Nehru Says China Wants More Land CALCUTTA, India —(UPI)— Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru charged last night that Communist China does not share Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's current desire for peace and implied the reason lies in a desire for more territory. Page 7 "I have no doubt that Khrushchev wants peace," he told a news conference. "The same eagerness for peace is not present in China. "Russia is now a territorially satisfied power," he said. Then he remarked that he could not say the same thing about Communist China, China, he said, "was still suffering from the first flood of revolution." Will Not Speculate Asked if he thought the Chinese Communists timed their incursion into Indian territory to counteract Khrushchev's peace offensive, Nehru refused to speculate. But he did say the Chinese attack on the northeast frontier agency could be "part of a delibereate program of aggression" or could be inspired by the Tibetan refugees in India. China may have made the move he said, because of its fears that the refugees would make trouble in the area near the Tibetan border. The English Daily Tribune of New Delhi said that China caused the AAUW President To Speak Today The president of the Kansas Division of the American Association of University Women will be the guest speaker of the Lawrence Branch at 6:30 p.m. today in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. Eleanor Hong, a member of the national AAUW Mass Media committee, is a professor of English and chairman of the division of language and literature at Southwestern College, Winfield. trouble with India because it had to keep causing turmoil. "It appears the consensus of opinion that, unlike the Soviet Union, China is not at all anxious to end the current cold war." it said. "The general feeling is that China has acquired vested interests in international tension. Her motive apparently is to keep tension alive so that the world does not easily forget her own major international problem regarding Formosa." 80 Here for Y Meeting Eighty students from Kansas colleges and universities will arrive at KU tomorrow to attend a state conference of YWCA and YMCA members. A talk on the "Existing Tensions Between the U.S. and U.S.S.R. and Methods of Dealing with Them," will be given at 8 tomorrow night in the Kansas Union by Dr. John Swomley, national secretary of the Fellowship of Reconciliation, Nyack N.Y. Peter Lepnam, Dallas, Tex., regional executive secretary for World United Service, will speak at 1 p.m. Saturday in the Plymouth Congregational Church. Robert Nebrig, Leavenworth senior, will speak at a dinner Saturday night in the Kansas Union. He will discuss his experiences as an exchange student in the Soviet Union last summer. Our Debt Grows and Grows WASHINGTON, D.C. — (UPI)— The total debt of federal state and local governments in the United States came to an estimated 383 billion dollars in 1958, according to Tax Foundation, inc. Radio Programs KANU 4:30 Jazz Cocktail 5:00 Twilight Concert: "Sonata in E-Flat Major for Piano and Violin" by Mozart. 7:00 Concert Hall 7:30 Contemporary Concert: "Capital of the World" by Antheil 7:55 News 8:00 University of the Air—Security in a Nuclear Age. 9:00 Everybody's Classics 9:55 News 10:00 A Little Night Music: "Quartet No. 14 in D Minor" by Shubert 11:00 Sign Off. KUOK 4:00 Music in the Afternoon 6:00 KUOK News 6:05 Jayhawk Jump Time 7:00 KUOK News 7:05 Musical Pathways 7:30 Spotlight on Sports 7:40 Musical Pathways 8:00 KUOK News 8:05 Alburn Time 8:45 Melody Time 9:00 KUOK News 9:05 Music From Peyond th Heavens 10:00 KUOK NEWS 10:05 The Horton Kurtis Show 11:55 KUOK News Educator Views American System An educator from British Guam has come to KU to study teacher programs, teaching facilities, and adult education—especially in agricultural areas. Making his headquarters at KU Joseph D. Hentzen will spend two weeks in Kansas as a participant in the specialist program of the U.S.State Department's international educational exchange. He is principal of a school at Berbice in the sugar and rice producing area of British Guiana. KOOL KROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Talk about your victory 2. Perches in churches 3. Clair de la's last name 4. Koots the best kind to smoke 5. Swedish gal's name 6. An arbor graduate 7. Goofy Mortimer 8. Lady jad say (abbr.) 9. — Aviv 10. Competitive kind of woman 11. Eric is a little boy 12. Lady jad saint (abbr.) 13. — Aviv 14. Motors, waves and lions do it 15. King of Norway 16. It's common to ride a bicycle 17. Walk with a roll 18. Raps backward 19. Graf man ship) 20. Almost a Weep 21. Discerning 22. 2nd Person sheepshoe 23. 9th makes Kools so enjoyable 24. Not the kind of town for a race track 25. Speak highly of 26. Degree dental 27. Act like an angel 28. Little America 29. This suffix is the most 48. To be (Latin) 49. Queen Elizabeth I DOWN 1. Is very hot 2. second man 3. Girl from LA.A? 4. It is shiny in a 5. one man's 6. caressing hand is another's — 6. His ale (foam cream) 7. Play obviously not by Somerset Maughan 8. A bum one mishaps you 14. Classical dumb girl 18. Good places for dolls 19. Either's brother 20. Tennis skunk- ing game romantic 21. Fish, not be- loving spouses 22. Crooks who could be soft to touch 23. This is madness 24. Meet up, in the rain 25. Hand holders 26. A type of line 27. Fashion 28. The British call cigarette butts 29. Tree house 30. Fellow who could probably use a cigarette 31. out learn a scanty living No.5 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "ARE YOU KOOL ENOUGH TO KRACK THIS?" 9 10 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 35 36 37 38 39 40 43 46 49 41 42 43 46 49 44 45 46 49 47 48 49 When your throat tells you it's time for a change, you need a real change... University Dally Kansan Thursday, Oct. 22, 1959 Student Ends Hunger Strike Against ROTC BERKELEY, Calif. — (UPI) — Frederick Lawrence Moore Jr., 18-year-old son of an Air Force colonel, cut short his hunger strike against compulsory military training at the University of California yesterday, saying "it has served its purpose." Pale and weakened, Moore made his announcement on the third day of his fast from the steps of Sproul Hall, headquarters for Reserve Officers Training on campus. He planted himself there to protest compulsory enrollment of underclassmen in ROTC training. Student support rallied around the youthful mathematics major, who had promised to fast for seven days. His petition against enforced ROTC training was signed by more than 1,300 persons, many of them ROTC students, sympathetic women students and a group of clergymen. Moore's father arrived in Berkeley this morning, but the youth would not say whether he had talked to him vet. Earlier, Col. Moore had written his son an explanation of the need for military preparedness. He is attached to the Pentagon in Washington, D.C., and resides in Arlington, Va. An action by the executive committee of the UC student body in favor of voluntary military training will be presented to the board of regents on Friday. It was passed last night. A student mass demonstration has also been called in Wheeler Hall for the same day. The University, as a state "land grant" college, must offer military training to undergraduate men. Some schools have taken this to mean that training can be offered but not required. The UC regents have said it is compulsory. Topeka Prepares For Possible Riot TOPEKA, Kan. — (UPI)— The Dick Clark rock 'n' roll show plays at Municipal Auditorium next Monday and a police official yesterday called for extra officers. Traffic Lt. Dan Mallory said that without extra men there will not be enough policemen on duty to quell a riot if it breaks out. he suggested that off-duty officers should be hired. The city commission said it will consider Mallory's recommendations tomorrow. The show caused a disturbance when it played in Kansas City, Mo. last Saturday night. A teacher affects eternity; he can never tell when his influence stops.— Henry Brooks Adams. CENTRAL HEATING IN OUR COTTON water-repellent wanderer's coat makes it an any-weather wonder! Whither do you wander—sports meets? food marts? college campuses? kiddy parks?—go in this coat! Handsomely classic with an up-down hood, leash belt in chic vari-waled corduroy lined in matching Orlon* pile. Antelope or lichen green. Sizes 8 to 18. - REGISTERED TRADE MARK 2995