Page 3 the and ocean pro- eably Con- nta- tiveervedectednurredbody's ever slim count since tibles flying n the carned. t the d the s are t the k ing foot- allen have the dider, as dia- ined in leave lays. could e two field park- pose. going to l the football Seek Alaska Jet Victims e too as to park n EIELSON AIR FORCE BASE, ALASKA—(U. P.)-Authorities awaited the brief period of arctic daylight to resume their search to today for bodies of persons killed yesterday when an eight-family apartment was sliced by a crashing F84F Thunderjet. Authorities feared that the final death toll might climb as high as 15. Ten bodies were taken from the ice-coated, charred ruins of the dwellings which eight enlisted airmen and their families occupied, and three other tenants of the buildings were unaccounted for. Searchers who plodded through the rubble in 26-degrees-below-zero weather believed the three missing tenants and possibly more might be found in the ruins after daybreak. Ice and darkness forced searchers to abandon their efforts about midnight last night. The weather was so cold that thin cocoons of ice formed around parka-clad rescue workers and at least 75 firemen were treated for frostbite. The dead were believed to include triplets born last year, Maj. John Orr, public information officer at Eielson, said. Their parents were believed to be Sgt. and Mrs. William Fimple, who survived the accident. Harvard Professor To Give Dains Talk Dr. Louis S. Fieser, Sheldon Emery professor of organic chemistry at Harvard University, will give the eighth annual Frank Burnett Dains Memorial Lecture at 4 p.m. Friday in 233 Malott. He will sneak on "Cholesterole and Cancer." The lecture is sponsored by the chemistry department and Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemistry fraternity. Official Bulletin Today Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the Public Relations office, 222-A. Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on Friday. In the bulletin material to the Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. CCUN Steering Committee, 4 p.m. office, Student Union. Juniors and seniors: The English Proficiency examination will be given Dec. 3. Register in the office of the dean of your school today. Museum of Art record concert, 4 bows in "D" at Museum Bellius: "Symph- ony No. 2 in D." * Coffee Hour, 4-5 p.m., Music Room. Student Union. Sponsored by Social Responsibility Commission of M.WCA, and Student Council. Activity Center series of politics. Speaker: Clarence J. Hein. "Structure of Parties and their Role in Politics." Jay Janes, 5 p.m., Pine Room, Student Union. Attenoe Meeting, 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room, Student Union. Speaker: Prof Ray Hoppenon. "Life in the Peruvian Andes." (in English). Chemistry Club. 8 p.m., 233 Malott. Speaker: Dr. Lester Horwitz (Midwest Research Institute) "Organic Reactions in Anqueous Solutions." Refreshments. Gehrman Christmas choir rehearsal, 5 p.m. 300 Fraser. Assemble a singalong single from the book. Tomorrow Morning prayer, 6:45 a.m., Danforth Channel, Holy communion, 7 a.m. Morning Meditations, 7:30-7:50 a.m. Danforth Chapel. Come. Museum of Art record concert, noon, 4 p.m. Orchestra. Debussy: "Images from the Orchestra." Baptist Student Union 12:30-12:50 p.m. Danforth Chapel, Prayer and Worship Colored films, 4 p.m. 15 Fraser "Romance of Old Gentian Town." "Persian of Old Gentian Town." AWS House of Representatives, 4 p.m. Javhayk Room. Student Union. Poetry Hour, 4 p.m., Memorial Union Music Room, 210 N. Fifth Avenue, MacLeish Edwards Der Deutsche Verein: 5 Uhr in 502 Fraser. Fraus Dr. Elsbeth Pulver aus Bern wird uns ueber Max Frisch and Friedrich "Duermertr, zwei mit Schweizer Schriftsteiler, sprache Lied-einfeldern Kaffeklatsch, herzilich einfeldent" YM-YWCA Bible study, 4 p.m. Oread Room. Bring your Bible and join us. engleigh, Kus; 7.30 p.m., Pine Room, Memorial Union, Attendance required. Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel, Students, faculty and friends are invited. Business meeting after regular meeting. Friday Morning prayer, 6:45 a.m. Danforth Church, Holy Communion, 7 a.m. Chapel, Row 10. Morning meditations, 7:30-7:50 a.m. Chapel, Come. DAMONTRU Museum of Art record concert, noon. 4 Main Gallery. Messenger: "La Naitive d u Seigneur" Honegger: "Gugues and Choral." The University chapter of the Future Business Leaders of America includes 25 business education majors and students in secretarial training. Business Club First In State There are over 400 chapters throughout the nation. Five are in Kansas. The KU chapter, organized in 1948 by Miss Loda Newcomb, associate professor of secretarial training, was the first chapter in the state. Robert Badgley, president, said the local chapter supplies the background material necessary for future high school teachers to sponsor similar organizations. High schools represent the bulk of the club's membership. Commuters To Hold Sack Lunch Meeting to finance its social activities. the local chapter contracts university projects. Members donate their time. The chapter is sponsored by Arno Knapper, business instructor, and Miss Newcomb. Nationally, FBLA is sponsored by the National Education Association, Washington, D.C. Bill Allaway, YMCA general secretary, will speak at the Commuter's Sack Lunch at noon to-morrow in 102 Marvin. Mr. Allaway will discuss "The Place of the 'Y' on the Campus." Everyone is invited to bring a sack lunch and attend the meeting, he said. Alabama, Florida, Georgia and Mississippi celebrate April 26 as Confederate Memorial Day but North and South Carolina observed Confederate Memorial Day on May 10 while Virginia marks it on May 30. Woodard To Head TB Seal Drive Dr. Parke H. Woodard, associate professor of physiology and chairman of the Douglas County tuberculosis association, will head the 49th annual Christmas seal drive in the county again this year. The Christmas seal drive, the oldest fund raising campaign in the United States, is designed to combat and control tuberculosis in the U.S. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the KU Health Service, is the president of the Kansas State Tuberculosis Association. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. Hopponen To Talk To Spanish Club Wednesday, Nov. 30, 1955. University Daily Kansan Raymond Hopponen, assistm professor of pharmacy, will give an illustrated talk on some of the customs of Peru at 7:30 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union. The program is sponsored by El Ateneo Spanish club, but the speech will be in English. Mr. Hopponer was a member of a mountain expedition group who last summer succeeded in climbing Cordille Blanca, an unconquered mountain in Peru. Shoemaker To Attend Language Conference Dr. W. H. Shoemaker, chairman of the Romance Languages department, will attend a Conference on Preparation of Secondary School Teachers of Modern Foreign Languages to be held in New York Dec. 10 and 11. The conference will be composed of 22 persons, including 18 University professors from throughout the U.S. It is part of a program of study by the Modern Language Association of America made possible by a Rockefeller Foundation grant. 'Ole Davy' Is King No More WASHINGTON—(U. P.)—Davy Crockett coonskin caps are riding the racks in the stockrooms. T-shirts bearing the picture of the "king of the wild frontier" are tossed onto the remnant tables in the bargain basement. In the aftermath of one of the biggest sales booms on record, local merchants now sadly report that the craze that was "so hot in May" has "really cooled off" in November. Davy is king no more at the cash register. "Our Davy T-shirts have been cut from $12.9 to 39 cents," said one department store buyer. "And they're still moving slow." New Zealand's flightless, tailless, bewhiskered kiwi is the only bird with nostrils at the tip of its bill. For its size, about that of a chicken, the kiwi lays the largest egg known, says the National Geographic Society. A four-pound bird may produce a one-pound egg, about eight times as heavy as a chicken's. --- HI! JOIN ME FOR A LUCKY DROODLE? --- HERE'S A DROODLE THAT PACKS A PUNCH. It's titled Lucky smoke rings blown by prizefighter with tooth missing. It packs a moral, too: Why knock yourself out looking for a better-tasting cigarette when all you have to do is light up a Lucky? Luckies taste better, first, because Lucky Strike means fine tobacco. Then, that tobacco is TOASTED to taste better. So light up a Lucky. It's the winner—and still champion—for better taste! DROODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Price LUCKIES TASTE BETTER - Cleaner, Fresher, Smoother! ©A.T. Co. PRODUCT OF The American Tobacco Company AMERICA'S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTES