Thursday. October 7. 1954 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Researchers To Go Afield The Governmental Research center will send a number of its staff afield in the next seven days to hold educational programs in other cities in Kansas. Prof. Ethan Allen, director of the center, and Kenneth Beasley, assistant director for consultation, will spend today in Parsons at a fall meeting of the Kansas Association of City Managers. About 12 members of the staff will go Saturday to the Kansas Conference on Government in Topeka, under the auspices of the Kansas League of Municipalities. Most of next week will be devoted to a series of instruction courses for high school students in parliamentary procedure and action. Instruction will be given to the members of the Hi-Y, high school branch of the YMCA. Hays and the area nearby will be covered Monday by Lyle Kyle, assistant director for consultation. Tuesday Mr. Kyle will give the same program at Wichita university. Mr. Beasley will go to Emporia wednesday, and Thursday will be covered by Rhoten Smith, research associate, in Pittsburgh, the last stop in the series. Mr. Beasley will spend Thursday in Hutchinson at the annual fire school to be held there. Lecturer Praises Early Booksellers "John Dunton and Edmund Curll were two of the most remarkable men in the book selling and publishing world," said Peter Lurray Hill when he gave the second annual public lecture on books and bibliography last night in Strong auditorium. The London lecturer and bookseller spoke on "Two "Augustan Booksellers: John Dunton and Edmund Curll." and These men were prominent in the late 17th and early 18th centuries when booksellers were often publishers. He indicated that in this period, because of the turbulence of times, there was a contrast in public taste. A certain rakkishness was combined with religious feeling. Mr. Hill gave the backgrounds of the two men and showed how they recorded the feelings of their period. He concluded with "Dunton and Curll with their great output of minor works have helped us across the turbulent waters of bibliographies." People of the world speak more than 1,000 separate languages or dialects. Official Bulletin TODAY University Women's club tea-for new members 2-4.30 p.m. Club lounge, bar "Fresh Refresher," 4 p.m. Methodist Student Center. In Tertula, 4:30 p.m., 113 Strong. Election. Or. Orjuela and Columbian Red Peppers, 5 p.m., Union. Attendance required. Der Beutsche Verein picnic, 5-8 p.m. Potter lake. 50c. Register German club bulletin board. Fraser. Increment weather. Kaffeeklatsch. 502 Fraser. "Love and Marriage," 7 p.m., Methodist Student center. KuKu, 7:30 p.m. Fine room. Union Migration plans, pledge officers. Baptist Student Prayer - Devotions. 12:50-12:50 p.m. Danforth chapel. AWS House, 4 p.m., Jayhawk room, Union, required for all representatives Quack club, 7.30 p.m., Robinson gym. Pledging. feeging. YMCA Cabinet, 5 p.m., 306 Union. Christian Science organization meets this week at 8:45 p.m. instead of 7 p.m. House with boots in SUA carnival. YW buzz session, 7 p.m., Kansas room. Theta Sigma Phi, 8 p.m., North College hall. FRIDAY Sociology club forum and coffee hour, 4 p.m. Short Annex E. Canterbury association, 5-7 p.m. Trinity church, Dr. Bee, "Christian marry" Episcopal morning prayer 6:45 a.m. Eucharist 7 a.m., Danfort chapel. Eucharist 7 a.m. Danfort SUNDAY Newman club business meeting, after 10 o'clock mass. Church hall. Commission Sunday for club sit 'together in front news. Delta Phil Delta, 7 p.m., Miller hall. Dr. Banner speaks. WEDNESDAY Episcopal Inquirers class, 7 p.m., 306 Union. Halleck Concedes GOP in Difficulty Washington—(U.P.)There is some support for the belief that President Eisenhower has been told that the Republican party already is licked in this year's congressional election contest—barring the occasional miracle. Private advices from Denver suggest that Rep. Charles A. Halleck (R.-Ind.) gave the President such a report last weekend. For publication and after seeing Mr. Eisenhower, Halleck did not go so far. But he did conclude that the Republican party was in a very difficult position. Halleck, the House majority leader, is close to and trusted by Mr. Eisenhower. Whatever else he may have said privately to the President, he certainly made an earnest plea for more active presidential participation in this campaign. Republican party leaders by now are worried, as evidenced by their appeals for some hell-for-leather Eisenhower campaign speeches. vice President Richard M. Nixon arrived in Denver yesterday for the political pow wow which will end tomorrow night in an Eisenhower-Nixon radio and TV appearance. Nixon already is on public record with the repeated statement that the present political trend is against the Republicans. Both Nixon and Halleck have also said that a stepped-up campaign would win this year for the administration. But Halleck would not agree with Republican National Committee Chairman Leonard Hall's prediction of a 25-seat gain for his party in the House. The GOP is running scared in this campaign. The party's professionals are genuinely scared, and they show it. Mr. Eisenhower seems less alarmed. Some of the reporters at Denver with the presidential party are speculating that Mr. Eisenhower may be holding back a bit from the campaign to avoid identifying himself too much with a possible party defeat. It has been impossible so far to obtain from the President or his staff here or in Denver any solid statement of how much campaigning he intends to do this month. Meantime, the professionals are putting on as much pressure as they can muster for more Eisenhower activity. James Reston, chief of the New York Times Washington bureau, put the situation in interesting perspective this week in a dispatch to his paper. Reston observed that two recent visitors to Denver, Halleck and Gen. Alfred M. Grunenther, had complained that the administration was not getting its story, across either to the American people or to the world. Use Kansan Classified Ads. EXPERT WATCH REPAIR --- Electronically Timed Guaranteed Satisfaction I Week or Less Service WOLFSON'S 743 Massachusetts STUDENTS! FIREPOLE FOR FALSE ALARMS MOST BEAUTIFUL WOMAN IN TURKEY ACCOMPANIED BY VERY UGLY FRIEND Want to pick up $25? Make up a Lucky Droodle and send it in. It's easy. If you want to find out just how easy it is, ask Roger Price, creator of Droodles. "Very!" Price says. Better yet, do a Droodle yourself, like the ones shown here. Droodle anything you like. And send in as many as you want. If we select yours, we'll pay $25 for the right to use it, together with your name, in our advertising. We're going to print plenty—and lots that we don't print will earn $25 awards. Draw your Droodles any size, on any piece of paper, and send them with your descriptive titles to Lucky Droodle, P. O. 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