Mondav. Dec. 14. 1953 University Daily Kansan CLASSIFIED Phone KU 376 Classified Advertising Rates day 50c 25 words or less Additional words three Five days days 75c $1.00 2e 3e Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be delivered during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University of Alabama, not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. 345 p.m. the day before publication date. TRANSPORTATION GRADUATE STUDENT wants ride to or near Wilmington, North Carolina, during vacation. Will share expenses. Writer, Department of Zoology, Snell hall. 12-16 RIDE WANTED to California over vacancy Phone Ronald Schruben. 2056. 12-17 GRADUATE STUDENT SEEKS RIDE TO CALIFORNIA for Christmas vacation, preferably leaving around Dec. 20—willing to share expenses. Ph. 2256. 12-15 ASK US about airplane rates, sky coscoe family days, round trip reductions, business trips for Business or pleasure trip call Miss Rose Glesman at the First National Bank for information or iteraries and invaions. 8th and Mass. sts. Ph 30. LOST AND FOUND BROWN RIMMED GLASSES with goo Lenses from France Finder please call 23623. 12-15 THEREE KEYS in leather case engraved by the author. PROJECT. BOB Nebell, 2051. Reward. 12-15 BLACK CORDE* PURSE at Kenton con- fessional call Irma Lok尔特mer Ph. 3450 BUSINESS SERVICES RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wichita every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Phone Jim Sellers, 3101J evenings. MTW-tf PROFESSIONAL TYPING at student rates. Prompt consideration, accurate and fast. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker ave. Ph. 2721W. MW-fT FORMAL AND INFORMAL dressmaking also draperies and slipcovers, and alteration. Phone 1843-L-4. 825 New York MWF-TI TWIPING: Do reasonably and accurate Ruby code. 1223 A12-13 21422 JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet shop, including toys, food, an on-stop pet shop has everything for fur, fins, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1211 Conn. Phone 4181. ff Page 7 CABINET - MAKER AND Refinisher Antique pieces. Bar-top finish on tabletops. High class work guaranteed. E. E Higginhottom. Res. and Shop, 623 Ala EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do all kinds of typing at home. Standard rates. Accurate and fast service. Come to 1616 Vermont, or phone 2373R. tf BEVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics on American Service Company, 618 Vt. tf FOR SALE GIVE A LIVING GIFT. Cocke Spaniel Leonard. Ph. 2130. The Ken Fennick 12-17 Lenard. Ph. 2130. CHRISTMAS SPECIAL: Siamese kite- chers $15 and $20. Ph. 348. 4281. 12-16 19% EDITION of Encyclopedia Americana. Call Delbert Jones, Ph. 322. 12-45. SPEED GRAPHIC, good as new $24 x 3/4, Graffex flashgun, Kaltar rangefinder, lens shade, 2 film holders, pack adapter, encry- ting case; $175.00. John F. Hale. Catalog 12-14 COCKER PUPPIES for Christmas gifts, Blonds and buffs, pedigree stock. Select and will hold until Christmas if desired. See at 345 Miss. Phi. 2905W. 12-14 EXAKTA 35 mm CAMERA. Tessar lens; RF10mm. New condition. Saftfice. Rh. 2334W4. FOR RENT SINGLE. ROOM for men. Clove to bath. $50.00 a week. 817 Maine. P212W. 12-14 P82W. 12-14 MISCELLANEOUS WANT TO BUY: Boy's used bicycle, 24-inch wheel. Ph. 814M. 12-14 should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or contact lenses. YOUR E Y E S LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. Phone 425 1025 Mass. Security Risks Create New Party Break Washington — (U.P.)— Sen. Joseph R. R. McCarthy and Attorney General Herbert Brownell Jr., were apparently at odds today over whether the Eisenhower administration has completed its job of cleaning security risks out of government. Sen. McCarthy said he thinks security risks are still working for the government. "The fact that today some are being kicked out inades that I don't think the job wa; ended as of 'last night.'" In a radio interview at Ft. Worth, Texas, last night, the attorney general said, "We think they are all out of the government now. But the President has promised within the coming year we will have come to terms with people so the people can be sure none of them is left in government." Attorney General Brownell did not say all "security risks" had been fired, but only that he thought all persons with Communist leanings had been ousted. It was not known whether McCarthy meant to include pro-Reds in his use of the phrase "security risks." The security risk classification covers both persons with Communist tendencies and those with personal habits such as drunkenness or sex perversion who might endanger national security through talking too much or by being liable to blackmail. Sen. McCarthy, appearing on the NBC television show "Meet The Press" last night, refused to "estimate the number" of security risks he thinks are still in government. The justice department had "no comment" on the senator's statement. Attorney General Brownell pledged the Republican administration to a drive against Communists outside the government. Atomic Scientists To Meet in June Detroit —(U.P.)—Top atomic scientists from at least 10 foreign countries—excluding Russia and other Iron Curtain nations—will discuss peacetime uses of nuclear power with U.S. researchers at the University of Michigan next summer. it was disclosed today. The five-day meeting starting June 20 was announced by the American Institute of Chemical Engineers after President Eisenhower's appeal to the United Nations General Assembly for an international pool of atomic resources Dr. George G. Brown, dear oi engineering at Michigan and treasure of it against, said Washington is raised against inviting Russia and her satellites. Pamunjom, Korea—(U.P.)—T h murder trial of seven Chinese war prisoners charged with slaying a fellow inmate was postponed today because the Communists protested the appointment of an American civilian to defend the men. The trial, scheduled to start Saturday morning, grew out of Red charges that "Allied agents" have directed a reign of terror among anti-Communist Chinese and North Korean POWs. Reds Get Trial Postponment Dean Breaks Peace Pariey Panmunjon, Korea—(U.P.)-American Envoy Arthur H. Dean said yesterday he will fly back to the United States today leaving behind a Far Eastern expert to reopen negotiations for a Korean peace parley if the Communists change their tactics. Enraged by the Communists' insulting remarks about the United States, Mr. Dean broke off the seven-week-old preliminary talks Saturday and told the Reds he would not return unless they apologized. Chinese Envoy Huang Hua accused the United States of perfidy and treachery in connection with South Korean President Syngman Rhee's unauthorized release of 27,000 anti-Red North Koreans last June. Before announcing he will go to Washington to report on the deadlock which may doom the conference, Mr. Dean set another condition for resuming the talks—the Reds must indicate they really want a conference. Mr. Dean said he would leave Seoul airport today at 12:00 noon (CST) "if the Communists have not given notice" they want to resume the talks under his terms. He said Kenneth Young of the State department would stand by for about a week with "full authority" to resume the conversations if the Communists apologize for insulting the United States. If the talks are reopened," Mr. Dean said, "Young would continue them for a reasonable time in an effort to reach agreement of the time and place for the convening of the political conference, the governments who would attend on each side and the governments with direct experience in Korea who might be invited by both sides." Mr. Dean said, however, he was "very sure" the Communists would resume the disrupted preliminary talks on convening a Korean peace conference. "They may hold off a week or 10 days," he said. French Club Play Tonight A play entitled "Un Flabeau Jennette, Isabelle" will be presented at 7:30 p.m. today in the Green Hall Little theater by Le Clare Francais. It is taken from one of the plays written by Moliere in 1666. Scripture will be read by Genevieve Vile, Francois D'Hiver, and Robert Schaeffer, graduate students. A choir will sing and the audience will join in the singing of Christmas carols. A pantomime sketch will also be given. The cast is composed of Joy Brewer, college junior; James Bass, fine arts junior; Romarymary Ise, college sophomore; Robert Hobbs, college sophomore; Richard Maag, fine arts sophomore; George Sheldon, college freshman; Marvin Carlson, college freshman; Shirley Holmes, college senior; Terry Carle, college junior; and Thomas Bryan, college freshman. Submarines have been invented which were propelled by oars, treadles, hand-operated screws, clock-work, springs, steam stored in tubes, chemical engines, compressed air, stored gases, and electric motors. DOORS OPEN 12:00 (Noon) Continuous Showings at 12:15-2.40-5:05-7:30-9:55 The Minnesota farmwife, who had expected to get a negative answer, held a small Bible in her hand with her finger resting on the sixth verse from the 22nd chapter of the Book of Proverbs. "I know you believe me when I say I would like to talk to you." Fvt. Tenneson wrote. "However, there really isn't much you could accomplish by it. I know that you want to take me home with you, but I have made up my mind and I am not going." Pvt. Tenneson's letter contained such shopworn phrases as "the Gestapo FBI." Pfc. Richard R. Tennesseon, 20, sent the propaganda-nacked letter to Mrs. Portia Howe's Tokyo hotel room through Indian custodial forces in answer to her plea that he give up Communism and return to Minnesota with her. Mrs. Howe, 47, who had traveled 7,000 miles from Alden, Minn. to see Pvt. Temeson only to be refused permission to go to Panmunjom, received her son's reply with dry eyes and said she had not given up hope. "Train up the child in the way he should go and when he is old he will not depart from it," Mrs. Howe read. "I tried to train him in the way he should go," she said. "I believe God's promises and I'm not giving up at this point." Prisoner Tells Mother Of Refusal to Go Home Tokyo- (U.P.) A Communist-indoctrinated American war prisoner told his mother today in a letter from his barbed-wire Red compound that he made up his mind to reject his home and country. Mrs. Howe's appeal to her son, one of 22 Americans who chose to remain with the Communists during last summer's prisoner exchange, had contained nothing that would give the Reds an opportunity to charge she was putting Pvt. Tennessee under pressure. Then Mrs. Howe's voice faltered, "Where did she fail?" she asked. "Were you?" "I am staying in a hotel in Tokyo," she wrote. "I came out here in spite of Christmas preparations to talk to you. A message would reach me in my hotel in Tokyo. National Broadcasting company correspondent James J. Robinson gave Mrs. Howe's message to an Indian officer who read it to Pvt. Tennessee through the barbed wire of the prison compound in the Korean demilitarized zone. During my life I have witnessed both peace and war in the United States," Pvt. Tennessee wrote back, "I love peace. I love mankind. I love them enough to fight for them. That is what I am doing right now, that is why I'm not going home." Can Shortage Closes Plants Lakeland, Fla.—(U.P.)-Single-shift operations were called at two Snow Crop plants in Florida because of a shortage of cans today and the company expected to close a third plant by Sunday. The company said about 1,500 workers will be affected by the reduced operations at Auburndale and Dunedin and by closing the plant at Frostproof, Fla. ADM. 20c-65c SPECIAL STUDENT PRICE "BITTER RICE" ONLY WITH ID CARD 50c Reds Attack 3 Jap Ships Moji, Japan —(U.P.)— "Mystery" vessels, believed to be Chinese Communist, fired on three Japanese fishing boats in the East China sea today, according to the Japanese Maritime Safety agency. Nearly three hours later two Japanese fishing boats. No. 27 Nitro Maru and a sister ship, No. 16 Nitro Maru, both 98 tons, were also attacked about 90 miles southwest of the same island. The former reported she had escaped the attackers. No word has been received from her sister vessel but maritime officials believed she also had succeeded in fleeing from the attackers. The agency's local station said it had received a message from the patrol boat Hirato that the 362-ton trawler Hakozaki Maru was fired on by four "mystery" boats about 70 miles west of Tai Heishan island. There was no serious damage done or injuries to the crew. The attackers disappeared southward after the attack. An Eastern railroad intends to use enough continuous welded rail to construct 112 miles of track in building a freight classification yard near Pittsburgh, Pa. Officials said it would be the largest installation of that type ever put into service at one location. Some 36,000 welds will be required. HELD OVER NOW—ENDS THURS. Shows 7:00-9:00 Feature 7:20-9:30 DECAMERON NIGHTS starring JOAN FONTAINE-LOUIS JOURDAN with GOOFREY TEARLE-JOUNG COLLINS-BINNIE BARNES TECHNICOLOR NEWS-CARTOON-MUSICAL Patee PHONE 121 LAWRENCE'S DISTINCTIVE THEATRE