Daily hansan ofesenior With Shul- book. seared. ves 20,200 city of Nag- grant etab- central Wednesday, Sept. 30, 1959 LAWRENCE, KANSAS 57th Year, No. 9 student and Arthur B. McKinley, Medicine Lodge third-year law student. Facing the bench is the prosecuting attorney, Larry M. Baker, Wichita third-year law student. Seated is Melinda Hill, Kansas City, Mo., junior, court reporter. NO DICE—Russell J. Danna, Independence, Mo., junior, left, assumes a "you can't win" expression as he hears KU law students deny his parking ticket appeal last night in Green Hall Student Court. On the bench left to right are Wendell E. Yockey, Lawrence second-year law Band Day Forces to Invade Campus and City Saturday The KU campus will be invaded Saturday by over 4.200 high school students dressed in band uniforms and armed with horns. The 65 bands will merge to present the half-time show at the Kansas-Boston football game. Directing Band Day activities will be Russell Wiley, KU band director. The day will begin with a parade at 9:30 a.m. in downtown Lawrence. The musicians will meet for rehearsal in the stadium after a picnic at Potter Lake. Game time is 1:30 p.m. The KU band will perform in pre-game ceremonies. At half-time the bands will file out of the stands and march onto the field to the cadence of the KU drum section to form 25-feet high letters spelling "Band Day KU-1959." Prof. Wiley will conduct the bands in playing "America the Beautiful" and the KU Alma Mater Kansas high schools to participate are: Mulvane, Coffeyville, Nortonville, Cimarron, Oskaloosa, Caney, Frankfort, Holton, Bonner Springs, Everest, Bern, Hillsboro, De Soto, Oakley, Centre, Columbus, Chanute, Herrington, Burlington, Riverton, Derby, Erie, Moran, Onega, Burlingame, Effingham, Overbrook, Basehor, Valley Falls, Horton, Gardner, Rossville, Salina, Larned, Independence, Lawrence, Shawnee-Mission North, Paola and Iola. Ruskin, Shawnee-Mission East, Belleville, Leavenworth, Leavenworth Junior High, Atchison, Olathe, McPherson, Wilsey, Yates Central, Washington, Wamego, Rosedale and Ward of Kansas City, Kan., Eureka, Pleasanton, Turner, Wellsville, Washburn, Sabetha, Concordia, Ellsworth, Haskell and Ottawa. The Independence, Mo., band also will participate. Khrushchev To Red Celebration TOKYO —(UPI)— Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev arrived today in Peiping and told leaders of the communist world "we must do everything within our power to clear the atmosphere and create conditions for friendship among the peoples." “Exerting all our efforts we must attain a situation in which universal peace is made secure,” he told an airport gathering which included such notable communist leaders as Mao Tse-Tung of Red China, Ho Chi Minh of North Viet Nam and leaders of the satellites in Europe. Khrushchev arrived to help celebrate Communist China's 10th anniversary tomorrow. There was widespread speculation the Peiping regime would use the day to free five imprisoned Americans and perhaps to fire a rocket-missile in a token gesture of China's growing power. Permanent ID's Needed For Game Student's will need their permanent ID cards to be admitted to Saturday's football game with Boston University here. Temporary ID cards will not be honored. Art Exhibit Open In M-D Building A new exhibit of drawings, paintings, prints and sculpture has been opened at the Student Art Gallery in the Music and Dramatic Arts building. Most of the works on exhibit are part of the permanent collection of the Drawing and Painting department. The exhibit will be open through Nov. 2. Weather Occasional light rain tonight and Thursday. Mostly cloudy and unseasonably cool through Thursday. Low tonight 45 to 50. High Thursday in the 50's. September Ends Wet and Cold TOPEKA —(UPI)— The last day of September, 1959, in Kansas will be remembered as overcast and raw, marked by snow in the northwest and cold rain in most other areas, the U.S. Weather Bureau said today. The cold rains, extremely hard on livestock, probably will continue today and Thursday, and Friday will be cool and cloudy, with unsettled atmosphere caused by northeast surface winds being overrun by southwesterly winds aloft. Weathermen said snow that started in the Goodland area yesterday, finally stopped this morning. No snow remained on the ground. Because temperatures were cold and the snow was mixed with rain, it melted as it fell. Showers yesterday and last night were light for the most part. Garden City had .42 of an inch of rain, Kingman .61, Matfield Green .54, Patterson .71, Lyndon and Osage City .50, Oswego .85 and Pittsburg .69. The editor and business manager of the 1959 Jayhawker. KU magazine yearbook, were granted $350 bonuses by the All Student Council last night. Council Grants Yearbook Bonus William Harper, Topeka senior, the editor, and Arly H. Allen, Lawrence senior, business manager, will receive $350 each in addition to $65 a month they received last year. Motions to give bonuses of $100 each and $150 each were defeated soundly. Larry Blikhan, Prairie Village senior, suggested that the bonus could be used as a reward by the Council, with a large bonus being given only if an exceptional job had been done on the yearbook. Bill Introduced For Magazine A bill was introduced before the ASC last night to establish "Spectrum" as an official University literary-academic magazine. Sigma Delta Chi, professional fraternity for men in journalism, would be technical sponsor of the magazine. The bill was referred to the committee on committees, which will make recommendations to the Council at the next meeting. Oct 13. Calder M. Pickett, associate professor of journalism, and L.R.C. Agnew, chairman of the department of history of medicine, have been recommended as faculty advisers of the publication. ASC Suggests No Finals for Seniors The All Student Council passed a resolution last night recommending that the College Intermediary Board discuss with the administration the possibility of allowing seniors in good standing to forego final examinations. Under the plan a senior with a grade of B or higher in a specific course would not have to take the final, if the instructor of the course had no objections. The College Intermediary Board is composed of students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, who meet with members of the College faculty to discuss curriculum and administration policies. Yoe Writes Letter Tom Yoe, director of public relations and secretary of the Jayhawker Advisory Board, said in a letter to the Council that he thought Harper and Allen had done an excellent job and deserved the bonus. Sarah Anne Shaffer, Russell senior, pointed out that staff members of campus radio station KUOK and the Daily Kansan receive no pay for their work. The ASC was presented a bill from Hall Lithograph Co., Topeka, for $477.50 in printing costs of The Fowl, defunct campus humor magazine. The magazine had $184.53 in its treasury, leaving a balance of $293. - 02 for the ASC to pay. New Members In Two new members of the ASC were sworn in last night. They are Lynn Anderson, Atwood junior, who replaces Jim Henderson, Wichita senior, as a fraternity living district representative and Korff Maag, Pratt senior, who replaces Don Schmalrzre representing married students. Three appointments to the Student Court were approved by the ASC. Gene Anderson, Belleville, Tom Fulkerson, Kirksville, Mo., and Bob Edmonds, Lawrence, law students, were nominated by Jim Austin, Topeka senior and president of the student body, in conjunction with the Law School Advisory Board. The ASC was told that two appointments made last spring to the Student Athletic Seating Board are invalid. The appointments of Charles Johnson, Lawrence graduate, and Lawanna Steele, Wichita sophomore, made by Austin, do not comply with constitutional requirements. The ASC constitution states that the four members of the board must be ASC members, appointed by the chairman of the ASC. Must Be on ASC Named ASC representatives to student body executive committees were Linda Rundle, Bonner Springs senior, social; Martha Crosier, Lawrence senior, campus chest; Betty Bumgarner, Tulsa, Okla. junior, public relations; Ed McMullan, Long Beach, N.Y. junior, National Student Assn.; Bob Iott, Livingston, Mont. senior, Housing; Larry Blickhan, Prairie Village senior, labor; Sarah Shaffer, Russell senior, health; Dorothy Trickett, Topeka junior, traditions; Al Cohn, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, publicity and Ken Wainwright, Syracuse graduate, traffic and parking. AH, SWEET SLEEP—After only a week and a half of classes, studying has taken its toll. Perry Walters, Tonganoxie junior, rests his eyes "for just a minute" at the library. His sleep was short because it was interrupted by the whistle.