Page 8 University Daily Kansan Dr. Ise Holds Audience Spellbound at Meeting By BOB GREENE Dr. John Ise, retiring economics professor, held a small audience spellbound with his humorous comments on various subjects—religion, foreign policy, labor, politics, and music. Ise spoke at a reception honoring him and Mrs. Ise last Saturday evening at Henley house. It was sponsored by the Graduate club and the Collegiate Council of the United Nations. When asked if a former student was radical, the well-known professor said. "Oh no, he is no radical. He didn't have the brains to be a radical. I think he was a Republican." About other phases of life John Ise said the following: Jazz: "I just don't like the stuff." McCarthy: "Don't blame me for McCarthy, I didn't make him popular. . . McCarthy did more to promote Communism than anybody else in the country." McCarthy-Eisenhower feud: "The most fun the Democrats have had in a long time was watching McCarthy and Ike slugging it out. Of course Ike didn't slug but he looked unpleasant." Dixon-Yates: "I don't know anything about that, except that I'm against it." Eisenhower's popularity: "I don't think that there's any recession in Ike's popularity . . . he's such a praverful man. He goes to church and he starts the cabinet meetings with a prayer and then his Secretary of Agriculture comes out west and prays for rain." (After someone mentioned the rain of last week, Ise said) "Maybe that shows that God's on the Republican side." Foreign policy: "Our foreign policy should be to win friends all over the world . . . supporting Franco (shows) there is no morality in our policy. We have lost millions of friends . . ." His teaching at a women's college: "I have never taught at a women's college before. The chance comes a few years late but I am going to enjoy it anyway." NewAFGroup Has Elections Sabres Flight, new basic AFROTC society, elected officers last week for next semester. Jim Aldrich, college freshman, was elected executive officer; Don Moor, engineering freshman, vice executive officer; Dan Schepel, pharmacy freshman, operations officer, and Bruce Smith, college freshman, comptroller. This was the second meeting of the new society. Sabres Flight, a new organization nationally, is a sub-organization of Arnold Air society. The purpose of the new society is to prepare basic cadets for entrance into advanced AFROTC and Arnold Air society. Mai, Kenneth T. Crum is the faculty advisor for Sabres Flight. Journalism Awards Continued from page 1) Awards for feature writing went to Shank, first place; Elizabeth Wohlgemuth, senior, second place, and John McMillion, college junior, placed third. Mike Walker, college freshman, was awarded first place in the feature photography division; Larry Tretbair, college senior, placed second, and Bill Slamin, journalism senior, was third. Tretbair was first in the news photography awards, and Harry Elliott, journalism junior, placed third. Jack Fisher, senior, placed first in the institutional advertisement; second place went to Sue Epperson, fine arts senior; Bob Wolfe, junior, was third, and Charles Sledd received honorable mention. Wolfe placed first in the promotional advertisement awards; Jay Rollheiser, senior, received second place, and James Cazier, junior, was third. Thieves Take 6 Telephones Six telephone sets have been stolen from the KU campus in the last month in a series of unsolved hefts. Four of the thefts toook place last Friday, with North College, the Student Union, and Sigma Phi Epsilon and Lambda Chi Alpha fraternities each losing one set. Previously, Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity had lost two of the sets Mav 28. Police said the phones, which are valued at $65 each, were taken during the night, with the intruders clipping the wires to remove the telephones. India Librarian Studies Watson Sved Bashiruddin, librarian of the Muslim university at Aligarh, India, began a 3-week intensive study of library operations here Saturday. He is one of 12 Indian university librarians and 15 public librarians studying their profession in this country under a State Department specialist program. Robert Vosper, KU librarian, said Mr. Bashirudden was assigned here through the American Library association. The Indian librarians are in this country through a provision of the Congressional act of 1951 making a loan to India for purchase of wheat. Up to $5 million of the interest on that loan may be used for educational purposes on behalf of India. The visit by the librarians is the first such project. The Indian university librarians came to this country in late February. After an orientation program in Washington, D.C., they went to the University of Chicago for a 3-week seminar in the Graduate Library school. Ike Approves Voluntary Plan For Allocation of Vaccine Washington—(U.P.)—President Eisenhower today approved a voluntary plan designed to assure fair allocation of the Salk polio vaccine. $ \textcircled{4} $ ___ The plan would be effective following completion of the current program of immunization being conducted by the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis for first grade school children. She said only a voluntary plan of priorities and distribution could be "There will be a shortage of the vaccine for several months." Mrs. Hobby said as her plan was announced at the White House. The report prepared by Welfare Secretary Oveta Culp Hobby and experts of the Public Health service recommended that "for the time being" the vaccine should be administered only to children of the most susceptible age group, five through nine years old. Once the federal voluntary program goes into effect, Mobb will direct division and allocation among states of the entire output of the vaccine on the basis of the five through nine population in each state. mobilized "fast enough" to be effective during this temporary period of shortage. "The program meets the President's objective of getting all safe vaccine to American children as rapidly as possible and assures that no child will be denied vaccination because of inability to pay," she said. The White House said that as a result of the report, plans are being made to ask Congress for an additional $2 million for the Health, Education, and Welfare department to conduct the vaccine program, particularly for "vigorous enforcement" of laws prohibiting sales of the vaccine outside authorized channels of prescription drugs. Legislation prepared by the department also will ask Congress for about $28 million to help states purchase the vaccine for the program to go into effect following completion of the foundation's free immunization. Buy CHESTERFIELD today! You'll SMILE your approval of Chesterfield's smoothness mildness—refreshing taste. You'll SMILE your approval of Chesterfield's quality — highest quality—low nicotine. Largest selling cigarette in America's colleges © LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO Co.