he Com- of Kan- year law Alpha Howard, sorority university hold its 9 p.m. to Kansan. dinner fast night ism sor- apper at ead, t. ficers law, has pha Tau spring Duncan resident; jun- engine- and Ken- rian. ver or to ASSIFIED ADS Phone KU 376 Classified Advertising Rates 50c Three Five days days 75c $1.00 Additional words. 1c ac 2c accept with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in at least two days before cept (saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journals should be sent to 3:45 p.m. the day before publication. TRANSPORTATION RIDER WANTED TO WEST COAST around Jan 22th Ph. 42618 - p11 7 p.m. RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wichita every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Phone Jim Sellers, 31013 evenings. MTW-tt ASK US about airplane rates, ski coach, family days, round trip reductions, all expense tours and steamship lines. For entries or offers at the First National Bank for information or juniaries and reservations. 8th and Mass. sts. Phone 30. tf BUSINESS SERVICES PROFESSIONAL TYPING at student office. Prompt consideration, accurate and fast. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker ave. Ph. 2721W. MWF-tf FORMAL AND INFORMAL dressmaking, attenuations, Fn. 1843L-4, 825 N MWF-I TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Phone 1368M. MWF-1f JAYHAWKERS. Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are ours too. We provide everything for fur, fins, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Conn. Phone 4181. tf TVBIST*: Experienced, accurate typist will give immediate attention to your work. References upon request. Mrs. Fevurly. Ph. 3226-M. MWF-1F EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do all kinds of typing at home. Standard rates. Accurate and fast service. Come-to 1616 Vermont, or phone 2373R. FOR SALE BEVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the back pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic containers. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. tt CABINET-MAKER and FINISHER Antique pieces, Bar-top finish on table tops. High class work guaranteed. E. E Higginbottom. Res. and. Shop. 623 Alaia 1942 CLDS-1948 motor (76), 5,000 miles radio, heater, new seat covers, new paint, good rubber. See Marvin Wortman at 841 Lr., or call 2995J. 1-11 1942 BUICK SUPER CONVERTIBLE Vernmont. Ph. 2771M 1-11 0508311204 COLOR FILM-KODAK; 36 exposures - for 3-cm and 12-cm - 1-11 - or 3-sc-7 p. Ronald Chenl. FOR RENT ATTRACTIVELY FURNISHED APART- MENT: large living-bedroom, kitchen and first floor, private entrance, 4 blocks from hotel. $32.00 per room. 3712W. 1-7 High Court to See 2ndMovieofWeek Washington — (U.P.)—The Supreme Court turned from crime movies today to the problem of illicit love. When the justices leave the each this afternoon, they will review their second movie of the week. It is "La Ronde." a French language film which New York censors banned as immoral. The picture deals with a series of interlocking love affairs in Vienna at the turn of the century. Yesterday members of the court convened in one of their conferences rooms to watch the film "M", the story of a psyecopath who lures small girls to their deaths by buying them balloons and sweets. The local crime syndicate finally corners the killer in order to ward off police raids demanded by the frightened public. Superior Films, Inc. producers of "M," say the picture "seeks to gain popular understanding that mental illness has concrete environmental causes. . and that therefore to remedy the problem. . are deserving of support." The justices will have to decide whether to accept this view or that of Ohio's Attorney General C. Olney O'Neill, who says: "Ohio has sought to protect its citizens from a devastating attack upon the social and moral order of the state." For Extra Cash, sell those items with a Kansan Classified. Crapshooters Give Up Pants, Cash to Thugs At least 19 men and one woman, most of them spectators at the game, lost money to the gunmen, who threatened to "blow hell out of you" and roughed up at least two of the victims. Cushing, Okla.—(U.P.)Four hooded men, one of them armed with a submachine gun, held up a high-stakes dice game near Cushing last night and escaped with about $20,000. The robbers, wearing women's stockings over their heads, forced all the men around the dice table to take down their pants, and left all the trousers in a pile on the floor when they escaped. The victims were bound with picture-hanging wire the robbers brought with them. The robbery took place at the home of E. G. Ferry, Winfield, Kan., about one mile north of the Cushing city limits. Officers said the victims included persons from Kansas, Arkansas and Oklahoma. Page 7 One of the victims gave details of the holdup. He said the bandits kicked in the back door and burst into the gambling room with an order for everybody to "get low." He said one man carried the submachine gun and the other three were armed with pistols or revolvers. The gunmen then ordered all the men to drop or take off their pants. One of the victims, a Cushing man, tried to escape and a robber hit him on the head with the butt of his pistol and knocked him down. His head was cut but he was not seriously injured. At least one other man was roughed up by the bandits. The witness said a player from Woodward started for the front door and one of the pistol-carrying bandits fired at his feet and stopped him. Wisconsin U. OK's Campus Freedom Madison, Wis. —(U.P.) In a move prompted by the campus appearances here of two Communist Daily Worker editors, the University of Wisconsin today endorsed the principle of freedom of action among students. The faculty group voted unanimously last night to accept a teacher-student committee report which restated the freedom of Wisconsin students to join groups of their own choosing and to invite off-campus speakers to address them. The committee study and report was begun after an editor of the New York Daily Worker appeared here last January to address a meeting of Labor Youth league, a student organization. While reaffirming the principle of student freedom, the report also warned students of the "possible consequences of membership in organizations designated by official action as subversive." Both appearances touched off state-wide controversies and criticism. Since then the league invited another Daily Worker editor to the campus. Ike Inspires New March New York — (U,P)—Composer-bandmaster Paul Lavalle presented a new type of portraiture-in-music last night, a radio program of three of his marches with President Eisenhower, the World of News Reporting and the U.S. Air Force as subjects. The 15-minute program of "Lavalleia" followed Mr. Eisenhower's radio-TV address to the nation. Mr. Lavalle conducted his 48-piece band in "The Dwight D. Eisenhower March," the "United Press March" and "The U.S. Air Force." The marches were the product of year's composing. In the New York United Press newsroom, Mr. Lavalle jotted down the rhythmic pattern of the wireless code and the peep of telephoto receivers, which he used as the underlying theme of the "United Press March." To get the background for the Air Force composition, Mr. Lavalle visited two Air Force bases. The march reflects the sounds of jetage flight—the whine of jets, the roar of bomber, planes, and the thunderclap of the smashing of the sound barrier. Mr. Lavalle dedicated "T h e Dwight D. Eisenhower March" to the President at Mr. Eisenhower's inauguration a year ago. It is built around the musical notes represented by the President's initials, D.D.E. KDGU Schedule 4:00 UN Review. 4:15 Show Fields 4:30 Remember When. 4:55 Your Union 5:00 Pechworks 5:00 Pachworks. 5:30 Movietime. 5:55 News. 6:00 Fantasy in Strings. 6:30 In the Mood. 7:00 Bookstore Hour. 8:00 Notes on the Night. 8:00 Notes in the Night 9:00 Sign Off. Accounting Students Visit Topeka Firms University Daily Kansan A class in accounting systems taught by Howard Stettler, associate professor of accounting, is visiting business houses in Topeka today. Included in the day's itinerary are the tax relief division for motor fuel, a Topeka wholesaler, and a department store. Mr. Stettler said the purpose of the field trip was to study the business machines and accounting methods used by the Topeka firm. 2:30-7-9 Shows N-O-W NOW • ADM. 20c — 50C Robert Stack "War Paint" 50c Grants will be made to full-time engineering students interested in tool and production engineering as a profession. The grants will be paid directly to the institution on a quarter or semester basis up to $700 a year. Shows 7:00 — 9:00 10 Grants Available For Tool Engineers 195 international education awards for 1954, nine in the U.S. and one in Canada, will be made by the American Society of Tool Engineers for next fall's term. Application forms must reach the ASTE office before March 31. These forms are available in the office of the School of Engineering, 111 Marvin hall. Movie Socialite Dies on Train Hollywood, Calif. — (U.P.)—Film stars and a host of international celebrities today mourned the death of Countess Dorothy Di Frasso, 66, who died of a heart ailment aboard a train as she returned from a party staged in her honor at Las Vegas. Her father was a New York and California millionaire. Her first husband was Claude Graham White, an English flyer. She later married the late Count Carlo Di Frasso. They once owned the palatial Villa Madama in Rome, which they sold to Mussolini. Actor Clifton Webb, accompanying her on the return from the party, said he discovered her body when he went to awaken her as the train approached Los Angeles yesterday. She was lying in her roomette, covered by her mink coat and wearing $250,000 in iwews, he said. In 1941, she played hostess in Mexico City to exiled King Carol of Romania and his companion, Madame Lupescu. The countess, born to wealth, became an international figure whose adventures were reported in the tabloids and gossip columns of the last 25 years. She was one of Hollywood's most lavish party-givers during the 1920s and '30s and once led a safari in Africa. She was a friend of the late gambler and ex-hoodlum Benjamin (Bugsy) Siegel and introduced him into filmland society. The party was given for her by producer Tom Douglas. Guests included Marlene Dietrich, Mr. Webb and Van Johnson. "She had gone to Las Vegas for a party—Cary Grant took her to the plane." Mr. Webb said. "She had heart spasms there. The doctor told her she should not take nitroglycerine pills so indiscriminately. She was a fabulous woman." For Extra Cash, sell those items with a Kansan Classified. N-O-W! M-G-M's TOP LOVE MUSICAL SPECTACLE TECHNICOLOR EASY TO LOVE ESTHER WILLIAMS VAN JOHNSON VAN JOHNSON - TONY MARTIN An M-G-M Picture Mat. 2:30 - Eve. 7 - 9 Features 3:04 - 7:34 - 9:44 EXTRA "FOOTBALL Highlights of 1953 Phone916 "Home of CinemaScope" GI Bill Cut-off To Be Aug.20 Many Korean veterans will have their last chance to begin educational training at government expense at the beginning of the spring semester, but not much change is expected in the number of Korean veterans enrolled in the University. The cut-off date, applying only to veterans who were separated from service before Aug. 20, 1952, does not go into effect until Aug. 20 of this year. According to a release from the Veteran's Administration, those veterans would still be able to start training during the summer session. Veterans who left service after Aug. 20, 1952 and who have not started educational training are not affected by the cut-off date next fall. They have two years from the date of their separation from service to begin training. The University veteran's bureau estimated the number of Korean veterans enrolled at 400-425. None of these will be affected by the provision, since they already have begun training under the GI bill. Under Public Law 550 a veteran actually must be enrolled in school before his deadline. Filing an application for employment is according to information from the VA. The Aug. 20 cut-off date applies only to Korean veterans and does not concern veterans of World War II. Two Attend Biennial Kappa Psi Meeting Wayne Wagers, pharmacy senior, and Henry Wittenberg, pharmacy sophomore, were delegates to the biennial national convention of Kappa Psi, honorary pharmacy fraternity, held from Dec. 28-30, in Washington, D.C. The chief item of business in the convention was a yearly $500 scholarship which was set up. This scholarship is to be awarded as the prize for the best library re- sponsored by Kappa Psi. It will go to a pharmacy student for graduate work. Regular chapter reports were given, and the national officers were elected at the convention. For Extra Cash, sell those items with a Kansan Classified. HER LIFE WAS A... Nightmare! HER LOVE LIKE A... Dream! NOW! Shows 7-9 Adults 65c CELLEE STONE GLENN LANGAN BELAUN GONDI LEO GENN Lawrence's Distinctive Theatre