for them to meet Southwest Missouri tonight, Arizona on Thursday, Santa Clara on Friday, and Stanford on Saturday.
Kansas State has drawn three tough ones—San Francisco tonight. Notre Dame on Friday, and Michigan State on Saturday.
Kansas State narrowly kept its perfect record intact with an 82-80 win over Indiana on Saturday, conquering on a set shot by Carjack with only 4 seconds remaining. La Salle also had a close escape Sunday, beng forced into overtime by Dayton after being tied, 56-56 at the end of regulation.
Burke Wins Meet By Sinking Putt
Miami, Fla—(U.P.)—Forced into a pressure-packed "sudden death" playoff, blond Jackie Burke, Jr., found the golden touch with his putter to win the Miami Open Golf tournament and add $2,000 to his personal bankroll today.
Burke, the curly-haired Houston Texas, tourney veteran, earned his money the hard way as he and 27-year-old Dick Mayer of St. Petersburg, Fla., were tied at 273 strokes apiece at the end of the regulation 72 holes of play yesterday and remained deadlocked following four more extra holes.
Dayton, which also lost to La Salle in the finals of last season's national invitation tournament, had the high scoreer in soph Jack Sallee, who canned 27 points.
Rams Meet Lions In Grid Playoff
The Rams gained their deadlock with the idle Lions when they defeated the dangerous Pittsburgh Steelers, 28-14, as Norm Van Brocklin threw three touchdown passes. The Lions had taken a half-game lead on Saturday when they routed the Dallas Texans, 41-6.
New York—(U.P.)-The Los Angeles Rams meet the Detroit Lions in a playoff Sunday to decide the American conference championship and the right to play the National conference champion Cleveland Browns in the National League's title game
The winner of Sunday's playoff opposes the Browns, who backed in their seventh division championship in as many years yesterday.
The Browns, meanwhile, bowed to the Giants, 37-34, only to learn they clinched their conference title when the Washington Redskins shaded the Philadelphia Eagles, 27-21, on a touchdown by Eddie Lebaron with 18 seconds left. The San Francisco Forty-niners beat the Green Bay Packers, 24-14, and the Chicago Bears defeated the Chicago Cards, 10-7, in the other games.
RICC
22
27
KANSAS PASS GOES ASTRAY—Kansas Forward Jerry Alberts is tangled with Rice Forward Don Lance as the Jayhawk sophomore gets a pass off during the second half of Saturday night's basketball game in Houston. The pass was intercepted by a Rice player out of the picture at the right. Others in the picture are Rice Guard Maurice Teague (22) and Forward Stan Fulfer (27). Kansas lost the thriller, 54-51—Kansan photo by Rich Clarkson.
Kansas Loses to Rice, 54-51 As Owls Rally in Last Period
By DON NIELSEN
Kansan Sports Editor
Kansas' green basketball team dropped a heartbreaker to the Rice Owls Saturday by a tantalizing score of 54-51 at Rice Institute in Houston, Texas.
The loss gives the Jayhawkers a 1-1 won-lost record for the young season. Last Thursday night the KU eagers took a 63-50 victory from the Green Wave of Tulane university in the season opener.
Kansas trailed most of the way through the contest, pulling ahead only in the third quarter when they held the Owls to only five points during the period.
High point man in the game was Gene Schwinger of the Owls who racked up 20 points. Don Lance, his teammate, followed closely with 19 points. High point man of the Jayhawk five was Jerry Alberts who scored 9 points.
Kansas entered the final frame with a 37-34 lead. Schwinger and Lance led the Owls during the quarter as they outpointed the Jayhawkers 20-14. The Jayhawkers managed to hold their lead until there were about three minutes left, when the Owls tied it up at 48 all.
The Owls went ahead then, and with about 40 seconds left to play, led the Jayhawks 52-48. Then Bill Heitholt dumped in a field goal, and
Dean Kelley helped with a free throw to narrow the gap.
Lance dropped in a field goal with seconds left, however, and the clock ran out with the Jayhawkers on the short end of a 54-51 score.
The Jayhawkers will open home play Friday night with a two-night stand against the Mustangs from Southern Methodist university.
Here is the KU-Rice box score;
Rice (54) G FT F F
Fulfer 0 3 2
Linus 8 5 3
Schwinger 8 4 3
Robieauxche 5 1 2
Veague 1 2 2
Dickens 0 0 0
Bryan 0 1 0
Beavers 0 0 0
Wohn 0 0 0
Totals 29 16 14
Kansas (51) G F T F
Alberts 3 3 2
Davinson 2 2 1
Born 2 3 4
Hetholt 2 3 4
D. Kelley 1 5 4
Twenty-five per cent of all drivers involved in fatal automobile accidents in the U.S. last year were under 25 years old.
DEAR FRIENDS:
with gifts that show your esteem and affection.
Time to remember your friends and loved-ones
It will be a pleasure to serve you.
Gustafson
COLLEGE JEWELER
809 Mass.
Patterson 3 0 1
A. Kelley 2 2 3
Smith 2 0 1
Total 18 15 17
Score by team number
Rice 14 15 15 20-54
Kansas 8 11 11 20-54
Officials—Arceneaux and Show.
Free throw missed—Fulfer 3, Lance 2,
Schwinger 3, Teague, D. Kelley 3, A.
Kelley.
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Monday, Dec. 15, 1952 University Daily Korea
Page 5
KU
TAKING AN EARLY LEAD—Wes Santee, Kansas distance ace, passes one of his fraternity brothers, Royse Fergusen, at the three mile mark of his 14 mile race Saturday. Santee ran against a relay team composed of 28 of his fraternity brothers. Fergusen is waiting for the handoff of the baton from Don Tice, who was about 100 yards behind Santee at this point—Kansan photo by Dave Arthurs.
K-State,OU,MU Win In Big Seven Basketball
Kansas State, Oklahoma, and Missouri won over their opponents in Big Seven basketball play over the weekend, while Nebraska lost to Minnesota, 72-61.
Kansas State 82-Indiana 80
Kansas State
Kansas State led the Indiana Hookers when a long shot by Wildcat Carby dropped in to give the Wildcats a two point victory. The Wildcat scoring column wsa fattened by the sharp-shooting of Dick Knostman who poured in 27 points during the contest.
High point man for the Hoosiers was Dick Farley, who got 18 points. The score was tied 14 times, and the lead changed hands 15 times during the game.
Oklahoma 59-Southern Methodist 54 A fourth-quarter rally by SMU fell short as the Sooners held onto a lead they got in the first quarter. The Oklahoma five had a 14-7 first quarter lead, and built it to a 28-20 lead at halftime.
The Mustangs worked on the
Sooners' lead but were unable to close the gap during the last quarter. 62 BL Leonard 62
Missouri 66-Ft. Leonard Wood 62
The Missouri Tigers held off a fighting Fort Leonard Wood team during the last quarter to eke out a 66-62 victory over the hilltoppers.
The two teams traded scoring punches on even ground throughout most of the contest, but the Tigers pulled ahead to a 9 point lead during the third quarter, and stayed ahead.
Minnesota 71-Nebraska 62
Minnesota 71-Nebraska
Minnesota swiped an early lead,
and drew on the Nebraska
Cornhuskers 71-62 in a cage game
played in Minneapolis.
The Cornhuskers closed the gap to 34-31 at halftime, but were left behind when the Gophers put on a scoring spree during the third quarter. They led 56-42 at the end of the third period.
3,420 boys and girls under 15 years old were killed in traffic accidents last year.
RIDE THE BUS
NO CAR FUGS
WHEN YOU
RIDE THE BUS
Roger
"'Well, Reginald, I'm mighty glad my wife isn't jealous of the pretty coeds."
Santee Beats 28-Man Relay Team By 200 Yards in 14-Mile Marathon
By DON TICE Kansan Sports Writer
Wes Santee, Kansas University distance ace, surprised everyone including himself Saturday as he paced off the 14 mile jaunt from Tonganoxie to Lawrence in one hour, 14 minutes, and nine seconds.
Santee defeated his 28 Acacia fraternity brothers by about 200 yards. John Quarrier, quarter miler on the freshman track squad, finished the last lap 50 seconds behind the Ashland antelope.
"I was very surprised and pleased with the times in the race," Santee said. "Not only did I run faster than I expected to, but I was surprised to see that the guys averaged two minutes and 42 seconds apiece on their half-miles."
Santee ran the first mile, his fastest, in four minutes and 41 seconds to take a 100 yard lead over Ralph Moody and Bob Keefer, first two runners for the fraternity. He maintained this distance for several miles, and then increased it to as much as 500 yards at about the $ \frac{3}{4} $-mark in the race. With most of its better runners stationed towards the end of the course the Acacia team was able to narrow this lead considerably by the end of the race.
When asked if he was in trouble anytime during the race, Santee said "there was one place about three miles from home, when I was running into the north-west wind that my face got pretty cold and my neck muscles began to tighten up, but as soon as I turned south again I warmed up."
All the runners were warmly clad because of the near-freezing weather, accompanied by snow-flurries early in the race. Santee wore blue sweat clothes and pulled heavy wool socks over his hands for mittens. Most of the Acacia runners were clad in
Greensburg, Pa. —(U.P.)—Tradition got a black eye at a children's home here when the kids were asked what they would like for their Thanksgiving dinner. They rejected the conventional turkey in favor of cheeseburgers and banana splits.
Cheeseburgers Get the Nod
sweat-suits with many wearing caps and gloves.
Kansas Track Coach M. E. (Bill) Easton was pleased with his star's performance. He followed Santee in a station wagon and gave him his
times on each mile.
Kansas Highway patrol cars followed Santee and the fraternity runners over the course, causing traffic on highway 24-40 to pile up behind them as much as a half mile at times.
About 50 spectators were at the south end of the Kaw river bridge to see the finish of the race, and a number of others followed all or part of the contest in cars.
--on Sale at the
"The Perfect Gift for Christmas"
A
1953
KU CALENDAR
1953 U CALENDAR
- Union-Hawk's Nest
- Information Booth
- Business Office in the Journalism Building
Looking for a Christmas Gift for That Man in Your Life?
XMAS
Wreath of pine branches with decorative ribbons and ornaments.
Gift box wrapped in paper with a striped design.
Candles and gingerbread cookies.
A. C.
See George for your favorite brand of:
Pipe Racks
- Humidors
- Foreign and Domestic Tobaccos
- Novel Ashtrays
- Tobacco Pouches
- Cigarette Lighters
All Lighters Carry the "Pipe Shop" Personal Service Guarantee.
George's Pipe Shop
727 Mass.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Dec. 15, 1952
Truman Says Hysteria Endangers U.S.Freedom
Washington—U.P.P.—President Truman said today Americans will "destroy the very thing they are struggling to preserve" if hysterical fear of communism drives them into "suppressing liberty at home."
He spoke at ceremonies dedicating a permanent new shrine for the three great documents of this nation's heritage of freedom-The Declaration of Independence, The Constitution and The Bill of Rights.
The ceremonies, attended by Chief Justice Fred M. Vinson and other dignitaries, took place in the National Archives building where henceforth the priceless documents will be displayed together for the first time in a fire-proof, bomb-proof repository designed to protect them from the ravages of time or atomic war.
Mr. Truman said the ideals of human liberty which the documents represent are now endangered from without by "Communist tyranny" and from within by those who would suppress freedom of speech and thought in the name of fighting communism.
"Those who want the government to regulate matters of the mind and spirit are like men who are so afraid
Music Honorary Pledges 8 Men
Eight men have been pledged to Phi Mu Alpha, honorary music fraternity.
The new pledges are David Treadway, college senior; Jerry Hall, fine arts sophomore; Wilbur Kent, fine arts freshman; Alfred Kanwischer, fine arts junior; Richard Maag, fine arts freshman; Richard Rhode, fine arts junior; Ralph Kiehl Jr., college junior, and William Conrad, fine arts sophomore.
Initiation ceremonies were held a week ago for four men. The initiates are Barry Green, fine arts sophomore; Jim Gleason, college sophomore; Keith Carter, fine arts sophomore, and Melvin Biggart, college sophomore.
Robert Taylor, Emporia, province governor, was a guest at a morgasm bord at the Heart tea room following the initiation. Thursday night members of Phi Mu Alpha plan to go Christmas caroling.
TODAY
Official Bulletin
YWCA: Cabinet members and house representatives, Christmas party. 4-5 p.m., Henley house, instead of regular meeting.
Mathematical colloquium: 5 p.m.
203 Strong.
German Nativity play rehearsal:
7 p.m., cast and choir, Fraser theater.
Naval Research Reserve unit 9-20:
7:30 p.m., 101 Haworth, Lt. Comdr.
Fredrich A. Wyatt, speaker "Naval
Reserve and Research." Visitors
welcome.
Engineerettes: Christmas party,
7:45 p.m., 1317 Rhode Island. Bring
50-cent kitchen item for exchange.
TUESDAY
TUESDAY
Sculpture club: 7:30 p.m., Strong auditorium. Dr. C. S. Smith, anthropologist, speaker. Exhibit of primitive African and Indian sculpture in connection with films.
Student Council meeting: 7:30 p.m.,103 Green,pictures will not be taken.
WEDNESDAY
Newman club: Catholic students caroling party, dancing and refreshments at the church 7:30-10:30 p.m. Cars needed at 7.
Tryouts: for "Lily, the Felon's Daughter," 7-9, Green theater.
loss club: 7:30 p.m., 20 Strong.
Delta Phi Delta: business meeting,
7:30 p.m., Spooner sculpture
room.
German Nativity play: 8 p.m.
changed to Fraser theater.
YOUR EYES
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
of being murdered that they commit suicide to avoid assassination," he said.
Interviews
Personnel representatives from six companies will be on the campus next week to interview February graduates of the School of Engineering.
Students seeking further information and applications can obtain them at the office of the School of Engineering, 111 Marvin hall. Students may sign the interview schedule in the same office.
TODAY
U. S. Steel company of Pitsburgh will interview all types of engineers.
J. S. Steel company of Pitsburgh will interview all types of engineers. Sears, Roebuck and company would like to interview chemical, mechanical, industrial, and electrical engineers.
Collins Radio company will interview electrical and mechanical engineers. They will also interview physicists.
Tuesday
J. I. Case company is interested in interviewing mechanical, civil, and electrical engineers.
Sheffield Steel corporation will interview civil, architectural, mechanical, and industrial engineers.
Friday
John Deere Waterloo Tractor works is interested in interviewing mechanical engineers.
The following interviews will be held at the School of Business this week. Interested persons may sign the interview schedule in the business placement bureau. 214 Strong.
Todav
R. J. Remmer of Sears, Roebuck and Company will interview School of Business graduates for positions in production, accounting, personnel, sales, purchasing, and management
Friday
G. G. Ward of Sheffield Steel corpation will interview students for positions as sales trainee.
Connecticut Mutual Insurance company representatives will interview students who desire to enter the life insurance field.
Tryouts for Play Set for Wednesday
Tryouts for "Lily, the Felon's Daughter," a gay nineties meledrama to be produced by the University Players in February, will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday in the Little Theater in Green hall.
"The play is a compilation of five old-time melodras, written by Tom Taggart." Mark Gilman, president of the Players, said. Tryouts are open to anyone.
The first of four jet aircraft engines donated to the department of aeronautical engineering by the Navy was received last week, Ammon S. Andes, chairman of the department, said today.
University Receives First Jet Engine
ROMSON
WONDER SHOWFEST LOCATION
He said the engine, of the pulse jet type, is being transported to the department's installation at the Lawrence airport. It will be set up there and operated shortly after Christmas, Prof. Andes said.
The other three jets, two J-33's and another pulse jet, have been shipped by the Navy and are expected to arrive at the University shortly.
'Y' Groups to Carol Tuesday
Shop at
RONSON LIGHTERS
YMCA and YWCA members will hold a Christmas caroling party Tuesday evening.
Rowlands
The group will meet at Henley house, 1236 Eroad, at 8:30 p.m. and will serenade Watkins hospital, the homes of the chancellor, deam of women, dean of men, and several private convalescent homes in Lawrence.
FREE GIFT WRAPPING
--exciting little scarves-smartly fashioned costume jewelry-gloves to compliment every costume Kayser hose-Apple Blossom nylon gowns, slips and panties.
Saturday is the most dangerous day of the week in traffic.
Chinese Reds Keep Pressure On ROKs in Vital Positions
A 160-man Red force charged the slippery slopes of Pinpoint hill on Sniper ridge last night and early today to try to take ROK positions. The tough little Korean infantrymen hurled hand grenades at the Reds as UN mortar and artillery came to the ROKs support.
Seoul—(U.P.)—Republic of Korea infantrymen, backed by accurate mortar and artillery fire, repulsed a Chinese Communist assault on Pinpoint hill today as the fighting shifted from the western to the central Korean front.
The Chinese shift of the fighting from the west to the center of the line apparently was designed to keep constant pressure on the ROKS in vital positions.
American military advisers said that from the persistent attacks on ROK positions in the past two months the Chinese appear to be "picking on" the South Koreans in an attempt to discredit the new ROK army.
The 1st ROK division and a crack Chinese field army west of the Imjin river on the western front temporarily ended their grudge fight at
Big and Little Nori hills.
American Sabrejets tangled with MIG-15 Communist jets for the first time in five days today. One MIG was damaged and eight other damage claims awaited confirmation by gun camera film.
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Monday. Dec. 15, 1952 University Daily Kansan
"Santa Is Much Too Slow—Use Want Ads—Make Some Dough!"
Page 1
Kansan Classified Ads
Call
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 Daily Kansan Business office. Journals must be received by 45 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five
day days five
25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00
Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
BUSINESS SERVICE
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Phone 1396M. MWF-12
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360, 1109 Mass. **tf**
BEVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. tf
EXPERIENCED Typist. Term papers,
notebooks, theses and miscellaneous. Mrs.
E. J. Roscoe, 838 Louisiana, Apartment
4, upstairs. Phone 2775-1. tf
TYINGWANTED. Prompt, accurate service. Pick-up and delivery service after 6 p.m. and before 8 a.m. Phone 3157R. Mrs Llyingston. tf
TYPING SERVICE. experienced these.
Mrs. Harper 506 West 8th. Phone 134W. 8
506 West 8th. Phone 134W. 8
REAL ESTATE listings wonted. Sales-
Almen, 3110f8 buyers. William J. Vien-
sak Almen, 3110f8
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything the pets need! Our one-stop pet shop has everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch dinner, sandwich, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 am. until midnight. **tf**
FOR SALE
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malts, home-made pies and cakes. Free parking space for customers.
COLT WOODSMAN, Sport Model, 22 cal.
pistol excellent condition. $50.00; RCU
record rack, record rack, and
48 popular records. Bill Akinson,
805 Ohio State, Phallon 3410,
12-16
CLOTHING; Pink, short-style coat, size 14. Was $39. now $25. Dressy, black faille skirt, size 26. $18 Both like new. Worn once. Phone 1984-W. 12-17
TWO NICE blond Cocker puppies A.K.C. registration. Six weeks old. Sired by Arcadian's The Whistler. Dam Taffy of Lawrence. See at 345 Mississippi street, Lawrence. Will hold till Christmas time if desired. Mrs. E. E. Alexander. 12-15
MISCELLANEOUS
RADIO and TV service-same day as service on all makes. Most complete stock equipment parts in this area. Bowman Radio and TV 63 Vermont. Phone 182 prompt service.
DRESSMAKING, formals, alterations. by an experienced European dressmaker. See Themis Zannetou, 1633 Vermont (down-stairs apartment). Phone 1477M. 1-6
Air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. midnight. Crystal Cafe, 609 Vt. tlf
CONCOQ SERVICE-B- F. Gooddry tires and batteries, complete lubrication service, automatic tramway service. Buchelun Cocono Service. 19th and Massachusetts.
TYPE: Experienced in theses, term paper, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Phone 1396M. tf
FOR RENT
ROOMS FOR MEN, newly decorated,
woven woolen closetets. Garage
available. 698 Missouri St.
KU 376
TRANSPORTATION
RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wichita every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Call Jim Sellers.'310JL evenings. MTW-2
RIDER WANTED — Driving straight through to Phoenix, Ariz. Leaving Friday evening, Dec. 19. Share expense basis. Call Donald G. Ross, 3231W.
12-15
UIDE WANTED to Mexico. Two exchange
employees would share expenses
851 19-16
WANT A RIDE to New Orleans and
sack during the Christmas holidays.
Will share driving and expenses. Please
all Arnold Krollton, 2955 R. after 3. 000.
WANTED: Ride for 2 to Florida, leaving for Christmas vacation around Dec. 10. Will help drive and share expenses. Urgent! Please call Arthur Burke 569. 12-15
ASK US ABGUT airplane rates, sky coach. family days, round trip reduc-
ents. American Express land lines. Cunard and Matson Steamship lines. Call Miss Gleeson with his reservations. Bank for Mass. streets. Phone 30.
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steaamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international trips; libraries. Phone Mrs. Lois Odafter. 3661 Downs Travel Service. 1015 Mass.
WANTED
LEGUARD for Robinson Swimming Pool to work from 7-9 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Apply Henry Shenk, 107 Robinson. 12-16
STUDENTS interested in working new banquet service at Student Union for Mary Miss Harvey or Tom Mollinson between 2 and 4 p.m. on Union cafeteria office.
CLEKK-TYPIST II—must be careful, accurate typist, ready to learn electric drawing, skilled graph operator. Also need blindy worker—mailing inserting, gathering, etc. Pre-presentation exposition under 40. University of Kansas Press, Journalism Building. 12-tt
Dorm Counseling Positions Now Open
There will be several openings for counselors in the freshman dormitories next semester, according to Martha Peterson, dean of women.
Anyone interested in becoming a counselor should apply immediately at the dean of women's office, 220 Strong. Appointments will be made soon.
--education junior, gave the angel's message to the shepherds with clear-voiced divine authority.
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2 Graduate Fellowships Set Up for Engineers
Two new graduate fellowships for engineers were announced today by Don Wilson, chairman of the department of electrical engineering.
The Charles LeGeyt Fortescue fellship, sponsored by the American Institute of Electrical engineers, was established as a $25,000 trust fund to provide graduate fellowships in electrical engineering.
The administration of the income from this fund is placed in the hands of a committee of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers. This committee makes the award, providing a minimum allowance of $500 each, to the candidates selected.
To be eligible a student must have received his bachelor's degree from an accredited college by the time he work under the fellowship hinges.
He must not hold or receive any other fellowship which carries a stipend greater than the tuition required by the institution at which the graduate work is to be undertaken.
Applications for this fellowship should be made on or before Feb. 1.
The other fellowship which was also announced by Prof. Wilson was the Charles A. Coffin and Gerard Swope fellowship sponsored by the General Electric Educational fund.
The amount of each fellowship granted shall be $1,400 for an unmarried student and $2,100 for a married student. There will be no change in the stipend granted because of a change in marital status occurring after enrollment in the fall term of study.
In addition to the award to the student, a grant of $1,200 will be made for each fellowship to the college or university at which the student is studying. This grant is to be applicable to expenses of the student including tuition, equipment, and other costs.
Closing date for submitting applications for this fellowship is Jan. 1.
Complete details and information regarding these two fellowships be obtained from Prof. Wilson in 212 Electrical Engineering laboratory.
Prof. Wilson said that there are numerous fellowships and scholarships available to graduates who have the desire and ability to continue their educations. He said these funds should be of great help to graduates who are not financially able to continue their education.
Laboratory Theater Scores In 'Second Shepherds' Play'
By JERRY KNUDSON
An intriguing 14th century miracle play, "The Second Shepherd's Play," was admirably presented by the Laboratory theater before an appreciative audience yesterday in the Little Theater in Gresham.
It will again be performed at 8 p.m. Tuesday. No admission is charged.
The first part of the play is a bawdy farce among the peasants on the Yorkshire moors, followed by the adoration scene in Bethlehem. The three shepherds tie the two together, and the farce portion gives tremendous power to the religious scene.
Shirley Strain, college senior, was delightfully funny in the farce portion as the snaggle-toothed, unkempt, cackling wife, Gill. Mark Gilman, education junior, was equally humorous as the easy-going, "innocent" Mak.
However, through the humor of the farce portion protruded a vivid
The three shepherd were excellent in their portrayals: Max Zent, college sophomore, the old and experienced Coll; Bill Means, business junior, as the hen-pecked Gib, and Ernest Dade, college sophomore, as the young and good-natured Daw.
One of the most moving scenes was the tender presentation of each shepherd's simple gift to the Christ child in the manger.
Mary Rigor, fine arts freshman, played Mary with sensitivity. Kenneth Plumb, college freshman, created a characterization of Joseph without any lines. Maurice Casey,
--education junior, gave the angel's message to the shepherds with clear-voiced divine authority.
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Tom Shay, director of Lab theater, is to be commended on his interpretation and handling of the play. The difficult language was delivered smoothly by the actors. John Hankins, professor of English, was script consultant.
The imaginative setting and good lighting made the best of the small stage area. Dan Palmquist, instructor of speech; John White, graduate student, and James Sparks, education freshman, did the lighting.
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THE REMAINS OF JACKIE DAVIS
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Dec. 15, 1952
Ship Splits at Sea; 40 Men Being Rescued
Leghorn, Italy—(U.P.)—Rescue workers started hauling 40 American crewmen ashore by breeches buoy today after the United States Navy Supply Ship Grommet Reefer broke in two in Leghorn harbor.
It was expected to take all day to remove the entire crew. The crew was huddled in the shattered stern of the 2,460-ton ship, which had been carrying a cargo of turkeys and other Christmas cheer to United States soldiers in Europe.
The Grommet Reefer, anchored in Leghorn harbor, started dragging its anchor in a 62-mile gale.
It piled up on LaRegina reef, 100-yards offshore, an hour later, and the ship snapped in two. The stern went on the rocks. The bow drifted crazily until it snagged on a sand bar.
In the storm, it took 10 hours to rig the breeches buoy on a dangerously thin line.
United States Navy, United States Army and Italian Navy men are cooperating in the rescue operations. Rescue operations were suspended briefly while the rescuers put a
heavier cable onto the craft.
In midafternoon the rescuers started rigging searchlights, certain that it would be a night operation to get all the crewmen ashore.
The situation of the crewmen was serious before the breeches buoy line was rigged.
Red China Rejects PW Exchange Plan
Tokyo— (U.P.) —Communist China dashed hopes today for an immediate armistice in Korea by rejecting a United Nations plan aimed at solving the deadlock of exchanging prisoners of war.
Peiping radio said Chinese Foreign Minister Chou En-Lai had cabled formal rejection of the plan to UN General Assembly President Lester B. Pearson of Canada.
Washington—(U.P.)The government today broke a 10-day freeze on pay raises as a sharply trimmed Wage Stabilization board resumed operations despite an industry boycott.
Pay Freeze Thaw By Government
With businessmen refusing to serve and labor relegated t oan advisory role, the board's public members prepared to tackle its backlog of 12,000 wage cases as soon as Economic Stabilizer Roger L. Putnam gave the word.
Mr. Putnam planned to sign the necessary legal orders today delegating authority to the four public members to take over administration of wage controls.
Talks by 2 Californians Set at KU Medical Center
Two California doctors are scheduled to give lectures at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City Thursday.
Dr. Ernest Jawetz, of the University of California hospital, will speak Thursday morning on "the theoretical and pharmacological aspects of combined antibiotic action." That afternoon, Dr. Michael J. Hogan will deliver the fourth annual E. J. Curran lecture in ophthalmology.
Trustees of the World War II Memorial association Saturday closed the book on an effort that gave KU one of the first war memorials completed at a major college or university.
The trustees approved dissolution of the association, formally transferred title to the memorial carillon and driveway to the University, and transferred the remaining assets to the Endowment association.
The association raised $343,000 to build the 120-foot campanile with its 53-bell carillon and a driveway around the north crest of Mount Oread.
Justice Hugo T. Wedell, Topeka, served as president through the life of the association as did the other officers. Carl V. Rice, Kansas City, Kan., was vice president; Fred Ellsworth and Charles B. Holmes, both of Lawrence, secretary and treasurer respectively.
Meeting with the trustees were trustees of the Memorial corporation which conducted the post World War I campaign that produced the stadium and Union building.
Christmas Party Set for Union
A Christmas party sponsored by the Student Union Activities will be held in the Hawk's Nest at 8 p.m. Wednesday.
p.m. Wednesday.
Everyone is invited to the party,
Peggy Allison, party chairman said.
Activities will include dancing,
Christmas carols, refreshments, and
trimming the tree.
The dancing will be in the Trail room. There is no admission charge for the party.
Chemistry Students Tour Hercules Plant
Eight chemistry students, accompanied by three faculty members, Thursday toured the Hercules powder plant 14 miles east of here on highway 10.
They visited laboratories at the plant and observed various facilities for the processing, manufacture, and storage of explosives.
Arrangements for the trip were made by Anne Longworth, college senior. Accompanying the group were Ernest Griswold, associate professor of chemistry; Gilbert Height assistant professor of chemistry, and Kenneth H. Jacoby, director of chemistry laboratories.
Chesterfield is Best for YOU!
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John B. Boyce
COLUMBIA UNIV. '50
MARK LEMOND
And First to Present this Scientific Evidence on Effects of Smoking
AMEDICAL SPECIALIST is making regular bi-monthly examinations of a group of people from various walks of life. 45 percent of this group have smoked Chesterfield for an average of over ten years.
After eight months, the medical specialist reports that he observed . . .
no adverse effects on the nose, throat and sinuses of the group from smoking Chesterfield.
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Houston State Historical Society
Topeka, Ks.
New Union Rental Charges Ranae from $5 to $35
Rental charges for facilities in the Student Union and organizations which may use the facilities have been compiled by the Union Operating board.
Meeting rooms, meal service, and facilities for teas and receptions are available to students, faculty, and staff of the University, alumni, conference-groups, departmental meetings, faculty wives, student wives, staff wives, and University-sponsored organizations.
Other groups wishing to use the Union should make application to
the office of the director, who will in turn seek a ruling from the operating board and the chancellor's office.
Rates for using the various rooms are; ballroom, for dances or ticket selling social functions; $35; Kansas room, $15; Jayhawk room, $10; Pine room, $10, and the English room, $5. These rates are for dances or ticket selling social functions.
Office space rental in the building will range from $4 a month for multiple offices to $15 for each of two large offices. Most student organization offices will be rented for $10 a month.
Conference groups of non-university persons, such as those sponsored by the extension division will be charged 25 cents a day for each person plus meal charges.
The book store will pay a monthly rental of $500.
at $2 apiece. This charge will include all services.
There will be no rental charge if the affair is a dinner dance at which the group concerned buys 100 plates
Reservations for all functions are scheduled in the director's office and must be recorded in order for a commitment to be binding. It is understood that the price paid the Union for the dinner is the price that the guest will pay.
If a higher price is charged, the true price of the dinner must be indicated on the ticket. Under no circumstances will a ticket be printed which includes padding or loading for other overhead charges
without being itemized.
Other policies laid down by the board state that the Union will provide checkrooms for proper safeguarding of personal property; that smoking will be allowed in all rooms where ashtrays are provided, but will not be allowed in the ballroom proper during dances, except at the tables around the edges, and advertising or publicity is not allowed in the Union building.
All posters and bulletin board announcements should be left at the hostess desk in the main lobby.
Daily hansan
50th Year, No.62
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
All 39 Seamen Rescued From Sinking U.S. Ship
Leghorn, Italy—(U.P.)The last of 39 American seamen who had huddled on the broken stern of the U.S. Navy supply ship Gromme Reefer were snatched to safety today.
Six Attend Big 7 Meet
Student organizations, social and athletic events, and public and alumni relations were discussed at the Big Seven student government conference at the University of Missouri Friday and Saturday.
The meeting was attended by two voting delegates and six other delegates from each Big Seven school. Bill Wilson, ASC president, Marilyn Hawkinson, college junior, Joe Woods, pharmacy junior, Dana Anderson, college freshman, Hubert Dye, business junior, and Will Adams, graduate student, represented KU.
Members defeated a resolution on the non-partisan election of class officers and heard Richard Murphy, president of the National Student association, stress the importance of student government organizations.
Wilson and Miss Hawkinson voted to table a resolution that the Big Seven student government conference go on record as favoring academic freedom as defined recently by the American Association of University Professors. The person making the tabling motion pointed out that "we have more important things to consider."
$612.19 Collected As Vespers Gifts
An offering of $612.19 was given by the audiences of the Christmas vespers to be used in the University Scholarship fund for music and art students, it was announced today.
This sum was collected from the audience estimated at between 4,500 and 5,000. The contributions varied from $5 bills to a Missouri mill.
No part of the donation is used for the vesper expenses as they are a budgeted item for the School of Fine Arts.
Weather
All of Kansas basked in sunny mild weather today, with yesterday's brisk, chilly winds forgotten.
BIG HAPPY MAN
Lowest temperature overnight was 20 degrees at Goodland. I t touched a peak of 59 at Dodge City, Garden City and Hill City yesterday. A high pressure area in the western United States was credited with giving n a s s f a i r
FAIR
ed with giving
K ans s fair
weather, but observers here said the situation would change. The five day forecast calls for colder weather Friday or Saturday, with snow in northern Kansas and rain in the south. Temperatures tomorrow will continue from 45 to 55 degrees.
Tuesday, Dec. 16, 1952
- The last man was brought off by one of four U.S. Navy helicopters from the carriers Midway and Leyte. The carriers had raced through the Ligurian sea to this northwest Italian port where the Grommet Reefer, with its cargo of Christmas turkeys for American troops, smashed on the rocks and broke in two yesterday.
"All hands removed. No injuries," came the word from rescue head-quarters which told of the happy, dramatic ending of the two-day rescue operation by breeches buoy, boat and helicopter.
In keeping with the rigid tradition of the sea, the Grommet Reefer's master, Capt. Henry P. Saukant, of Brooklyn, N.Y., was the last man brought to shore.
The Grommet Reefer had started dragging its anchor in a gale in Leghorn harbor and at 3:30 a.m. yesterday (8:30 p.m. Sunday CST) it had been hurled on the rocks of the "Queen of Leghorn" reef, where it broke in two.
In the final moments of the rescue operation Capt. Saukant stood alone on the battered stern of his ship.
A helicopter hovered over him. He hauled down the American flag, which had been snapping from the mainbrace in the wind, grabbed a line dropped by the helicopter, and was raised to the craft. An Italian flag, which had flown from the ship's mast as customary because the ship was in an Italian harbor, was left flying.
The helicopters arrived at a critical moment. The stern, hammered incessantly by wind and water against the jagged rocks, was weakening. It was listing so that the breeches buoy could no longer be used, and every man would have had to jump into the icy sea—as some did—to be picked up by two Italian Navy launches.
Libraries, Union Announce Hours
The Student Union and KU libraries announced their vacation schedules today.
Coffee will be served in the Union cafeteria every day, except Christmas and New Year's day, from 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
The Hawk's Nest will be open Friday until 10:30 p.m., and will then close for the complete vacation.
Three meals a day will be served every day during vacation except Christmas and New Year's day when only one meal will be served. That meal will be from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. During the rest of the vacation, breakfast will be served from 7:30 to 8:30 a.m.; lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., and supper from 5 to 6 p.m.
Watson library will be open regular hours this week but will close at noon on Saturday. Students who now have books should return them on or before Dec. 19. Students needing books after that date and throughout the vacation period may begin borrowing them on Dec. 17.
Watson library hours during the vacation will be, Saturday, Dec. 20,
8 a.m. to noon; Sunday, closed; Monday to Wednesday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
and Thursday, closed; Friday, 8 a.m.
to 5 p.m.; Saturday, 8 a.m. to noon;
Sunday, closed. The last week of
vacation, Dec. 29 to Jan. 4 will follow
the same schedule.
The Law library vacation hours will be 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday and 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday, closed Sunday, Christmas day, New Year's day, but open Sunday, Jan. 4 from 2 to 10 p.m.
Lindley hall library will be open 9 a.m. to noon and 1:30 to 5 p.m. on Monday through Friday, and 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday, closed Sundays and holidays.
The Engineering library in Marvin hall will be open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, closed Saturdays, Sundays and holidays.
Talk with Regents Slated for Jan.16
The All Student Council housing committee will present its case for better University housing to the board of regents Friday, Jan. 16, committee members reported at a meeting last night.
The purpose of last night's meeting was to discuss points to be presented before the board.
The committee still is gathering material and is not ready to release any statements on policy, the committee chairman said.
Winifred Meyer, college sophomore, is meeting with Carroll D Clark, professor of sociology, Wednesday to get a professional viewpoint on the benefits of group living.
Donald Horttor, college senior, agreed to find out the percentage of persons in organized houses working full-time or part-time and the percentage of persons representing organized houses in campus activities.
Dean Glasco, chairman, and Miss Meyer will write a letter to other Big Seven universities to find out how they have handled housing problems.
Bill Wilson, ASC president, suggested the committee write to the National Student association for information on housing.
Glasco reported he had received a call from Jean Waddell, president
UN Remains Firm In Repatriation Stand
Ike Sees Carlson on Senate Grumbling
United Nations, N. Y. — (U.P.) The United States stood firmly today on its demand for voluntary repatriation of war prisoners as the sole condition for resuming Korean peace talks.
An American statement issued here last night said the United Nations command—in effect the U. S. government—was ready to resume negotiations at Pamunjun whenever the Communists accept the proposals contained in the UN's compromise peace proposal which was rejected by the Peiping government yesterday.
The Pamunjunji talks, the Americans said, could be resumed whenever the Oriental Reds accepted the proposals of the resolution passed by the General Assembly on Dec. 3, or when they advanced "constructive proposals of their own which could lead to an honorable armistice."
Gen. Eisenhower meanwhile took his time about scheduling an appointment with Gen. Douglas MacArthur, his former commanding officer, who was said he has a "new, clear and definite solution" to the Korean war stalemate.
New York—(U.P.)—President-elect Eisenhower conferred today with Sen. Frank Carlson who was expected to fill him in on grumbling among Senate Republicans that they had not been consulted about federal appointments.
gen. Eisenhower's press secretary, James C. Hagerty, said he had had no reports of nettled feelings among Senate Republicans because the President-elect had not notified interested senators in some cases before filling administrative posts.
The Kansas Republican, an Eisenhower campaign adviser and one of the president-elect's closest friends in Congress, had a long luncheon session with Gen. Eisenhower in the "42nd Street White House" in the Commodore hotel.
In answer to questions about reports that the two already had met, Mr. Hagerty said shortly after noon that was not true. However, he declined to comment on reports that the Eisenhower and MacArthur offices had been in contact to arrange a meeting.
Asked whether he would announce such a meeting in advance, Mr. Hagerty replied: "I just don't know."
Gen. Eisenhower's message to Gen. MacArthur from the cruiser Helena last week, while returning from his inspection tour of Korea, said he was "looking forward to informal meetings" with Gen. MacArthur to get the benefit of his thinking and experience on the Korean problem.
Gen. MacArthur replied with an affable message. His military office said today, however, that there were two errors of transmission in that message—as released to the press on the Helena—which might lead readers to misconstrue Gen. MacArthur's intent somewhat.
Gen. Eisenhower had been expected to meet with Gen. MacArthur sometime this week, but there were no indications from his headquarters exactly where or when the meeting would take place. Gen. MacArthur lives in the Waldorf-Astoria Towers, only seven blocks from the Eisenhower Commodore hotel headquarters.
One visitor to the Eisenhower headquarters today was Martin P. Durkin, head of the AFL-affiliated Plumbers union, whose appointment as Secretary of Labor was announced three days after Gen. Eisenhower had departed for Korea.
Mr. Durkin, who says he has no idea who recommended him to Gen. Eisenhower, has not seen the President-elect since his appointment was announced. He said he conferred with Gov. Sherman Adams of New Hampshire, who will be assistant to the president in the new administration on matters having to do with the Plumbers union.
of Inter-dorm, offering the services of the organization. The group was asked to give its opinions on why group living is advantageous.
Fred Rice, college sophomore, volunteered to gather information from employers that might strengthen the housing committee argument.
Glasco and Hortor will return early from vacation to work on the case to be presented before the board of regents.
ASC to Decide On Class Voting
The second reading and voting on the non-partisan election of class officers' bill will be the major business of the All Student Council meeting at 7:30 today in Green hall.
The bill states that candidates for class office shall file directly with the ASC election committee by submitting a petition signed by 25 members of the class concerned. Candidates' names will be placed on a general election ballot, except in cases where more than three have filed for same office. In such cases candidates shall be voted upon in a non-partisan primary election to be held simultaneously with the party primaries. Names of the top three will be then placed on a general election ballot.
Several appointments will be made tonight by Bill Wilson, ASC president. Wilson will appoint members to the Little Hoover commission to work with Chairman Hubert Dye, business junior, appointed at the last meeting. The appointment must be ratified by the Council.
Committees will be appointed to study the Jayhawker and the possibility of organizing a student planning commission. William Nulton, college senior, will be appointed to a planning committee to coordinate foreign student activities.
A report will be made by Joe Woods, pharmacy junior, on the Big Seven student government conference held at the University of Missouri over the weekend. A report will be given on the instructors and course evaluation poll recently conducted by the temporary scholarship committee, and the auditing committee will report on the new Jayhawk auditing plan.
The finance committee headed by Lyle Anderson, business senior, will recommend that the ASC grant $125 to the Forensic league and $50 to Associated Women Students.
Sour Owl Sales Begin Wednesday
The Sour Owl, campus humor magazine, will go on sale Wednesday, Ron Kull, editor, said today. The 24-page magazine is crammed with jokes, stories, cartoons, and off-beat information. There are several exciting stories in the magazine including an expose' of the night life in Strong hall. Dick Bibler and Paul Coker are back at their cartooning best.
The magazine will sell for 30 cents and will be on sale at the information booth, Union building. Strong rotunda, and Fraser hall.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan
Sooner's Threat May Change Rule
With the prospects of Oklahoma withdrawing from the Big Seven conference growing more probable, and the feeling that is building up among the member schools against the ban on post-season football games, the Big Seven is faced with the problem of eliminating a rule which has created great criticism in the Midwest.
But the Big Seven has its reasons for keeping the ban on bowl games for its members. The conference regards the National Collegiate Athletic association as its parent organization. Because the NCAA has set up its own tournaments in basketball, baseball, and track, the Big Seven conference has ruled that its members may participate in such post-season activities.
However, the NCAA does not provide bowl games for its members' football teams. While the NCAA has established minimum standards for bowl, the Big Seven does not consider that as official as the tournaments.
Many persons have cried that the Big Seven is discriminating against grid teams by allowing post-season games in all sports except football. But the Big Seven is sincere in its belief that the policy it is pursuing is more in keeping with the lines set up by the NCAA.
Many of the members of the Big Seven have been taking a more definite stand on the question of bowl games lately, and the tide seems to be turning in favor of bowl games for Big Seven teams.
If Oklahoma continues to seek admittance in the Southwest conference, the Big Seven may have to reverse its stand on bowl games. Sooner Coach Bud Wilkinson has insisted he wants to stay in the Big Seven conference. He believes the Big Seven to have a healthier program for all athletics. But the Oklahoma Board of Regents is applying great pressure to jump the Sooners into the Southwest conference.
Coach Wilkinson prefers to stay in the Big Seven and work to change the existing rules. And that appears to be the most logical plan. Rules should never become so necessary that they can't be changed.
When a rule does not serve the purpose for which it was intended—as the ban on bowl games does not—then it should be changed.
Bob Longstaff.
Truman-Ike Truce Held Only 7 Days
The political truce between President Truman and President-elect Eisenhower was one of the shortest on record—an even seven days.
1. 8. 13
It was two weeks ago that Mr. Truman stated the ground rules for the new Democratic opposition. He said then that the incoming Republican administration should be given a chance to show what it can do before being subjected to a lot of criticism.
He said, for example, that he would have no comment or criticism of Eisenhower's nominations to high office until the new administration had a chance to take over and show its stuff.
On Thursday of last week Mr. Truman blasted, in language unusually strong for a presidential news conference, at Eisenhower's method of approaching the country's greatest policy problem. That is what to do about Korea, and how.
What Mr. Truman still identifies as the Korean police action is the most stubborn and challenging of the unsolved problems he is leaving to the new administration.
The President said it was demagoguery for the President-elec to approach the Korean problem with a campaign pledge to visit that country. Second guessers now are convinced Eisenhower's pledge to go to Korea was one of the top factors in his election triumph.
Mr. Truman sensed the deadly political impact of Eisenhower's pledge the instant it was made. He was and is sensitive on the subject of Korea. Right or wrong, Mr. Truman is personally responsible for the United States being involved there. He personally made the decision although he had the advice of his cabinet and military associates.
Mr. Truman assumed further individual responsibility in the spring of 1951 when he fired Gen. Douglas MacArthur. MacArthur said then, as he says now, that he had a plan to end the war.
Right or wrong, Mr. Truman rejected the MacArthur plan for the plan of his diplomatic and military advisers and the war goes on. That again was the President's personal and final decision and responsibility.
Mr. Truman's intention to give the Eisenhower administration a chance to show its stuff before shooting at it, collapsed after a week under the weight of Korea and all the name of that nation implies.
Eisenhower will find it hard to forgive Mr. Truman's barbed language so directly challenging his motives. There is speculation here about what the two men will talk about Jan. 20 during the inaugural parade from the capitol to the White House—or, whether they will talk, at all—United Press.
The older folks complain "that this modern generation moves too fast," and a Los Angeles grandmother turns right around and holds up three banks in a month's time to bring back memories "of the good old days."
In The Editor's Eye
Rv ROGER VARRINGTON
It is very interesting to watch the people on the street at Christmas time as they pass or stop at a Salvation army offering booth.
Some pass but many stop to drop in a coin and receive a word of thanks from the worker there.
Those who do give are a cross-section of all economic classes. It is comforting and pleasing to note the ones that give. It is comforting to know the well-to-do are interested enough in the needy to give and it is pleasing that the not-so-well-to-do are big enough to share what they have also.
It is too bad that many cannot preserve within themselves the spirit of sharing the entire year. However, it is a wonderful experience at Christmas time, when the opportunity to share is so great, to note that our supposedly cold and disinterested capitalists are still interested in the other guy.
A SIGN IN THE J-SCHOOL has resulted from a suggestion in a recent One Man's Opinion authored by Phil Newman. The signs are posted on various bulletin boards and in the newsroom. They read "A Newspaper Should Lead - Not Follow."
That famous editor said newspapers should not veer from their "traditional position as leaders of public opinion to mere peddlers and purveyors of news."
Unknowing to those who proposed the idea, it is only a slightly reworded sentiment of William Allen White, for whom the school is named.
A FRIEND OF OURS, who is a Fulbright scholar here, came home boiling mad the other evening because a professor had told him that he gave higher marks for well-written papers which showed little thought than for papers which evidenced a great deal of thought but were not so well written.
"Under those circumstances," said our friend, "the greatest insult to my intelligence would be to become a success at this University."
Under those circumstances, we would be inclined to agree with him. We are hoping, however, that such professors are in the minority here.
* *
CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS on the Hill have been up for several weeks now and compliments are certainly due for the seasonal beauty they have added to the campus.
Although the lights in front of Strong hall seem rather gaudy for the idea which the season is celebrating, we think the tree in the rotunda and the soft blue lights at Danforth chapel are beautiful.
AN EDITORIAL in the December
UNIVERSITY Daily Hansan
University of Kansas Student Newspaper News Room KU 251 Ad Room KU 373
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Dairy Press Association, Association for Advertising Represents by the National Advertising Firm, 420 Madison Avenue, N.Y. City.
ELECTIONAL EDITOR
Editor-in-Chief ... Roger Yarinason
Editorial Assistant ... Charles Burch
Editorial Assoc...
EDITORIAL STAFF
Asst. Mgr. Editors -------------- Mary Cooper, Bob Stewart, Chuck Zuegner Max Thompson City Editor --------------- Dean Evans Society Editor -------------- Jeanne Fitzgerald Sports Editor -------------- Don Nielsen Athletics Editor -------------- Case Keen Astros Editor -------------- Chuck Morelock Graph Editor -------------- Phil Newman Tire Editor -------------- Daron Sarten
Managing Editor Diana Stonebaker
Asst. Mgr. Editors Mary Cooper, Bob
NEWS STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager Clark Akers
Advertising Mar. Elbert Spivey
National Mar. Virginia Mackey
Correlation Patricia Vance
Classified Ad. Mar. Tam Besson
Promotion Mar. Don Landis
Business Adviser Dale Novotny
Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $45 a year (add 1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan. every afternoon during the University year except Saturday and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Entered second classmate at Lawrence or at Lawrence Kau. Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
To the Editor of the Daily Kansan.
Although the Air Force does a good job in keeping my schedule well filled, I still find the time to read the University Daily Kansan—as I did in my recent four years at KU. I was particularly interested, and concerned, with a recent editorial by Miss Taylor entitled "Jayhawker Policy Needs Clean Up."
First of all, Miss Taylor asks, "Why should last year's Jayhawker close its books with a profit of $1,000—why not make a better book instead of filling the pockets of the staff?"
Granting that the Jayhawk should and will make improvements in the future management of its affairs—as is true in other activities of the University—there are certain questions asked by Miss Taylor, which although rhetorical, should be answered.
Disregarding the editorial's general and pervasive tone of sarcasm—which, at times, can be effective in editorial writing, there are certain statements that should not be left unchallenged. Just as Miss Taylor concedes, "that the editor of the Jayhawker is responsible for the smooth running of a $27,000 enterprise," the editor of the Kansan likewise has certain definite obligations—perhaps the most important of which is reflecting valid student opinion, without intentional or accidental distortion of the truth.
Perhaps it was accidental, but Miss Taylor's references to the Jayhawker a "closed shop" for a "chosen few" were passed on to the UDK's readers as fact—wholly unsupported by the rest of the editorial. The Jayhawkier is certainly not a closed organization when the hundred or more students who work on its staff are considered—and the "few" are chosen by a board of experience and ability: the dean of the School of Journalism, the bursar of the University, the executive secretary of the University, the deans of men and women, the chairman of the ASC's publication committee, former editors and business managers—among others.
(Editor's Note: Win Koerper was the
auteur of *The Filler* and the *Daily Kansas;
On the Filler* of the *Daily Kansas;*
Forgetting Miss Taylor's misrepresentation of fact (the profit rei-
10 issue reported that the ASC wanted the Kansan to clear up the editorial board situation for the many students who are unclear about that body.
Ex-Editor Denies Charges
The editorial pointed out that the board had been objectively reported and explained in the Nov. 14 UDK and that copies of that issue were available in the office.
To date no one has called for any of the back issues. Either a lot of people are saving their Kansans at home or the ASC was wrong. Either solution seems highly improbable.
In our case, with the 1952 Jayhawker, it was not apparent that we would make a profit until early spring—when increased sales and ads made the difference.
mained after expenses and bonuses were paid), the answer is relatively simple. At the beginning of each school year, when the budget of the Jayhawkner is set up, it is impossible to predict the exact number of subscriptions and advertisements which will be sold. That is the time of the year when contracts are signed with printers and engravers.
There is hardly any practicable way to spend an extra thousand dollars on the last issue—with contractual commitments already made. In fact, if Miss Taylor's intimations were correct—it seems that we would not have left a profit—but would have "filled our pockets" toward the end of the year through our "liberal" expense" accounts. We did not, however, and the profit went into the revolving Jayhawker fund—which in future years should make possible the production of better Jayhawkers.
Second, Taylor asks, "If you Jayhawker edit and business manager receive salaries, why shouldn't the same position on the Kansas receive compensation." Fundamentally, while the journalism students who edit the UDK do not receive salaries—they do receive credit hours
— and, more significantly — grade points. There is not even a mention—much less credit—on my transcript, or on Bill Howell's or Kenny Dam's for our Jayhawker work. The question of whether a Kansan editor's "A" or "B" is equal to a Jayhawker editor's salary is certainly debatable—but, evidently, that is not what Miss Taylor chose to discuss.
As to the question of proper salary—most of the people who are acquainted with Jayhawker work will agree that $35 or even $45 per month amounts to an extremely low per hour wage. Of course, there is the pleasure, and somewhat dubious honor to be considered—but, in my opinion, this factor is well balanced by the heavy restriction on other activities, the limitation of credit hours carried, and the surrender of much leisure time which is automatically accepted by the Jayhawker editor upon his election.
Miss Taylor also put forth the statement that "no one knows how much money comes in, or where it goes." Quite to the contrary, the bursar of the University who is also chairman of the Jayhawker advisory board has complete records of income and expense—as does the student business manager. Such a statement indicates, at least to me, an unknowing display of dangerous journalism—and an unwise policy for a Kansan writer to follow.
Win Koerper '52
2nd Lt., USAF
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FIGGER YOU CAN LEAD US TO OL' PORKY IN THIS MISTY FOG AN' DARK?
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COMICS, ARLINGTON
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Page 3
Greek Pianist Receives Praise PromSmall Concert Audience
By KEN COY
An enthusiastic though small audience asked for three encores from Mrs. Gina Bachauer at her piano concert in Hoch auditorium last night and would have eagerly listened to more.
From the moment the charming Mrs. Bauchauer began her concert with the varied and agitated movements of "Toccata and Fugue in D minor" by Bach-Tausig, she was an example of tireless perfection.
The Toccata represents one of the most outstanding transcriptions from Bach by Tausig. This difficult composition is filled with broad sounding chords and running passages taxing the abilities of pianists.
One of the major works on the concert was "Sonata in B minor" by Chopin. The first movement, allegro maestoso, with its numerous little melodies afforded a wealth of listening pleasure.
She met the challenge wonderfully, playing the lighter parts with graceless ease and the broad, somber party with dignity and feeling.
The last movement, finale, presto ma non tanto, is an extremely difficult movement with broad progressions and a tremendous amount of power. Power is exactly what Mrs. Bachauser is best at and this movement represented one of the most colorful and best performed of the entire program.
Bouquet. Bauchauer was presented a bouquet representing the colors of the Greek flag by two of her countrymen.
turther.
These students were George Delsios, special student in business, and Kariolifolia Mitsakis, special student in journalism, exchange students from Greece.
Fantasie Dance
At the close of the concert the applause continued in an ever increasing wave. Many people flocked backstage to congratulate her or to seek autographs. A long line of people extending at times almost back out into the auditorium, waited patiently at the door of her dressingroom. ___
The program also included "Three Intermezii" by Brahms and "Three Fantastic Dances" by Shostakovich.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
County Correspondents: 4 p.m. meeting, 105 Green, refreshments. Bacteriology club: Christmas din-
nery, 6:15 p.m., at the Chuck Wagon
History club: 7 p.m., 9 Strong.
Discussion. Conference
Student Council: 7:30 p.m. meeting, 103 Green. Pictures will not be taken.
History club: 7 p.m., 9 Strong Discussion. Objectivity in History.
Sculpture club: Presenting exhibit of primitive African and Indian sculpture with films, 7:30 p.m.
Strong auditorium. Dr. C. S.
Smith, speaker. All welcome.
IFPC: 7:30 p.m., Phi Kappa house.
WEDNESDAY
IFPC: 7:30 p.m. Phi Kappa house YM-YWCA caroling party: 8:30 10:30 p.m. meet at Henley house.
Pre-Nursing club: 4 p.m., Fraser dining room.
ISA Scholarship: applications du 5 p.m. Pick up and return applications to Dean of Women's office.
Jr. Panhellenic: 4:30 p.m., Delta Delta Decla house.
University Daily Kansan
Try-outs: for "Lily, the Felon"
Daughter" 7-9 p.m., Green theater
Newman club: Catholic students caroling party, dancing, and refreshments at Catholic church, 7:30-10:30 p.m. Porss needed at 7 p.m.
Chess club: 7:30 p.m., 20 Strong.
Chness club. 7:30 p.m., 20 e.bldg.
Delta Phi Delta: business meeting,
7:30 p.m., Spooner sculpture room.
FACTS: 7:30 p.m. meeting, 110 Fraser.
Society of American Military Engineers: business meeting, 7:30 p.m., MS lounge.
Wesley foundation: caroling party,
7:30 p.m. meet at the Union.
AIChE: 7:30 p.m., 426 Lindley, Mr. H. G. Fair, Phillips Petro refinery, speaker.
German Nativity play: 8 p.m.
changed to Fraser theater.
THURSDAY
Community Christmas Worship service: 8 p.m., First Presbyterian church, 9th and Vermont. YM-YWCA and KU Chorale presenting the program.
the program
Liquid Air Demonstration: 8:30 p.m., 305 BCL, by Dr. Haight. Public written.
Deutscher Verein: no meeting today.
Moscow Greetings To KU Professor
The announcement from Washington that Col. Earl L. Mickelson had been named military attache in the U.S. embassy in Moscow was a reminder to Dr. E. O. Stene, professor of political science at the University.
Universi. Just a few days before he had received a Christmas letter, dated December 1, from Col. Mickelson. The two had been classmates from a country grade school through the Ph.D. at the University of Minnesota. The colonel's field is mathematics.
Col. Mickelson has actually occupied his post since October. He moves into a position previously filled by major generals, one of them being Robert W. Grow, who was relieved and court martialed because he permitted his diary containing indiscreet comments to fall into the hands of Russian spies.
A commentary in the letter states; "Downtown Moscow looks quite modern, but you've got to see the rest of this burg!"
Choir to Sing Carols At Tree in Strong
The A Cappella choir will have its annual carol singing celebration around the Christmas tree in the rotunda of Strong at 4:15 p.m. Wednesday.
About 113 singers will take part in the 30-minute program of carols both old and new under the direction of D. M. Swarthout, professor of piano.
Paris —(U.P.) The North Atlantic Treaty Organization council approved today an Anglo-American compromise which will name British Admiral Earl Mountbatten head of the NATO Mediterranean Naval commands.
NATO Approves British Admiral As Naval Chief
Prime Minister Winston Churchill was expected to announce Earl Mountbatten's appointment this afternoon in the House of Commons.
The long squabble between Britain and the United States over the Mediterranean command was ended by the NATO council today at the second session of a conference which opened yesterday.
Under the compromise, American Adm. Robert B. Carney, NATO southern front commander, will retain control of Allied naval forces supporting ground warfare.
Meanwhile, informed sources said the NATO council will brush aside an urgent plea by Supreme Allied Commander Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway and cut his requested $430,000-000 base-building program for Europe in half.
The committee was set up after members of the 14-nation North Atlantic alliance said they would or could not commit themselves to the program asked by Mr. Ridgway.
Europe in India.
The source said that a base-building committee made up of NATO finance and defense ministers would recommend a $220,000,000 1953 building program to the NATO council.
All 14 nations are represented on the building committee so council approval of the abbreviated program is just a formality.
The source said the NATO ministers decided to hold themselves to the smaller program until they learn what their overall 1953 defense targets will be.
Supreme Court Draws Line On Employe Loyalty Oaths
Washington—(U.P.)The Supreme Court has drawn a boundary line beyond which states may not go in requiring loyalty oaths of public employes.
Justice Clark reviewed each of the Courts' three recent decisions upholding loyalty oaths for Los Angeles
Justice Tom C. Clark, speaking for an 8 to 0 majority, ruled that a person cannot be barred from public employment merely because he once joined an organization later found to be subversive. The important thing, Justice Clark said, is: Did the person know what kind of an organization it was when he joined it?
In another precedent-setting decision yesterday, the Supreme Court ruled 8 to 1 that a man may be convicted in state courts on the basis of wiretap evidence in violation of federal law.
The decision struck down as unconstitutional Oklahoma loyalty oath which ignored this factor. The case arose after seven teachers were discharged May 21, 1951, from Oklahoma A&M college at Stillwater because they refused to sign.
State Rep. William Shibley, author of the law, said at once that he will prepare another bill to meet the high court's objections.
Refused either to quash or transfer to New York a grand jury investigation of an alleged international oil cartel begun here several weeks ago.
city employes, teachers in New York, state and candidates for public office in Maryland. He noted none of these states tried to punish "innocent" members of subversive groups. But in Oklahoma, he went on. "the fact of membership alone" is the test of loyalty. This, he ruled, "offends due process."
Affirmed a California court decision dismissing a civil anti-trust suit brought by the Justice department against lettuce growers in the Salinas area of California.
'Yesterday the Court also:
SOUR
OWL
BUY
IT
TOMORROW
Tuesday, Dec. 16, 1952
Resentment of Dewey Builds Over Patronage
Washington—(U.P.)—a wave of resentment against Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York was building up today among Republican senators who fear that "Dewey domination" of the Eisenhower administration may deprive them of patronage rights they have waited years to exercise.
Grumbling has become widespread, even among senators who were early supporters of President-elect Eisenhower. They have been waiting in vain for definite assurances that Eisenhower will follow the tradition of "counselling" majority party senators about federal appointments.
One senator, who was an early Eisenhower supporter, said the wave of "anti-Deweyism" is already a serious threat to the Eisenhower legislative program, which could be wrecked by a hostile Senate.
Senatorial blood pressure began to rise when Eisenhower filled cabinet and sub-cabinet posts in some cases without consulting or notifying interested senators. The appointments themselves persuaded many senators that the Dewey influence is already dominant in the new administration.
Sen. Frank Carlson (R-Kan.), one of Eisenhower's closest friends in congress, was expected to report on the problem during his conference with the President-elect in New York today. Some senators hoped his report would prompt Eisenhower to issue a reassuring statement on patronage.
This suspicion has been heightened by the fact that Herbert Brownell, a former Dewey lieutenant who will be Eisenhower's Attorney General, has emerged as the key man in passing out jobs under Eisenhower.
But another senator, also an early
The purposes of the Kansas commission for Unesco are to promote a sympathetic understanding of all peoples of the world and to advance their welfare.
The main speaker at the conference banquet Friday evening was Dr. Richard McKeon of the University of Chicago.
Crosier Elected To UNESCO Job
Clayton Crosier, assistant professor of civil engineering, was elected to the executive board of the Kansas commission for the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural organization at the commission's sixth annual conference at Emporia Saturday.
Dr. Milton C. Cummings, '24, was elected chairman of the commission. Dr. Cummings is president of the State Bank at Effingham.
Others attending the conference from KU besides Prof. Croesier were Dr. Edward Robinson, associate professor of philosophy, and Dr. Robert Sternfeld, assistant professor of philosophy.
Eisenhower booster, discounted its importance. He said a certain amount of grumbling is inevitable when a party returns to power.
This senator believes Dewey and Brownnell have become scapegoats for a situation that developed because Eisenhower was unable to devote any time to political and legislative problems during the past two weeks because of his Korean trip.
Union Service Set Thursday
The services, written and directed by Richard Scott, college junior, and presented by members of the University YMCA and YWCA will consist of the familiar Christmas story told by a unique combination of choral and solo music and antiphonal readings.
An interdenominational Christ-
mas worship service will be held at
the First Presbyterian church, 901
Vermont st., at 8 p.m. Thursday.
The Christmas story will be told by a narrator who will read passages of scripture, and by the solo and choral singing and speaking groups. The choral and solo voices will come from the balcony of the church.
The University Chorale under the direction of Clayton Krehbiel, assistant professor of music education, and Mrs. Alfred Gallup, church organist, will furnish the music.
Music by the University Chorale will include "Break Forth Oh Beauteous Heavenly Light" from Bach's Christmas Oratorio, "He Shall Feed His Flock" from Handel's Messiah, and other well known Christmas selections.
The service is sponsored by the Lawrence Ministerial alliance.
The audience will see only a lighted cross at the front of the sanctuary.
The traditional Christmas worship service at Danforth chapel sponsored by the campus "Y's" will not be held this year because of the community service.
"We hope the students will attend the program downtown," said John Biegert. YMCA president.
The service has been compiled by Scott, YM chairman, from scriptures and from the modern poetry of W. H. Auden and T. S. Eliot.
"The service is one of the 'Y' projects planned throughout the year to serve Lawrence residents and to link the University with the community," said Irvin Gaston, YMCA executive secretary.
We
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Turtles, 2 lb. **2.90**
Assorted Chocolates 2 lb. tin **2.50**
Weaver's Candy—Main Floor
CARAMELS
Alpha Phi Alpha Sig Eps Edge IM Opponents
Sigma Phi Epsilon and Alpha Phi Alpha won close contests in yesterdays' slate of four fraternity "A" games.
S. P. Epsilon 31. Sigma A. E. 28
S. P. Epsilon 31, Sigma A. E. 28
Sigma Alpha Epsilon held a 15-13 half time lead, but was unable to cope with a strong second-half drive by Sigma Phi Epsilon, as the Sig Alphas were defeated 31-28. Godfrey Larson led the Sig Ep's with 11 points, while Frank Smith and Bill Rich shared scoring honors for the SAE's with 9 points each.
Alpha Phi Alpha 23. Acacia 22
Alpha Phi Alpha 23, Acacia 22
A frenzied kitchen drive failed Acacia was shaded by Alpha Phi Alpha 23-22. The largest margin of the game was a four point lead held by Alpha Phi Alpha at the end of the third quarter. Stan Hamilton, Acacia, and Curtis Herron, Alpha Phi Alpha scored 12 points each to pace their respective teams.
P. K.P. 33, A.K.L. 18
Marvin Rengel scored 11 points to lead Phi Kappa Psi to a 33-18 win over Alpha Kappa Lambda. The Phi Psi's showed their strength early in the game as they took an 17-7 half-time lead. Jim O'Dell was high man for the losers with 12 points.
Triangle 36. P.K.A. 18
Triangle held the Pi Kappa Alpha quintet to 4 points in the first half on to win to 36-1. John Mormont faced the triangle team with 12 points.
OTHER SCORES
Fraternity "B"
Kappa A. Ps1 31, Delta BH 23
Alpha K. Lambda 35, Phi Kappa 19
Delta Upsilon 67, Stigma Pl 30
*Independent* **B**
East Side Kids 49, Stephenson 47
Pk Idelta Theta Ii G1,sigma Chi II 12
Pi Kappa Ps I I4, Sigma ChI III 11
Pi Kappa Ps I I5, Sigma ChI III 11
TODAY'S GAME:
Robinson Annex
Fternitym **A** Theta_Tau-Tau Kappa E
5 Alpha Tau Omega-Pi Kappa E
5 Alpha Tau Omega-Pi Kappa E
Robinson Annex
**Fraternity "B"**
8.15 Theta Chi-Delta T. Delta (E)
8.15 Sigma Nu- Sigma A. E. (W)
8.15 Phil Kappa Tau-Phil Kappa S. (E)
8.15 Phil D. T.-Sigma Phi E. (W)
**TOMORROW'S GAMES**
Fraternity "A"
4 Sigma Chi-Phi Kappa Tau
5 Kappa Sigma-Delta Chi
Fashion
Alba Tau Omega-Triangle (E)
Industrial,
"IR"
8.15 Upi Sigma Nu- Gamma Delta (W)
8.15 Upi Sigma Nu-
8.15 OROTIC ITC-Knows Nothings (W)
Illinois Tops Ratings Again
New York—U.P.) Illinois, which lived up to its pre-season buildup with an impressive victory in its 1952-53 opener, was named the nation's No. 1 college basketball team for the second week in a row today by the United Press board of coaches.
The 35 leading coaches who make up the United Press rating board selected the same five leading teams as last week, listing LaSalle of Philadelphia, Kansas State, Washington and Oklahoma A&M behind the Illini in that order.
The United Press college basketball ratings (with first-place votes and won-and-lost records in parentheses):
1. Illinois (24) (1-0) 333
2. LaSalle (7) (4-0) 256
3. Kansas State (2) (2-0) 253
4. Washington (3-1) 188
5. Okla. A&M (1) (5-0) 168
6. Seton Hall (5-0) 104
7. UCLA (3-1) 103
8. N.C. State (5-1) 97
9. Minnesota (1) (3-0) 92
10. Notre Dame (6) (3-0) 63
11. Seconde (H) Hy. Cross, 50; 12. Indianapolis, 47; Louisiana State, 28; 14. St. Louis, 17; 15. Navy, 16; 16. California, 14; 17 (tie), St. Bonaventure and Brigham Young, 12 each; 19. DePaul, 9; 20 (tie), NYU and Missouri, 8 each.
Others: Ohio State, 6; Kansas, 5;
Duquesne, Villanova, Arkansas,
Michigan, Seattle and Butter, 4 each;
Louisville, 3; Oklahoma City, Vanderbilt and Western Kentucky, 2 each; Santa Clara, Fordham and Idaho, 1 each.
Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Dec. 16, 1953
Along the
JAYHAWKER
trail
By DON NEILSEN
Kansan Sports Editor
Kansas opens its home game season Friday against the Mustangs from Southern Methodist with a 1-1 record, but there are voices which insist that Kansas is lucky to have won one game.
In our opinion, Kansas will be a hard team to beat on its home court. Although they have showed little scoring punch in averaging 57 points per game thus far in the young season, the Jayhawks have demonstrated a tremendous defensive ability.
They held the Tulane five to only 50 points, after the Green Wave had averaged 88 points per game going into the Kansas contest. Then they held the Rice Owls to 54 points. The real show of defensive strength during that contest came during the third quarter when the Jayhawks held their opponents to only five points throughout the period.
With an ability to stymie opponents in the scoring department, the Jayhawks are setting a new trend. The emphasis in basketball play has been shifted toward scoring too much lately. Coaches have been cramming their team with men who have scoring ability and skyscraper height as their only assets. Guarding seems to have become a lost art.
The Big Seven conference officials have gotten themselves behind the eight ball. Their last ruling on post-season athletics has aroused such a storm of opinion, that only by changing their minds gracefully can they come back into the good graces of a great many sports fans.
-KU-
KU
LARRY BONNIE
Their ruling that post-season athletics were all right as long as football bowl games were excluded has aroused cries of "discrimination" from all over the Midwest. The latest protest came in the form of a resolution passed by the Big Seven Student Government association which met in Columbia, Mo., over the weekend. They passed a resolution to the effect that bowl games should be included in the charmed circle of post-season tournaments which already includes baseball, basketball and track.
The conference officials either will have to back down gracefully or will have to reinforce their stand on the bowl plan with some-
stronger arguments. There is no point in keeping a bad rule because of the principle of the thing. Maybe their next meeting will bring a satisfactory answer to the charges against them.
Take advantage of this early reduction of both short and long formals and cocktail dresses for holiday wear.
Campus WEST
Original price Now
17.95 11.85
19.95 13.85
25.00 15.85
29.95 18.85
35.00 24.85
39.95 28.85
black taffeta formal skirts
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All Sales Final.
Maybe You Don't Need Height-But It Helps
By OSCAR FRALEY
By OSCAR PRALLEY United Press Sports Writer
Despite frequent admonitions that you don't have to be a skyscraper to be a top flight basketball player, it appeared today that the five top college court stars this winter all would be handy lads to have around when washing the chandeliers.
There is rather general agreement that this quintet should be composed of Walt Dukes of Seton Hall, Don Schlundt of Indiana, Bott Pettit of Louisiana State, John Kerr of Illinois and Bob Houbregs of Washington.
Duke is the tallest at six feet, 11 inches. Schlundt and Pettit each are a mere six, nine; Kerr is six, eight, while Houbregs is the midget of the bunch at only six feet, seven inches.
These men all are centers, where basketball height is concentrated. Their contemporary challengers are such as six foot, 10 inch Bob Mattick of Oklahoma A&M; six-six Tom Gola of LaSalle and Ed Kalafat of Minnesota, and Penn's Ernie Beck and Navy's Don Lange, both six feet, four.
These are the big guns, and it poses a rather intriguing problem for the fellows who are going to pick the all-American teams. All of them are centers, leading scorers for their outfits and devastating under the boards.
There have been worried growls by the football selectors over the necessity for picking offensive and defensive "all" teams. What happens now in basketball, where the power is concentrated at center, and only one berth is open of the five to be filled? Simple, Jack you pick five centers and let the guards and forwards fall where they may.
Because the term "guard" or "forward" is highly misleading under the current system of firehouse basketball. For instance, very little guarding actually is done—without drawing fools which quickly deposit the
guarder on the bench for the rest of the evening.
of the evening.
Proof that this one-time basketball art is a lost link comes from the coaches themselves. Here and there you will find a coach proclaiming that only his players can play a defensive game; that no other coach teaches his players how to guard.
The answer is that defense is ignored and all concentration is on offense. You win by outscoring the opposition, not holding him down.
Under this system, the star player is the guy who contributes the most points. That fellow usually is the center, picked for his height and shooting ability.
The anticipated epitome of the lot this winter is expected to be Dukes, Houbregs, Pettit, Kerr, Schlundt, et al.
Love Conquereth All Obstacles
Birmingham, Ala. — (U,P)— It was like the movies when Ed Patterson, 25, a window-washer, gazed through a city hall window on the blonde beauty of Barbara Bonds. Barbara also noticed Patterson and made a disparaging remark about him to her boss. It had the movie ending, too—they got married.
---
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should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
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Page 5
K-State,Illini Win Easy Cage Games
University Daily Kansan
New York—(U.P.)An awesome display of scoring power sent Illinois, the Nation's top-ranked team, off to a flying start today in defense of its Big Ten championship.
The Illini game within a basket of equalling their home court record last night as they crushed Michigan, 96 to 66.
La Salle and Kansas State, ranked second and third nationally, also impressed with victories last night. La Salle, on a national tour, whipped Southwest Missouri, 77-70, in a game not as close as the score indicated, while Kansas State cleared its bench in walloping San Francisco, 81-60.
in Wawipong San Francisco
All five Illini starters scored in double figures to register their second victory in as many starts. Clive Follmer led the way with 17 points, followed by towering John Kerr with 16 and Irv Bemoras with 15. Milt Mead, the Big Ten high jump champion, led outclassed Michigan with 16.
La Salle registered its sixth win in six starts. Norm Grekin had 18 points and Tom Gola 17 for La Salle, but Forrest Hamilton scored 21 for Southwest Missouri.
Dick Knostman led Kansas State with 15 points, but Phil Zukievich of San Francisco took game honors with 16.
In another Big ten game Wisconsin opened its league season with a 75-70 victory over Iowa, Soph Dick Cable had 25 points for Wisconsin and McKinley Davis had 23 for Iowa.
In other leading games: Seton Hall, ranked sixth nationally, trounced Louisville, 77-66, as six-foot, 11-inch Walt Dukes scored 28 points
to keep his average at 29.3; Ed Conlin and Dan Lyons scored 22 points each to lead Fordham to an 81-51 win over Wagner; Richmond defeated South Carolina, 84-78, in the southern conference; Miami (Fla.) edged Florida, 75-73; Elton Tuttle tallied 22 to pace Creighton to an 88-67 win over Portland; Texas downed Colorado A&M, 63-46, as Billy Powell scored 17; and Texas A&M routed Eastern New Mexico, 68-48.
Other leading games tonight include: Houston - Detroit, Akron-Western Reserve, Tempe, Ariz. St.-San Diego Marines, Arizona-San Diego St., Texas Christian-Bradley, Connecticut-Brown, Duquesne-Carnegie Tech, Western Kentucky-Cincinnati, Clemson-Presbyterian, Colgate-RPI, Denver-Drake, Hardin Simmons-Texas Wesleyan, Manhattan-Hofstaff, Marquette-St. Norbert, Toledo-Miami (O.), New Mexico-New Mexico A&M, Oklahoma City-Oklahoma Baptist, Seattle-Peoria Caterpillars, Texas A&M-Trinity (Tex)., Wake Forrest - McCrary Eagles.
Seton Hall will come back in search of its seventh victory tonight against John Carroll. Three other highly-ranked teams will be in action—17th ranked Brigham Young against Washington State, 20thranked Missouri against Arkansas, and NYU, tied for 20th spot, against Yale.
Student Group Approves Lifting Of Bowl Ban
Representatives of the Big Seven Student Government association met at the University of Missouri over the weekend, and returned with a resolution supposing post - season athletic events — including bowl games.
points:
First, the association felt that the financial benefits to all schools would be greater.
be greater. Second, they felt that the Big Seven conference as a whole would gain prestige as a result of member schools' participation in post-season athletics.
11 Small College Games Set Along With NAIA Tourney
Eleven games, in addition to the annual NAIA (National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics) tournament were on the week's schedule for Missouri and Kansas colleges, starting with five contests tonight.
The conference voted to uphold bowl games along with the post season athletics on the basis of three points:
Third, they felt that since the NCAA, which is regarded as a parent organization, recently lifted its ban on bowl games the conference no longer would be fighting the opinion of the policy makers.
The NCAA, which had had a ban on all post-season football games, recently changed its ruling to one placing a set of minimum standards for all bowl sponsors to meet. They still do not support a football bowl game as they do support post-season athletic events in baseball, basketball, and track.
The NAIA tournament, opening Thursday night in Kansas City's Municipal auditorium, offered these first round battles:
Southwest Missouri State of Springfield, defending champion, against Morning Side of Sioux City, Iowa; Washburn of Topeka against Marshall of Huntington, W. Va.; Southwest Texas State of San Marcos against Millinik of Decatur, Ill., and Rockhurst of Kansas City against Portland, Ore., university.
Winners will collide in the semifinals Friday night with the championship game booked for Saturday night. Southwest Texas State is ruled the top choice to capture the championship.
Other games on the week's program included:
Tonight:
William Jewell at Maryville.
Westminster at Rolla.
Kearney, Neb. State at Springfield,
Kearney State at vs. South Dakota at
Nebraska.
Doane, Neb., vs. St. Benedict's at Atchison, Kan.
Attnson, R
Wednesday:
Emporia State vs. Augustana at Sioux Falls, S.D.
The conference was attended by two members of the Student Government association from each of the seven member schools. The resolution was passed by a 13-0 vote, with one Nebraska representative abstaining.
NAIA tournament at Kansas City;
Ottawa at Warrensburg, Mo.
Sloux Pan Thursday:
SOUR
OWL
ON SALE
WEDNESDAY
Take One
Home
Drury vs. Pittsburg at Springfield Southwestern vs. Phillips U. at Winfield. Kan.
Friday:
Rolls at Cape Girardeau, Mo.
Saturday;
San Diego, Calif., State at Fort Hays, Kan., State.
COACH
Cunningham
"I know he's small Coach, but wait till you see him in action."
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Tuesday, Dec. 16, 1952
Reich to Miss More Practice Because of Damaged Fingers
Kansas basketball fortunes have received another jolt with the announcement that Gil Reich, a member of the 1950-51 West Point cage team and rated an outstanding prospect for the Jayhawkers, will be unavailable for at least two more weeks.
Reich, who suffered a broken finger in the Missouri football game, had the cast taken off Saturday but upon further examination, it was found that he would have to have further consultation with a Kansas City doctor, according to Alexander C. Mitchell, professor of health service at the University. Dr. Mitchell said that an operation might be required to reset the broken bones. The operation might spoil Reich's chances of seeing action in the 1952-53 KU cage season.
The Jayhawkers worked on fundamentals in Monday's practice sessions and experimented with several
starting combinations in hopes of finding one that will click. They were hampered with the slick Hoch auditorium floor which has not had the wax from the Military Ball removed.
Coach Phog Allen said that the Jayhawkers should have a tough game with the SMU Mustangs Friday and Saturday nights. He pointed out that they have most of their men from the 1951-52 season returning and said "They have a tough outfit."
Read the Kansan want ads!
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On the Hill
By JEANNE FITZGERALD
Kansan Society Editor
Alpha Chi Omega sorority will hold its annual formal Christmas dinner Wednesday night at the chapter house. Gifts wil' be exchanged.
North College hall will give its annual Christmas party for faculty members and their children from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. today (Tuesday) in the livingroom of the hall.* Members of the standards boards planning the party are Joss Dougherty, Donna Twater, Laurie Lane, Suzanne Schwantes, Ann Burton, Katie Soden and Carol Fluarty.
Theta Phi Alpha sorority will give its annual Christmas gift exchange party for the members tonight at the chapter house.
Kappa Sigma fraternity entertained members of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority with a dessert dance Tuesday at the fraternity house. Chapersones were Mrs. Edna Stewart and Mrs. Edwin B. Peet.
Delta Gamma sorority and Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity held an exchange dinner Tuesday at their chapter houses.
The University Faculty Club gave a tree trimming party Sunday evening in the main lounge of the club Entertainment consisted of popping popcorn in the fireplace and singing Christmas carols. Hosts were Mr. Martin Jones and Miss Lavina Frank, co-chairmen; Mr. and Mrs. Dale Novotny, and Mr. and Mrs. Franklin C. Nellick.
Gamma Phi Beta sorority held its annual Kiddie party for the members last night at the chapter house. Those who attended wore costumes. Santa Claus distributed gifts for the chapter's gift exchange. Toys were collected and donated to the March of Toys drive.
The University Faculty club will give a Children's party at 4:30 p.m. today in the main lounge of the club. Santa Claus will be present to entertain the children. A special children's supper will be served from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at 50 cents per plate. Hosts will be Mr. and Mrs. Burton W. Marvin, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Ericksen, and Mr. and Mrs Tom Smith.
Stanley Hamilton, college sophomore, was elected president of the Acacia fraternity pledge class. Joe Williams, engineering sophomore, was elected to the Inter-fraternity Pledge council.
Gamma Phi Beta sorority will give an informal party for members of the sorority and their dates from to 11 p.m. Wednesday at the chapter house.
***
Acacia fraternity announces the recent pledging of Raymond Clinesmith and Ralph Moody, college freshmen. Clinesmith's home is in Hoxie, Kan., and Moody's home is in Minneola, Kan.
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will hold its annual tree trimming party from 5 to 8 o'clock today, at the chapter house.
--their annual Christmas dinner at 6 p.m. Wednesday at Westminster house. Lee Douglass, engineering junior, is program chairman and is also in charge of arrangements.
The Press club will hold a Christmas party from 7 to 10:30 p.m. Wednesday in the William Allen White reading room of the Journalism building. Each member must bring an impractical gift under 50 cents to be admitted to the party. Santa Claus will be there to distribute the gifts.
- * *
Chi Omega sorority will hold its annual formal Christmas dinner Wednesday evening at the chapter house. Following the dinner, gifts of small toys will be exchanged. The toys will be taken to children of needy families in Lawrence.
Pi Phi's Entertain 25 Children The members of Pi Beta Phi sorority entertained 25 children at their annual party for underprivileged children Saturday at the chapter house. Santa Claus arrived at the party with gifts of toys and clothing for each child. Refreshments were served.
Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Dec. 16, 1952
CUNNINGHAM
Why don't you watch where you're going?
Religious Notes
Wesley Foundation
Members of the Wesley Foundation will meet at the Student Union building at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday to go Christmas caroling. Refreshments will be served at the church afterward.
- * *
Westminster Foundation
New members will be inducted into the Westminster Women's guild Tuesday at the annual Christmas Dinner at Westminster house. The theme for the evening is "The Open Door."
The group will visit the Old People's home, Lawrence Memorial hospital, the chancellor's home, and the Catholic church rectory. Refreshments will be served in the church basement afterward.
Newman Club
***
Members of the Newman club will meet at 7:15 p.m. Wednesday at the Catholic church, 1229 Vermont, St., to go Christmas caroling. Women belonging to the club who want rides to the church are asked to notify Georgianna Flynn.
The Presbyterian Men will hold
YMCA-YWCA
A caroling party will be sponsored by the YMCA and YWCA at 8 o'clock tonight. Members will meet at Henley house, 1236 Oread Ave., and return there for refreshments afterward.
- * *
Two Pinnings Announced To Members of Acacia
Sellards hall announces the pinning of Miss Opal Smith, college sophomore, to Mr. Robert Keefer, engineering junior. Mr. Keefer, whose home is in Rexford, Kan., is a member of Acacia fraternity. Miss Smith's home is in Selden, Kan.
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Van Landingham of Kingman, Kan., announce the pinning of their daughter, Donna, to Mr. James Burgess of Harper, Kan. Miss Van Landingham is a nurse at Winter General hospital, Topeka, Kan. Mr. Burgess is a senior in the School of Business and a member of Acacia fraternity.
KU Christmas Decorations Show American Love of Glitter
Americans are considered to be highly materialistic people, and no doubt we are. We love bright lights, tinsel, excitement, bustling crowds, and parties. These "likes" are often exemplified in our holiday observances, and Christmas is no exception.
Bv ROZANNE ATKINS
The Christmas tree probably comes closest in capturing the American spirit of Christmas than anything else. It is bright, glistening, and youthful. But the Christmas tree is more than that, as the Puritans who first condemned it as sacrilegious grew to realize. It is a symbol of hope.
As the bright light of Bethlehem drew men to the King of Peace, the bright lights of our Christmas trees draw men together in brotherhood, peace, and goodwill toward all men.
KU Yuletide decorations are typical of those over the country. Walking across the campus at night, one can see the bright lights of Christmas trees everywhere. Six giant pine trees and two smaller ones in front of Strong hall stand like huge cathedrals of light.
In the rotunda of Strong hall stands the traditional Chancellor's Christmas tree. Each year the tree is trimmed in a different way. This year's tree, a 20-foot Norway pine, was decorated with ornaments made from tin cans saved for the design department by the Union cafeteria.
The big tree was one of 20 trees
Vacation Rides Listed at Union
Already there are some interesting approaches to the problem. Several students, apparently convinced that rides are hard to find, will settle for anything going in their direction.
Others are either driving or want rides to places like southern California, Florida, and Chicago.
Students can either sign the list "rides wanted" or, if they are driving home and wish to take riders along, sign their name and telephone number on the "rides" list.
Looking for a ride home for Christmas? If you are, it may be helpful to check the list of available rides posted at the entrance of the Hawk's Nest.
One exchange student has requested a ride to Switzerland, and another exchange student wants transportation to Paris. As yet, the requests have gone unanswered.
along Highway 59 that had to be moved by the University. James Reiter, gardener, picked out the tree, Arvid Jacobson, associate professor of design, was in charge of decorations.
Prof Jacobson said the tree was the first pine tree ever used in the rotunda; spruce had always been used before.
The motifs decorating the tree are both abstract and realistic. There is one Jayhawk perched upon its branches especially for the chancellor, Prof. Jacobson said.
Three Times The Fun FOR Three Times A Dime The New SOUR OWL Is Out Again Wednesday
WITH:
- NEW STORIES
Similar to the trees in front of Strong hall, are the ones in front of the chancellor's home. Lighted shrubbery in front of Hoch auditorium and Watson hospital and the prescription from Kappa Phi. pharmacy fraternity, on Bailey lab add additional color.
- NEW JOURNS
- NEW CARTOONS
- NEW JOKES
Because of construction work, the Union building will not have its usual Christmas tree in the lobby, but will have one at the southwest end of the new addition.
By Bibler and Coker
All For Only 30c
ON SALE TOMORROW AT
FRASER HALL
INFORMATION BOOTH UNION
STRONG ROTUNDA
TAKE HOME A COPY AT CHRISTMAS
- FRESHMAN UNDER 18 MUST HAVE PARENTS'
PERMISSION TO PURCHASE
Of all the beautiful sights as Christmas time here on the campus, none is as lovely as Danforth chapel.
There is a Christmas tree in the cafeteria. There will be a party to decorate a tree for the Hawk's Nest at 7:30 Wednesday. Anyone may attend.
The white stone cross at the apex of the chapel steals into the heart with its message of divine love, as he music from the organ within reminds us of a "Silent Night," "Holy Night."
STARTS
TODAY!
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EXTRA! EXTRA!
2 - CARTOONS - 2
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Also
News of The Day
Patee PHONE 321
Tuesday, Dec. 16, 1952
University Daily Kansan
Page
"Santa Is Much Too Slow-Use Want Ads-Make Some Dough!"
Kansan Classified Ads
PALMYRIA
Call
Call KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be processed during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Dublin or placed on course. Journals, not later than 3:48 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One three five
day days five
25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00
Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
BUSINESS SERVICE
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches-for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360. 1199 Mass. tf
BEVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. tf
EXPERIENCED Typist. Term papers,
notebooks, theses and miscellaneous. Mrs.
E. J. Roscoe, 838 Louisiana, Apartment
4. U. airlines. Phone 2775-1. **tt**
TYPING WANTED. Prompt, accurate service. Pick-up and delivery service after 6 p.m. and before 8 a.m. Phone 3157R. Mrs. Livingston u
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment in this area thus assuming that we are the largest radio and television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. tf
TYPING SERVICE. *experienced theses,
Mrs. Hir*
*506 West 6th*. Phone 1344W.
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are easy to find, everything for fur fin, and features. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf
REAL ESTATE listings wonted. Sales-
Rentals- buyers William J. Vance
8101 RIOR
CRYSTAL LAFE serves breakfast, lunch dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves cheesies, steaks sandwiches, malts, home-made pies and cakes. Free parking space for customers. tf
FOR SALE
COLT WOODSMAN, Sport Model, 22 cal. pistol excellent condition. $50.00, RCA 45 record changes, record rack, and 18 cal. pistol, Bill Bilak, 805 Ohio St. Phone 3410, 12-16
CLOTHING: Pink, short-style coat, size 14. Was $39, now $25. Dressy black faille skirt, size 26, $10. Both like new. Worn once. Phone 1894-W. 12-17
A
MISCELLANEOUS
RADIO and TV service-same day as service on all mats. Make most of these parts in the Bowman Radio and TV 62 Vermont. Phone 138 for prompt service. tr
DRESSMAKING, formals, alterations,
an experienced European dressmaker. See
Themis Zannetou, 1633 Vermont (down-
stairs apartment). Phone 1477-1. 6
CONCOZ SERVICE-B - F. Goodrich tires and batteries, complete lubrication service plumbing, automatic transmission Buchstein Concoz Service, 19th and Massachusetts.
EXPERT WATCH REPAIR
Electronically Timed.
Guaranteed Satisfaction
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WOLFSON'S
743 Mass.
Air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. midnight. Crystal Cafe, 609 Vt. tf TYPISF: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glnka, 1911 Teen. Penn. 1396M. tf
LOST
NUEDE JACKET. Left in 217 Journalism last Wednesday morning. Dark brown. Extra long. Reward. Call Roger farrington.
NAVY BLUE leather bilffold, believed lost between Corbin and Blake last Friday. Contains ID card, key, and money please call Eline Carlson. 860. 12-18
BROWN-RIMMED glasses in case. Friday
6:30, and Marvin and Marvin.
after 8 p.m. 12-18
TWO EUROPEAN students want ride to South, direction Florida or New Orleans. Share expenses, help drive. Phone Egon Sohmen. 2122. Urgent. 12-18
TRANSPORTATION
RIDE WANTED for two to South Dakota for Christmas. Will share expenses. Call Marshall Swain, 2984R. 12-18
RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wichita every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Call Jim Sellers. 31013 evenings.
MTW-tt
WANT A RIDE to New Orleans and back during the Christmas holidays. Will share driving and expenses. Please call Arnold Kotwitz, 2955 R, after 3:00.
ASK US ABUT airplane rates, sky coach, family days, round trip reduc- american Express land tours. Cunard and Matson Steamship lines. Call Miss Glesman at the national Bunk for reservations. 8th and Mass. streets. Phone 30. tf
AIRLINE TICKETS. prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel. Hineries. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer. 3661. Downs Travel Service. 1015 Mass.
WANTED
LEGUFAUD for Robinson Swimming Pool to work from 7-9 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Apply Henry Shenk, 107 Robinson. 12-16
STUDENTS interested in working new banquet service at Student Union for Tomlinson between 2 and 4 p.m. at Union cafeteria office.
CLEK-TYPIST II—must be careful, accurate typist, learn to read electric photographs, use stereograph operator. Also need binder wires—mailing inserting, gathering, etc. Preparation for use in presentations under 40. University of Kansas Press, Journalism Building. 12-ff
FOUND in front of library. Butler county,
identify pay for ad at UDK office.
pay for ad at UDK office.
12-18
According to the Census bureau, 50 per cent of all single women and 36 per cent of all widows and divorces in the United States are employed.
FOUND
SOUR
OWL
---
OUT WEDNESDAY
German Students Give Miracle Play
A 16th century "miracle" play, foremost event of the German department's Christmas program for Wednesday, will be presented by a cast of about two dozen students of German.
Other parts of the program are to be filled by a student caroling choir and an instrumental trio.
Players are Balthasor, third king,
Victor Fite Jr.; narrator, Georgia
Lou Heil; Mary, Anne Higgins; innkeeper,
William Schwinn; devil,
Harry Snyder; poor shepherd, LeRoy Waldschmidt; young shepherd,
Don Williams; angel, Janis Johanson;
second servant, Virginia Biggart,
and Kaspar, first king, John Garland, all college freshmen.
Prologue, Charlene Foerschler and old shepherd, Leonard Duroche, college sophomores. Gabriel, Eddie Symns; singed, angel Dick Scott; second shepherd, William Eastwood; first servant, Levi Barnes, and conscience, Patricia Mitchell, college iuniors.
Herod, David Butts, college senior; singing angels, Harriet King and Linda Stormont, fine arts juniors; Joseph, Leopold Haindel, graduate student; innkeeper's wife, Heidi Bloesch, education junior; Melchior, second king, Richard McNabney, special student.
Culture Increases IQ, Clark Says
Intelligence is largely a cultural project, and the improvement of culture would result in an increase of intelligence, Prof. Carrol D. Clark, chairman of the department of sociology and anthropology, said Sunday in the ninth of a series of "Sociology on the Air" broadcasts on KLWN.
Prof. Clark pointed out a fallacy of many thinkers when they believe that intelligence is going to decline because of "erosion of genes." He said that it has never been proven that IQ tests measure a genetic factor in intelligence. Not much is known about hereditary transmission of human intelligence, he added.
Swarthout to Judge Tulsa Solo Tryouts
D. M. Swarthout, professor of piano, will leave Friday for Tula, Okla., to judge musicians seeking an opportunity to be soloists for the Tula Symphony orchestra.
The tryouts will be held Saturday for about 30 young musicians competing for the positions. The candidates will be both vocal and instrumental.
E. Thayer Gaston, professor of music education, will address occupational therapy students 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday in 326 Strong. The subject of his talk will be music therapy.
Gaston to Discuss Therapy
FULL LINE OF TREES AND ORNAMENTS THE Barteldes Seed Co. 804 Mass.
Diplomat's Hope Lies In Truman's Decision
Washington—(U.P.)—John Carter Vincent's last hope of salvaging his 28-year career in the U.S. diplomatic service rested today on the slim chance that President Truman may overrule his top Loyalty Review board.
The board last night found "reasonable doubt" as to Mr. Vincent's loyalty, and recommended that he be fired immediately. The State department suspended him as U. S. Minister to Tangier, and ordered him back to this country. But it said a final decision on firing him will be left up to Mr. Truman.
The President is expected to decide Mr. Vincent's fate after conferring with Secretary of State Dean Acheson, who returns Saturday from Paris. Even if Mr. Truman should overrule the loyalty board—which he has never done before—the decision would be subject to review by the new Republican administration coming in next month.
While branding Mr. Vincent a loyalty risk, the board completely cleared another career diplomat, John Paton *Davies Jr.* Both Mr. Davies and Mr. Vincent were targets of Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) in his campaign against alleged Communist influences in the State department. Both also had come under fire from the Senate internal security subcommittee.
Board chairman Hiram Bingham said any question of Mr. Davies' loyalty was removed by confidential testimony given to the board by Gen. Walter Bedell Smith, head of the Central Intelligence agency, and U. S. ambassador to Russia George F. Kennan. Mr. Davies, a veteran of many years diplomatic service in China, is now serving as deputy director of the U.S. Office of Political Affairs at Bonn, Germany.
Mr. Vincent, 53, who once headed the State department's Far Eastern division, was given a clean bill of health by the department's own loyalty board last Feb. 19. After lengthy closed hearings on charges made by Sen. McCarthy, ex-Communist Louis Budenz and others,
NOW!
ENDS
WEDNESDAY
The image provided does not contain any text or any discernible content to describe. Therefore, no question can be generated based on this image.
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the board sent Mr. Vincent back to his post at Tangiers with an expression of "full confidence" in his loyalty.
He indicated that the board's finding was strongly influenced by evidence of Mr. Vincent's "close association with numerous persons who, he had reason to believe, were either Communists or Communist sympathizers."
Mr. Bingham emphasized that his review board did not find Mr. Vincent "guilty of disloyalty." But he said Mr. Vincent's "conduct in office, as clearly indicated by the record, forces us reluctantly to conclude that there is reasonable doubt as to his loyalty to the government of the United States."
Strong City Driller To Head Welldiggers
Lon Dietrich, Ottawa, was elected vice president and J. G. Lassey, Miltonvale, secretary-treasurer. Bledsoe succeeds Wesley Weishaar, Scott City.
Hazon Bledsoe, Strong City, has been elected president of the Kansas water well drillers at their fifth convention held here.
The water well drillers held their convention in Lindley hall.
Comfort! Convenience!
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Dec. 16, 1952
84 Reds Killed in Pongam Rioting
Pongam Island, Korea—(U.P.)-The commander of this prison island told today how more than 4,000 fanatic Communists "hypnotized" themselves into staging a riot that ended only when UN guards fired point blank to save their own lives.
Lt. Col. George D. Miller said he ordered his 300 American and South Korean guards to fire to prevent the prisoners from breaking free and wiping out the UN detachment.
The uprising, which took place Sunday afternoon cost the lives of 84 prisoners and caused injuries to 118 others. Four guards were injured.
in the uprising.
Pongam island holds a total of 9,000 Communist civilian internees of whom more than 4,000 took part
Col. Miller said the Communists stood straight up and made no attempt to dodge bullets fired from light machine guns, shotguns, carbines and rifles at less than 30 yards. Some tried to fight hand-to-hand with the UN guards.
"They were standing four ranks deep with their arms linked," Col. Miller said. "They were singing and swaying back and forth."
"After our first volley, the wounded were held upright and kept on singing. The ones that were down were pulled up by the arms."
He said the prisoners were so "hypnotized" by their own singing that one wounded man still was trying to sing as he was carried to
a hospital at Koje island, 10 miles away.
Col. Miller said when his men tried to remove the dead and wounded after the battle, the prisoners "lay on the ground with locked arms."
"Our men had to force them apart. It took two men to get one separated from another and dragged out.
"It is impossible to convey the frenzy they had worked themselves into," he said. "I looked at them and could see their eyes were glazed, they were so wrought up."
He said the prisoners made a "tremendous" noise singing prohibited Communist songs, cheering, chanting slogans and shouting "Manzai."
Children Sought In Quarry Bottom
Naperville, Ill.-(U.P.)-Forty volunteers prepared to pull on hip boots today and wade through the muddy, junk-littered bottom of an abandoned quarry in an extraordinary search for two young playmates who vanished nine days ago.
By noon the staggering task of pumping an estimated 80 million gallons of water from the spring-fed quarry will be completed. Already portions of the uneven bottom were in sight.
The waders will brave below-freezing temperatures to form a human chain and systematically explore the muck at the bottom of the pit.
Meanwhile, pumping began at another, smaller quarry nearby on the chance that Jean Petersen, 6, and her "little boyfriend," Edward Rosenselt, 3, drowned in its icy waters Dec. 7.
The scope of the search was amazing as it entered its second week. Hundreds of volunteers have dedicated themselves to the proposition that it is worth a million dollars to find the missing children dead or alive.
Read the Daily Kansas Want-ads.
Chemistry Club to Give Liquid Air Showing
A demonstration of the properties of liquid air will be the feature attraction at the chemistry club meeting which will be held at 8:30 p.m. Thursday in 305 Bailey.
Dr. Gilbert Haight, assistant professor of chemistry, will present a liquid air demonstration for the layman and not of a purely technical nature.
According to Dr. Haight, the liquid air, which must be brought in especially for the demonstration, affords rather spectacular results when it is combined with other materials.
Windsor to Skip Coronation
Paris—(U.P.)—The Duke of Windsor announced that neither he nor his American-born Duchess will attend the coronation of his niece, Queen Elizabeth II next June. The Duke will spend Christmas in the United States in self-imposed exile.
Crash Makes Honey Flow
Eighty-nine Kansas high school seniors took a three-hour examination at the Military Science building Saturday in hopes of receiving about 30 four-year NROTC scholarships. Each is valued at $7,000.
Louisville —(U,P)— It was the sweetest accident this side of Guy Lombardo. The truck that hit a telephone pole near here had 100 pounds of honey aboard—before the crash.
89 Seniors Seek $7,000 Stipends
Those receiving the scholarships will be paid $50 a month for four years. They will receive all expenses for three summer cruises. University fees, books and uniforms for the winners will be furnished by the Navy.
Those making the best test scores will be interviewed by a state selection committee and receive rigorous physical exams in Kansas City next month. Winners may apply for admission to any of the 52 colleges and universities having NROTC units.
Final Staging of Lab Play
The final performance of "The Second Shepherds' Play," 14th century English miracle play, will be presented at 8 p.m. today in the Little Theater in Green hall.
Tom Shay, instructor of speech,
directed this third annual Christmas production of the Laboratory theater. No admission is charged.
Seoul, Korea —(U,P)— American Sabrejets shot down four communist MIG-15 jet fighters, probably destroyed one, and damaged another today in 13 savage aerial dogfights over Northwestern Korea.
Dogfights Rage Over Korea. Bombers Harry Supply Lines
Twenty-seven Sabres tangled with 32 MIGs during the day in duels ranging from 45,000 feet to the 800-foot level.
Jet aces Col. Royal N. Baker of McKinney, Texas, and Capt. Leonard Lilly of Manchester, N.H., shot their sixth MIGs today.
fighter-bombers, unmolested by the MIGs, struck at rail lines and supplies west of Haeju and east of Pyongyang in North Korea. Other planes struck at Red positions along the battleline.
Ground fighting slowed to monotonous probing attacks along the frozen 155-mile battlefront. Heaviest fighting was concentrated in the Sniper ridge sector where South
Charles Wins Sluggish Fight
Boston—(U.R.)—Ezzard Charles will have to look a lot better than he did last night to back up a promoter's bid for a heavyweight title fight here in June.
The ex-champ from Cincinnati scored a seventh round knockout at Boston garden over ponderous Frank Buford of Oakland, Calif., as 5,095 fans booed at the sluggish performance.
"I'm better than I looked tonight," Charles said afterwards. He weighed 187 pounds to Buford's 202.
"Buford was hard to fight because he was trying for one wild punch. It took a couple of right hands on the head to open him up."
Matchmaker Sam Silverman of the Callahan Athletic club here has offered the winner of the return bout between heavyweight king Rocky Marciano and defeated champion Jersey Joe Walcott a $400,000 guarantee to fight Charles at Braves field in June.
Koreans repulsed Red attacks.
The Sabres damaged two MIGs yesterday in six dogfights with nearly 200 Red jets. Eight other damage claims were made by Sabrejet pilots, but they awaited confirmation by gun camera film.
It was the first time in five days the MIGs had ventured into North Korea from Manchuria. It was the greatest show of strength by the Red Air Force in weeks.
B-29 Superfortresses pounded troops and supply areas near Pyongyang, capital of North Korea, and Sinanju to the north, in a continuation of round-the-clock bombing of Red troop and supply targets in North Korea.
Light B-26 bombers swarmed over roads in North Korea, shooting up 95 Red trucks moving southward with supplies for Communist troops on the front lines.
60 Well Drillers At Meeting Here
A group of down-to-earth Kansans held a two-day session at the University Friday and Saturday when the Kansas water well driggers' association held its fifth annual convention.
Sponsored by the Kansas Geological Survey and the department of geology, the convention brought approximately 60 Kansas water well drillers, suppliers of drilling equipment, and government representatives to the University for the meetings which were held in Lindley hall.
Dr. W. H. Schoewe, associate professor of geology, delivered a speech entitled "This is Kansas." Other speeches were delivered by B. F. Latta, State Board of Health, and by C. K. Bayne of the Geological survey.
Among the exhibits on display was an unusual one-half scale working model of a cable tool drilling rig. The model, which cost over $3,000 to build, was manufactured by the Bucyrus-Erie company of South Milwaukee, Wis.
KU
Cuddly, plush little Jayhawk, 9 inches tall; in red and blue with yellow beak and feet. He smiles on one side of his moveable head, and scowls on the other. Buy one for yourself and give another for Christmas.
$3.95
How about yours一 I'd like that.
I bet your friends and family would love me.
"All I want for Christmas is a nice, warm home!"
STUDENT Union Book Store
You Join You Join You Join Coca-Cola Coke
TOY DRIVE GAINS IMPETUS-Kenneth Coy, journalism senior, inspects some of the numerous toys donated by students to the Independent Student association-sponsored March of Toys drive. The collection center is at the Information booth. The toys are to be given to children in several orphan homes as Christmas gifts—Kansas photo by Charles Burch.
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
50th Year, No. 63
Wednesday, Dec. 17, 1952
ASC Passes Non-Partisan Class Officer Election Bill
Bv ROZANNE ATKINS
The non-partisan election of class officers bill passed by a 15-6 vote last night at the All Student Council meeting in Green hall.
The bill, the main item on the ASC agenda last night, was proposed by Nancy Landon, NOW; Margie Campbell, FOR; Marc Hurt and Will Adams, FACTS. Pachaamac was opposed to the bill. FACTS favored the bill. The bill passed when the NOW, FOR, and a Pach member voted in favor of the non-partisan election bill.
The bill provides that candidates for class office shall file directly with the ASC election committee by submitting a petition signed by 25 members of class concerned. Candidates names shall be placed on general election ballot, except when more than three have filed for same office.
In such cases candidates will be voted on in non-partisan primary election held simultaneously with party primaries. Names of top three candidates will be placed on the general ballot.
After the passage of the bill, reports from the standing committees began.
Joe Woods, chairman of the auditing committee, reported to Council that Jayhawker books are being put in order by a certified public accountant who has been hired for $45.
Bill Wilson, ASC president, made several appointments. Lyle Anderson and Phil Owen, business seniors, and Donald Humphrey, business junior, were appointed to the Little Hoover Commission with a two-thirds approval of Council.
The committee found two things that still need to be corrected. First, the circulation manager of the Jayhawker is receiving a salary of $100 a year in the form of an expense account, the committee reported.
Second, the system of recording Jayhawkers sold is so confusing no one can actually tell how many are sold. Anderson recommended to the board a numerical instead of nominal file system be installed.
Wilson appointed six persons to study complete organization of the Andyhawker and to make suggestions. They were Dean Glasco, engineering junior; Ron Kull, journalism
Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
senior; Kay Conrad, college senior;
Dorian Horton, college senior; Bill Nulton, college senior; and Nancy Canary, education junior.
FACTS to Argue Jayhawker Pay
A proposal to do away with the salary of Jayhawker staff and substitute bonuses in proportion to number of annual sales will be discussed at a FACTS political meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in 110 Fraser.
Reports will be heard on the Big Seven student government conference at Missouri university last weekend and on the ward system with special regard to the student in a private home.
A proposed national convention of progressive political parties similar to FACTS will be discussed. Political leaders on the campuses of Iowa State college, Nebraska and Southern Methodist universities, and William Jewell college are reported to be interested in the FACTS party setup at KU. Iowa State has run FACTS candidates in political campaigns there.
2 College Daze Scripts Entered
Two scripts have been submitted for the 1953 College Daze production to be presented in Hoch auditorium April 24 and 25.
Any script that has not been handed in must be in the Student Union Activities office by noon Friday in order to compete in the script contest. Twenty-five dollars is being offered for the winner. Scripts which will be judged by members of the English, drama, and music departments. Results of the contest will be announced after Christmas vacation.
Staff positions also open for application are music director, choral director, make-up director, costume designer, houses manager, program editor, stage manager, and others. Applications to be submitted by Jan. 15. Special interviews for staff positions will be held Jan. 15 and 16.
Producer-director and business manager positions for the annual production are now open. Applications must be in the SUA office by noon Jan. 10. Interviews will be held by appointment Jan. 12.
The staff will be announced Jan. 19 and the first organization meeting will be held Jan. 20.
Finals Slate Shows 2 Free Half-Days
Two half-days of grace have been returned to the final examination schedule for the fall semester, Registrar James K. Hitt said today.
The final exam period for this semester will run from Thursday, Jan. 22, through Thursday, Jan. 29. There will be no exams given the first morning, or Saturday afternoon.
As a new innovation this year, 20 minutes will be allowed between the two morning or afternoon exams instead of 10. Exams will run from 8 until 9:50 a.m., 10:10 a.m. until 12 noon, 1:30 until 3:20 p.m., and 3:40 until 5:30 p.m.
Mr. Hitt stressed that students and faculty should follow the schedule strictly if possible. If a student should have an exam schedule that would give him four finals on one day, he is asked to submit a written request to Mr. Hitt as chairman of the Calendar committee, by Jan. 8 requesting a change in schedule.
Three exams in one day is not considered too much of a load, Mr. Hitt said.
If a faculty member feels that the scheduled time for examination would be harmful to the student and the instructor, he, too, may make an application to the committee for consideration, he said.
Examination Schedule - Fall Semester, 1952
Thursday, January 22, 1953, to Thursday, January 29, 1953, inclusive.
Classes meeting at: Will be examined at:
8 A.M., M W F sequence* 10:10-12:00 Monday January 26
8 A.M., T T S sequence** 10:10-12:00 Tuesday January 27
9 A.M., M W F sequence* 10:10-12:00 Friday January 23
9 A.M., T T S sequence* 1:30- 3:20 Thursday January 22
10 A.M., M W F sequence* 10:10-12:00 Saturday January 24
10 A.M., T T S sequence* 3:40- 5:00 Thursday January 22
11 A.M., M W F sequence* 8:00- 9:30 Wednesday January 28
11 A.M., T T S sequence* 3:40- 5:30 Friday January 23
12 Noon, M W F sequence* 3:40- 5:30 Thursday January 29
1 P.M., M W F sequence* 10:10-12:00 Wednesday January 28
1 P.M., T T S sequence* 1:30- 3:20 Monday January 26
2 P.M., M W F sequence* 8:00- 9:50 Tuesday January 27
2 P.M., T T S sequence* 1:30- 3:20 Wednesday January 28
3 P.M., M W F sequence* 8:00- 9:50 Thursday January 29
3 P.M., T T S sequence* 3:40- 5:30 Wednesday January 28
4 P.M., M W F sequence* 10:10-12:00 Thursday January 29
4 P.M., T T S sequence* 1:30- 3:20 Thursday January 29
French 1
French 2
German 1
German 2
Spanish 1
Spanish 2
} (All sections) 8:00- 9:50 Saturday January 24
General Biology
Zoology 2
Physiology 2
} (All sections) 1:30- 3:20 Friday January 23
Chemistry 2, 2E, 3, 3E, 7, and 48.
All Sections)
Physics 5 and 6, 156 a and b
All Sections)
Economics 9 & 10 (Acctg. I & II)
ROTC (Army, Navy, Air Force
and/or
Sections)
3:40- 5:30 Monday January 26
1:30- 3:20 Tuesday January 27
3:40- 5:30 Tuesday January 27
Ike Spokesman Quiet On MacArthur's Plan
New York—(U.P.)—President-elect Eisenhower returned to his 42nd street headquarters today, leaving unanswered all questions concerning a meeting with Gen. Douglas MacArthur.
FM Tower to Help Match TV Gift
Gen. MacArthur has announced that he has a new plan for a "clear and definite solution" to the Korean war.
Mr. Eisenhower's headquarters spokesman would not talk about a meeting of the two. Gen. MacArthur could not be reached. Neither could his personal adviser, Courtney Whitney.
There had been rumors that the two five-star generals might meet at a breakfast conference at Mr. Eisenhower's Morningside residence. But there were no early morning visitors known to have visited the President-elect.
Mr. Eisenhower left early for his Commodore hotel headquarters where he met two New Jersey Rea TV outlet would necessarily include the cost of the tower.
The University's $65,000 FM radio tower may count toward a $200,000 matching fund for a $100,000 gift by the Fund for Adult Education, a Ford Foundation subsidiary, for construction of a television station here.
University officials indicated today that it is a possibility that the cost of the tower may be included in the $200,000 figure, but said the University is not planning to push such action at the present time.
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to the chancellor, explained that the total cost of building
The Fund For Adult Education offered gifts of $100,000 each to KU and Kansas State college for construction of TV stations, providing each school could put up $200,000 by Jan. 31, 1953.
It is planned that programs from either school could be relayed to the other, probably by means of a microwave relay station, R. Edwin Browne, director of radio and television here, said. A coordinating committee is already set up and has been functioning for several months, Mr. Browne said.
publican women's leaders as the day's first callers.
Mr. Eisenhower's announced schedule of appointments at his Commode hotel headquarters ended with luncheon. The whole afternoon, according to the schedule, was to be "devoted to staff conferences."
As Mr. Eisenhower's headquarters became more reticent about discussing the meeting, it was recalled that Gen. MacArthur in his speech said a "present solution" requires basic decisions which are "improper for public disclosure or discussion."
Weather
Cooler air moved into western Kansas today, threatening to drive
Indian summer weather w h i c hiked temperatures to balmy 67 at Hill City and Garden City yesterday. B r i s k northerly winds carried the cold air mass i n t o Kansas and cloud-
USCO
The weather but- COLD & FAIR
reau forecast cooler weather over
the west tonight and over the state
tomorrow. A chance for scattered
showers and possibly freezing rain
was seen for late Thursday.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Dec. 17, 1952
Jayhawker Can Improve If Interest Great Enough
At a recent meeting of the Campus Affairs committee, the Jayhawker yearbook was discussed and very few kind words were spoken. If the committee is to be taken as the true sounding board of campus opinion which it is supposed to be, then something is wrong in the Jayhawker office.
1. There is a poor system of financial accounting with few people knowing exactly where the money goes and what is left.
The primary objections to the present Jayhawker system seem to be these:
2. The Jayhawkuser is under the loose control of a faculty-student board which names the editor and business manager and then lets loose the reins.
4. The editor and business manager are paid too much.
3. The top staff positions often seem controlled by outside groups, namely greek houses.
5. The quality of the finished book is not satisfactory.
The Jayhawker board is the controlling body of the book. It is made up of the bursar, dean of men, dean of women, dean of the School of Journalism, previous editors and business managers who are still on the campus, the present editor and business manager and a representative of the ASC's publication committee.
No regular meetings are held. The board meets only when a meeting is called. Usually its function consists merely of choosing the two top staffers and approving contracts. Otherwise it meets only to discuss emergencies that arise.
The editor and business manager are chosen in the spring of each year for the following school year. Applications are made to the board and each position is supposed to have at least three applicants.
It happens that the editor last year and the editor this year belong to the same social fraternity. The board was aware of this when they made the selection. Kenneth Dam was chosen because he had the best qualifications for the job by virtue of his previous work on other jobs in the Jayhawker staff. Whether or not his fraternity connection made him more eligible for these lower jobs, and hence, later the editorship, is pure speculation.
The board has expressed concern, however, that it often seems such succession is the only choice given it in the applications.
Business manager this year is Frank Norris. At
He received only advice to confer with Karl Klooz, bursar, and report if they came up with something.
one of the two meetings held this year, he asked the board to set up a system of accounting for the Jayhawker, perhaps even hire a CPA. An admirable proposal, in our opinion.
The board has also heard a suggestion that a full-time office manager be set up to do the mechanical end of bookkeeping and bill collecting. The proposal was aimed, not to subtract from the administrative responsibility of the business manager, but to make the system more efficient and relieve the student worker of some headaches.
The solution to financial problems is a complete reworking of the Jayhawker board with a more systematic control and hearing of reports. Financial clarity has already been proposed with two workable plans outlined for the board's acceptance.
Both of these suggestions sound like steps in the right direction but neither has been acted upon. And, at present, one may ask members of the board how much profit the book made last year and where it was put, and be told, "I don't know."
As for pay of the editor and business manager, last year's two top staffers received a salary of $350 plus a 10 per cent bonus which they asked for at the end of the year. The ASC has passed a bill granting this year's editor and business manager a raise of $100.
Another plan which would improve the book's quality has been discussed outside the board meetings. This plan would make the writing of Jayhawker copy part of a laboratory course. Such a plan has definite advantages. The quality could be improved but jobs and courses would be open to everyone. The course would offer credit which could replace salaries. The lab work could include photography courses as well as writing courses.
The quality of the book is a matter of opinion and with the first issue already in the hands of the students, can be judged very readily. In our opinion there is room for a great deal of improvement, especially in the writing.
The most important factor is interest on the part of the students for whom the book is printed. A more efficient system of financial accounting and a better quality book are needed but neither can be had merely by gripping which seems to be the present extent of interest.
Silly Gifts Can Help Toy Drive Succeed
—Roger Yarrington.
A student telephoned the editor of the Kansas recently and made what we think is a pretty sensible suggestion.
He pointed out that at many fraternity, sorority, and various campus organizational Christmas parties, it's required that each person bring a silly, inexpensive "gift" of some sort.
Most such "gifts" serve a very temporary purpose and usually are taken home and end up in the trash can.
Thus, by being just a little selective in choice of such a "gift" University students can make their gift also brighten the Christmas for children in several of the state's orphan homes.
It was suggested that students would do well—in selecting their "silly gift"—to choose one which would fit into the toy category. Then, after the foolishness is over, the gift could be donated to the ISA-sponsored toy drive.
—Phil Newman.
A Syracuse, N.Y., man told a judge that watching television at night made him too tired to go to work in the mornings. Many TV programs do seem to be a bit tiring.
Flashbacks
DECEMBER 17
25 years ago
The debate squad met Missouri in a match that ended in no decision. The subject was: "Resolved that the Republican party should be returned to office in 1928. Missouri took the Democratic side.
DECEMBER 17
The annual Christmas program was held outdoors in front of Blake ball. F. E. C. Bucher, speech defender, was the group's sage holiday source. and the group's sage holiday source.
Kansas was preparing to meet Kansas State in the newly constructed Hoch auditorium. Coach Phog Allen ran the team through a light scrimmage in preparation for the big game.
A University alumni team defeated the faculty, 5-8, in a basketball game. Ernie Quigley referred the game.
Funeral services were held for Prof. William Savage Johnson, 65, chairman of the department of Eng-
10 years ago
Little Man on Campus by Dick Bibler
FRESHMEN
SIGNA PHI NOTHING FRATERNITY
SOPHOMORES
SIGNA PHI NOTHING FRATERNITY
JUNIORS
SIGNA PHI NOTHING FRATERNITY
SENIORS
G-14
FRATERNITY HANDBOOK: "A primary concern of the fraternity is to bring out the individuality of typical American boys from every walks of life."
from every walk of life."
Campus Bowl Ideas Practical Plan
Oklahoma's current "footie" game with the Southwest conference in the face of a Big Seven ban on post-season bowl games may result in the Sooners' withdrawal. If this happens, Oklahoma will take with it enough power, prestige, and financial strength to reduce the Big Seven to a second-rate conference.
But the solution, of course, does not lie in a compromise of principle. But it can be found in a compromise of procedure. Several plans have been proposed for the Big Seven by which the conference could sustain its rejection of commercialization post-season games and yet mollify its mutinous component.
The shortsightedness of Big Seven officials is the result of an earnest desire to put the "A" for amateur back into intercollegiate athletics. But their persistence in clinging to an unpopular stand can only lead to the defeat of their principles if key schools like Oklahoma go out on strike and finally find a new position under happier circumstances.
The most practical plan to cross our desk is Chancellor Murphy's "campus bowl" idea. He suggested that the Big Seven champion meet some other conference winner as an annual season climax. But this series of bowl games would be played on the campuses of the schools involved, the revenue presumably to be divided between the two conferences.
Chancellor Murphy's plan eliminates the big city promoter and takes the bowl game away from the sun-drenched winter resorts where many sports enthusiasts are found but few students. The chancellor believes that intercollegiate athletics exist for the students, either as participants or as spectators.
By bringing the bowl games to the campus, the conference would satisfy most of the member schools, collect a useful bit of change, and put the game in front of the students where it rightly belongs.
The plan might also prevent the Big Seven from becoming the Little Six.
—Chuck Zuegner.
lish from 1924 to 1940.
The manpower commission announced the calling up of all army reserves at the University at the end of the semester.
Creighton beat the Jayhawkers in a cage thriller, 38-33, before 1,900
POGO
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5 years ago
at Hoch auditorium. After the game Coach Allen said, "We will be lucky to win any games back East." The squad was to leave for five games in the East.
The Jayhawkers led by Ray Evans were preparing for the Orange bowl game against Georgia Tech in Miami. They had two other all-Americans on the team in Don Fambrough and Otto Schnellbacher.
The Lawrence fire department was called to the Kappa Alpha Theta house when a fire was discovered in the cook's lounge. Damage was limited to the room where the chair, rug, curtains, and mattress were destroyed.
Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1 if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except holidays and Sundays. University holidays and summer periods. Entered sack class matter in March 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1979.
Page 3
DiSalle Urges Controls Until GOP Takes Over
Washington—(U.P.)—Michael V. DiSalle today threw his 194 pounds into the administration drive to keep wage-price controls going at least until the Republicans take over on Jan. 20.
The new economic stabilizer quipped that he would have had even more weight to throw into the effort if he hadn't lost 35 pounds running—unsuccessfully—for the Senate from his native Ohio this year.
President Truman yesterday named the former price stabilizer to take over the post of economic stabilizer from Roger L. Putnam and hold together the wage-price program during "the remaining days of my administration."
According to Mr. DISalle—who has lost not one ounce of his humor—the President "wanted someone whose political future was behind him."
A week ago Mr. DiSalle completed a stint as "special consultant" on controls and recommended that the administration do everything possible to maintain the "status quo"—leaving major decisions as to continuation of controls up to the Republican administration. This will be his policy.
Just as Mr. Truman convinced Mr. DiSalle to return to the controls program, he also convinced Defense Mobilizer Henry H. Fowler to stay on his job until Jan. 20 instead of leaving Jan. 1 as planned. Mr. Putnam's resignation, scheduled for Jan. 1, was allowed to take effect immediately.
Shortly after these developments were announced yesterday, Messers Fowler, DiSalle, Putnam and other stabilization officials chorused a warning than an end to controls would mean another round of inflation.
At a group news conference, they said:
1. The cost of living probably hit a new peak Nov. 15.
2. Frices of canned fruits and vegetables have risen three per cent since they were decontrolled by Congress; prices for children's clothing and shoes are rising; prices of bread and milk are pressing against ceilings.
Ridgway Supports NATO Expansion
3. There is pressure for price increases in 150 areas affecting industrial and defense production and 35 industries are asking price increases ranging from 5 to 20 per cent.
Paris — (U.P.) — Supreme Allied Commander Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway and his American chief of staff appealed today to the North Atlantic Treaty organizations not to halve a proposed $430 billion Allied base-building program in Europe.
Sen. Ridgway and Gen. Alfred M. Gruenther made last ditch appeals to the NATO council to support the program asked by the American commander-in-chief.
A committee of the defense and finance ministers of the 14-nation organization had suggested a base-building program of $235,200,000. Under Gen. Ridgway's plan the United States would put up 42.8 per cent.
4. The upward pressure on wages is still present, with wage hike petitions running at the rate of 1,800 per week.
Band to Hold Christmas Party
University band members and their guests will have a Christmas party from 7:30 to 9:30 tonight.
There will be musical entertainment and two movies at the party. Guests will include Chancellor and Mrs. Franklin D. Murphy; Dean and Mrs. Thomas Gorton, and Raymond Zepp, band instructor, and his wife.
Rodger Vaughan, fine arts senior,
will be president of the band for
the coming year. Other officers
include Larry Havlick, education
junior, vice president; Dale Moore,
fine arts junior, secretary-treasurer;
Paul Worley, education junior,
member-at-large, and Frank Vasin,
education junior, freshman
trainer.
Student directors appointed for the coming year are Vaughn and Jerald Smith, education senior.
Taft Chances Lift For Senate Post
Washington—(U.P.)—Sen. Robert A. Taft's chances of Senate Republican floor leader got a lift today with conciliatory statements from two of President-elect Eisenhower's closest friends in Congress.
The statements came from Sens. Frank Carlson (R-Kan.) and H. Alexander Smith (R-N. J.), who conferred with Mr. Eisenhower in New York yesterday. Sen. Carlson thenakter the latter said Eisenhower would take no part in selection of a Senate GOP floor leader, but added that:
How much of a lift still depends on the reaction of Republican senators.
"If Sen. Taft wants to be Senate leader, I assume he will be, and personally I would be for him."
In the light of other Carlson remarks, his statement was interpreted here as something less than an endorsement of Sen. Taft for the floor leadership.
But it was also regarded as evidence that the "Eisenhower senators" would not fight to prevent the election of the Ohioan, who lost the GOP presidential nomination to Mr. Eisenhower after a bitter struggle last summer.
Sen. Smith told newsmen that "Sen. Taft would be the logical major leader and personally I hope that can be brought about."
While Sen. Taft has never called himself a candidate for the floor leadership, he has said he was available if Sen. Styles Bridges of New Hampshire, the present floor leader, steps out.
B-29s Bomb Red Supplies; Jets Down Another MIG-15
Seoul, Korea—(U.P.)—American Superforts hurled tons of bombs today on two big Communist supply areas in North Korea while outnumbered American Sabre jet pilots shot down one Communist MIG-15 jet fighter and damaged four others over MIG alley.
The intrepid F-86 pilots racked up today's score in four separate aerial duels involving a total of 10 Sabres and 44 MIGs. In one fight, two Sabres took on 24 MIGs 35 miles south of the Yalu river. One of the Russian-built planes was damaged.
As a result of today's battles, the Sabre jet pilots brought their claims for the last three days to five MIGs destroyed, one probably destroyed and seven damaged.
Damage credits went to 2nd Lt.
Paul J. Jacobson of Elmore, Minn;
Capt. Vincent E. Stacy, Crystal
Falls, Mich.; Maj. Vermont Garrison,
Mt. Victory, Ky., and Marine pilot Maj. Edwin H. Finlayson of Monticello, Fla.
Credited with destroying a MIG was Col. James K. Johnson, 4th Fighter-Interceptor Wing commander from Phoenix, Ariz., who claimed a probable kill yesterday.
and battlefront positions in North Korea.
Fighter-bombers from five 5th Air Force wings and a Marine air group bombed Red transport lines
American Superforts pounded two Red supply dumps deep in North Korea early today, dropping 200,000 pounds of explosives despite a heavy overcast and hurricane-force winds.
Authority on Keats To Speak in Fraser
The senior lecturer in English at Cambridge university, T. R. Henn will speak on "Poetry and Painting" at 4 p.m. today in Fraser theater.
Mr. Henn was a colonel on Gen, Eisenhower's invasion planning staff in World War II and was awarded the Legion of Merit in recognition of his service.
He is on a tour to gather research material. He is an authority on the poetry of W. B. Yeats. In 1950, he published "The Lonely Tower," a study of Yeats's career and writing.
Wednesday. Dec. 17, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Liquid air, which is atmosphere cooled to below minus 400 degrees on the farenheit scale, enables one
Dr. Gilbert Haight, assistant professor of chemistry, will produce the one-man show. He describes it as a "free" lecture; that is, one at which notes should not be taken.
These and other equally spectacular stunts will be featured in a demonstration of the properties of liquid air at 8:30 p.m. Thursday in 305 Bailey lab, in a lecture open to the public.
Ever see a rubber nail which could be driven into a block of wood- or a rubber ball which would shatter when bounced against a wall?
Chem Professor to Show What Liquid Air Can Do
Dr. Haight taught chemistry at George Washington university in Washington, D.C., before coming to the University of Kansas in September.
to perform all sorts of spectacular feats with ordinary materials.
Baltour s
411 W. 14th
"I try to have something of a show for my students about every week," he said, "but once a year I try to put on something really spectacular. This one is it."
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 17, 1952
Jayhawks Stress Defense in Drills
Stressing defense nearly all afternoon, Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen drilled his Kansas charges hard Tuesday in preparation for the Jayhawk's home opener Friday night against the Southern Methodist Mustangs. Tipoff time is 7:35 in Hoch auditorium.
The Kansans worked on the press defenses then finished off with a 20-minute scrimmage that saw the usual first five on the front line with the "Reds." That is, sophomores Larry Davenport and Jerry Alberts at forwards, junior B. H. Born at center, and senior Dean Kelley and sophomore Bill Heitholt at the guard spots.
"We looked like we had a little more life than we did Monday," the head man said after the workout. "Yesterday we were terribly listless, maybe from the trip."
While Allen ran the same five that started the two games on the southern trip that saw the Jayhawks split a pair, he didn't exclude the possibility of some changes in the near future as he changed the top five frequently.
Juniors A Kelley and Harold Patterson strengthened their position as first team challengers in the games with Tulane and Rice. Kelley tied for high point honors for the Kansans in the Tulane game, Born and he each getting 13. Patterson played most of the way at center in the second half against Rice. Patterson, a junior college transfer, is adept at any position and might
take over for anybody.
Allen was still bemoaning the fact that he needs one more man with "savvy." The youthful Javhawks had early season jitters in both of the southern games and probably needed more than Capt. Dean Kelley to keep them under control. But with three experienced boys, Charlie Hoag, LaVannes Squires, and Gil Reich, on the disabled list, prospects for such help appear dim.
The 51-54 loss to Rice Saturday night ended the Kansas victory streak over college competition at 16 games. The Jayhawks added the Tulane triumph to 15 straight over the last part of last season.
The Rice victory also was th Owl's first over KU in five tries.
SMU will bring a team, for the two-game stand, that has dropped two narrow decisions this year. The Mustangs opened by losing to Hardin-Simmons 55-36, then fell before a Big 7 team, Oklahoma. 54-59.
Kansas twice defeated the boys from Dallas last year, winning the first 74-51 with fabulous Clyde Lovellette hitting 42, then squeaked past the next night, 58-57.
Maxim Favored In Title Fight
St. Louis —(U.P.)—A surprise, last minute shift in the betting odds today made light heavyweight champion Joey Maxim a one-point favorite to beat ancient Archie Moore in their nationally televised title fight tonight at the arena.
Yesterday, 36-year-old Moore had been favored at 8-5. But a flood of Maxim support last night hammered the price to even money, and then boosted Cleveland Joey into the lead by one point.
Heavy betting reflected fight-enthusiasm that boosted the sale of tickets and caused promoter Emory D. Jones to predict Missouri's first $100,000 boxing gate.
Jones, the St. Louis representative of the International Boxing club said, "We'll go out to the arena with an advance of more than $80,000. Then we'll sell tickets at the arena full blast until time for the main event." About 12,000 fans would be required for a $100,000 gate. The arena can hold 19,300.
Matchmaker George W. Carson said the former Missouri boxing record gate was $56,905, attracted by Willie Pep and Cheryl Riley for their featherweight title fight in St. Louis January 16, 1950.
Carson disclosed that Maxim had phoned him last night "and with supreme confidence he told me he was positive he could lick Moore and that he wanted to come back to St. Louis soon to make another defense of the title."
Oklahoma A&M, DePaul Clash in Top Tilt
New York (U.P.)—The ball-hogging Oklahoma Aggies will try to put the brakes on high-scoring DePaul in an intersectionsal high-light on tonight's basketball schedule.
Both teams are ranked in the top 20 nationally—the Aggies fifth and the Blue Demons 19th—and both will be shooting for their sixth victories in a so-far perfect season. But they achieved their high-ranking in different ways, and tonight's meeting on the Aggies' court at Stillwater, Okla., shapes up as an "offense vs. defense" battle.
The Aggies, true to the traditions of Coach Henry "Hank" Iba, are once again one of the nation's top defensive teams. In the first five games, they allowed an average of only 40.8 points per game. DePaul, on the other hand, has been scoring at the merry rate of 83.8 points per game, so the collision should be terrific.
Four other high-ranked teams are in action tonight but only one, 19th-ranked Notre Dame, should run into much trouble as it ites its fourth win against Loyola of Chicago.
LaSalle's Explorers, ranked second, continue their national tour with a visit to three-time-beaten Arizona. Louisiana State, ranked 13th, meets another three-time loser, Alabama, in the Southeastern conference. Navy, rated 15th, faces Rutgers, which has lost twice.
One team ranked in the top 20.
20th-rated Missouri, went down to defeat last night. The Tigers bowed to Arkansas, 65-64, at Columbia, when Carrol Groggins of Arkansas sank a set shot from the side with only one second remaining. Six-foot, four-inch Gene Lambert of Arkansas led the scoring with 24 points.
Walter Dukes, Seton Hall's 6-foot, 11-inch all-American candidate, fattened his scoring average as the sixth-ranked Pirates gained their seventh win of the year by 89-77 over J. Carroll. Dukes tallied 36 points 18 of them on free throws, to run his average to 30.6 points per game.
Brigham Young, ranked 17th, posted its sixth victory by 64-44 over Washington State, although Fete Mullins scored 22 points for State.
New York U., which shares the 20th rank with Missouri, won its fifth straight by 87-72 over Yale as 6-foot, 6-inch Boris Nachamkin paced the attack with 23 points.
In other leading games last night: Bob Carney scored 29 points to lead Bradley to an 89-76 victory over Texas Christian; the Peoria Caterpillars, national AAU champions, were hard-pressed to beat Seattle, 78-73, as pint-sized Johnny O'Brien of Seattle tallied 32 points; Duke routed Davidson, 94-65, in the Southern conference; Houston beat Detroit, 72-69, in overtime in the Missouri Valley conference; Connecticut defeated Brown, 81-62.
Best Wishes
for a
Merry Christmas
and a
Gay Holiday
Season
STOP AT THE JAY SHOPPE
for those
Last Minute
Gift
Suggestions
Jay
SHOPPE
STOP
5 Thinclads Win Varsity Letters
Duquesne romped over Carnegie Tech, 72-55; Clemson trounced Presbyterian, 82-64; Drake beat Denver, 82-54; Manhattan crushed Hofstra, 74-52; Toledo nicked Miami of Ohio, 65-64; Texas A&M down Trinity (Texas), 60-55; Western Kentucky shaded Cincinnati, 77-76, and Marquette routed St. Norbert, 110-70.
Keith Palmquist, Minneapolis, Minn., pacer, was the lonely senior letter-winning among a group of five Kansas cross-country award winners, announced Tuesday by Athletic Director Dutch Lonborg.
gTbt
The slender blond drew his third monogram in helping Bill Easton's Jayhawkers to their sixth consecutive Big Seven title. Other lettermen were Art Dallzell, Spring Hill junior; Wes Santee, Ashland junior; Lloyd Koby, Sedgwick junior, and Dick Wilson, Albany, N.Y., junior.
--and Many Other Items
1953 Jayhawker
Second Issue Out-
Thursday and Friday, Dec. 18-19
On Sale At-
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B. H. Born Shows Promise As Center
By CHUCK MORELOCK
Kansan Assistant Snorts Editor
Filling the shoes of all-American Clyde Lovellette is a tremendous task, but B. H. Born, 6 foot 9 inch Kansas center, has the potential to match some of the Terre Haute Terror's scoring records and could be just as effective in all-around floor play.
It is doubtful that Born can shatter as many scoring marks as the great Lovellette, who was one in a million, but the big Medicine Lodge junior has the equipment to provide the difference between a first and second division finish for the green Kansas team.
Born entered the University in September, 1950 after being wooped by about 40 schools bidding for his basketball services. He was the Lovellette of Kansas high school basketball in the 1949-50 season and had a 25 point average in Southern Kansas league competition. He set records in the Dodge City Invitational and the state Class A tournaments by hitting for 87 points in 3 games and 111 in 4.
Basketball scouts camped on his doorstep following his graduation and Born said that he narrowed his choices down to St. Louis, Bradley, and KU before finally deciding on Mt. Oread.
He did not play with the freshman cage squad at the University
IM Basketball
The Daily Kansan is unable to carry writeups on yesterday's intramural "A" games since the officials scored 61 points, score cards to the intramural office
Fraternity "A"
Phi Delta Theta 68, Tau Kappa E. 12
Alphapha Omega 54, Phi Kappa 30
Phi Kappa Tau 32 Phi Kappa Sigma 20
Phi Delta Theta 36 Sigma P. E. 16
Sigma Alpha E. 45, Sigma Nu 25
Theta Chi 29 D. Tau 26
Today's Games Robinson Annex
Fraternity "A"
4 Sigma Chi-Phi Kappa Tau
5 Kappa Sigma-Delta Chi
Robinson Gymnastium
8.15 Alpha Tau Omega-Triangle (E)
8.16 Alpha Tau Omega-Triangle (E)
9:15 Nu Sigma Nu-Gamma Delta (W)
9:15 Grip Nips-Block Black Knights (E)
9:15 AFROTIC II-Know Nothings (W)
*Tomorrow's Games*
4 Don Henry-Battenfeld
5 Stephenson-Jolliffe
6 Sterling-Oliver--Pearson
7 Last Chance-ISA
8 Jim Beam-Theta Tau
9 AFROTIC I-YMCA
Robinson Gymnasium
Independent "B"
**Independent**
8:15 NROTC-Aluminum Five (E)
8:15 Twin Pines-Oread (W)
Fraternity "U"
8:15 Upsolution III-D.T.D. II (E)
Phi Delta Theta, Beta PI II (W)
but was shoved up to the varsity immediately and scrummaged with the team throughout the 1950-51 campaign. He broke into most of the Jayhawkers games last season but played briefly since Lovellette was smashing all Big Seven and national scoring averages.
Born showed sparks of basketball greatness, particularly in passing and ball-handling, and played his best game in the crucial K-State contest last March which decided the Big Seven championship.
He and Larry Davenport made the trip to Helsinki this summer with the Olympic basketball team, but did not play. Born had previously logged some post-season time by playing briefly in the KU-Peoria Caterpillar exhibition series in Hutchinson in June.
Born started the 1952-53 season in fine fashion by hitting 13 points against Tulane at New Orleans. He played aggressive ball and showed promise of developing 'into a top-notch center and a more than adequate replacement for the departed Lovellette.
The 20-year-old education major said that the present Kansas team is young, fast, and will "run" most of the time. He listed Kansas State as the Jayhawks toughest opponent this year and said that Kansas chances for a winning season "will denote on hustle."
There is a definite possibility that Born, no matter how far he progresses, may be hampered in his bid to achieve national and conference fame because of the tremendous marks set by Lovellette. A 21 or 22 point output for Lovellette was only so-so to him and a 28 point barrage was merely average. The average college center would be considered to have had a hot night if he scored 15 tallies.
Wednesday, Dec. 17, 1952 University Daily Kansan Page
Thus, Born may be forced to play in the shadows of Lovellette's reputation this season and possibly in 1953-54. However, continued improvement by Born easily could place him among the elite in conference and midwestern cage centers.
Kansas fans hope that Born, as well as the other members of the green Jayhawker team, can develop into all-American prospects—they would enjoy another 3 a.m. rally.
MSA
23
INDIANA
23
B. H. BORN Kansas Center
Campus capers call for Coke
There's fun-filled confusion when the campus empties into cars, trains and planes as Christmas holidays begin. Heading for good times? Pause for a Coke and go refreshed.
DRINK
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REUSE FAT OFF
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DRINK
Coca-Cola
REGULAR MAP OFF.
KANSAS CITY COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY
"oke" is a registered trade-mark.
© 1952, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY
Reich Wins Sixth In Punt Returns
Gil Reich, defensive standout for the Kansas football team, finished sixth in the nation in punt return vardage in figures out today.
Reich, the Steelton, Pa. all-American, returned 19 punts for 327 yards. His average of 17.2 yards a return was the best of all the top 10 punt returners in the country. Horton Nesrsta of Rice won the punt return contest romping 536 yards with 44 punts. His average was only 12.2, however.
In 1951, 9,470 pedestrians were killed in U.S. traffic accidents.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 17, 1952
Protest Grows in UN Over Employe Purge
United Nations, N.Y.—(U.P.)—An international storm of major proportions appeared gathering today about Secretary-general Trygve Lie's purging the United Nations of employees subversive to the United States.
Indications were that the storm would not break until the General Assembly reconvenes next February after its Christmas vacation, at which time there was expected to be a concerted demand that the 60-nation group review the entire history of dismissals resulting from U.S. investigations.
Mr. Lie, meanwhile, stood on his right to hire and fire without consulting the Assembly and rejected India's demand that he halt his current housecleaning of Communist suspects until the Assembly has decided upon a new policy.
Mr. Lie has fired 19 suspected Americans, acting under the recommendation of an international panel of jurists that he should dismiss all American Communists as well as any employee refusing to testify about alleged Red activities or
Plans were completed Monday for a Diesel Operators institute, sponsored by University Extension, to be held here April 29-30-May 1.
Diesel Institute Set by Extension
Municipal power plants, pipeline companies, and other industries will send Diesel operators to the conference.
Edward J. McBride, professor of mechanical engineering; R. S. Tait, associate professor of mechanical engineering; Theodore Wagner, instructor of mechanical engineering, and George H. Brooks, assistant to the dean of Extension, were KU representatives at the meeting.
anyone the secretary-general believes is engaged in, or is likely to engage, activities deemed subversive by the U.S., now serving as host to the United Nations.
Mr. Lie has refused to fire 14 other Americans because he lacked evidence to back up adverse comments from the State department.
President Truman moved yesterday to strengthen Mr. Lie's hand by ordering the State and Justice departments to work with the Civil Service commission in ousting American Communists from the U.N.
No action was taken in the recent meeting between Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy and Lawrence City Manager Jim Wigglesworth on the Lawrence airport problem, the chancellor said today.
No Action Taken At Airport Talk
Dr. Murphy said that he and Mr. Wigglesworth merely laid the groundwork for further discussion by making sure everyone understood the problem. He said that no results could be determined until after one or two more meetings with the city manager. No dates have been set for the conferences.
The Lawrence city commission took no further action in its regular meeting Tuesday afternoon.
The Lawrence city commission has suggested that the University assume the operation of the Lawrence airport, which is now being leased from the University by the city.
Washington—(U.P.)—Justice department sources said today the FBI has lined up several "surprise" witnesses to testify in the perjury trial of Far Eastern specialist Owen Lattimore.
While informants refused to identify any of the potential witnesses, they said some are from foreign countries, mainly in the Orient.
Lattimore, 52-year-old Johns Hopkins university professor and one-time state department consultant, was indicated by a federal grant jury yesterday on charges he lied seven times during his testimony last winter before the Senate Internal Security subcommittee. He promptly protested his innocence.
One count of the indictment charged Lattimore lied when he denied under oath he has ever been a promoter of communism or Communist interests. If convicted of all seven counts, he would be liable to a maximum penalty of 70 years in prison.
Witnesses Found for Lattimore Trial.
Dr. Detlev W. Bronk, president of Johns Hopkins university, announced that Lattimore would be given "leave of absence, with salary" from the university faculty "until a federal court passes on the charges."
Lattimore's arrangement was tentatively set for 10 a.m. Friday. But government attorneys said the date for his first appearance in court may be postponed to permit his attorneys—the famous firm of Arnold, Fortas & Porter—to file motions in his behalf.
Prosecutors conceded there wasn't a "ghost of a chance" that they could bring the case to trial before Attorney General-designate Herbert Brownell Jr. takes over the department for the Republicans on Jan. 20.
Lattimore, who conferred at length with his attorneys last night, indicated he will fight the charges all the way to the Supreme court if
"If I should not, it would be an
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Pre-Nursing club: 4 p.m., Fraser dining room.
Jr. Panhellenic: 4:30 p.m., Delta Delta house.
ISA scholarship: applications due 5 p.m. Pick up and return applications at Dean of Women's office.
Jay James: 5 p.m. meeting, Hawk's Nest, Union.
Alpha Kappa Psi: professional commerce fraternity, 7 p.m., Strong auditorium, FBI agent, speaker. All business school students invited.
Tryouts: "Lily, the Felon's Daughter." 7-9 p.m. Green theater.
Newman club: Catholic students caroling party, dancing and refreshments at the Catholic church, 7:30-10:30 p.m. Cars needed at 7.
Chess club: 7:30 p.m., 20 Strong.
Wesley foundation: caroling party;
meet at Union at 7:30 p.m.
AICHE: 7:30 p.m., 426 Lindley.
ASME: 7:30 p.m., 502 Snow. Speaker from Black and Veatch, and refreshments.
Society of American Military Engineers: business meeting, 7:30 p.m. MS lounge.
FACTS: 7:30 p.m. meeting, 110 Fraser.
Speaker, H. G. Fair of Phillips Petro, Refinery.
Losses Await Losers in Kansan Office
Delta Phi Delta: business meeting,
7:30 p.m. Spooner sculpture room.
German Nativity play: 8 p.m changed to Fraser theater.
Mrs. Moorhead frankly doesn't know what to do with the odd assortment of articles that are unclaimed. She hopes people will make their claim soon, because she's running out of storage space.
THURSDAY
Kansan. Mrs. Dorothy Moorhead, business office secretary, places the ad for three successive days. Before the owner can claim the article, he must pay for the ad.
Anybody lose a car key?
Student Union Christmas party 8 p.m., Hawk's Nest.
Somebody did, because the key and numerous other items are waiting dispassionately for their owners in the business office of the Daily Kansan.
Among the articles is a half-knitter argyle sock, undoubtedly the work of a home economics student. The sock was left in a woven basket that contained thread and other needlework. Perhaps the coed changed her major.
Probably the most valuable lost items are two pairs of horn-rimmed glasses. Four or five other pairs of glasses have been found in or around the new Journalism building, which seems to be sort of a dumping
Not so with a half-filled tobacco pouch and a girls' left-handed glove which have been around as long as anyone can remember.
ground for valuable odds and ends. The spectacles and a number of bill-folds have been claimed in a short time.
Episcopal Holy Communion: 7 a.m.
Danforth.
When an article is found, the usual procedure is to advertise in the want ad column of the Daily
Deutscher Verein: no meeting today.
FBLA: Christmas party, 4 p.m.
Strong Annex D. Bring grab bag
gift and game.
IAS: sponsoring film, "Wind Tunnel Flutter Test of B-47 Model," 5 pm., Aero Hut, room 4. All Agros invited.
Christian Science organization: 7
p.m. Danfortch chapel.
ISA: special meeting, 7 p.m., Pearson hall. Everyone please come to wrap toys to be taken to the orchamages.
Gift Handkerchiefs
Community Christmas worship service: 8 p.m., First Presbyterian church, YM-YWCA and KU Chorale presenting the program.
803 Mass.
15c to $3.95
- Chinese Linens
- Swiss Embroidries
TERRILL'S
PASS THE ORDER
61 Please! for Fruit Lake
Take a Tip from Santa
For giving, for getting, for just plain good eating—delicious, loaf fruit cakes from
61 Please!
for
Fruit Lake
10 15
A
DRAKE'S
907 Mass.
"Drake's for Bakes"
Phone 61
evil day in our country for freedom of conscience, of research, and of comment," he said. "These are freedoms that should be guarded by all, but by university professors with a special devotion."
35StudentstoSing At German Play
twbdcsnd
A 35-voice choir will sing at the German department's nativity play at 8 p.m. today in Fraser theater.
Members of the choir are Lawrence Bodle, Patr Cusic, Ruth Elser, Romayne Norris, L. F. Watkins, and Roger Youmans, college sophomores; Julia Bolas, Paula McVay, and Esther Storer, college seniors; Darrrell Brown, Vernon Diel, Lois Fox, Patricia Fox, John McCoulough, Frank Newby Jr., Thelma Ross, and Richard Scott, college juniors.
Rupert Dunn, Anne Martin,
Vaughn Moore, Ethlyn Sejkora, and
Don Smith, college freshmen; Heidi
Cohrs, Hans Deppe, Traudl Glass,
Irene Graewe, Peter Slonek, and
Elisabeth Schuler, special students in the college; Theodora Ericsson and
Marlene Peterson, education seniors;
Harriet King, fine arts junior; Ralph Flowers, Aldo Vigliano, Helga Vigliano, and Lise Wertheimer, graduate students.
Primitive Sculpture Discussed by Club
C. S. Smith, assistant professor of sociology and assistant curator of anthropology, led an informal discussion about African sculpture last night at a Sculpture club meeting
The discussion was preceded by showing of two films, "Buma—African Sculpture Speaks," and "The Loon's Necklace." The films presented primitive, African, and Southwest Coast Indian sculpture and antique pieces, explaining their meanings.
OPEN THURSDAY
Students...
9 'Til 9 p.m. for Your Christmas Shopping.
LADIES
HOUSE SLIPPERS
$2.00 to $3.85
MEN'S HOUSE SLIPPERS
ROMEOS WITH SIDE ELASTIC; warm sheeplined; soft sole or hard sole with zipper fastener.
$4.95 and $5.95
MEN'S FELT SLIPPERS $2.95
WOMEN'S GALOSHES $2.95
Haynes and Keene
819 Mass. Phone 524
Wednesday, Dec. 17, 1952 University Daily Kansan
"Santa Is Much Too Slow-Use Want Ads-Make Some Dough!"
Page 7
11 KU Teachers to Science Meeting
中
Call KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be emailed to you during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Mail and student office. Journey time is not later than 45 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
25
1. One day Three days Five days
5 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00
additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
BUSINESS SERVICE
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Phone 1396M. MWF-t
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360,1199 Mass. tf
BEVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. t
EXPERIENCED Typist. Term papers
notebooks, theses and miscellaneous. Mrs.
E. 4. J. Roscoe, 833 Louisiana, Apartment
1, upstairs. Phone 2775-J. t
TYPING WANTED. Prompt, accurate service. Pick-up and delivery service after 6 p.m. and before 8 a.m. Phone 3157R. Mrs. Livingston. tt
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment in this area thus assuring fast efficient service and Radio and Telephone. Phone 188. 828 Vermont free pickup and delivery.
*TYPING SERVICE.* experienced theses
500 West 6th. Phone 1344W. Mr. H
Larkin
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Donate your fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tt
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
Almen, 3110R buyers. William J. V.
Almen, 3110R
CRYSTAL LAFE serves breakfast, lunch dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves chicies steaks
cakes. Free parking space for customers.
FOR SALE
CLOTHING: 13W. Was $39, now faille skirt, size 26, Worce once. Phone one.
short-style coat, size
$25. Bessy, black, black
$10. Both like new
$94-W. 12-17
MISCELLANEOUS
RADIO and TV service-same day as service on all makes. Most complete stock equipment parts in this area. Bowman Radio and TV 936 Vermont. Phone 1834 prompt service. **183**
DRESSMAKING, formals, alterations, by an experienced dressmaker. See Themis Zannetou, 1633 Vermont (downstairs apartment.) Phone. 1477M. 1-6
CONCOQ SERVICE—B. F. Goodrich tires and batteries, complete lubrication service plus expert automatic transmission CONCOQ Service, 19th and Massachusetts. tt
Air-conditioned, Open from 6 a.m. midnight. Crystal Cafe, 609 Vt. tf YYPESI: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glnka, 1911 Penn. Phone 1396M. tf
LOST
SUDED JACKET. Left in 217 Journalism last Wednesday morning. Dark brown. Extra long. Reward. Call Roger Yarrington. 12-18
NAVY BLUE leather billfold, believed lost between Corbin and Blake last Friday. Contains ID card, key, and money. Please order please call Elaine Carlson. 860. 12-18
BROWN-RIMMED glasses in case. Friday between Robinson and Marvin. Call 28943 after 5 p.m. 12-18
TRANSPORTATION
TWO EUROPEAN students want ride to south, direction Florida or New Orleans, share expenses, help drive. Phone Egon iohmen. 2122. Urgent. 12-18
RIDE WANTED for two to South Dakota
Marshall Swain, 2848R. 12-18
RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wichita every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Call Jim Sellers. 31013 evenings.
MTW-tt
WAN&T A RIDGE to New Orleans and
BATKIN A RIDGE to Christmas and
HOLIDAYS will share drive and exprese.
Will掌架 drive and express. Please
掌架 Armored Kettle, 2355 X 1800, after
3:00 AM.
ASK US ABCUT atripane rates, skis coach. family days, round trip reservation, ski resorts, American Express land tours. Cunar and Matson Steamship lines. Call Mitsi information and reservations. Bank information and reservations. 8th and Mass. streets. Phone 30.
URLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange international and international travel for libraries. Phone frs. Lols Odafter. 3661. Downs Trave service. 1015 Mass. t
FOUND
FOUND in front of library, Butler county,
identifies one person who
pay for an UDK office. 12-18
ENDS TONITE
John Payne
"CARIBBEAN"
THEY WENT FORTH TO BATTLE and they fell for her
EIGHT IRON MEN
LATE NEWS — COLOR CARTOON
Eleven University teachers will be participants in the program of the 119th meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in St. Louis, Dec. 26-31.
The association is the largest group of related scientific organizations in the world with nearly 50,000 individual members. About 6,000 persons will attend the St. Louis meetings.
Dr. Herbert B. Hungerford, professor of entomology, is president-elect of the Society of Systematic Zoology, an international organization that meets in connection with the association.
The other KU representatives will be Dr. Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the School of Education; Dr Ray Q. Brewster, professor of chemistry; Dr E. Raymond Hall, professor of zoology; Dr Walter M. Kollmorgen, professor of geography; Dr L. R. Lind, professor of Latin and Greek; Dr James C. Malin, professor of history; Dr Charles D. Michener, professor of entomology; Dr Raymond E. Hopppen, assistant professor of pharmacy; Dr Charles A. Leone, assistant professor of zoology, and Dr Charles F. Peterson, assistant professor of pharmacy.
Dr. Hungerford will present a paper on aquatic hemiptera. Dr. Hall is chairman of a symposium for which Dr. Michener will report on the importance of life history studies in systematic entomology. Dr. Leone will give a paper on "Serological Relationships Among Some Distantly Related Anthropods and Mollusks." This paper was prepared jointly with Harry E. Webb of Dexo, a freshman in medicine.
WANTED
TYPIST WANTED close to 1219 Ohio.
Call Ahmed. 2235W. 12-19
STUDENTS interested in working new banquet service at Student Union for Harvey J. Tomlinson between 2 and 4 p.m. at Uni. cafeteria office.
CLEK-TYPIST II—must be careful, accurate typist, ready to learn electric circuitry. Need to use graph operator. Also need bindery worker —mailing inserting, gathering, etc. Pre-prepared exp., need position under 40. University of Kansas Press, Journalism Building. 12-ff
Dr. Kollmorgen's paper will be "Possible Contributions of Geographers to Proposals for Water Use and Control, Particularly in the Kansas River Basin." Dr. Brewster will speak on "Getting the Right People into Chemistry," in connection with the dedication of the Washington university chemistry building.
Dr. Malin will be one of a four-man symposium in the botanical sciences section. He will speak on "Soil - Animal - Plant Relationships, Historically Reconsidered."
Dean Anderson will address the concurrent meeting of the National Association for Biology Teachers on "Study of Use of Visual Aids in Biology." He also will be a member of a panel in the education section evaluating the New York State regents examinations in science.
Dr. Lind will address one of the medical societies on "The Role of the Classics and Social Sciences in Pre-Medical Education."
Dr. Peterson will present three research papers to the pharmacy section. With Dr. Hoppoen he will report on "Solubility of Phenobarbital in Propylene Glycol Alcohol Water Systems." The others are "The Anti-Fungal Activity of Osage Orange Wood Extract" and "An Evaluation of Rates of Relief of Theophylline from Suppository Bases."
The former was written with Eugene W. Brockemeyer of Lexington, Mo., a graduate student at
DeadlineExtended For Scholarships
Today is the deadline of the Independent Student association $50 scholarship, Ronald Sammons, college junior, chairman of the scholarship board, said today.
STARTS
THURSDAY
The award is given on scholastic standing, need, and leadership of the student. The student doesn't belong to the ISA to be eligible.
Applications may be secured from the dean of women's office or from Sammons at Battenfeld hall.
The winner of the scholarship will be announced before the Christmas vacation.
One more murder to complete the deadly 'T'
... WAS SHE NEXT?
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KU last year and now an instructor in pharmacy at Ohio State university. The latter paper was prepared jointly with Arthur J. Guida, another KU graduate student now on the faculty of the Medical college of the State of South Carolina, in Charleston.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 17, 1952
Use Brains with Chains,Safety Men Caution Motorists on Winter Hazards
By RICH CLARKSON
Brains plus chains equal sound advice on snow and ice.
That is a streamlined summary of the many recommendations contained in a new booklet just published by the National Safety council which sets down the results of 11 years of test research by the council's committee on winter driving hazards.
The six basic rules established by the 33-man committee composed of experts in automotive engineering, law enforcement, and traffic safety education are:
1. Get the feel of the road. Try your brakes occasionally, while driving slowly and away from other traffic, to find out just how slippery the road is.
2. Slow down. Adjust your speed to road and weather conditions so that you can stop or maneuver safely.
3. Keep windshield clear. You must see danger to avoid it so check the defrosters and windshield
wiper blades. And don't hesitate to thoroughly clean your back window as well as the windshield.
4. Use tire chains on snow and ice. They cut stopping distances in half, and increase starting and hill-climbing traction by four to seven times. Even with the help of chains, however, lower than normal speeds must be used on snow and ice.
5. Pump your brakes to slow or stop. Slamming them on only brings more trouble.
6. Follow at a safe distance. Keep well in back of the car ahead of you so that you have plenty of room to stop. Remember that without tire chains, it takes from 3 to 12 times as far to stop on snow and ice as on a dry surface.
The committee also published some surprising findings as to the efficiency of the "snow-tread" tires which are being offered over the country as a substitute for chains.
Special winter tires of 25 different types were tested for traction. The tests showed, that while some tires gave improved traction under
certain conditions, their overall improvement over conventional tires is not great enough to warrant less caution when driving on slippery surfaces.
The same tests also demonstrated that special winter tire treads do not approach the performance of reinforced tire chains, and the report concluded, "While some of these tires can be considered a palliative, they are certainly not the answer to severe snow or ice conditions."
Describing tire chains as the best self-help available to the driver, the committee said reinforced chains reduce braking distances on both snow and ice by about half, increase forward traction on ice about seven times, and on packed snow out-pull conventional tires nearly four times.
The tests were conducted last winter on frozen lakes and winter roads near Clintonville, Wis. They were made under the direction of Prof. Ralph A. Moyer, research engineer of the Institute of Transportation and Traffic Engineering at the University of California.
Carillon to Feature Christmas Carols
Christmas carols will be featured on the carillon this week.
Programs will be given each day at 7:50 a.m., 8 a.m., 11:50 a.m., 12 a.m., 4:50 p.m., and 5 p.m. by Jerry Hart, fine arts freshman; Stanford E. Lehberg, college senior; Marion Jersild, piano instructor, and Ronald Barnes, University carillonneur.
The carillon program to be played from 7 to 7:30 p.m. today follows:
"Carol of the Bells" ... M. Lenotovich
Children's caroll.
"Away in a Manger" ... M. Luther
"Christmas Tree"
"German Friend"
"Candle"
Winter Issue Ready For 1953 Jayhawker
The winter issue features a large pre-season section on Kansas basketball, a homecoming story, and a round-up of pictures of residents of all organized houses.
The second section of the 1953 Jayhawker is being distributed today in the Information booth and in the Jayhawker office.
1. "Bring a Torch, Jeannette Isabell"
2. "Noel" ... C. L. Daquin
3. "Noel Nouveauet"
4. "Duranian" ... Purudian
1. "Joy to the World"
2. "It Came Upon a Midnight Clear"
3. "O Little Town of Biddleheim
L. Redden"
4. "Silent Waltz"
4. "Silent Night" Gruber
Mr. Barnes also will play special programs of Christmas music at 7 p.m. Friday and 3 p.m. Sunday.
The Friday program follows: British counsellor
Polish carols
1. "In a Manger"
1. "In a Matter"
2. "Come, All Ye Shepherds"
3. "Good King Wencelas"
traditional carols
"Hark the Herald Angels Sing"
"Came Upon a Midnight Clear"
"The Swan You Lost"
"O Come All Ye Faithful"
Old English carols
Old English carols
1. "Coventry Carol"
2. "Deck the Halls"
3. "The Holly and the Ivy"
4. "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen"
German carols
**arbores**
1. "O Tumba baum"
2. "Stille Nacht"
The carillon program to be played at
3 pm. Sunday follows;
1. "In Dulci Jubilo"
2. "O Tannenbaum"
(7)
Harzfeld's
On the Hill
Glamour
... under the Christmas tree
*
in a dozen ways .. a wingtip scarf by Vera, Bright silk prints in miriads of colors many interesting designs. Hand rolled hems.
All hands applau the shorty glove in camel color racoon hair blended with wool and nylon. Cork color pigskin palms. Toasty warm!
'Round Her Neck'
St. Nick Special
$3.95
$2.00
\* \*
\*
3. "My Sheep Were Grazing"
4. "Lo. How a Rose"
Traditional carols
1. "Joy to the World"
2. "O Little Town of Bethlehem"
3. "Hark the Herald Angels Sing"
4. "Come Upon a Midnight Clear"
5. "O Come All Ye Faithful"
Polish carols
1. "Come All Ye Shepherds"
2. "Good King Wencelas"
3. "To Manger"
English carols
1. "Deck the Halls"
2. "Coventry Carol"
3. "The Holly and the Ivy"
4. "Give Me Merry, Gentlemen"
5. "Silent Night"
3. "My Sheep Were Grazing"
*
--shore 100 yards away by breeches buoy.
Leghorn, Italy—(U.P).—A U. S. Navy investigation began today into the grounding of the supply ship Grommet Reefer on the rocks in Leghorn harbor.
Capt. Forrest Close of U.S. Navy headquarters in Naples, president of a five-man court of inquiry, began taking statements from the 39 crew members who spent up to 38 hours on the battered stern half of the ship in a raging storm.
The rescue of all hands was completed late yesterday with the help of helicopters from the U.S. Aircraft Carriers Midway and Leyte which picked up the last 16 of the stranded men.
Ten were fished out of the water after they went over the side on rope ladders and 13 reached the
Student Court to Hear 5
Five defendants will appear before the Student court at 7:30 p.m. today in Green hall. The defendants, all charged with parking violations, are Roger Collins, engineering freshman; Robert Boston, college junior; Paul E. Krause, engineering sophomore; Robert W. Atchison, graduate student, and Alan Heath, business senior.
Crew members indicated their skipper, Capt. Henry P. Saukent of New York, ordered the vessel to put out to sea at top speed from its anchor in Leghorn harbor when 60-mile-an-hour winds began blowing. But the gale apparently hurled the 2,460-ton vessel against the rocks before the order could be carried out.
TNT
POPCORN
9 quarts
from 1 can
Santa is riding a tricycle.
Shop Thursday Night Till 9
VAN HEUSEN
That's Right . . . Only
3 Cleaning Days
Left Till Christmas
Phone
75 New York
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Completely Washable GABARDINES All Colors $4.95
VAN HEUSEN FANCY
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Gibbs
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14
THE NASHVILLE FOOTBALL TEAM IS IN MIDDLEWATER, TENNESSEE, FOR A BATTLE AGAINST THE GUY DAVIS CENTER. THE TEAM WILL BE AT 7:00 P.M. AT THE LANE OF SUNDERLAND. THE CARS ARE ALREADY OUT OF FIELD.
Passing on a hill.
Failure to yield the right of way.
Here are three accidents in the making, and in every instance, the blame can be clearly set. The driver who is passing on a hill is suddenly confronted by another oncoming vehicle. The car pulling from the side road in failing to yield the right of way to oncoming traffic is leaving himself open for arrest besides being involved in an accident—and maybe a serious one. The speeder, who although he believes he has full control
21809
Speeding.
of his vehicle, is simply asking for trouble. These pictures show mistakes which lead to more than half of all serious accidents, records of the National Safety council show. Speeding, as the number one cause, accounted for almost one-third of all fatal wrecks. These pictures were faked with the cooperation of the Douglas county sheriff's office. Kansan photos by Rich Clarkson.
Christmas Traffic Toll Looms High
The traffic death toll at Christmas is greater than that of any other holiday period of the year.
Heavy travel, tricky weather, early darkness, and holiday festivity combined to bring death to 351 persons during a four-day Christmas holiday last year, statistics of the National Safety council reveal.
The accident toll for this year's extended four-day holiday period is expected to equal, if not exceed last year's grim picture, council officials have forecast.
"Our records show that the traffic death toll for Christmas eve and Christmas day is about twice the annual daily average," said Ned H. Dearborn, council president.
"Travel is especially heavy over long holidays, which encourage traditional family get-togethers even when the members must drive considerable distance," he added.
The council in its annual Christmas safety campaign made these recommendations to holiday drivers:
1. Driving or walking, put the Christmas spirit of "good will toward men" into practical use by being extra courteous to others.
3. And if you inbibe Christmas spirit in liquid form, stay away from the steering wheel of a car.
2. If streets are icy or slippery, keep your speed down and your caution up.
Return a Student— Not a Statistic
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Thursday, Dec. 18, 1952
50th Year, No.64
UN Planes Bomb Near Red Capital Ike, 'Old Soldier' Confer About Korean War Policy
Seoul, Korea —(U.P.)— United Nations fighter-bombers smashed a huge Communist troop concentration 20 miles south of the North Korean capital of Pyongyang today.
At least 70 buildings were destroyed and 30 were damaged in the four-wing attack.
"Nothing could be left intact," Col. Walter M. Berg, Staten Island, N.Y., said. "It was a perfect mission."
Returning pilots said secondary explosions rocked the entire area. An ammunition dump blew up into a ball of fire that spread into a flash of flame 500 feet wide, they said.
American Sabrejets shot down one MIG-15 Communist jet and damaged another in the fourth straight air battle along the Manchurian border.
1st. Lt. James F. Low, Sausalito, Calif., shot down his ninth MIG of the Korean war in a battle between 10 Sabres and 22 of the Russian-built planes.
The damaged MIG was claimed by Maj. Richard L. Ayersame, Sacramento, Calif.
Irish Lecturer Tells Relation Of Poetry to Paintings
KANU License Renewed by FCC
KANU, located at 91.5 megacycles on the FM band, has been operating since Sept. 15 on a construction permit issued by the FCC of interim authority to provide program service, Mr. Browne explained.
The Federal Communications Commission yesterday granted a license to KANU, the University FM radio station. R. Edwin Browne, director of University Radio, announced this morning.
The granting of the license is "actually a formality," he said, which must be renewed regularly. In granting and renewing licenses, the FCC must be satisfied that programs broadcast by the station are "in the public interest, convenience, and necessity."
Sorority Scholarship Given to Sophomore
ruins and deserted villages.” Mr. Henn illustrated his lecture with slides of famous paintings.
"We discussed," Gen. Eisenhower said later, "the possibility of peace in Korea with particular reference to the world situation in which, of course, such Korean peace would have to be determined."
Gen. Eisenhower had invited Gen. MacArthur to "informal meetings" to get the full benefit of his "thinking and experience" after Gen. MacArthur said in a speech he was "confident there is a clear and definite solution to the Korean conflict." Both men said after their luncheon conference yesterday they would meet again.
"Studying paintings, architecture, and other forms of art can be of much value to the study of literature," T. R. Henn, Irish scholar, said yesterday before an audience in Fraser theater.
It was a colorful and historic scene played by the President-elect and the man he called "my old and respected commander." It was enacted against a background furnished by President Truman, who has indicated he doubts either of
The Gamma Phi Beta Christmas scholarship has been awarded to Shirley Boatwright, fine arts sophomore.
The scholarship consisting of $100 is awarded annually on the basis of financial need and academic record, Sanice Manuel, Gamma Phi Beta president, said.
"A macabre theme of skeletons and death, for example," he said, "was prevalent in medieval literature as a result of paintings by Holbein, the Dutch artist."
Paintings or pictorial symbols of horses influenced poets throughout the Renaissance, were used by John Donne, the 17th century metaphysical poet, and are still seen somewhat in the poetry of A. E. Housman, the English poet, he said.
With General MacArthur, whom President Truman fired as Korean commander 20 months ago, he went over the problem of Korea as seen in a setting of global unrest.
New York—(U.P.)—President-elect Eisenhower drove ahead today with his deeds-not-words Korean war policy after receiving the counsel of an "old soldier" named Douglas MacArthur.
Mr. Henn, senior lecturer in English at Cambridge university, pointed out three ways in which painting and poetry may be related: A picture can serve as inspiration to the poet; the poet may reinterpret or illustrate a poem, sometimes adding it, or a poem may be conceived at the same time with the painting.
"Melancholy exultation at ruins, later altered to a feeling of sweetness, peace, and light, can be seen in poetry of Shelley and Byron," he said, "probably derived from paintings popular at that time of
Javhawker Pictures Needed
Organizations whose pictures have not appeared in the 1952-53 Jayhawker should contact Jane Alvine, associate editor of the Jayhawker, immediately, Kenneth Dam, editor, said today.
An Open Letter
Chancellor Explains Financial Picture
Next month the Kansas Legislature will consider the appropriations that will operate your university the next two years. The Legislature's actions will largely determine what kind of a university you will have the next two years, and will mold your university for the next decade.
Your university proposes to spend in the next two years only 12.3 percent more than in the two-year period now ending. Considering the growing student body and inflation since 1950, when today's budgets were planned, I feel this is a reasonable request, quite comparable to the experience of the average business enterprise.
To the student body:
During the Christmas recess you will discuss the university with your parents and others. As you do, remember these simple facts.
You probably haven't realized it, but until now KU has received support from the federal government for its day-to-day operations. Under the "GI Bill of Rights" the university received an extra payment above the normal fees for each "GI" student.
These "extra payments"—once received on as many as 5,500 students—reduced the amount needed from the Kansas Legislature to operate the university. But now federal support is received only on 391 students and the reserves from this source are exhausted. By next year this item will be almost zero, as the "Korean GI Bill" has no such provisions.
The transition from federal to full state support creates this problem.
We must ask the Legislature to increase the appropriation by 40 per cent in order to meet the modest, planned increase of 12.3 per cent in operating budget the next two years.
The university is asking that it be able to serve you and the state as well the next two years as now. To increase appreciably the scope of service would require more than a 12.3 per cent increase in budget and 40 per cent larger appropriation.
You are your university's own ambassador. How you use this information will help determine the character of your university and how it prepares for the great student bodies that will follow you in the next decade.
FRANKLIN D. MURPHY Chancellor
them has an answer to the Korean stalemate.
The third man in the scene was John Foster Dulles, who worked closely and admiringly with Gen. MacArthur during the Japanese peace treaty negotiations.
The Eisenhower - MacArthur meeting had been kept in strict secrecy by Eisenhower headquarters. Then, at 12:42 p.m., yesterday, the President-elect and Mr. Dulles suddenly left headquarters. They went up Park avenue to Mr. Dulles' four-story, stone-front house in the fashionable East side 90's.
In past public utterances and in conversation, Gen. MacArthur has indicated he always has believed Soviet Russia would back out of a showdown unless all the chips were on her side of the table.
Surrounded by floor-to-ceiling bookcases and seated in leather-covered easy chairs grouped before the fireplace, the three talked some more. It was 3:19 p.m. when they left through the glass-and iron-grillwork front doors. Gen. Eisenhower, bare-headed and beaming, emerged first and nodded to the cheering crowd of 200 neighbors across the street and to householders grinning from doorways and windows.
Gen. MacArthur, wearing a natty gray hat, followed. Both men had on overcoats and had scarfs wrapped about their necks.
Weather
Kansas braced itself for another
onslaught of winter today as a
CODE 1052 WALT MALCOLM
SNOW
snow - bearing low pressure center moved eastward from New Mexico and drizzling rain already began falling at Chanute and Emporia Temperatures dropped to below freezing early today, although Chanute had a night time
low of 37 degrees. Much cooler weather was forecast for tonight. Light snow was expected to begin in the west this afternoon, and snow or sleet was predicted for the central section tonight and tomorrow. The front edge of the new cold assault was expected to reach eastern Kansas by Friday afternoon.
University Daily Kansan Thursday. Dec. 18, 1952
POGO
2
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TIL THIS SAILORMAN FROM TURKESTAN
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MY ANNA PLAYED PIANNA
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THAT DON'T SOUND LIKE YOU, THREE KINGS OF ORIENT, IS "
THEY IS THREE OF UB, ISN'T THEY? AN'WHERE'S YOU THINK SINGAPORE IS? IN THE OL UNITE AN'STATE?
Election and Campaigns Voted Year's Top Stories
The election of Dwight D. Eisenhower as president was voted the biggest news story of the year by students of the School of Journalism in a poll sponsored by the Editorial class.
The campaigns of presidential and senatorial hopefuls which split the country into many camps took second place in the voting.
In February all the world mourned the passing of a man who had fought valiantly for his life. The death of King George VI left as deep a mark of grief in this country as it left in Great Britain. This year's installment of the Korean war has been one of bloody hill battles and uneasy quiet. The war has been an issue not only in Korea but throughout the world, causing hatred and fear to be spread into the smallest issues of the day.
The steel strike played an important part in this year's news. The long paralyzing strike choked off most of the country's production; then, in a dramatic move, President Truman put the industry under government control. The Supreme court fight followed this, and Judge David Pine handed down his momentous decision and returned the industry to its owners.
The Republican convention with its bitter fights, splits, and quarrels, and its unforeseen nomination of Eisenhower on the second ballot placed third.
The first three stories led by a big margin and the remaining seven placed so closely together that a few votes would have changed their position. The stories below are listed the way they finished.
The Democratic convention, though not as dramatic as the previous convention, was of great news value. The draft of Adlai Stevenson was almost background material for the stalling, maneuvering, and final death of the young liberal wing's fight for recognition.
The Korean truce talks stalled all year and were finally moved from Panmunjom to New York, with little effect until India entered a truce plan. For a while a split between the United States and England over the repatriation question seemed imminent, but Russia healed it by rejecting the plan.
The cabinet choices gave the country a great guessing game and there were few Republicans who were not mentioned as possibilities. Guessing came to an end when the cabinet announcement came. The announcements were followed quickly by the first Eisenhower-Taft split over the future Secretary of Labor Martin Durkin.
The tenth position went to President-elect Eisenhower's trip to Korea. Perhaps it is prophetic that the last story on the list may be among the top three in next year's selections.
—Don Moser.
Eisenhower Named NCAA Champions Win Man of The Year First Spot in Campus News
President-elect Dwight D. Eisenhower and eight others in political and governmental fields captured all but one place in a poll taken by The Editorial class to name the top ten news personalities of 1952
Mr. Eisenhower, whose personality played a major part in the recent Republican election victory, is the No. 1 news personality. His Democratic opponent, Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson of Illinois, was runner-up. Winston Churchill, leader of the British Conservative party, was third.
Other members of the top ten:
Of the entire ten, only Miss Monroe is not connected with politics or government. Politicians made news chiefly in the United States, but much of the world waited for the results.
Sen. Joe McCarthy (R.-Wis.), John Foster Dulles, and Trygve Lie, tied for 4th; President Harry S. Truman, 7th; Queen Elizabeth of the British Empire, 8th; Sen. Robert A. Taft (R.-Ohio), 9th, and film starlet Marilyn Monroe, 10th.
The Eisenhower story is one of a popular general persuaded to resign his commission, to return to the United States, place his name in state primaries and rally support against the No.9 newsgetter, Sen.Taft, who also had eyes for the GOP nomination.
Mr. Eisenhower's victory over Sen. Taft in the Republican convention, his campaign against the challenging Gov. Stevenson, and subsequent election to the presidency—the first time a Republican had won the office since the election of 1928—were all top news stories, bringing the Eisenhower name more and more before the public.
Selection of Gov. Stevenson as the second top news personality would have seemed unbelievable a year ago today. Most Americans were unacquainted with the name and record of the man who last summer was nominated Democratic standard-bearer—although he never sought the honor.
The extraordinarily high caliber of the governor's campaign speeches immediately made him the talk of the nation's press. His forthright efforts to "talk sense" to the American people endeared him to millions of previously-unknown persons.
Mr. Churchill, a world newsmaker since the turn of the century, again showed his astuteness and leadership in British politics to win third place.
Tied for fourth place in the poll were the garrulous anti-Communistic Sen. McCarthy, the secretary of state-designate John Foster Dulles, and the Secretary-General of the United Nations Trygve Lie.
Rampaging President Truman won seventh place. The Missouriian managed to keep his name before the public all year, by his decision not to re-seek his position, his support of various Democratic aspirants, his part in the steel controversy, his "whistle-stopping" campaign tour, and recent fracas with Gen. Douglas MacArthur.
In the No. 9 spot was Sen. Taft, who was frustrated last summer in his third attempt for the presidency by the nomination of Mr. Eisenhower.
Queen Elizabeth, destined to assume the throne vacated by her late father in England, was voted to No. 8.
Rounding out the top ten in a voluptuous manner is the hypermammiferous Marilyn Monroe, whose fame mostly rests on a combination of correctly-placed curves. Miss Monroe's climb into news prominence chiefly can be traced back to the publication of a nude calendar picture of the starlet—who said she had posed in such condition in earlier days when she "needed the money."
—Bob Stewart.
The series of stories which came from the mad, hectic weeks of the NCAA championship tournament was voted the top campus news story in 1952 by the members of the Editorial class.
Kansas winning the amateur championship and the enthusiastic rallies which followed spontaneously on the campus was considered to be the No. 1 story appearing in the Daily Kansan.
The tragic drowning of James A. Delphia and Bernard E. Rickers in Lone Star lake last May was voted the No. 2 campus story. Delphia and Rickers were homeward bound from an interfraternity pledge council picnic at the lake when their car went off the road and plunged into the lake.
Members of women's houses probably will not forget the third campus story—panty raids. The raids had their beginnings on other campuses but soon spread to Kansas. Little damage was caused at the University although there were many broken windows. The greatest damage was caused at the Alpha Delta Pi sorority house.
Kansas perhaps does not have many fast talking senators, but it does have big winds. The collapse of the partially-constructed Science building took the fourth slot in the big story poll. The Kansan reported the damage which set construction back six weeks was caused by a 70-mile an hour wind
Poor housing in upperclass women's houses rated the fifth spot in the poll. The Kansan first broke the story in October, and climaxed the drive with a double page picture story.
The controversy raised over the establishment
of an editorial board to review Kansan editorials before publication received the sixth position in the poll. Confusion arose out of whether the board was to be set up by the All Student Council or the School of Journalism, but the task finally was delegated to the School of Journalism.
The injury to Matt Murray and the subsequent drive to raise funds to help pay his hospital bill was voted into the seventh spot. Murray received a brain concussion in an automobile accident last February. A dance was given for his benefit following the Kansas-Kansas State basketball game.
The dedication and formal opening of the William Allen White School of Journalism in its new building was voted to the eighth position. Ceremonies for the dedication were held in February.
Racial discrimination rated the ninth spot in the poll. Involved were stories centering around a church youth group's efforts to investigate and abolish discriminatory practices against KU Negro students in privately owned campus restaurants.
In the political vein, the attempts to reorganize the All Student Council last spring was voted into the tenth spot. The reorganization plans concerned organizing the council with a membership from resident-districts instead of its present membership from schools of the University.
Eight of the 10 top campus news stories occurred last spring. Of the top 10 stories, at least four were given mention nationally.
—Bob Longstaff.
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas Student Newspaper
News Room KU 251 Ad Room KU 373
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Editorial Assistant Charles Burch
NEWS STAFF
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Mar. Editors — Diana Stonebrenker
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Telegraph Editor...Chuck Marelock
Picture Editor...Dan Sartz
News Advisor...Victor Dunlouy
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Business Manager Clark Ackers
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It will be next March or Apru before Publisher's Weekly lists the 10 best books for 1952, but speculation among readers and critics has begun already.
Revised Bible Leads News in Book Field
Undoubtedly the biggest news in books was the publication of the new Revised Standard Version of the Bible, the product of 15 years of scholarship. Next to the Bible on the bestseller list was "A Man Called Peter," Catherine Marshall's warm biography of her husband, the late chaplain of the U.S. Senate.
All in this all year, there were few major disappointments among publishers and, said Time magazine this week, a lot of good entertaining reading for just "plain readers."
In a class by itself was "Witness". Whittaker Chamber's painfully honest and brilliant report on the Hiss case.
In fiction the big sellers were the
big names—Hemingway, Waugh,
Steinbeck, Ferber, and Costain.
Ernest Hemingway's "The Old Man and the Sea" was a beautifully written fishing story in praise of the courage of man and the nobility of nature. The story—appearing in Life magazine and as a Book-of-the-Month Club selection—had the greatest immediate audience ever reached by a serious novelist.
Evelyn Waugh's "Men at Arms" was the fine first installment of a trilogy about men and war.
John Steinbeck's "East of Eden" is sullen, violent, and powerful—about a woman who operates a brothel in a small California city.
Thomas B. Costain's "Silver Chalice"—long, dramatic, and inspirational—was a novel revolving around a silversmith who tries to mold a suitable receptacle to hold the Holy Grail.
3
In The Editor's Eye
By ROGER YARKINGTUN
Tomorrow will mean the beginning of vacation for most of the students here and many are expected to travel home by auto.
Weather prophets have it that bad weather is coming and may cause tricky driving.
Bv. ROGER YARRINGTON
We have been running a number of news and editorial articles concerning safe driving. We would like to make one more effort before the stampede for the city limits begins . PLEASE . drive carefully for your own sake and the sake of those riding with you.
Bad driving conditions at Thanks-giving time resulted in auto accidents for six University students. Fortunately none of these have ended in tragedy but they remain as a warning of what may happen the next time.
AN AMENDMENT TO the Kansas board constitution has been proposed to straighten out the confused passage in that document which, according to some interpretations, prohibits editorializing in the UDK on political issues.
We consider that clause a very unfortunate piece of antiquity and are hoping that when the board meets again the amendment will be adopted. It was defeated at the meeting last Tuesday with 10 votes for and four votes against. An amendment needs 14 votes.
TUESDAY'S ASC ACTION creating non-partisan elections for class officers was split along the party lines we expected. Our good wishes go out for the idea but we are wondering if it might turn out to be a farce.
More cheers go to the appointment of a committee to study the Jayhawker situation. FACTS is going to make a similar study. We doubt, however, if the results will sound the same.
- * *
THE SOUR OWL, campus humor magazine published by Sigma Delta Chi, finally appeared. Some think it was worth waiting for. It does have more jokes than last year's issues. The parody features we enjoyed so much are gone, however.
joined so much are the
The jump from 25 cents to 30
cents in price didn't seem to hurt
sales any. At the end of the first
day's sales, over 1000 of the 1600
copied printed had been sold.
BILL WILSON, ASC head, has sent us a letter attempting to clarify his position with the Kansan. We will publish it as soon as we have space.
His post script mentioned a piece published in this column last week which told about a campus politician visiting the UDK to complain about being misquoted. The piece also told what reply the politico received. Mr. Wilson's letter informed the editor just who made the reply to his complaint.
We didn't say in the original piece who the politico was that made the complaint. Besides, Bill, we know who told you where to get off.
Cate Dean's Friends Suggest Loan Fund
Approximately $200 in unsolicited gifts from friends and former students of the late Raymond A. Schwegler, dean emeritus of the School of Education, have been received by the KU Endowment association, Irvin Youngberg, secretary, said today.
The donors suggested that the R.A. Schwegler Memorial loan fund be established for students in education.
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1952 Has Its Quota Of Humorous Stories
This was the year of the big story, but along with the front page news of wars, deaths, and strife, there was the usual assortment of stories to make readers sit back and wonder just how serious life really is.
There were two contests this year, one held and the other threatened, that intrigued us. One was in Murmansk, Russia, where a Russian team won the 3,200-meter reindeer-drawn sled race at the 18th North festival.
The other, which hasn't taken place yet but has half the men in the world lined up to be judges, would be held in Hollywood. The contest would be between Corinne Calvert and Zsa Zsa Gabor. Miss Calvert has invited Miss Gabor to a contest which would prove that the French star is not flat chested.
Three perennials were back in the news again. In the marriage race, Tommy Manville and Artie Shaw still kept apace with each other. Tommy took his ninth wife, and Artie, trailing close behind took his seventh.
The third perennial, Winnie Ruth Judd, hit the jackpot this year by escaping from her Arizona asylum twice.
Calendar art came into its own this year. As soon as the story of Marilyn Monroe's posing in puris naturalibus for a calendar artist was released, the mad dash was on.
was released, the maid ushered in. Carefree bachelors received a severe blow. The ideal of all red-blooded American boys was trapped into marriage. Lil Abner and Daisy Mae were finally customers of Marryin' Sam.
Daisy Mae were many customers of Marys As usual, one doctor came out with a complete cure-all for any disease from bunions to dandruff. Dr. Robert Lincoln of Boston, for a price, let patients have a whiff of Bacteriophage. Patients too weak to walk could receive curb service.
As the year ends, the most intriguing story unfolds. We now have a horse who can discover bodies, name robbers, and answer almost any question. We have offered the owner $20 if she can get the horse here before finals. —Don Moser.
Olympics Win Top Spot In Kansan Sport Poll
This year was a big year for sports and the Editorial class voted the U.S. triumph in the Helsinki Olympic games as the top story of the year.
Following close behind were the achievements of the mighty Kansas basketball team that took the Big Seven championship, the NCAA tournament, and went on to fame in the Olympics.
Next in importance was the annual win of the New York Yankees over the New York Giants in the World Series.
Rocky Marciano put boxing in the fourth spot with his win over Joe Wolgott in a heavyweight championship bout.
The Olympics came into the rating again at the fifth spot in the poll. Emil Zatopek made headlines all over the world in winning three gold medals in distance events.
Sixth place went to the great Michigan State team which came through the season without a loss.
Troy Ruttman's victory in the Memorial day Indianapolis speedway classic took seventh place in the poll.
Golf took the eighth spot with the continued comeback of iron man Ben Hogan and Slammin' Sammy Sneed's victory in the Masters Tournament.
The team of Jones, Calumet, and Arcaro placed ninth in the contest, but first in the Kentucky Derby.
Last on the list was the Yale story of the year. Not only did old Eli beat Harvard, but the team manager made the last point of the game. D.M.
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Page 1
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Flashbacks
University Daily Kansan ___
DECEMBER 18
25 Years Ago
The Daily Kansan provided a Merry Christmas for three Lawrence families which would otherwise not have had one. The children received all of their desires, and the mothers were remembered with gifts.
Jayhawkers were anxiously awaiting the first basketball game of the season against the Kansas State Wildcats tomorrow night. The game will be the first played in the new Hoch auditorium.
University students held mass meetings outside the chancellor's office to protest the extremely short four-day Christmas vacation.
Draft boards throughout the nation today were ordered to defer from the draft until the end of the semester all medical, dental, veterinary, and engineering students who
10 Years Ago
had completed at least one year of college. (The boys were having trouble then, too.)
5 Years Ago
The College today set the 60 per cent passing rule. Students who fail in 40 per cent or more of their studies and do not meet the probation requirements will not be allowed to enroll the following semester.
A scholarship gift of $5,000 exclusively for use by the William Allen White School of Journalism has been donated to the University by Mr. and Mrs. Oscar S. Stauffer of Topeka.
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The KANSAS POWERand LIGHT COMPANY
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Dec. 18, 1952
Oklahoma A&M Trims DePaul In Top Cage Tilt
New York—(U.P.)—An impressive victory over previously unbeaten DePaul boosted the national prestige today of the Oklahoma Aggies, masters of defensive basketball.
The Aggies, ranked fifth nationally by the United Press board of coaches, rung up their sixth win last night by a lopsided 62-51 count over DePaul, ranked 19th nationally, on the Aggies' court at Stillwater.
The Aggies always boast one of the best defensive clubs in the nation, and they went into last night's fray with an average of 40.8 points allowed per game—a mark that De-Paul boosted slightly. The Aggies broke fast and took a 13-point lead in the first quarter, center Bob Mattick accounting for 10 points in the spurt.
DePaul never caught up after that, although the Demons' Jim Lankin emerged as the game's high scorer with 16 points.
Second - ranked LaSalle, 10th-ranked Notre Dame, 13th-rated Louisiana State, and 15th-ranked Navy each won an expected easy triumph in other games last night.
LaSalle, on a tour to the West coast, rolled to an 87-68 victory over Arizona at Tueson, Ariz. The unbeaten Explorers, gaining their seventen win, moved to a 40-32 lead at halftime and held a 24-point margin in the fourth period before easing off. Pop-shooting Fred Lehle led the Explorers with 31 points.
Loyola of Chicago tried a possession game in hopes of upsetting Notre Dame, but the Irish broke through for a 53-45 victory at South Bend. Joe Bertrand tallied 14 points to lead the Irish to their fourth win. Louisiana State gained its fifth victory by 58-45 over Alabama in the Southeastern conference.
Jayhawkers Drill For SMU Games
The Jayhawkers drilled on offensive and defensive plays and patterns in practice sessions Wednesday but did not scrimmage.
Most of the time was spent in getting used to the Hoch auditorium floor, which has just had the wax removed that was used for the Military Ball. The Jay-hawkers will meet SMU in a two game series at the auditorium Friday and Saturday.
The team worked on rebounding the rest of the time. Assistant coach Dick Harp said that failure to control the backboards last Saturday led to the Jayhawkers defeat by Rice.
Probable starters for the SMU game Friday will be B. H. Born, center; Larry Davenport and Jerry Alberts, forwards, and Bill Heitholt and Dean Kelley at guards, Harold Patterson and Al Kelley have been pressing for starting berths, however, and could be inserted into the starting lineup.
MU to Play Host To TCU Cagemen
Columbia, Mo. —(U.P.)—University of Missouri basketballers play their third home game in six days when they meet Texas Christian here tonight.
Coach Sparky Sialep said after Missouri's first loss in two starts that his team made too many mistakes and just threw away the game.
The Tigers, losers to Arkansas in a 65-46 thriller Tuesday, went through short workouts yesterday to correct passing and rebounding errors committed in the game with the Razorbacks.
Tonight's opponent, Texas Christian, is potentially a good club despite its inexperience, Stalcup said. The Texans have two wins and one loss, an 89-76 defeat by highly-rated Bradley.
Hoag Returns to Class After Knee Operation
A sewer hole has played havoc with Kansas prospects for a successful cage season by stripping the Jayhawker squad of the "greatest sixth man in basketball." Charlie Hoag.
Hoag, a sparkplug of the 1952 Big Seven and NCAA championship team, was counted on to provide Phog Allen's green basketball squad with speed and scoring ability, before he was shelved with a knee injury suffered in the Kansas State football game.
The injury occurred when the Oak Park, Ill., senior was forced out of bounds and in trying to regain his balance, stepped in a sewer hole and jammed his knee.
Hog was forced to miss the Nebraska and Oklahoma A&M games and his loss crippled the Jayhawker offense. He was an offensive starter for the Missouri game but lasted only one play as the knee popped out of joint.
Just before Thanksgiving vacation, doctors decided that he should have the knee operated on at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City. The operation took place two weeks ago today, and Hong still is forced to wear crutches part of the time. He said that he won't need the crutches in about two weeks but that at present he is not able to bend his knee.
The Blanquita theater in Havana Cuba, has the largest seating capacity of any theater in the world, with 6,- 500 seats.
Hoag, all-state basketball selection in his senior year at Oak Park, Ill. High in 1949, lettered in his sophomore year at KU and developed into a great player last season. He rarely started, but became one of the most valuable utility players in the nation because of his tremendous hustle and speed.
His loss is a severe jolt to Kansas basketball prospects and Hoag said "I'm disappointed, but can't do much about it." He added that he thinks the Jayhawkers will do all right without him.
ALEXANDER HARVEY
OUT OF ACTION-Jayhawk guard Charley Hoag, who helped spark the 1952 Kansas team to the Big Seven and NCAA titles, will miss the current season because of a bad knee.
bad knee.
14
AFROTC Wins Close IM Game
KANSAS CAPTAIN — Dean Kelley, the only starter returning from the 1952 Jayhawker team, is a good floor man, shooter, and a great defender. He developed rapidly last year and was named to the NCAA all-tournament squad at Seattle.
Providing innumerable stories within a story, the International competitions as a whole drew more interest—and newsprint—than any other event in the entire history of sports. The top 10 in order appear here to be:
A thriller in which the AFROTC shaded the Know Nothings by two points, in the independent "B" division, highlighted the five-game intramural basketball slate yesterday.
In a nip and tuck game which saw the lead change hands several times, the AFROTC defeated the Know Nothings 37-35. The Know Nothings held a slim 21-18 halftime lead, but were out-played in the second half by a sharp shooting Air Force quintet. Ronald Sams carried the scoring load for the Air Force with 19 points, while Dick Radley was high for Know Nothings with 13.
AFROT C 37. Know Nothings 35
New York—(U.P.)—Because of their world-wide interest, the 1952 Olympic games today were awarded top spot in Fearless Frailey's annual ranking of the year's 10 best sports stories.
Kappa Sig 41, Delta Chi 35
Duane and Archie Unruh scored 20 and 10 points respectively to lead Kappa Sigma to a 41-35 victory over Delta Chi in the only fraternity "A game yesterday. Glyn Shaver scored 11 points to pace the Delta Chi quintet.
Alpha Tau Omega held a hapless Triangle team to two points in the first half, and six in the second as they won an impressive 86-8 rout. Darrell Walker was high point man for the ATO's with 20 points. This game was in the fraternity "B" division.
ATO 86. Triangle 8
Independent "B" SCORES
Gamma Delta 29, Nu Sigma Nu 19
Black Knights 31, Gnip Gnips 26
OTHER SCORES
Fraley Picks 10 Top Sports Stories
TODAY'S GAMES Robinson Annex
4 Don Henry-Battenfeld
5 Stephenpson-Jolliffe
6 Sterling-Oliver-Pearson
7 Last Chance-ISA
8 Jim Beam-Theta Tau
9 AFROTC-YMCA
Robinson Annex Independent "A"
Robinson Gymnasium
Independent / DIl
8:15 NROTC-Aluminum Five (E)
8:15 win Pines-Oread (W)
Friday
9:15 DU III-Delta Tau Delta II (E)
9:15 PG DU-Relta Teta Ei W(J)
No intramural basketball games are scheduled for Friday because of Christmas
1. Olympic games.
3. Marciano-Walcott heavyweight championship.
z. world series.
- Kentucky derby.
* Boros wins U.S. open
4. Kentucky derby
5. Boros wins U.S. open.
6. Sedgman-Connolly.
6. Sedgman-Connolly U.S. - Wimbledon grand slams
7. Kentucky - Bradley basketball suspensions.
8. Despirito's ride on the records.
6. Desipitre rite on the records.
7. Robinson-Maxim "heat collapse".
9. robinson-maxim "heat collapse"
10. Walcott - Charles Fight.
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By CLARKE KEYS
Kansas Assistant Sports Editor
It's Kansas State all the way. That's our opinion after witnessing the methodical 81-60 defeat the Wildcats handed San Francisco Monday night.
The Wildcats have been picked all along to be the team to take over the top spot in the Big 7 and national scene from the Kansas Jayhawkers, but Coach Jack Gardner's charges have looked so good, so early, that they may surpass everyone's guess.
Paced by Dick Knostman and four other lettermen, the Wildcats have taken their first three games of the young season. Two, over Drake and Indiana, were squeaks, but with the sophomore bench that the Wildcats have, that could be understandable. But even the sophomores looked tops against the SFU Dons.
K-State didn't give the Dons much of a chance to find themselves as they tore to a 20-11 first quarter lead and went on from there. The Wildcats hit on 38 per cent of their shots from the field while a cold San Francisco club, forced to go over the top, connected on only 22 per cent. State dominated the backboards too, clearing 35 rebounds to 49 for the Dons.
The biggest moan coming out of the Wildcat camp this fall has been the loss of speed in Jim Iverson, "Hoot" Gibson, and Gene Wilson, all gone off last year's conference runner-up team. But if the Cats are slower this season, they must have been mighty swift last year.
Following that old Gardner custom, this year's Wildcats continually speed and drive for the bucket. They very seldom stop to run a real pattern. They got most of their shots from close in off the drives, but if the defense keeps them out, boys like Gene Stauffer and Bob Rousey pump over the defenders to hit.
As far as rebounding goes, very few teams have ever had the board-clearing power that Gardner has at his finger tips. Instead of getting shorter, the substitutes Gardner puts in tower nearer and nearer toward the rafters in the new field house.
Gardner didn't give his starters much of a chance to play Monday, but their brief appearance convinced the crowd of 11,500 that they are every bit as good as reported. Knostman played only 14 minutes, well under half the game, yet scored 15 points. He also cleared seven rebounds in that time, plus acting as that important feed man in the Wildcat offense.
An all-American last year, apparently nothing can keep him from such an honor this season.
Then there was controversial Jack Carby who grabbed nine points and nine rebounds in playing a fine game. Most of Carby's points came on tip-ins and he proved that he really can jump.
Jesse Prisock is another big letterman who will really be tough to outplay. The junior from Emporia scored 11 and took seven rebounds against the Dons.
The Wildcats put up a mighty stiff defense against San Francisco and only some fine second half long distance shooting enabled the Dons to score much at all.
Yes, the usual boisterous K-State crowd should have plenty to cheer about this season.
USC Starts Intense Drills In Hopes of Rose Bowl Win
Los Angeles—(U.P.)—Southern California, its aura of invincibility dispelled by Notre Dame, buckled down today with determination to restore Pacific Coast prestige in the Rose Bowl New Year's day with a victory over Wisconsin.
Gone was Southern California's dream of its first perfect season since 1932. But the Trojans still can salvage a large measure of greatness for 1952 if it becomes the first team to whip a Big Ten representative since the start of the bowl series with the Midwest conference.
It was a bitter blow to Coach Jess Hill and his team when they fell before Notre Dame in the final game of the regular season, 9-0. Whether Southern Cal can survive the blow and come back against Wisconsin will be answered New Year's Day. Before the Irish "champion-wreckers" laid them low, the Trojans were favored strongly here to beat the Badgers. But the Trojans couldn't come back last year after a defeat and there are some who feel they can't this season, either.
Hill's usually genial attitude was replaced by one of grimness as he worked his players for the Rose Bowl. A winning coach can't be considered "on trial." But the Notre Dame defeat revived talk of Southern Cal's sputtering offense, talk that had subsided after the Trojans' last three conference wins over Stanford, Washington and UCLA.
The greatest team in the west on defense, Southern Cal had its defensive might matched by the Irish.
That means Hill must be able to generate sustained drives that lead to touchdowns if he hopes to beat the Badgers. And he "Has the horses" to do the job if they click as a unit.
In Jim Sears, Southern California fields the best all-around seen in the west this year. Flanking him are Al Carmichael at wingback under the Hill single-wing system, George Bozanic as blocking back, and Leon Sellers at fullback.
who also were able to generate a scoring thrust. Although Hill would not say it, Trojan fans believed that the defense would rally against Wisconsin. No team, however, has kept Wisconsin from scoring this season.
Villagers Must Stop Smoking
Great Neck, N.Y. — (U.P.)— Residents of this Long Island community located near the Sinclair Refining company depot were warned today to give up smoking or else.
Police and volunteer firemen warned residents against smoking or lightning matches after a 188,000-gallon high octane gasoline storage tank sprung a leak underground and gasoline bubbled from the ground in half a dozen places.
I
。
About 60 per cent of all U.S. visitors to Canada cross the border at Ontario.
Thursday, Dec. 18, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Help make this a really Merry Christmas DRIVE CAREFULLY
- Avoid accidents during the Holidays
- Look out for ice, snow,and poor road conditions
- Use extra caution... We'd hate to lose a friend
The Bells in the Air
Motor Co.
714 Vt.
Phone 3500
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Dec. 18, 1952
On the Hill
By JEANNE FITZGERALD Kansas Society Editor
Alpha Delta Pi sorority held its annual formal Christmas dinner Tuesday evening at the chapter house. The guests of honor were Chancellor and "Mrs. Franklin D. Murphy. Other guests were Miss Agnes Brady and Miss Kathleen O'Donnell.
***
Mortar Board, senior women's honor society* will hold its annual Christmas party-meeting at 9 o'clock tonight at the Sigma Kappa house. Gifts will be exchanged and refreshments will be served.
\* \* \*
Pearson hall held its annual Christmas dinner Wednesday evening at the hall. Guests were Chancellor and Mrs. Franklin D. Murphy.
**
Delta Delta Delta sorority was entertained by Delta Chi fraternity with a dessert dance Thursday at the fraternity house. Chaperones were Mrs. C. H. Wentworth and Mrs. L. L. Williams.
Alpha Tau Omega fraternity held a buffet dinner for the members of the chapter and their dates Tuesday evening at the chapter house. After dinner the guests were entertained by singing Christmas carols and dancing. The fraternity also held its annual formal Christmas dinner Wednesday night at the chapter house.
- * *
Delta Chi fraternity announces the pledging of John Buller, college freshman, Thursday. Buller is a letter man on the freshman football team. His home is in Lyons, Kan.
Corbin and North College halls will hold a Christmas dinner for faculty members tonight at the halls. Guests will be Dean and Mrs. Paul B. Lawson, Dean and Mrs. T. DeWitt Carr, Miss Martha Peterson, Miss Mary Peg Hardman, Mr. and Mrs. James K. Hitt, Dean and Mrs. Donald K. Alderson, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Nichols, Dr. and Mrs. Ralph I. Canuteson, and Dean and Mrs. Gilbert Ulmer.
***
A formal Christmas dinner will be held by Delta Gamma sorority tonight at the chapter house. It will be followed by a dessert for the Lawrence alumnae of the sorority.
Alpha Omicron Pi sorority held its annual formal Christmas dinner and party Monday night at the
1953
MISS NANCY PINKNEY
Pinkney-Evans Engaged; Wedding Set for April
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Pinkney of Ford, Kan., announce the engagement of their daughter Nancy Ann to Mr. Dean Evans, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Evans of Kingman, Kan.
Miss Pinkney is a senior in the School of Education and Mr. Evans is a junior in the William Allen White School of Journalism. The wedding will be in April at Ford, Kan.
Brown-Barnhill Pinned
Delta Gamma sorority announces the pinning of Diane Brown, fine arts sophomore, to Stanley Barnhill, a member of Sigma Alpha Epison fraternity. Both persons are from Junction City, Kan.
chapter house. Toys were exchanged among the members for distribution through the Salvation Army.
\* \* \*
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity held its annual Christmas dinner Wednesday night at the chapter house. A gift exchange among the members followed the dinner.
- * *
Alpha Omicron Pi sorority announces the recentpledging of Ruth Sutton, fine arts sophomore from Leavenworth, Kan., and Jeanne Skinner, fine arts sophomore from Wichita, Kan.
***
The pledge class of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity entertained women from Foster hall with a dessert dance Tuesday night at the fraternity house. Chaperones were Mrs. J. I. Hollingsworth and Miss Adelle McClelland.
THE BUS (Adv.)
by Bibler
THE RAPID TRANSIT CO.
MERRY CHRISTMAS
and a
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
"Cheer up, Reginald — they'll be back in a few days."
Washington — (U)P.— If the letters to Santa Claus are any indication, American parents are raising a pretty smart crop of very young.
Washington — (I,U)— If the letters
Kids' Letters to Santa Show-Ingenuity
One eight-year-old boy enclosed the pieces of a jig-saw puzzle with his note, which said: "Dear Santa: I do not want anything for Christmas, but if you can put this thing together in 10 minutes, I'll give you a present."
Here are some of the samples of a couple hundred letters, ai in childish scrawl and most of them addressed "Santa, North Pole."
Letters to the jolly old fellow in the red suit usually wind up in the dead letter office.
One little eight-year-old girl said she was writing in the interest of her younger sister, "who can't write." "She is a smart girl," the elder child said, "and would like a magic doll for she deserves it. I and my mother will send you the money." The girl signed her mother's name to the letter.
Another little girl, apparently intent on helping her mother around the house, said she wanted an electric iron, a carpet sweeper, a dust pan, a dust rag "and an apron to go with it."
Four neighborhood children and a dog dumped all of their letters into one cover and thus got away with only three cents postage.
The boys wanted the usual things, like kites and marbles. One of them ghost-wrote for the pup, which would, please, "like a rubber bone and some dog candy."
One boy wrote Santa Claus nothing. All he did was enclose a newspaper advertisement for a pair of house slippers.
Another boy asked for nothing, but gave Santa a change of address "in case you haven't looked it up in the phone book."
One girl asked for a doll baby and a cocktail set, and another said she would like "a table fit for three chairs."
One child, who said he was seven,
got confused in addressing his
letter. He addressed the note to him-
self and in the "from" slot he wrote
in a bold hand: "From Mr. Claus,
the Pole."
An unusual letter came from a six-year-old. She made a long list and then an adult apparently took up the task. On the other side of the letter the adult wrote: "Take care of this kid and I will have some cool, clear water for your reindeer." It was signed "Grammy."
Shop BROWN'S First
TEXT ONLY
WITH HOODS
HEAVY WEIGHT
FLEECE LINED
$2.98
SWEAT SHIRTS
TUXEDO RENTALS Complete Accessories
Brown's TOGGERY 830 Mass.
FIRST DOOR SOUTH OF PATEE THEATER
Artist
Merry Christmas
and a
Happy New Year
from
Carter's Stationery 1025 Mass. Phone 1051
FINEST FOODS
for Merry Christmas
FEASTING
YOUNG TOM
TURKEYS
lb. 49c
WILSON'S
HAMS
Half or Whole
lb. 49c
FINEST FOODS for Merry Christmas FEASTING YOUNG TOM
Ocean Spray No. 303 Can CRANBERRY SAUCE 15c
First Choice 10 oz. Pkg.
MARSHMALLOWS 10c
Crisp Whole Quart Jar SWEET PICKLES 39c
Kraft Famous Quart Jar
MIRACLE WHIP 47c
C and H Powdered or 1 lb. Box BROWN SUGAR 10c
All Vegetable 3 lb. Tin
CRISCO 79c
Fancy New Crop Ib. Cello Bag
MIXED NUTS 49c
Calif. Navel Large Doz.
ORANGES 45c
Andy Boy Large Stalk
CELERY 18c
Calif. Iceberg Large Heads
LETTUCE 2 for 35c
RUSTY'S
Food for Center
23RD. & LOUISIANA
LOW PRICES EVERYDAY
OPEN EVENINGS
AND SUNDAYS
IGA
LOTS OF THE
PARKING SPACE
COLE'S
Food for Center
2ND. AND LINCOLN
EVERYDAY LOW PRICES
Thursday, Dec. 18, 1952
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
"Santa Is Much Too Slow—Use Want Ads—Make Some Dough!"
Kansan Classified Ads
中
Call KU 376
TOM
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid on time during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journals may be received at 45 p.m. the day before publication date.
.
Classified Advertising Rates
One day Three days Five days
.50c 75c $1.00
.1c 2c $1.30
25 words or less Additional words
BUSINESS SERVICE
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sandwiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360.119 Mass.
BEYERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. tf
EXPERIENCED Typist. Term papers,
notebooks, theses and miscellaneous. Mrs.
J. R. Josco; 838 Louisiana, Apartment
4. upstairs. Phone 2775-1. tf
TYING WANTED. Prompt, accurate service. Pick-up and delivery service after 6 p.m. and before 8 a.m. Phone 3157R. Mrs. Livington. tf
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment in this area and have trained Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. tt
**KYPTING SERVICE.** experienced theses,
Boston 6th, MA. Mrs. Haf,
800 West 6th. Phone 1344W.
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 are devoted, our fur, kit, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tt
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
man buys. William J. Van
Almen, 3110R.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries.
Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6
am. until midnight. **tf**
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malts, home-made pies and cakes. Free parking space for customers.
MISCELLANEOUS
RADIO and TV service-same day as
service on all makes. Most complete stock
parts in this area. Bowman
Radio and TV Vermont. Phone 1343
prompt service. **134**
Comfort Convenience
JAYHAWKER
NEW Push-Bock CUSHIONED CHAIRS
NOW THRU SAT
NOW THRU SAT.
A STANLEY KRAMER Production
EIGHT
IRON MEN
A COLUMBIA PICTURE
donate Ballett College - Arthur Fitziland - Le Marvin - Richard Killen - Daniel Wilson - James Griffin - David McBurney - Mary Cattie Play by MORT MORT - Advised from his Groove Play by Sear of sound by JOHN RYAN - Advised from his FROGONI ANNA by FRED FROGONI ANNA by FRED FROGONI ANNA
LATE NEWS EVENTS
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
ENDS TONITE
"WHEN WORLD'S
COLLIDE"
FRIDAY - SATURDAY
"SNOW WHITE AND
THE SEVEN DWARFS"
CONCOC SERVICE-B - F. Goodrich tires and batteries, complete lubrication service plus expert automatic transmission ConcoC Service, BF and Massachusetts. 18f
DRESSMAKING, formals, alterations,
an experienced European dressmaker. See
Themis Zannetou, 1633 Vermont (down-
stairs apartment). Phone 14777. 1-6
LOST
Air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. midnight. Crystal Cafe, 609 Vt. tf TYP19S: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Penn. Phone 1396M. tf
SUEDE JACKET. Leo in 217 Journalism last Wednesday, morning. Dark brown. Extra long. Rewear. Call Roger Yarrington. 12-18
NAVY BLUE leather bilfoil, believed lost between Corbin and Blake last Friday. Contains ID card, key, and money. Please order please Eline Carlson. 860. 12-18
BROWN-RIMMED glasses in case. Friday between Robinson and Marvin. Call 2984J after 5 p.m. 12-18
TRANSPORTATION
TWO EUROPEAN students want ride to South, direction Florida or New Orleans. Share expenses, help drive. Phone Egon Sohmen. 2122. Urgent. 12-18
RIDE WANTED for two to South Dakota
Marshall Swain, 2934R
12-18
WANT A RIDE to New Orleans and back during the Christmas holidays. Will share drive and expenses. Please call Arnold Kottwitz, 2955 R, after 3:00.
ASK US ABOUT airplane rates, sky coach, family days, round trip recur. American Express and American Express land tours. Camard and Matson Sleemship lines. Call Miss Glessean at the national Bank for the Reservations 8th and Mass. streets. Phone 30.
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steampath and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether for meetings or conferences. Mrs. Lois Odafter, 3661, Downs Travel Service. 1015 Mass.
FOUND in front of library. Butler county,
identify. Identify. identify.
nav for攻 at UDK office. 12-18
FOUND
WANTED
TYPIST WANTED close to 1219 Ohio.
Call Ahmed. 2233W. 12-19
STUDENTS interested in working new banquet service at Student Union for Miss Harvey or Union Miss Harvey or Union Tomlinson between 2 and 4 p.m. tfr Union cafeteria office.
CLERK-TYPIST II—must be careful, accurate typist, ready to learn typewriter techniques, be trained in minimo-operator. Also need binder worker —mailing, inserting, gathering, etc. Previous experience if possible. Age, both positions, under 40. University of Kansas Press, Journalism Building. 12-tf
Brazilian School Offers Fellowships
Two fellowships are being offered by the Uniao Cultural Brasil-Estados Unidos, Sao Paulo, Brasil, for young men graduates with good knowledge of Portuguese or another romance language.
Candidates must be American citizens with a bachelor's degree from a recognized American college or university by the date of departure. They must be under 35 years of age, and will be required to teach English a minimum of six hours a week at the Unoa.
The period of the fellowship is from March 1, 1953, for an academic year. Application blanks may be secured from the U. S. Student Program of the Institute of International Education, 1 E. 67th st. New York 21, N. Y. Applications and all supporting documents must be filed by Feb. 1.
Phi Sigma Hears Lecture on Birds
Fellowships cover tuition fees in any of the faculties of the University of Sao Paulo and in the Portuguese courses of the Uniao Cultural, room and three meals a day, and a monthly allowance.
"Short-winged birds are for power flying and short distances of speed, while birds with long pointed wings are for long flights," H. B. Tordoff, instructor of zoology and assistant curator of the Natural History museum, told Phi Sigma, honorary biological fraternity, Tuesday at Snow hall.
"Contrary to popular belief, pheasants can fly faster than quail. This is probably because a pheasant is larger and appears to fly slower than it actually does," he said.
"White meat of a bird is designed for short, fast flight, while the dark meat is designed for long flights.
Dr. Charles D. Michener, chairman of the department of entomology, is attending several scientific meetings in Philadelphia this week and will present research reports on bees, a subject on which he is one of the world's authorities.
The Entomological Society of America and the American Association of Economic Entomologists are holding their annual meetings Dec. 15-18. Meeting for the first time will be the American section of the International Union for the Study of Social Insects of which Dr. Michener is secretary.
During the latter meeting Dr. Michener will be chairman of a symposium on "Caste Determination in Social Insects." This is the problem of why apparently identical insect eggs develop differently to produce queens or workers.
Professor Attends Entomology Parley
"THE BANK OF FRIENDLY SERVICE"
Douglas County State Bank
Washington—(U.P.)—There will be regular mail deliveries on Dec. 26—the day after Christmas—even though it is a holiday for federal workers.
Dr. Michener also will give a research report on the biology of the halictine or sweat bees.
for a
Christmas Greetings
Prosperous New Year
Truck registrations in the United States increased by 77.8 per cent in 10 years-from 4,839,064 in 1940 to 8,637,969 in 1950.
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
Telephone 3200
Postmen to Work Dec. 26
The Postoffice department said enough workers will be kept on the
and
Best Wishes
NOW!
SUSPENSE!
EXCITEMENT!
THE UNLUCKY HOUR!
...in a Showdown
Between Criminals!
"THE
HOUR
OF 13"
Miriam-
Schultze-Mayer
PHOTOGRAPHY
Peter
LAWFORD with ADDAMS
Roland Derek
CULVER • BOND
MAT. 2:30—EVE 7 and 8:56
FEATURES: 3:06 - 7:36 - 9:32
ADDED
JIMMY DORSEY
And His Band
CARTOON — NEWS
NEXT!
"THE STEEL TRAP"
GRANADA
job to insure regular mail service. The department also said there will be the usual parcel post deliveries on Christmas day, although there will be no regular mail service.
The department said any employees forced to work on Christmas or Dec. 26 will be given time off ater.
STARTS
FRIDAY
THIS ONE IS REALLY CUCKOO!!
Something for the millions who loved and laughed at the "MIRACLE ON 34TH STREET" and MR.880"
Something for the Birds
20th CENTURY FOX
starring
VICTOR PATRICIA EDMUND
MATURE·NEAL·GWENN
WITH
AARRY KEATING · DIADYS HUFFIN HUTT · MICH CANDERLE · PRODUCTION BOM
LARRY KEATING - BLAYS HURLEBUT - NUH SANDBERS - CHRISTIAN RUB
3 SHOWS FRIDAY
MAT. 2:30 - OPEN 2:00
EVE. 7-9 OPEN 6:45
FEATURE: 3:10 - 7:40 - 9:40
WEVE ADDED
Xavier Cugat and Orch.
CARTOON — NEWS
Patee
PHONE 321
HURRY: ENDS TONITE!
Robert Ryan — Ida Lupino
"BEWARE MY
LOVELY"
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Dec. 18, 1952
U.S. Ups Ante in Pact; Gives $225 Million
Paris—(U.P.)-The United States has agreed to pay 40 per cent of a temporary 1953 Western Europe base-building program on which a high-level North Atlantic Treaty organization committee agreed to spend at least $225 million, authoritative sources said today.
The U.S. apparently upped its offer from 35 to 40 per cent of the 1953 share-the-cost program, in a final effort to push through the temporary base-building program and save the Atlantic Pact conference from becoming a complete failure.
American Defense Secretary Robert A. Lovett in an attempt to goad
Debate Team WinsTourney
The University debate squad added to its record the championship in the junior division at the Southwest college debate tournament at Winfield Friday and Saturday. Other than this, they have won two tournaments and taken second place in a third.
A total of 28 schools from 6 states participated in the Winfield tourney. Each team took part in five preliminary rounds, and the eight best teams in each division—junior and senior—went on to the quarterfinals, semifinals, and finals.
The team of Bill Arnold and Hugh Bell, college sophomores, were entered in the junior division. They won their division by defeating the Garden City Junior college in the finals, and losing only one debate in the preliminaries.
The team of Lee Baird, college sophomore, and Bill Nulton, college senior, was entered in the senior division. They won four out of five of the preliminary rounds and were defeated by Southwest Missouri State Teachers college in the quarterfinals.
Nulton also received a "superior" rating in the discussion group; Bell took second place in extemporaneous speaking, and Arnold placed fourth in oratory.
his European colleagues into taking some action on the $425 million base-building program originally requested by supreme commander Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway had said the U. S. would pay only 35 per cent of the costs in 1953.
Last year the U. S. paid 42.8 per cent of the program costs.
The temporary base-building program would be a stop-gap until President-elect Eisenhower assumes office.
The fourth and last day of the meeting here saw an important policy debate in the full council with Lovett fighting Europe's desire to avoid maximum defense spending.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Deutscher Verein: no meeting today.
FBLA Christmas party: 4 p.m. Strong.
Havent seen you.
IAS: sponsoring film, "Wind Tumel
Flutter Test, B of A-47 model, 5 p.m.
on Saturday" (Saturday only).
Christian Science organization; 7 p.m.
Danforth chapel.
ISA: special meeting, 7 p.m. Pearson hall. Everyone please come to wrap the
Student Curriculum Committee: 8 p.m.
Strong Annex F 3.
Community Christmas Worship service: 8 p.m. First Presbyterian church. YM-YWCA and KU Chorale presenting the program.
Liquid Air Demonstration: 8:30 p.m.
305 BCL by Dr. Hailgt. Public invited.
for a caroling party
meet at 32 Strong. All actives
and pledges to attend.
Western Civ Registration Set
Registration for Western Civilization final exams will be held Jan. 5,6,7 in 9 Strong Annex C, Rupert Murrill, sociology instructor, said today. All students who plan to take the exam to be given Jan. 10 must be registered.
About 1400 copies of the Sour Owl, campus humor magazine, have been sold with about 100 remaining, Editor Ron Kull, said today.
'Hotcake' Sales Reported for 'Owl'
The magazine, which sells at 30 cents, will be sold at the information booth only, he said. It contains 24 pages and features jokes, cartoons by Dick Bibler and Paul Coker, and off-beat information
Stories include an "expose" of night life in Strong hall, how to read war news, satires on entering freshmen, University life, and the Guano bird.
Court Finds StudentGuilty
The Student Court last night found one person guilty of parking violations, one not guilty, and held one case over.
Two others also charged with parking violations did not appear in court.
Alan Heath, business senior, who received a ticket for parking in the I parking zone, was found not guilty by a 6-0 decision. Heath won his case on the ground that he had a permit to park in the I zone even though it was not on his license plate.
Roger Collins, engineering freshman, who received a ticket for parking in the C zone behind Fowler shops, was found guilty by a 6-0 decision. The prosecuting attorney won the case for the school on grounds that ignorance is no excuse.
The case of Robert W, Atchison, graduate student, held over from the last court session, is to be held over again so that the defendant can provide witnesses or council.
Robert Boston, college junior, and Paul Krause, engineering sophomore, did not appear, so were automatically found guilty.
A $1 or $2 penalty will be levied by the traffic office against those found guilty according to the number of tickets they have had before.
Catholic Leader's Criticism May Cause Diplomacy Strain
Washington—(U.P.)—Catholic tempers flared and diplomats predicted a new strain in U. S.-Yugoslav relations today because of Marshal Tito's abrupt diplomatic break with the Vatican.
Six ROTC Cadets Win Commissions
Six Army ROTC cadets at the University will receive appointments as second lieutenants in the Regular Army upon their graduation in June, it was announced today by Col. Edward F. Kumpe, professor of military science and tactics.
A seventh KU cadet will receive a regular commission but he must wait until he becomes 21 in September of 1953. He is Gordon Eugene Moore, business senior, who will be commissioned in the transportation corps.
The seven were selected in a nationwide competition of distinguished military students. They will receive their commissions under the same circumstances and have the same career standing as the graduates of West Point.
This is the largest number of Regular Army commissions KU students have earned in one year. The six to be commissioned in June:
John Herman Evers, college senior; Eugene Charles Hall, fine arts senior; William Eugene Johnson, business senior; J. Knox Jones Jr., graduate student; Robert Merideth LaFollette Jr., engineering senior, and Christian John Mann, engineering senior.
The School of Fine Arts announced today that the presentation of opera scenes by the opera workshop, originally scheduled for this afternoon has been postponed until Thursday, Jan. 15.
Opera Scenes Postponed
Physics Professor to Speak
Max Dresden, associate professor of physics, will be the speaker at the meeting of the Psychology club at 7:30 p.m. tonight. His topic will be "The Scientific Method In Psychology."
Msgr. Thomas J. McCarthy of the National Catholic Welfare conference charged Yugoslavia is no different from Russia in its "ruthless" attempt to destroy organized religion.
Diplomats said the move was certain to fan opposition to the administration's policy of limited cooperation with Marshal Tito in the interests of European defense.
But the State Department remained silent. Officials were reluctant to talk in view of the explosive diplomatic and domestic religious overtones involved.
Msgr. McCarthy said America's 20,000,000 Catholics could be expected to react strongly. He said Marshal Tito's action was not only an attack on the church but a new "insult" to he revered Yugoslav primate, Archbishop Aloysius Stepinac."
Marshal Tito charged, among other things, that the Vatican interfered in internal Yugoslav affairs and that the recent elevation of Msgr. Stepinac to the College of Cardinals was "hostile and an insult."
FACTS Okays Jayhawker Action
FACTS political party endorsed Bill Nulton's Jayhawker proposal with an amendment last night at its meeting.
The amendment stated that Jayhawker editors not be paid more than $50 salaries a year and that commissions be granted only if the Jayhawker makes a profit and all commissions be granted on a percentage basis to the total profit.
Other business was an explanation of the ward system, endorsement of academic freedom discussed at the Big Seven student government conference, and discussion of the proposed national convention of progressive political parties similar to FACTS.
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Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
Merry Christmas
Donna Francis, fine arts sophomore, might not be the Santa Claus that will come down your chimney Wednesday night, but she is the kind we can all hope to meet. With pencil light, Donna expresses our wish to you.—Picture by Du. Moser and Phil Newman.
Dec. 18, 1952 Daily Kansan Picture Supplement Page 2
Daily Kansan Picture Supplement
The Inn at Mill Creek
THE U.S. MUSEUM OF ARCHITECTURE
HOTEL
Chris
at
DELTA CHI FRATERNITY
DANFORTH CHAPEL
THE COLLEGE OF STATISTICS
STRONG HALL
HOCH AUDITORIUM
SCHOOL OF PHILOSOPHY
Date Dec. 52
For Everyone!
Address University of Kansas
One Merry Christmas and
One Very Happy New Year
To be taken Dec. 25th
BAILEY CHEM LAB
Page 3 Daily Kansan Picture Supplement Dec. 18, 1952
tmas
KU
HOCH AUDITORIUM
SCHOOL OF PHARMACY
LAWRENCE KANSAS
For Everyone 1st Dec 52
Address University of Kansas
R. One Merry Christmas and
R. One Very Happy New Year -
Days To be taken Dec. 25th and
Jan. 1st.
BAILEY CHEM LAB
Dec. 18, 1952 Daily Kansan Picture Supplement
It Could Happen to You
Not everything about Christmas is merry.
For everything about Christmas is fiery.
Too many people work against this philosophy when buying presents. Even the honest mistakes in size, taste, etc., don't help make you happy. Embarrassed or chagrined—Yes.
Happy—No.
Of course, all this is of no consequence since we all know it's not the gift anyway, but the thought behind it. It's a fairly well established tradition to exchange gifts about this time of year — and who are we to criticize?
We hope none of the plights pictured on this page become yours on Dec. 25. Have a nice vacation, Merry Christmas, Happy New Year, and see you Jan. 5.
—Picture Story by Don Sarten
TOMMY HELSEN AND JONATHAN SMITH
PETALIE LEE
"Him and his beer parties," exclaims Barbara Simmons, a graduate student in social work, upon opening this gift, calculated to embarrass the non-drinking young lady. With a woman's ingenuity, it becomes the start of a new collection.
Artemis
LINGERIE
Now here's a lad who's about to get in some deep and hot water. Murray Meader, a fresh medical student is visualizing . . . but brother, "What will her mother say?"
Leon Mason and Don Waggoner, engineering sophomores, are thankful for this nice gift. But both can be excused for exclaiming, "But, what is it?" We'll give you a hint fellas, it's supposed to help cut down on your smoking expenses.
The girl is holding a large blanket.
Chrys Angersbach, an education junior, has a practical boyfriend. "But his 'size' judgment is lousy," she'll admit. It's a contrast to what most boys would prefer girls to wear in sweater sizes.
POSTO
STEEL
All of us have friends that delight in spending hours wrapping gifts that take the same amount of time to unwrap. But Will Larkin, an engineering sophomore, wound up with some gold cuff links after forgetting the untying and unwrapping process.
Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
50th Year, No. 65
Friday, Dec. 19, 1952
MERRY CHRISTMAS
FROM
THE STAFF
OF YOUR
UNIVERSITY
DAILY
KANSAN
AND
WORTHAL
AN' A
HAPPY
NEW
YEAR!
Eisenhower Releases Names of Four To Be Named to Top Defense Posts
New York—President-elect Dwight D. Eisenhower today announced the names of four men he will nominate for top positions in the Defense department. $ \textcircled{4} $
They were:
Secretary of the Army—Robert TenBroek Stevens, 53, of South Plainfield, NJ.
Secretary of the Navy—Robert Bernerd Anderson, 42, of Vernon Texas.
Secretary of the Air Force-Har-
d E. Talbott, 64 of New York.
Deputy Secretary of Defense Roger M. Kyes, 46, of Bloomfield Hills, Mich.
James C. Hagerty, Mr. Eisenhower's press secretary said the President-elect would send the names of the four nominees for the top defense posts to the senate for confirmation after his inauguration Jan. 20. Observers said no opposition was expected.
Mr. Eisenhower made the selections after a series of conferences with Defense Secretary-designate Charles E. Wilson on his return trip from Korea last week, Mr. Hagerty said. They conferred aboard the Cruiser Helena and at Honolulu.
The four nominees are men of similar background with years of experience as executives and directors of large corporations.
Mr. Keyes is a graduate of Harvard university, is married and has four daughters. Before becoming connected with General Motors, he was vice president of Empire plow company, Cleveland, and president general manager of Ferguson-Sherman Manufacturing corporation.
herman Manufacturing corporation.
Mr. Stevens is a graduate of Yale,
Mr. Talbott, a graduate of Yale university, is married and has two daughters and two sons. A former chairman of the board of North American Aviation company, Mr. Talbott now is a director for Commercial National Bank and Trust company, New York, and a member of the finance committee of the Chrysler corporation.
He has practiced law in Texas since 1932. In addition to his service as a member of the Texas legislature, Mr. Anderson has been an assistant attorney general and a state tax commissioner.
Washington —(U.P.)— Far Eastern expert Owen Lattinmore today pleaded innocent in federal district court to charges of lying seven times to Senate investigators.
is married and has three sons and one daughter. His war record included service as a 2nd lieutenant in World War I in field artillery, and in World War II. he served as a colonel in the office of the quartermaster general.
Mr. Anderson received his law degree from the University of Texas in 1932. He is married and has two sons. Since 1943 he has been vice president of Associated Refineries, Inc. He is director and deputy chairman of the board of directors of the Federal Reserve bank of Dallas, Tex.
Mr. Talbott served from 1942 to 1943 as director of aircraft production of the War Production board.
Owen Lattimore Pleads Innocent
The 52-year-old Far Eastern specialist was called before District Judge R. Kirkland today for arraignment on a seven-count perjury indictment growing out of his testimony before the Senate Internal Security subcommittee last winter.
In 1940, Mr. Stevens acted as head of the textile section of the National Defense Advisory commission.
Johns Hopkins university in Baltimore has granted him leave of absence, with salary, until his trial is concluded. If convicted on all counts he would be liable to a maximum penalty of 70 years in jail.
Prof. Lattimore indicated in advance of the hearing that he would plead "not guilty" to all of the charges, including the key one that he lied when he swore that he never promoted Communist interests.
The bond of the Johns Hopkins University professor was continued at $2,000 and his attorney, Thurman Arnold, made it at once in negotiable treasury notes.
Government counsel urged that Prof. Lattimore be confined to the District of Columbia and Maryland but Judge Kirkland said "After you make bond you can go anywhere in the world but be back on the day of the trial."
Judge Kirkland set the trial for "sometime about the first of March."
Sleet, Light Snow Hamper Exodus For Christmas
By KEN COY
Student prospects of mild Christmas weather were dashed today by sleet, light snow, and freezing rain which combined to create most road conditions over most of Kansas.
FBI Accuses Brink's Suspect
Boston — (U,P) — FBI affidavits singled out Joseph (Spees) O'Keeffe, a hoodium now facing a contempt charge, as a "participant" in the unsolved $1219 00 Brink's robbery.
The affidavits indicated O'Keeffe had referred to $60,000 taken in the nation's largest cash holdup as "baby" in a wire-tapped telephone conversation with his wife.
O'Keele thus became the first solid suspect to be named since eight men wearing Halloween masks overpowered Brink's guards and scooped up the money at the armored car firm's north end counting house on Jan. 17, 1950.
The "baby" angle came into the case last night when FBI agent John D. Greene's affidavits were introduced.
Greene said in one affidavit that the bespectacled O'Keefe, 44, received a telephone call at Bradford county jail in Pennsylvania from his wife, Mary, six months after the robbery.
O'Keele, who has a 20-year police record, was scheduled for continued hearing today before Federal Judge William T. McCarthy on a charge of contempt for refusing to answer a grand jury's questions.
The call, which had been tapped, was made by Mrs. O'Keefe from her Stoughton, Mass., home after she had been questioned by authorities about her husband's activities.
"And later he told her, 'Just take good care of the baby. You know what I mean,'" the affidavit said.
"He asked her whether or not anything was found and she answered 'no'," the affidavit said.
Fatzer Studies Detector Tests
Topeka —(U.P.)— Kansas Attorney General Harold R. Fatzer's office today studied the results of lie detector tests taken by State Representative Howard Bentley and John Harvey, special representatives of an architectural firm.
Fatzer announced after completion of questioning of the two men last night that the tests indicate Bentley was "truthful" when he charged that Harvey offered him payment for securing contracts for the firm.
Bentley had charged that Harvey told him "it would be worth ten per cent of the normal architectural fee, or roughly $50,000, for me personally, if I would see that his firm got the business."
Bentley had charged that Harvey offered him payment for securing contracts for the firm.
The project is a proposed 9-million dollar state office building.
Thomas W. Williamson, member of the Topeka firm, repeated a statement that "no member of our firm has ever directly, indirectly, by implication or otherwise ever conveyed to any of our employees the idea that we would consider business obtained" on such a basis.
Pianist Wins Scholarship
Pianist Martha Heck, fine arts senior, has been awarded the Carruth Memorial scholarship. This $50 grant was established in 1909 by W. H. Carruth in memory of his wife. Each year a Lawrence high school student who makes the highest grades in German over two semesters is given the award.
Freezing rain, sleet, and snow blanketed the state, spreading a snow cover of 2 to 3 inches over the western half of the state and putting a hazardous film of ice on the rest of the highways.
Continuing wet and snowy weather tonight and tomorrow is expected by the weather forecasters. Snow will probably be limited to the western half of the state, they added.
Rain up to 84 inches fell at Pratt during the night and yesterday. The highway patrol reported highways were very slick in the west and spots in the east were icy and treacherous.
Precipitation for Kansas was .68 inch at Hutchinson, 41 at Dodge City, .55 Russell, .38 at Hays, .30 at Hill City, .22 at Garden City, and .01 at Goodland.
reportedthat.35inchesofrainhadfallen The Lawrence weather forecaster reported that .35 inches of rain had fallen in Lawrence through the night and this morning.
As the vacation begins, students remembered the Thanksgiving vacation when they faced one of the worst snow storms in the area for many years. For this reason bus and train depots expected a big run on ticket sales to homeward bound students trying to "beat the storm."
Classes were expected to suffer this afternoon as many students "cut" to get an early start. However, the Union bus depot reported only slightly increased ticket sales this morning and the train depots said they had only many calls but few sales.
Both the trains and the buses expected a rush later this afternoon. Heavy skies are prevalent throughout the Lawrence area today.
With rainfall and the freezing temperatures expected this afternoon, roads are described as "hazardous." The Union reported there would be a special schedule for students meals for those staying in Lawrence.
There will be a coffee line from 7:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.; breakfast from 7:30 to 8:30 a.m.; lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., and dinner from 5 to 6 p.m.
There will be meals served every day except Christmas day and New Year's day when only hunch will be served. All other campaes cafes reported they will be closed until after the vacation.
Classes will resume at 8 a.m.
Monday, Jan. 5.
MERRY CHRISTMAS
Lawrence Sophomore Wins ISA Scholarship
Mary Beth Snead, fine arts sophomore, is the winner of the $50 Independent Student association scholarship, Ron Sammons, college junior, chairman of the scholarship board, announced today.
Miss Snead is from Lawrence and is studying in occupational therapy. She was judged among the applicants to be highest in merit, leadership, and scholastic standing.
'Y' Groups Sponsor Inter-faith Service
The Interdenominational church service sponsored by the YWCA and YMCA was held at the First Presbyterian church Thursday night.
The script, written and directed by Richard Scott, college junior, was a modern adaptation of the familiar nativity Christmas story. The cast consisted of members of the YW and the YM, with choral selections by the University Chorale under the direction of Clayton Krehbiel.
Nursing Club Holds Party
A Christmas party for members of the pre-nursing club replaced their regular Wednesday meeting. Christmas stories and singing of carols provided entertainment, and refreshments were served.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Dec. 19, 1952
Little Man on Campus
by Dick Bibler
ANCIENT HISTORY
ASSIGNMENT
FOR TONORROW
192 - 243 ft
A BOOK LAMER
IN WELL
HAND
FRIEND
HOW TO
LAY BRICKS
"Don't you worry about how they'll make a living—just stress the importance of a college education."
Ask Yourself Why? Then Be Careful
You pick up the newspaper and read: "Three Children Killed In Car Accident." Too bad, you mutter, and turn the page. But you can't turn this page. This time you are part of the accident; you are there.
You are the student hurrying home for the Christmas eve celebration, driving too fast. You look with horror at the tragedy you have caused. Blood on your face from the gash in your forehead doesn't impair your vision. The scene is seared into your brain.
You are the mother staring numbly at the three silent bodies of your children. The initial shock keeps you from feeling your own pains or from actually knowing. You don't see the people who have gathered around you to help. You hear only a dull noise as the ambulance pulls up beside the cars, its siren still screaming.
You are the nurse called from the surgical team to help with the injured. This is your first emergency call and for a second you swallow hard; then force yourself to do what you must.
You are the doctor, vainly trying to find a child's heart beat through your stethoscope. You move from one treatment table to another, but there is not even a feeble throb to give you hope. You cover each small body with a sheet and come from behind the screen to help with the others.
You are an attendant taking the mother from the emergency room. Her cuts have been treated and she has been given a strong sedative; but not strong enough. You hear her begging, pleading for news of her children. You think something about Christmas being a time to celebrate a birthday; but this mother holds hands with death instead. You try to reassure her, comfort her.
You are the father who comes in answer to a tragic call. There are packages and bundles in your arms. A few minutes ago you wondered why in heaven's name a woman can't be on time. She knew you had lots to do on Christmas eve. The packages are forgotten now. You have cried before, but not since you were a young boy. The doctor explains to you; tries to make you understand. You, too, are numb. You are not interested in the "what." "who," or "how." There is only one question you can ask—"WHY?"
—Lorena Barlow.
Koerper's Jayhawker Letter Rates Answer from Writer
Some answer should be made to the letter from Win Koerper that appeared in the Kansan Tuesday concerning the "Jayhawker issue."
Though Mr. Koerper is pained by our "tone of sarcasm" he seems fairly adept at the technique himself. And he has chosen to get personal about it.
We have no feud with Mr. Koerper. We merely want to air a problem that most everyone thinks needs airing. That problem is the Jayhawker yearbook—why it isn't a better book for the money that goes into it.
He says for example that the book's $1,000 profits remained after expenses and bonuses were paid. On the contrary, the figures in the business office indicate that after the $1,039 profit was figured in June, the yearbook chiefs requested a 10 per cent bonus from this amount and received it—$150 apiece. And there are still a few bills outstanding against last year's Jayhawker.
We did not intend to "distort" the truth or "misrepresent" the facts—although Mr. Koerper seems to have done a good job of just that in his letter in at least one place.
The argument that $1,000 profits could not be estimated at the beginning of the year or spent on the last issue is also a good one except that it misses the point. We said—and meant—that all the money made—including the profits and the $1,000 given to Koerper and his business manager in salaries and bonuses last year—should go into the making of a better yearbook—into the permanent Jayhawker fund.
No part of it should be doled out in gifts to staff members by an advisory board without the consent of the ASC, as was done last year. We see that in the ASC bill raising the salaries this year —such bonuses will be checked from now on by the Council.
Secondly, Debater Koerper chose to counter only
one of several illustrations that were used to show the inconsistencies of student activity salaries. The point was that editing the Jayhawker is a student "activity" and participation in this activity should not be paid for. If it is, the council should be consistently generous with the students' money and should have annual salaries for cheer leaders; ASC, Student Union and AWS presidents, as well as for Kansan editors. But Mr. Koerper challenged the proposal only for Kansan salaries.
the proposal only to Kansan his argument that the Kansan editor gets grade points is true—he gets one—but that's the way the Journalism school operates. Work on the Kansan is a laboratory experience for students who plan to make a career of newspaper work.Maybe the Jayhawker could benefit too if it were staffed by students in a laboratory writing course with credits.
We will not discuss the relative merits of dollars and grade points, though we fail to see how the Kansan editor's one hour's credit equals the Jayhawk editor's $500.
We maintain that there is much to be desired in the business management of the book—and that few know where the money goes. Hopeful indications are seen in the efforts of Frank Norris this year to set up an adequate bookkeeping system—but this record system is long overdue.
As for our "closed shop" argument—this was just one point brought out about the limited nature of the book. True, the Jayhawker board selects the most qualified person for the editor's job. But it seems obvious that these same experienced people have had the breaks in the past—the opportunities and lesser appointments that are necessary to gain the "experience" necessary for the big bear's job.
Mr. Koerper's argument that a "hundred or more students" are considered for important jobs is a little hard to take. —Dot Taylor
Flashbacks
DECEMBER 19
25 Years Ago
The third anniversary of radio station KFKU will be celebrated this evening with a "rally" program.
The concluding part of the annual Christmas tree program will be held outdoors in front of Blake hall tonight. The first part of the program will be held in Fraser chapel.
10 Years Ago
A committee of student representatives of Hill organizations met to discuss plans for "repudiating the mob action as representative of the student body." A group of students had protested the short Christmas holiday. A petition will be formulated asking the University Senate to reconsider its action in voting down two proposed resolutions granting students an extended vacation. (The Senate reconsidered and extended the vacation from four days to one week).
5 Years Ago
Gov. Frank Carlson telephoned Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra, to tell him that the revised goal of $18,000 needed to send the band to the Orange Bowl football game had been reached.
University nurses today took influenza vaccine to the organized houses on the Hill and gave the shots.
Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 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 second class master Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence Kan., Post Office act of March 3,
Letters
To the Editor of the Daily Kansan:
ASC Head Outlines Position
I have, on several occasions, been misquoted, misinterpreted, or falsely quoted which has led to several misunderstandings between the Kansan and myself. It is my feeling that a point by point explanation of the editorial policy and editorial board of the Kansan is necessary.
2. The Kansan was admittedly under some pressure when they formed the editorial board; however, my feeling is that they have taken a very progressive step in insuring that the editors shall be responsible to the Kansan board. Actually the control of the students over the Kansan was increased rather than decreased since the power of veto was placed in the hands of a board of students rather than the Dean of the School of Journalism.
1. The Kansan violated its policy as stated in its constitution in not remaining neutral in political editorializing. Admittedly the editors wrote as individuals but the fact remains that the presentation appeared to be the opinion of the paper.
3. The proposed review board, it passed by the Kansan board, will have many mutual advantages. Not only will it be an indicator opinion of the policy and presentation of the Kansan but also it will afford an opportunity for the Kansan to explain its problems and policies.
4. The ASC in its motion did not vote to the censor the Kansan as many
The council agreed to this instruction and tied the vote 11 to 11. I broke this tie with a "no" vote because I felt that few knew enough of the issue. These facts were neglected in the Kansam's stories.
As to particular issues I was quoted as saying that the Kansan's presentation of the housing problem was detrimental to public relations. This is a completely false statement. I have even gone to the point of stating that the Kansan presented the picture of need of housing very adequately with good editoriality.
GOOD KING SAUERKRAUT
LOOKED OUT!
ON HIS FEETS UNEVEN...
BEWARE THE SNOO LAY ROUND
AN' BOUT...
ALL KEERCHOO
ACHIEVIN'...
YOU THREE LI'L
KINGS OF THE OL'
ORIENT COULD BE
TRIMMIN' THE
CHRISTMAS TREE.
HER CHOO?
GES-UNDHEIT!
WHAT'S SNOO?
NOTHIN'... WHAT'S WITH YOU?
PAGEANT REHEARSAL TODAY
12-19
I have on two occasions criticized Miss Mary Cooper for her editorials on the appointment of the housing committee. She had not, to my knowledge, investigated the particulars behind the appointments nor the duties of this committee.
"that the ASC go on record opposing censorship of the UDK.
"Yes means in favor of the motion. No does not mean that you favor censorship, but that you do not know enough about the issue."
students thought. The motion was stated as follows:
Many members felt that they did not know enough about the issue to vote intelligently; others felt it was not our place to consider it while some felt this was a proper stand for the ASC to take. I instructed the vote as follows:
PLACES! EVER 'BODY... PLACES!
NOW WHAT?
TELL THESE LIL' BURGLARS I AINT NO CHRISTMAS TREE!
ORDERS IS ORDERS! YOU SAY TRIM SO TRIM IT IS!
IF, AS HE CLAIM, HE IS PLAYIN' THE PART OF A CAMEL, HOW COME HE GOT BRANCHES?
I am very desirous of having good student housing on the campus and I am in complete accord with the philosophy of the University Planning Committee concerning housing. I feel that the committee can organize an overall housing program.
I am not unwilling to accept any and all criticism, in fact I welcome it, if it is well-founded in fact and the issue well understood by those concerned. I feel that on all controversial issues that I have a right to express the meaning of my statements. I hope that this has helped to create a better understanding between the Kansan and me. I hope to look forward to cooperation from the Kansan to aid in the solution of many of the problems of the University.
---
Wm. J. Wilson President of ASC
Friday, Dec. 19, 1952
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Let Us Show What We Believe
In the hurry and scurry of preparing for Christmas—buying gifts, selecting a tree, perhaps planning a vacation—we sometimes become so absorbed in the activities of the holiday season that we give little to its real significance.
This is, after all, a solemn time—a time for rededication to God, to church, to basic moral and spiritual concepts.
What ever our particular faith may be this is the season to reaffirm it—and to realize our eternal need of it. For in this tense and uncertain year of 1952 we need the support of religion more than we have ever needed it before.
Why? Because we are at war in one corner of the world with a power that flately denies God and the validity of his teachings. The Communist philosophy holds the State to be superior to everything else, including God. And to such a sacrilige we of the free world can never subscribe. For we have built our way of living, our way of thinking, our very liberty, on God's laws. What is the American Constitution itself but a new statement of the dignity of man as sanctified in the Bible?
Thus, of the foreign scene, we are this Christmas at death grips with a force that would, if it could, wipe out our most sacred religious beliefs. ALL OF US, . . . Protestants, Catholics, Jews . . . face the threat TOGETHER!
And on the domestic scene we find ourselves beset by other forces of moral disruption—gangsters, corrupt officials, even narcotic poisoners of our children.
IN OUR CHURCHES.
To fight off these enemies of decency at home and abroad we need to call on our utmost moral strength, our firmest spiritual convictions. And where we can find such strength? There is only one enduring source:
No matter what faith we profess, the Pulpit stands as an inexhaustible fount of spiritual power. In the scriptures and sermons of our clergy we can find the answers to all the vilifications of God that flow from Communist mouths.
This can and should be a holiday season in the truest sense of the words—a holy day season.
Let us make it that. Let us affirm its real meaning by going to the church of our preference—not once, not only at Christmas iteself, but again and again. To fill our houses of worship to overflowing, to claim our loyalty to the teachings of God—what greater defence could we hurl at those who scorn and assail those teachings?
Crowded churches would be a true measure of Communism's failure. They would, moreover, be the strongest attestation to prove that American decency has not given way to the onslaughts of domestic evil.
Let us turn to our houses of worship—and let us continue to fill them as long as we believe in man's fight to freedom, integrity, and decency.
A CANDLE IN A WREATH
LAWRENCE Sanitary MILK and ICE CREAM CO.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Dec. 19, 1952
Little Man on Campus
by Dick Bibler
ANCIENT HISTORY
ASSIGNMENT
FOR TOMORROW
172 - 243 pt
A BOOK LAWER
WELL
YOUR
FRIENDS
HOW TO LAY
BRICKS
"Don't you worry about how they'll make a living—just stress the importance of a college education."
Ask Yourself Why? Then Be Careful
You pick up the newspaper and read: "Three Children Killed In Car Accident." Too bad, you mutter, and turn the page. But you can't turn this page. This time you are part of the accident; you are there.
You are the student hurrying home for the Christmas eve celebration, driving too fast. You look with horror at the tragedy you have caused. Blood on your face from the gash in your forehead doesn't impair your vision. The scene is seared into your brain.
You are the mother staring numbly at the three silent bodies of your children. The initial shock keeps you from feeling your own pains or from actually knowing. You don't see the people who have gathered around you to help. You hear only a dull noise as the ambulance pulls up beside the cars, its siren still screaming.
You are the nurse called from the surgical team to help with the injured. This is your first emergency call and for a second you swallow hard; then force yourself to do what you must.
You are the doctor, vainly trying to find a child's heart beat through your stethoscope. You move from one treatment table to another, but there is not even a feeble throb to give you hope. You cover each small body with a sheet and come from behind the screen to help with the others.
You are an attendant taking the mother from the emergency room. Her cuts have been treated and she has been given a strong sedative; but not strong enough. You hear her begging, pleading for news of her children. You think something about Christmas being a time to celebrate a birthday; but this mother holds hands with death instead. You try to reassure her, comfort her.
You are the father who comes in answer to a tragic call. There are packages and bundles in your arms. A few minutes ago you wondered why in heaven's name a woman can't be on time. She knew you had lots to do on Christmas eve. The packages are forgotten now. You have cried before, but not since you were a young boy. The doctor explains to you; tries to make you understand You, too, are numb. You are not interested in the "what," "who,' or "how." There is only one question you can ask—"WHY?"
-Lorena Barlow.
Koerper's Jayhawker Letter Rates Answer from Writer
Some answer should be made to the letter from Win Koerper that appeared in the Kansan Tuesday concerning the "Jayhawker issue."
Though Mr. Koerper is pained by our "tone of sarcasm" he seems fairly adept at the technique himself. And he has chosen to get personal about it.
We have no feud with Mr. Koerper. We merely want to air a problem that most everyone thinks needs airing. That problem is the Jayhawker yearbook—why it isn't a better book for the money that goes into it.
We did not intend to "distort" the truth or "misrepresent" the facts—although Mr. Koerper seems to have done a good job of just that in his letter in at least one place.
He says for example that the book's $1,000 profits remained after expenses and bonuses were paid. On the contrary, the figures in the business office indicate that after the $1,039 profit was figured in June, the yearbook chiefs requested a 10 per cent bonus from this amount and received it—$150 apiece. And there are still a few bills outstanding against last year's Jayhawker.
The argument that $1,000 profits could not be estimated at the beginning of the yegr or spent on the last issue is also a good one except that it misses the point. We said—and meant—that all the money made—including the profits and the $1,000 given to Koerper and his business manager in salaries and bonuses last year—should go into the making of a better yearbook—into the permanent Jayhawker fund.
No part of it should be doled out in gifts to staff members by an advisory board without the consent of the ASC, as was done last year. We see that in the ASC bill raising the salaries this year—such bonuses will be checked from now on by the Council.
one of several illustrations that were used to show the inconsistencies of student activity salaries. The point was that editing the Jayhawker is a student "activity" and participation in this activity should not be paid for. If it is, the council should be consistently generous with the students' money and should have annual salaries for cheer leaders; ASC, Student Union and AWS presidents, as well as for Kansan editors. But Mr. Koerper challenged the proposal only for Kansan salaries.
Secondly, Debater Koerper chose to counter only
His argument that the Kansan editor gets grade points is true-he gets one-but that's the way the Journalism school operates. Work on the Kansan is a laboratory experience for students who plan to make a career of newspaper work.Maybe the Jayhawker could benefit too if it were staffed by students in a laboratory writing course with credits.
We will not discuss the relative merits of dollars and grade points, though we fail to see how the Kansan editor's one hour's credit equals the Jayhawk editor's $500.
We maintain that there is much to be desired in the business management of the book and that few know where the money goes. Hopeful indications are seen in the efforts of Frank Norris this year to set up an adequate bookkeeping system-but this record system is long overdue.
As for our "closed shop" argument—this was just one point brought out about the limited nature of the book. True, the Jayhawker board selects the most qualified person for the editor's job. But it seems obvious that these same experienced people have had the breaks in the past—the opportunities and lesser appointments that are necessary to gain the "experience" necessary for the big bear's job.
Mr. Koerper's argument that a "hundred or more students" are considered for important jobs is a little hard to take. -Dot Taylor
Flashbacks DECEMBER 19 25 Years. Ages.
The third anniversary of radio station KFKU will be celebrated this evening with a "rally" program.
The concluding part of the annual Christmas tree program will be held outdoors in front of Blake hall tonight. The first part of the program will be held in Fraser chapel.
10 Years Ago
A committee of student representatives of Hill organizations met to discuss plans for "repudiating the mob action as representative of the student body." A group of students had protested the short Christmas holiday. A petition will be formulated asking the University Senate to reconsider its action in voting down two proposed resolutions granting students an extended vacation. (The Senate reconsidered and extended the vacation from four days to one week).
5 Years Ago
Gov. Frank Carlson telephoned Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra, to tell him that the revised goal of $18,000 needed to send the band to the Orange Bowl football game had been reached.
University nurses today took influenza vaccine to the organized houses on the Hill and gave the shots.
Mail subscription rates; $3. a semester or $4.50年 (add 1$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 second class master Sept. 17, 1910 at Lawrence Kan., Post Office act of March 3, 1879
Letters
ASC Head Outlines Position
To the Editor of the Daily Kansan;
1. The Kansan violated its policy as stated in its constitution in not remaining neutral in political editorializing. Admittedly the editors wrote as individuals but the fact remains that the presentation appeared to be the opinion of the paper.
I have, on several occasions, been misquoted, misinterpreted, or falsely quoted which has led to several misunderstandings between the Kansan and myself. It is my feeling that a point by point explanation of the editorial policy and editorial board of the Kansan is necessary.
2. The Kansan was admittedly under some pressure when they formed the editorial board; however, my feeling is that they have taken a very progressive step in insuring that the editors shall be responsible to the Kansan board. Actually the control of the students over the Kansan was increased rather than decreased since the power of veto was placed in the hands of a board of students rather than the Dean of the School of Journalism.
3. The proposed review board, if passed by the Kansan board, will have many mutual advantages. Not only will it be an indicator opinion of the policy and presentation of the Kansan but also it will afford an opportunity for the Kansan to explain its problems and policies.
4. The ASC in its motion did not vote to censor the Kansan as many
As to particular issues I was quoted as saying that the Kansan's presentation of the housing problem was detrimental to public relations. This is a completely false statement. I have even gone to the point of stating that the Kansan presented the picture of need of housing very adequately with good editoriality.
EL GOOD KING SAUERKRAUT
LOOKED OUT
ON HIS FEETS UNEVEN...
BEWARE THE SNOO LAY ROUND
AN' BOUT...
ALL KERCHOO
ACHIEVIN'...
YOU THREE LIL' KINGS OF THE OL'
ORIENT COULD BE
TRIMMIN' THE
CHRISTMAS TREE.
KER-
CHOO?
GES~
UNDHEIT!
WHAT'S
SMOOS?
NOTHIN'...
WHAT'S
WITH YOU?
PAGEANT
REHEARSAL
TODAY
12-19
The council agreed to this instruction and tied the vote 11 to 11. I broke this tie with a "no" vote because I felt that few knew enough of the issue. These facts were neglected in the Kansan's stories.
I have on two occasions criticized Miss Mary Cooper for her editorials on the appointment of the housing committee. She had not, to my knowledge, investigated the particulars behind the appointments nor the duties of this committee.
"that the ASC go on record or opposing censorship of the UDK."
students thought. The motion was stated as follows:
"Yes means in favor of the motion. No does not mean that you favor censorship, but that you do not know enough about the issue."
Many members felt that they did not know enough about the issue to vote intelligently; others felt it was not our place to consider it while some felt this was a proper stand for the ASC to take. I instructed the vote as follows:
PLACES!
EVER'BODY...
PLACES!
NOW WHAT?
TELL THESE LIL' BURGLARS I AINT NO CHRISTMAS TREE!
ORDERS IS ORDERS! YOU SAY TRIM 50 TRIM IT IS!
IF, AS HE CLAIM, HE IS PLAYIN' THE PART OF A CAMEL, HOW COME HE GOT BRANCHES?
I am very desirous of having good student housing on the campus and I am in complete accord with the philosophy of the University Planning Committee concerning housing. I feel that the committee can organize an overall housing program
I am not unwilling to accept any and all criticism, in fact I welcome it, if it is well-founded in fact and the issue well understood by those concerned. I feel that on all controversial issues that I have a right to express the meaning of my statements. I hope that this has helped to create a better understanding between the Kansan and me. I hope to look forward to cooperation from the Kansan to aid in the solution of many of the problems of the University.
-
Wm. J. Wilson President of ASC
Friday, Dec. 19, 1952 University Daily Kansan Pay
Let Us Show What We Believe
In the hurry and scurry of preparing for Christmasbuying gifts, selecting a tree, perhaps planning a vacationwe sometimes become so absorbed in the activities of the holiday season that we give little to its real significance.
This is, after all, a solemn time—a time for rededication to God, to church, to basic moral and spiritual concepts.
What ever our particular faith may be this is the season to reaffirm it—and to realize our eternal need of it. For in this tense and uncertain year of 1952 we need the support of religion more than we have ever needed it before.
Why? Because we are at war in one corner of the world with a power that flately denies God and the validity of his teachings. The Communist philosophy holds the State to be superior to everything else, including God. And to such a sacrilige we of the free world can never subscribe. For we have built our way of living, our way of thinking, our very liberty, on God's laws. What is the American Constitution itself but a new statement of the dignity of man as sanctified in the Bible?
Thus, of the foreign scene, we are this Christmas at death grips with a force that would, if it could, wipe out our most sacred religious beliefs. ALL OF US, . . . Protestants, Catholics, Jews . . . face the threat TOGETHER!
ters, corrupt officials, even narcotic poisoners of our children.
And on the domestic scene we find ourselves beset by other forces of moral disruption—gangs-
IN OUR CHURCHES.
To fight off these enemies of decency at home and abroad we need to call on our utmost moral strength, our firmest spiritual convictions. And where we can find such strength? There is only one enduring source:
No matter what faith we profess, the Pulpit stands as an inexhaustible fount of spiritual power. In the scriptures and sermons of our clergy we can find the answers to all the vilifications of God that flow from Communist mouths.
This can and should be a holiday season in the truest sense of the words—a holy day season.
Let us make it that. Let us affirm its real meaning by going to the church of our preference—not once, not only at Christmas iteself, but again and again. To fill our houses of worship to overflowing, to claim our loyalty to the teachings of God—what greater defence could we hurl at those who scorn and assail those teachings?
Crowded churches would be a true measure of Communism's failure. They would, moreover, be the strongest attestation to prove that American decency has not given way to the onslaughts of domestic evil.
Let us turn to our houses of worship—and let us continue to fill them as long as we believe in man's fight to freedom, integrity, and decency.
Holly
HOLLY BELL
Merry Christmas
LAWRENCE Sanitary MILK and ICE CREAM CO.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Dec. 19. 1952
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
ACCOUNTING
STATE BOARD ACCOUNTANCY
BUSINESS STUDENTS KID' EACH OTHER—Howard Stettler, associate professor of accounting, cooperates with a group of students of the marketing department in posing as a bookkeeper at a desk set up in front of the accounting office in the basement of Strong hall. The stunt is result of a mild rivalry between the accounting and marketing students. Sign above reads: "Wanted: Accountant. $150 per month. Top wages in the field, and we furnish very comfortable stool, eye shade,
sleeve garters and pen."—Kansan Photo by Phil Newman.
For Every Bob Cratchit There's a Benevolent Scrooge
The perennial feud between the lawyers and the engineers is not the only one raging over the campus.
A continuous intra-school rivalry exists between the marketing and accounting students in the School of Business. The latest gag was pulled by five marketing students, Howard Kisling, Bill Tobler, Wayne Bear, Kempel Wilhelmsen, and Paul Arrowwood, who ordered a special Christmas gift for the accounting students from Santa Claus.
The gift was a tail easel-top desk, similar to the one used by the much-abused Bob Cratchit in Dickens' "Christmas Carol." Appurtenances delivered along with the desk were a high stool, an eye shade, a pair of sleeve garters, and a quill pen.
The marketing students contend that this will be adequate working tools for the student accountant 40 years hence, when he hobbles into the office on his cane, hoists up his sleeve garters, climbs wearily up the rungs of his high stool, opens his beloved accounts receivable ledger, and begins scratching away with his old, faithful quill pen.
The accountants are pictured in the future as men who will feed their families bacon rinds and hominy grits, the meager benefits of a $15 a week salary. So say the marketers.
By RICH CLARKSON What causes accidents?
That is a question with a single answer. But that answer is something that the American public hates to admit. And consequently, experts in all fields associated with the problem spend millions of man-hours and billions of dollars trying to place the blame elsewhere.
Probably the costliest attempt at reducing accidents is the large number of million-dollar highway
Public Covers Up for Accident Culprit
Students Laugh With Lecturer
The 100 or more students who attended Dr. Gilbert Haight's lecture on the properties of liquid air yesterday spent most of the hour laughing.
Included in the "lecture" were demonstrations of how to make coffee with liquid air, how to boil an egg and how to make rubber as strong as steel.
A highlight of the demonstration came when Dr. Hight made a popgun from a cork and a test tube which contained some of the stuff.
A pair of his "colleagues" chose an inopportune moment to enter the lecture room late, and were peppered with corks from his improvised "air gun."
"In this test tube we have common ethyl alcohol, which we will lower into the liquid air." After several minutes the tube was lifted out and it was shown to contain frozen alcohol.
The demonstrations were liberally sprinkled with commentary, such as:
"This is how the chemist makes hard likker," he quipped.
Dr. Haight demonstrated how much more rapidly relatively "incombustible" materials burn in a container which holds liquid air.
A cigarette, for example, burns so completely that not a trace of ash is visible. A cigar, which Dr. Haight had some trouble in lighting, also burned itself out more or less completely.
In answer to the question, "What happens to animate things in liquid air," Dr. Haight brought out a hot dog and immersed it in the liquid air. Presently, he brought it out again and smashed it on the table top. "Dog gone," he said.
Affirming a desire to show those attending the lecture that "the chemistry department's heart is in the right place." Dr. Haight "unveiled" a Christmas greeting on the dual blackboard in the lecture room.
Then, sliding that out of the way,
he revealed a "chemical Christmas tree," which is actually a hodge-podge of chemistry props put together by Dr. Haight.
Get Out Prancer
If we want to get that tire fixed where we can depend on prompt service
2
we'd better call Art Nease at
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Standard Service
601 Mass.
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construction programs that have been instigated in many states following World War II. Although the resulting highways are a greater convenience to America's drivers, the result has not been to help the accident problem, but only to worsen it.
Statistics of the National Safety council show that most serious wrecks occur on level stretches of highways. In this very area, the majority of accidents occur on the best highways, while the corkssew roads with an excess of sharp corners carry the cleanest records.
Automobile manufacturers advertise the many safety features of the new cars, such as reinforced tops, leather covered dash boards, improved brakes, and better overall construction. Yet in the same advertisements, they point out that increased horsepower will make fast driving almost effortless.
The safety council records also show that less than four per cent of all fatal accidents are caused by mechanical failure.
Weather conditions, blamed by majority of one the principal causes of wrecks, actually contribute to than four-fifth of all fatal accidents.
With only one variable left, it becomes obvious through simple elimination that the driver himself is the principal cause in most accidents. The safety council's list of major causes—passing on hills, speeding, drinking and driving—shows where the true blame for America's poor safety records rests.
Return a Student—
Not a Statistic.
Campus Radio to Present Christmas Holiday Programs
University FM radio station KANU has an abundance of spec Christmas programs scheduled for the coming week.
Outstanding among them are:
Bach's complete "Christmas Oratorio" beginning at 8 p.m. Sunday. The station will remain on the air until about 10 to complete the "Oratoria."
A complete performance of the "Messiah" at 8 p.m. Wednesday. Again the station will remain on the air until the program is completed at about 10:30.
Monday: "The Heart of Shelter," special dramatic production by
Other Christmas programs scheduled on Sunday: Schutz "A Christmas Story" at 4 p.m.; "London Studio Concert" at 2:30; "Music for the Connoisseur" at 5, featuring the Randolph Singers, and "Candlelight Concert" from 6 to 7.
Throughout the week Christmas programs are planned for children at home at the time when the "Jayhawk School of the Air" is usually beard—2 to 2:15 and 2:30 to 3:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday.
The Christmas theme will also be featured on "Music You Want When You Want It" from 4 to 4:30 p.m. and Candlelight Concert from 6 to 7 p.m., Monday through Thursday.
A traditional reading of Dickens' "Christmas Carol" by Robert Calderwood, professor of English, from 7 to 7:30 p.m. Christmas Day over both KANU and KFKU.
BBC at 7:30 p.m. over both KANU and KFKU and "Music of the Baroque" from 8 to 9, featuring the Mt. Holyoke college choir in a program of Christmas hymns and carols.
Tuesday: "Britain's Ceremony of Carols" on Symphony Hall from 7 to 7:30 p.m., over both stations, and the FM Concert from 8 to 9, presenting the Robert Shaw choral.
Thursday: "Old English Carols"
from 2 to 12:51 p.m.; "Welcome, You"
at 2:30 to 3 with orchestra and
chorus presented by BBC; Marian
Anderson with Christmas music at
7:45, and Chamber Music from
8 to 9, presenting "Christmas with the
Trapp Family."
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←
Friday, Dec. 19, 1952 University, Daily Kansan Page 5
Merry Christmas Students
From
Te-Pee Jct. Highway 24-40
And
Marriott Cafe 2 Doors South of Patee
We have appreciated your patronage the past year and we are looking forward to seeing you in 1953
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday. Dec. 19, 1952
KU to Face SMU Tonight In First Home Cage Game
By CHUCK MORELOCK
Kansan Assistant Sports Editor
Kansas places a 12 game home-court winning streak on the block Friday and Saturday night when the green Jayhawkers meet the SMU Mustangs in a two-game series.
The Jayhawkers last defeat in Hoch auditorium came late in the 1951 season, when Oklahoma guard John Rogers hit a 24-foot last second shot which gave the Sooners a 61-59 upset victory. Kansas rebounded to whip Iowa State in the last home contest of the 1951 campaign then stopped 11 opponents last year.
The Mustangs easily could end the winning streak as they have three regulars returning from the 1951-52 edition which held the Jayhawkers to a 58-57 win after being trounced the previous night on the strength of a Clvde Lovellette 42 point blast.
The returnees are forward Jack Kastman, and guards Dick Bryant and Charles Galey. Kastman, a 6-3, 200 pound Shawnee-Mission product, led the Mustang team in scoring last year with 193 tallies.
SMU opened with narrow losses to Hardin-Simmons and Oklahoma and scored their first victory with a 63-62 squeeze over Colorado A&M at Dallas Wednesday night. They have two other starters who could give Kansas trouble, forward Bob Clayton, an all-state selection in Indiana, and guard Art Barnes, a Dallas sharpshooter. Kansas has a 6-1 record in the inter-conference series, having lost to the Day Hayes-coached crew 49-46 in the finals of the 1948 Big Seven tournament.
LAMAR 81
Kansas goes into the series with a 1-1 record. The Jayhawks ran over Toronto to earn 63-50 at New Orleans last week and beat before Rice 51-14 last Saturday.
Two other squad members probably will see considerable action, juniors Al Kelley and Harold Patterson. Kelley was impressive in the Tulane game and shared scoring honors with 13 points. Patterson, who has been shifted to forward after receiving all-American honors at Garden City Juco from the center position, is fast, aggressive, and is a potentially great rebounder.
The defending Big Seven and NCAA champions are attempting to organize an effective offense by use of the alternate post and three-out, two-in arrangement. This method allows a team to win 20-5 third quarter scoring advantage against Rice Saturday before losing the lead late in the game.
The sophomore-studded Kansas team is 24.2 points below the 71.2 average set by the 1952 Jayhawker powerhouse. The Kansas defense was more than adequate in the Tulane and Rice contests, but the offensive average stands at a modest 57 points.
ONE OF THE BIG SEVEN'S BETTER GUARDS—Jayhawk Bill Heitholt, stellar sophomore from Quincy, Ill., will help Coach F. C. Allen's basketballers in the contest with Southern Methodist tonight in Hoch auditorium. Heitholt lettered with the varsity squad last year as a freshman by appearing in 28 of 31 games. He is a fast, aggressive battler who can score equally well from the outside or from the fast break. He is a good rebounder, and his defensive play has helped him earn his starting berth on the Jayhawk quintet.
Phog Allen is expected to field the same lineup that opened at Tulane and Rice. B. H. Born is the center, sophomores Larry Davenport and Jerry Alberts, forwards, and sophomore Bill Heitholt and Captain Dean Kelley at guards.
News Just Doesn't Move Far Enough
News gets around, but apparently not enough. Kansas track Coach Bill Easton received a letter today from Montreal, Canada requesting results of the now famous Wes Santee-Acacia fraternity overland race Saturday.
G. M. Watson, of the Canadian city, sent a clipping from the Montreal Daily Star telling of the upcoming race, but Mr. Watson says that neither the Star, nor three New York papers he reads had any followup on the story.
Mr. Watson, an "avid track fan" since he saw Kansas' Glenn Cunningham run the mile, said he was very much interested in the outcome and asked Coach Easton to write him about the race.
SMU, rated as the best Mustand team since 1946-47, probably will open with Clayton and Kastman at forwards, Barnes and Galey, guards, and 6-4 Ralph Kendall, center.
Wildcat Tilt Tops Cage List
New York — (U.P.) The basketball spotlight swings tonight to East Lansing, Mich., where three of the nation's top 10 teams appear in a doubleheader, by all odds the best show so far this young season.
Kansas State, ranked third, collides with Notre Dame, ranked 10th, in one game as both unbeaten teams try for their fourth win, while seventh-ranked UCLA meets Michigan State in the other.
Another twin bill tomorrow night sends Notre Dame against UCLA and Kansas State against Michigan State. It's a golden opportunity for one of the teams to gain prestige that would probably boost its national ranking.
Another important game tonight at Seattle, Wash., sees Washington's Huskies, ranked fourth nationally, meet California, which is ranked 16th.
We
In this holy season we hope that the star that guided the Wise Men will guide us to peace and greater happiness.
Weaver$ BOI JENA.
A MESSIANIC WISH.
Don Henry Ekes Out Victory Over Battenfeld
Kansan Sports Writer
By DON TICE
Don Henry 31. Battenfeld 29.
tered highlight.
In other "A" games, Last Chance defeated ISA, Jim Beam defeated Theta Tau, AFROTC beat YMCA, Pearson beat Sterling - Oliver, and Jolliffe won over Stephenson.
Don Henry 31, B.A.
Herb Pearson saved the day for
Don Henry as he dumped in two
consecutive free throws in the sudden
death period, enabling his team to defeat Battenfeld 31-29.
A "sudden death" overtime game between Don Henry and Battenfeld highlighted yesterday's six game independent "A" slate.
It was a very sluggish game for three quarters, with the score standing 12-10 in favor of Battenfeld at the end of the third period. In the fourth period both teams moved into high gear, and the score was 24 all at the end of the regular playing time.
The score was tied again at the end of the three minute overtime period as each team made four points. The game then went into the sudden death period, in which the first team to make two points wins the game. A Battenfeld player fouled Don Henry's Herb Pearson, w hoskun both of his charity tosses to end the game. Pearson was high scorer for Don Henry with 10 points, while Jerry Jones led Battenfeld with 18.
AFROTC 54, YMCA 41
The AFROTC overcame a six point halftime deficit to defeat YMCA by 13 points, 54-41. Dick Wogan and Loren Martin shared scoring honors for the Air Force with 16 points apiece. Dean Tinklen scored 12 points to pace YMCA.
Jolliffe 37. Stenhenson 21
Pearson 46. Sterling-Oliver 24
Pearson jumped off to a ten point lead in the first quarter, and then steadily widened the margin as they defeated Sterling-Oliver 46-24. Tom Schafer, Pearson, and Dick Davis, Sterling-Oliver, were high scorers with 20 and 13 points respectively.
**Surface 547. Stephenson 541**
After trailing by 10 points at halftime, Stephenson put on a third quarter scoring drive to draw to
within four points of their opponents, but were unable to maintain the pace as Jolliffe won 37-31. Walt Haskins played an excellent game for the losers as he scored 21 of their 31 points.
Last Chance 53, ISA 47
Ross Correll with 16 points, paced Last Chance to a 53-47 victory over ISA. Last Chance took a five point halftime lead, which it maintained throughout the remainder of the game.
Jim Beam 41, Theta Tau 14
Jim Beam showed a well balanced scoring attack and a stiff defense as they ran over Theta Tau 41-14.
Bob Trego and Bill Porter led the Jim Beam quintet with 12 and 10 points respectively.
Kansas Dominates Sooner All-Stars
Notre Dame and Texas, placing five players each, trailed closely. Harley Sewell, Texas' all-America guard, was the only man to be selected on both the offensive and defensive elevens picked by the Sooners.
The Kansas Jayhawkers with seven men dominated the all-opponents' team voted by Oklahoma Sooners, Big Seven football champions.
The offensive team-Ends Tom Stolhandske, Texas, and Paul Leoni, Kansas; Hansel Fink, Wisconsin; Frank Vrichornje, Notes Darner, guards; Harley Sewell, Texas, and Jack Alasman, Kentucky; Dan McCormick, Jones, Texas; halfbacks, Charlie Hog, Kansas, and Bob Brandeberry, Kansas.
The defensive team-Ends, Bill Schaubacker, Nebraska, and Don Brandby, Illinois, and Michael Braska, and George Mrkonic, Kansas; middle guard, Sewell, Texas; linebackers, Galen Fiss, Kansas, Elmer Stout, Oklahoma A&M, and Dan Shannon, Notre Dame, Jeff Milton, Notre Dame, and Gil Reich, Kansas; safety, Veryl Switzer, Kansas State.
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CHRISTMAS
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Friday, Dec. 19, 1952 University Daily Kansan Page
MERRY CHRISTMAS
CJEWEN
...to YOU our best customer
THANK YOU FOR YOUR PATRONAGE. WE'VE ENJOYED SERVING YOU IN 1952. WE'RE LOOKING FORWARD TO SERVING YOU IN 1953.
Your Lawrence Service Stations
Airport Inn
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Zook's Standard Service 23 & La. Phone 2020
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1901 Mass. Phone 3063
Tepee Service Station Sam Ferguson, Bulk Agent Skelly Products Located on Jct. 59 and 24
Rapid Transit Service Mobilgas — US Royal Tires 1000 Mass.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Dec. 19, 1952
KU to Face SMU Tonight In First Home Cage Game
By CHUCK MORELOCK
Kansan Assistant Sports Editor
Kansas places a 12 game home-court winning streak on the block Friday and Saturday night when the green Jayhawkers meet the SMU Mustangs in a two-game series.
The Jayhawkers last defeat in Hoch auditorium came late in the 1951 season, when Oklahoma guard John Rogers hit a 24-foot last second shot which gave the Sooners a 61-59 upset victory. Kansas rebounded to whip Iowa State in the last home contest of the 1951 campaign then stopped 11 opponents last year.
The Mustangs easily could end the winning streak as they have three regulars returning from the 1951-52 edition which held the Jayhawkers to a 58-57 win after being trounced by two of the Clyde Lovellez at 42 point blast.
The returnees are forward Jack Kastman, and guards Dick Bryant and Charles Galey. Kastman, a 6-3, 200 pound Shawnee-Mission product, led the Mustang team in scoring last year with 193 tallies.
SMU opened with narrow losses to Hardin-Simmons and Oklahoma and scored their first victory with a 63-62 squeeze over Colorado A&M at Dallas Wednesday night. They have two other starters who could give Kansas trouble, forward Bob Clayton, an all-state selection in Indiana, and guard Art Barnes, a Dallas sharpshooter. Kansas has a 6-1 record in the inter-conference series, having lost to the Doye Hayes-coached crew 49-46 in the finals of the 1946 Biz Seven tournament.
Kansas goes into the series with a 1-1 record. The Jayhawkers ran over a cold Tulane squad 63-50 at New Orleans last week but fell before Rice 51-54 last Saturday.
Two other squad members probably will see considerable action, juniors Al Kelley and Harold Patterson. Kelley was impressive in the Tulane game and shared scoring honors with 13 points. Patterson, who has been shifted to forward after receiving all-American honors at Garden City Juco from the center position, is fast, aggressive, and is a potentially great rebounder.
The defending Big Seven and NCAA champions are attempting to organize an effective offense by use of the alternate post and three-out, two-in arrangement. This method enabled the Jayhawker to run up a three-out, then committed against Rice Saturday before losing the lead late in the game.
Phog Allen is expected to field the same lineup that opened at Tulane and Rice. B. H. Born is the center, sophomores Larry Davenport and Jerry Alberts, forwards, and sophomore Bill Heitholt and Captain Dean Kelley at guards.
The sophomore-studded Kansas team is 24.2 points below the 71.2 average set by the 1952 Jayhawker powerhouse. The Kansas defense was more than adequate in the Tulane and Rice contests, but the offensive average stands at a modest 57 points.
ANHURA
31
ONE OF THE BIG SEVEN'S BETTER GUARDS—Jayhawk Bill Heitholt, stellar sophomore from Quincy, Ill., will help Coach F. C. Allen's basketballists in the contest with Southern Methodist tonight in Hoch auditorium. Heitholt lettered with the varsity squad last year as a freshman by appearing in 28 of 31 games. He is a fast, aggressive battler who can score equally well from the outside or from the fast break. He is a good rebounder, and his defensive play has helped him earn his starting berth on the Jayhawk quintet.
News Just Doesn't Move Far Enough
News gets around, but apparently not enough. Kansas track Coach Bill Easton received a letter today from Montreal, Canada requesting results of the now famous Wes Santee-Acacia fraternity overland race Saturday.
G. M. Watson, of the Canadian city, sent a clipping from the Montreal Daily Star telling of the upcoming race, but Mr. Watson says that neither the Star, nor three New York papers he reads had any followup on the story.
Mr. Watson, an "avid track fan" since he saw Kansas' Glenn Cunningham run the mile, said he was very much interested in the outcome and asked Coach Easton to write him about the race.
SMU, rated as the best Mustand team since 1946-47, probably will open with Clayton and Kastman at forwards, Barnes and Galey, guards, and 6-4 Ralph Kendall, center.
Wildcat Tilt
Tops Cage List
New York — (U.P.) The basketball spotlight swings tonight to East Lansing, Mich., where three of the nation's top 10 teams appear in a doubleheader, by all odds the best show so far this young season.
Kansas State, ranked third, collides with Notre Dame, ranked 10th, in one game as both unbeaten teams try for their fourth win, while seventh-ranked UCLA meets Michigan State in the other.
Another twin bill tomorrow night sends Notre Dame against UCLA and Kansas State against Michigan State. It's a golden opportunity for one of the teams to gain prestige that would probably boost its national ranking.
Another important game tonight at Seattle, Wash., sees Washington's Huskies, ranked fourth nationally, meet California, which is ranked 16th.
We
Weavers
BIO HOME.
In this holy season we hope that the star that guided the Wise Men will guide us to peace and greater happiness.
PRAYING FOR THE STAR OF JESUS
Don Henry Ekes Out Victory Over Battenfeld
By DON TICE Kansan Sports Writer
In other "A" games, Last Chance defeated ISA, Jim Beam defeated Theta Tau, AFROTC beat YMCA, Pearson beat Sterling - Oliver, and Jolliffe won over Stephenson.
It was a very sluggish game for three quarters, with the score standing 12-10 in favor of Battenfeld at the end of the third period. In the fourth period both teams moved into high gear, and the score was 24 all at the end of the regular playing time.
Don Henry 31. Battenfeld 29
Don Henry 31, Battefield 29 Herb Pearson saved the day for Don Henry as he dumped in two consecutive free throws in the sudden death period, enabling his team to defeat Battefeld 31-29.
A "sudden death" overtime game between Don Henry and Battenfeld highlighted yesterday's six game independent "A" slate.
The score was tied again at the end of the three minute overtime period as each team made four points. The game then went into the sudden death period, in which the first team to make two points wins the game. A Battenfeld player fouled Don Henry's Herb Pearson, w hoskun both of his charity tosses to end the game. Pearson was high scorer for Don Henry with 10 points, while Jerry Jones led Battenfield with 18.
AFROTC 54, YMCA 41
The AFROTC overcame a six point halftime deficit to defeat YMCA by 13 points, 54-41. Dick Wogan and Loren Martin shared scoring honors for the Air Force with 16 points apiece. Dean Tinklen scored 12 points to pace YMCA.
Pearson 48, Sterling-Oliver 24
Pearson 46, Sterling-Oliver 24
a ten point lead in the first quarter, and then steadily widened the margin as they defeated Sterling-Oliver 46-24. Tom Schafer, Pearson, and Dick Davis, Sterling-Oliver, were high scorers with 20 and 13 points respectively.
Jollife 37, Stephenson 31 After trailing by 10 points at halftime, Stephenson put on a third quarter scoring drive to draw to
within four points of their opponents, but were unable to maintain the pace as Jolliffe won 37-31. Walt Haskins played an excellent game for the losers as he scored 21 of their 31 points.
Last Chance 53, ISA 47
Ross Correll with 16 points, paced Last Chance to a 53-47 victory over ISA. Last Chance took a five point halftime lead, which it maintained throughout the remainder of the game.
Jim Beam 41, Theta Tau 14
Jim Beam 41, Theta Tau 14
Jim Beam showed a well balanced scoring attack and a stiff defense as they ran over Theta Tau 41-14.
Bob Trego and Bill Porter led the Jim Beam quintet with 12 and 10 points respectively.
Kansas Dominates Sooner All-Stars
The Kansas Jayhawkers with seven men dominated the all-opponents' team voted by Oklahoma Sooners, Big Seven football champions.
Notre Dame and Texas, placing five players each, trailed closely. Harley Sewell, Texas' all-America guard, was the only man to be selected on both the offensive and defensive elevens picked by the Sooners.
the offensive team-Ends Tom Stolmhandske, Texas, and Paul Leoni, Kansas; tacchels Spencer, Kansas; Harley Varrionce, Dick Gards, Harley Sewell, Texas, and Jack Alessandrine, Texas; halfbacks, Charlie Hogan, Kansas, and Bob Brandeberry, Kansas
The defensive team-Ends, Bill Schabacker, Nebraska, and Don Brandby, Nebraska, and Mickel, Nebraska, and George Mrkonic, Kansas; middle guard, Sewell, Texas; linebackers, Galeen Fiss, Kansas, Elmer Stout, Okla-
ness; halfback, Johnny Lattner, Notre Dame and Gil Reich, Kansas; safety, Veryl Switzer, Kansas State.
wonderful ways to say... MERRY CHRISTMAS
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wonderful ways to say...
MERRY CHRISTMAS
We Are Looking
Foreward to
Serving You Again
IN
1953
THE CHUCK WAGON
Home of Fine Cooked Foods
and Bar-B-Q.
MERRY CHRISTMAS
1 95 3
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Friday, Dec. 19, 1952 University Daily Kansan Page
MERRY CHRISTMAS
OJENEN
...to YOU
ourbestcustomer
THANK YOU FOR YOUR PATRONAGE. WE'VE ENJOYED SERVING YOU IN 1952. WE'RE LOOKING FORWARD TO SERVING YOU IN 1953.
Your Lawrence Service Stations
Airport Inn
Cabins — Cafe — Texaco Products
G. L. Ritchie, owner Highway 24-40
Mel Franz Conoco
900 N.H. Phone 867
Zook's Standard Service
23 & La. Phone 2020
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900 Indiana Phone 3354
Bucheim Service Station
1901 Mass. Phone 3063
Tepee Service Station Sam Ferguson, Bulk Agent Skelly Products Located on Jct. 59 and 24
Rapid Transit Service Mobilgas — US Royal Tires 1000 Mass.
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Dec. 19, 1952
Home Made Gift Wrappings Inject Personality Into Gift
By DOT TAYLOR
Wrapping gifts is as much a part of Christmas as trimming the tree and baking holiday goodies. *
And even though the gifts pile up the wrapping is as fun as helping Santa, in fact, it's a challenge to see how original, clever, and gay you can get.
So use your imagination and ingenuity to dress up your packages, and the gifts you give will be exciting ones that reflect the personalities of the receiver and you.
There are some unusual and inexpensive wrapping materials right at hand that you can find when you get in the holiday mood.
Get out your last year's greeting cards, cut out the pictures with pinking shears, and paste them on top of the box. Try small snapshots of your family and friends in the same way. Look through your family sewing basket for odd bits of lace or rickrack to use in place of ribbon.
Wrap kitchen gifts in plaid shelf paper or colorful wallpaper. Or personalize your gift, spelling out the name of the receiver with tiny stars or letters.
Tie tiny toys to a child's package or top a box of Christmas cookies with a ginerbread horse.
Bright and lavish bows can be made from inches of colorful satin ribbon. Or, if you can't tie fancy bows, make tailored wrappings. Glue on cutouts of bells. Use red and green tape or insert glossy foil under a lace paper doily to add a decorative touch.
Here's the Dope
S'FUNNY, I CAN'T SEEM TO RUN AS FAST AS I USED TO!
harry goff
NATIONAL SAFETY COUNCIL
Delta Tau Delta Gives Formal
Members of Delta Tau Delta fraternity and their dates danced to the orchestra of Matt Betton at the fraternity's annual Christmas formal Saturday night at the chapter house.
The decorations centered on two lighted Christmas trees. Evergreen rope was hung from the walls and several large candelabra were hung from the ceiling. The front hall was decorated with one large candelabrum with a bowl of red roses, evergreen, and holly set at the base.
Refreshments were served in the basement lounge. At the end of the dance, the members of the fraternity serenaded their dates with the Delt "Memory Song."
Guests were Pauline Palmer, Frances Henningson, Mary Jo Kincaid, Roberta Taylor, Jann Duchossois, Earlene Hovey, Kay Ames, Fredrica Voiland, Dorothy Brunn, Lavina Lou Corryell, Cleo Dlabal, Marilyn Martenius, Susan Montgomery, Ann Helsby, Jane Johnson, and Ann Stevens.
Pat Hayes, Ann McFairland, Ann Morgan, Connie Connelley, Jackie Bushley, Janet Whiteside, Jean Dennian, Jeannette Gowan, Helen Anderson, Mrs. John Cox, Jerry Street, Maxine Ratzlaff, Georgann Vanderberg, Martha Peterson, Corolyn Kay Scott, JoAn Hietman, and Marilyn Button.
Ann Kelley, Marilyn Miller, Diane Walker, Pat Grade, Beverly Hamel, City Crane, Marcenele Richards, Pat Constantos, Donna Woods, Kay Vetterick, Gene Grout, Lucy Ann Mullinax, Pat Aylward, Annabel Hunge, Mrs. Don Muir, Patricia Dlabal, and Bet Lowell.
Shirley Bussard, Mary Metchner, Dottie Twente, Caroline Holmes, Ann McCutcheon, Jean Loudon, Diana Harrison, and Billie Bergen. Chaperones were Mrs. Dean S. Nite, Mrs. John R. Scott, Mrs C. H. Wetnworth, and Mrs B. A. Mayher.
Gamma Phi Beta Announces Russing-Clewinger Pinning
Gamma Phi Beta sorority announces the pinning of Miss Suzanne Russing, college junior, to Mr. Hal Clewinger, first year law student.
Miss Russing's home is in Pittsburgh, Kan. Mr. Cleavinger is a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity. His home is in Manhattan, Kan.
May
1953
be abundant
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Toy Buying Needs Careful Planning
New York — (U.P.)— Between now and Christmas eve, you and several million other grownups will shell out millions of dollars for toys.
Mr. Freud, president of the Toy Guidance council, an educational and promotional organization, said there's one bargain the grownups are pretty sure of this year.
"That's safety," he said. "Most manufacturers now give toys thorough tests before they go to market."
And, one expert says, you should spend just as carefully on playthings as you do on groceries or clothes. For, as in any other buying, you get what you pay for in toys, according to Melvin Freud.
1111 Mass.
To help you get the most for your toy-shopping dollar, Freud made several suggestions.
Look for the Underwriters Laboratories seal on all electrical toys, he said, and don't buy electrical toys for the under-six age group.
Do provide a balanced variety of toys for outdoors, and indoors, and choose those which give the children a chance at self-expression.
Don't buy on impulse. Both the child and your dollar deserve more than a gadget giving only momentary pleasure. Don't wait until the last minute to shop, because some of the best playthings—especially those of steel, wood and rubber—will be in shorter supply this year
Don't buy toys for eye-appeal alone. Freud said if the child can only watch, and not participate, much of the toy's value is lost.
Lappa Sigma Installs Officers
Tony Marz, engineering senior,
was installed Monday as president of
Kappa Sigma fraternity. Other officers installed were Calvin Spradley, engineering senior, vice president, and Walter Rickel,
pharmacy senior, master of ceremonies.
Kappa Sigma Installs Officers
Kastens-Mavbrey Engaaged
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Kastens of Olathe, Kan., announce the engagement of their daughter Jean to Mr. Donald Mabrey, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Mabrey of Liberal, Kan. Mr. Mabrey is a sophomore in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
New York—(U.P.) You can put the Christmas touch into every part of the house instead of just stopping with a tree in the parlor and a wreath on the front door.
Christmas Touch Can Be Added To Every Part of the House
Here are some suggestions from Claire Kennard, a free-lance decorating expert in New York, and Allyn Wayne, flower stylist.
Mr. Wayne said the basic rule is to
Formal Theme Is Silver, Blue
Gene Johnson, Tod Haren, Joe Fink, Mary Larson, Bill Cunningham, Frank Williams, Terry Williams, Jeanne Spencer, Jim Burgland, Phil Petitt, Ethan Smith, Kathleen Soden, Dean Owens, and Larry Cheatham.
Silver and blue decorations centerering on a silver Christmas tree decorated with blue balls and tinsel and spotted with blue lights highlighted the Gamma Phi Beta sorority Winter formal Saturday night at the chapter house.
Robert Fulton, Andy Hall III, Cliff Lambert, Hal Cleveringer, Merie Hodges, Duane Estes, Clark Wesley, Bob Pfumm, Jane Pfumm, Gerald Kelly, Dick Bowen, Jack Rodgers, Bob Mayer, and Bill Crews.
Dwight Adams, Don Green, Bill Michener, Bob Roth, Rosalee Osborne, Bill Hall, Brandeberry, Sterling Waggener, and Merl Sellers.
Glittery silver and blue snowflakes were hung from the ceiling and walls. Guests had their pictures taken in a Christmas sleigh in the front hall. Evergreen boughs coated with synthetic snow completed the decorations.
Guests were Lea Herboth, Bob Babcock, Jack Dryden, Jack Glick, Stan Smith, Jim Endacott, Bert Baker, Bud Dalton, Jerry Houghland, Nancy Blackley, Dean Edwin, Bob Asmann, Jerry Brownlee, and Leslie Kellogg.
Chaperones were Mrs. Thomas H.
Stuart, Mrs. C. A. Thomas, Mrs.
Astrid M. Dohner, and Mrs. Ralph
Park.
fit the style of the decorations to the
style of the home. Miss Kennard
said her rule is to keep the decora-
tions colorful but simple.
Mr. Wayne suggested this simple arrangement for a coffee or end table in the modern home:
Put a bowl or any handy container inside a deep red and white Christmas basket. Fill the container with shredded styrofoam to hold the arrangements in place. Then design an "L" of foliage—either cedar or spruce—anchoring each branch firmly. For contrast with the greenery, use six or eight big white chrysanthemums, placing the larger flowers lower in the design. For a final note of cheer, wire clusters of red berries onto the branches and add three or four painted cones with the tips painted silver-blue.
Try pinning colorful Christmas balls to plain curtains in any room of the house. Make a Christmas mobile by decorating an artificial branch and suspending it from the ceiling by a fine, dark wire.
Miss Kennard said that popular as the poinsetta is in home decoration, she would like to see women use other flowers.
Her favorite materials are Christmas greens, small trees, whether natural or artificial ones cut from styrofoam or foil, and fruits such as grapes and apples.
"None of that dry stuff, like driftwood, unless you gilt it or paint it Christmas colors," she said firmly.
One of the simplest table centerpieces, she said, is made by filling a small container with holly sprigs and a few carnations, and surrounding this with various fruits.
Delta Chi Elects Officers
J a m e s. Hoefener, engineering junior, was elected president of Delta Chi fraternity Monday. Other officers elected were Earl Knaus, college sophomore, vice president; Don Gates, engineering sophomore, recording secretary; Jack Dryden, pharmacy senior, treasurer; Bill Thompson, engineering junior, corresponding - secretary, and Hans Peterson, business senior, sergeant at arms.
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1 Page 9
Blake Tower's Series of Clocks Took 'Their Own Sweet Time'
University Daily Kansan
By SHIRLEY PIATT
Students hurrying to classes on the east side of the campus have learned not to synchronize their watches to the old clock atop Blake hall which has never kept up-to-the-minute time.
The history of the clock that once tick-tocked from Blake's towers dates back to the early 1900s. Its time-filled record tells the story of an aged ticker with all the idiosyncrasies of time-keeping.
The minutes marked by the hands on the face of the clock, which was replaced by the present one, ran accurately from time to time. But, being rather erratic, the clock was usually from 2 to 12 hours off. Finally the clock refused to run.
One day, for no known reason, the clock started running. A Kansan reporter wrote a story on the miracle, however a late bulletin had to be included at the end of his story reading: "The clock stopped without warning at 12:01 p.m."
The moody clock, a topic of campus conversation, even became the subject of a poem by Grucchi Guillanne, entitled "Ode to the Physics' Clock." The poem was printed in the Kansan, March 4, 1912.
Many causes for the clock's inaccuracy, were suggested. The favorite item of conversational attack was pigeons. The large hands of the clock made a comfortable roost for tired pigeons, but the clock was soon overloaded.
The weight of the pigeons on the hands caused the clock to waver and resulted in either slowing down or speeding up the Blake time piece.
Buildings and grounds workmen came to the rescue of the clock, shattering the pigeon theory of faulty time by putting grease on the hands of the clock. The hapless pigeons, unaware of the situation, lighted on their favorite campus roost as usual, only to find it converted to a slippery slide.
By tricking the pigeons, it was hoped that the clock would resume its intended duties. The time piece, however, was staunch in its delinquent ways and was junked in 1921.
A new clock informed clockwatchers of the correct time for several years, then, like its predecessors, it refused to cooperate with standard time. The new clock was running slow!
No cause could be found for the unpredictable acts of the physic's clock. Not even the pigeons could be blamed this time. Finally newly-found energy perked up the old ticker and it resumed time keeping at a fairly accurate pace.
Nothing of great significance has happened to the clock since it went back to its regular path after a
Fraternal Group Entertain
Lawrence Children at Party
Delta Gamma sorority and Delta Upsilon fraternity entertained 25 Lawrence children from the ages of two to 12 with a Christmas party Wednesday evening in the Delta Upsilon chapter house.
Santa Claus distributed gifts to the children. The guests played games and sang Christmas carols. Refreshments were served. Chaperoes were Mrs. W. S. Shaw and Mrs. James A. Hooke.
Here's the Dope
BUT OFFICER,
I'M LATE TO A
FUNERAL!
YOUR OWN,
I PRESUME?
NATIONAL SAFETY COUNCIL
period of daylight saving time. Occasionally the clock misses a few minutes, but students can easily understand its wish for a short rest after a college career of about 30 years.
Dailyhansan Society
Pearson Hall Gives Formal
The men at Pearson hall and their dates danced to Dick Fritz' band at the hall's annual Christmas formal Saturday night in the house.
A white band shell spotted with blue lights was provided for the band. Three Christmas trees, mistletoe, evergreen rope, and holly decorated the rooms.
Guests were Peggy Long, Barbara Moser, Marvalie Tibbs, Betty England, Colleen Engle, Marjorie Tibbs, Sheila Haller, Barbara Beers, Louise Hoffman, Bernadine Baxendale, Barbara Blount, and Pamela Ellis.
White carnations were placed on one of the Christmas trees like snowballs. Each girl who attended the party received one of the carnations. Bubbling fruit punch cooled with dry ice was served.
Beth Deibert, Barbara Norrie, Pat Norrie, Wanda Sammons, Jane Ellis, Teresa Waugh, Pat Hurt, Betty Bunton, Grace Grabart, June Cooley, Elizabeth Teaches, Beryl Bell, Pat Howell, Anne Howland, Nancy Farrish, Gloria Ball, Johanna Scott, Else Kvyme, and Scholat Schetz.
Chaperones were Mrs. Edna Brown, Mrs. Edward Dicks, Mrs. Astrid M. Dohner, and Mrs. R. H. Wilson.
7 Members Inducted Into Women's Guild
Seven new members were inducted into the Women's guild of the Presbyterian church at the group's annual Christmas dinner Tuesday night.
They are Barbara Bradstreet, college sophomore; Beverly Churchill, college freshman; Margie Neighbors, college freshman; Donna Spotts, special student; Cheryl Brock, college freshman; Beryl Bell, fine arts freshman, and Johanna Trotter, college freshman.
Guests at the dinner were women on the board of trustees for Westminster house and wives of the other members of the board.
Group singing following the induction ceremony was led by Edwina Jones, education junior.
MERRY
Eight new members were initiated into Sigma Pi Sigma, honorary physics fraternity, Dec. 10.
Sigma Pi Sigma Physics Club Initiates Eight New Members
MERRY
CHRISTMAS
For All of You and
May the New Year
be a Successful One.
Samples Jewelry
914 Mass.
The initiates are Edward R. Basy, engineering senior; Jean M. O'Dell, Richard Verbrugge, Edward Vinson, Richard T. Brackmann, John W. Wilkening, and James A. Endacott, all engineering seniors, and George Mayberry, engineering junior.
Watkins Hall Announces
Atkins-Dick Pinning at For
Watkins hall announces the pinning of Miss Rosanne Atkins, journalism junior, to Mr. Charles Dick, college senior. The pinning was announced at Watkins's Christmas formal last weekend.
Miss Atkins' home is in Kansas City, Kan. Mr. Dick is a member of Acacia fraternity. His home is in Hutchinson, Kan.
Sigma Phi Epsilon Entertains
Underprioriyeda Children
Members of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity and their dates entertained 26 underprivileged Lawrence children with a Christmas party Wednesday afternoon at the chapter house.
The children watched movies and played games. Each child received a present from Santa Claus. Refreshments were served.
Christmas Customs Changed Since Druid Days of Yore
Washington—(U.P) Many customs around the Yule season have changed since olden days.
True, the custom of bringing trees into the homes goes back to ancient times. Long before the Christian era, worshipers of the sun god associated trees with sacredness.
According to researchers, the people of Egypt celebrated the shortest day of the year by bringing date palms into the house. That was the symbol of life triumphant over death.
The greeting "Merry Christmas" began in Britain. The custom of decking the Christmas tree is supposed to have originated in Germany and the Christmas stocking in Bel-
In Rome, the feast of Saturn was observed by lifting aloft a bough of evergreens. The Druids believed that green boughs in the home meant eternal life. We see this carried out today in door swags, window decorations, stairway, mantel and wall decorations. The Society of American Florists says that in the time of Henry VIII Christmas trees were adorned with pomegranates for court festivals in Britain.
giam or France. Holland claims the origin of Santa Claus, according to ancient history.
Also there is a story that the origin of Santa Claus dates back to Lycia at the beginning of the fourth century. The bishop of Myra was purported to be wealthy and showered the very poor with his money at Christmas time, saying that the gifts were from "Saint Nicholas." It was, according to legend, in the Scandinavian countries that Santa climbed aboard a sleigh, hauled over the snow by reindeer to deliver gifts. In America, the custom was changed by having the jolly old fat one dropping in on the kiddies via the chimney.
610x1082 7405
Decorations of the home with mistletoe is another ancient custom.
The officiating priest used a golden sickle to cut the plant by the officiating priest. In those days mistletoe was supposed to keep away the witches, Today, of course, it is an excuse to lure your sweetie under a sprig and give her a kiss.
---
.
You can't find a gift for Duck's that way.
It's No Use Santa!
THEY ALREADY HAVE EVERYONE'S FAVORITE SEAFOODS!
All KU Students Know That.
And by the way, Santa, DUCK'S WANTS TO SAY
MERRY CHRISTMAS
to all the Jayhawkers
DUCK'S Sea Food TAVERN
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824 Vermont
1000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
Page 10
80 96bba2, Dec 18
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Dec. 19, 1952
BASKETBALL TONIGHT
24
KU vs. SMU
Talbert's Appliance
910 Mass. Phone 3606
Landrith's Foods
1007 Mass. Phone 173
Jayhawk Billiards
719 Mass. Phone 2044
Golden Gate Chocolate Shop
713 Mass. Phone 3395
Dot and Ed's Cafe For Late Evening Snacks
HOME GAMES
Set 1
Set 2
Dec. 19 -----SMU Jan. 8 -----Okla. A&M
Jan. 17 -----Kansas State* Feb. 7 -----Missouri*
Feb. 10 -----Oklahoma* Feb. 14 -----Nebraska*
Mar. 9 -----Iowa State* Mar. 2 -----Colorado*
- Conference Games
TEAM MEMBERS
No. Name Pos. Age Ht. Wt. Home Town
3 Alberts, Jerry F 19 6- 3 181 Lincoln, Ill.
10 Anderson, John G 18 6- 2 209 Grand Island, Neb.
25 Born, B. H. C 20 6- 9 200 Medicine Lodge
23 Buller, Ken F 22 5-11 180 Buhler
4 Davenport, Larry F 19 6- 2 172 Newton
7 Deckert, Marvin F 20 6- 1 175 Burdett
2 Dye, Everett F-G 20 6- 2 150 Neodesha
21 Heitholt, Bill G 19 6- 3 195 Quincy, Ill.
13 Johnson, Wes G 20 6- 3 175 Newton
24 Kelley, Allan F-G 19 5-11 161 McCune
14 Kelley, Dean Capt. G 21 5-11 170 McCune
17 Nicholson, Eldon C-F 19 6- 6 193 Pittsburg
20 Patterson, Harold F 20 6- 1 185 Rozel
9 Reich, Gil G 21 6- 0 187 Steelton, Pa.
22 Smith, Dean G 21 5-10 148 Topeka
34 Whitney, Wes C 20 6- 3 208 Newton
8 Wolfe, Jack G 19 5- 7 135 Lawrence
Brunswick Billiards
714 Mass.
Willies Grill
Phone 2048 1017 $ _{1/2} $ Mass.
This image is too blurry to be accurately read. It appears to be a grayscale image with a vertical striped pattern. Due to the poor resolution, no text or clear visual content can be discerned from this image.
Phone 2093
Friday, Dec. 19, 1952
University Daily Kansan
Page 11
"Santa Is Much Too Slow—Use Want Ads—Make Some Dough!"
Kansan Classified Ads
中
Call
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be processed during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univ. Reference Office, Journalism bldg, not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
25 words or less Additional words
One day Three days Five days
.50c 75c $1.00
.1c 2c $1.30
BUSINESS SERVICE
TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, er. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Phone 1306M. MWF-#f
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches--for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360,119 Mass. **tf**
BEVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. ff
EXPERIENCED Typist. Term papers
notebooks, theses and miscellaneous. Mrs.
J. R. Josco; 838 Louisiana, Apartment
4, upstairs. Phone 2775-7. tt
TYPING WANTED. Prompt, accurate service. Pick-up and delivery service after 6 p.m. and before 8 a.m. Phone 3157R. Mrs. Livingston. tf
RADIO AND TV repair service on hakes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ment. We provide fast efficient service. Bowman Bruck and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. tf
**TYPING SERVICE.** experienced theses.
Ms. Iris Hauk
600 West 86th. Phone 1344W.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 am. until midnight. tf
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jawhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Visit us at www.jayhawkers.com for fun, fn, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218. Conn. Phone 418. if
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
men buyers. William J. Vilma-
Almen, 3110R
CRYSTAL CAFES serves chiles, steaks sandwiches, malts, home-made pies and cakes. Free parking space for customers
MISCELLANEOUS
RADIO and TV service-same day as service on all makes. Most complete stock of tubes and parts in this area. Bowman 135 Vermont. Phone 138 if prompt service.
KU376
DRESSMAKING, formals, alterations,
by an experienced European dressmaker. See
Themis Zannetel, 1633 Vermont (down-
stairs apartment). Phone 1477- 16
CONCOC SERVICE-B. F. Gooddry tires and batteries, complete lubrication service and automatic transmission service. Buchheim. Conoco Service. 19cf and Massachusetts.
Air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. till midnight. Crystal Cafe, 609 Vt. tf TYPEF: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Penn. Phone 136M. tf
TRANSPORTATION
WANT A RIDE to New Orleans and back during the Christmas holidays. Will share drive and expenses. Please call Arnold Kotwitz, 2855 R, aft. 3,000.
ASK US ABUT airplane rates, sky coach family days, round trip reductions, American Express land tours. Craned and Matson Steamship lines. Call Miss and Matson National Bank for information and reservations. 8th and Mass. streets. Phone 30. U
MIRLINE TICKETS, prompt continuation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether on business or leisure. Phone frs. Louis Odafen, 3614. Downs travel service, 1015 Mass
WANTED
TYPIST WANTED close to 1219 Ohio.
Call Ahmed. 2235W. 12-19
CLEKER-TYPIST II—must be careful, accurate typist, ready to learn electric power systems and use graph operator. Also need bindery worker—mailing inserting, gathering, etc. Pres. Press, University of Kansas Press, Journalism Building. 12-ff
Hay Dinner With Trimming Available to Horses Dec. 25
Chicago—U (P).-The anti-cruelty society announced today it will serve a hay dinner with all the marmalade horses on Christmas day.
The "trimmings" will include a bushel of mixed grain and some carrots.
Abandoned cats and dogs will get cooked liver sausage, raw horse meat, dog candy, biscuits, cooked fish, milk and cream.
Garryville, La. — (U.P.)—Justice of the Peace Anicet Hilbert, picked up by game wardens and ordered to appear in his own court for hunting rabbits with a searchlight, fined himself $12.50.
Hunary Judge Fines Himself
"I got hungry for rabbit," Klibert said.
Kansas Kids Come to See Children's Art Section
By JERRY KNUDSON
The University, in carrying out its program to serve all of the people of the state, has added another project with this goal in view. A Children's Room was opened early this fall in the Museum of Art.
"The project has a dual purpose
The project has a dual purpose to give art education students experience of children and to serve schoolchildren in the state," said Miss Maud Ellsworth, chairman of the department of art education, director of the project.
Two class periods are held every Saturday for fifth and sixth grade children. From 10 to 11:30 a.m. Lawrence pupils participate, and from 1:30 to 3 p.m. the room may be reserved by any school in Kansas.
The schools choose the children sent, Miss Ellsworth said "because of interest, because the child needs it, or because he has earned it." The room can accommodate 12 children.
No fee is charged for the class, which includes a half-hour tour of the museum in which the children learn about the exhibits. The museum furnishes the equipment and the School of Education supplies the materials.
SANTA CLAUS IS TALKING TO A ELF.
Mary Anne Forman, art education senior, has been teaching the morning class, and different students take over the afternoon class. The children started with crayons and now do drawing and water color painting.
For one class they observed Winslow Homer's painting in the museum in which Miss Forman pointed out how Homer learned to draw from nature. After an outdoor observation period, the children proceeded to work on something from nature.
At the close of the sessions the children talk about each pupil's work. "They're not at all afraid to say what they think about others' work, and most have very good observations." Miss Forman said.
The questions flew the Saturday they looked at the huge bronze Buddha located near the base of the basement landing. The children wanted to know how much it would cost, what it was made of, how much it weighed, and all about the casting process. Miss Forman said.
Out-of-town schools which have taken advantage of the afternoon class are the Roesland school in Kansas City, Kan., the Riverside rural school in Douglas county, and the Atchison grade school. Three small town schools are booked this far for the next semester — St. George, Perry, and Clifton.
"The project has been most successful, and we have had great expressions of appreciation," Miss Ellsworth said. It will also serve as a demonstration of the late ideas of teaching art for teachers, parents.
THE GIFTS ARE ALL WRAPPED AND READY TO PUT UNDER THE TREE. THAT MEANS THAT CHRISTMAS IS ALMOST HERE. HIXONS WANT TO WISH YOU A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR.
721 Mass.
Hizon STUDIO
Members of Delta Gamma sorority and Delta Upson entertained a group of underprivileged Lawrence children ranging in ages from 2 to 12 years. Each of the children were presented with gifts from Lorrimer Armstrong, engineering sophomore, who acted as Santa Claus. The party *also included refreshments and entertainment.*
About 30 youngsters enjoyed an early Christmas last night when they met with Santa Claus at Delta Upsilon fraternity house.
Greek Groups Fete Children
Phone 41
or "anyone interested" that are welcome to come and observe, she added.
George Michale, business junior, said, "Fraternity and sorority members were pleased that were able to make the children happy. It was a party that will be difficult to forget," he said.
An additional 50 children recently have been entertained at similar parties given by Pi Beta Phi social sorority and by Pi Delta Theta, social fraternity. Santa Claus has been the highlight of each party providing toys, candy, and clothing for the children.
The Pueblo Indians called the spot upon which the city of Santa Fe, N.M., now stands, Kuopoga, or "the place of the shell beads near the water."
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---
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Dec. 19, 1952
Red 'Mechanical Monsters' Blasted Near T-Bone Hill
Seoul, Korea—(U.P.)-United Nations big guns hurled a heavy rain of fire last night at six Communist "mechanical monsters" making a second appearance on the Korean battlefront in less than a month.
UN forward observers spotted two groups of three strange armored vehicles lumbering near the front lines on the central front near T-bone hill.
Elsewhere on the ground today, UN and red infantrymen traded blows all along the frozen battlefront.
South Koreans drove up the slopes of Jane Russell hill on the central front, knifed into Chinese positions and then withdrew after a brief fight.
Pamunjom, Korea — (U,P)—The Communists accused the United Nations today of dropping propaganda leaflets inside the neutral zone at Pamunjom. They also claimed a UN plane flew over the area yesterday.
In the air, B-29 Superforts kept
Reds Say UN Leaflets Fall in Neutral Zone
"Military aircraft of your side once again intruded into the air above the conference site in violation of agreement," the Reds said in a letter delivered at a liaison officers' meeting.
"The same day, slanderous leaflets were found within the conference site area. These two incidents were both confirmed through joint investigation by the security officers in the conference site area."
The Reds demanded that "effective measures" be taken to prevent a recurrence.
State Health Board Discounts Poisoning
Topeka-(U,P)-The Kansas State Board of Health yesterday discounted reports that food poisoning was the cause of an outbreak Wednesday of dysentery and vomiting among 20 grade school pupils at Alma. Kan.
The board said it had tested meat from a turkey that the children ate at the school lunch room and found no evidence of poisoning.
Dr. James Mott, head of the communicable disease department of the board, said the outbreak was similar to others and that a virus is "presumably" causing the trouble.
up their fierce pounding of Red targets in North Korea, plastering two big supply centers south of Pyongyang and at Kanachon on the main rail line.
Fifth Air Force light bombers reported destroying 75 Red trucks during the night and hit a troop billeting area east of Pyongyang.
Solons Await Eisenhower Cue
Washington — (U,P)— Most Republican congressmen awaited a cue from President-elect Eisenhower today before taking a stand for or against the sweeping medical care program outlined by President Truman's health commission.
"If Truman is for it, I'm against it."
A few GOP lawmakers shared the sentiments of Rep. Clarence J. Brown (R-Ohio), who told reporters:
But many others begged off from commenting on the commission's 250-page report, explaining that they wanted time to study the complex issues thoroughly and to see what position the incoming GOP administration will take.
The commission shoved aside Mr. Truman's own controversial proposal for compulsory federal health insurance. It called instead for a state-managed program, with the federal government contributing about $1 billion a year to help underwrite the cost.
While it did not attempt to spell out all the details, the commission suggested that most persons would pre-pay their own medical costs through expanded insurance programs like the private plans now in operation.
The government would finance care of the poor and aged. Patients would be free to choose their own doctors, and doctors would be free to practice as they see fit.
New York — (U,P)— The campaign and election of Dwight D. Eisenhower as the first Republican president in 20 years was the biggest news story of 1952, editors of the United Press said today.
Ike Victory Top 1952 UP Story
In announcing their annual selection of the 10 top news stories of the year, the UP editors said 1952 was "a year of radical change on many levels and easily the biggest news year since World War II."
2. U.S. conducts first successful H-bomb experiments.
The 1952 list:
1. Gen. Eisenhower wins GOP nomina-
tion, wins rest. Republican
president in 20 years;
3. Korean war goes into third year with
agging and enemy
prisoners rioting.
4. Supreme Court outlaws government seizure of steel plants.
5. Elizabeth $\Pi$ becomes British queen on death of father, King George VI.
6. Captain Kurt Carlsen makes heroic
Staff on the "flying enterprise"
7. Fatal plague in New Jersey
8. Mid-air aircraft
close Newark airport.
8. Ditch Maeks relations with Britain over oil.
9. Felons in many U.S. prisons.
10. Rearruck ousted from Egyptian thrappe
Truman Blasts Newsmen, Insists He's Still President
Washington—(U.P.)-President Truman wants it clearly understood that he is still the nation's chief executive and will remain so until Dwight D. Eisenhower is sworn in as his successor on Jan. 20.
He made plain at his news conference yesterday that he intends to perform all the duties and claim all the prerogatives of the presidency right up to the moment Eisenhower takes the oath on inauguration day.
His apparently strong feelings on the subject were brought out when a reporter asked if he would ride up Pennsylvania avenue from the White House to the Capitol with Gen. Eisenhower on inauguration day.
Mr. Truman added that he will not ride back down the avenue with Gen. Eisenhower in the inaugural parade. He said he would leave the Capitol alone as a private citizen. Mr. Truman will not return to the White House. He may go directly to the railroad station to board a train for Independence, Mo., his hometown.
Mr. Truman replied with a smile that it will be the other way around. He said Gen. Eisenhower will be riding with him because he will still be President at that moment.
Doctors Fight to Save Life Of'Precarious' Siamese Twin
Roger Lee, deprived of a vital vein that drains blood from the brain, was in "precarious" condition, the hospital said, and remained in a coma.
The hospital bulletin said:
Surgeons yesterday were forced to cut a hole in his throat and force life-giving oxygen directly into his lungs.
Chicago—(U.P.)—Doctors fought today to save the life of tiny Roger Lee Brodie, still unconscious more than 36 hours after an historic feat of surgery separated him from his stronger Siamese twin.
The University of Illinois Research and Educational hospital reported at 8:35 a.m. that there was no marked change in the condition of the 15-month-old twins.
"At 8:35 this morning there has been very little change in the condition of Roger Lee and Rodney Dee Brodie since yesterday afternoon. The condition of Roger remains very precarious. He has not regained consciousness and is being fed intravenously.
Rodney Dee, whom surgeons were forced to favor in the unprecedented head-separating operation Wednesday, still was listed in "critical" condition, but he was conscious and appeared to be gaining.
"Rodney is doing better than his brother. Nevertheless his condition still is termed critical."
There were indications that today might decide whether the babies will live. But doctors feared that Roger Lee could not survive without the big, blood-draining vein.
- LUNCH, 11:30 TO 12:30
On the duty side of the presidency, Mr. Truman said he is preparing State of the Union and economic messages for Congress, as well as a budget.
- WILL OPEN JAN. 4 AT 1:30 P.M.
- DINNER, 5 TO 6
The President is required by law to submit a budget within 15 days after Congress convenes. But there are no such definite deadlines for the State of the Union and economic messages.
- WILL CLOSE DEC. 19 AT 10:30 P.M.
- BREAKFAST, 7:30 TO 8:30
The Constitution requires that the President shall report "from time to time" to Congress on the State of the Union. The law requires that the President's economic message go to Congress at the beginning of each session.
- SNACK BAR, 7:30 TO 6
On New Years and Christmas
at the Cafeteria
Holiday Hours
White House aides said at one time that Mr. Truman might not send either to Congress. But they apparently had not consulted him,
Lunch Only
the Hawk's Nest
He told his news conference the only question is whether he will deliver the State of Union message in person to Congress, as he has in the past. He said he hadn't decided that yet.
711 MASS.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
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