Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 1, 1960 Around the Campus Field House Theft Unsolved Campus Police Chief Joseph Skillman said yesterday that investigation of the $6,845 Allen Field House robbery remains at a stand still. "We have no suspects and we don't have any definite leads. The sheriff and KBI are still on the case, but there just isn't anything to go on." he said. The robbery occurred October 3. None of the doors into the inner office or of the double safe in the business office were tampered with. Fingerprints failed to help in cracking the case. Chief Skillman said that he also did not have anything definite to work on in solving the recent "eat burglary" of three fraternity houses. Extension Staff Has New Members Charles L. Stroup, Jr., and Ivo G. Vonderwell have joined the staff of the institutes and conferences section of University Extension. Both are KU alumni. They succeed extension representatives John Pattinson, who transferred to the managership of the KU Wichita Extension Center, and Robert R. Ratch, who has taken a position in the office of the State Insurance Commissioner. Mr. Stroup received a B.S. degree in journalism in 1957. Since then he has been an officer in the U.S. Air Force. Mr. Vonderwell has been a graduate student in geology the past three years. He received a B.S. degree from St. Joseph College. Arab-American Club To Hold Banquet The KU Arab-American Club will hold a banquet in celebration of the Arabic Ramadan Holiday at 6:30 p.m., April 9, at the Community Building. H. A. Ireland, professor of geology and the group's adviser, will be the featured speaker. He will talk on "The Economical and Educational Development in the Arab Middle East." A film entitled "The Arab Middle East" will be shown at the banquet which will feature an Arab menu. Man Says Never Say Die COLUMBIA, S.C. —(UPI)— Dr. Julian Salley, irked by his wife's bragging about the hole-in-one she carded on the eighth hole of the Forest Lake golf course last week, went out this week and shot a hole-in-one on the same green. The houses, Delta Chi, Delta Upsilon and Pi Kappa Alpha, were ouglarized of $239. Police are still working on the break in of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority over Christmas vacation. '13 Clocks' Nears Sellout Performance Tickets for "The 13 Clocks" which will be presented at 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday in the Experimental Theatre are going fast. The Friday and Saturday performances are sold out. Tickets are still available for the Monday through Thursday performances. The seating capacity of the Experimental Theatre is 80. Approximately 20 standing room only tickets will go on sale one hour before each performance. Chairs will be provided for those purchasing the standing room only tickets, according to officials at the University Theatre box office. Raymond D. Pruitt To Deliver Lecture Raymond D. Pruitt, chairman of the department of internal medicine at Baylor University, will present the 24th Noble P. Sherwood lecture at 8 p.m. tonight in the Recital Hall at the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. Dr. Sherwood will talk on "Apostrophe to Greatness." The talk is sponsored by the Alpha Iota Chapter of Phi Beta Pi Medical Fraternity. The public is invited to attend. Students Can Obtain Travel Information Students planning travel in other countries may obtain information on requirements of various countries from Clark Coan, foreign student adviser, 228 Strong. Mr. Coan has information on requirements for passports, visas, customs, travel allowances, and health, currency, and vehicle regulations. Information also is available on organizations assisting educational travel. Harvard Professor To Speak Wednesday Taylor Starck, professor of Germanic languages at Harvard University, will speak on "Chivalric Complacency and Bourgeois Impatience in the Middle Ages" at 4 p.m. April 6, in 411 Summerfield. His speech is part of the University Lecture Series. Members of Phi Delta Theta fraternity will clean the right of way along three highways within the city limits tomorrow. Kingston Trio's Coming The project is a part of the fraternity's National Service Day. More than 6,500 members of the fraternity's 120 chapters will take part in similar civic projects throughout the country. A contemporary poet, a magazine editor and a KU associate professor of English will judge the William Herbert Carruth Memorial poetry contest. The contest is open to all undergraduate and graduate students. Entries should be submitted to E. L Ruhe in 203 Fraser by April 11. New LP Album to Be Released Soon Limited Supply Available Reserve Your Copy by Phone Now The local chapter will start at 8 a.m. tomorrow and work until noon when a picnic lunch will be held. Plans call for the work to be completed by 3 p.m. Judges Selected For Poetry Contest Two city trucks will work with the men independent of each other. One will start at 6th and Massachusetts Streets and work west to Iowa Street. The other truck will start on 23rd Street at the viaduct and work west to Iowa Street. Both will then converge along Iowa until they meet. Hyann Plutzik, whose collection of poems, "Aspects of Proteus," won the Poetry Award of the National Institute of Arts and Letters in 1950. now teaches at the University of Rochester. His most recent collection, "Apples from Shinar," was published last summer and includes the now-famous poem, "For T.S.E. Only." Fraternity to Hold Cleanup Project Call "KIEF'S RECORD & HI-FI" VI 2-1544 MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Ask about our record club! Open Evenings Theodore M. O'Leary, editor of "Profitable Hobbies" magazine, and a KU alumnus, lives in Kansas City, Mo., and is a member of the Kansas City Star book review staff. Arvid Shulenberger, associate professor of English, has written two books. "Roads from the Forty" was published in 1954, and "Cooper's Theory of Fiction" was published in 1955. Open Evenings The only way to get rid of tempat is to yield to it.—Oscar Wilde Sue Morgan Delta Gamma Weather-wise coats for a Kansas Spring — a terrific value at $14.98. Beige, blue, willow-green — some are reversible. COACH HOUSE Plaza K. C. Blue Ridge K. C. KU Campus Lawrence France Explodes 2nd Bomb PARIS — (UPI) — France's second nuclear explosion today marked a major step in a program to create an arsenal of usable atomic weapons, defense ministry sources reported. The sources said today's explosion was intentionally "much weaker" than the first blast, Feb. 13. They said France was more concerned with scaling down the size of its explosions than with making bigger ones. Brig. Gen. Albert Buchalet, 43, commonly called the father of the French atom bomb, told newsmen after the first explosion in the Sahara that "miniurization now is within our reach." The official communique on today's blast said only that a "low power" device had been detonated successfully. Cued to shoes, leather gloves and belts also are blossoming out in flower pastels, notably lilac, Paris rose and tulip yellow, as well as the muted tones — olive, greige, pewter gray and smoky browns. A decorative zipper functions just like a plain one, but when zipped the teeth are hidden by a succession of rhinestones set in plastic squares. SPRING REOPENING Friday Is Chocolate Day at Dari-King Chocolate Cones 10-15-20-25c Shakes Malts Sundaees Slushes----4 Flavors Banana Splits Sodas 6th & Florida Try Our King Burgers 25-35-50c Call VI 3-9033 Girls, for Easy Going 4. 95 This label identifies the Shoe of Champions McCoy's 813 Mass. VI 3-2091