Wednesday. November 1. 1967 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 7 Halloween carol sing spawns 'panty hopes' Some women may have thought it was a panty raid. But the Templin men had wholesome intentions—they had arrived to sing Halloween carols. The women in Daisy Hill dormitories came to the windows when they heard men outside. Some enjoyed the singing. Others thought the idea was sweeter than the men's voices. However, the singing continued despite an uncertainty as to how their carols were being received and despite a chill mist that was falling. Several of the men carried carved pumpkins aglow with candles. The group began singing after their arrival was announced with a trumpet carried by one of them. The songs were Christmas melodies, with altered lyrics, from Charles Schulz's songbook of pumpkin carols. One began, "pumpkin bells, pumpkin bells, dashing through the streets..." Fifty men took part in the hour of caroling, then returned to Templin for cider and doughnuts. The singing was a good-will gesture but the men were somewhat partial. They visited only the women's dorms. JAYHAWK FOOD MART'S PLAYER OF THE WEEK Bob Douglass "Douglass is our boy this week," said Bob Floyd. "He continues to improve every game, and now he's writing himself into the record books. Several aspects of the Iowa State game were pleasing. The blocking was good, particularly by the fullbacks. And how about those track boys? The Douglass-to-Ard and Douglass-to-Ollison combinations look pretty hard to defend against." Here's a winning combination; you and Jayhawk Food Mart. Convenient and close to the campus, Jayhawk Food Mart is open till midnite. Stop in and bring us your grocery list. And let's talk a little football. KU athletics—and KU students—rate high with us. KED CARPET SERVICE AT POPULAR PRICES 9th & Ill. Open till Midnite VI 3-1204 Express Your Sentiments Toward Vince's Purple Pride UDK-VOICE OF STUDENT ACTIVITY 600 see horror flicks Halloween spirits were undamped by a misty rain falling outside the Kansas Union Tuesday night. From the ballroom came sounds of "silent" horror movies—the hoots and shrieks of about 600 spirited students. It was a sell-out for Student Union Activities popular films' first special feature this year. Tom Bashaw, Wichita senior and films committee publicity chairman, said it was because "everybody likes to laugh at these." There was more hissing and meaning than laughter as Lon Chaney Sr. dramatized frantically to convey "horror" in "Phantom of the Opera." KU males who dominated the audience apparently found his "Roaring 20's" manner a little tame, so they accentuated every feeble advance of the monster toward the fair maiden with "ooo0's," "ah-ah's," "yeah-yeah's," and more than one "all right!" Chaney was at one point even called a "lecherous old man" by a delighted and boisterous fan. The added violence of Chaney's role in a second film, "The Hunchback of Notre Dame," however, might have been much too much for three girls who were "bored" after 15 minutes of "Phantom." They had come to put on their own show, dressed in costumes more to viewers' horror than any worn by characters in the movies. One could twist her mouth open only far enough to explain that her green face was tempera-painted, and that she hoped the word "Love" on her forehead would wash off easily. 1967 ACCOUNTING, MATH AND ENGINEERING GRADUATES FOR SYSTEMS, PRODUCTION, RESEARCH, INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING, TESTING ENGINEERING, FIELD ENGINEERING, DESIGN, AND SALES The Inland Steel Company, East Chicago, Indiana, invites you to investigate our many career opportunities. Consult the specific job descriptions in the pocket of our brochure. Our representative will be on your campus on Friday, November 10, 1967. INLAND STEEL COMPANY East Chicago, Indiana We are an Equal Opportunity Employer in the Plans for Progress Program. CLASSICAL FILM SERIES presents "THE LAST MILLIONAIRE" (France,1934) The story of an all-powerful dictator whose purposeless but uproariously funny edicts are followed without question by his obedient subjects A brilliant satire by the master of French comedy Rene Clair 7 and 9 p.m.-Wednesday-Dyche Auditorium Single Admission: 60c