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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 CIGARETTES KING-SIZE Tiny Filter Traps... plus that Real Tobacco Taste Poll Tax Move A Democratic Unity Measure WASHINGTON—(U.P.)—A senate Democratic leadership move to abolish the poll tax by constitutional amendment under-scores its new "moderate" approach to an issue which has split the party for years. In a speech at Whitney, Tex., last night, senate Democratic leader Lyndon B. Johnson announced he would ask his Democratic Policy Committee to include the proposed amendment in the 1956 legislative program. It was an obvious unity move by Sen. Johnson to unite northern and southern Democrats on at least one of the civil rights measures which have hurn the party apart for more than a decade. Sen. Johnson listed this proposal as part of a 13-point legislative program. The program also included a tax cut "to benefit the low income groups, probably along the line" of previous Democratic efforts to increase income tax exemptions. VATICAN CITY —(U,P)— Italy's leading newspaper reported today that Pope Pius XII heard the "true and distinct" voice of Christ during a vision as he lay near death last December. Southern Democrats have long professed a willingness to vote for a constitutional amendment which would prohibit collecting poll taxes, still in effect in seven states, in federal elections. However, they successfully resisted bills, passed by the House, to abolish the poll tax by law on grounds that such legislation was unconstitutional. Vision Reported Seen By Pope Pius Northern Democrats and many Republicans insisted on the legislative approach with the result that nothing was done. The poll tax dispute was tied up with fair employment practices legislation, which was even more unacceptable to the South, and with anti-lynching bills. None ever survived the filibuster or threat of filibuster by southern Democrats. The Corriere Della Sera of Milan, the nation's influential and biggest circulation newspaper, said the Pope had told this to a group of 20 "qualified ecclesiasts." The dispatch was signed by its Vatican correspondent, Silvio Negro. Inquiries brought only terse "no comments" as the Catholic world eagerly sought more details of the second supernatural experience reported for the Pope in the past five years. There was no immediate confirmation of the report in authoritative Vatican quarters. Tomevret, Museum of Art & Music concert, noon Mon. Maat Gallery: Beethoven: Sonata Nov. 4th Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the Public Relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day or publication of the notice. The date may be entered in the Daily Kansan Notices should include name, place, date, and time of publication. A spokesman of the Vatican press office said the semi-official Vatican newspaper Osservator Romano will not carry any mention tonight of the vision. Official Bulletin Today Museum of Art record concert, noon, 4:30 Main Gallery. Isaac: "Missa Carmichael." Tomorrow Museum of Art record concert, noon 4 p.m., Main Gallery, Vaughan Williams "Symphony No. 5 in D minor." University Daily Kansan Museum of Art record concert, 4 p.m. Main Gallery; Handel; Toni sonatas. Museum of Art record concert, moon 4 pollye and Arlec Gallery. Hip-pop Hip-tonic and Arlec Gallery. Saturday Mathematics Club, 4 p.m., 217 Strontium, Hoecker. "Peacetim Used for Atomic Reactions." Flu Epidemic Predicted For U.S. During Winter WASHINGTON—(U.P.)-A leading medical authority said today there is a pretty fair chance the nation will have an influenza epidemic this winter. 6 Pals Of Beria Shot In Russia LONDON —(U.R)— Tiffs radio announced today that six former police officials in Laurenti P. Beria's home state of Georgia were executed for carrying out plots by the executed secret police head, covering up his misdeeds, and framing his enemies. In addition two others were sentenced to prison terms of 25 years the broadcast from Tiflis, capital of the Georgia republic, reported. It was the biggest purge since Mr. Beria himself was fired as Soviet secret police chief early in the Georgi Malenkov regime and shot in December of 1953 for allegedly plotting against Mr. Malenkov's government and the Soviet Communist system. Radio Tifin, giving only the 1st names, listed these six men as executed by a firing squad: Among the executed men were the top secret police officials of Georgia during or immediately after the Stalin dynasty. Rabana, formerly Georgian commissar and subsequently commissar of internal affairs; Rukhdze, formerly head of the Interrogation Department of the MKVD (secret police) of the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic and subsequently Georgian minister of security; Tsereteli, formerly Georgian deputy commissar of internal affairs and subsequently Georgian deputy minister of internal affairs; Stavitskiy, Krinan and Khazani, interrogators of the Georgian Commissariat of Internal Affairs. Paramanov, also an interrogator, was sentenced to 25 years imprisonment. A man named Nadaraia, and not identified further, was sentenced to 10 years. Ike Meets With Cabinet THURMONT, Md., U.P.)—President Eisenhower met with his cabinet in a rustic mountain lodge today to discuss some of the national and world problems that have piled up since his heart attack Sept. 24. The unusual cabin session was the first which Mr. Eisenhower has attended since he was stricken. Cabinet discussions are always secret, but it was evident that the subjects considered today included Mr. Eisenhower's state of the union message to Congress, next January, and problems at the United Nations. Before entering the cabinet meeting, Mr. Eisenhower disclosed, in a conversation with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and United Nations delegate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., that he has been concerned about France's recent walkout from the UM. Mr. Eisenhower, who arrived in Thurmont from his Gettysburg, Pa., farm yesterday to preside over a meeting of the National Security Council, was accompanied by Mr. Dulles and Mr. Lodge. Asked whether politics would be considered at the cabinet meeting or whether the question of Mr. Eisenhower running for a second term, agriculture Secretary Ezra T. Benson said, "That's not on the agenda." Press Secretary James C. Hagerty was asked about published reports that Milton Eisenhower, the President's brother had interceded to block demands by Republicans for Mr. Berison's resignation. Mr. Hagerty said he knew nothing of any such action by the President's brother. A medium-sized tank uses 1.915 pounds of chromium and 100 pounds of tin, all of which is imported. There is no way to tell for sure, but Dr. Dorland J. Davis said flu epidemics strike in cycles and this country is about due for another. If an epidemic occurs, Dr. Davis said it probably will be the relatively mild form of influenza which figured in the epidemics of 1951 and 1953. Even so, he said it could bring a lot of misery to thousands of Americans. A Trouble-Maker Dr. Davis heads the laboratory of infectious diseases at the government's National Institutes of Health. He also is in charge of the World Health Organization's influenza Center in the United States. Influenza is a big trouble-maker, he said. In its milder forms, it produces a general feeling of discomfort—headache, cough, four-to-five-day fever, general aching and a feeling of being "all washed out." In its more serious forms, flu can lead to pneumonia and death—especially among older people. The symptoms are similar to those found in severe colds, grippe and half a dozen other common respiratory infections. But true influenza is caused by its own family of viruses. It usually is spotted when there has been a fairly large outbreak and experts move in to make a laboratory identification. The influenza family of viruses falls into two main divisions—type A and type B. The B virus usually causes relatively small, sporadic outbreaks. Type A is the one that produces major outbreaks, occasionally on a world-wide scale, and strikes in two and three-year cycles. Vaccine Used Sparingly There is a vaccine against influenza. It is considered a good vaccine but it has not been used widely among the general public because its effect is limited to a few months, and flu viruses mutate or change so that the guarantee against the virus which turns up in a given epidemic is not always 100 per cent. France Quells Riff Uprising RABAT, Morocco —(U.P.)—France poured in troop reinforcements today to quell a new unrising in the Riff Mountains and Sultan Sidi Mohammed Ben Youssef began a race with revolution to establish an independent Moroccan government. New violence also threatened in Casablanca. Nationalist agitators in Casablanca exhorted Morocains to stop work today in open defiance of appeals from Sultan Ben Yeussuf for peace and in the violence-ridden North African territory. At least 20 persons have been killed in the wave of bloodshed and terrorism since the Sultan's return to the throne last week. While the Sultan sought to form a new national government that could restore peace, French troops again moved up the twisting mountain roads into the barren Lunar peaks of the Riff against the fierce Berber tribesmen. The new trouble in the Fliff flared Saturday among the same barren brown peaks and rich valleys along the border with Spanish Moreco where Abdel Krim once dreamed of running the French into the sea and forming an independent Morocco. Troops were rushed into the area while signal fires flickered on the rugged crests to summon the Berbers to battle their hated enemy. French Resident-General André Dubois ordered the troops in after a French lieutenant was hacked to death at Tabouda. Resident-Gen. Dubois was determined to crush resistance before it erupts into an orgy of anti-French bloodhed.