Monday, Dec. 17, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Night Bus Service Planned for Campus The campus bus schedule will be extended to include night service on a two week trial basis following Christmas vacation, the All Student Council said yesterday. Suzy Runnells, Greeley, Colo., junior and chairman of an ASC committee negotiating with the Lawrence Transit Company, said, "Primarily, the bus service will help girls make better use of campus study facilities, especially in cold weather." She said that many women are hesitant about walking across campus after dark. "Lately, incidences of women being attacked make it unsafe to get out alone at night." BESIDES BEING unsafe, she pointed out that long walks to the library from Lewis Hall, the freshmen dormitories and West Hills also discourage women from studying on campus at night. For those reasons Miss Runnells proposed the extended service at last Tuesday night's meeting. She and two other ASC members will make final arrangements with the Lawrence Transit Company tomorrow. Tentatively, the bus will run between 7:30 and 10:30 or 11 p.m. starting the Monday after Christmas vacation. Trial bus stops will include freshman women dormitories and large women's dormitories as well as sorority houses near the Tennessee Street and West Hills vicinities. IF, AFTER two weeks, enough students ride the bus, the transit company may continue the service for the remainder of the school year. The night bus service, which originally was part of the Fall 1961 Vox party platform, was tried last spring, but failed. Former Supreme Court Justice Cites Impact of Court's Rulings A former associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, citing the court's rulings on integration and reapportionment, pointed out Friday that the court's rulings often have ramifications which touch every citizen. Former associate justice Charles Evans Whittaker made this point in a speech and an interview at a Phi Alpha Delta (legal fraternity) dinner. He retired from the court in April of this year. Whittaker said the principal requirement for a case to be accepted by the Supreme Court is that it be "of great public concern." AFTER CITING the integration and reapportionment rulings, he declined further comment on them, saying that a Supreme Court justice should not comment on cases he dealt with while a member of the court. Whittaker reviewed the operating procedure of the Court and said that a justice may change his mind at any time before the decision of the court is announced. WHITTAKER SAID that if several justices disagree with the majority view they caucus to see if they will write a dissenting opinion. He said there is a continuous "petitioning of brother by brother" to work out disagreements. And after the decision is announced, he said, there is endless criticism. The loser is never pleased, Whit-taker said. The more controversial the question, the higher the pitch of tension, he added. A KU graduate and former professor is a founder of the new Park Forest College, Park Forest, Ill. Former Journalism Instructor Helps Found Illinois College John R. Malone, class of 1937 and assistant professor of journalism from 1946 to 1950, is one of five men who founded the not-yet-built college which will cost an estimated $10 million. Construction of the private, nonprofit college will begin in 1963 with the building of 18 classroom buildings. The first freshman class will be enrolled in 1965 and enrollment is expected to be 3,000 by 1970. The four-year liberal arts college will operate on the trisemester plan of three 16-week semesters. Students will have the choice of finishing their education in three years or in the usual four years. Malone, after leaving KU in 1950, became research director of Fensholt Marriage is popular because it combines the maximum of temptation with the maximum of opportunity.—George Bernard Shaw Advertising Agency, Chicago. Ill. In 1961 he became executive director of the Foundation for a Compatible Second Consistent Alphabet. He was formerly co-owner of the Morristown Sun and co-founder of The Burley Tobacco Grower's Assn. weekly with Mel Adams, KU professor of journalism. Both newspapers were printed in Tennessee. BUSINESS MACHINES CO. 912 Mass. — VI 3-0151 PORTABLES - $49.50 up SERVICE SALES RENTALS All Kinds Office Equipment Printing, Mimegraphing and Duplicating Pick up — Delivery IF YOU HAVE OR NEED A CAMERA OR FILM (with cost of processing included) OR CAMERA EXTRAS See OR CAMERA TYPE GIFTS UNIVERSITY CAMERAS located at "K" Grill & Sundries VI 2-0213 Bill Haynes $ ^{*} $ says... 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