Watson's New Lending Policy Receives Student Approval Watson Library's new policy, which is designed to limit the amount of time a faculty member can borrow a book from the library, seems to have received approval by most students. A student opinion poll was taken to find the students' reaction to an old problem around the library—how to keep faculty members from keeping books out for an indefinite length of time. Flynn's Second Wife To Fight for Estate Page 3 HOLLYWOOD — (UPI)— Errol Flynn's second wife said last night she plans a court fight over the late actor's estate. The library's new policy is to tell Mrs. Nora Eddington Flynn Haymes, mother of two of Flynn's four children, said she hired attorney Saul Ross, to find a will made by Flynn three years after the one filed for probate Wednesday in New York. "I know there is another will and I am going to fight to protect the girls' interests," said Mrs. Haymes. "Errol told me about a 1957 will the day he arrived in town (last Aug. 28). He said he made it in 1957, and that it provided for everything to be divided among his four children and his parents." The filled will, dated April 27, 1954, left most of Flynn's estate to his widow, Patrice Wymore, with specific bequests to his children and parents. "He said to Deidre: 'I'm leaving that property in Jamaica to you and Rory. It will be your heritage,' " reported Mrs. Haymes. Mrs. Haymes said Flynn discussed the alleged later will with their two daughters, Deidre, 14, and Rory, 12. Under the 1954 will, both daughters were left $10.000 each. Read Kansan Classifieds Attend the Lawrence Assembly of God 13th & Mass. J. J. Krimmer, Pastor a student when a faculty member has a book the student needs. If so desired, the book will be recalled for the student. Some of the comments by students were: Henry Overton, Lorraine, N. Y., sophomore—"I think it will be effective if it is followed through. This new policy is a remedy for an evil which should never have existed." Peggy Kallos, Horton junior—"I think the faculty should have a time limit. It isn't fair that they should have an indefinite borrowing period." Tony Morrow, Kansas City, Mo. senior-"It's a damn good deal. The books should be for the students and not the faculty." Dorothy Bickley, Leawood junior, backed both sides. "I think the new policy is a good Wife's Binao Bothers Hubbv TOLEDO, Ohio — (UPI) — City Manager Russell Rink is a man who sticks to his convictions. Since he has been in office he has waged a continuous battle against bingo, theater drawings and other lotteries. Yesterday his wife won $50 in a drawing by a dry cleaning firm. Today, Rink made her give it back. If you do not think about the future, you cannot have one.—John Galsworthy. idea because some of the professors forget to return the books. But if the professor uses it all the time I think he should have first right to it," she said. Del Weightman, Overland Park junior, supported the new policy. "At times there is research which can only be obtained from one book. Before, if a faculty member had it you were out of luck," he said. Karen Weber, Wichita junior—"It's a nice idea. Because some times they keep out books so long. This way we have a chance at them." Richard Reinhold, Chicago, Ill., senior—"I think three weeks is a reasonable length of time for anyone to keep a book. Why should the faculty have greater privileges than the student body?" Nancy Baber, Webster Groves, Mo., junior, seemed to summarize the opinions of all the other students. "I definitely think that it is the only fair policy. If an instructor or professor expects us to do all the outside work we are assigned during a semester, we should at least be able to get the books needed," she said. More juice can be extracted from lemons and oranges by warming them for a few moments under the hot water faucet before squeezing them. No vitamins are lost in the process. THE UNIVERSITY PLAYERS Present Eugene O'Neill's Poignant Drama University Daily Kansan "DESIRE UNDER THE ELMS" Oct. 26-31,8:00 p.m. Music & Dramatic Arts Building EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE Friday. Oct. 23, 1959 Four Missing as Air Force Jets Collide in Routine Flight PORTLAND, Ore. — (UPI)—Four men are missing in the crash of two jet fighter-interceptors which collided on a routine training mission last night east of here. Air Force operations officers at Portland Air Base said the downed planes, both FF-89-H Scorpions, were manned by members of the 123rd Oregon Air National Guard Fighter-Interceptor Squadron based at Portland International Airport. Neither plane had been found by midnight. The crash occurred about 10 p.m., while two planes carried out a routine radar intercept training mission. One plane was a target for the other, officials said. An Air Force spokesman said an SA-16 air rescue plane and an Air Force helicopter were searching the north slope of Mt. Wood for the missing jets. Both planes carried a pilot and a radar observer. Ground search parties from the Civil Air Patrol and the Hood River Rescue Team were dispatched to the general crash area, near Park-dale, Ore., on the lower slopes of the 11,245-foot high mountain. Park-dale is approximately 45 miles east of here. Former KC Editor Dies NEW YORK — (UPI) — John M. Moorhead, assistant news and makeup editor of the New York Daily News, died yesterday while starting a round of golf at the Ferncliffe Golf Club in New Jersey. He was 61 years old. Death was attributed to a heart attack. Moorhead had been news editor of the former Kansas City Journal before coming to New York in 1942, when he joined the staff of the New York Herald Tribune. He later held public relations posts here and in Brazil before joining the News in 1952. Now you see it! Now you don't Trade your case of typists' tension for a box of Eaton's Corrasable Bond. Then relax! Your typing errors will be a $\alpha$ secret between you and this talented paper that erases cleanly and completely, without smears, smudges or tears, at the flick of an ordinary pencil rubber. Eaton's Corrasable Bond CARTER'S STATIONERY STORE 1025 Massachusetts SUA Carnival October 31 Student Union Everybody Come!