Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, December 7, 1954 SUA Open House Set As Pre-Vacation Event To join in the pre-holiday festivities, the Student Union activities will hold an open house Dec. 15. Everyone is welcomed. The SUA Travel bureau committee has posted sign-up sheets for drivers needing passengers and students needing rides home for Christmas vacation. The sign-up sheets are posted in Fraser and Green halls, and the Union building. These sheets are to be signed before Wednesday. Students signing the list will be notified by Dec. 13 If rides have been arranged for them. The table tennis tournament will be held at 7 p.m. today and Tuesday night in the ballroom. The Student Union crafts workshop will be open tomorrow from 7 p.m. until 9 p.m. Free instruction in jewelry making, enameling, and pottery making will be given by Jim Stoner, manager of the art and engineering department of the bookstore. For midweek entertainment, a record dance will be held in the Trail room Wednesday. George Detsios, special student in the school of business, will be master of ceremonies for intermission entertainment. The photography club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Student Union crafts shop and the darkrooms on the basement level. Larry Tretbar, college senior, will give instruction on composition, developing, and printing negatives. The Student Union has two darkrooms which may be used at any time. The SUA will hold a "poetry hour" Thursday at 4 p.m. in the Music room. Frank Nelick, assistant professor of English, will read selections from the writings of A. E. Housman. Bowling play-offs for the campus championship will be held Sunday at 2:30 and 4:30 p.m. in the "Jay Bowl." The olive drab color for Army uniforms was adopted in June 1902. Rhee Stresses War Warning Seoul — (U.P.)— President Syngman Rhee said today his army may attack the Communists alone, apparently forgetting his promise to cooperate with the United States in unifying Korea. The 79-year-old leader told his first press conference since his summer visit to the United States that "unless we unify Korea neither North nor South can survive." "We will rush north alone if we have to. What else can we do?" Mr. Rhee added. Less than a month ago, the government promised to "cooperate with the United States in its efforts to unify Korea, including possible efforts through the United Nations." Mr. Rhee, who has 700,000 U.S.-equipped troops at his command, said today his government may pursue its own unification plan "in case the United Nations does not come along with us." "If all the Chinese troops withdraw from Korea, I believe we can persuade our allies to withdraw also with the understanding neither will return unless there is an open aggression," he said. Moore to Discuss Poet-Novelist D. H. Lawrence, novelist and poet, will be the subject of Prof. Geoffrey Moore's weekly lecture at 7 p.m. today in Strong auditorium. Mr. Moore, the visiting Rose Morgan professor, has been giving a series of lectures on "The Spirit of Modern Literature." Yoshida Resigns Japanese Post Bv UNITED PRESS Pro-American Shigeru Yoshida suddenly resigned today as prime minister of Japan, ending a political career that regained for a defeated and once-hated country the respect of the free world. Mr. Yoshida quit shortly before Japan's congress, the Diet, planned to meet for a confidence test of the prime minister's administration, which recently was linked to a shipbuilding scandal. It was considered a certainty that the Diet would have condemned Mr. Yoshida, but his unexpected resignation surprised many observers. Ichiro Hatoyama, founder of Mr. Yoshida's Liberal party and now president of the newly-formed Conservative Democrats, was regarded as the prime minister's most logical successor. Mr. Hatovama, partly crippled by a stroke, was purged by Gen. Douglas MacArthur in 1946 as an "ultra-nationalist" a move which brought Mr. Yoshida to power and established Japan as a bastion against Communism in the Far East. Mr. Hatoyama's party, in its constitutional convention, adopted a platform urging a study of stepped-up trade with Red China but experts foresaw no immediate change in policy should he become prime minister. Statewide Group Chairmen to Meet County chairmen for Statewide Activities will meet at 5 p.m. today in the Jayhawk room of the Student Union. The year's activities will be outlined, and chairmen will be given a chance to ask questions about the organization. A preview of movies available for Statewide use in high schools will be held at 7 p.m. in the projection room in the basement of Fraser. New Doctor Arrives In Spite of Difficulties Graduate Forum Planned by Club A Graduate forum will meet every Monday at noon in the cafeteria, the KU Graduate club decided at a meeting yesterday. Programs for the future meetings will consist of informal discussions, music sessions, speeches on art and painting, and talks on cultural patterns of other countries. Officers are president, Shanti S. Tangri; vice president, Bill Allaway; secretary, Molly Kelly; and treasurer Barbara Tildesev. A music session is planned for Monday. KDGU Schedule 6:30 Daily Kansan Headlines 6:35 Blue Barron 6:35 Blue Barron 6:45 Obl So Good 6:35 Blue Barron 6:45 Oh! So Good 6:45 7:00 Bookstore Hour 8:00 University Theater Concert 8:45 News,weather 9:00 Career Hour - 9:30 Top Seven Show 9:55 News 9:55 News KANU Schedule 5:30 Jazz Concert 5:45 Cameron Reports Sports 5:55 News 6:00 Candlelight Concert 7:00 Symphony Hall 7:30 Jazz Story 7:55 News 8:00 FM Concert 9:00 A Little Night Music 9:15 News 8.88 News 10:00 A Little Night Music Fraternity Plans Exhibit Delta Phi Delta, honorary art fraternity, is planning an exhibit of sculpture and design work. The display will be in Strong hall for one week and tentative plans are being made to display it the following week in the Student Union. - After being snowbound on her honeymoon in Canada and becoming involved in an entanglement of tape to get her visa approved, Dr Josephine Miller arrived several days late yesterday to assume her new position of staff doctor at Watkins hospital. Dr. Miller, who uses her maiden name professionally, married Kenneth Peters, college freshman, who plans to major in business. Nov. 27 in Winnipesag. Canada had an extremely bad snow storm that week, transportation was stopped, and the couple was not able to leave the city. To add to their problem, Mrs. Peters' visa was delayed and was not ready when roads became safe to travel. By then it was time for Mr. Peters to come back to KU for classes. Three days later Mrs. Peters received her visa and came to Kansas by train. The doctor and her husband grew up in Winnipeg. Mrs. Peters attended the University of Manitoba and took her internship at St. Boniface hospital in Winnipeg. She has been in Kansas once before on a three-day visit in October. The couple plans to spend the Christmas vacation in Canada where Mrs. Peters said they were "used to 3-day blizzards and 50-below-zero temperatures." Miss Santa Finalists To Be Chosen Today Judging for the finalists in the "Miss Santa" contest will be completed tonight. The five finalists will be announced in the Kansas tomorrow with their pictures. They will be heard on the "Go or Goof" show over KDGU at 7 p.m. tomorrow. Pictures of the 27 candidates are now posted on the bulletin board in the Journalism building. "Miss Santa" will be presented with her prizes at the University Veterans organization dance in the Student Union ballroom Friday night. Help the Jayhawkers in the Service Keep up With the news on the Campus Send them the-- Subscription Rates $4.50 - one year $3.00 - on semester KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111-JOURNALISM BUILDING