1. $x = 2$ 时 $f(x) = \sin (2x)$ Chess Tourney To Begin Slate Of SUA Events A chess tourney meeting tomorrow in the Card room of the Student Union will be the first of a week of extra-curricular events planned by the Student Union activities. Play in the chess tournament will begin at 7 p.m. tomorrow. The eventual winner of the KU tournament will meet winners from other schools. Arvid Shulenberger, assistant professor of English and author of the book "Roads from the Fort," will be the featured speaker at a student-faculty coffee hour at 4 p.m. in the Browsing room. He will speak and answer questions on the writing of novels. Organized billiards is planned for after Thanksgiving with registration continuing through this week for the tournament. Other events in the Union this week include the weekly Quarterback club meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Ballroom; the Kansas designer-craftsman art exhibit in the main lounge; a photography club meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday; and an all-school table tennis tournament beginning at 6 p.m. Friday. Jim Stones, manager of the art and engineering department of the bookstore, said the Union crafts shop will be open from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. tomorrow. Conservation Class Takes Field Trip The class in wildlife conservation and management visited several conservation projects in south Central Kansas Saturday and Sunday. Rollin H. Baker and Harrison B. Tardoff of the faculty and nine students made the trip. Headquarters were the Plum Thicket farm near Sharon in Barry county. Floyd Amsden of Wichan, the owner, has frequently made this farm, which is known for its quail production program, available to KU scientists. The Great Salt Plains National Migratory Bird Refuge, a short distance southward across the Oklahoma line, was inspected. No such project exists in Kansas. On Sunday a visit was made to the ranch of August Lololette near Florence, where a band of antelope is being developed and several experimental fish ponds are in use. Armstrong Paintings Displayed in New York Mr. Armstrong and Norman Narotzky, the other artist, were winners of the fifth annual group show held this fall at the galleries. The new exhibit, in which Mr. Armstrong is showing paintings in oil, gasein and encaustic, is their prize. John Armstrong, instructor in drawing and painting, has 14 paintings in a 2-man show November 13-24 at the Creative galleries in New York City. Mr. Armstrong and Robert Green, associate professor of art, also have had paintings accepted for the eighth annual exhibition of oil paintings by artists of the Missouri Valley from Nov. 17 to Dec. 17 at the Mulvane Art center at Washburn university. Deadline Tomorrow For Queen Entries —Kansan photo Tomorrow is the final day for entering candidates for Military ball queen. Pictures of all candidates must be submitted to Lt. (jg) Patrick J. Barrett, associate professor of naval science, in room 2 of the Military Science Annex by noon tomorrow. tomorrow. Twelve finalists will be chosen by the queen selection committee on Wednesday. The queen will be crowned at intermission of the Military Ball on December 11. registrar Has Directories Student directories will be available in the Registrar's office in Strong hall starting today. Student ID cards are required to obtain the directories. READY TO PLAY—E Boyd Jordan, president of the Guild of Carillonneurs in North America from Marie Mont, Ohio, is preparing to play the carillon during the Carillonneurs workshop held here over Monday, Nov. 15, 1954 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Washington—(U.P.)—President Eisenhower sent to the Senate today agreements to rearm and restore the sovereignty of West Germany to aid "the cause of peace and freedom in the world as a whole." President Sends to Senate Plan for West Germany The pacts would bring 500,000 West German troops into the allied stand against communism and make the former enemy nation a partner in the North Atlantic Treaty organization. President Eisenhower sent the pacts to the Senate and a special message at the same time as the Soviet Union was exerting efforts to stall action on German rearmament. Mr. Eisenhower said the pacts were drawn to align West Germany with the allied nations in manner to insure freedom and equality for Germans and avoid the "danger of a revival of German militarism." Russia has called for an all-Europe peace conference—a call certain to be rejected by the Allies until at least the German pacts are ratified by the Allies. Mr. Eisenhower sent the documents to the special session of the Senate with a hope they will be studied by the Foreign Relations committee and then ratified promptly when the new session meets in January. "I know the Senate is aware of the very great importance of these agreements to the security of the United States and to the cause of peace and freedom in the world as a whole," he said. He said the agreements represent the culmination of a joint effort over several years "to promote closer cooperation in security matters among nations of Western Europe and to find a way of associating the great potential strength of Germany 1 Dies, 4 Survive In Plane Crash at Sea Norfolk, Va.—(U.P.)Four survivors of a Navy patrol plane that crashed off the North Carolina coast were plucked from the water today but a fifth man perished and two members of a search crew were missing. Miners' Families Stand Vigil at Disaster Scene Farmington, W. Va.,—(U,P)—Grief-stricken families of 15 men entombed by an explosion at the Jamison Coal and Coke Company No. 9 mine kept a lonely vigil today waiting for a raging underground fire to be choked off so rescue squads can bring out the bodies of the victims. All five entrances to the large mine, which recently had undergone a $4 million remodeling to make it safe, were sealed off yesterday after state and federal mine officials and the United Mine workers union decided it was not safe to send additional rescue squads into the pit. The 15 men, all maintenance workers, were trapped in the mine when an explosion, believed to have been caused by an accumulation of methane gas, belched black smoke and flames into the sky through the main portal and a fan house Saturday afternoon. Howard Jenkins, a 38-year-old father of four children, was the first known victim. He was killed while standing in the fan house. The 16 deaths made it the worst mining disaster in West Virginia in 10 years. Officials said it may take days or even as long as a month for the fire to be extinguished by shutting off the air, depending on how big the fire was and how much air already was in the mine. They will keep a constant check on the atmosphere in the mine by taking air samples at various bore holes to see when it will be safe to crack the concrete seals. A coast guard seaplane landed on the water and rescued four of the Navy plane's crew who had managed to get aboard their life raft. They were spotted in the cold gray morning mist, floating on Pamlico Sound northwest of barren Orcacoke island. The survivors reported that the fifth crewman went down with the plane. The body of the fifth crewman was not recovered. The coast guard said it understood the plane sank after a forced landing. Survivors were flown to Elizabeth City and later two were rushed to the Naval hospital at Portsmouth, Va., for treatment of injuries. One suffered a broken leg and another a head injury. The other two men were reported uninjured. The PV-2, a twin-engined seaplane, was on a flight from Miami to the Anacostia, Md., Naval air station when it radioed that it would attempt a forced landing at sea 30 miles off Cape Lookout, N.C. The plane had reported mechanical trouble. There was no word from an F3D fighter plane from the nearby Cherry Point, N.C. Marine air station which was diverted to search for the PV-2 while on a routine training flight. The fighter, carrying a two-man crew, was listed as missing. Hospital to Buy Blood Need extra Christmas money? Project 119 will pay $10 per pint for the right blood. If interested come to the laboratory at Watkins hos-pital between 9 and 11 a.m. or 2 and 4 p.m. tomorrow, Wednesday or Thursday. Two rescue squads went into the pit through the tipple entrance four hours after the blast but were driven back after penetrating about one quarter mile when their oxygen supply ran out. Two reserve teams went back into the smoking and flaming hole Saturday night but rescue operations were called off because of a buildup of gases. 8 MORE DAYS TILL THANKSGIVING VACATION 33 MORE DAYS TILL CHRISTMAS VACATION FLY From Kansas City To: Round trip, tax included First Class Sky Tourist Boston $127.60 $165.11 Jacksonville 109.12 135.08 Indianapolis 61.27 San Francisco 165.00 212.85 Houston 92.07 Tulsa 33.00 FAMILY DAYS — Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday. Head of family pays full fare—wife and children 12 through 21 years of age pay half fare. Steamship Lines - Conducted Tours — Domestic and Foreign - Air Lines — Domestic and Foreign Reserve Now for 1955 Steamship Sailings The First National Bank of Lawrence TRAVEL AGENCY Miss Rose Gieseman, Manager 8th Fr Massachusetts Sts. Telephone 30