Friday. Nov. 30. 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 JFK-Mikoyan Talks Fruitless WASHINGTON — (UPI) — President Kennedy's long conference with Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan failed to lessen the lingering differences over Cuba and pointed up the possibility of new East-West dissension in Southeast Asia. Mikoyan was meeting today at lunch with Secretary of State Dean Rusk but officials said they did not expect this talk to alter matters materially. THE WHITE HOUSE announced that Kennedy and Mikoyan, in a 31/2 hour session last evening, agreed Soviet and American negotiators in New York should continue their efforts to tie up loose ends of the Oct. 28 agreement on removal of Red missiles and bombers from Cuba. U. S. officials added that the White House session failed to make any progress on any disputed points, including the major question of how and when Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev is going to make good on his promise to permit United Nations inspectors to check Cuban bases to make certain all offensive weapons have been removed. Officials said the danger of new disorders in Southeast Asia came up in discussing Laos. The President was understood to have pointed out that a considerable number of Communist North Vietnamese troops remain in Northern Laos despite the Soviet pledge to see that they were removed under the international agreement to "neutralize" the kingdom. U. S. OFFICIALS said the President and his aides also were disturbed by the continued refusal of pro-Communist Pathet Lao elements to cooperate in forming the coalition government agreed on at the Geneva conference last summer. It was understood Kennedy warned Mikoyan that continued refusal of the pro-Communist Pathet Lao to open up their territory and participate in the coalition government agreed on last summer at Geneva was jeopardizing the peace. Partial Listing: Partial Listing: Sweaters ... $3.95 to 17.95 Blouses ... $4.95 to 9.95 Skirts ... $6.95 to 17.95 Jewelry ... $1.00 to 3.00 plus tax Hosiery ... $1.15 to 1.35 Dusters ... $10.95 to 12.95 Many other gifts Kirsten's Hillcrest Shopping Center OPEN EVENINGS Last Chance Given To Sign for NY Bus Students bound for New York during the Christmas vacation will have their last chance today to save $20 on the trip. SUA is offering a chartered bus which will leave Lawrence on Dec. 19 for the New York area. Students may travel via this bus for $40 instead of the usual $80. Interested students should contact Tonto Mays at VI3-4811 before Friday. Stewardesses Have Bottle Problems NEW YORK — (UPI) — Three pretty stewardesses simultaneously smashed champagne bottles against a pillar yesterday to christen the $10 million passenger terminal at Idlewild Airport shared by Braniff International Airways, Northwest Orient Airlines and Northeast Airlines. Northeast stewardess Helen Stillman got a slight glass cut on her hand, Branift stewardess Sheila Dixon got champagne all over her face and 10-gallon hat and Northwest stewardess Bette Budd got her kimono costume bathed in bubbly champagne. Full Schedule Outlined For Leadership Day About 125 high school senior girls are arriving on campus today, but they'll be so busy that there will be no time for fraternizing with the KU male. The Associated Women Students (AWS) High School Leadership Day committee has a full schedule of entertainment speeches, panels, and tours planned for them. HIGH SCHOOL Leadership Day is designed to acquaint outstanding senior girls with the importance of a college education and the desirability of coming to KU. Representatives come from Kansas and eastern Missouri. Activities start this evening with a program of entertainment, including a fashion show; the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority Student Union Activities (SUA) skit, "McGoat at Ku"; the Alpha Phi sorority small ensemble; folk songs, and a dramatic reading. THE SCHEDULE for Saturday: 9:00 a.m.—Registration. 9:30—Keynote speech by James 10:00 Coffee break Gunn, administrative assistant to the chancellor. 10:46 COURT JEAN 10:15—Talk, "The Varied Roles of the KU Woman," by Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women. 10:30 Talk on AWS by Marilyn J. Mueller, Houston, Tex., senior and president of AWS. 10:45—PANEL. "Opportunities Unlimited." by Mortar Board members (senior women's honorary) and moderated by Dean Taylor. 2:15-Discussion groups on "Cues for Campus Living," led by members of Mortar Board and AWS Senate. 12:15 p.m.—Luncheon at Gertrude Sellards Pearson. 1:30-Tour conducted by Cwens (sophomore women's honorary) of Alpha Chi Omega sorority, Watkins Scholarship Hall, Danforth Chapel, and Watson Library. 3:05 Concluding remarks by Sharon Menasco, Wichita sophomore and chairman of High School Leadership Day. Official Bulletin TODAY Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Davonorth, Chapel SUNDAY International Club, after the foreign movie at Hoch, Jayhawk Room, Union Eldg., Ping Pong Tournament, Dancing and Refreshments. Catholic Masses, 8:00 a.m., St. Lawrence, Chapel 213; Fresher Road; 8:00 a.m., Fraser Auditorium; Lutheran Student Association, 5:00 a.m., Woodwardwood Room; D.A. Jackson, Religious Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES SALUTE: ROY MOORE Roy Moore (B.B.A., 1958) is responsible for 51,000 telephone customers served from Southwestern Bell's San Antonio office. To efficiently keep tabs on the nearly $700,000 monthly billing, Roy has a staff of 24 people including four supervisors. A lot of responsibility, but Roy showed he could handle it right from his first assignment as a Staff Assistant in the Houston Sales Department. From there, he progressed to Commercial Assistant, and then to Group Manager for ten exchanges around Cuero, Texas. Roy Moore and other young men like him in Bell Telephone Companies throughout the country help bring the finest communications service in the world to the homes and businesses of a growing America. BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES