Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Sept. 20, 1960 KU Honorees In Discussion All student participants in the past or present KU honors programs are invited to a discussion of the current program tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. George R. Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and Francis Heller, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, plan to hear students' views on new developments in the honors program. Not all of the nearly 300 students involved could be notified of tomorrow's meeting. The honors program is made possible through a 3-year, $45,000 grant by the Carnegie Corp. (Continued from page 1) said later they would turn over their jobs whenever the politicians came to an agreement. Congo Action Against Reds This seemed to leave the way open to a compromise settlement between Lumumba and Kasavubu, who have been bitter rivals in the political wrangling to date. NOW MORE FIRMLY entrenched in power than ever. Mobutu also issued a communique threatening to arrest and expel any newsman who sends news of any rivals to the new council. Mobutu previously had moved his forces into the administration building here and thrown out dozens of civil servants. He also issued an order for the arrest of Lumumba and five of his aides should they try to fly to the United Nations General Assembly meeting in New York. The fast-moving political events were punctuated by U.N. charges that it had received reports that Katanga President - Premier Moise Tshombe's troops had committed "the most horrible atrocities yet" in Northern Katanga. U. N. sources said U.N. planes were airlifting Congolese national army troops from the Katanga front back to their Stanleyville and Thysville bases. THE TROOPS were airlifted to the Katanga frontier last month to lead Lumumba's planned invasion of the secessionist province. The announcement of the new council came first over Leopoldville radio in a statement by Mario Cardoso, general commissioner of education. Council members later called a news conference on the steps of the administration building which Motubu siezed this morning. WASHINGTON — (UPI) A congressional inquiry into the defection to Russia of two U.S. code workers has ended with sharp criticism of those responsible for employing them three years ago. Defection Blamed On Security Check Chairman Paul J. Kilday (D-Tex) of a House Armed Services subcommittee, said that when the two turncoats were hired, the National Security Agency (NSA) had information which "showed them to be unstable, even though specific acts of culpability were lacking." Kilday blamed NSA employees who evaluated the qualifications of the two men on the basis of lie detector tests and investigations by military intelligence agents. The two defectors — Bernon F. Mitchell, 31, and William H. Martin, 29 — denounced the United States at a news conference in Moscow two weeks ago. Golfing Tip NEW YORK—(UPI)—Winter golfers at several American courses daubed their golf balls with lipstick so they'd be easily spotted in last year's snows. We ought seriously to consider whether there is any point in the whole Ph.D. process. In university circles, the degree is irritably dismissed as a union card, and perhaps it is nothing more than that — an indefensible form of academic featherbedding. —David Boruff. Truman Says No To Senate Post INDEPENDENCE, Mo. — (UPI)—Former President Harry S. Truman "positively" took himself out of consideration today for the democratic nomination as United States senator but declined to name his personal preference for the post. The political situation in Missouri was thrown into turmoil a week ago today by the death of U.S. Sen. Thomas C. Hennings Jr., D-Mo. The Democratic state committee meets in Jefferson City tomorrow to select a nominee. "I will not accept the nomination to the Senate because I don't think it is the right thing for me to do," Truman told newsmen at a press conference in his office at the Truman Library. "I say no positively." The 76-year-old former chief executive, who said in New York last week that he was too old to serve in the Senate, told reporters "it would be much better for the welfare of the country if a younger man were nominated" for the Senate. "He could fill out the term and then become the candidate of the Democratic Party for the full term two years hence." Practice What's Preached CREDITION, England — (UPI) — Sir John Shelley was making a speech to open a new $56,000 fire station here when all 16 firemen had to dash away to fight a blaze. Try the Kansan Want Ads Veep Candidates Urge United Stand Against K WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Presidential candidates John F. Kennedy and Richard M. Nixon agreed today on at least one point — America must stand steadfast against its unwelcome guest, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev. Republican Nixon urged Americans not to "lose our nerve or lose our balance" over anything Khrushchev said at the U.N. General Assembly session. Nixon planned a day of stumping in Michigan. Democrat Kennedy took a day off from campaigning and prepared for his first nationwide TV speech tonight in which he will spell out his ideas for strengthening the United States at home and abroad to meet Khrushchev's challenge. THE CANDIDATES yesterday sought votes in areas of lingering economic distress — Nixon at Scranton and Wilkes-Barre, Pa., and Kennedy in Charleston, W. Va. They accused each other's party of being responsible for the plight of such areas. Nixon said Democrats pushed through Congress a "straight pork barrel" aid to distressed areas program designed to provoke a presidential veto in order to create a political issue. Under the bill, he said, areas like Scranton were "left begging." The Vice President said he favored a Republican-sponsored $200 million program of federal aid to depressed areas. He pledged to give such legislation top priority if he is elected. KENNEDY CHARGED that the Eisenhower administration had vetoed aid to distressed areas, blocked efforts to improve unemployment compensation, opposed a hike in the minimum wage, refused to expand the distribution of surplus food to the needy and "failed to offer one single program to increase the welfare of the American people." The Massachusetts senator outlined a sweeping program of government-assisted economic and social progress including federal contributions to teachers, salaries and a plan to furnish richer and more varied meals to Americans living on surplus foods. Parents' Day Is Scheduled October 1 The ninth annual Parents' Day observance at the University of Kansas is scheduled for Oct. 1. The day is set aside to encourage parents to visit their sons and daughters attending KU and to become acquainted with the University. The program includes the Syracuse vs. KU football game, lunch with students in their living groups or at the Kansas Union Cafeteria and an openhouse of all schools, departments and divisions of the University. More than 2,000 guests registered for the 1959 observance. Faculty Members Given Fulbrights Fulbright Fellowships will allow six University of Kansas faculty members to teach and study in foreign lands during 1960-61. The faculty members are: George Beckmann, associate professor of history, Japan, Thomas Gale, assistant professor of history, University of San Marcos, Lima, Peru; Fritz Heider, professor of psychology, University of Oslo, Norway. Dean Burton W. Marvin, dean of the school of journalism, Tehran University, Iran; Kenneth E. Rose, professor of mining and metallurgical engineering, University of Engineering, Lima, Peru, and M. Erik Wright, professor of clinical psychology, University of Western Australia, Perth. Two faculty members with other research grants for this year are Robert Tomasek, assistant professor of political science, Chile, and Charles Valentine, assistant professor of sociology, University of Pittsburgh. Moore Holds Record BALTIMORE, Md.—(UPI) —Lenny Moore of the Baltimore Colts holds the team's all-time scoring record—252 points. Communists and anti-Communists can live together or die together -- Bertrand Russell. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Filters for flavor -finest flavor by far! Tareyton has the taste Dual Filter does it! Here's how the DUAL FILTER DOES IT: 1. It combines a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL ... definitely proved to make the taste of a cigarette mild and smooth... 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. 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