Thursday, Oct. 6, 1960 University Daily Kansan Page 9 "There will have to be a meeting to deal with some of the outstanding questions we failed to deal with in Paris and I am very hopeful the Russians will agree to it," he said. LONDON — (UPI) — Prime Minister Harold Maecillan returned from New York today with a call for "patience and firmness" with the Soviet Union and hope for a spring summit conference. He added that he felt more hopeful after his talks with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev in New York than he did after the Paris summit collapse. CONVINCED?-Tom Holler, Wichita senior, left, is getting the Spectrum sales speech from Richard Hartman, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore. Spectrum, the official campus magazine, is on sale at the information booth. Macmillan Advises Patience Firmness With Russia He was reticent about the disarmament issue, now the chief problem between east and west, and implicitly rejected the Soviet Union's demand for advance acceptance of a set of principles on arms cuts. MacMillan said the West must stand firm against the Soviet Union and expect no quick solutions. "You have to have principles and practices," he said. Welcome Students - 19c Hamburgers - Free Parking - Open 8 a.m. - 8 p.m. TOM'S CAFE 7 W.14th College Students Now spend your weekends dancing to the top live bands in the area — BY POPULAR DEMAND: ALL YOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGES 80 x 60 NEW DANCING FLOOR ESPECIALLY FOR YOUNG ADULTS BARRY'S BARN- Olathe, Kansas 119th and new 50 Highway Six miles south of Highway 10 on 50 Highway at the red and yellow blinker lights Kansas Union Teems With 350 High School Journalists Long lines of high school journalists threaded their way across the floor in the Kansas Union this morning. By the time the room had cleared, 350 students and advisers representing 30 high schools in Kansas had signed the long lists. They were presented with pins and name tags before climbing the 24 steps to the ballroom. They were registering for the 42nd annual High School Journalism Conference. This meeting is sponsored by the Kansas State High School Activities Assn. and the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information with the cooperation of the University Extension Bureau. Calder M. Pickett, acting dean of the School of Journalism, introduced various speakers at the first meeting, in the ballroom. Afterwards rooms were selected for the discussion groups and lectures. Melvin Mencher, assistant professor of journalism, told students at a session on feature writing that the School of Journalism faculty members and high school journalism advisers led the small groups. most important element in such writing is imagination. "Imagination in subject matter and in writing are essential in writing good features," he said. James E. Dykes, associate professor of journalism, speaking on yearbook advertising, said that "strategy and planning makes a difference in a successful selling campaign for the yearbook. "This includes development of sales plans, benefits of advertising in yearbooks, factual information on buying power of a school-age market, planning of proposed layouts for the representative to take to prospective advertisers and ideas which would be added incentives to buy space." "The English language is a storehouse of strong, action verbs," he continued. "Select them with care and your sentences will sing." Clarke C. Keys, instructor of journalism, spoke of the role of photography in high school journalism. "The biggest shortcoming in high school photography," he said, "is trying to include too much in a picture. Keep them simple and they will have more impact." Get Your SPECTRUM The popular campus academic literary magazine is on sale now throughout the campus Leading Jewelers 743 Mass. VI 3-4366 12-Year-Old Needs To Change Clothes LOS ANGELES — (UPI) — A 12-year-old girl was sent home from an elementary school yesterday to change clothes because her teacher thought her shoulder strap dress was immodeet. "There was nothing vulgar about the garment," protested the mother of seventh grader Gary Hardy. "The dress was a full-skirted cotton print, entirely modest and coming well below my daughter's knees." Mrs. Hardy, admitting that her attractive blonde daughter was well developed for her age, explained that she was garbed in a sleeveless dress because she was going to a doctor after school for a polio shot. Packaged foods, packaged housing and next packaged education by television in the home.—Norman Norton. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT CORDUROY CONVERTIBLE A wardrobe-in-itself Natural- shouldered jacket is lined in an Antique Print with matching breast-pocket handkerchief; has center vent, hacking pockets, Antique crested metal buttons. Trim, tapered Post-Grad slacks. Vest reverses to match jacket lin- ing and handkerchief. Knockout colors; at the best campus shops. 3 piece Convertible . . . . . . . . $29.95 Reversible vest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.95 Post-Grad Slacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.95