Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 15, 1963 Dyche Museum Tracks Dead American Indians The Museum of Natural History is tracking down the North American Indians with the help of two grants awarded the University. Carlyle Smith, curator of the museum, will direct both grants. Inferences about early Indian cultures will be drawn from artifacts and field observations from his earlier archeological trips to areas destined for inundation by reservoir projects. A grant of $6,000 from the National Science Foundation will provide for DeGaulle Policy Poses Problems PARIS — (UPI) — President Charles de Gaulle's inflexible positions on a multi-national nuclear force and the European Common Market posed critical problems for France's two major allies today. De Gaulle's rejection yesterday of the polaris missile complicated President Kennedy's plan for a European nuclear force in which France would play a key role. His simultaneous insistence on strict adherence to the common market treaty, with no special conditions, set back Britain's 15-month-old negotiations for entry into the six-nation trade group. Thus, the stolid. 72-year-old French leader dealt the United States and Britain, France's wartime and postwar allies, strong rebuffs in order to maintain French independence of action. DE GAULLE received some indirect backing from Gen. Lauris Norstad, who just retired as Supreme Allied commander of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Norstad has favored giving European nations a voice in the deployment and use of nuclear weapons. In a speech in Washington last night, Norstad said NATO's nuclear weapons should be controlled by an executive body of three nations, any two of which could send atomic arms into action. This is similar to an idea De Gaulle favored. De Gaulle's rejection of the multinational nuclear force centered around the polaris missile conflicted with the West German position. West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and his government last night announced their "full cooperation" in Kennedy's so-called Nassau defense plans. THE DEFENSE PLAN is based on agreements reached by Kennedy and Prime Minister Harold Macmillan last month in their talks at Nassau, the Bahamas. Macmillan accepted Kennedy's offer of the Polaris as the nucleus of Britain's nuclear strength. De Gaulle said France intends to have its own national defense, with its own atomic forces "if need be." He said France has no need of its allies in the event of a nuclear war and "alliances are not absolute virtues." Israel Extends Fair Invitation Israel Extends Fair Invitation JERUSALEM — (UPI) The Israeli government has decided to allow the city of Tel Aviv to invite West Germany to a 1964 fair, it was reported today. STUDENTS Grease Jobs . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing analysis of materials from Indian village sites in the Missouri River valley. Material was collected by Mr. Smith in a series of trips to South Dakota from 1950 to 1959. The grant also will enable rearrangement of the material at KU, necessitated by an addition to the Natural History Museum. The addition, now being completed, will give Dr. Smith's anthropology division needed research facilities. 7 a.m-11 p.m PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd Mr. Smith also received a supplementary grant of $400 to an earlier $4,000 grant from the National Park Service. The supplement will provide for a student assistant to analyze material collected last summer at the Melvern Reservoir in Osage County. Two graduate students will work half-time on the NSF project, after the grant officially takes effect in July. The study will lead to publication of a book of scientific reports, with descriptions of findings at the Indian village sites and placement of findings in their proper time periods. The artifacts were from Indian cultures present in Kansas as long as 2,000 to 5,000 years ago. Jack M. Schock, Hiawatha special student who plans to enter the master's program, will assist under the supplementary grant. Petra Moore, Lawrence graduate student, will assist under the original National Park Service grant. Saturday Last Day To Get Polio Vaccine Thousands of doses of the third dose of Sabin oral polio vaccine are available at Watkins Hospital until Saturday noon, and from the Douglas County Health Service through Friday Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, Health Service Director, reported today. This will be the last time Sabin vaccine will be available in this region. Only 70 obtained the vaccine yesterday, Dr. Canuteson said. The vaccine is available free to students at Watknis. There is a one dollar fee for faculty and staff. There is no charge to anyone at the County Health Service. The currently available dose of the Sabin vaccine protects one from type II polio. The previous doses given here were for protection against Type I and III polio. Episcopal Bishop To Speak Sunday The Rt. Rev. Edward Clark Turner, the Episcopal bishop of Kansas, will address the Canterbury Association Sunday evening at the Canterbury House, 1116 Louisiana. His topic will be "The Bishops as a Source of Doctrine in the Episcopal Church." Dinner is at 5:30 p.m. and the bishop will speak about 6 p.m. Laird Plans Russian Study Through Rockefeller Grant Roy D. Laird, associate professor of political science, and a specialist in Soviet agriculture, has been awarded a Rockefeller grant to conduct research next year at the University of Munich in Germany. Prof. Laird will study the implications of post-Stalin changes in Soviet agriculture, emphasizing the U.S.S.R.'s 1962 administrative reorganization. Prof. Roy Laird PROF. LAIRD will investigate the political applications of Soviet agriculture at the Munich Institute for the Study of the U.S.S.R. He also plans to consult with former Soviet scholars. An important part of Prof. Laird's study will include a tour of Russia to observe first-hand Soviet rural life. In 1960 the KU professor traveled extensively in the Soviet Union as a member of a United States agricultural group. Prof. Laird joined the KU faculty in 1957. He attended the Soviet Studies Institute of Glasgow University in Scotland, and in 1956-57 was a research analyst for the U.S. government. He is the author of numerous articles on Soviet agricultural practices published in journals here and abroad. CHESTERFIELD KING Tobaccos too mild to filter, pleasure too good to miss! CHESTERFIELD KING Longer length means milder taste The smoke of a Chesterfield King mellows and softens as it flows through longer length . . . becomes smooth and gentle to your taste.