Page 6 University Daily Kansan. Wednesday, Sept. 22, 1954 Around the World— U.S. Visit Planned By Asian Premier Karachi, Pakistan—(U.P.)—Premier Mohammed Ali left by air today for Washington to discuss Pakistan's "growing association with the United States." All, a former ambassador to the United States, will make a side trip to southern France to confer on "various matters" with the Aga Khan, many of whose Ismaili Moslem followers live in Pakistan. Buenos Aires — (U.P.) — A U.S. pharmaceutical concern has announced plans for a $200,000 cortisone plant, making it the first firm to benefit from Argentina's liberalized foreign investment law. Quito, Ecuador—(U.P.)The government said today it has sealed the border between Ecuador and Peru because of a reported outbreak of Bubonic plague in a Peruvian coastal town. Pamunjom, Korea—(U,P)—T h e Communists returned the bodies of 123 allied soldiers today, completing their part in an exchange of Korean war dead that began last month. Red officers said they had returned the remains of 4,023 men, including 60 Americans,15 South Koreans and 48 of unknown nationality. Court to Review Segregation Law Washington—U.P.) The Supreme court announced today it will begin hearings. Dec. 6 on detailed decrees to enforce its historic ruling outlawing segregation in public schools. The court also announced that it has extended until Nov. 15 the deadline for interested states to file briefs or to request a chance to be heard in the December oral arguments. The previous deadline was Oct. 1. Seven states have already notified the court they want to appear either in oral arguments or as interested parties at the hearing. They are North Carolina, Arkansas, Texas, Florida, Maryland, Tennessee, and Oklahoma. Question for debate is how and when the Supreme court will issue final orders for ending segregation of white and Negro students. Washington —(U,P)— Vice President Richard M. Nixon has slammed back at Adlai E. Stevenson's criticism of GOP foreign and defense policies and the Democratic leader has taken a poke at administration "expedient." Nixon Retorts Amid Adlai Blasts The top Republican and Democratic campaigners fired their latest blasts in the struggle for control of the 84th Congress in different parts of the Midwest last night. Mr. Nixon said at Lansing, Mich. that the Eisenhower administration is dedicated to a goal of world "peace without surrender." He said that it would be "easy" to "blunder into war" or to win peace "by surrender." In a speech billed as an answer to the Stevenson attack on the administration = last week, the vice president agreed that cuts have been made in foreign aid and de- tense spending. But by wise spending, he said, the nation is "stronger militarily than it has ever been before and we are capable of meeting aggression whenever and wherever it occurs." Mr. Stevenson, 1952 Democratic presidential candidate, told a party rally at Indianapolis, Ind., Saturday that American leadership in the free world has deteriorated under GOP rule. He also criticized the administration for trimming military programs while the Communists expand theirs. He centered his fire on other aspects of the administration in a speech last night at Bloomington, Ill. He pinned the "expediency" label on farm policy decisions by Agriculture Secretary Ezra T. Benson. "Some Democrats have been waiting for the indignant reaction to such expedition by the Eisenhower administration from the GOP press that had backed *Bacon*" Stevenson said. "But I am told we should wait a long time." Other campaigns President Eisenhower left Denver on a western tour that was expected to include political speeches in Washington and California. Republican National Chairman Leonard W. Hall said after a conference with the President yesterday that the GOP faces a "hard fight" in the fall campaign. But he predicted Republicans would pick up between 15 and 22 House seats in the Nov. 2 election. Edmund S. Muskie, who last week was elected the first Democratic governor of Maine in 20 years, said in a magazine interview that Mr. Nixon's efforts in the state cost the Republicans votes. Washington Speaker to Lead Health Lab Miss Elsa Schneider, specialist in health and physical education in the U.S. Office of Education, Washington, D.C., will lead a workshop in elementary physical education here Monday. Elementary school superintendents and physical education instructors from 17 counties in northeast Kansas have received invitations to the one-day program, which also is open to the public. It will provide an opportunity to study physical education for elementary school girls and boys, stressing—the practical need of games, rythms, relays, and rainy day activities. Miss Schneider will conduct all sessions, including a lecture, "A Look at Elementary Physical Education," in the morning, a laboratory in the afternoon, and in the evening an address, "Elementary Physical Education, 1954." Miss Schneider formerly taught at grade schools in Alabama, Wisconsin and Illinois, and served with the Illinois Department of Public Instruction before going to her present job in 1948. A staff luncheon at the Faculty club is scheduled at noon Monday honoring Miss Schneider.