Around the Campus International Club Discusses Cler German Reunification Page 3 East and West Germany will not wage a war for reunification because it is militarily impossible. This was the contention of a panel of German students who spoke on German reunification Friday night at the International Club. THE PANEL gave the following reasons for the impossibility of an East-West German war: *The West German army is not a national army. It is integrated with NATO which is under the command of English, French, Canadian, United States, and German authorities. The panel said negotiation between East and West Germany is impossible at the present because the West German government does not negotiate with the appointed East German government. - The United States and Russia control use of the atomic bomb, which would be necessary for future mechanical warfare. THE GERMAN students called Berlin the key to freedom. They said freedom for all Western countries would be limited with the loss of Berlin. The panel gave three conditions necessary for German unity which include: - East and West Germany must recognize that they are not German creations. Dance Classes Begin Tomorrow The first of a series of beginnin dance classes will begin at 4:00 to morrow in 102 Robinson, said Mi Joie Stapling, professor of physic The first 30 men and 30 women may sign up in 103 Robinson without charge. The first series will run for six weeks. Miss Carolyn Snell, instructor in physical education, will be in charge of the class. *Both East and West Germany should go back to the standard that they are provincial with no diplomatic acknowledgement. - East and West Germany should work together on traffic between the two areas and should exchange books and newspapers. Quack Club Pledge Service Tomorrow The Quack Club's pledge service will be held at 7:45 p.m. tomorrow in Robinson Gymnasium. Naismith Drive Will Be Closed Naismith Drive, from 15th to Crescent, will be closed for about two weeks, starting today, due to construction of a steam and utility tunnel for the new engineering building. Keith Lawton, director of physical plant operations, said every effort will be made to have the street in use by the Oklahoma game, but that it probably won't be ready for the exhibition basketball game. Students detouring around Naismith are asked to be extra cautious because of the unusually heavy flow of traffic near dormitories. Franzen Appointed Chemistry Fellow Hugo F. Franzen, Lawrence graduate student, has been appointed the Pan American Petroleum Foundation fellow in chemistry for the 1960-61 academic year. Franzen will study on the campus for the Ph.D. degree in physical chemistry and devote his research to a study of chemical vaporization. The Petroleum Fellowship is one of 16 offered at 15 colleges and universities this year. It carries a stipend of $1,500 covering cost of tuition and fees. Clergyman Claims Atheism in Vogue "It's not a fashionable thing to be a Christian in Lawrence today. It's fashionable to be an atheist or an agnostic." Rev. John F. McLaughlin, clergyman of the Lawrence Episcopal Church, made this point while talking to approximately 40 students gathered informally in the Canterbury House living room Sunday evening. Father McLaughlin, as the students call him, gave a brief history of the Canterbury Assn, and explained its purpose today. "History is full of people who succeed in spite of a bad beginning. Maybe that's what Canterbury will do. Let's not look at the past but the future. We must make room for the coming generation." "Trinity is your parish home," he explained. " Its primary importance is to lead you in worship. Our interest should be to make Canterbury work." Canterbury Assn., Episcopal youth group, meets every Sunday evening at five. It is begun with an evening prayer and followed by supper and a program. Jolliffe-Miller Take First in Sports University Daily Kansan Jolliffe and Miller Scholarship Halls won first places in the sports events of the annual All Hall Fall Ball held Friday evening. The decisive victory in the men's division came when Jollife broke the tie with Battenfeld by winning the tug-of-war, placing Jollife in first place and Battenfeld in second. Foster Hall took third place. Among the women's halls, Watkins ran a close race with Miller. Watkins led until the tug-of-war when Miller topped Sellars then Watkins for a clear victory. Watkins dropped to second place by one point and Douthart took third. Math Club Meets Tomorrow The Math Club meeting at 7:36 p.m. tomorrow will be in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union, not the Trail Room. Makes your haircut fit your head! No matter how you like your hair cut--you'll look better when you use Short Cut. This new, non-greasy hair groom adds body to the hair fibers, makes your haircut fit your head. Keeps hair neat, and helps condition your scalp into the bargain. Takes 2 seconds, costs a fast .50 plus tax HUCTION Old Spice SHORT CUT HAIR GROOM Monday, Oct. 3. 1960 First Humanities Forum Is Tomorrow Night The Humanities Forum will hold its first meeting of the year at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union. Edward F. Grier, associate professor of English and chairman of the American Civilization program, will talk on his work with Walt Whitman manuscripts. George J. Worth, assistant professor of English and president of the Humanities Forum, has extended an invitation to all interested persons to attend this and succeeding meetings of the group. Peter J. Caws, associate professor of philosophy, is the Humanities Forum's secretary. Two Films for Wednesday The Forum is a faculty-graduate student organization devoted to the reading and discussion of scholarly papers in language and literature, history, philosophy, and fine arts, and allied fields. The movie, "Span of Life", will be shown with "Population Explosion," the regularly scheduled film, at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Room 3, Bailey. SPORTS FANS. The KU QUARTERBACK CLUB IS HERE AGAIN! See Exciting Films of Each Saturday's Game Narrated by Top Players UNION BIG 8 ROOM 7 P.M. EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT FREE ADMISSION and REFRESHMENTS No telltale traces... EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND Typewriter Paper It's easy to flick off your mistakes on Eaton's Corräsable Bond. Make a pass with a pencil eraser and typing errors are gone—like magic—no error evidence left. Corräsable has an exceptional surface—erases without a trace. Once does it—there's no need to retype. Saves time; money, too. The perfect paper for perfection—erasable Corräsable. 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