-(UPII) Rd R. t night t must M. dear 9, the Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS Wednesday, Oct. 21, 1959 57th Year. No. 24 INDIAN SUMMER — Colorful leaves, warm weather, and a sunlit spot make study almost a pleasure. Elaine Haines, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, left, and Marilyn Estes, Kansas City, Mo., junior, review notes before class. (Daily Kansan photo by Jack Harrison) Only Fools Would Paint a Tree By Carol Heller The glory of Indian Summer abounds. A rain of brilliant leaves spashes golden, char-treuse and copper pools on campus lawns. A maroon wall of vines climbs high to clash with the red roof of Hoch Auditorium. The green foliage of a tree near Fraser Hall is tinted with iridescent lavender. Oh, to be an artist . . . to paint the clear blue sky, the smoky horizon*, the rust and golds and crimsons. But artists don't like to paint autumn scenes. Raymond J. Eastwood, professor of drawing and painting, ventures that autumn is too easy to paint. This opinion is in direct contrast to an editorial by George DeBord in last Wednesday's Daily Kansan. "Most painters are bored by autumn—the colors are so obvious. Winter scenes are much more difficult to paint," he said. But while the artists and writers argue the aesthetic merits of autumn, the photographers are in complete accord. George wrote that only a fool would try to match the colors of autumn. A dozen photographers, including a 12-year-old with a battered box camera, have snapped pictures of the color bedecked tree near the campus at the home of Mrs. Leon Flint, 1605 Louisiana. Hungarian Sees Plot by Soviets "You are all doomed," a former Hungarian minister warned KU students today. "You are doomed to death, murder, starvation and concentration camps. Bulletin "You are doomed in the minds of the Kremlin as Soviet leaders work devilishly day and night toward the destruction of your free nation." It came after a 3-hour morning meeting of union and industry atorneys on the question of retroactivity. Eisenhower, through the justice department, asked Judge Sorg yesterday for the injunction. PITTSBURGH—(UPI) A federal judge today ordered the nation's 500,000 striking steelworkers to return to their jobs for 80 days under the Taft-Hartley act. The United Steelworkers union appealed to block enforcement of the order. U. S. District Judge Herbert P. Sorg, a 47-year-old Eisenhower appointee, agreed with the president that the 99-day strike imperiled the nation. Sorg handed down the historic back-to-work ruling at 12:44 p.m. (Lawrence time). AWS Receives Top ASC Grant Associated Women Students will receive the largest single appropriation from the All Student Council this year. Lawrence Diecker, Westphalia senior and chairman of the finance and auditing committee, said members of his committee went over requests with an officer from each group. The ASC voted last night to appropriate $1,894 for the AWS, $550 less than their original request. All requests but that of the Student Religious Council were cut. Money requested by the pep clubs for migration trips was not appropriated. The SRC will receive its request of $300. The appropriation is for financing the Religious Emphasis Week in the spring. However, the council added $50 to the pep clubs' regular appropriation. The money will be used to promote pep rallies and organized cheering at athletic events. Weather Continued warm and partly cloudy tonight and Thursday. Low tonight in the 30's northwest to the 40's and 50's elsewhere. High Thursday 65 to 70. The speaker was Nicholas Nyardi, former fianance minister of Hungary who is now director of the International Institute at Bradley University. He appealed to students to realize that the American free enterprise system is the only bulwark against Russian accession. He warned that salvation rests upon the willingness of American citizens and upon better economic education. American Industry Best "The only reason we are not in a shooting war is because Nikita Khrushchev knows the Russian economy could never match the incomparable American industry and the incredible American agricultural output," he said. Mr. Nyardi said that many Americans believe negotiation is the only alternative to World War III. "It is true that we must negotiate, but do not forget that the time might come when not negotiation, but economic, moral and military strength will save the United States, Only Strength is Understood "The language of strength is the only language Soviet leaders know." Mr. Nyardi contended that Khrushchev's threats are not made on the basis of his strength in the U.S.S.R. "The opposite is true. Khrushchev is not strong.-At home he is fighting for his life. Not his political life, but his physical life—his little bald head on its square neck. "Khrushchev has won his power by appealing to the Russian people. He has promised them a better life. "He has them interested now in Lunik I and II, but when the Russian people tie of looking at the hole on the other side of the moon and start looking at the holes in their shoes, that will be a sad day for Mr. Khrushchev," Mr. Nyardi said. Worker Injured By Fall at Union Glenn Coffman, a Lawrence construction worker, was injured about 1 o'clock this afternoon when he fell 14 feet onto a concrete slab at the Kansas Union addition. He was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital by ambulance. The extent of his injuries was not known, but he was knocked unconscious in the fall. B. A. Green Construction Co. is building the addition. Father Believes Missing Son 'Just Spreading Wings' The father of an 18-year-old KU freshman who has been missing since Saturday says his son is probably "just spreading his wings" and should return home this weekend. Frederic C. Harvey, Mission freshman, disappeared from his room at Joseph R. Pearson dormitory sometime Saturday. Campus Police Chief Joseph Skillman said Harvey's clothing and books were missing from his room and his car from the parking lot. Frederic C. Harvey "We haven't heard a thing since then. The pressure is pretty great on a freshman and I think he just wanted to get out from under it for a while and took off for a week," Mr. Harvey said this morning. Harvey's father, Fred M. Harvey. 6114 Delmar St., Mission, was notified of his son's disappearance Monday. "He wrote a little note to his friends which was found crumpled in a wastepaper basket in his room. The note said, 'I'm leaving and I'm not coming back.' Mr. Harvey said his son had not mentioned any troubles to him. He heard from his son in a letter last Thursday. "He's a quiet sort of boy and you can't tell what he's thinking," Mr. Harvey said. Mr. Harvey said he had talked to his son's roommates but apparently young Harvey had not disclosed his plans to them. SMOKE GETS IN YOUR EYES—Patsy Batt, Algonquin, Ill., freshman, uses a natural-gas soldering torch as sne makes a piece of jewelry in her jewelry class.