Alcoholic Study Awards Available At Utah, Yale TOPEKA—(U.P.)—The Kansas Commission on Alcoholism announced today it will offer scholarships to two summer session schools on alcohol studies, at Yale and the University of Utah. Forced by the Legislature to drop out of patient treatment work, the commission will continue its educational program in fighting alcoholism in Kansas. The scholarships, with the number presently unlimited, will be available to physicians, clergymen, attorneys, law enforcement officers, social workers, hospital administration and others interested in problem drinking. Monday. Feb. 13. 1956. University Daily Kansan The one week Utah school will be June 17-23. The Yale school at New Haven, Comm., will be July 1-26. Lewis Andrews, executive director, said the commission decided Saturday in Wichita to withdraw from operation of the 12-bed recovery center there on April 1. He said there is a possibility Wichita sponsors may take it over. The Legislature, in providing $50.833 for the commission for the next fiscal year, ordered it to sever connection with the treatment center by July 1. Mr. Andrews said 40 patients have been treated and discharged since the center was opened last October. He said 65 per cent of those discharged have maintained sobriety or show definite improvement since receiving treatment. Israel Study Available Study in Israel during 1956-57 for a graduate student has been made available by the government of Israel through its ministry of education. Closing date for applications is Wednesday. Students applying must be willing to engage in a research project. Applications may be made through J. A. Burzle, professor of German, 304 Fraser. Preferred fields of study are sociology, history, language, or related subjects of the Middle East or Israel. Places of study will be the Hebrew University, Jerusalem; the Hebrew Technical Institute, Haifa, and the Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovoth. International Club Elects Officers Nigel Kermode, Jersey Channel Islands, graduate student from England has been elected president of the International Club. Appointed as social committee was Claire Alder, St. Gallen, Switzerland, graduate student, and as publicity chairman, Daniel Hillen, Breukelen, Netherlands, graduate student. Activities for this semester will consist of evenings of entertainment by students from various parts of the world. Kermode expressed the hope that more Americans will become members of the club this semester. Faculty Men Have Paintings In Exhibit Oil paintings by two members of the department of drawing and painting have been accepted for the annual Midwest Exhibition at the Joslyn Art Museum in Omaha. Robert B. Green, associate professor, is represented by two paintings, "Etido and Rose" and "Surprise Corridor." Robert Sudlow, assistant professor, is represented by his painting "Autumn." Iceland's capital, Reykjavik, is 1,700 miles closer to the North Pole than is New York City, yet Reykjavik has an average January temperature only one degree lower, thanks to the warming influence of the Gulf Stream. WANTED MALE STUDENT Share 2-Bedroom House Call VI 3-5663 WANTED Mickey Cohen's In Trouble Again PALM SPRINGS, Calif. —U.P.) Former gambling kingpin Mickey Cohen, 41, released last year after spending four years in a federal prison for income tax evasion, is in trouble with the law once again. The ex-big time mobster, however, faces a somewhat lighter charge. He was jailed for a short time early today here for failing to register as an ex-convict. Police Chief August Kettman said Cohen arrived in this plush resort area Saturday and registered at a hotel under an assumed name. He became the subject of a city-wide search yesterday after he changed the registration to his own name. After spending a short time behind bars, a familiar pastime, Cohen was released on $1,000 bail and ordered to appear Feb. 15. LONDON—(U.P.)-Prime Minister Sir Anthony Eden told Parliament frankly today there are "certain differences" between the United States and Britain on foreign policy. 'U.S., Britain Not In Accord' "It was decided in Washington," he said, "that in examining the scope of each control, the test would be the extent to which it served the interests of the free world." Reporting on his recent Washington talks with President Eisenhower, Mr. Eden said that in far eastern policy he found "we have not recited from our position, nor is it fair to say the U.S. government has modified its." However, he said both allies agreed to review the embargo on certain trade with Communist countries, a point near to the heart of this island kingdom which depends on exports for its very life. He assured the House of Commons that in the Middle East dispute, efforts to settle differences between the Arabs and Israel "will be prosecuted in union by the United States and ourselves." TRUNK SHOWING of LANZ Spring and Summer Dresses Campus West from 9 a.m. until 5:30 p.m. Wednesday the 15th Don't write home for money—write Lucky Droodles! A ratt of students have already earned $25 in Lucky Strike's Droodle drive. By June, hundreds more will. Better get with it. It's like taking candy from a baby. Do as many Droodles as you want. Send them, complete with titles, to Lucky Droodle, Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Include your name, address, college, and class—and the name and address of the dealer in your college town from whom you most often buy cigarettes. If we select your Droodle, we'll pay $25 for the right to use it, with your name, in our advertising. And we pay for a lot of Droodles that never appear in print! Talk about easy money! This is it! DROODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Price LONG WALK ON SHORT PIER Sandy Schreiber Texas A & M CENTIPEDE DOING CARTWHEEL Warren Swenson Gonzaga And while you droodle, light up a Lucky the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked! "IT'S TOASTED to taste better! © A.T. Co. PRODUCT OF The American Tobacco Company AMERICA'S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTES