University Daily Kansas Tuesday, April 14, 1953 0 Atlantic Pact Air Power Stressed by Military Washington—(U.P.)—Military authorities have sealed down their plans for more allied ground divisions in Western Europe this year and will put major emphasis on building up Atlantic Pact air power. Defense department sources reported these developments as Defense Secretary Charles E. Wilson and Gen. Omar N. Bradley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, paraded to fly to Europe today for North Atlantic Treaty Organization conferences which will decide 1953 strength goals. U. S. military planners expect the NATO allies to fix a goal of 5,500 airplanes. But they apparently are reconciled to accepting a small increase in numbers of ground divisions. Gen. Alfred M. Gruenstein, chief of staff to NATO commander Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, said recently the West European Defense forces are approximately at their 1952 goals of 50 divisions and 4,000 airplanes. While Gen. Ridgway's headquaters has been represented in Paris dispatches as wanting about eight more divisions added this year, some military men in the Pentagon will not be surprised if a longer target is set. A one-time tentative goal of 96 AF Captain Named To AFROTC Post Capt. James C. McCausland, recently returned from Korea, has been assigned as an assistant professor of air science at the Air Force ROTC unit here, Col. Lynn R. Moore, professor of air science, announced today. Capt. McCausland of Mararillo, Texas, received a degree in industrial engineering from Texas A&M, and was commissioned a 2nd lieutenant at Yale university June 1, 1944. His Air Force specialty is aircraft maintenance. He was stationed in Germany from June to January, 1946, and then went to Korea after a tour of duty in the U.S. divisions by 1955 appears to have been abandoned altogether. Final figures for 1953 will be fixed by the NATO council which begins meeting in Paris on April 23. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and Treasury Secretary George M. Humphrey will join Mr. Wilson at the conference. Med Group Names 13 New Members Two juniors and eight seniors have been named to membership in Alpha Omega Alpha, national honorary medical fraternity. Juniors selected were William E. Burkhalter, and James C. Warren. The seniors selected were Donald L. Cooper, Dale G. Griswold, Edward J. Huycke, Willard E. Kauffman, Charles Replogle, Thomas Westcott, Hugh W. McCaughey and Walter J. Stelmach. Dr. E. Gray Dimond, associate professor of medicine, was also awarded membership. Holdover members who were named as juniors last year are Lamont Gaston and William Ruth. ROTC Practices Today for Review Cadets of the three ROTC units will participate in a practice review at 4 p.m. today on the intramural fields in preparation for the annual federal inspection to be held Monday. The students will not be excused from classes for the practice today, but Chancellor Murphy has asked that the cadets be excused from 4 p.m. classes the day of the review. Sob Singing Ray Irks British Rector Elsed, England — (U.P.)— A clergyman complained today that Johnny Ray earned more money in two weeks of sob singing here than a British farmer can earn in 40 years. "Something has gone wrong with our sense of values when we are willing to pay such a person in a fortnight a salary it would take a farmworker 40 years to earn," the Rev. Frank Parkhouse wrote in a leaflet distributed in his parish. "He shivers and sighs and even cries," the rector said. "I imagine that is just what the audience should be doing when they realize how they are being fooled." Movie Head Sees 3-D As Boost to TV New York — (U.F.) — Spyros Skouras, president of 20th Century-Fox Films corporation, believes that top-flight movies will be made available to millions of television viewers in the near future. A lecture on the development and design of helicopters by Charles Seibel, chief engineer of the Cessna Helicopter division. Wichita, will be given at 7:30 p.m.Monday in 205 Journalism building. Cessna Official to Lecture On Helicopter Development Mr. Seibel is a graduate of Wichita high schools, and received bachelor Lind Talks in Topeka To Classical League "The Importance of Latin as Preparation for College" was the subject of a talk by Prof. L. R. Lind, chairman of the department of Latin and Greek, delivered to the fourth annual State Junior Classical league at Topeka High school Saturday. Prof. Lind spoke to more than 100 delegates from high schools in Kansas and showed color slides of Rome and Italy. The group is affiliated with the American Classical league, an organization which promotes the study of Latin and Greek in the U.S. and master degrees at the California Institute of Technology. He has been employed by Bell Aircraft corporation, Buffalo, New York, and Boeing Airplane company. Formulating his own designs for the development of the helicopter, he founded the Seibel Helicopter company at Wichita in 1948. In 1952 his company was merged with Cessna. Mr. Seibel and his company produced several flying models which in configuration and engineering proved to have great merit. The Seibel lecture is sponsored by the KU student chapter of the Institute of the Aeronautical Sciences and is open to all interested persons. Tickets Are On Sale At The Information Booth And In Organized Houses. The K.U. Relay Dance April 18th-The UNION Ballroom Tickets - $1.00 Each Including Fed. Tax "High Grades" Insurance... For this last lap of the semester brush up for finals with one of our outline series. Its newspaper-like efficiency highlights the essentials of the course and can help you to study. 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