Page 5 Kansas Editors To Meet Here Burton W, Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information will describe the impact of American journalism upon journalism and public affairs of the Middle East for the annual University of Kansas Editor's Day Oct. 23. Dean Marvin has just returned from a year in the Middle East where he was a Fulbright lecturer in journalism at the University of Tehran, Iran. ABOUT 150 Kansas newspaper editors and their wives are expected to attend the Editors' Day Events, which will begin in the morning in Flint Hall and conclude with the Kansas-Oklahoma State football game. In addition to the talk by Dean Marvin, the program will include an announcement of the name of the 45th Kansas editor elected to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame and the annual "wrangle session." Annually editors who have been active in Kansas newspaper affairs for at least 25 years elect to the Hall of Fame an editor who has been deceased for at least three years. The vote is conducted by mail ballot. THE "WRANGLE SESSION" is held each year to discuss newspaper problems. The "wrangle session" will be led by Stewart Newlin, editor of the Wellington Daily News and president of the Kansas Press Association. Upon arrival, the editors will be greeted with coffee and doughnuts furnished by the University Daily Kansas. They will be guests of Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe at a buffet luncheon in the Kansas Union building, and A. C. Lonborg, director of athletics, will host the editors at the football game. University Daily Kansan A special feature of the day will be displays in the William Allen White Memorial Reading Room in Flint Hall. Medieval Air To Fill Union "Medieval Madness," complete with handsome knights, fine ladies, underprivileged serfs and maladjusted jesters, will dominate the Student Union Activities Carnival, Saturday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. the organizations presenting skits are: Sigma Chi, "The War of the Four Roses"; Alpha Chi Omega, "Nights at the Round Stables"; Phi Kappa Psi, "McHeath Bar"; Alpha Kappa Lamba, "Scorcerer's Worksnop"; Alpha Delta Fti, "Tonite the Knight"; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, "Sir Wesco and the Rebelling Dragon"; Kappa Kappa Gamma, "St. George and the Dragon" or "The Knight Mayeth Slayet But the Malady Lingerer On"; Sigma Nu, "Shamalot," and Gamma Phi Beta. "A Friend in Need Is a Dragon Indeed." The groups presenting booths are: Delta Chi, "Knight on a Cube"; Kappa Alpha Theta, "Theta Joust House"; Delta Upsilon, "D.U. Dungeon"; Lewis Hall, "Serfside Twist"; Sigma Chi, "Little Knight on Campus"; Chi Omega, "Ring a Damsel—Win a Dragon"; Triangle, "Rountree Roulette"; Phi Delta Theta, "Knights of the Round Table"; Sigma Phi Epsilon, "Burn the Bard"; Phi Gamma Delta, "Death's Door"; Phi Kappa Tau, "The Dragon-Slay-Booth"; Tau Kappa Epsilon, "Tar and Feather the HERETEKE"; Acacia, "Be a Knight for a Night"; Lambda Chi Alpha, "Jayhawk Joust"; Alpha Phi, "Scaldin Cauldron"; G.S.P., "Gertrude's Sorcery Palace", and Pi Kappa Alpha, "Knight's Club". NORMAN, Okla. — (UPI) — A three-year program of night courses leading to a master's degree in business administration will be offered by the University of Oklahoma College of Business Administration beginning this fall. Night Courses The program has been instituted in response to many requests from business establishments and the services for a course study which could be undertaken without interruption of full-time jobs. Official Bulletin SUA Bridge Lessons: 7 p.m., every Wednesday, Room 306, Kansas Union. Instructor, Larry Bodie. Catholic Daily Mass; 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. All students planning to apply for Fulbright or foreign government awards for 1962-63 should make an appointment at Hospital this week. Medical examinations must be taken at the academic institution at which the students are enrolled. Ph.D. French Reading Examinations: Saturday, Oct. 14, 9 to 11 a.m., Fraser 11. Submit books to Miss Craig, Fraser 120, bv Oct. 11. Episcopal Holy Communion and breakfast; 7 a.m., Canterbury House. TOMORROW Foreign Service Meeting: 4 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union. Mr. Howard J. La reunion du Cercle Francais annonce pour mercredi, le 11 octobre, sa remplieuse par la conference en francais de M. Henri Peyre mardi le 10 octobre, la conference aura lieu, a quatre heures dans la saite de recital de Murphy Hall. Hilton, a Career Foreign Service Officer, Program of the Department of State. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. WEDNESDAY Student National Education Association: 4 p.m., Bailey Auditorium, Film and speaker concerning Russian education. Increased means and increased leisure are the two civilizers of man.—Benjamin Disraeli Monday, October 9, 1961 Carilloneur Barnes to Be Guest Performer Ronald Barnes, KU carilloneur, will play a carillon recital Oct. 21 at the Culver Military Academy, Culver, Ind., for the 10th anniversary of the dedication of the Culver Memorial Chapel. Mr. Barnes will give the recital on a 51-bell carillon in the Culver Chapel. Parts of his program were arranged by Robert B. Grogan, Parsons graduate student. A man should always consider how much he has more than he wants, and how much more unhappy he might be than he really is.—Joseph Addison Mr. Barnes played a recital last month on the 48-bell carillon of the First Plymouth Congregational Church in Lincoln, Neb., and has been invited to return. Many a man who thinks to found a home discovers that he has merely opened a tavern for his friends. —Norman Douglas To you self-denial may only mean weariness, restraint, ennui; but it means, also, love, perfection, sanctification—R. D. Hitchcock Common sense is not so common. Voltaire Every 24 hours, the world's largest distillation unit separates crude oil into ten different categories which end up as six million gallons of finished products. This involves continual monitoring of 250 instruments, followed by precise balancing of controls. To operate at peak efficiency, control directions are changed many times daily to compensate for a multitude of variables. The IBM computer that took over this job now reads the instruments, makes the calculations, and issues the orders for the control changes. It is guided in its work by over 75,000 instructions stored in its electronic memory. Just a few years ago electronic control of such a complex industrial process would have been impossible. But such is the progress in computer systems that in the sixties it will become commonplace. This dramatic progress means exciting and important jobs at IBM for the college graduate, whether in research development, manufacturing, or programming. If you want to find out about opportunities in any one of these areas, you are invited to talk with the IBM representative. He will be interviewing on your campus this year. Your placement office can make an appointment. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, creed, color or national origin. Write, outlining your background and interests, to: Mgr. of Technical Employment, Dept. 898, IBM Corporation, 590 Madison Avenue, N.Y. 22, N.Y. You naturally have a better chance to grow with a growth company. IBM will interview Nov. 8, Nov. 9. ---