Thursday, Dec. 8, 1955. University Daily Kansan Page 3 Why do more college men and women smoke VICEROYS than any other filter cigarette? Because only Viceroy gives you 20,000 filter traps in every filter tip, made from a pure natural substance cellulose-found in delicious fruits and other edibles! Yes, only Viceroy has this filter composed of 20,000 tiny filter traps. You cannot obtain the same filtering action in any other cigarette. The Viceroy filter wasn't just whipped up and rushed to market to meet the new and skyrocketing demand for filtered cigarettes. Viceroy pioneered. Started research more than 20 years ago to create the pure and perfect filter. Smokers en masse report that filtered Viceros have a finer flavor even than cigarettes without filters. Rich satisfying, yet pleasantly mild. 4. Viceroy draws so easily that you wouldn't know, without looking, that it even had a filter tip . . . and Viceroy costs only a penny or two more than cigarettes without filters! That's why more college men and women smoke VICEROYS than any other filter cigarette . . . that's why VICEROY is the largest-selling filter cigarette in the world! 20,000 Tiny Filter Traps... plus that Real Tobacco Taste Only Oliver Hall Remains To Honor First Chancellor Little remains on the campus to remind students of the University's first chancellor—the Rev. Robert W. Oliver. And the future of the lone landmark to the man, Oliver Hall, is now under consideration. University officers are still discussing what to do with Oliver and several other halls vacated by the recent shift in dormitory housing. Some may be torn down. J. J. Wilson, director of dormitories, said. However, the factors of land value and property value will be taken into consideration. The frame house at 1126 Louisiana St. was purchased in the summer of 1949 for $15,000. Approximately $5,000 more was spent remodeling it for a men's scholarship hall, and the first men moved in that fall. The Rev. Mr. Oliver of the Lawrence Episcopal Church was elected chancellor of the University the first meeting of the Board of Regents on March 21, 1865. He was born Oct. 9, 1815 in Ayrshire, Scotland. His boyhood was spent in training for the British Army, and in 1863, he was sent $ \pmb{\mathbf{w}} $ the United States as an attache. While in the United States, the Rev. Mr. Oliver resigned his commission and began his study for the ministry. Before the close of the Civil War he was sent to Lawrence on "a humane mission," and afterwards was appointed to the chancellorship. He died in 1899. At Last! A Soft-Hearted Judge At Last! A Soft-Hearted Judge SOUTH BEND. Ind. (U.P.)—Who says all traffic judges have hearts of stone? Faced with a sobbing 81-year-old widow charged with a violation after years of driving without an accident, the judge suspended the fine. "I just couldn't fine you," he said. JIM'S DRIVE-IN North on 2nd Street 8 ounce Club Steaks Featuring french fries or mashed potatoes salad and drink $1.00 Chicken on a Platter 1/4 of a 23/4 pound dressed chicken 85c Chili 25c French Fries 20c plenty of parking space Make your Christmas bright with poinsettias. Stop in today and choose your favorite flowers for Christmas giving. Order for your housemother today. Flowers are always Welcome,always in good taste. Adlai Appeals To Labor Group NEW YORK—(U.P.)-Adlai Steven-son appealed today for the support of labor in his political ambitions in an address to the new AFL-CIO labor organization. He urged the delegates of 16 million members of the AFL-CIO to take an active part in politics and said that democracy needs all the political participation it can get out of just as many individuals and just as many responsible groups as is possible. Mr. Stevenson emphasized that he had "hopes" the new labor organization would support him fully in the coming campaign. In the field closest to the hearts of labor men, he said that many of the provisions of the Taft-Hartley act are inequitable or unworkable. "They must be changed or removed," he said. 46 To Sing In Nativity Forty-six students in German classes will sing Christmas carols adding to the color of the nativity play which will be presented by the German Club at 8 p.m., Dec. 14 in Fraser Hall. The choir will be directed by Donald B. Farrar, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore. The singers are John T. Schmidt, Russell freshman; Frank H. Ise, Wichita sophomore; Newton C. McCluggage, Lawrence sophomore; Suzanne E. Loveall, Kansas City, Kan.; freshman; Marcia J. Brooke, Bethel freshman; Delberta D. Holloway, Gend Breat freshman; Elizabeth A. Noyes, Troy graduate student; Marjorie A. Vrbsky, Crete, Neb, sophomore; Mary William Weaver, Lawrence senior. Betty Jo Davis, Belle Plaire sophomore; Janet F. Hannenman, Washington sophomore; Don Cecil Hunnicutt, Sabeth aophomore; John F. Gardenhire, Topeka sophomore; Winston T. Mann, Lawrence junior; Kenneth Y. Chock, Honolulu, Hawaii, freshman; Clayton G. Nuss, Hoisington freshman; Dennis E. Henderson, Salina senior. Johni B. Forssberg, Logan junior; Bertha A. Griesher, Topeka freshman; mary Carolyn Willis, Newton junior; Rosemary Griffin, Rock Port, Mo, freshman; Sharon M. Rhodes, Lawrence sophomore; Kurt Gust, Ochtrup, Germany, graduate student; Karen R. Miller, Horton freshman; Larry S. Underwood, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, Wayne Wallace, Atchison sophomore; Clifford P. Ambrose, El Dorado freshman. William W. LaRue, Bird City freshman; Norman E. Griswold, Lawrence junior; William H. Berry, Kansas City, Kan., senior; Josef Steidl, Leogang, Austria, graduate student; Elizabeth M. Devlin, Atlantic City, N.J., freshman; John L. Marletta, Lawrence sophomore; Carlton E. Dowdy, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore; Dana D. Dickerson, Topeka sophomore; Elizabeth E. Hoover, Lawrence sophomore; Myrld D. Powell, Ottawa graduate student. Muriel B. Hoecker, Industrial City, Mo, senior; Mary J. Woofer, Colby junior; Robert L. Steinman, Law- rence freshman; Urs P. Pulver, Berne, Switzerland graduate student; Marilyn J. Briney, McDonald freshman; Sam F. Anderson, instructor in German; David G. Hill, Lawrence senior, and Harry L. Turner, Topeka sophomore. AUTO PARTS AND TIRES New or Used AUTO WRECKING and JUNK CO. East End of Ninth St.