University Daily Kansan Friday. Nov. 12, 1954 Page 3 What have VICEROYS got that other filter tip cigarettes haven't got? THE ANSWER IS 20,000 FILTERS IN EVERY VICEROY TIP Inside every Viceroy tip is a vast network of 20,000 individual filters to filter your smoke over and over again. You get only the full, rich taste of Viceroy's choice tobacco s . . . and Viceroys draw so freely. Yes, you get Viceroy's remarkable new tip . . . with 20,000 individual filters . . . plus king-size length for only a penny or two more than cigarettes without filters. WORLD'S LARGEST-SELLING FILTER TIP CIGARETTE Only a Penny or Two More than Cigarettes Without Filters OPERATION BY TELEVISION Doctors at the University Medical center in Kansas City, Kan., are shown in the television surgical gallery as a program on the repair of hernias is conducted along with inauguration of a postgraduate course for area doctors. Better Rallies Asked by Allen The wingless insect known as the walking stick looks so much like a twig that it is all but invisible against a tree. Mrs. Ricard has taken citizenship studies by correspondence. Dr. Forrest C. "Phog" Allen called on the KuKu's to help sponsor longer, better pep rallies in a talk before the men's pep club last night. Prof. Ricart left his native Spain just before the revolution after studying and teaching in Barcelona. He came here in 1948 after lecturing in England and France. Prof. Domingo Ricart, assistant professor of Romance languages, and his wife became naturalized citizens of the United States yesterday morning as part of a nationwide Veterans day celebration in Topeka. Speaking to about 25 members of the organization, Dr. Allen criticized "puny" 10 minute rallies. "They stink," he said. "Kansas State gets a whole day vacation every time they beat us. I'm not asking for holidays, but I do think we could have hour-long pep rallies that would amount to something." Texas produces about 70 per cent of the nation's carbon black. Prof. Ricart said this is of "tremendous significance" to him because his bad has had a great effect on the job he now feels like a true member of the community. Dr. Allen pionted out that in the past, students could not give the Rock Chalk and other yells in Hoch auditorium because "it's a fine arts building." He said the fieldhouse now provides a "perfect" place for school rallies. Speaking on the importance of enthusiasm, Dr. Allen told of the Kansas-Nebraska game of 1920 in which an underdog Kansas team, behind 20-0 at half-time, tied the game in the second half. This was the result of genuine enthusiasm, he said. Ricarts Become Citizens of U.S. By promoting better pep rallies. Dr. Allen said the school pep organizations could form the leadership in a revival of this type of enthusiasm. In the business meeting, KuKus discussed plans for the Missouri migration and rally, and passed out cards to members who will solicit Campus Chest funds. TV Surgical Gallery Inaugurated at Center Interviews The University Medical center television surgical gallery was used for the first time yesterday simultaneously with inauguration of the newest postgraduate course for area doctors. Monday Engineering students will be interviewed by personnel representatives from the following companies Monday through Thursday: Tuesday Wednesday Esso Standard Oil company, chemical, civil, electrical, industrial, mechanical, and metallurgical engineers: also chemists. General Electric company, electric, mechanical, aeronautical, chemical, and metallurgical engineers; also physicists, engineering physicists, and chemists. Thursday Radio Corporation of America, RCA Victor division, electrical and mechanical engineers and physicists; also interested in candidates for advanced degrees in engineering and physics. Collins Radio company, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, electrical and mechanical engineers. Aberdeen proving ground, aeronautical, chemical, electrical, mechanical, and metallurgical engineers; also mathematicians and physicists. Socony-Vacuum Oil company chemical, civil, mechanical, electrical, and petroleum engineers; als chemists. Corn Products refining company. Chicago, chemical, mechanical, and electrical engineers. Bell system interviewing for Southwestern Bell Telephone company, long lines department of American Telephone and Telegraph company, Western Electric company, Bell Telephone laboratories, and Sandia corporation; electrical mechanical, industrial, civil, chemical, and metallurgical engineers; also majors in engineering physics, physical sciences, business administration, and arts and sciences. Interested persons should sign interview schedules and fill out applications in the School of Engineering office, 111 Marvin. The Masai tribesmen of Kenya and Tanganyika have no written language, says the National Geographic Society. They have never adopted the wheel; donkeys provide transport. Nor do they build boats, because they live near no large body of water. Twenty-five general surgeons began the first of four monthly day-long refresher sessions on "Operative Clinics in Surgery." Dr. Chester B. McVay, clinical professor of surgery at the University of South Dakota School of Medicine, Yankton, and developer of the McVay method of hernia repair, was guest surgeon. With his surgical assistant, Dr. John Chapp, and the surgeons on the faculty of the School of Medicine, Dr. McVay presented the first program on the repair of hernias. Four types of hernias were repaired under critical observation and discussion by the teacher-surgeon team working in the new television surgical gallery. Color television has added to the surgical gallery what it lacked and what caused its abandonment—the ability to see close-up what the surgeon is doing. The surgeons in the new television surgical gallery, in the presence of the familiar setting of real patients and surgical teams, simultaneously saw color television closeups of all pertinent operative details. The television surgical gallery has permitted a concentration and intensification of medical teaching never possible before the coming of color television. Until now, television has taken the students out of the operating room to some distant classroom. There was an informal atmosphere in the operating room gallery. Close-range direct questions and answers from and to the surgeon-teachers brought an intimate sense of participation. A full array of instructional tools including chalkboard with ultraviolet light and fluorescent chalk (to make diagrammatic sketches easily visible in the dim light). X-ray view boxes, and slide and movie projectors, permitted the instructors to present all aspects of the techniques of the four cases. Two standard color television receivers and a single 27 by 33-inch color television projection screen came alive only when the steps of the surgical procedure required a closeup view. More than $3,000,000 have been paid by the Atomic Energy Commission as bonuses to finders of uranium deposits. Uranium, the essential material for making the atom bomb, is the most sought-after metal in the world today.