Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks. Daily hansan 52nd Year. No. 29 LAWRENCE, KANSAS KuKus Sponsoring K-State Postcard Razz Like to put in your two cents worth in razzing Kansas State? Here's your chance. Just buy a two-cent postcard from the KuKus, write on your own personal game slogan, and ship it off to Manhattan. If you'd like to wax eloquent, buy 10 or 20 cents' worth Monday, Oct. 25, 1954 The idea is to flood the 'row college' with thousands of post cards bearing appropriate comments on Saturday's game. It's easy to figure that if each of 6,000 students would send 10 cards, the Wildcats would be swamped with 60,000 of them. Coach Chuck Mather will present a trophy to the organized house which buys the most cards per capita. Six thousand already have been ordered by various organized groups. To credit your house, just mention its name when you make your purchase. "This is an all University project," Paul Culp, promoter of the campaign, said. "The KuKus are sponsoring it just because someone has to handle the coordination. To make it work, every student will have to be in on it. In writing the message, you're strictly on your own. If you're like us, you have probably grown tired of the worm "Wreck Silo Tech" slogan and would like to substitute some original composition of your own. This is your big break. Just keep your comments to words which will pass through the U.S. Postal department. The cards will be on sale tomorrow from 7:45 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the information booth, Strong hall, and the Student Union. You may send cards to a Wildcat friend or the Kansas State chapter of your house, or buy them already addressed to the Manhattan newspaper. Turn them in and the Kukus will even mail them for you. It's as simple as that. Here's your big chance to let the puddy cats know what you think of them. Six Teams Remain In Debate Trial Six teams remain in the debate squad tournament which is continuing this week. The remaining teams are William Arnold and Hubert Bell, college seniors; Robert Kimball, John Eland and Gary Sick, college sophomores; and John Fields, 1st year law; Margaret Smith, college freshman; and Don Ihde, college junior; Charles Shanklin, engineering freshman, and Joel Sterrett, John Knightly and Robert Ince, college freshmen. To cut the heavy soil or grease on clothes, add a cup of liquid household ammonia to the hot wash water in addition to the soap or synthetic detergent. Coffee Slated Today For AWS Aspirants --- Washington—(U.P.)-Navy admirals, who have never exactly taken a shine to sailors in skirts, have decided to cut the strength of the WAVES drastically in the coming three years. Under the plan, the number of WAVE officers will be slashed in half and the number of enlisted WAVES reduced by one third. Out will go all the WAVE officers who are reservists. UN Dissolution To Be Debated Tomorrow Night And the women, who will be ousted, are not particularly happy about the admirals' decision. Some of the WAVES in the Pentagon are complaining that it is all part of an "admirals' plot" to scuttle their program. Women's Organized Houses Now Selling Follies Tickets Collegiate Council for the United Nations will celebrate the birthday of the UN with a debate on the question, "Resolved, that the UN should be dissolved." The debate will be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Jayhawk room of the Student Union. A coffee will be held from 4 to 5 p.m. today in the English room of the Student Union for eight freshman women applying for candidacy to the AWS Senate. The yearly peace pact renewal dinner between representatives of KU and Kansas State college will be held at 6:45 p.m. today in the Sunflower room of the Student Union as a prelude to the annual football contest at Manhattan Saturday. WAVE Force Will Be Cut Jim Johnston, president of CCUN, said, "Mr. Abels is known as a prominent isolationist among weekly newspaper publishers. His feelings against the UN are as sincere as Dr. Stermfield's are for continuance of the organization." It will be decided whether or not* Capt. Louise K. Wilde, director of the WAVES, told a reporter the objective is to get the WAVES down from the inflated Korean strength to a "peacetime nucleus strength." Mr. Abels and Mr. Sternfeld have argued heatedly on UN questions on Mr. Abels' regular Sunday afternoon broadcast over KLWN. Ed Abels, former national president of the National Editorial association and publisher and editor of the Lawrence Outlook will take the affirmative, and Robert Sternfeld, assistant professor of philosophy, will argue the negative. Nino LoBello, faculty adviser for CCUN and instructor in sociology, will be the moderator. L. C. Woodruff, dean of students, will work for one evening as a houseboy; Ted Cox, campus policeman, and F. C. "Phog" Allen, will work as singing waiters, and the quartet will work as singing waiters for an evening. Peace Pact Dinner Set for Tonight An auction is also on the program. Chancellor, Franklin D. Murphy will be "sold to the highest bidder" as a housemother for an evening. Miss Martha Peterson, dean of women, and Miss Mary Peg Hardman, assistant dean, will work as phone girls for an evening. Tickets are now on sale for 50 cents in women's organized houses for the AWS Faculty Follies, to be held at 7:30 p.m. Friday, in Fraser theater. The money derived from the auction and from ticket sales will go for the annual AWS Memorial scholarships given in memory of women students who have died while at KU. sociate professor of law, who have combined for a barbershop quartet. They are Donna Carleson, Susan Frederick, Joan Graham, Dianne Hays, Marilyn Haize, Sandra James, Megan Lloyd, and Shirley Ward, all college freshman. Sam Anderson, German instructor, who will play bagpipes; Miss Shirley Hughes, physical education instructor, who will give a modern dance; the Rev. Dale Turner, minister of the First Congregational church, who will give a magic and hypnosis demonstration, and Clayton Krebhiel, assistant professor in music education, Keith Lawton, administrative assistant to the chancellor; Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice, and Charles Oldfather, as- Allen Crafton, professor of speech, will be master of ceremonies. Included on the program will be: It will be decided whether or not to renew the peace pact, which has been in effect since 1931, and K- --state will receive the traveling trophy for winning the football game last fall. -Kansan photo AOPI HOUSE-TO-BE—A sign, designated No. 2, marks the lot at 11th street and West Campus road where the Alpha Omicron Pi social sorority plants to build a new house soon. Construction will start when the architect's plans are completed, probably by next rush week. This sign is called No. 2 because pranksters took the original sign. The present house is at 1144 Louisiana st. Dulles Praises Accord; Eden Sees Peace Hope Washington—(U.P.)—Secretary of State John Foster Dulles returned today from Paris and said the agreement for rearming Germany marked "the beginning of a new era for Europe." He was greeted at the airport by President Eisenhower. Voice in Politics Urged by ISA The Kansas Independent Students' association, in its state convention here Saturday, passed resolutions that the member ISA organizations should: 1. Voice themselves through student political parties. The largest number of resolutions came from a political forum headed by Bill Arnold, college senior. The group decided that independents could work better with Greeks in student politics by organizing and working through Greek-independent political parties. 2. Plan more Greek-independent social activities. It recommended that ISA chapters encourage members to become active in politics, act as agents to contact independent students during campaigning, and help inform freshmen about the student government of their schools. First on the convention agenda was a panel discussion, "A Bird's-Eye View of Greek-Independent Relations." The meeting then broke up into three discussion groups and reassembled later to pass the recommendations. 3. Send ISA information to prospective university students. The resolutions were the result of three group discussions which studied Greek - Independent relations in campus politics, social affairs, and personal relations. Representatives of Greek letter organizations participated with ISA members in the discussions. Mr. Dulles went to the White House with Mr. Eisenhower. - "I do feel that I can bring back words of good tidings not only in terms of the documents signed but also in terms of the spirit which animated our discussions which marked, I believe, the beginning of a new era for Europe," Mr. Dulles said. In London, British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden said today that the new western defense system brought into being Saturday at Paris will, if successful, provide the basis "on which we can seek an understanding with the (Communist) East." Two American congressmen who returned to West Germany today from an extensive tour of the Soviet Union joined the chorus by reporting that the prospects of a rearmed Germany, linked to western defense, "is having a sobering and deterring effect on the Kremlin." "If we can bring about stability and a common purpose in the West," he said, "we shall have established the essential basis on which we can seek an understanding with the East." Norway's foreign minister, Halvard M. Lange, in Paris, also predicted in an exclusive United Press interview that the new western accords will improve prospects for negotiating "a modus vivendi" with the Soviets. Rep. Laurie C. Battle, an Alabama Democrat, and O. C. Fisher, a Texas Democrat, agreed that the western move to rearm Germany as an ally of the West has caused serious preoccupation in Moscow. Thirteen student council members, eight faculty advisers, the KuKu president, the senior, junior, and sophomore class presidents, and the Daily Kansan executive editor will represent KU. About 19 members of the K-State council and two faculty members will attend from Manhattan. Bob Kennedy, KU All Student Council president, said a rousing vote of approval, subject to approval by the ASC tomorrow night, is expected on the renewal. The trophy, usually awarded at the conclusion of the game, will be given belatedly because the cup was not found until last week in the Union, where it had been misplaced since the recent remodeling of the building. Dick Pickett, council president, will lead the K-State delegation. William Craig and Phil Sorensen, dean and assistant dean of students, respectively, of K-State, will attend as faculty advisers. Carolyn Bailey, college freshman, an accordianist, will provide entertainment. Peace Pact Dates to 1931 Tonight's signing of the K-State-KU peace pact will mark the 24th year of the ceremony between the schools' student councils. The pact was drawn up in 1931 after both campuses were damaged in pre-game activities. The friendship dinner, to re-adopt the pact, is held each year, alternately in Lawrence and Manhattan. Purpose of the pact is to safeguard the welfare of the students, protect property of the schools and townspeople, insure peaceful relations between the schools, and to abolish all school fights and undeirable pre-game activities. Any damage done by members of either student body is paid for by the student council of the offending school. When several K-State students damaged the University campus in 1948, the offenders paid for their vandalism through their student council. Action was taken after the KU goal posts were knocked down following last year's game. Last revised in 1950, the pact provides that a meeting "be held at least 10 days before any athletic contest between the two schools." If the pact is broken by action of individual students, these may be subject to fine or expulsion after a joint committee from KU and K-State meets and recommends action. Weather Cloudy weather SHOWERS lows tonight will northwest to the east. r with showers and t h u n d e r- storms is predicted for Kansas today and tonight. Colder temperatures are expected for most of the state except for t he extreme southeast. T he be near 30 in the 50s in the south-