Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, Oct. 31, 1958 Halloween Is Different (Continued from Page 1) was pulled, plunging the house into darkness for hours. A sign asking "Have you changed your oil yet?" was hung on the door. "For Sale" signs were placed on all cars in the Chi Omega parking lot. At the Pi Beta Phi sorority house the lawn was cluttered with barrels, cans and bottles. Alpha Delta Pi lost its porch furniture and a sign stating "Men at Work" was thoughtfully nailed to the door. An unidentified student amused himself by splattering hedge apples against the sides of buildings. One went through a window of a residence north of Memorial Stadium. A shotgun blast shattered the silence and there was a race into the darkness. The unscathed student was declared the winner. In 1919 the field of operations had been expanded. A group of enterprising KU men boarded a train for Aggieland to do a little preparing for the KUK-KState football game the following day. Possibly the K-State pony express was running that day. Word leaked out and the men were greeted by a group who locked the Jayhawkers in a fraternity house until the game was over the next day. The Kansas City-born photographer David Douglas Duncan will arrive by plane from Paris Saturday to attend the opening of his photographic profile of Pablo Picasso. Ten original Picasso works also will be shown. City, Mo. It will be on display through November. The show will begin at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Nelson Gallery of Art and Adkins Museum in Kansas Duncan selected the photographs to be displayed from more than 10,000 he took of Picasso during a year's stay at the Picasso villa in Cannes, France. Many of the photographs appeared in Duncan's book, "The Private World of Pablo Picasso." Some have never been shown publically. Picasso Photographer To Attend Sunday Exhibit "American Evening," with persons attending in costume, will be celebrated by the International Club at 7:30 tonight in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. (Continued from Page 1) "Occasional flooding of the Kaw is good for the soil, and the best possible solution would be to widen the mouth of the Kaw at Kansas City, dump the flood water into the Missouri, and let the people in Missouri worry about it." International Club Plans Costume Party publicans for their in-action on flood control projects in Kansas. In referring to construction on the Tuttle Creek Dam, Sen. McDowell said, "Gov. Docking has got something started in 18 months that the Republicans have held up for 10 years." Jokes, social dances, square dancing, jazz, are on the program. Prizes will awarded for the best costume. IDs Not Good for Nov. 7 Musical "Right after the 1951 Kaw river flood," he said, "Gov. Ed Arn made a study of the flood control situation and came up with these two things: Senators Split mance of the musical primarily for alumni and parents of students who will be here for the Homecoming weekend. He quoted a plank of the platform which says the Democrats have a civil defense program planned which will prepare Kansas for the possibility of a nuclear war. Sen. Hults said if a person read the Democratic party platform carefully he could see how meaningless the document really is. "I checked into this," Sen. Hults said, "and found that a Donald Hewitt has been appointed Civil Defense director, Mr. Hewitt runs a Ticket order blanks have been mailed to all alumni who receive the KU newsletter. Reserved seats will be $1.50 for the Friday night performance. Curtain is at 9 p.m. cemetery in Kansas City, Kan. Perhaps Docking should run on a platform saying: Have shovel, will travel." Sen. McDowell, answering Sen. Hults, said Mr. Hewitt was appointed to his post by the federal government and passed a civil service examination to get the appointment. ID cards will not admit students to the University Theatre production, "The King and I," on Friday night, Nov. 7. Students may use ID cards for the production on Nov. 10, 11, 12 and 14. The committee on Homecoming arrangements secured the perfor- Why Not Take Your Date to the TEE PEE WE CAN RECORD ANYTHING The Impossible Takes A Little Longer 1011 N.H., Phone VI 3-4916 Mr. a Sis eager hitten wr and. Miss school Del edquit Delt Janu eddin Mrs. puence uight ams. cWill Mr. school ik Ka anne 30 Mau- suren- dent the B The last w of a 100 so spo chure Othe Bierce St. educat bocer Of En Bash been ector Colo than sheets perreat