7 President Changes Mind Will Help in '54 Campaign Washington—(U.P.)President Eisenhower's plan to sit out next year's congressional campaign, so far as individual Republican candidates are concerned, lasted barely a week. Page 3 Official Bulletin Faculty and Staff: This is the last week to have faculty and staff leave. These are Franklin D. Murray, chapte University Players, 5 p.m., Green hall Little Theater Fulbright applications must be submitted to 304 Fraser on or before October 31. J. A. Burzle, KU Fulbright pro program adviser. Pl Lambda Theta aple service, 7:15 p.m. Home Ec room. Fraser, Casual 4-No Bridge Club: Card room, Student Union. 7.15 p.m. Students, faculty, staff Versammlung des Deutscher Vereins Donnerstag: 5 p.m., 502 Fraser. Ein Kurzer film: "Deutsche Persohnlichkeit" Erfleischengabe AWS House Meeting; 4 p.m., Pine room, Student Union. Le Cercle Francais: Fete de Dousseintis, lo cercle francoise demain la pointe du cercle, demain hale longue glisse, Student Unit Hawk's Nest Christian Science Organization: 7 p.m. Danielson Hall Players will not meet today. Kuku pledges, 7 p.m., and business at 10 a.m. "Dust or Destiny"痴,7.30 p.m., 436 L i n g e N o w D e l t e Sigma Pi pledges, 8 p.m., 9 S h o r g e Bulley Chemistry Club, 8 p.m. 305 BCL Dr. Kleinberg; "U n u s u l a I oxidation An. Inst. Architects student chapter 7:30 p.m. 205 Journalism FRIDAY All-Student Devotions, 9:45 p.m. Dan forth chapel. KUCF sponsor. Episcopal Communion, 7 a.m. Dan- ford church School of Pharmacy picnic, 6:30 p.m. Kaw Kow Transportation BCL 6:15 p.m. Transportation BCL 6:15 p.m. Phi Mu Alpha, 5 p.m., 131 Strong, Attendance required. Chemistry Lecture Slated Tomorrow The 6th annual Frank Burnett Dains memorial lecture will be given at 4 p.m. Friday in 305 Bailey chemical laboratory. the State University of Iowa. He will talk on "Reactions of Cystine with Di-functional Reagents." Prof. Dains is a former professor of chemistry at the University. The lecture is sponsored by the KU department of chemistry and Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemical society. A dinner for Dr. Shriner will be given at 6 p.m. in the Kansas room of the Student Union. Members of Alpha Chi Sigma and guests will attend. Report Describes Glaze Technique The smooth-appearing glazed surface of a piece of ceramic ware, seen through the electron microscope at about 20,000 times magnification, may take on such features as planes, plateaus, ridges, wrinkles, jagged regions, crystals, bubbles, and grooves. "Electron Microscopy of Fired Glaze Surfaces," recently issued by the State Geological survey, is a technical report which reveals such secrets about glazes. The report points out how the technique of electron microscopy for determining character of glaze surfaces can be applied to the study of relatively smooth glazes, such as are required for pottery and other ceramic ware in many ceramics industries. Another report, "Experimental Separation of Iron-Bearing Minerals from Certain Kansas Clays," is bound with the glaze report. This paper is based on laboratory research of two light-firing clays from Cloud county and one from Cherokee county. IF YOU Live in Kansas You'll Find All The News of Kansas in The TOPEKA DAILY CAPTIAL University Daily Kansan A. E. Hall Dist. 1800 Learnard Phone 1813L1 Lawrence, Kansas He chilled some Republican politicians a week ago yesterday at his news conference by responding like this to a question whether he would take part in the 1954 battle to save Congress for the GOP. Mr. Eisenhower said he was deeply interested in what happened to the Senate and the House. But he did not intend to make the presidency an agency for use in partisan elections. He had no intention of going out and getting into partisan struggles in any district or any state. The foregoing is a paraphrase of part of Mr. Eisenhower's reply. He also said it was his job to develop an enlightened and progressive program to give Republicans good cause to obtain election. Not all Republican politicians were dismayed by the President's statement. Sen. Milton P. Young (R-S.D.) applauded the strategy which, he said, would help midwestern Republican candidates next year. Young and the President are disputing the farm relief problem. But there was more amazement than applause for Mr. Eisenhower's announcement. Mr. Eisenhower had another news conference yesterday. There was considerable back and forth questioning between the President and the reporters on his 1954 campaign plans, if any. William H. Lawrence of the New York Times finally put the pertinent question. Lawrence: Mr. President, following up a previous question, you have made the point to us here today, sir, that it would be physically and mentally unwise to try to absorb the problems of all 435 (Congressional) districts. This doesn't bar you, however, in the course of the next year, if you happen to be in somebody's Congressional district, from giving him a pat on the back. Mr. Eisenhower replied that as a matter of fact he was always compli- mened when somebody came up and wanted to have their picture taken with him (laughter). It sort of meant that they thought he was not going to damage them. He thought it was sort of a compliment. He didn't see why he had to take an extremist view on this thing. There was more. But for worried Republican politicians, that will be enough. They'll be looking to Mr. Eisenhower for a pat on the back where needed in the 1954 campaign, or a picture, or maybe a ride across the state and district on the Presidential train if it happens that some speeches have to be made across country in 1954. For extra cash, sell those items with a Kansan classified ad. MEN - LOOK on MEN'S To $19.78 $14.75 Values SPORT COATS Dutch Architect To Speak Here STYLE and QUALITY for LESS! 831 Mass. An internationally known Holland architect will spend three days on the KU campus in November, giving lectures and meeting informally with students, architectural staff members, and practicing architects from Kansas and Missouri. He is Willem Dudok, city architect and planner for Hilversum. The Netherlands, who will arrive in Lawrence Nov. 14. On Nov. 16, Mr. Dudok will give a public lecture, "To Live and Build," at 3 p.m. in Strong auditorium. On Nov. 17, he will go to Kansas City to meet with the Kansas City chapter of the American Institute of Architects, and to speak to them on "Thoughts on Town Planning." Mr. Dudok was born in Amsterdam, and since 1928 has been the city architect and planner for the town of Hilversum. There he has designed and supervised construction of the town hall, public baths, an electric draining mill, several schools, an abattoir, and several homes. Besides the city plan of Hilversum, he is also responsible for the city plans of Wassenar, Zolle, and the reconstruction plans for The Hague and the Velsen-Ijmuiden. He designed the Exchange in Rotterdam, and town halls for The Hague, Amsterdam, and Velsen in Holland and for Curacao in the Dutch West Indies. Mr. Dudok has won honors including the Gold Medal of the Royal Institute of British Architects, the gold medals of The Hague and the Hilversum. He is an officer of the Order of Orange-Naussau, a Knight of the Order of The Netherlands, and an officer of the Order of the crown of Belgium. Orry Walz, instructor in sociology, will be the commentator on "Sociology on the Air" a program at 3:05 Sunday over KLWN. The broadcast is entitled "Sticks and Stones—A Study in Religion," and is made possible under a grant from the fund for Adult Education established by the Ford Foundation. Roughly half of the earth's known uranium ore lies in the Belgian Congo in the fantastic open-pit mine at Shinkolobwe, 70 miles northwest of Elisabethville. Shinkolobwe's name was dropped from maps for secrecy's sake during World War II. Walz to Be KLWN Speaker everything that Christmas means is in this gift For Quality Photography... STUDIO Call 151 U.S. Report Charges Reds With Murder of Thousands Washington—The United States went before the bar of world opinion today with documented charges that the Communists in Korea murdered thousands of Allied and American troops in atrocities rivaling the savagery of Dachau and Buchenwald. In an 87-page white paper made public last night, the Army told how prisoners were hung up by their hands and set alife, how they were stabbed to death with bamboo spears, how they were dismembered, emasculated, or bludgeoned. The report, drawn from the testimony of 216 survivors and buttressed by grisly photographs, listed 29-815 persons as probable atrocity victims—6,113 Americans, 5,509 Allied troops, 17,354 Korean civilians, and 839 unidentified. Officials said the total may rise as other reports of Red brutality are investigated. The Voice of America beamed broadcasts around the globe in an effort to burn the atrocity story into the minds of men everywhere. Congressmen urged the administration to lay the charges before the United Nations as it did in the case of Communist germ warfare charges. The Army report was drawn up in the form of a legal document. Thirty-four war crimes cases ready to go to trial last June were dropped when the defendant prisoners were ordered released in the armistice exchange so that Allied POWs would not be held by the Reds for alleged crimes. Any remaining hope for 7,955 American servicemen listed as missing was wiped out by the evidence cited in the report. Time Set for Free Swims Actors to Meet, Plan Coffee University players will meet at 5 p.m. today in Green hall basement. Plans will be made for a coffee for the cast of "Caine Mutiny." A co-recreational swim is being held at Robinson gymnasium Wednesdays from 7-9 p.m. Men and women are to bring their own suits and caps. Admission is free. IT PAYS TO LET EXPERTS DO IT Save money on car repairs, get better performance from your car all the time. Bring it here regularly and let our experts check and service it. Battery Inspected Complete Testing Terminals Cleaned 50c Valuable Coupons with Each $2 Purchase Jim's D-X Service 1836 Mass. More graphically than anything else perhaps the report's cold, almost clinical recital of Communist brutality brought home the ugliness of the "little" war in Korea. In the case of the "Chinese torture," a surviving American lieutenant told how wounded prisoners were hung up by their hands, set afire, and when dead or only unconscious stabbed in the eyes with sticks. The Army said the "Taejon massacre" will be recorded in history "along with the rape of Nanking, the Warsaw ghetto and other similar mass executions." Communist executioners slaughtered 5,000 to 7,000 inmates of the local jail in cold blood. In another case, five American airmen were found with their bodies perforated with bamboo spear wounds. Two GI illiteracy men were found—one dismembered, the other cruelly bayoneted and with his eyes gouged out. is a new experience in shoe comfort . an Authentic Moccasin interpreted in the best Taylor tradition. HERE . . . Hand-sewn front. Brown or Black $1095 — $1295 the