Friday, November 3. 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Large Tournout for Tourney With what was described on " neominal turnout," 62 men, two women took part in a ping pong tournament in the Kansas Union last night. The tournament was played on seven tables, with 14 playing at a time. The remainder of those present watched the matches with much spirit and interest. With matches being decided by the best two out of three games, the top two players of the night were decided: Breon Mitchell, Salina sophomore, and Stephen Peters, Merriam sophomore. They played three games to decide who was champion. Peters took the first game, 21-19; Mitchell, the second, 21-8. The deciding game saw Peters triumph. 21-19. Two close runners-up were Chuk- kwok Lo, Hong Kong freshman, and Norman Sobiesk, Lawrence graduate student. K. S. Balgopal, New Delhi, India, sophomore, participates in the ping pong tourney. Library Find to Be 'Sensation' The Anglo-Saxon fragments found in a KU book by the library will cause a sensation in scholarship, Thomas R. Buckman, director of libraries says. The library reported final identification of the fragments from a 14th century manuscript Friday. The fragments are valued from $8,000 to $10,000. Mr. Buckman said Bertram Colgrave, visiting professor of English, had told him before he left for Durham, England, in September that Froshawks Choose Officers for Year Froshawks, freshman women's pep organization, recently elected officers for the 1961-62 school year. Officers elected were Georgia Lonnecker, Kansas City, Mo., president; Mary Weston, Overland Park, vice president; Pat Wyles, Ft Leavenworth, secretary; Judy Watson, Wichita, treasurer; Elaine Borel, Falls Church, Va., and Chris Wolf, Wichita, songleaders; Anne Garlinghouse, Topeka, social chairman; and Susan Kidwell, Garden City, publicity chairman. Candidates for the various offices were selected by personal interviews with more than 70 freshman women who applied. Elections were then held to choose among the candidates selected. Official Bulletin TODAY Hillel Friday Night Services: 6:45 p.m. Jewish Community Center, 917 High- way Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, Union, Film on Urbana Conference. International Club: Directly following the International Club's rules and susan Union. Dancing and refreshments. SATURDAY Hiliel Autumn Dance: 8 p.m. Jewish Community Center. 917 Highland Drive. SUNDAY Lutheran Church Services: 8:30 and 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m., Immmanuel Lutheran Church, 17th & Vermont, 5 p.m. Wednesday, Donofrio Chapel. Catholic Mass: 9 and 11 a.m., Fraser Hall. (Newman Club). Lutheran Church Services: 9:15 and 11 and 12 Lutheran Church, 13th and 14 New Hampshire Oread Friends Meeting: 10:30 a.m. Dionfof paper bags are welcome to this club. Lutheran Student Association Evening Vespers: 5:15 p.m. Dunbridge Chapel. Dinner will follow in the Cottonwood Room, Union, at 5:30 with the program following. Faith of Life Seminar: 8:45-10:30 a.m. Westminster Center, 204 Oread Break- Room Morning Worship: 11 a.m. Westminster Center, 1204 Oread, Rev. E. G. Froyd, Synod Executive of the Synod of Kansas, "Christian Perspective." Sunday Evening Fellowship: 5:15-7.30. Westminster Center, 1204 Oread. Speaker and speaker. Dr. Dance of the speech present who will speak on "Brain Washing." MONDAY Episcopal Holy Communion and Lunch: 12 noon, Contenbury House Kuku Pep Club: 6:30 p.m., Oread Boom, Kansas Union Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TUESDAY the announcement of the discovery would receive great acclaim. Prof. Colgrave identified the fragments fully and will publish an article on the discovery in Speculum, a medieval journal published in Cambridge, Mass., in January, 1962. One of the manuscripts is a religious text and the fragments contain part of a sermon, "The Confessor." Their value is that of filling in holes in history caused by the destruction of Anglo-Saxon documents by 16th century Protestants who regarded them as "papist heresies," Mr. Buckmann said. Nurses's Club Meeting: 7 to 8 p.m. Fraser Hall Dining Room. Rita Peters will speak on her trip to Australia where she helped the International Council of Nursing. WEDNESDAY Student National Education Association: 4 p.m., 30? Barley, Speaker, Dr. A. J. Edwards: "Educational Procedures for Children Who Are Different." The library discovered the fragments in a Latin book of poetry which the library was urged to buy by Kenneth Rothwell, professor of English. The fragments were noticed upon purchase and Alexandra Mason, then assistant head of special collections, realized their worth. Miss Mason began study on them but the library called Prof. Colgrave, an expert in Anglo-Saxon literature, to make the final estimate. He completed the study in four months after correspondence with colleagues at Oxford and Cambridge, England. WASHINGTON — (UPI) The government's nuclear survival plan calls for a temporary freeze on all prices, wage, salaries and rents in the event of widespread attack on the United States. U.S. Survival Plans Readied Under study are details of how the government could indemnify firms for property losses. Officials said such payments would have to be gradual, lest the economy be flooded with money at the very time that goods were in shortest supply. That could cause runaway inflation. The plan also anticipates national sharing of losses, with undamaged areas taking on the burden of keeping the economy running. AN INTER-AGENCY STUDY group has been working on postattack survival for more than two years. It is under the chairmanship of Edward F. Phelps, director for economic stabilization of the Office of Emergency Planning. Phelps hopes the group will develop in the next few months additional machinery for alleviating the most acute post-attack economic stress. One novel aspect of the survival plan is that the job of enforcing the rent and price freeze and of rationing goods would fall on local governments. In past wars Washington has directed these programs. The Labor Department's extensive Page - Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil network of field offices would administer the wage-salary freeze. Reg. 16.95 Now 1395 ACME COWBOY BOOTS Reg. 19.95 ------ Now 1695 THE OFFICE OF EMERGENCY planning is working with state governments on post-attack state and local responsibility. The states, in turn, are to instruct local authorities. To date 30 governors have appointed officials to take charge of emergency planning. Four federal-state-local conferences have been held since April—in New York, Chicago, San Francisco and Los Angeles. From 350 to 700 businessmen, bankers and professional people have attended these meetings. A fifth is scheduled for Dec. 5-6 in Atlanta and a sixth for mid-January, probably in Dallas. plan was only a temporary expedition to keep the economy from falling apart. It would continue in force, Fhelps said, "until the federal government could crawl out from the rubble, assess the damage and decide what must be done." Flags Aplenty PHIELS EMPHASIZED in an interview that the economic survival SAN FRANCISCO - (UPI) Thirteen flags have flown over California in its recorded history. They include the Spanish Empire, England, the Spanish National Ensign, Russia, the Russian-American Company, pirates from Argentina, the Mexican Empire, the Mexican Republic, explorer John Fremont's flag, the original Bear Flag, the American Flag in 1846, the state's present official Bear Flag and the Stars and Stripes of the U.S.A. A fashionable knockout for handling all kinds of weather. Fine water repellent poplin . . . beige on one side, orange and tan print on the other. Stain, crease resistant. Sizes 4-14. Second Floor