er of is y- m. st ed erk ri- of iily iily He he t- in Tuesday, April 16, 1957 Daily hansan —(Daily Kansan photo) Consul-General Young Han Choo,left, greets International Club President Ola Ojikutu,Nigeria sophomore. Korean Unity Needed' Although Southern Korea has made some progress in rebuilding her war-torn country, complete rebuilding cannot be accomplished unless Korea is reunited. Young Han Choo, Korean consul general from San Francisco, said in an interview Monday. "As long as Korea is divided, it is undeterminable how long it will take the country to build back up after the recent war," Mr. Choo said. "There will be no peace of mind among Koreans and also no peace of mind in the Far East. The Korean people in both Southern and Northern Korea want to be united into one country under a free enterprise economy." Mr. Choo is visiting the University as part of a tour of seven states visiting universities and talking with student advisers about problems Korean students might be having there. North Korea supplies the raw materials necessary for industry. Without a combination of the two, Korea can never again gain back its full strength. Mr. Choo said that the need for unity grows out of the fact that South Korea has most of the agriculture which supplies the major part of the food for both sections. "The Chinese Communists have already violated the terms of the truce," Mr. Choo said. "The U. S. manpower in Southern Korea is sufficient, but they are not equipped with the modern weapons which would be needed if war once again broke out in our country." Mr. Choo said that South Korea does not fear any of her own people in North Korea, but does fear the 400,000 Chinese Communist troops stationed there. Of the exchange student program between Korea and the U.S., Mr. Choo said that although there are 3,000 Korean students now studying in the U.S., few of them are under the direct exchange program. Some students have had the chance to visit the U.S. for a few weeks to see the different industries and points of interest, he said. —(Daily Kansan photo) HUMPTY-DUMPTY had a great fall and so did the hyperbolic paraboloid near Lindley Hall. All the king's horses and all the architecture students won't be able to put it back together. The structure gave way and cracked at two of the three piers which support it at 10:45 this morning. Students testing the strength of the structure applied about 55 pounds of pressure per square foot by hanging cinder blocks from the roof. The hyperbolic paraboloid was designed to support only 20 pounds of pressure per square foot pounds of pressure per square foot. LAWRENCE. KANSAS 54th Year. No.122 Jayhawker Jobs For '57-58 Open Any student wishing to apply for the position of editor or business manager of the Jayhawker, 1957-58, should submit a letter of application to Mr. Karl Klooz, chairman. Jayhawker Advisory Board, 121 Strong, by noon Saturday, April 27. Accompanying the application should be three letters of reference; two from former teachers, either college or high school, and one from a former employer. The applicant must have credit for 24 or more hours of work for the past two semesters and a grade point average of 1.0 or better. The current salary for the editor and for the business manager is $65 a month for 10 months. IFC Adds Delta Sigma Delta Sigma Phi fraternity, formerly known as the Delta Sigma Club, became the 28th member of the Inter-fraternity Council Monday night. Delta Sigma Phi became a colony at KU in April 1956, and according to the IFC rules, remained in this capacity until Monday night. A March vote had been scheduled but a misinterpretation of the rules postponed the balloting. The IFC also elected delegates to the regional IFC-Panhellenic conference at Colorado University, Boulder, Colo., April 28-30. They are John Hibbard, Wichita sophomore, George Smith, Lawrence sophomore, and Norman Grove, Larned junior. Primary Election Deadline Thursday The deadline for petitions and nominations for the April 24 primary elections of Student Council and class officers is midnight Thursday. Tom Griffith, Pratt senior and All Student Council Elections Committee chairman, said that all nominations other than party nominations for the ASC must have a petition signed by 100 students. "Petitioners must also submit a $1 fee for printing charges." Griffith said. "Candidates for class officers, which must be nonpartisan, must submit a petition signed by 25 members of the class concerned and the $1 fee." 5 Relays Parade Entries Withdrawn What started out to be a KU Relays parade with more than 20 floats entered has now dwindled to 15 floats with committee members wary of the remaining entries. Docking, Queens Plan Schedules Tentative schedules for the KU Relays Queens and Gov. George Docking were announced Monday by Relays officials. Gov. Docking will arrive in Lawrence early Friday afternoon and will begin his activities at 4 p.m. by opening the Engineering Exposition with Dean T. DeWitt Carr of the Engineering School and other guests. Governor To Be At Banquet Governor To Be At Banquet Gov. Docking will be, one of the guests at the Relays banquet at 6:30 Friday night in the Student Union Ballroom. At 10 a. m. Saturday he will ride in the Relays parade and will assist in opening the Relays at 1:15 p. m. Judy Anthony, Kansas City, Mo., junior and KU queen, will begin her official duties Wednesday by appearing at a luncheon of the Kansas City, Mo., Chamber of Commerce in the Hotel Muehlebach. The Big Seven queen, Charlene Anthony, Nebraska University, will arrive in Kansas City at 9 a.m. Thursday. Queens On TV Miss Judy Anthony and her attendants will meet Miss Charlene Anthony in Kansas City Thursday moving. At noon the two will appear on KMCB-TV on the Noon program, and on KCMO-TV at 6:25 p.m. At the Interscholastic meet Friday, attendants to the Relavs queen will present medals to the high school winners. The queens will make a brief appearance at the Relays banquet Friday evening. The queens and attendants will be presented at the Relays dance at 10:30 p. m. (5) Both queens and their attendants will ride in the parade starting at 10 a. m. Saturday. A luncheon has been tentatively scheduled for noon Saturday. At 1:15 p. m. the royalty will take their official position at the Relays. see relates to story of governor Docking To Operating Engineering, page 8) **Image 8** (See related story, "Governor Dock- The Governor's Department Six women's houses and 14 men's houses were entered in the float competition Sunday night. Monday the picture changed considerably when three sororities and two fraternities dropped from the parade. Withdrawing their entries were Delta Gamma, Alpha Omicron Pi, and Alpha Delta Pi sororities and Phi Kappa Sigma, and Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternities. "I don't know what we'll do now. It is almost too late to come up with anything." Chairman Jay Dee Ochs, Wichita senior, said Monday night. "I suppose the reason is that this is Easter weekend and many students are going home. "The Rock Chalk Revue also received so much of the student's time last week," he said. 2 Governors Here The one and one-half hour parade, as it stood this morning, is composed of approximately 12 cars driven by KU basketball team members and carrying the two Relay queens and the KU candidates, and a convertible carrying Gov. George Docking and Missouri Gov. James T. Blair Jr. Leading the parade, which will march through the Lawrence business district at 10 a.m. m. Saturday, will be Joe Skillman, chief of the campus police. First, second and third place trophies will be awarded in the men's and women's divisions and will be announced Saturday. The trophies are donated by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. The services will also be represented by two Army, one Navy and three Air Force ROTC units. The AFROTC drum and bugle corps and the Angel Flight, women's drill team, will also participate. Five nearby high school bands and the KU marching band will also participate. The color guard for the parade will be eight National Guardsm who will be dressed in Civil War uniforms. Women's floats will be Corbin, North College, and Gertrude Sellards Pearson Halls. Men's floats will be Delta Tau Delta, Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Chi, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Triangle, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Nu, Carruth-O'Leary, Delta Sigma, Delta Chi, and Alpha KappaLambda. Haskell Institute will also have a float. 97% Of University Budget Granted Despite the ballyhoo about the last state Legislature being a divided do-nothing group, the University came away from the session with most of its requests granted. Out of a total of $12,256,344 requested by the University, the legislature appropriated $11,781,-949. almost 97 per cent. The only large request that was completely refused was for $352,000 to remodel Blake Hall for extension services. However, some of the requests were cut slightly. The next largest cut was from the appropriation for the music and dramatics arts building. The University asked for $400,000 and received $300,000. With the $100,000 cut out, an organ for the building was deleted from plans. Repairs Cut Evidently the Legislature thought KU buildings were in fine shape, as a total of $261,000 in repairs, including $110,000 for the music and dramatic arts building, was cut to $105,000. Of this, $30,000 will go for some stone work on Dye Museum and $75,000 for site planning (finishing sidewalks, a compressor, etc.) of the music and dramatic arts building. "Perhaps we will have board sidewalks leading to the building for awhile," he said. "Something important will have to be cut from the list of things needed to finish the building," said Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University. The University received $50,000 for a planning appropriation for an addition to Snow Hall. A $50,000 planning appropriation for a new engineering school was turned down. The legislature declared that the money was available, however, The University received $1,300,000 appropriation for work on the new business school. It will be divided between the next two years, with $600,000 cominga next year and $700,-000 the year after. Budget Raised and merely postponed the project until the first session of the next legislature. Despite the subtractions, the operating budget rose almost $1,000,000 from this year's $10,825,733. This includes auxiliary enterprises such as health service, dorms, the printing department and summer activities such as the music camp. The University also obtained the passage of four bills which affected the life of the University: 2. empowers the Board of Regents to raze Locksley Hall buildings and Sunnyside apartments as needed. 1. is for parking violation enforcement. 3. enables the Board to sell land to Delta Tau Delta fraternity for an addition to the fraternity house. 4. authorizes commissioning of campus police by the city. Add to these apropriations the raise in salary the Legislature gave without blinking an eye and you find the University and lawmakers agreeing pretty much on all important school needs.