--- Can't Vaccinate Against Kissing The director of student health at Kansas University views lightly the recent ban placed on kissing lines at Kansas State College. Dr. Ralph Canuteson says the ban should be nearly impossible to enforce. "Smooch lines" which usually accompany such events as engagements and pinnings, are definitely contact points for spreading flu viruses and colds. "But who is going to supervise the thousands of students who participate in group activities of this kind?" he asks. Dr. Canuteson says, "You can vaccinate against a flu epidemic, but you can't vaccinate against kissing." Dr. Canuteson does not think colleges and universities should try to control kissing. Kissing is as natural as nature, he says. "Two people drinking out of the same bottle, or sharing a cigarette spread as many germs as if they were kissing. An unprotected cough or sneeze is more dangerous than any of these forms of direct contact. A sneeze or cough spreads a cold more widely." Dr. Canuteson says that kissing will continue in private even if group necking is outlawed. He thinks nature should be left to run its course. He has only a minor word of caution: "Students should be careful who they kiss." Harger, Jones Named To News Hall of Fame The late Charles M. Harger of Abilene and the late Paul A. Jones of Lyons were elected to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame Saturday during Kansas Editors' Day here. At the same time, Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism announced that the journalism library of the late Prof. Emil L Telfel, containing 500 books and approximately 200 pamphlets, has been given to the school by Professor Telfel's widow, Helen. Mr. Harger and Mr. Jones are the 41st and 42nd members of the Hall of Fame. Members, elected by editors who have worked in the state more than 25 years, become eligible three years after their deaths. Mr. Harger, who was 92 at his death April 3, 1955, spent his entire newspaper career in Abilene. He became a cub reporter in 1888 and shortly after became the editor. He worked continuously until four days before his death. In 1954, the William Allen White Foundation gave Mr. Harger its first annual Award for Journalistic Merit. Mr. Harger was a school teacher before entering newspaper work and he was the first journalism teacher at the University of Kansas. He commuted weekly from Abilene for a day of lecturing at KU. Mr. Jones, who died Jan. 4, 1954, at the age of 71, had edited the Lyons Daily News for 36 years. He was famed as a writer of short, and often barbed, paragraphs of editorial comment and as a historian and novelist. Mr. Jones began his news career in Chetopa, Kan., and later became a reporter on papers in Joplin, Mo., and Coffeyville. For each roll of film you leave for fast processing, you receive an additional free. Offer good on 620, 120, 127, 35mm black and white film. FREE FILM 1-Day Photo-Finishing (Black & White Film) ★FAST Movie and 35mm Color Service (By Eastman Kodak) HIXON STUDIO DON CRAWFORD BOB BLAKN 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Engineers, Physicists Mathematicians OCTOBER 8 NAA's On-Campus Interviews Autonetics Division makes automatic control systems for manned aircraft and missiles. Pioneered in space navigation...built inertial guidance system for USS Nautilus and Skate. Columbus Division designed and is building the Navy's most advanced carrier-borne weapon system, the A3J Vigilante, and the most versatile jet trainer, the T2J. The NAA Industrial family has a career for you : Atomics International Division puts the atom to work for power and research in America and abroad. Los Angeles Division is the home of next-generation manned weapon systems—the B-70 and F-108—and America's first manned space ship, the X-15. Rocketdyne Division builds liquid-propellant engines for Atlas, Thor, Jupiter, Redstone missiles, and for the Jupiter "C" that puts the Army's Explorer satellites into orbit. Missile Division is at work on the GAM-77,jet-powered air-to-surface missile for the Air Force's B-52. See Your Placement Office Today For Interview NORTH AMERICAN AVIATION, INC. GOP Chairman To Speak Here Philip K. Kline, Johnson County Republican Central Committee chairman, will address Young Republican representatives from organized houses at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in 301 Bailey Hall. Mr. Kline will discuss the program planned for a Republican party rally at 8 p.m. Oct. 15, in Kansas City, Kan. The cable car was invented in San Francisco in 1873 by Andrew S. Hallidie, who couldn't bear to see horses struggling up the city's steep hills. Monday, Oct. 6, 1958 Research Projects Get Renewed Grants Two research projects directed by Dr. Paul G. Roofe, professor of anatomy, have received continued financial support this year from the U.S. Public Health Service. The study of the transport of polio virus from the intestines to the central nervous system received a second-year grant for $9,570. Dr. Cora Downs, professor of bacteriology, is co-director of the project. University Daily Kansan Page 3 Another grant of $18,623 is for the last of an eight-year program in the study of the appearance of certain enzymes in the developing salamander embryo. Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results The word "maelstrom" came into English as the name of a celebrated whirlpool off the Norwegian coast, the National Geographic Magazine says. LA TROPICANA CLUB Mexican Food Served at 4 p.m. Favorite Beverages Sold 434 LOCUST ST. North Lawrence Under New Management Ivy League Classics in genuine shell The lean, restrained Ivy League look in men's clothing is magnificently complemented by Taylor-Made shoes of genuine shell cordovan. When one considers that a horse supplies only enough of this rare leather to make but two pairs of shoes, its reputation as the aristocrat of leathers is easily understood. Across from Lindley the 1420 Crescent