Page 3 Around the Campus 3 From KU On Program Three KU faculty members will be on the program of the 39th annual meeting of the National Council for Social Studies in Kansas City, Mo. Nov. 26-28. George L. Anderson, professor of history, will be the luncheon speaker for the American history section on Nov. 27. His subject will be "The Nature and Learning of History." Donald R. McCoy, assistant professor of history and director of correspondence study, will be a member of a panel reporting on a service center for American history on Nov. 28. Alvin Schild, associate professor of education, will be a panelist Nov. 28 on in-service training programs for social studies teachers. Jane Crow Is Lawson Scholar Jane Crow, Topeka senior, has been selected this year's Paul B. Lawson scholar. Each year the award is given to the senior in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences with the highest academic average for the first three years of school. The late Mr. Lawson was at one time dean of the college. The award also includes a $50 scholarship to be used in the Kansas Union Book Store. Miss Crow is the first girl to receive the distinction of being a Paul B. Lawson scholar since the award was first presented in 1955. Miss Crow is president of the Inter-Residence Council, former president of Gertrude Sellards Pearson upperclass dormitory and a member of Mortar Board. Carrying a double major in mathematics and sociology, she said she plans to attend graduate school next fall. Corporation Grants $5,500 for Research The Research Corp. has renewed one grant and awarded another to two KU chemistry professors for the 1959-60 school year. Earl Huyser, assistant professor of chemistry, will receive $3,000 for a research project entitled "Kinetics of Free Radical Chain Addition Reactions." Ralph N. Adams, associate professor of chemistry, received a renewal of a $2,500 grant for research on "New Voltametric Electrode Systems." Regional Business Deans Meet Here A regional meeting of the American Association of Collegiate Schools of Business will be held on the campus tomorrow and Saturday. James R. Surface, dean of the KU School of Business, said about 25 deans will attend the conference. States to be represented include Utah, Colorado, North Dakota, South Dakota, Oklahoma, Texas, Nebraska, Iowa, Wyoming, New Mexico, Missouri and Kansas. Politics are the most important thing in life-for a newspaper.-Henrik Ibsen International Club INFORMAL COFFEE Friday After the Movie in Hoch JAYHAWK ROOM OF THE UNION Discovering hidden geological facts about the western Grand Canyon area will be the objective of three KU graduate students next spring. Geology Students To Grand Canyon Sophomores to Hold Coffee Tomorrow A coffee for all sophomores has been scheduled for tomorrow morning from 9 to 10. The coffee will be held in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. All sophomores will be excused from classes to attend the coffee. Dancing Bill Fisher, Lawrence, Jim Sorauf, Wanwatosa, Wis., and Edward Schleh, Williamsport, Pa., will spend about five months in the Grand Canyon area. W. Kenneth Hamblin, assistant professor of geology, will accompany the men. Prof. Hamblin describes the area as "practically unknown with regard to general geology details."* The idea for the destination of the trip came from Raymond C. Moore, professor of geology. Prof. Moore took part in one of the first map making expeditions ever to go down the Colorado River. Political Science Assn. Names Ethan P. Allen, professor of political science and chairman of the political science department, has been appointed to a two-year term on the nominating committee of the American Political Science Assn. The APSA has more than 2,500 members. A U.S. Public Health Service grant of $30,462 renews for the fifth year a KU study of the behavior of normal children residing in towns of different sizes. Herbert F. Wright, professor of psychology, directs the project. The studies are made with Lawrence children in comparison with children in McLouth, Oskalooa, Overbrook and Tonganoxie. $30,462 Awarded For Child Study The purpose of the project is to develop methods of research in the history of human behavior and to describe living conditions and behavior of children in midwest American communities. Westinghouse Man To Speak Tonight The district engineering manager for Westinghouse Corp. will speak tonight at 7 in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Ferris R. Summers, class of 1939, will speak on "Research, Tomorrow's Nucleus Today." Mr. Summers will illustrate his talk with slides and sound movies. Refreshments will be served following his speech. Democratic Vote Too Strong CHICAGO — (UPI) — Election officials noted one of the strongest Democratic votes on record yesterday in a normally solid Republican district. They discovered an enthusiastic Democratic voter had used so much force in pulling a voting machine lever that he broke the machine's main spring. Thursday, November 5. 1959 University Daily Kansan JAY BRAD medium spread, low slope, button-down JAY-RONDELET short round with eyelets CAMPUS SHOP VI 3-8763 1342 Ohio KU CONCERT COURSE — EXTRA ATTRACTION a witty comedy adapted for the stage from the intimate letters of Mrs. Patrick Campbell and Bernard Shaw Katharine Cornell, Brian Aherne in Jerome Kilty's "DEAR LIAR" UNIVERSITY THEATRE Monday, Nov. 9th at 8:20 p.m. Tickets: Main Floor $4.10, $3.08; Balcony $2.82, $2.05 Fine Arts Office, Union Ticket Center, Bell Music Co. Hurry! — Only 150 Seats Left — Hurry! $ 55 & Daring-Trip Students who have the cleverness to corner $55 and the courage to risk clobbering a leg are perfect personalities for KU-Y's ski trip to Colorado between semesters. The chairman of the KU-Y ski trip committee says no bones have been broken on past trips. However, he admits there has been one or two sprained ankles. The 60 students chosen from applications will migrate by bus to Loveland Pass in Anapaho Basin, near Colorado Springs, Colo. A meeting for all interested KU students will be held at 7:30 tonight in 305 Kansas Union, where the gory facts may be thrashed out in detail. David B. Corv, Wichita junior, explained: "We are going to take about five instructors. We haven't got them yet, but they are filing applications. We will also get skiing lessons from the school at the pass." The $55 will pay for room, board, transportation, ski-tow tickets, insurance, and instructors. Applications for the ski trip start today in the KU-Y office in the Kansas Union. They will be accepted until the KU-Y office runs out of forms. Boots, poles, and skis cost extra—$5.80 for the four days. Information on the expense of cocoa, coffee, and other warming drinks is not available at this time. A Cat's Meow Causes Crash | Make New Friends, Keep Old RUTLAND, Vt. — (UPI) — Morris Viedoidsky, 19, of Keene, N.H., ran his car off the road and into a tree after his pet kitten became wedged between the brake pedal and the accelerator. HARTFORD, Conn. — (UPI) — Quentin Napper, 17 was sent to Cheshire Reformatory after his mother told a judge "he's looking forward to going there because his friends are there." FOR THAT PERSONAL TOUCH THIS CHRISTMAS- SEASON'S GREETINGS 1 (Your favorite photo here) ACTUAL SIZE OF CARD — 4 $ \frac{1}{4} $ x 5 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Four Designs Available 10 cards and envelopes $1.25 25 cards and envelopes ... 2.75 Imprinting Price Upon Request CAMERA CENTER BILL OLIN 1015 Mass. CLIFF TATHAM Next to the Varsity Theatre VI 3-9471