====PAGE-LEVEL METADATA==== University Daily Kansan Page 0391_2 from reel: L 739 (1965-09-17 to 1966-01-21) https://digital.lib.ku.edu/ku-udk/4572 Title: "War — Supreme Evil": First Kansas Draft-Dodger Spent Christmas in a Jail Cell Summary: Article about Alexander Harlow Dewey, a KU student who refused to register for the draft during World War II and spent Christmas in jail, becoming the first Kansas draft dodger. Category: campus news Subjects: draft evasion; student activism; Vietnam War era; KU history Named Entities: Dewey, Alexander Harlow Confidence: 0.9 Title: Journalism Dean Attends Meeting Summary: Dean Warren K. Agee of the William Allen White School of Journalism at KU attended a communications specialists conference in Denver. Category: campus news Subjects: university administration; journalism education; academic conferences Named Entities: Agee, Warren K. [dean] Confidence: 0.85 Title: KU Debate Teams Post 4 - 1 Scores Summary: Four KU debate teams participated in the Northwest Missouri State College Debate Tournament, with three teams posting 4-1 records. Category: sports Subjects: academic competition; debate teams; university sports Confidence: 0.8 Title: Biologist-Teacher Exhibits Paintings Summary: KU alumnus Stewart Clarke, a research biologist and teacher, is exhibiting his paintings in the Kansas Union Browsing Room. Category: arts Subjects: art exhibitions; KU alumni; scientific art Named Entities: Clarke, Stewart [biologist-teacher] Confidence: 0.8 Title: It Used to Be... By Hector Olave Summary: Column comparing past and present student life at KU, focusing on holiday traditions and academic customs from 1915 and 1940. Category: features/profiles Subjects: historical comparison; student life; KU traditions Confidence: 0.75 Title: [advertisements] Advertisers include: Sandy's; A-1 Kotzin Co.; Terrill's Category: advertisements Confidence: 1.0 Note: Descriptive metadata for this item has been generated in part using AI (artificial intelligence) technologies and may be incomplete, misleading, or inaccurate. Please contact the Kenneth Spencer Research Library with specific questions or concerns.