ns in the ommander. Lom Lon- tions and men and ond out- ndnesday's diers. The dian crisis hur said toment that let For-based on depo- he made n to the exchange G. Kirk lishinsk. ement to enms could or state- worthless, s. rt, (Rep. oraneous predict- republican wn party the Re- ated re- At-Lace request a United ngl rela- another r. Chan- chairman bioshas has l" Com- is- egy com- round is at atomic want to learned ests has the rim staves have ideal for a safety and anwhan EC pe reported a twin- boat were fog-end slopes nt. The easter in wildcat its third e Army argo for opening resident majority bership. 29th Journalism Conference Here Discussions of the different phases of journalism will highlight the 29th annual high school journalism conference to be held Saturday at the University. Chamber Music Concert Series To Open Sunday The 1951 Chamber Music series will open Sunday with a concert by Leslie Chabay, tenor; at 4 p.m. in Strong auditorium. Chabay, who has been singing in American operas since 1945, will present an all-German lieder program. Since only 400 persons may attend the Chamber Music series, students and faculty are urged to buy season tickets as soon as possible. After coming to this country from Switzerland, Chabay joined the San Francisco opera and now is a member of the Metropolitan opera. The program will include: "Brich entzwel, mein armes Herze," "Ich halte, treulich still," "Liebster Herr Jesu," "Gib Dich zu Frieden," J. S. Bach. Six Goethe songs, "Sehnsucht," and "Wonne der Wehtm," by Beethoven; "Geheimnes," and "Wanders Nachtlied," by Schubert; "Blumengruss," and "Fruhling ubers Jahr." by Hugo Wolf. Following intermission Mr. Chabay will sing the following selections from "Gesange nach Lenau" by Schumann; "Lied eines Schmiendes," "Meine Rose," "Kommen und Scheiden," "Die Sennin," "Einsamkeit," and "Der Schwere Abend." "Fruhlungstraum," "Thr Bild," "Liebesbotschaft," "The Liebe hat gelogen," and "Rastlose Liebe," by Schubert. > Three hundred students and teachers from eastern Kansas high schools are expected to attend the conference. The University of Kansas conference is one of five being sponsored throughout the state by the Kansas State High School Activities association, all with the aim of helping high school students and teachers in the production of school papers and yearbooks. The conference will be divided into two sections, one for students interested in journalism and one for those interested in the publication of year books. Discussions will be conducted by faculty members of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information. High school journalism teachers from several of the schools will participate in the conference, aong with several other teachers and businessmen. Those participating from the School of Journalism are: Emil L. Telelf, associate professor of journalism; Frances Grinstead and Victor J. Danilov, assistant professors of journalism; Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism; and Burton W. Marvin, dean of the school. High school journalism teachers leading discussions are: G. O. Watson, Shawnee Mission High school, Mission; Bill Morey, Liberty Memorial High school, Lawrence; Bill Adams, Toppea high school, Topeka; and Phillip Keeler, Rosedale high school, Kansas City. Kan. Other persons conducting discussion groups are: Oscar M. Haugh, assistant professor of education; Karl H. Fitzer, vice-president of Burger-Baird, Kansas City, Mo.; Joe M. Miller, Myers and company, Topeka; and H. Ralph Kolb, manager of the yearbook department at Burger-Baird. National Magazine Pictures Fraternity Flood Clean-Up Dean Marvin will speak at the opening meeting of the conference at 9 a.m. in Strong auditorium. Life magazine devotes four pages in its current issue to the recent flood damage clean-up staged in North Lawrence by the Inter-fraternity Council. The article is titled "Kansas" Cleanup" and subtitled "Fraternity Men Restore a Flood - Stricken Town." Included in the article is a series of pictures showing; the fraternity men gathered at the Union Pacific station to receive their tools, raising a house floor and shoveling mud out of a bathtub; cleaning and scrubbing floors and restoring buildings. There was some pleasure mixed in with the hard work the article reveals. One picture shows Harlan Parkinson, College freshman, carrying Jeaneene Fischer, College sophomore, out of a basement where she and Beverly Marsh, fine arts sophomore, had made an inspection tour. In another picture, Jeannee gets her face and hands washed with a Student Wins $40 At Royal Johnnie Muir, engineering sophomore, and her 3-year old horse, Cynthianna King, won first place in the ladies' 3-gaited amateur division, Missouri and Kansas division, at the American Royal Sunday. Her prize was a blue ribbon and $40. Cynthianna King has a good record of first places. The 3-gaited class at the Liberty, Mo. Horse show and the reserve champion junior-walk trot horse division at Waterloo, Iowa Horse show were won last spring by Miss Muir's horse. Mills To Speak At Seminar Dr. Russell C. Mills, associate professor of biochemistry, will address the School of Medicine seminar at 5 p.m. today in Haworth hall. hose. The clean-up was the same day as the game with Colorado. One photo shows the men stopping work to listen to the game for a moment. The final pictures show Bob Ball, College sophomore, taking a shower fully clothed, and later on the steps of the house with his date for the evening, Marjean Sullivan, College sophomore. Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks. UNIVERSITY DAILY Comedy and satire, in the George Bernard Shaw tradition, are features of the film, "Major Barbara," which will be shown at 7:30 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium. Students and faculty members will be admitted free to the show. Cases include Deborah Kerr, Wend Hale Harris, Harrison, and Eunlyn Williams. Will Present Shaw Comedy Student Directories At Union Book Store "Major Barbara," produced 10 years ago, was re-released recently and has had successful showings in theaters throughout the East. William Nulton, FACTS representative, said, "The reason for this primary election is that FACTS has always felt that all students at KU should have the opportunity to help select the candidates to represent them." Student Directories may be obtained in the Student Union bookstore today, Saturday, or Monday, Oct. 22. Identification cards must be presented. Applications must be turned in to the desks in Corbin hall or North College by 4 p.m. Monday, Oct. 22. Blanks are available from the following people: George Hawkins, Daniel Haegert, William England, Ben Holman, Paula McVay, William Foster, Joyce Shank, and Wilbur Shumaker. Lawrence, Kansas hansan Any freshman interested in holding a class office or a position on the All applicant may obtain an application on blanf from a representative of FACTS. Campus Political Parties Line Up Campaign Forces FACTS will hold its primary election Tuesday, Oct. 23, in Fraser hall and the Union. Only FACTS members may vote in the primary but any freshman may apply for offices. Cam Line Up FACTS To Hold Primary Oct.23 --car facing street as a "safety factor" in traffic. Asked if he had read the parking regulations, he replied that he wanted to "test them." Members of the freshman class will go to the polls Oct. 31 to elect class officers and two representatives to the All Student Council and Associated Women Students senate. Voting will be held from 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the booths in the basement of Strong, main floor of Fraser, basement of Marvin, and the main floor of the Union. Offices to be filled include president, vice - president, secretary, treasurer, a man and woman representative to the ASC, and two women for the AWS senate. Only women may vote for the AWS senate members. Donald Dirks, ASC elections chairman, said that five students will be in charge of each booth, with equal representation by the parties. Counting of the ballots will be supervised by a member of the political science department, and election will be by plurality. Officers elected will assume their duties immediately, and ASC and AWS representatives at the next meeting of these organizations. Pachacamac and FACTS will select their candidates early next week. Pachacamac wil hold meetings with freshmen and at that time explain how the freshmen may select candidates. FACTS will hold an open primary Oct. 23, and at that time all applications will be voted upon. Chakravarty To Discuss Poetry Dr. Amiya Chakravarty, visiting professor from India, will be principal speaker at the dinner of the Kansas Poetry society Saturday evening. The dinner, to be held in the English room of the Union, will conclude the organization's one day convention. The editor of Kansas magazine will explain the 1952 issue to the society at a luncheon meeting at 11:30 a.m. in the Union cafeteria. The group will meet at the home of Miss Florence Snow, 711 West 12th street, Saturday afternoon. The society meets twice a year to discuss poetry written by members and the problems of writing and publishing poetry. Membership is by invitation only. Pleads Parking Zone In'Catacombs; Student Court Still Fines Him $1 Pleading that he thought the Military Science building was down in the catacombs of Lawrence and not a parking zone, Richard S. Mechem, graduate student, was nevertheless found guilty and required to pay a $1 ticket at a session of the student court Thursday night. Mechem, who came to KU from Washburn college, added, "There you can park in the president's gopher hole and it's okay. He comes out—you give him a ride downtown. All very informal." Thomas H. Smith Jr., College sophomore, was also found guilty, despite his plea that he was unaware of the zoning system. The court ruled against him since he was not a new student. In all, four students were found guilty and the same number acquitted by the court. Willis H. Dukelow, College junior had a permit for I zone, but backed car into parking stall in defiance of the parking rule that cars must be driven forward into stall. Dukelow said he parked with the front of the "If you have a zone permit and are assigned a certain space in the zone, it shouldn't matter how you fill that space, backwards or forward," he said. He was found guilty on the basis of violating University parking regulations. John C. Hoham, engineering sophomore, who neglected to replace his parking ticket after it fell off the rear license plate, was also found guilty. Those found not guilty were: Jimmy Simmons, engineering sophomore, Roland D. Williams and Robert M. Colver, student students, and Betty Jean Tudor, College freshman. Three students were declared guilty by default: Joseph Eugene Ballou, Richard B. Collins, and George R. Gould, Jr. Remaining students on the docket were granted continuances until next month. They were Thomas J. Halpin, Harold Ray Dickman, Bautista Murillo, Louis B. Perkins, Robert J. Austell, Beverly M. Brown, George A. Auemple, Walter C. Davis, Wallace E. LaBerge, Janet Curry Lowe, Gene Edward Davidson, Monte Gene Cox, Arnold Kottwitz, and Fletcher S. Abbey. In other business, the court ruled that All Student Council Bill No. 17 is a new bill amending Bill 14. There was a question from the A.S.C. on whether the new bill, which does away with salaries for the president, secretary, and treasurer of the Council, was actually a new bill or merely an amendment to the old one. Pach-NOWPlans Frosh Primary The exact date and place of the meeting, sponsored by Pachacamac, will be announced Monday. All freshman women are invited to attend. Candidates who will be supported by Pachacamac-NOW in the freshman election Wednesday, Oct. 31 will be selected at a meeting of freshman women soon. The meeting will be run in town- hall fashion. Eight Pachacamac elected to take charge to take charge until the freshman group elect a chairman from their ranks. The chairman will then assume charge of the meeting, handling all nominations, discussions, and election of candidates. Nominations of candidates for the freshman class offices will be made from the floor. In explaining the purpose of this type of meeting, Dean Grogger, president of Pachacamac said, "Possibly the most representative type of government is the town meeting. Here all persons interested meet to elect their officers through open debate and vote. "In this type of election the qualifications of each candidate are freely expressed for the benefit of everyone. When the discussion is concluded the members vote to select the proper qualified candidates for the respective offices." Freshman men living in fraternities will vote for their candidates. Research Group Hears Scientist Increasing emphasis on applied science research is crowding out basic research in the United States, Dr. Alan T. Waterman, director of the National Science foundation, warned members of Sigma Xi, honorary scientific research society, Thursday. "The total national expense for research and development in 1952 in the United States will total about two and a half billion dollars. About 65 per cent of the research is being done by industrial organizations, about 25 per cent of the government, and 10 per cent in the universities." "Most of the basic research is done in universities which means that a small portion of our research is fundamental," Dr. Waterman pointed out. The former chief scientist of the office of naval research began his address by saying that the history of modern times contains abundant evidence that society has been a continuous and vocal critic of the ways of science. "On the one hand we have those in society who hold science to be the salvation of mankind, and on the other hand, those who consider science the author of life's evils," Dr. Waterman said. "It is not time that we scientists remind our social critics that science is an impersonal force and that society has the answer?" he asked. WEATHER Kansas — Partly cloudy through Saturday except mostly cloudy in the eastern portion this afternoon. Warmer tonight and on Saturday except becoming colder in northwest portion Saturday afternoon. Low tonight 35-45, high Saturday 45-50 northwest to 55-65 southeast.