University Daily Kansan Page 3 Malott to Return For Dedication Of Science Hall Former Chancellor Deane W. Maillot, now president of Cornell University, will return for the formal dedication of the new Physical Sciences building Friday. As speaker for the convocation at 9:20 a.m., President Malott will dedicate the $25,200,000 structure which was begun under his administration. The Physical Sciences building was one of a series of expansion projects, and from his arrival in 1939 until his resignation in 1951, the former chancellor saw 10 buildings completed. A native of Abilene, President Malott was the first alumnus and native Kansan to direct the University. He was the ninth KU chancellor. Upon receiving the bachelor of arts degree from the University in 1921, he went on to earn a master of business administration degree from the Harvard Graduate school. He remained at Harvard as a faculty member until he came to KU as chancellor. While at KU, President Malott was known as the personable chancellor who could sell himself, his ideas, and the University to everyone. He holds membership in many honor organizations including Phi Beta Kappa; Delta Sigma Rho, professional forensic fraternity; Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity; Alpha Kappa Psi, professional commerce fraternity, and Kappa Delta Pi, professional education fraternity. —Kansan photo Official Bulletin TODAY Today is the deadline for Fulbright applications. Turn in at 304 Fraser. RU Bames arts and crafts group, 7:30 evening. Local Memorial Union. Open to student wives. Engineerrettes 8 p.m. Jayhawk room, Memorial Hall, Denmark life, help, talk, talk. Museum of Art record concerts, noon 4 p.m. L. Berstein, *The Anxient of Anxie* TOMORROW Radio Players, 5 p.m., 205 Journalism Westminster one study. 4 p.m., Westminster two study. AGI. 7 p.m. 305 Memorial Union. Open meeting. Presbyterian Men's cabinet. 7 p.m. Westminster house, 1221 Oread. Pre-Nursing class: 7.30 p.m., 110 Fraser. Speaker, Mrs. Esile Alpha Phi Omega, 7:30 p.m., Oread room. Union. All pledges; imports; imports. WCA comparative religions commission house. Open meetin meeting, lecture on Hindu religion. Movies: Pakistan Folk Dances, documentary; 7:35 p.m. Kansas room Museum of Art record concerts, noon and 4 p.m. G. S. Bach. Cantatas No. 6 in Episcopal student services MTWTF. Diploma in Presbyterian Prazer 6:45 AM, Communion 7:15 AM. WEDNESDAY Cercle Francais, 4.15 p.m., Templin hall. Newman Club executives, 7 p.m., a the Castle. Choir, 7 p.m., church. c. 59 p.m., 9 Strong. KU Billard club, 7:30 p.m., 305 Union Open meeting Open meeting Jay Jones, meet at 5 p.m. at stadium Mahieu to Discuss 'Barber of Seville' Beaumarchais, author of the original French play, "The Barber of Seville," will be the subject of a discussion by Prof. Robert G. Mahieu, professor of romance languages at the regular meeting of Le Cercle Francaise at 4:15 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 3, at Templin hall Recordings of some of the music in the play will be presented also. Monday, Nov. 1, 1954 MIGHTY SNAPPY—Roth Gatewood, left, business senior; Tom Siegfried, drum major, college sophomore, and Don Springer, music education junior, look quite pleased with themselves in their new band uniforms which arrived in time for the boys to check in their old uniforms this morning and try on the new ones. Nixon Denounces NBC For Refusing Free Time Denver(U.P.)——Vice President Richard M. Nixon denounced the National Broadcasting company last night for refusing him free time to answer what he termed a "vicious, hysterical, scurrilous" Democratic attack on President Eisenhower. He called on 70 major news outlets today to print what he would have said in his answer to the Democratic attack. The Vice President sent a message and an accompanying 1,500 word text by telegram to a list of publishers, editors, press associations and political writers throughout the country. In his statement, Mr. Nixon said that Adlai Stevenson's nationwide TV and radio speech from New York Saturday night constituted "one of the most vicious, scurrilous attacks ever made by a major political figure on a President of the United States." The Vice President will speak for 20 minutes on the 11th hour Republican political show to be broadcast and telecast from 8 to 8:30 today. President Eisenhower will talk on the final 10 minutes of the program from the White House in Washington. In New York, NBC spokesmen said they had no immediate comment. He said the Democrats started the current congressional campaign by questioning President Eisenhower's honesty and that they ending it "by slvy immouing his patriotism." Mr. Nixon's statement accused Mr. Stevenson and former President Truman of setting a prize example of "how not to run a camouflage." Mr. Nixon told a newsman that Mr. Stevenson's "attack" on President Eisenhower probably would prompt him to change the entire text of his election-eve radio and TV speech from Denver tonight. Mr. Nixon later announced his radio-TV appearance would be devoted primarily to a recapitulation of the accomplishments of the Eisenhower administration. Use Kansan Classified Ads. Chancellor Franklin D. Jaup presented winners with cash prizes of $400. These and other works will be on display through November 30. Kansas Designer Show Crafts Awards Go to 19 Nineteen persons shared honors last night at the opening of the first Kansas Designer Craftsmen show in the Student Union. Competition was limited to Kansans or former Kansas artists and residents of Greater Kansas City. Carlton Ball, Ford foundation fellow and professor at Southern Illinois university, judged the show He accepted 119 pieces of 191 entries in 12 design and craft techniques. The winners of prizes and honor mention: Dr. Michael F. Andrews, Madison, Wis., (former teacher at KU). The Sculpture House award of $25 for sculpture. Blanche Carstenson, Kansas City, Mo. The American Crayon Co. $25 purchase award for a silk screen place mat. Dorothea Dalton. Santa Monica Calif. Honor mentions for sculpture and unglazed clay. Alma Eikerman, Bloomington, Ind Anonymous $75 award for silver-smithing. Mary Fischer, fine arts sophomore, St. Louis, Mo. Anonymous $100 awards for a groun of ceramics. Isabelle Gaddis, Winfield. Honormentions for silversmithing and jewelry. Jari Havlena, Kansas City, Mo. The Thomas C. Thompson Co., $30 award for iewelry. Mrs. Ralph I. Johnson, Kansas City, Mo. Honor mentions for weaving. Don L. McKinley, Wichita. The Fred Hall $25 award and the Rapid Transit $25 award for furniture. Sam Van Meter, fine arts junior. The Lawrence Paper Co. $25 award for sculpture. Mrs. Marion Schroeder, Lawrence. Honor mention for Jewelry. Robert K. Montgomery, Wichita The Thomas C. Thompson $20 award for jewelry. Cecil Read, St. Paul, Minn. The Lawrence Journal-World $25 award for a seagrap bow! F. Jules Reed, Minneapolis, Mimn. The Constance Leiter $25 award for jewelry. Herbert C. Schumacher, fine arts senior. The ICTL Studio 50 awards [design] Alice Schwartz, Salina. The Clover Farm Stores $25 awards, the Kansas City Weavers guild $25 award and the Countryside Hand- weaver $10 award for weaving. Elden C. Tefft, assistant professor of design. The Josie Eresch $100 purchase award for sculpture. Norma Walker, Ft. Collins, Colo. The Weaver's store $50 award for weaving. Marilyn Austin, fine arts sophomore, $25 for a group of ceramics castings. Portrait Display Now at Museum Twelve portraits dating 1600-1850 are on display through Nov. 10 at the University of Kansas Museum of Art. The group includes one new acquisition, several loans and pictures already owned by K.U. Edward Maser, museum director, said the new portrait is a half-length painting of Baptist May, one of the socialites of Restoration England, a friend of Charles II and Keeper of the Privy Purse. It is the work of Gerard Soest, 1600-1681, a German settled in London. The exhibit contains two portraits by Sir Joshua Reynolds, one of England's greatest portrait painters. They were loaned by Mrs. Caroline Walker and Richard Shields of New York City. Two other loans are portraits of Mrs. Francis Scott Key, by Kellog, and Mrs. Mary Brice by Rembrant Peale. Prof. Herman Chubb of the political science department, made the loan of these portraits. October Was Busy For Watkins Hospital October has been a busy month for Watkins hospital, Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director, said today. He said the influx of patients in the hospital was due to the chest x-rays for all faculty members and employees, physical examinations for new students, physical examinations for Fulbright applicants, intramural game injuries, and the usual fall increase in colds.