Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 12, 195 7,000 Hear KU Chorale Dodge City Concert The KU Chorale gave three performances Saturday and Sunday in Dodge City for the dedication of a new municipal auditorium. About 7,000, including Gov. Fred Hall, attended. Last night the Chorale sang at a Douglas County Co- dition Union ballgolf. The group, directed by Clayton Krehbiel, assistant professor of music education, will make several appearances during the year. One will be on Oct. 24 in Kansas City for the convention of the Kansas Association of Insurance Agents, another in Salina Dec. 1 for the Kansas State Teacher's Music Association meeting. Chorale members; Mary Jo Huvek, Bethel senior; Suzanne Schwantes, Winfield senior; Sandra Keller, Lenexa senior; Mary Jo Wootter, Colby junior; Barbara Blount. Larned senior; Carol Cunningham, Russell senior; Sharon Tripp, Lawrence junior; Bonnie Dinmore, Overland Park sophomore; Shella Nation, Chanute sophomore; Judith Cotton, Lawrence junior; Pamela Hutchinson, Arkansas City junior; Beverly Runkle, Pittsburg sophomore; Mary Sharon Cole, Colby junior; Virginia Wallace, Topeka junior. Herbert Wildeboor, Atchison graduate student; Donald Farrar, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Merwin Hayes, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore; Leland Roberts, junior; William Kamberg, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Dorald Cayee, Coffeyville graduate student; Vance Cotter, Oakley senior; Robert Yanike, Maryville, Mo., senior; Maurice Casey, Bethesda, Md., senior; Edward Jones, Dodge City junior; Jack Davison, Bolivar, Mo., sophomore; Robert Johnson, Hutchinson junior; Douglas Wallace, Topeka junior; Roger Brown, Topeka sophomore. The biggest single consumer of water in the United States is irrigation. Atomic Exhibit To Tour Japan Japan is preparing for its first Atoms-For-Peace Fair, the largest atomic exhibit produced to date, and the first to be shown in the Far East. The show is one of eight which the U.S. Information Agency is exhibiting overseas to show how atomic energy can be harnessed for peace. The fair will open in Tokyo on Nov. 1, and will feature new reactor models displayed for the first time anywhere. Constructing New Building The Tokyo newspaper, Yomitri Shimubu, is constructing a new building to house the exhibit, which covers about 25,000 square feet and will require 25 freight cars to transport it from city to city. It will remain in Tokyo for six weeks, then go on a tour of Nagoya, Kyoto, Osaka, Hiroshima, Fukuoka, Sapporo, and Sendai. Scientists To Explain The agency said Japanese universities, scientific institutions, city governments, manufacturers, and newspapers are pooling their efforts to make the show a success. In each city, Japanese scientists will be present to explain the uses of atomic reactors and radio-active isotopes in medicine, agriculture, and industry. Exhibits from Japanese laboratories, hospitals, and industrial plants will illustrate the progress made by Japan's atomic scientists. To date, more than six million persons have seen agency "Atoms-For-Peace" exhibits in Europe, India, the Near East and Latin America. Construction of an underground electrical duct to enclose a coaxial television cable was completed yesterday, said C. G. Bayles, superintendent of buildings and grounds. Duct Constructed For KU TV Cable The duct runs through the campus from the stadium to Allen Fieldhouse. Hoch Auditorium is on the line, and the control board is in Marvin Hall. The cable will now be laid for future televising of football and basketball games. Use Kansan Classified Ads So You Like Sexy Humor! CARBONDALE, III. —(U.P.)-College students—and maybe others—prefer their humor with a dash of sex, according to a study made by Leslie F. Malpass of Southern Illinois University's psychology department. Prof. Malpass tested students' preference in jokes and cartoons to find out what people laugh at and why. He also wanted to know what effect, if any, surroundings had on those who listened to jokes or looked at cartoons. He classified jokes and cartoons as sexual, aggressive and whimsical. Then he showed the hump to the students in groups of or more, in groups of six or seve and alone. Prof. Malpass found the students prefer "sex-oriented" jokes over whimsical humor or aggression-type jokes that are based on attack against a person or other object. He also found people laugh at jokes most readily in a large group, less when alone and the least when in a small gathering. He suspects "fear of being noticed" holds down reaction to jokes in small groups. YOUNG DEMOS ANNUAL PICNIC Clinton Park 6 p.m. Wed., October 12 MEMBERSHIP DRIVE Free Rides from Green Hall at 5:45 Free Food & Liquid Refreshments Come in and visit our PAPER BOUND BOOK SECTION We have many of the world's great books available in inexpensive editions. These paper bound books are very compact-take up little room on your shelf. We carry series such as Anchor, Anvil, Harvest Books, Mentor, Evergreen, Viking Portables, etc. Here are just a few of the titles available: Parrington-Main Currents in American Thought- Hawthorne-Short Stories ...Vintage-$.95 ea Portable Milton ...Viking-$1.4 Lee-The Snake Lady ...Evergreen-$1.25 en Brenton-Shaping the Modern Mind ...Mentor-$.35 ea ... and many others