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Ar Jr., and and STUDENT NEWS PAPER Lawrence, Kansas UN To Hold Second Session Next Week The second annual United Nations conference will be held at the University Monday, Jan. 23, and Tuesday, Jan. 24. This is a state-wide conference conducted by the University Extension at which representatives from Kansas cities and towns can obtain first hand information on the progress of the United Nations. It is held in connection with the U.N. department of public information. Speakers from the U.N. include Gilbert Yates, secretary of the economic and social council; James B. Orrick, chief of the non-governmental organizations section of the department of public information; and Grace Bok Holmes, liaison officer for the U.N. international children's emergency fund. Following is a schedule of the two-day conference; Monday, Jan. 23: 9:30 a.m. Registration in the rotunda of Strong hall. 10 a.m.: United Nations exhibits. 10 20:00: Opening session. 10:30 a.m.: Opening session in Strong auditorium; Mrs. Benjamin O. Weaver presiding; welcome by Dean F.J. Moreau. 10:45 a.m. "Tthird International Conference of N.G.O.'s at Lake Success" by James B. Orrick 12:00 noon Group luncheon 1:00 p.m.: Bus tour of campus. 2:00 p.m.: "Highlights of Regional Conferences" by Mr. Orrick. 3:00 p.m. "Kansas and the United Nations" by Mrs. Weaver. 4:00 p.m.: "Techniques of Infor- mation" by F.L. Schlagle. 6:00 p.m.: Recognition 9:00 a.m. "Work of Specialized Agencies" by Mrs. Weaver; "World Health Organization" by Dr. E. V. Thiehoff; group discussion. 6:30 p.m.: Banquet; speaker, Gilbert Yates; UN films. 9:40 a.m.; "The World's Children' by Grace Bok Holmes; group discussion. 10:20 a.m.: Recess. 10:30 a.m.: "Continuing Information at the Local Level" by Mrs. Howard Richardson; group discussion. 11:40 a.m.: Report of the nominating committee. 12:00 noon: Presentation of newly elected president of Kansas United Nations; plans for state organization; county chairmen. 12:45 p.m.: Luncheon; "Looking Ahead" by Miss Holmes; adjournment. New Closing Hours For Two Weeks Steve Mills and Kent Shearer, College junior, will debate before a student assembly Friday, Jan. 27 at Emporia State Teachers' college, Two University speakers, to be named later, will debate against one another Friday, Jan. 27 at the Lawrence Kiwanis club meeting. Speakers participating in the intramural activities may give informative, demonstrative, or entertaining speeches. Any University student may enter the series if he has not participated in any major college speech contest previously. Other events on the forensic schedule will be the Lorraine Bucher oratorical contest. Wednesday, March 20, at 11 a.m., activities, series in March, and April. Two speaking teams will close the first semester's forensic program with exhibition debates on Thursday, Jan. 26, and Friday, Jan. 27, in Emporia and Lawrence. Three foreign students enrolled in the University will give their views concerning political and economic problems as affecting international relations Thursday, Jan. 26. They will speak before the Iola Kiwanis club. The associated Women Students have announced the following closing hours for final week and until classes resume on Thursday, Feb. 2: Closing hours today through Wednesday, Jan. 25 will be 11 p.m. except for Saturday, Jan. 21, when they will be 1 a.m. Closing hours Thursday, Jan. 26, through Wednesday, Feb. 1 will be midnight. Closing hours Feb. 2 will be 10:30 p.m. Four University speakers will attend an invitational debate contest Friday, Feb. 10 and Saturday, Feb. 11 at Northwestern university, Evanston, Ill. Two weeks later four debaters will go to a contest at the University of Nebraska, and four to eight debaters will attend a contest at St. John's college at Annapolis, Md., in March. KU Debaters Set Schedule The speakers' bureau will begin second semester forensic activities with a program Friday, Feb. 3, in Iola. Teams may be sent to debates in either Texas or Wis. in the late spring, and several University students will go to the Missouri Valley tournaments on Friday, March 31, and April 1 to compete in debate, oratory, and extemporaneous speaking. E. C. Buehler and Ken Giffin will accompany the groups as debate directors. JAMES B. "SCOTTY" RESTON Two New Library Additions To Be Open This Afternoon The two $390,000 additions to Watson Library will be opened for inspection and regular use this afternoon. A brief "ribbon-cutting" ceremony will open the west addition at 4 p.m. Participants will be Charles Marshall, Topeka, the state architect who designed the additions; Chancellor Deane W. Malott, and C. M. Baker, director of libraries. Open house for students and faculty will continue until 6 p.m. Punch will be served in the Kansas room, which is a continuation of the main floor level of the library. Guides will show visitors through the green room, Kansas room, and third floor offices of the west addition. Visitors will then be taken across the original portion of the library for a "cross section" view of the partially-completed stacks. College Approves New Physics Class A course in the handling of radioactive materials was approved by the College faculty in a meeting Tuesday night. The new course, to be called "Safety in the Use of Radioactive Materials," will be offered in the spring semester by the physics department as Physics 60. It will be taught by Dr. Frank E. Hoecker. Dr. Ray Q. Brewster, chairman of the Committee on Honesty, in a preliminary report on the conduct of examinations stressed the importance of conducting examinations in ways most conducive to honest work. Music Week Chorus To Begin Rehearsals Chorus rehearsals for the Music Week. presentation of the Verdi "Requiem" will begin Thursday, Feb. 2, D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, announced today, "the rehearsals will be held at 4 p.m. each Thursday in Strong auditorium. The chorus will be composed of the University A Capella choir, the University Men's and Women's Glee clubs, and faculty, students and townpeople. Dean Swarthout invited members of the faculty and student body who have a "reasonably good voice and can follow an independent voice part" and who wish to sing with the group to attend the first rehearsal. The "Requiem," a mass for the dead, will be sung Sunday, April 30, in Hoch auditorium. The University Symphony orchestra will accompany the chorus and four soloists yet to be announced. NY Times Man Will Address Students Feb.10 James B. "Scotty" Reston, Pulitzer prize winner and diplomatic correspondent of the New York Times, will deliver the first William Allen White foundation lecture here Friday, Feb 10. He will speak at a convocation of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information at 2 p.m. in Fraser theater. The convocation will be open to the public. "Mr. Reston was invited to deliver the first lecture because of his rapidly growing reputation as one of the finest and most conscientious journalists in the world today." Burton W. Marvin. One purpose of the Foundation, Dean Marvin said, is to bring to the University lecturers who are prominent in journalism and related fields. The foundation will meet at 10 a.m. on Feb. 10 in the Pine room of the Union, and the officers and instructors will attend a luncheon in the English section of the Union at noon. Hereafter, Feb. 10, birthdate of William Allen White, will be the annual meeting date of the foundation. Mr. Reston won the Pulitzer prize in 1944 for his news dispatches and interpretive articles on the Dumbarton Oaks Security conference. Described by Time magazine as a "topnotch interpretive reporter," he has been on the staff of the New York Times since 1939. In 1943 he was made assistant to the publisher and later that year went to London as acting head of the Times bureau. In January, 1945, he became national correspondent of the New York times and since then has reported on the negotiations in Washington, D.C. In 1942, Mr. Reston wrote "Prelude to Victory," a book of criticism on some Americans for their struggle to get personal gains and material things during the war rather than considering the welfare of the country. Mr. Reston was born in Clydebank, Scotland, in 1909. He came to the United States in 1920, and attended public schools in Dayton, Ohio. In 1932 he was graduated from the University of Illinois. After working for the Springfield (Ohio) Daily News and being sports publicity director for Ohio State university, he joined the staff of the Associated Press in New York City as a sports writer in 1934. In 1937 Mr. Reston was sent to London by the Associated Press to cover major sports events in the summer and the A.P. foreign office in the winter. With final week beginning Thursday, University students can be found preparing for examinations in a variety of ways. At left: Robert Dunn (foreground), business student; John Freiburger (kneeling) engineering sophomore; and Cliff Ratner (sitting), College sophomore, search through an elaborate file for old quizzes. Center: Helen Whitehead (left), fine arts freshman; and Jane Mather (right). College freshman relax to mull over books and notes with the aid of a few dozen cig- arets and a pot of coffee. Kansan Photo by Bob Blank At right: Margaret Miller, College senior, and James Murray, College sophomore, decide to forget finals and see a movie instead.