Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1962 Picture taking Time Extended Poor student turnout to the Registrar's office request for new students to have ID pictures taken has forced a new picture-taking schedule. The pictures are no longer used on the KU-ID, as in past years. The new pictures are to be used in files in the various University offices. William Kelley, assistant registrar, said today that only 50 to $60\%$ of the students, who were asked by mail to have their pictures taken, have done so. KELLY SAID. "I realize that many students had classes when we were taking pictures, so we think the new schedule, which runs all day, will attract more students." Picture taking has been operating for the last three weeks on the second floor of Strong Hall. A letter sent out at the beginning of that period urged all new students to get this picture taken. A second letter was recently sent out to those people who failed to have their pictures taken, urging that they come during the remainder of this week or next week, with their KU-ID. Pictures will be taken any time between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. to tomorrow or Friday or Dec. 4, 6, or 7, in Strong Hall, second floor, Rotunda. Study Contends Bell Rates High TOPEKA — (UPI) — The Kansas Supreme Court received a recommendation yesterday that a lower court ruling in favor of the $5.8 million telephone rate increase for Southwestern Bell be reversed. E. H. Hateher, a Topeka attorney appointed by the High Court to make a fact finding study of the three-year-old court battle, concluded that a method used by Bell for computing phone rates was too high. The company sought the increase in intrastate rates in 1959 to pay for replacement of equipment. Shawnee County District Judge Paul Heinz ruled in 1960 that Bell's rate increase was proper and should be allowed. The ruling allowed Bell to boost its rates to produce the extra $5.8 million despite a Kansas Corporation Commission (KCC) ruling that Bell was entitled to an increase of only $1.3 million. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers TRADING POST 7041/2 Mass. Ph.VI 3-2394 Located 1 door South of K.P. & L. in basement. Youth bed complete ... $29.95 Wooden office swivel chair ... $ 4.00 Child's roll top maple desk and swivel chair $24.50 5 pc. dinette set ... $29.95 Metal wardrobe ... $14.00 F. ech Provincial wing ...k chair $24.50 Filling cabinet $19.95 G.E. electric dryer $89.95 3 drawer chest $10.00 Room divider $ 7.00 Baby bed with mattress $16.50 21" Console T.V. $19.00 Portable T.V. $69.95 Console model record player $42.50 AM table model radio $ 8.00 Metal kitchen cabinet $13.50 Twelve military ball finalists met with an Air Force representative last night to discuss a revised queen selection procedure that will cut their ranks to three. Queen Procedure Revised by ROTC The meeting was scheduled after the military science department released a statement reporting that "due to recent misunderstandings and confusion with respect to nomination procedures" student Army, Navy, and Air Force R.O.T.C. representatives would each submit three candidates as queen finalists. The queen will reign over the Dec. 7 Military Ball. We invite you to come in and look around. Remember a few steps down gives you a big step up in savings. The nine semi-finalists will be selected from undergraduate KU women regardless of organizational affiliation. The queen will be selected by five judges who are not affiliated with the military science department, rather than by Scabbard and Blade, a triservice honorary military organization, previously scheduled to make the selection. A military ball committee member said the action came after department heads heard rumors of dissatisfaction that all 12 finalists were now or had been members of Angel Flight, women's student Air Force organization. "Our theory is that many of the houses on campus chose their Angel Flight members as queen candidates. We had our pick of all the girls on campus for Angel Flight so this amounted to a second screening," the committee member said. Coordinators To Share P-t-P Responsibility The KU People-to-People chairman last night shifted several of his responsibilities onto the shoulders of three coordinators. William Schaeffer, Shawnee Mission junior and P-1-P chairman, announced reorganization plans at an executive board meeting in the Kansas Union. UNDER THE NEW PLAN the three coordinators will be directly responsible for several committees and sub-committees. The coordinators will report weekly to Schaeffer on committee activities. The coordinators are Arlo Schurle, Green sophomore and administrative director, Michael Bush, Glendale, Mo., junior and vice chairman, and Jerry Harper, Lawrence junior and public relations director. They will head seven main committees — hospitality, special projects, membership students abroad, brother-sister, job placement and public relations — and 38 sub-committees. SCHAETER SAID the executive board (seven committee chairmen and three coordinators) will meet every other week instead of weekly. "With the growth of P-t-P," he said, "too much responsibility has been centered in me as chairman. Several times I have been forced to make decisions without knowing the feelings of the executive board. Also it has been difficult to retain effective communication with each committee chairman and their respective sub-committees. "Under the new setup," Schaeffer said, "the coordinators will be able to devote more attention to the committees than I can alone." Revenue Service Sets Two Days to Hear Gripes WASHINGTON—(UPI)—The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has received so many protests over its tough new expense account rules that it has reserved two days instead of one for a public hearing. IRS announced yesterday that a hearing would be held Dec. 3 as well as Dec. 4, the date originally scheduled. A spokesman said more than 200 letters of comment about the proposed expense account regulations have been received. Pershing Missile Tests Successful Cape Canaveral — (UPI) — The Army's 30-foot Pershing Missile roared 350 miles across the Atlantic last night in a successful long-range test. The missile flew an unerring course and landed its dummy warhead in a planned target area southeast of here. The Pershing closely resembled the war-ready model expected to be shipped to U.S. defense forces in Europe starting sometime next year. It was the 36th success in 43 tries for the Pershing. State Farm Insurance Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent Off, Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23rd. Res, Ph. VI 3-5949 Lawrence, Kan. KU SPORTS DIAL on KLWN 1320 7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts 5:00 Today Football Forecast 5:20 Tom Hedrick Sports "Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!" says Titus (The Chisel) Aurelius, Ars '63 B.C. "O tempora! O mores!', I used to wail," says The Chisel, "where today can you get a filter cigarette with some flavor? Then I discovered Tareyton—the magnum opus in cigarettes. Put a pack in your toga and enjoy de gustibus you never thought you'd get from any filter cigarette." Dual Filter makes the difference DUAL FILTER Tareyton Product of The American Teleco Company - Teleco is our middle name .