Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks. Daily hansan LAWRENCE. KANSAS 53rd Year, No. 31 Wednesday. Oct. 26. 1955. ID Transfer Penalties Set By ASC Ruling Penalties for the illegal transfer of ID cards for athletic events were passed by the All Student Council last night in an amendment. 1. The price of a general admission shall be paid to the Greater University Fund for scholarships and endowments. The penalties: 2. The violator's ID card will be returned after payment. A resolution to enact a World University Council as a permanent committee of the ASC was referred to the charter committee for rewording as a bill. 3. After a second offense a violator will not be admitted to athletic contests with his ID card during the season of the sport in which this violation occurred. The purpose of the committee is to coordinate the international activities on the campus and to carry out programs of the ASC in the area of international affairs. A bill providing for a one-day holiday to celebrate special occasions was tabled. 4. All cases may be appealed to the disciplinary committee within five days of violation. President George Sheldon, Salina junior, announced that several ASC members had met with a committee from the National Student Association to consider joining the NSA. He urged ASC members to attend the NSA convention in Pittsburgh in December to learn more about the organization. Frosh Primary Voting Is Slow At noon today 217 had voted in the freshman primary elections at the two main polls in Strong and Fraser Halls. The primary election is being held for class officers and representative to the All Student Council. Voting will continue until 6 p.m. Other polls are in the Student Union *lobby*, and in Malott and Marvin Halls. Ballot counting will begin at 4 p.m. Voters mark the ballot one for their first choice, two for their second, and three for their third. Freshmen and upperclass party members may vote for ASC members, but only freshmen may vote for freshmen class officers. Party and ID cards must be shown for the ASC voting, and ID cards for class officer voting. The general election will be Nov. 2. Class Schedule For Tomorrow The statewide activities convocation will be held tomorrow. Students will meet by counties from 9:20 to 10:30. The convocation class schedule: Classes will start 8:30 9 a.m. classes will meet 8:40- 9:10. Convocation 9:20-10:30. 10 a.m. classes will meet 10:40- 11:10 11 a.m. classes will meet 11:20- 11:50. HAVING A GAY OLD TIME-By sitting on balloons are these housemothers (from left), Mrs. R. B. Chapin, Mrs. John Skie, Mrs.-Wanda Dick-Peddie, Mrs. L. O. Rohsbough, Mrs Hazel Carter, Mrs. E. H. Turner, Mrs. E. C. Rainey, and Mrs. H. W. Jenkins. Balloons Surrender Fight As Housemothers Attack Balloons were popping in the Student Union last night when 72 housemothers from organized houses and halls attended the Housemothers' Party, given by the Associated Women Students. A nightlight of the party was the balloon relay race. The house-mothers divided into two teams and broke their balloons, by sitting on them. Lion Hunt, led by Elizabeth Immer, Kirkwood, Mo., junior was also played by the housemothers and their AWS escorts. Barbershop harmony was provided by the Jayhawks quartet of John Waddell, Junction city sophomore; Roger Wood, Larry Baker, and Gary Rohrer, Wichita juniors. In hillbilly style, Ruth Scholes, Council Grove senior, gave a reading, "Basketball." Housemothers joined Barbara Blount, Larned senior, in singing. Weather KANSAS—Generally fair this afternoon and tonight. Warmer tonight. Thursday partly coldly east and south, considerable cloudiness northwest. Windy Thursday, turning cooler northwest and extreme west. Low tonight around 40 northwest to 45-50 east and south. High Thursday 60s northwest to around 80 southeast. Guy V. Keeler, director of the University of Kansas Lecture Course Bureau, will be the speaker for the annual meeting of the Osage City Chamber of Commerce Thursday night. Keeler To Speak Tomorrow KU Junior Held In Holdup John L. (Juck) Melody, Lawrence junior, was arraigned in Topeka magistrate's court this morning on charges of holding up a Topeka drug store for $326.73 yesterday. The adopted son of Leslie Melody said he needed the money to meet bills on his car, but his father said that his son had no financial problems. Melody has admitted ordering the store's only occupant, Mrs. Henry C. Gray, to lie on the floor while he made his getaway. He forced Mrs. Gray to empty the contents of the cash register into a sack. On his way back to Lawrence Melody stopped at a Big Springs gasoline station and was overtaken and arrested by Topeka police. Capt. Ray Pope. Melody went to high school at Kemper Military Academy at Boonville, Mo., and also had one year of junior college there. He and his parents moved to Lawrence from Rockwell City, Iowa, eight months ago. Union Carnival To Be Held Nov.5 A gambling casino, a comic opera, a dart-throwing booth. and Pete Skelley's Blues" are among the 29 entries from organized houses in the Student Union Carnival Nov. 5, Robert Bishop, Merriam junior and carnival chairman, announced last night. Jayhawk Follies Auditions Set For Nov. 8,10 The Homecoming Follies committee will hold auditions for singers, dancers and variety acts in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union Tuesday and Thursday. Nov. 8 and 10. The annual show will be given in Allen Field House Nov. 18 in connection with the freshman-varsity basketball game. The homecoming queen and her two attendants will be introduced at the Follies. There will be later tryouts for a chorus line of 30 Red Peppers. The audition time will be announced later. Members of the committee are Nat Eek and Charles Dodrill, instructors of speech and drama, chairman and associate chairman; Katherine Carr, Student Union Activities director; Lewin Goff, University Theatre director; Jack Brooking, instructor of speech and drama. Clayton Krehbiel, assistant professor of music education; Patricia Pierson, Burlington senior, cheerleader; Ruby Schaulis, Clay Center senior, Jay Jane president; William Buck, Kansas City, Kan., senior; SUA president; Donald Smith Eureka junior, KuKu president; Sally Six, Lawrence graduate student; Shirley Lytle, Weaton, Ill., senior; Ted Teichgraeber, Emporia sophomore; and Donald Johnston Pittsburg senior. 'Picnic' Opens At 8 For Four-Day Run The University Theatre production "Picnic" will open at 8 p.m. today in Fraser Theater for a four-day run. The play, by KU alumnus William Inge, stars Joyce Elliott, Independence, Mo. freshman as Madge Owens. It is directed by Allen Crafton, professor of speech and drama. HORSING AROUND—Freshman politics were campaign parade Warren is a candidate for fresh-helped by a horse last night when Warren Degoler, man president, that's why he wears top hat and tails. Kansas City, Kan., and followers held a torchlight (Kansan Photo) Ten sororites and one freshman dormitory have nominated young women for the queen contest, and two fraternities and a men's dormitory have chosen candidates for the Little Man On the Campus contest. Beginning after the KU-Kansas State football game, the carnival will continue until 9 p.m. A dance, with the John Carlos band, will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight. Admission is 50 cents a person or 75 cents a couple. Tickets for the booths will cost 10 cents. A rebate of 10 per cent of their ticket sales will be given to each of the organized houses that enters the carnival. LMOC To Be Picked The candidates are: Alpha Chi Omega, Sharon Steeby, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore; Alpha Delta Pi, Jeanene Cook, Great Bend sophomore; Alpha Omicron Pi, Cynthia Berringer, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore; Alpha Pi, Janet Sue Bye, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore; Chi Omega, Sallie Callender, Kansas City, Kan., junior. Delta Gamma, Barbara Golden, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, Gamma Phi Beta, JoAm Barton, Overland Park sophomore; Kappa Theta, Barbara Hauck, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore; Kappa Kappa Gamma, Sarah Waddell, Salina junior; Pi Beta Pi, Shirley Ward, Salina sophomore, and Gertrude Sellards Pearson, Dorothy Owens, Kansas City, Mo., freshman. The winner in the LMOC contest will be determined by ticket sales, but the queen will be chosen by the campus police from the top three in ticket sales. LMOC Candidates LMOC candidates are: Delta Upsilon, George Swank, Topeka sophomore; Sigma Phi, Epsilon Chris Divich, Doland, S.D., senior; and Carruth-C'Leary, George Giovanos, Perth Ambov. N.J. The queen and LMOC will be announced at the intermission of the dance. Trophies will be awarded to the two, and the winners of the "best booth" contest in the men and women's division. Wheat Stocks Reported Chairman of the carnival committee are Bishop, general chairman; Barbara Anderson, Kirkwood, Mo., junior, publicity; Donald Scott, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore booth coordination; James Remsberg, Iola junior, tickets and expenditures; Mary Laughterbach, Colby sophomore, contest, and Gerald Rosenlund, Topeka senior; chaperons. TOPEKA — (U.P.)— The Kansas crop reporting service today listed stocks of wheat in the state at the start of October at a near record 311,234,000 bushels. Holdings were seven million bushels less than the record amount one year earlier. Supplies of wheat in off-farm positions amounted to 260,600,000 bushels Oct. 1, while 45,174,000 bushels on Kansas farms. Rye stocks totaled 585,000 bushels, the largest Oct.1 holdings since 1945. Stocks of all feed grains were approximately 25 per cent larger than a year ago.