l'age 3 University Daily Kansan Why do more college men and women smoke VICEROYS than any other filter cigarette? BECAUSE ONLY VICEROY GIVES YOU A PURE, NON-MINERAL, NON-TOXIC FILTER WITH 20,000 FILTER TRAPS IN EVERY FILTER TIP! 1. Yes, only Viceroy has this filter composed of 20,000 tiny filter traps. You cannot obtain the same filtering action in any other cigarette. 2. Besides being non-mineral and non-toxic, this cellulose-acetate filter never shreds or crumbles. 3. The Viceroy filter wasn't just whipped up and rushed to market to meet the new and skyrocketing demand for filtered cigarettes. Viceroy pioneered. Started research more than 20 years ago to create the pure and perfect filter. 4. Smokers en masse report that filtered Viceroys have a finer flavor even than cigarettes without filters. Rich, satisfying, yet pleasantly mild. 5. Viceroy draws so easily that you wouldn't know, without looking, that it even had a filter tip... and Viceroys cost only a penny or two more than cigarettes without filters! 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 TINY FILTER TRAPS... plus Richer, Smoother Flavor Democracy Is Defined Democracy consists of the equality of opportunity to make decisions and the obligation to live up to them. Dr. E. E. Bayles, professor of education, said last night at a Graduate club meeting in the Student Union. Democracy is no guarantee of wise decisions, he said, but in the last analysis, a sobering influence is produced when the people know they are going to have to live up to the decisions they make. "Critical thinking," he said, "is decision making." There are a number of broad, general terms, he said, that many people associate with democracy which are not wholly accurate. The first thing that people think of in relation to democracy is "freedom," he said. That term "distinctly violates" the rule that a good definition should strike a difference between alternative elements and definitions. Dr. Bayles noted at this point that every law infringes on some freedom. Of the term "majority rule," he said a similar violation is made. "It is possible to have a dictatorial majority," he said, "but it has become more evident to other nations that such is not the case in the United States. Also used as a broad meaning for democracy, Dr. Bayles said, is "respect for the individual." Democracy fails, he said, when personal concern is transformed into a restrictive element. Thursday, April 28, 1955 PhD. reading examination in German, 9-11 am. Saturday, April 30, in 306, Fraser. Only candidates approved by Graduate school may take exam. Poetry Hour, 4 p.m., Music room, Student Union. Negro poets: Dumbar, Johnson, Hughes, Cullen. Reader: Jessica Crafton. Official Bulletin University Players, 7 p.m. English room. Student Union. Election of offi- cials. TODAY E. C. Franklin Memorial lecture, 4 p.m. 12 Malcolm hall. Dr. George W. Watt: "Compounds of Elements in the Zero Oxidation State." Public invited. Der Deutsche Verein; 5 p.m., Oread room, Student Union. Jerry Hart, barbature-a a program of German songs. Everyone welcome. Museum of Art record concert, noon and 4 p.m. Orlandus Lassus: Lamentations of Jeremiah; Josquin Des Pres: Profundif Clinavol ad Te Ave Maria. AWS House of representatives, 4 p.m. Jayhawk room, Student Union. Christian Science organization, 7 p.m. Dorothy Hall, Students, faculty and professors. Psychology club, 7:30 p.m., room 305 Student Union. TOMORROW Episcopal morning prayer, 6:45 a.m. Communion, 7 a.m. D an f o r t h church. Morning meditation, 7:30-7:50 a.m. Danforth chanel. Everyone invited. Museum of Art record concert, noon and 4 p.m. Pfezner: Kleine Sinifonie Op. 44; Symphony in c major, Op. 46. Gamma Delta coffee hour, 3 p.m. SATURDAY Museum of Art record concert, noon and 4 p.m. Haydn: Symphony No. 7 in C major; Symphony No. 8 in G major. *"abhona Worship" treasure hunt*. Museum of Art record concert, 4 p.m. Charles, Lyes; Symphony No. 3. SUNDAY Graduate club social evening, 8 p.m. midnight. Hennie house. Meena Tyagrajan and Shanti Tangri hostess and host. Gamma Delta picnic 4:30 p.m. Potter lake. Talk by Miss Sheri Groh. Student center, to follow. K-State Gamma Deltas to be guests. Lahana fellowship panel *The Relational between Spirit and Spiritedness* 7.30 p.m., church Hiliel foundation supper 5 p.m. Community center, 1409 Tennessee. Phone Stan Berger 1047W or Robert Sokal 3472J for reservations. Richard Elliott Barker, former graduate student and part-time instructor of English, pleaded guilty Tuesday in District court to charges of possession of marijuana. He requested an opportunity to apply for an observation period at the State hospital in Topeka before sentencing. Barker Pleads Guilty Barker had been bound over to the May term of the District court here after preliminary hearing Mach 7. He was arrested at his home in Lawrence Feb. 28. 2 UDK Heads To Join Panel Two University Daily Kansan executives will participate in panel discussions tomorrow and Saturday at the Regional Press conference of the Associated Collegiate press and Rocky Mountain Intercollegiate Press associations on the University of Colorado campus at Boulder. The two Editorial assistants Ronald Grandon and John Herrington, journalism juniors, will be in a group of five students and a faculty adviser who will make the trip. UDK Business Adviser, Gene Bratton; Executive Editor Nancy Neville, journalism senior; Editorial Editor Karen Hilmer, journalism senior; and Sports Editor Dick Walt, journalism sophomore, will also attend. Grandon will take part in a panel session on "You Can't Print That," concerning the question of freedom of the college press. Herrington will be in a round table discussion of "This Is How We're Going to Do It In 1956." The session will give editorial staffs an opportunity to talk over common ideas and problems. Jay Janes Hold Pledging for 17 The Jay Janes pep club pledged 17 girls last night and initiated one member. The pledges are Ann Rumsey, Janice Mietzner, Carole Baker, Frances Todd, Ona Finney, Marilyn Mundon, Barbara Gilmore, Lorie Dudley, and Shirley Carson, college sophomores; Betty Jean Davis and Mary Woodward, college juniors. Karol Pepes, Betty Kepler, Eleanor Major, and Patricia Campbell, education juniors; Josephine Thomas, business junior, and Carol Saunders-White, fine arts junior. Dorothy Gerber, education sen- Dorothy Gerber, education senior, was initiated into the club. ASC Labor Group Cancels Meeting The meeting of the ASC labor committee with Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy was cancelled yesterday, and rescheduled for 3 p.m. Tuesday, May 10. The committee was to have presented its recommendation for a 65-cent minimum student wage law to the chancellor at 3 p.m.yesterday. every man's a Romeo in "After Six" formal wear! Workaday worries fall away when After Six sets the stage for pleasure! The distinction, drama and elegance of After Six dinner jackets make any social event something special, with superior styling, tailoring, and incredibly weightless comfort. $269.95 $26.95 905 Mass. St. $5 up Phone 905