Hemisphere Art In Union Display Twenty-two paintings from Latin America, Canada, and the United States will be on display in the Student Union lounge until June 13. The paintings are from the permanent collection of the fine arts department of the International Business Machines corporation. - The United States is represented by George Bellows, an early exponent of the idea that American artists did not have to go to Europe for proper training. The pictures portray life in the lands from which they came. The subject matter is varied, ranging from "Dancer" and "Selecting Coffee Beans" in genre, to "Canada's Rugged Northland" and "Nicaraguan Native Fantasy". Included in the exhibit are works by Hector Basaldua, Argentina Antonio Sotomayer, Bolivia; Candido Portinari, Brazil; Alexander Y. Jackson, Canada; Luis Strozzi Chile; Luis Alberto Acuna, Columbia; Francisco Amighetti, Costa Rica; Mario Carreno, Cuba; Celeste Wos y Gil, Dominican Republic Antonio Belliolo, Ecuador; Salarrue, El Salvador. Most of the pictures from Latin America depict the countries and the people, and the Canadian landscape scenes reflect a country of great forests. Humberto Garavito, Guatemala Petón Sainav, Haiti; Carlos Zuniga Figueroa, Honduras; Diego Rivera, Mexico; Rodrigo Penalba, Nicaragua; Humberto Ivaldi, Panama; Pablo Alborno, Paraguay; Julia Codesido, Peru; George Bellows, United States; Carmelo de Arzadun, Uruguay, and Hector Poleo, Venezuela. A Living Doll—The painting shown is that of Diego Rivera and is one of 22 paintings from the permanent collection of the fine arts department of the International Business Machines corporation which will be on display in the Student Union lounge until June 13. Music Panel To Judge Hits A panel of music experts will judge the future of late record releases on the "Go or Goof Show" at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow on KDGU. The experts include Clayton Krehbiel, assistant professor of music education and director of the University chorus; Leo Horacek, instructor of music education; Max Dressen, piano playing professor of physics; Burton W. Marvin, dean of the School of Journalism, and Ray Verry, manager of the Student Union Bookstore. Enough Vaccine Ike Tells Press By UNITED PRESS President Eisenhower told his news conference today that the supply of Salk polio vaccine is sufficient to complete first shots for first and second graders in the relatively near future. Mr. Eisenhower at the same time strongly defended Mrs. Oveta Culp Hobby, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, against charges of "gross incompetency" in handling the vaccine. The President said he found Mrs. Hobby's record highly efficient. The vast majority of American parents still have faith in the Salk polio vaccine and will let their children receive further inoculations, a survey showed today. But some have changed their minds and may withhold their youngsters from the second round of mass inoculations. A United Press spot check showed the greatest reluctance to continue the program was in California, where 36 children have come down with polio after receiving inoculations of vaccine prepared by the Cutter laboratories of Berkeley, Calif. The second round of mass inoculations was getting under way this week in California. But Siskiyou county authorities postponed the program indefinitely after 30 to 50 per cent of the parents withdrew their consent. In Los Angeles county, where 16 of the 36 cases have occurred, parental withdrawals were running about 15 per cent. Shots were given to only 67 per cent of an eligible 17,564 youngsters on the opening day of inoculations. Give Mom a Break This Spring! Store Your Clothes at Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, May 18, 1953 New York Cleaners This Summer Give Mom a break—and give yourself one too. Just have New York Cleaners clean and mothproof your garments and pack them away for you in their large storage boxes. Call 75 today—have them pick up your clothes and pack them away SAFELY for the summer. You'll be glad you did! 926 Mass. NOW AT Gibbs Clothing Co. GARDE HOWARD KEEL co-starred in M-G-M's musical "Klarnet" in CinemaScope and color, So much luxury for so little! VAN HEUSEN MOULIN ROUGE BATISTE Just look at the luxury! You get breeze-cool, silk-soft "Moulin Rouge" Batiste in a wide range of fresh-from-the palette Toulouse-Lautrec pastles, plus white. Look at Van Heusen's famous-first collars: Van Garde, handsome rounded medium-long, button-down collar with the famous "relaxed roll," or Van Karon, new short collar with rounded corners and smart spread. Now take another look at the price . . . and see how amazingly little all this luxury costs you. Just