--- Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Nov. 17, 1959 HOMECOMING ROYALTY—Judith Gorton, Lawrence junior (center), will reign as the 1959 Homecoming Queen. Her attendants are Marjorie Critten, Kansas City, Mo., junior (left), and Joann Hummel, St. Joseph, Mo., senior (right). Miss Gorton will reign over the KU-Missouri football game Saturday afternoon and the homecoming dance in the Kansas Union Ballroom Saturday night. Harry James and his band will play for the dance. (Daily Kansan Photo) Educational TV Not Used in Kansas Approximately 45 universities throughout the United States utilize a manner of education not possessed by a school in Kansas. This fact was brought up in a recent Congressional hearing on educational television, a device used to beam academics away from the classroom, which was begun in 1950. At present, Congress has reserved channels in Kansas for educational purposes. Now two bills are before the House of Representatives concerning ETV. The Schoeppel-Magnuson bill, already passed by the Senate, allocates up to one million dollars in direct grants to each state. Another allocates one million to each state in matching funds. Bruce Linton, associate professor of speech and journalism, said, "Educational television can become a reality in Kansas as soon as legislation is enacted in favor of it." tween closed and open television," he said. "Closed television could be defined as a circuit between the camera and receivers, requiring no broadcasting station, for example television between a lab and a classroom on the same campus," he explained. According to Prof. Linton, closed TV at the KU Medical Center was an innovation in the use of television. Unlike closed television, open TV requires a transmitting station and therefore a license. A recent publication of the Kansas Congress of Parents and Teachers proposes Lawrence, Manhattan, Hays, Colby, Chanute, Wichita, Pratt and Garden City as transmitting sites. The channels reserved by the federal government would be used solely for education. Some programs would originate from the Educational Television and Radio Center, Ann Arbor, Mich., although most would come from Kansas. Continental Classroom: Modern Chemistry, seen from 6:30 to 7:00 a.m. Monday through Friday. Labs are taught on Saturday mornings and credit is given in Education 120. "It has been proven that TV can be a great help in certain teaching problems," said Prof. Linton. "However, ETV is no equal substitute for the campus education," Prof. Linton said. Dean Anderson said that educational television would include both credit and non-credit courses. Thus far, the only connection KU has with the credit type is the NBC course. Kansan Want Ads Get Results In setting up the program, according to Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the School of Education, both lecturers and visual aids from the KU Visual Aid Center would be utilized. UDK Staffers Attend Meeting William Ted Tidwell, Lawrence senior; William Kane, Stafford senior; John Husar, Chicago senior, and Melvin Mencher, assistant professor of journalism, attended the annual convention of The Associated College Press in New York City last week. Tidwell is advertising manager for the Kansan. Kane is business manager, and Hasar is editorial editor. Prof. Mencher is the Kansan adviser. The delegation was sponsored by the Kansan Board. The purpose of the convention was to offer an exchange of ideas among student journalists. Delegates attended panel discussion groups covering all phases of college newspaper publishing. Prof. Mencher served as a panel member. Prof. Mencher also attended the annual meeting of the National Council of Collegiate Press Advisers of which he is a member. The five All-American college newspapers, including the University Daily Kansas, were on display at the Hotel New Yorker, headquarters of the convention. What is even a wise book but a blast from the lungs made visible to the eyes. —Harvey Allen KGDL ANSWER KOOL KROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Struggle of some scope 2. Mountain climbers dig this, on ice 3. It holds a square that's called a ring 4. Sad about the code? 5. Not the opposite of yours 6. Seems 7. How to start English Lift 8. Initiatesina fog? 9. One way to get to first base 10. Rake from Kouen 11. Frown a subject of jokes 12. They sound like last year's dresses 13. With vitrol 14. What 34 Across is usually for 15. When it's super, fast, real fast 16. Tremor, birthplace, not quite Hedy 17. See 27 Across 18. Marine (slang) 19. ___ poliol 20. Combining form for within 21. How Kools always taste 22. If you're smart, you're mad! 23. 3 letters to a loan Wolf 24. How yellow pigment 25. British fly-boys 26. Rose's side-kick 27. French ants 28. ___ Marner DOWN 1. Swap courses? 2. River in Venezuela 3. Kool's mascot 4. Compass point 5. Kin of a summerbund 6. Mad fad 7. What sinners do 8. Little electrical units 9. Little Morris 10. Prague to the City 11. Character in Hamlet 12. They're for the birds 13. Bolger was once in love with her 12. What head guys on this proverb 14. What good lookers do 15. Naval ship 16. Rita's ex 17. Kool's kind of magic 18. It's just between France and Spain 19. It's a hot spot does under new management 20. Where you feel Kool's smoothness 21. Army lads 22. Eggs à la Bardot 23. Ready, aim, 24. Certain cigarettes (slang) 25. Sigma's last name No.9 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 | | | | | 14 | | | | | | 15 | | | | | 16 | | | | | | 17 | | | | 18 19 | | | | 20 | | 21 | | | 22 | 23 | | | 24 | | | 25 | | | 26 | | 27 28 | | | | 29 | | | | | | 30 | 31 32 33 | | | 34 | 35 | 36 | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | "ARE YOU KOOl ENOUGH TO KRACK THIS?" A E "D some high take corre AS tion Soo action cil d tee f Fr junk of comi Be semi to the action again vidu In the the ASC