University Daily Kansan Page 9 Applications Open For Foreign Grant Students interested in graduate study for the 1962-63 academic year may apply for a $2250 National Defense Foreign Language Fellowship. Applications must be submitted before Jan. 15, 1962. The fellowship is to apply to studies improving students' knowledge of Russian, Spanish, or Spanish and Portuguese. Students may be progressing toward a degree in social science, science or Spanish. Students must plan their program to improve their Spanish or Russian and submit it through KU for national competition. The U.S. Office of Education, under the National Defense Education Act, will conduct the competition. A $450 summer session and dependents' allowance is also available in addition to the $2250. J. Neale Carman, professor of Romance languages, 103 Fraser, has further information. Schools and universities throughout the nation will compete. Quill, the English department's student literary magazine, will go on sale after the Christmas holiday. Kent DeVore, El Dorado senior, said yesterday. Quill on Sale Soon The issue is devoted to poetry and short stories and will be available in the Kansas Union and the English department. Too great haste in paying off an obligation is a kind of ingratitude. —Francois Rochefoucauld This Christmas Give Your Portrait by HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. 913-0330 JUDY WILCOX Alpha Omicron PI Wonderful for Christmas giving-or wearing. A white wool skirt and zippered cardigan. Youth Code Needs Help More insight and added facilities are needed to make Kansas's juvenile code a practical solution to juvenile problems, although the state has one of the finest codes in the United States. Such was the opinion of four speakers on juvenile delinquency at the final session of "The Child and the Law," subject of the first annual Law and Society Institute held here Dec. 4 and 5. Not all juvenile offenders should be treated with leniency, however, Atty, Gen. Ferguson said. Some offenses should receive penalties commensurate to the penalties dealt to adult offenders, he said. William Ferguson, attorney general of Kansas; James V. Riddell, Sedgwick County probate judge; Stuart Averill, psychiatrist and clinical director of the Boys' Industrial School in Topeka and Mrs. Ruth Casey, social worker at Topeka State Hospital were the speakers. They agreed the state must take a paternalistic attitude towards juvenile offenders. Rehabilitation, not punishment, is the main purpose of court power, they said. Mrs. Casey objected, maintaining the courts should exercise greater understanding rather than more discipline in dealing with juvenile crime. All the speakers agreed the home should mold the character of the nation's youth, thus halting social evils before they begin. Life's Photos Shown Downtown A collection of Life Magazine's finest photographs is on display at 1040 Vermont St. The collection was drawn from a list of favorites among Life's photographers. It will run for a limited time. For Best Results Use Kansan Classifieds Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers This is a -BELATED- BELATED is a condition when you are late for a date, class, or a meeting. You'll be ELATED if you let Fritz Co. keep your car in "A-OK" service condition. "Here's our original estimate-of course, heh, heh- we had to add a few minor extras." Our estimates miss sometimes too. There was an old lady last week whose final bill was $12.45 ... our estimate was $12.00... 714 Vermont VI 3-3500