Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 9, 1953 Debate Team to Enter 2 Weekend Tourneys KU debate teams will enter forensic tournaments Friday and Saturday at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville and at Southwestern college in Winfield. William Arnold and Hubert Bell, college juniors, will compete in the senior division for juniors and seniors at Southwestern. Margaret Smith, college sophomore, and Robert Kimball, college freshmen, will enter the junior division tournament for freshmen and sophomores. William Means, business senior, and John Fields, college junior, will U.S. Suspends Defiant Judge The judge notified the department he considers its attitude "insulting, arbitrary and illegal." and declared that "I will continue to perform my judicial functions." Frankfurt, Germany—(U.P.)-T h e U.S. State department suspended Judge William Clark for insubordination today and ordered him back to the United States, but the defiant jurist refused to heed the order. Judge Clark, who has been serving as U.S. chief justice in Germany, refused to return to Washington Monday when he learned the department is preparing to dismiss him as "surplus"—a step which he says is unjustifiable under present regulations. --debate in the senior division, and John Eland and Gary Sick, college freshmen, will compete in the junior division at Favetteville. University Chorus Concert Is Tonight The 350-voice University chorus will present a concert of Christmas music at 8 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium, under the direction of Clayton Krehbiel. --debate in the senior division, and John Eland and Gary Sick, college freshmen, will compete in the junior division at Favetteville. Dr. Kim Giffin, associate professor of speech, will accompany the debaters to Southwestern, and E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, will go to Arkansas. KU students also will enter discussion, oratory, and extemporaneous speaking contests in the tournaments. Arnold and Bell will enter all three events, while Miss Smith and Kimball will enter only in the discussion contest, at Southwestern. Eland will compete in oratory and Sick in extemporaneous speaking, and both, with Means and Fields, will enter the discussion contest in the Arkansas tournament. The subject for discussion will be "Practices Used by Congressional Investigating Committees." Debating procedure will be practically identical in both tournaments, Dr. Giffin said. Teams will debate both sides of the college question, "Resolved, that the United States should adopt a policy of free trade." Debating will begin with four rounds of "partial round robin" competition. Atomic Plant Leader To Speak at Banquet Adm. Hyman G. Rickover, director of the atomic power plant program, will speak at a banquet in honor of senior engineers at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas room of the Student Union. Engineers may buy tickets in Marvin hall. Prices are $1.25 for Engineering association members and $2 for non-members. Tickets will go on sale today to the public. Deadline Given For Gallery Trip Tomorrow is the last day students may sign up for University-sponsored bus trips to the 20th amphitheater, located at Art gallery, in Kansas City, Mo. One trip will be Dec. 15 and the other will be Dec. 17. Two buses will go each trip, leaving from Strong hall at 12:30 p.m. and returning to Lawrence late in the afternoon. Cost per student will be 85 cents for the round trip. The deadline for payment is tomorrow. Seventy students can go in the two buses. Students who wish to go should contact the drawing and painting office. Room 325 Strong hall. Paintings borrowed from other museums and art galleries will be on display at the Nelson gallery during the anniversary commemoration which begins tomorrow. A painting by Hilaire Degas, "Rehearsal of the Ballet on the Stage," will be on loan from the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art. A Claude Monet portrait of Antonin Proust will be sent from a Toledo, Ohio, museum. "moulin de la Galette" by Henri Toulouse Lautrec a painting which is insured for $100,000, will be sent by the Chicago Art institute. "Harlequin," a painting by Pablo Picasso, will be sent by the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. KDGU Schedule 4:00 Rhythm Rendezvous 4:15 Blue Penny 4:30 Cavalcade of Music 4:35 Your Onion 5:00 Pachworks 5:30 Facts on Record 5.55 Mme 6:00 Fantasy in Strings 7:00 Bookstore Hour 8:00 Notes in the Night 9:00 Sign Off 7.00 Bookstore Hour 8:00 Notes in the Night 6.00 Fin Off 6:30 In the Mood 6.55 None In clear water, a submerged submarine can be spotted from the air it depths up to 100 feet. Peace Parley Negotiations Reported at Break-Up Point Panmunjom—(U.P.)—Negotiations for a Korean peace conference neared a break-up today when the Communists abruptly rejected a United Nations "final" offer of conditions. Red delegates to the preliminary talks told Mr. Dean they never will agree to a peace conference unless Soviet Russia is invited as a "neutral" which would not be bound by any decisions reached. Members of the staff of United States Special Envoy Arthur H. Dean, representing the UN command in the negotiations, predicted that they would be home before Christmas—with or without having laid the basis for a formal conference, and probably without. But we are not going to be bullied," Mr. Dean said. Mr. Dean said he would wait a reasonable time for the Communists to change their minds. He reminded newsmen he has been authorized since the arrangement talks started to break off negotiations with the Communists at any time. He added he has not decided when or how he might end them if the Reds do not change their minds about his final offer. He told the Reds that Russia must sit on the Communist side, if it attends the conference, and that it must accept full responsibility for any decisions reached. Three Win Cash For Design Ideas Three fine art students have won prizes for designing place mats for North College hall, Elizabeth Swigart, instructor of design, said today. The first-place award of $10 went to Tal Streater, sophomore. Mary Schroeder, sophomore, won a second-place prize of $2, and Dianne Barnhill, junior, received $2 for third prize. The winning designs will be used in North College dining rooms. Falcons have wonderful eyesight. They have been known to respond to a feathered lure from a distance of 5,400 feet. DO YOU WANT TO SAVE A DOLLAR? IF you still have Christmas shopping to do and want to get your gifts at a good discount STEVE SMITH 4271 K.U. Christmas Card Campanile Card- Campus Snow Scene Cards Photographic reproductions on ripple Stock. 5c each - box of 16,75c -- complete with matching envelopes. Campanile Engraved Stationery Back in Stock-98c Beautifully engraved on Velvatone Stock For discriminating senders 10c each -- $1.00 per dozen -- complete with matching envelopes STUDENT Union Book Store