Page 12 University Daily Kansas Wednesday, March 9. 1960 ASC Passes Elections Bill (Continued from page 1) pus organizations applying for participation in the Campus Chest must submit their applications to the Campus Chest Steering Committee not later than one month before the opening of the drive. The allocations are to be determined three weeks before the opening of the drive. The adopted Campus Chest bill also provides that the Campus Chest chairman submit to the ASC finance committee a financial report of expenses incurred and disbursements made following the distribution of the allocations. Queen Bill Tabled The ASC re-tabled an amendment concerning the selection of the homecoming queen due to the absence of Larry Blickkan, Prairie Village senior and author of the amendment. The amendment proposed that the homecoming queen be selected by a vote of the student body. Last week the ASC Committee on Committees recommended that the ASC not pass the amendment. Concerning KU's affiliation with the National Student Association, the ASC recommended that the Committee on Committees select a group to further discuss the issue. Spectrum Out March 23 Spectrum Out March 23 Raymond Miller, Lawrence senior, reported on Spectrum Magazine, the official University academic and literary magazine. The 52-page Spectrum Magazine will be out approximately March 23. Several articles that are not written by students will be included in Spectrum. The first issue of Spectrum will include articles by Sen Hubert Humphrey (D-Minn); John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, and Walter Starkie, visiting professor of Romance languages. The responsibility of great states is to serve and not to dominate the world.—Harry S. Truman 'Review Day' Discussion Set Today for Students, Faculty Should there be a day's break between the last day of classes and the beginning of final week? Students will have a chance to express their opinions on this issue this afternoon. An open discussion of all ideas for a "review day break" will be held at 4 p.m. in room 306 of the Kansas Union. Representatives from the College Calendar Committee (who make the final decision), the College Senate Advisory Committee and the presidents of all organized houses have been given formal invitations. The idea for a "review day break" has been persistently evaded by University administration on the grounds that the University schedule does not provide for any open day. "Review day" proposals have been found favorable with students in recent Daily Kansan polls. Ise 'Fears the Worst.' (Continued from page 1) healthier economically than it was during the preceding Democratic administrations. Prof. Shaffer Attacks GOP Prof. Shaffer Attacks GOP Speaking for the, opposition, Prof. Shaffer attacked Republican policies on every level. He accused the present administration of neglect in advancing realistic social security and welfare measures, in settling on a creative farm policy, and in working out a satisfactory solution to the rising national debt. He added that the Republican party was closely allied with big business interests and that this alliance had been instrumental in destroying real business competition. "As I see it, the model Republican is a man who talks like Eisenhower and acts like Herbert Hoover. He is a man who puts off until tomorrow what should have been done in 1873," said Prof. Shaffer. Reinforcing Shaffer's argument, Prof. Ise branded the administration's natural resources policy as a "giveaway policy." Ise Cites "Spoils System" He cited the federal government's decision to release tideland oil properties in the Gulf of Mexico to private industry as an example of the alliance between big business and government, and charged that the "spoils system" used to fill government services is "the worst since Grant." He said that politicians who know little of the special problems of the services are now running the Soil Conservation Service, the Fish and Game service and the Tennessee Valley Authority. "Any economist who thinks Eisenhower is a great man is not an economist. What we really need now is more government intervention," said Prof.Ise. Prof. Saunders said that the Eisenhower policy was devoted to the encouragement of private enterprise as the economic foundation of our society. He said the administration's "vigorous" anti-trust activities belie claims that the government is favorable to monopolistic practices in modern big business. In denying the power of the state to make economic decisions for the consumer, he said: "We as individuals make our own choices about the products we want to buy. The government cannot do this for us." The debate was the first of a series sponsored by the Political Science Club. It was not judged by chosen individuals or by the audience. Thursday Special SPAGHETTI & MEATBALL DINNER All You Can Eat (Drink Included) 85c Doors Open At 12:30 Plenty of Parking in Rear Demos Gain in N.H. Primary MANCHESTER, N.H. — (UPI) — Both Sen. John F. Kennedy and Vice President Richard M. Nixon polled record votes in New Hampshire's bell-weather presidential primary but the Republicans appeared today to be losing their grip on the granite state. hower's 1956 vote, Kennedy doubled the 1956 total piled up by Sen. Estes Kefauver and loosened the GOP's traditional 2-1 hold on the electorate. Nixon easily topped Pres. Eisen- Kennedy, Democratic senator from neighboring Massachusetts, is the first Roman Catholic candidate for president since Al Smith who lost the 1928 election. EAT, DRINK AND BE MARRIED On a recent tour of seventy million American colleges, I was struck by two outstanding facts: first, the great number of students who smoke Marlboro, and second, the great number of students who are married. The first phenomenon—the vast multitude of Mariboro smokers—comes as no surprise for, as everyone knows, the college student is an enormously intelligent organism, and what could be more intelligent than to smoke Mariboro? After all, pleasure is what you smoke for and pleasure is what Mariborol delivers—pleasure in every puff of that good golden tobacco. If you think flavor went out when filters came in—try a Mariboro. Light up and see for yourself...Or, if you like, don't light up. Just take a Mariboro, unlighted, and puff a couple of times. Get that wonderful flavor? You bet you do! Even without lighting you can taste Mariboro's excellent filter blend. Also you can make your package last practically forever. 5' F O After eating, the baby tends to grow sleepy. A lullaby is very useful to help it fall asleep. In case you don't know any lullabies, make one up. This is not at all difficult. In a lullaby the words are unimportant since the baby doesn't understand them anyhow. The important thing is the sound. All you have to do is string together a bunch of nonsense syllables, taking care that they make an agreeable sound. For example: Here now is a figure to give you pause! Not that we don't all love babies. Of course we do! Babies are pink and fetching rascals, given to winsome noises and droll expressions, and we all like nothing better than to rain kisses on their soft little skulls. But just the same, to the young campus couple who are parents for the first time the baby is likely to be a source of considerable worry. Therefore, let me devote today's column to a few helpful hints on the care of babies. No, I say, it was not the great number of Marlboro smokers that astounded me, it was the great number of married students. You may find this hard to believe but latest statistics show that at some coeducational colleges the proportion of married undergraduates runs as high as thirty percent! And, what is even more startling, fully one-quarter of these marriages have been blessed with issue! First of all, we will take up the matter of diet. In the past, babies were raised largely on table scraps. This, however, was outlawed by the Smoot-Hawley Act, and today babies are fed a scientific formula consisting of dextrose, maltose, distilled water, evaporated milk and a twist of lemon peel. Go to sleep, my little infant, Goo-goo moo-moo poo-poo binfant. Having fed and serenaded the baby, arrange it in the position for slumber. A baby sleeps best on its stomach so place it that way in its crib. Then to make sure it will not turn itself over during the night lay a soft but fairly heavy object on its back—another baby, for instance. © 1960 Max Sbulman And when baby is fast asleep—the little angel!—why don t you relax and give yourself a treat? With Marlboro—or if you like mildness but you don't like filters—with Philip Morris made in long size and regular by the sponsors of this column.