Page 8 University Daily Kannan Tuesday, Oct. 16, 1956 17 Seniors Accepted Into Teachers' Assn. Seventeen seniors in the School of Education majoring in language arts have been accepted as junior members of the National Council of Teachers of English and the Kansas Asm. of Teachers of English. Junior membership will allow them to get acquainted with their professional subject matter organization before they go out to teach and will allow them to receive all professional publications of the organization at student rates. These include books and monographs, reading lists, film strips and recordings of modern poets reading their own verse. 2 Plays Begin Wednesday Those accepted were Rosemary Neale, Coffeyville; Patricia Moon, Marcia Droegemueller, Independence; Edna Maxwell, Joan Payne, Barbara Peak, Kansas City, Kan; Kathlene Keck, Shawnee; Vince Bilotta, East Orange, N.J.; Carol Curt, Neodesha; Diana Cuadrado, Minneapolis; Charles Howard Lyngan, Togeka; Arthur Lowe Frisbie, Fulton; John Dickson, Atchison; Marvin Carlson, Wichita; Nancy Squyres, Wakeeney; Wynette Thien, Prairie Village; and Howard Hays, Miami, Okla. The city jail, four mirrors, 27 people, one dead Russian, and one contemporary American playwright manage to fuse themselves into what should prove an interesting experiment Wednesday when the Studio Theatre presents its first bill. "The Inspector General," and "Darkness at Noon," at 8 p. m. in Green Hall. The two plays will be presented Wednesday through Saturday. Tickets are available by purchase or Student ID cards at the university Theatre box office in the Student Union lounge. The double bill represents the third acts of each of the plays and is an experiment designed to present the extremes of Russian social and political life. Foreign Service Positions Open A representative of the United States Department of State will be on campus Thursday to tell interested students about career opportunities in the U.S. Foreign Service. Meetings will be held at 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. in 155 Malott A written exam for the Foreign Service will be held Dec. 8. Candidates must be at least 20 years of age and under 31, and a U.S. citizen for nine years. Applications for the 1-day written examination must be received by the board of examiners in Washington, D.C., before midnight, Oct. 26. Successful candidates will receive appointments in any of the 268 embassies, legations and consulates abroad, as well as in the State Department, Washington. Starting salaries are scaled according to the officer's qualifications, experience and age, and range from $4,750 to $5,350 per year. Correction Miss Jean Hill, director of the department of nursing at the KU Medical Center will address pre-ursing club members at 4 p. m. Nov. 7 in 110 Fraser, instead of Wednesday as it was reported to The Daily Kansan. Junior Panshel To Visit Halls Members of Junior Fanhellenic Council will visit Douthart Hall and Miller Hall at 6:30 p.m. today to explain the different phases of sorority life to freshmen women. The group will visit Corbin, North College, Gertrude Sellards Pearson and Sellards halls at 6:30 p.m. Thursday. 'Oliver Twist' To Be Shown The J. Arthur Rank production of "Oliver Twist" will begin the 1856-57 University film series at 7:30 p.m. Friday in Hoch Auditorium. Starring Alec Guinness as Fagin and Robert Newton as Bill Sikes, the film tells the familiar Dicken's story of the little English lad, Oliver Twist, and his many adventures as he goes through life. Admission to the film series is limited to students and University staff and members of their immediate families. Students must present ID cards to be admitted. Marvin Returns From France Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information returned to the University today from a 3-day conference at the University of Strasbourg, France, where he was a member of a 7-man board of consultants in the planning of a journalism education center at that institution. The establishment of several such centers throughout the world was recommended in Paris last April by representatives of 30 nations at a conference on journalism education. At the request of UNESCO, Dean Marvin did a study for this conference on "Journalism Education in the United States," covering the history, philosophies and current practices in that field. The purpose of the center, Dean Marvin said, is inspired by the purpose of UNESCO itself, which is to encourage the development and exchange, internationally, of cultural, educational, and scientific information. The Paris conference decided there should be an emphasis on the exchange of these ideas through regular news channels, Dean Marvin said. The center at Strasbourg has been set up to train journalism teachers for Europe, Africa, and the Middle East. Centers in southeast Asia and Latin America have also been proposed. Dean Marvin said UNESCO hopes to set up a total of five or six such centers in strategic parts of the world. On his return from France, Dean Marvin attended the annual fall meeting of the American Council on Education for Journalism Sunday in Chicago. He is the chairman of that council's accrediting committee. Foreign Students On Soccer Teams European, Latin American and Asian-African teams will play in a soccer tournament the end of this month. The sports committee of the International Club has organized three soccer teams and it is hoped another team can be organized for the tournament. American students may join. Players are practicing on the football field next to Allen Field House Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays. The committee hopes to schedule a match between a pickup team and the international team at Ft. Leavenworth. Kansan Editor To Interview Vice President Ray Wingerson, Topeka junior and editorial editor of the University Daily Kansan, will attend the Intercollegiate Press Seminar, which includes a press conference with Vice President Richard Nixon, Wednesday at Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y. RAY WINGERSON Have You Tried Our Dance Music Service? At 9 p.m. (8 p.m. CST) the press conference with Mr. Nixon will appear over the CBS television network. No control will be placed over the questions, and the conference will observe all protocol governing vice presidential or presidential press conferences. Later Wednesday afternoon Prof. Clinton Rossiter of the Cornell government department will speak to the student newsmen on the phenomenon of American political campaigning, and on the offices of president and vice president. Prof. Rossiter is the author of the book, "The American Presidency." Following Prof. Rossiter's talk, the journalists will hear Mr. Nixon's own press staff describe how a major political campaign is covered. More than 20 colleges and universities, representing almost every section of the country, have indicated that their student newspaper will attend the journalism workshop. The seminar will begin when the college editors meet the vice presidential party at Tompkins County Airport Wednesday afternoon to observe the traditional on-arrival press conference conducted by the professional press. Wingerson left for Ithaca this morning from the Kansas City, Mo. Municipal Airport. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results FOR STUDENTS CAR LUBRICATION $1.00 Mufflers — Tailpipes Installed Free PAGE'S Sinclair Service 6th and Vermont Ph. VI 3-9894 Scotch Sound Recording Tape 7" Reel (1200 feet) $3.50 a Reel Mitchell Scholars To Attend Annual Mathematics Dinner Recipients of the U. S. Mitchell Scholarships will be guests at the annual dinner of the department of mathematics at 6:30 p.m. today in the Kansas Room of the Student Union. E. B. Stouffer, professor emeritus of mathematics, will speak about Dr. Mitchell, former chairman of the department, and his interest in the scholarship program, which he made possible. There are two types of Mitchell scholarships. One is an honor scholarship and the other an honor scholarship for students in mathematics. Mitchell honor scholars this year are David C. May, Penelope A. O'-Daniel, Ronald E. Off, Charles H. Roberman, George Roe, James D. Smarsh, Norma Jo Evans, and Robert Henderson, all freshmen. Their home towns were not available. sucrell honor scholars in mathematics are Charles E. Platz, Hutchinson-sophomore; Patricia J. Viola, Abilene junior; Arthur P. Vogel, Leavenworth sophomore; Wesley R. White, Satanta sophomore; Margaret M. Green, Lawrence senior; Wilfred M. Greenlee, National City, Calif. junior; Charles E. Henning, Ottawa sophomore; David B. Lehmann, Halstead senior, and Beverly Irene Doig, whose home town and classification were not available. Hoover Answers Charge By Adlai Although Herbert Hoover Jr. under secretary of state, he did not intend to talk politics in his speech to Tau Beta Pi national convention Friday night, he did deviate from this promise once. Obviously answering a charge by Democratic Presidential nominee, Adlai Stevenson that the Soviets stopped fighting in Korea because of Stalin's death, the son of the former President said, "The fact is that the Chinese Communists became convinced that this administration meant business, and that unless the fighting was terminated there was real danger that their war-making potential behind the Yalu River might be wiped out." 14 BIG BLANKET MAN makes date with Jockey brand underwear "Whether I'm on a Fall picnic, or a Spring test of the college golf course, I like to feel comfortable," says Roamer A. Kinsey. "That's why I've been going steady with Jockey briefs for years." Roamer has already found out what every young man should know about underwear—there's nothing like the comfort, and casual, at-ease appearance that comes from wearing Jockey briefs! 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