Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, Mar. 4, 1960 Family to Be United After 20-Year Interval MOSCOW —(UPI)— Mrs. Barbara Armonas left Moscow with her son today to rejoin their American family whom they have not seen for 20 years. Mrs. Armonas, smiling through the tears in her eyes, said, "Oh, how happy I am. My happiness has begun only now." She and her son left Moscow Airport at 8:45 a.m. (CST) for Stockholm. After a brief stop they will fly to Copenhagen. At Copenhagen, husband, John and daughter, Donna, plan to meet them. The family has been separated since the early days of Work War II and is now being reunite because of the intervention of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev. Her handsome son, John Jr., 20 was smiling and appeared calm before they boarded the plane here. But Mrs. Armonas was excited as she stood at the ramp. She told newsmen she had not been able to sleep for three nights thinking about the trip to a new life in the United States. She had skipped breakfast and had only a light lunch before rushing to the airport to be first in line for the flight. Clutching her brown leather handbag, the mother helped her son fill out the required 10 customs documents. Then they went to a waiting room where they mailed their last remaining Russian rubles and souvenir gifts to Mrs. Armonas' two sisters and brothers whom they left behind in Lithuania. Scandinavian Airlines officials gave the Armonas' the red carpet treatment. When the flight was finally called, Mrs. Armonas and John were the first aboard the plane. House Investigators Start New Payola Hearing Phase WASHINGTON —(UPI)— House investigators today open a new phase of their hearings into radio-TV payola and deception armed with a fresh set of questions for federal regulatory agencies. Chairman John C. Doerfer of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and officials of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) were called to testify before the House Legislative Oversight Subcommittee. The investigators planned to ask Doerfer about a yacht trip he took last month as the guest of a broadcasting company president. Doerfer said yesterday he went on a 50 to 60 mile pleasure cruise off Florida along with other guests of George B. Storer. A published report said Storer Broadcasting Co. owned 13 radio and TV stations which must renew FCC licenses in the next two years. Peanut Butter Would Clog Up the Works LONDON — (UPI) — An embarrassed spokesman for the Rolls Royce Co. said today reports that an engine recently developed by the company could run on anything—even peanut butter—were "exaggerated." "You see, this was a colloquial phrase used by the engineers on the project," he said. At the moment, he said, the engine was running on most of the current grades of refined fuel. Eventually, it might be modified to use diluted crude oil. Try the Daily Kansan Want Ads Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office. 222 Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of the meeting, not bring Bulletin material to The Daily Kansas. Notice should include name, place, date, and time of function. Official Bulletin TODAY Newman Club 2 p.m. St. Lawrence Club 2 p.m. Leadership Day. For all new officers. Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m. 1265 S. 9th St., sissippi. Study and rest refreshments. International Club. 9:30 p.m. Jayhawk Barn. Social evening, coffee and dancin- SUNDAY Wesley Foundation, 5-7:15 p.m. "How Compatible Religion & Science?" discussed by Prof. Ray Hopponen at Methodist Student Center. Newman Club. 7:30 p.m. Union. Installation of new officers. Newman Club Daily Mass. 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church. Episcopal Morning Prayer, 6:45 a.m. Holy Communion 7 a.m. Nuns' Home, House MONDAY Mr. R. Schmitz of Montgomery Ward will interview for positions in retail store management, mail order operating or manufacturing, mailing operations, industrial engineering in _202 Summerfield. Mr. J. Warner of Cargill, Inc., will interview for positions in general training program, engineering and industrial management majors for production training and anyone with agricultural background for feed sales in 202 Summerfield. Mr. D. Freeman of J. C. Penney will in- form us about his sales management in 202 Summerheld. Philosophy Club. 4 p.m. Union. "What is the moral purpose of Helmut Kuh. University of Mumich." KU Engineerettes. 8 p.m., Museum of Art Lounge, Dr. Dwight A. Regnier will demonstrate flower arrangements. Flowers will be given as door prize. 688 Students Take Part In English Proficiency Last night 688 students sat laboring for two hours over the composition of an English theme it was the spring English Proficiency Examination. Harvard and KU To Hold Debate David Dykstra, assistant professor of English and chairman of the English Proficiency Examination, explained today that the test themes will be graded by full-time, permanent members of the department of English. Today many are wondering just what happens next. "The themes are graded according to standard inseparable points of grading," said Prof. Dykstra. "They include mechanical aspects, organization, paragraph structure, dietion, content and effectiveness of purpose." Grading Points Listed Each instructor reads the compositions independent of the other five, he said. Harvard University and the University of Kansas will hold an English-style debate at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The debate will be the kickoff of the fourth annual Heart of America Debate Tournament. The teams will debate the topic, "If Lincoln Were Alive Today, He Would Be A Democrat." Prof. Dykstra commented that each individual theme passes from one instructor to the other until it is either passed twice or failed three times. When will the proficiency results be released? "I'm reluctant to say we'll get them out as soon as possible. I'm sure I'm safe in saying several weeks at least," answered Prof. Dykstra. "Now for the hard part—the wait for the results." Robert Kerr, Lincoln senior, shuffled to his fraternity house room last night following the examination, collapsed in a chair, lit a cigarette and sighed. Dean Brobst MOBIL SERVICE BETTER AUTO SERVICE FOR YOU Washing -Lubrication 23rd & Naismith Dr. VI 3-9645 OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY Hot Donuts 8-12 p.m. JOE'S BAKERY 412 W. 9th VI 3-4720 Take a COFFEE BREAK Nothing perks you up- keeps you going through these blustery days-like a good steaming hot cup of coffee Meet your friends at the HAWK'S NEST