Around the World— University Daily Kansan Page 7 WilsonMeetsRhee On Far East Tour By UNITED PRESS Seoul, Korea—(U.P.)-U.S. defense Secretary Charles E. Wilson conferred today with President Syngman Rhee after being briefed on military, political and economic problems in South Korea by top American officials here. TV on Hearings May Be Ended Washington — (U.P.) Rep. Emanuel Celler (D.-NY) plans to introduce a bill to prohibit commercial sponsorship of television and udio coverage of congressional hearings. This would include the current Army-McCarthy hearing. "Let's keep vaudeville where it belongs," Rep. Celler said in a statement. "Congressional activities are, and should be seriously deliberative." He said he was "amazed" that acting chairman Karl E. Mundt (R-S.D.) of the Senate investigating subcommittee agreed to permit commercial sponsorship of the hearings. "This show in particular is sufficiently grotesque." Rep. Celler said. "Adding the profit motive not only increases its absurdity but might well cause further injury to legislative prestige in the eyes of the American people." Sophomore Installed As Home Ec Head Suzanne Schwantes, college sophomore, was recently installed as president of the Home Economist club for the coming year. Other officers installed were: La Verte Yates, journalism junior, vice president; Barbara Spearman Anderson, college junior, secretary; Arlene Lutz, college sophomore, treasurer, and Susan Montgomery, college sophomore, social chairman. Use Kansas Want Ads for Results! Mr. Wilson is on tour of the Fau East. He was accompanied at the conference by Gen. John E. Hull, U.S. Far East commander, Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, 8th Army commander, U.S. Ambassador Ellis O. Briggs, and special envoy Arthur H. Dean. Other international developments Jerusalem — Jordan has accused Israel of sending a military patrol across the armistice line Saturday. Jordanian authorities said Arab legionnaires and national guardmen forced the Israelis to withdraw. Dublin—Prime Minister Eamon De Valera and opposition candidate John Costello scheduled election eve rallies tonight. The campaign may be the last for the ailing Mr. De Valera. Taipeh. Formosa—Fishery authorities in Formosa urgently requested Geiger counters from the United States today after a Chinese family in Keelung was hospitalized with what doctors thought might be radioactive poisoning. Doctors said the victims suffered swollen skin, sore throats and high blood pressure after eating a "bomb shaped sea fish". It was the first "Bikini fish scare" here. Montevideo, Uruguay — Seconds today worked out arrangements for a duel between Luís Battle Berres, former President of Uruguay and leader of a faction of the ruling Colorado party, and Nationalist Leader Dr. Luis Alberto De Herrera. Mr. De Herrera challenged Mr. Berres after the ex-president's newspaper accused him of failing to observe an agreement between the two parties regarding the appointment of Supreme Court justices. So sparsely settled are some sections of Australia that the National Geographic Society's map of this island continent shows a number of individual homesteads by name, as if they were towns or cities. Nancy Olsen 'Miss Starfire' At AFROTC Dance Nancy Olsen, college sophomore, was chosen "Miss Starfire," queen of the Air Force ROTC formal. Friday night in the Student Union ballroom. Miss Olsen, a member of Alpha Delta Pi, was accompanied by Cadet George McKemy, college senior. She was crowned by Col. Thomas B. Summers, professor of air science and tactics. Queen attendants at the dance were college sophomores Margaret Allen, Kappa Alpha Theta, and Shirley Price, Chi Omega. Winner of the $50 war bond first prize in the AFROTC shoulder patch contest was Larry Schultz, education sophomore. Schultz' shoulder-patch shows a Jayhawk in a flying suit "scrambling" for a jet plane. Oner shoulder patch contest winners announced were second place Aaron Bret Waller, fine arts freshman who received a $25 war bond; third place collaborators Constance White, fine arts junior and Elizabeth Herre, fine arts sophomore, who received $10 in cash; and Erwin Keith Coffin, fine arts junior, who received a $5 honorable mention award. The men and women's AFROTOC drill teams gave exhibitions of trick and fancy drilling during intermission time at the dance. The Starfire formal was the last social event of the season for the campus AFROTC. State Road Deaths Now 178 for Year Topeka — (U.P.) The Kansas highway traffic death toll reached 178 for 1954 today, the Kansas State Highway department reported. The death yesterday of G. L. Roland, 17, El Dorado, on highway 77 north of El Dorado when his motor overloaded raised the May death total to 20. There were 190 recorded traffic deaths on May 17 last year, and 69 on the same date in 1952. Patronize Kansan Adverttsers! Phone KU 376 Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c Terms; Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in during the hours 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday until contact to the University Business office, Journalism bldg., not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. WANTED TYPING OF THEMES, term papers, etc. 106, Nettikky, Phone 17793. 108, Nettikky, Phone 17793. MISCELLANEOUS HOUSE SETTling: Brick, stone, block wall cracking stopped permanently, plumbed, pilled, steel reinforced concrete; pillings footings installed. Guaranteed method. We lack back flues, parches, piers, walls for foundation. We also construct. Garf Construction Co., ph. 2996M. SUMMER ROOMS for boys, $12 per bed. Rooms available by beds. 1222 Music Places, 495 - 6-62 ROOMS FOR MEN. Faw vacancies for room management, office support, several Legal Counsels. CS8841 5-19 FOR RENT SINGLE ROOM, linens furnished. Board accesses from Tail Deck security. 5-20 moons. APPROVED SUMMER HOUSING for women, $40 for the summer session. Cooking privileges, convenient location, 1528 Tenn. Call 3697 or 1378J. tf MEN STUDENTS going to summer school! Nice, cool sleeping rooms, one-half block from Student Union. Call 2745M. 5-10 COOL, COMFORTABLE roos for men; Available for summer. Single beds, good lighting, close to campus. Call 1544J and ask for Mrs. Peterson. 5-17 FOR SALE AFTER-SIX TUXEDO. size 34. Worn four times. Excellent condition. Phone 2828 L-1. 5-19 PUREBRED Siamese littens. Sealpoints $15. E. S. Young. Call 2482L. 5-19 147 HARLEY '74" Q.H.V. Motor overhaul last summer. Good condition. 252. See at 1931 Rhode Island or call 3376M. Cheap transportation. No parking problems. 5-17 RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wienna every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Phone Jim Sellers. 31013 evenings. MTW-M TOM MAUPIN TRAVEL SERVICE Lowest airline fares, tourist and family fare, available on all scheduled airlines. Frequent airport service lines. Tours and cruises. Business and interview trips arranged as well as pleasure trips. See us for literature on your Summer vacation: TOM MAUPIN TRAVEL SERVICE, 1015 Mass. ff 3661 RIDERS WANTED for airplanes, steamships, and conducted tours. Ask us about Sky-coach and family day rates. Call Miss Rose Gieseman at the First Avenue station for information for initeraries and reservations. 8th and Mass. Phone 30. tf GETTING MARRIED? Need a place to live? Buy my house trailer—45 Glider, 25 ft., $825. J. B. Webster, Bob's Trailer Court, 6th and Michigan. 5-17 BUSINESS SERVICES JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit our *Jayhawk* pet shop. We have everything in the pet field, from food to toys to pet shop kits for everything for fur, fins, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf CABINET-MAKER a n d EFNSIHISER Antique pieces. Bar-top finish on table tops. High class work guaranteed. E. E. Higginbottom, Res. and Shop. 623 Ala. FORMAL AND INFORMAL dressmaking, dressing. Ph, 1843-1, 825 N.Y. MWF-M, MWF-NY. BEYERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. tf Read the Kansan classified ads. NOW SHOWING Sunday Night Is Lucky License Night 1 Student Dead,2 Hurt After NCU Shooting Chapel Hill, N.C.—(U.P.)Authorities sought a motive today for a burst of gunfire that left a brilliant art scholar dead and two other students wounded, one seriously, at a fraternity drinking party. Investigators were waiting to question critically wounded William Joyner, 20, of Summit, N.J., about the death of Putnam Davis, 23-year-old member of a wealthy Greenwich, Conn., family. Joyner, struck in the back by a burst of five shots which climaxed a night of frolic and beer-drinking at the University of North Carolina was reported too ill to be questioned for several days. Police all Allen B. Long, 20, of Chevy Chase, Md., had said "Davis did it," but could furnish no motive for the burst of shots fired in a bedroom of the swanky Phi Delta Theta chapter house. Police Capt. William D. Blake said Long, questioned at Memorial hospital where he is recovering from a shoulder wound, said Davis opened fire for no apparent reason with a borrowed .22 caliber pistol. The shooting in a bedroom shared by Long and Joyner on the third floor of the 30-room, colonial-style fraternity house occurred at about 7 a.m. Saturday following a fraternity celebration that started with a co-led beauty pageant. Davis' father, Putnam Davis Sr., who heads the Davis Larchmont corporation, a manufacturing firm at Larchmont, N.Y., arrived by plane over the week-end to help police in their investigation and to make arrangements for returning his son's body. Davis, described as a sensitive, moody youth with brilliant artistic and musical talent and an intelligence quotient of near-genius level, was found dead on the bed, shot at close range in the left temple and clutching the borrowed, 10-shot pistol. Police said a house boy, aroused by cries and the echoes of five shots, found Joyner lying in the hall, shot in the back, and Long gasping in an adjoining bathroom from a shoulder wound. Blake quoted Long as saying he had left the room briefly after they had been peaceably drinking beer, playing records and talking about the music Davis loved and when he returned, Davis was sitting on the bed with a pistol in his hand. Davis pointed the pistol at him, Long told Blake, and began firing without saying a word. He said he fled the room as more shots rang out, not knowing what happened to Joyner or Davis after that moment. The smew is the smallest of the mergansers, a fish-eating duck of northern Europe and Asia that is particularly expert at diving for its food. ENDS TONIGHT Private Industry Seeks Atom Use Washington —(U.P).— The U.S. Chamber of Commerce urged today that development of atomic power for peaceful uses be entrusted to private industry. The chamber's views were given to the House-Senate committee on atomic energy by Dr. Wilson Compton, president of the Council for Financial Aid to Education. He gave a general endorsement to the administration bill to overhaul the atomic energy law. "As federal monopoly in atomic energy is relaxed, the science of atomic power may be expected to advance under the encouragement of private initiative and competition." "Future atomic power development for peacetime uses should be promoted by and entrusted to competitive private enterprise," he said. "This legislation is a step in that direction and should open the way for the establishment gradually of an atomic energy industry." Mr. Compton said the federal government should not enter directly into commercial development of atomic energy and should not generate power except as a by-product of the output of special atomic materials at federally-owned plants. KCU to Inaugurate Ph.D in Education Kansas City, Mo. - (U.P.)- The University of Kansas City today announced it will inaugurate a program of study leading to the doctorate of philosophy degree in its school of education. Trustees also decided yesterday to add programs in the college of liberal arts for bachelor of science degrees in science, home economics, and medical technology. Also: Cartoon - News SHOWS 2:30-7-9:06 NOW SHOWING