Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Dec. 7, 1966 US Demands ZorinRemova UNITED NATIONS —(UPI)— The United States demanded today that Soviet Ambassador Valerian A. Zorin step down as president of the security council while it considers Russia's demand for restoration of the Congo's leftist Premier Patrice Lumumba. U. S. Ambassador James J. Wadsworth told Zorin, council president under the monthly rotation system, that he was "too prejudiced" to preside in the Congo dispute. Wadsworth said Zorin had taken part in Soviet efforts to wreck the U. N. program in the Congo. Wadsworth recalled a Soviet statement issued by Zorin yesterday in which he branded pro-Western president Joseph Kasavubu as a traitor, accused the United States of seeking to "liquidate" the pro-Lumumba Congolese Parliament and called Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold a "tool of aggressors and colonialists." Christmas Costs Billions NEW YORK — (UPI) — On Christmas morning Americans will open an estimated $7,300,000,000 worth of presents, according to a survey conducted by Market Facts. Families with an annual income of less than $7,500 will spend about $100 for such gifts while those with incomes of $7,500 and above will spend close to $200. Cornell Professor Poetry Hour Guest George H. Healey, professor of English and Rare Books at Cornell University will be the guest speaker at the Poetry Hour at 4 p.m. tomorrow. Mr. Healey will speak on "John Phillipps Collector and Curmudgeon" in the Browsing Room of the Kansas Union. Win without boasting. Lose without excuse. —Albert Payson Terhune 6-Hour in by 10 a.m. out by 4 p.m Photo-Finishing FAST MOVIE AND 35 MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak) NEW ORLEANS—(UPI)—White attendance at an integrated school slipped to 19 today despite a heavy police guard that muzzled angry housewives. HIXON STUDIO 721 Mass. But despite the heaviest police precautions since violence broke out in the first week of integration, white attendance dropped from 23 to 19, plus Ruby Nell Bridges, the lone Negro girl in the school. VI 3-0330 Police kept up their barricades a block away from the school. About Silent Mothers Watch Integration 20 white women standing on a lawn across the street from Frantz said police let them stay there only if they didn't yell. "We couldn't yell but we did give them the double-whammy," explained one of silenced hecklers. The rest of the hecklers were kept at the barricades, so far away from the building that they apparently felt screaming was useless. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Ronnie's FASHION BEAUTY SALONS Treat yourself to a sparkling new hairstyle for the holiday season . . . let one of Ronnie's skilled stylists create a new coiffure for you. New Styled Haircut & Shaping ... 1.50 Lustrous Shampoo and Fashion Setting ... 2.00 Cold Waves, From $5.95 Complete Appointment Not Always Needed Open Late Week Nights Malls Shopping Center - VI 2-1144 Tareyton has the taste- Dual Filter does it! HERE'S HOW THE DUAL FILTER DOES IT: 2. with a pure white outer filter. Together they select and balance the flavor elements in the smoke. Tareyton's flavor-balance gives you the best taste of the best tobaccos. 1. It combines a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL... definitely proved to make the taste of a cigarette mild and smooth ... NEW DUAL FILTER 'Product of The American Tobacco Company - "Tobacco is our middle name" © A. R. C. Hoover Calls for Campaign WASHINGTON — (UPI) — FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover has called for a "relentless campaign" by the public, in cooperation with police, against child molesters. Most women are not so young as they are painted. —Max Beerbohm YELLOW CAB CO. Phone VI 3-6333 24hr. Service Radio Controlled Owner Ward Thompson EASY-WASH 11th & Pennsylvania VI 3-9706 LARGE PARKING AREA Broke? Use The BOOK NOOK Lay-A-Away Plan For Those Christmas Gifts 1021 Mass. HAVE ALWAYS HAD an abliding hatred for the bottom crust of rye bread. There is no particular reason for making this point, except that whenever I think of Fort Lauderdale, I think of rye bread. There is no particular reason for that either, but I have been thinking of Fort Lauderdale. Fort Lauderdale is "where the boys are." Right now, that is. Most of the time, serenity reigns in Fort Lauderdale. (The Chamber of Commerce will hate me; they say it never rains in Fort Lauderdale.) But, for two weeks, twenty thousand collegians descend on this peaceful community and take it apart, peace by peace. They call it Spring Vacation, but it's more like amateur night at Cape Canaveral. They capture Florida and throw the Keys away. But I shouldn't joke—not while people are holding mass prayer meetings for an early hurricane season. This is "where the boys are." And girls, too. Such girls, it makes you dizzy to look at them. If you look long enough, you reach an advanced stage of dizziness called aphroditzer. It's like being in love. That's what happened to me, and it will happen to you, too. Everywhere you turn—beaches full of them, motels and hotels full of them, cars full of them, pools full of them, bathing suits full of them. Ah, bathing suits ... when the man said, "It's the little things in life that count," he must have been thinking of bathing suits. But mostly, it's the girls. Girls in love, girls in trouble, bright girls with a future, not-so-bright girls with a past, rich girls in the lap of a jury, poor girls in any lapp that'll have them girls of every size and discretion. It isn't any wonder that this is "where the boys are." And the things that happen are wacky and wild and wicked and warmly wonderful "where the boys are." Someone should make a movie about it. Hey, someone did! M-G-M calls it "Where The Boys Are." starring Dolores Hart, George Hamilton, Yvette Mimieux, Jim Hutton, Barbara Nichols, Paula Prentiss, with Frank Gorshin and introducing popular recording star Connie Francis in her first screen role. You'll want to see all the things that happen "Where The Boys Are." Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer presents "WHERE THE BOYS ARE" A Eutere production in CinemaScope and METROCOLOR. Screenplay by George Wells based on the novel by Glendon Swarthout. Directed by Henry Levin. Produced by Joe Pasternak.