Page 12 University Daily Kansan Tired, Grim Students Brace for Final Week By Joanne Prim It's that time again. You haven't slept since Sunday night. You haven't eaten since yesterday noon. You haven't spoken to anyone for a week. Your mother is wondering why you haven't written. Your teachers are wondering why you fall asleep in class. Your friends are wondering why you ignore them. Your dean is wondering why you enrolled in his school. You are wondering when you are going to finish two term papers, three book reports, a chemistry experiment, and 23 calculus problems. You're having problems with your one and only. When you call, he's too busy to talk to you. When he calls, you're too busy to talk to him. You're both mad and hurt. You put on your last clean pair of white socks yesterday. Your blouse or shirt is wrinkled and one button is missing. You've lost your glasses. Your room is in a mess. It is practically impossible to study there. You haven't made your bed for two weeks. Now it is covered with notes, papers, and general clutter. An unused alarm clock stands beside it. Your wastebaskets are potential firetracks. You obviously can't study at your desk. It holds a Kleenex box and three used Kleenexes, a coffee cup, an ash tray full of cigarette butts, a jar of olive pimento cheese, a typewriter, an empty toothpaste tube, and three cracker crumbs. On your dresser are bottles of vitamins. No-Doz. and Geritol. Your luggage is sitting at the foot of your bed. You still haven't put it away since you came back from Christmas vacation. A dirty pair of cutoffs and a sweatshirt hang droopily over the pile. Your neighbors to the south are playing their stereo full blast. Your neighbors to the north are indulging in a noisy poker game. Looks pretty bleak, doesn't it? But don't worry. Things will get worse. Next week is final week. You will be up 25 hours daily studying the lessons you ignored this week in order to do two term papers, three book reports, a chemistry experiment, and 23 calculus problems. Explosion Rips-time the Western allies raised strong objections. (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) explained that when the ground is frozen, it does not allow for the natural escape of gas to the surface, thus allowing it to build up. The gas line, an old one, is to be replaced this spring. The explosion did not cut off any major gas service. The gas line contained laboratory gas used in bunsen burners. The surrounding buildings are heated by steam heat, so there was no loss of heating facilities as there was following an explosion at Templin Hall Wednesday. A similar explosion occurred three yars ago in approximately the same area. Both explosions happened at a time when the area was relatively clear. Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Masn. VI 3-0330 Learn How to Fly in the Easy to Fly... ... CESSNA 150 INVESTIGATE OUR SPECIAL FLIGHT COURSE NOW! "Custom-Air" Travel For As Low As 5c Per Passenger Mile In The New 6 Place Cessna 205. Krhart Flying Service INCORPORATED 1/2 Mile NE of Tee Pee Municipal Airport VI 3-2167 KU Alum to Discuss Insurance Problems A KU graduate will be the guest speaker at the fifth annual School of Business Insurance Lectureship at 2 p.m. Feb. 2 in Murphy Hall. Donald C. Brain, 1940 School of Business graduate and national president of the Society of Chartered Property and Casualty Underwriters, will speak on "Insurance Distribution Problems and Opportunities." Brain is a partner with W. B. Johnson & Co. of Kansas City, Mo. The School of Business Insurance Lectureship program was made possible by an Insurance Development Fund established in the KU Endowment Association in 1957. Chinese Delegate Booed- Nikita S. Khrushchev's suggestion, for a meeting in East Berlin, (Continued from page 1) Brandt turned down such a meeting yesterday because the Christian Democratic Party members of his coalition city government threatened to walk out. But he told newsmen that he had gotten support for the meeting from West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, who also is a Christian Democrat, and might reconsider. Brandt is a leader of West Germany's Social Democratic Party. When Khrushchev visited East Berlin in March, 1959, he sent a similar invitation to Brandt but that A Western allied spokesman said today, however, that there probably would be no objection now providing it was clear there was no infringement of Allied sovereignty in West Berlin. Khrushchev has been the star attraction at East Germany's Communist party congress. The congress was expected to wind up its general policy debate with a second speech by East German Communist chief Walter Ulbricht and perhaps an address from Red China's delegate Wu Hsiu-Chuan. SAVE MONEY- SAVE TIME- Use the Convenient Facilities of Independent 9th and Miss. INDEPENDENT ALL SERVICE CENTER VI3-5304