Daily Hansan Friday, Oct. 12, 1956 for instant distists; who allet george liberal speak than all of ingest 54th Year, No. 23 ICE Queen,LMOC Entries Picked For SUA Fete LAWRENCE, KANSAS Candidates for Queen and for Little Man on Campus have been selected by organized houses for the Student Union Activities Carnival to be held from 4:30 p.m. to 12:30 p.m.Saturday, Oct. 20. The Queen of the SUA Carnival will be chosen by campus police from the three finalists with the largest number of votes. Each ticket may be bought for 10 cents and can be used as a ballot. The Little Man on Campus is chosen only by the ticket votes. Queen candidates are Margie Kazz, Leavenworth senior, Chi Omega; Peggy Garrison, Philipsburg sophomore, Alpha Chi Omega; Raudcill Hodson, Ottawa sophomore, Alpha Delta Pi; Marilyn Wiebke, Merriam sophomore, Delta Gamma; Sandra Sowers, Betheosa, Md., sophomore, Alpha Omicron Pi, and Barbara Taylor, Prairie Village sophomore, Kappa Alpha Theta. Nancy Evans, Kansas City, Kan, sophomore, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Mary Sue Poppe, Kansas City, Kans. sophomore, Phi Beta Phi; Anne lemoine, Lincolnville senior, Sigma Kappa; Barbara Reinhardt, Prairie Village sophomore, Gamma Phi Beta; Judy Weimer, Clay Center sophomore, Alpha Fhi. Shirley Hand, Kansas City, Mo, sophomore, Delta Delta Delta; Luce- tire Gable, Kansas City, Mo, sophomore, Gertrude Sellards Pearson; Bonnie Becker, Topeka freshman, Gertrude Sellards Pearson; Kathy Deuser, Kansas City, Kan, freshman, North College; Ellen Grady, Los Angeles, Calif., Freshman, Corbin, and Joyce Waters, Salina freshman, Watkins Hall. Candidates for Little Man on Campus are Gary Skinner, Chanute senior, Lambda Chi Alpha; Ronald Britz, Mission sophomore, Phi Kappa Tau; Gene and Gerry Hahn, Emporia seniors, Phi Delta Theta; Larry Swinson, Pratt sophomore, Pi Kappa Alpha; Kent Pelz, Park Ridge, Ill., sophomore, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, and Jim Hoffman, Marvysville junior, Delta Chi. John Pace, Independence, Mo, senior, Kappa Sigma; Jerry Wiliams. Olathe freshman, Phi Kappa Psi; Glen MacHahon, Kansas City, Kan., senior, Alpha KappaLambda; Wilt Chamberlain, Philadelphia, Pa., sophomore, Carruth O'Leary, and Jerry Konop, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, Varsity House. Tickets Being Sold For 'Damn Yankees' All persons wishing to attend the musical "Damn Yankees" Oct. 27 in Kansas City, Mo., are invited to buy reservations through the University Players. Private cars will leave Green Hall at 6:30 p. m. Oct. 27. Cost of the transportation will be fifty cents. Reserved ticket prices for the musical are $3.36 for the center balcony, and $2.20 for the side balcony. The reservation deadline is Sunday. Those interested should call Ted Teichgraeber, Emporia junior, at VI 3-6812 for information and reservations. Weather Fair and warm this afternoon and tonight except partly cloudy and turning cooler northwest tonight. Southerly winds 25 to 35 miles per hour this afternoon. Partly cloudy and warm Saturday except cooler northwest portion. Low tonight 60s except 50 northwest. High Saturday 75 northway to 80s elsewhere. Murphy Nominated To Education Post Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy has been nominated chairman of the executive committee by the American Council on Education (ACE), an unconfirmed wire service story reported today. Election is automatic after nomination, Dean George B. Smith of the University told the University Daily Kansas. The chancellor is scheduled to return today from Chicago, where the ACE meeting was held. He also attended meetings of the Ford Foundation's Fund for the Advancement of Education, in New York City. Hill Debates Open Saturday Five teams have registered for the KU intramural debate tournament to be held at 8 a.m. Saturday in Green Hall. "The purpose of this tournament is to give undergraduate students the opportunity to enjoy debating without requiring them to spend as much time as is usually expected of those who participate in varsity debate activities," Kim Giffin, associate professor of speech said. "We do not expect these teams to be expert or experienced debaters, but we do expect them to have fun and to gain some experience in oral argumentation." The topic for debate will be the national intercollegiate debate topic, "Resolved: That the United States should discontinue direct economic aid to foreign countries." The following teams are general: Benjamin Grant, Osage City junior and Robert Murphy, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; John Garrett, Pittsburg sophomore and Scott Stanley Jr., Kansas City junior; Rex Fowler, Gushland, Mo., and Larry Kevan, Kansas City, freshman; John Patten, Kansas City freshman and Marshall Crowther, Salina sophomore, and Young Snodgrass, Arkansas City sophomore and Gary Conklin, Hutchinson junior. PiKA To Hold Memorial Services Memorial services will be hek at 4 p.m. Sunday in Danforth Chapel by Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity for a member who died after an accident in Lake Michigan this summer. Charles Glasgow Ferguson III, Leavenworth freshman during the 1954-55 school year, was injured when he dived from a lifeguard tower into Lake Michigan July 14. He died 16 days later. Tau Beta Pi To Initiate 38 At 5:30 Tonihgt Tau Beta Pi, national engineering honor society, will initiate 17 honorary members nad 21 student pledges at 5:30 p.m. today in the Student Union. The initiation banquet will be held at 7:30 p.m. The honorary initiates include Herbert Hoover Jr., under secretary of state, and Kenneth A. Spencer, president of the Spencer Chemical Co. Mr. Hoover and Mr. Spencer will be the featured speakers at the banquet. The speeches of Herbert Hoover, Jr., United States under secretary of state, and Kenneth A. Spencer, president of the Spencer Chemical Co., before an initiation banquet of the Tau Beta Pi national convention, will be broadcast over KANU at 7:30 tonight in the Student Union. Latins To Perform Native Songs, Dances KANU To Carry Banquet Speeches "A Short Trip to Latin America," will be a showing of color slides of the countries represented on the campus. The entire group of performers Songs of Cuba, Mexico and Puerto Rico will be presented by Latin American and North American students. The cha-cha, rumba, samba and la bamba dances will be demonstrated. The special events branch of Voice of America has requested a tape of the program. Singers, dancers and musicians from Latin America will appear in "Latin American Night" at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union. The program is the first of the series sponsored by the International Club to feature various regions of the world. In addition to Mr. Hoover and Mr. Spencer, the honorary initiates are W. H. Shears Jr., Hutchinson contractor; Louis G. Feil, U. S. Engineers Corps, Kansas City, Mo.; O. K. Johnson, electrical construction, Topeka; Theordore J. Cambern, of Howard, Tammen, and Bergendoff, Kansas City, Mo.; James Ting-shun Wang, graduate student; G. A. Dunwoody, Iola architect. George M. Beal, chairman of the department of architecture; George H. Larson, chairman of the department of agricultural engineering, Kansas State College; LeRoy E. Colburn, J. F. Pritchard and Co.; Albert W. Grohne, chief engineer, Carter-Waters Corp.; Arthur E. Inman, director of operations, National Gypsum Co. Waldo R. Kell, assistant vice president, Raymond Concrete Concrete Pile Co.; Kelsey C. Matthews, Burns and McDonnell, Kansas City, Mo.; E. J. McBride, chairman, department of mechanical engineering; Alonzo G. May, of Lutz and May. Students Maurice W. Wildin, Hutchinson; Charles P. Colver, Coffeyville; Donald H. Lalaudear, Fresh Meadows, N.Y.; Ronald H. Herman, Kansas City, Mo.; Norman I. Burnett, Lawrence; Fred G. Rueter, (Continued On Page 8) Students to be initiated: will sing Latin Amreican songs to conclude the program. The public is invited to a dance session which follows the program. Latin American dances will be taught. Refreshments of cafe, mate and galletas will be served. Thirty students are enrolled this semester from 10 Latin American countries. They are from Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico, Panama and Venezuela. Bolling, Perkins Present Issues The issues seemed clearly drawn for at least the moment this morning, as speakers representing both political parties set forth arguments and proclaimed party achievements at an all-University convocation in Hoch Auditorium. The convocation formally inaugurated political emphasis week at KU. Draft Issue Is Discussion Topic A universal military training program was among subjects discussed by Roswell Perkins, assistant secretary of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, and Rep. Richard Bolling (D-Mo) at a coffee in the Union this morning. Rep. Bolling called for a review of the whole program. He said the administration is "making military service less attractive by knocking off the fringes, such as special prices at the PX." Mr. Perkins said the present concern over removing the draft is a highly emotional thing and unless Stevenson presents a reasonable alternative, he did not feel it warranted making the draft a political issue. Rep. Bolling called the present foreign policy "nothing but warmed-over Marshall Plan." He said the emphasis on military alliances was fine in developed areas, but in undeveloped areas, economic assistance was needed before they could support military alliances. Want Suburban Vote Both men agreed on the importance of the surburban vote in the coming election. Mr. Perkins said he felt the surburban vote reflected a new trend in the country, as people are looking for a government sympathetic toward the expansion of private effort and initiative. When asked if perhaps Adlai Stevenson's hydrogen bomb proposal might hurt U. S. prestige overseas, Rep. Bolling said he did not think so, as he believed the U. S. had lost ground in the last few years "since the Congress captured foreign policy." Business Meeting Here Saturday Fifty teachers of commercial subjects will attend a 1-day business education conference here Saturday. The teachers, from high schools junior colleges and colleges, will hear Dr. Arthur Allee of Houston University speak on "The Improvement of Instruction in Office Machines" at the morning meeting. A former University faculty member, Donald A. Boege, who is now office manager of the Bendix Aviation Corporation, Davenport, Iowa, will be moderator for a panel on "Improvement of Business Graduates." Boege taught at K.U. from 1951-54. Moore To Attend Coast Conferences Dr. Alfred H. Moore, assistant professor of education, will take part in two West Coast conferences on education for the mentally retarded. Dr. Moore will be a consultant at a one-day conference in Eugene, Ore., Oct. 22. From Oct. 23 to Oct. 27 he will attend the annual convention of the National Assn. for Retarded Children in Seattle, Wash., where he will participate in a teacher workshop. Speaking for the Republicans, Roswell B. Perkins, assistant secretary of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, told students and faculty that the GOP is the part yof the present, and that the issues of today are its concern, not the battles of the past. Cites President's Speech Secretary Perkins quoted President Eisenhower's state of the union speech in listing the three essentials of his party's platform—"Peace, prosperity, progress." Sec. Perkins listed as the first accomplishment of the Republican administration, the end of the Korean War. He also cited the negotiations that resulted in the Austrian peace agreement, the freeing of Iran from communist domination, the meetings in Geneva which brought about a better world atmosphere, the Untied States' part in the SEATO conference which brought together the free nations of southeast Asia, the esigning of 25 nations in the Atoms for Peace pact, and the ebuilding of a more powerful and improved military. He pointed to what he called an obvious prosperity as the second part of the GOP's campaign slogan. High Level of Prosperity "Under the Republicans there has been more earning, more production, more building, and more investment than ever before. The American people are enjoying an unparalleled level of prosperity," he said. Rep. Richard Bolling (D-Mo), the author of a recent article in the New Republic entitled, "Who Killed the School Aid Program?" followed Sec. Perkins's statistic-quoting speech with a less formal, often humerous blast at what he called "President Eisenhower's ratification of the New and Fair Deals." "After ratifying Democratic policies of the 1930's, now the Republicans are trying to steal the positive accomplishments of a Democratic congress," Bolling said. "Eisenhower glibly articulates and proposes legislation, and sometimes he supports it and sometimes he doesn't. The facts of this type of leadership, if it is leadership, can be seen in the defeat of federal aid to schools. After claiming that the 3-year extension of reciprocal trade was most urgent, his own Republican congress voted against the President, his party and his program." Bolling said. Cites School Aid Cities School Aid Rep. Bolling said that it was the Republican members of Congress who attached a civil rights amendment to the federal school aid bill and that it was this amendment that eventually killed that piece of legislation. He concluded by asking his audience to look beneath glib phrases and Madison Avenue politics, to see the failure of the Eisenhower administration. Libraries Director To Talk At DePauw Robert Vosper, director' of libraries will speak at DePauw University. Greencastle, Ind., Friday, Oct. 19, preceding the dedication of DePauw's new Roy O. West Library. Mr. Vosper will discuss "The Place of the Library in a Liberal Arts College" at a dinner for the University trustees and staff members, visiting librarians and college officials. The formal dedication of the library will take place Oct. 20.