Page 3 owing col- ing in induced r the 1955- a sec- offererseemet thewidswreasasoe saiomes t ketba sort i ate o thin sport Criminal Insanity Authority To Attend Meeting At KU Dr. Henry Weihofen, a nationally recognized authority in the field of criminal insanity, from the University of New Mexico's College of Law, will play a key role in the Conference on Criminal Responsibility which will meet Thursday and Friday in the Student Union. The purpose of the Conference to review legal and psychiatric problems of the criminally insane and to study what the medical, legal, and psychiatric professions can do to help them. M.C. Slough, professor of law and coordinator of the conference, said. Dr. Weinofen Dr. Weihofen is the author of several books. His book, "Innamy as a Defense in Criminal Law" is rewritten by him and is a classic in the mydge-literal field. also has written, with Prof. K.C. Sears of the University of Chicago, the fourth edition of "May's Criminal Law," and "Psychiatry and he Law" with psychiatrist Manfred S. Guttmacher. This year Dr. Weihofen won the Isaac Ray award for outstanding work in furthering understanding between psychiatrists and lawyers in the mental insanity field. He has been on the faculty of The University of New Mexico since 1948. Air Science Group To Hear Speaker H. M. Gaebe spoke to the Institute of Aeroanalytical Sciences this morning. His topic was "Aircraft Design for Supersonic Aircraft." Mr. Gaebe is chief of design operations at Chance-Vought Aircraft in Dallas, Tex. The lecture is open to all interested students. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results Col. Justice R. Neale, military science professor, told the University Veterans Organization last night that administrative programs in the Air Force and Army ROTC are open to all veterans qualified for the program. Col. Neale Talks To UVO Group Col. Neale stressed the fact that veterans do not have to go on active duty after graduation. He also said that veterans who undertake the program and find they aren't satisfied can be discharged by the refunding of their ROTC pay. "The ROTC program prevents an economic tailspin in the advent of another national emergency," he said. He said that many college graduates were "hard hit" financially when they were called into the service during the Korean War to serve in an enlisted status. Col. Neale said that the program at present doesn't train specific branch officers but teaches general basic military science. "The type of duty our graduates get depends on what the man wants and what the service needs, he said. "Our basic, course is designed to motivate the cadet to become a good officer," he told the veterans. "We don't want anyone who doesn't want our program. Ninety percent of the good officers are the people who have the desire to be a good officer," he stated. Eight companies have scheduled interviews for prospective engineering graduates during the remainder of the week. These interviews are open to students in all phases of engineering. Job Interviews Scheduled Students interested in these interviews are asked to sign interview schedules in the office of Dean T. DeWitt Carr, 111 Marvin Hall. Wednesday—J. B. Ehrsam & Sons Manufacturing Co., Kansas City; Spencer Chemical Co., and the York Corp. The schedule: Thursday-Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland; Cities Service Oil Co., and the Potomac River Naval Command, Washington. D.C. Friday-Allis-Chalmers facturing Co., Cities Service, and the Chrysler Corp. 4 Debaters In Iowa Meet University Daily Kansan Four University debaters will participate in an invitational tournament Friday and Saturday at the University of Iowa. Fifteen debate teams, most of them from Big Seven and Big Ten schools, will participate. The University debaters are Robert Kimball, Kansas City, Kan., and John Eland, Topeka, juniors, the affirmative team, and Jack Gorelick, Kansas City, Kan., and Kenneth Irby, Fort Scott, sophomores, the negative team. Speakers will use the national college topic, "resolved, that the non-agricultural industries should guarantee their workers an annual wage." Each team will have four rounds of debate. Kimball and Eland were winners of the squad round robin tournament and Gorelick and Irby won the recent squad elimination tournament. Tuesday, Nov. 29, 1955. Cities Lure Foreign Students During Thanksgiving Holiday Museum Gets 2 Art Pieces Prof. Maser explained that the console table is one of the more successful attempts at this harmony. It cannot stand alone but is part of a wall, he said. Gilding and carved decoration of the table were repeated in other elements of the room for which the table was designed, he pointed out. The wooden statue of Bacchus was sculptured by Balthasar Fermoser, early Eighteenth Century German. The statue is the only piece of Permoser's sculpture in America now, Prof. Maser said. The University AFROTOC rifle team is preparing for a three-day trip to Columbus, Ohio, next week. The 10-man team will fire a match with the Ohio State University team there for national honors. KU Rifle Team To Go To Ohio Two Eighteenth Century art pieces have been acquired by the Museum of Art in connection with its part in the current emphasis on the fine arts and culture of the period. One piece is a carved and gilded console table from mid-Eighteenth Century France. The other is a statue of Bacchus, the God of Wine, from Germany. Prof. Edward Maser, director of the Museum, described the table as an elegant wall table of the Rococo period. It is representative of the time of Louis XV, when the interior decorators were striving to achieve visual harmony among all the elements of a room, he said. A study by the U.S. agriculture department's marketing service shows that cattle productivity in this country has increased 38 per cent in the 30 years from 1924 to 1954. By ELIJ TONOMURA (Ofl The Daily Kansan Staff) Thanksgiving was a happy day for every American student—plenty of food, turkey, and many family reunions around candle flames. It was also a great day for the foreign students. They were invited to near-by communities by their friends and even some made extensive trips to New Orleans and Salt Lake City. "I saw a Mormon tabernacle and talked with a Mormon minister." said Heribert Pick of Trier, Germany, graduate student. "I saw the desert, too. I wanted to see it because we don't have such a waste land in Germany." "I had known New Orleans through Dixie music and had always wanted to see it," said Ingvar Melin, graduate student from Jakobstad, Finland. He visited the French Quarter, the Tulane University campus, and saw the Mississippi River. "New Orleans is so different from other American cities," he said. I could feel the French and Spanish atmosphere. Three students went to New Orleans. They were Yvonne Ann Nilson. Halsingborg, Sweden graduate student; Monica Vogel, Stockholm, Sweden, graduate student, and Thomas E. Morton, Wichita freshman. While Northern European trios enjoyed the warm weather in New Orleans, four students passed through cold Colorado on their way to Salt Lake City. They were Elizabeth Siebers of Duisburg, Germany, Reinhold Vogl and Hubert Reisner of Vienna, Austria, and Nigel Kermode, Jersey, England, all graduate students, and Shirley Dean, Lawrence senior. "The town is so beautiful, and the people are very gay," Yvonne said. Ocean waters near the equator contain about 35 parts or less of salt per 1,000 parts of water. YOU'LL BOTH GO FOR THIS CIGARETTE! No wonder Winston changed America's mind about filter smoking! King-size Winston tastes good - like a cigarette should! Its full, rich, tobacco flavor really comes through to you because Winston's exclusive filter works so effectively. Try a pack of Winstons for real flavor, real filtering, and real easy draw. R.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., WINSTON-BALEM, N.C.