Page 7 $1,200 Grant to Ricart University Daily Kansan The American Philosophical Society gave a $1,200 grant to Domingo Ricart, associate professor of Romance languages, for research abroad. PROF. RICART will leave for Europe in January. He will spend most of his six month sabbatical leave collecting data and studying manuscripts on Juan de Valdes in the libraries of England, Spain, Austria, Italy, France and Germany. The data will be used for a book on the contributions of Valdes' thinking on the European Civilization of the 16th century. Valdes was a Spanish humanist during the period of Erasmus. THE BOOK will be a continuation of a study which Prof. Ricart has been working on for eight years. The University Press and the Col- legio de Mexico have published his appraisal of Valdes. Prof. Ricart said he would probably lecture in England and Spain. His lectures will be on life in an American university. He will use slides of KU to illustrate how the American higher education works. NEW YORK — (UPI) — An exhibition of 20th Century projects considered too revolutionary to build is on view at the Museum of Modern Art here. Revolutionary Show It includes more than 30 ideas for cities on and over water and under the ground, for buildings that incorporate roads, and roads that incorporate buildings, and for factories and for houses designed for this country and abroad. The exhibition, called "Visionary Architecture," will close Dec. 4. Monday, Nov. 21, 1960 Reds Retaliate With Expulsion WASHINGTON — (UPI) — State Department officials said today that Russia's expulsion of a U.S. air attache appeared to be a "propaganda retaliation" for the recent espionage indictment of a Russian employee of the United Nations. The U.S. attache, Irving T. McDonald Jr. of Boston, was ordered to leave Russia with his wife and two children by Friday on charges of "activities incompatible with his diplomatic status." They referred to Igor Y. Melekh, chief of the Russian language section, office of conference services, in the U.N. Secretariat. Melekh was indicted by a federal grand jury Oct. 27 on charges that he tried to obtain aerial photographs of Chicago. The greatest of evils and the worst of crimes is poverty.—George Bernard Shaw Unclaimed Stolen Bicycles Accumulate at Police Office During the last couple of months the KU campus has been plagued by a large number of bicycle thefts. Most of the stolen bicycles have been found, but there are still a few to be claimed by their owners. He suggested that students comply with a city ordinance which requires that all bicycles be registered and issued a license. Police Chief Joseph Skillman recommends that students who own bicycles lock them whenever they leave them alone. Students who live in dormitories are asked to park their bicycles in the racks provided, lock them, and to register the serial number, make, and license number with the house manager. If this is done it would expedite the return of a bicycle in case it was stolen. At present a survey is being conducted to determine the need for additional bicycle racks. Anyone reporting a stolen bicycle should check with the campus police periodically to find out whether the bicycle has been found. At present there are several unclaimed bicycles being held by the Lawrence police and the campus police. BOSTON —(UPI)— Work will start soon on four piers to be built at a cost of $2 million at Logan International Airport. The piers will permit the loading and unloading of 35 jet airliners simultaneously. Try the Kansan Want Ads Easy way to do your new-car sampling— Drive Chevy once around the block at your Chevrolet dealer's one-stop shopping center! Just drop in and take a drive in one of the 30 spanking new '61 models your Chevy dealer now offers under the same roof. With every drive, your dealer is giving away free Dinah Shore Christmas records while they last. So hurry! 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