Page 3 2 Freshman Women Report Molestation by Young Man Two University women, both freshmen, each reported an incident of molestation by a man to the Lawrence police this weekend. The description that each woman gave the police was similar. The reports were filed when the man attempted to get the women to accompany him in his car. One woman said she was walking near 11th and Rhode Island streets about 7:20 p.m. Thursday when a young man tried to get her to accompany him. After she declined, she said, the car circled the block and the man got out and grabbed her. She hit him with her purse, she said, and he ran back to his car and drove away. The other incident occurred Thursday evening when the woman was walking near 13th and Mississippi streets when a man got out of a car and asked her if she wanted to go for a ride. She declined, she said, and he grabbed her and kissed her. She hit him with a notebook and he ran back to the car. The man was described as young, about 5-10. blond, and of medium build. He drove a light blue car. Airmen Killed in Jet Crash Listed Yokohama — (U.P.) The U.S. airmen killed in Thursday's jet plane collision here were Capt. Milan Mosny, Little Falls, N.Y.; 2nd Lt. William C. Edwards, Beau-coup, Ill.; and 2nd Lt. Kenneth E. Heeter, Ermienton, Pa., the Air Force announced today. The F-86 fighter piloted by Lt. Heeter and the T-33 trainer carrying Capt. Mosny and Lt. Edwards collided at 25,000 feet and plunged into Tokyo bay. Army divers are combing the bottom for wreckage of the two jets. KDGU Schedule 6. 30 Daily Kansan Headlines 6:30 Daily Kansan Headlines 6:35 Blue Barron 6:45 Oh! So Good 7:00 Bookstore Hour 8:00 University Theatre Concert 8:30 Crossroads 8:45 News, Weather 9:00 Career Hour 9:30 Top Seven Show 9:55 News KANU Schedule 5:30 Jazz Concert 5:55 Cameron Reports Sports 5:55 News 6:00 Candeliight Concert 7:00 Stephany Hall 7:30 Jazz Story 7:55 News 8:00 FM Concert 9:00 A Little Night Music 9:55 News 10:00 A Little Night Music Cramming for Exams? Fight "Book Fatigue" Safely Your doctor will tell you—a NoDoz Awakener is safe as an average cup of hot, black coffee. Take a NoDoz Awakener when you canram for that exam ...or when mid-afternon brings on those "3 o'clock cobwebs." You'll find NoDoz gives you a lift without a letdown... helps you snap back to normal and fight fatigue safely! 33 tablets • 35¢ • large economy size for Greek Row and Wheat Flour Group to Discuss Service Wife's Life A meeting to acquaint students with the life of a serviceman's wife will be sponsored by the Arnold Air society at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Jawhawk room of the Student Union. Mrs. William Brewer, Mrs. Riley R. Whearty, Mrs. Marlowe B. Sorge, and Mrs. Thomas B. Summers, wives of Air Force faculty officers, will lead the discussion. Everyone is invited. Senior Recital to Be Given Tomorrow Jean Gurley, pianist, will be presented in a senior recital by the School of Fine Arts at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Strong auditorium. Her program will feature works of Bach, Mozart, Schubert, Brahms, and Debussy. An editorial writing contest for students on the theme, "Is There a College Drinking Problem," will offer $2,400 in awards. The contest will be sponsored by Robert Awards, one of the projects of the Intercollegiate association for study of the alcohol problem. $2,400 in Prizes For Best Essays The general theme of the contest is "Drinking in College." Editorials may deal with any phase of the competition, but they must have his own title. The maximum length of each editorial is 800 words and the minimum is 500. The contest is open to any fulltime undergraduate student registered in a college, university, or junior college in the United States or Canada for any term of the school year 1954-55. No student who has written professionally is eligible Tuesday, January 11, 1955 University Daily Kansan To be considered, an editorial must be postmarked no later than May 1, 1955. Judging will be based on soundness and originality of thought, quality of research, clarity of expression, and accuracy of the basic facts. Clinic to Improve Writing Slated for Next Semester A writing clinic designed to improve composition will be sponsored by the English department next semester. Sumner: Top Wheat Area Reno county was second with 6,121,000 bushels, Barton third with 4,588,000 bushels, McPherson fourth with 4,494,000 and Sedgwick fifth with 4,221,000. Topeka — (J,P)— For the third straight year, Sumner county is the Kansas wheat growing champion. A federal and state Agriculture department report showed that Sumner led the state in 1954 with production of 6,321,000 bushels of wheat. "We expect to operate the clinic in experimental form next semester," Prof. James L. Wortham, chairman of the English department, stated. "It can have its greatest value if students come voluntarily and expect to work. We know of no miraculous cures for ailments of writing." Nine other counties that produced more than three million bushels during 1954 were Pawnee, Mitchell, Harper, Rice, Stafford, Rush, Ottawa, Pratt and Kingman. The clinic will be open two hours each afternoon, with time and place to be announced later. It is designed for all students of the University who may want help. Those who have failed the English proficiency examination, and those who have not yet taken the proficiency examination but would like assistance in improving their writing are being encouraged to attend. - Students who are enrolled in courses in English composition will not be eligible for the clinic. What young people are doing at General Electric Young manufacturing expert pioneers in automation at General Electric Automation: Continuous Automatic Production For one answer, 31-year-old P.H. Alspach, Manager of Manufacturing Development at G.E., is exploring automation. In 1964, our greatest shortage may be working people. This country's demand for electrical goods will be 100% greater than it is today. But there will be only 11% more workmen. How can production per man be boosted enough to close the gap? Automation is a way of manufacturing based on the continuous-flow concept. Products will be made, inspected, assembled, tested, and packaged by a series of integrated machines in one uninterrupted flow. As industry evolves toward greater automation, more workmen will become skilled machine specialists or maintenance experts able to control complete systems. Phil Alspach and the men under him now draft layouts for automatic systems, tackle the engineering problems involved, design automation equipment, and even build some. 23,000 College Graduates at G.E. This is a big and important job. Alspach was readied for it in a careful, step-by-step program of development. Like Alspach, each of G.E.'s 23,000 college-graduate employees is given his chance to grow, to find the work he does best, and to realize his full potential. For General Electric has long believed this: When fresh young minds are given freedom to make progress, everybody benefits—the individual, the company, and the country. Progress Is Our Most Important Product GENERAL GE ELECTRIC