Daily hansan World maica En- nesday lector peaper elector Mu- In- A- ear Mc Can dica as is n the ifornia LAWRENCE, KANSAS Thursday, Oct. 11, 1956 54th Year, No. 22 —(Daily Kansan photo) Now Hair This: Yankees Won If you see a student around the campus with a cowboy hat on his head during the next few weeks, the chances are it will be Al Feifer, Brooklyn sophomore who lost most of his hair in a bet on the World Series Thursday. The winner of the bet was Marion Boldt, Bushton senior, a Yankee fan. Had the Dodgers won, Boldt was to have grown "ducktails" and sideburns such as Feifer formerly wore. However Feifer was reluctant to get the crew haircut as his penalty. So the pledge class of his fraternity jumped him and held him down while Boldt snipped away. (See picture. That's Feifer bein gheld down. Boldt, back of him, is wielding the clippers.) Ironically, the haircut turned out so well that now Boldt has started cutting the hair of his other fraternity brothers—at their request, and for cash. State Needs Democrats Docking Tells Students "Kansas is in a mess and we have to turn it over to the Democrats," Robert Docking. Douglas County chairman, told about 150 Young Democrats at the membership picnic Wednesday. "The aim of the Kansas Democratic Party is to recapture the people's confidence in state government which has been shattered by personalities," Mr. Docking said. "The public office as a public trust has been violated. Two years ago the 'old guard' Republicans elected a liberal governor. But because of false issues and character assassination, the 'old guard' were defeated in their primary. They now offer a Kansas who is a representative 'old guard' politician and an obedient servant." "The Republican rose-colored glasses which Kansas has been wearing for 18 years are about to be taken off," Mr. Docking said. Larry Worrall, Kansas City, Kan. third-year law student, president of the Young Democrats, announced that all students who wish to take part in the first all-Lawrence political poll should meet at the Lawrence Democratic headquarters at 4 p.m. today. This will be house-tohouse poll to estimate the number of Democratic and Republican votes that will be cast in the November election. Political Issues On KUOK Today Charles Oldfather, associate professor of law, sang original ballads satirizing politics. Two KU students will discuss 1956 campaign issues on "The Political Eye." 6:30 p.m. today on KUOK. Larry Worrall, Kansas City law student and president of Young Democrats; and Richard Billings, Russell senior and president of Young Republicans, will question each other on foreign policy and wage increases. Conference For Student Teachers Set Fifty-five School of Education's student teachers will meet Friday and Saturday for their midterm conference. These students take no class work but teach in elementary and secondary schools within a 50-mile radius of Lawrence. John Schick. Kansas City junior, is moderator of the 15 minute program. The principle sessions of the conference will be panel discussions in the two divisions—elementary and secondary—from 1 to 2:30 p.m. Friday. The topic will be "What the Last Three Weeks of the Student Teaching Session Should Accomplish." Visiting panel members in the elementary section are Miss Thelma Carpenter of Prairie Elementary School, Johnson County, and Miss Elizabeth Walters of Porter Elementary, Johnson County. Students on the panel are Judy Weeks, Bonner Springs senior, and Jane Joslin, Lawrence senior. The moderator is Dr. Robert* Ridgway, assistant professor of education. Panel Members In the secondary division the panmembers are Jess Rose and Miss Wilma White of Shawnee-Mission High School, Johnson County. Film Schedule The film, "Planning for Personal end Professional Growth" will be shown at 9 a.m. Friday. Two groups discussions will be held from 11 to 11:30 a.m. Student teachers will meet with individual supervisors from 3 to 5 pm.. Saturday two discussion groups will discuss "Integrating Activities in the Elementary Curriculum" for elementary teachers, and "Tests and Other Evaluative Devices" and "Reporting Pupil Progress" for secondary teachers. A meeting with individual sponsors will be held from 10:30 a.m. to noon. Pianist To Play In Puerto Rico Mrs. Angelica Morales von Sauer, visiting professor of piano, will leave Lawrence Friday for a 10-day trip to Puerto Rico where she will open the concert season in San Juan and Ponce. The invitation to present the concert in her native country came from the Pro-Arte Musical Society of Puerto Rico and is considered a high honor. Mrs. Morales performed in the country last June and the Latin and Central American people are usually a bit reticent to ask an artist back in such a short time, she explained. "It is really quite a compliment," she said. Her program will include works of Bach, Schumann, Schubert, Chopin, Ravel, Saint-Saens and some of the compositions of her late husband. One of the featured numbers will be the Schumann selection as this year is the 100th anniversary of the composer's death. Mrs. Morales will return to the University Oct. 25. Jay Janes Hold Pledging For 23 Pledging ceremonies for the 23 new members of Jay Janes, upperclass women's pep and service organization, were held Wednesday in the Pine Room of the Student Union. The Jay Janes serve not only as a pep club striving to promote good sportsmanship, but also as a service organization for the University, Janice Mietzner, Kansas City, Kan., senior and club president, told the group. Famous Sculptor Joins KU Faculty Bernard "Pocc" Frazier, a KU graduate whose sculpture has attained nation-wide recognition, is now sculptor-in-residence at the University. BERNARD (POCO) FRAZIER Convocation At 9:20 Friday Roswell Perkins, assistant secretary of the Department of Health. Education, and Welfare and Rep. Richard Bolling (D-Mo) will be the speakers. Mr. Perkins, representing the Republican, was one of the youngest men ever appointed to a cabinet position and Mr. Bolling, representing the Democrats, has been a member of the House of Representatives for eight years. They will speak about 20 minutes each on election issues. Political emphasis week will open with an all-University convocation at 9:20 a. m. Friday in Hoch Auditorium with speakers representing both parties. Friday morning classes will be conducted on this schedule: 8 o'clock classes 8-8:30 9 o'clock班 8:40-9:10 10 o'clock class 10:40-11:10 11 o'clock class 11:20-11:50 Taylor To Address Deans' Convention Emily Taylor, dean of women, will speak on "Where Do We Go From Here" for the closing address of the Kansas Association of Deans of Women and Girls Advisers annual convention Oct. 26 and 27 at Kansas State College. Other speakers will be Herbert Wunderlich, dean of students at Kansas State and Dr. Walton Cole, president of the Kansas Mental Health Society. Dean Wunderlich will speak on "Freedom and Responsibility-Unchanging Values in a Changing World," and Dr. Cole's topic will be "Implications of Freedom and Responsibility for Mental Health." About 60 persons are expected to attend from Kansas colleges and high schools. Men May Apply For New Scholarships Ten $100 scholarships for the spring semester and five $200 scholarships for the fall semester of 1957 have been made available by the De Forrest Piazzek scholarship fund for "needy and worthy young men at KU." Scholarship awards will be determined by the General Scholarship committee. Applications may be made in the Office of Aids and Awards, 222 Strong Hall. Weather Partly cloudy and warmer this afternoon with southerly winds 25 to 35 miles per hour. Partly cloudy continued warm and windy tonight and Friday. Low tonight in the 60s. High Friday to 90. In announcing the appointment of the former Jayhawker track star to the newly created position, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy expressed his pleasure that Mr. Frazier has returned to his alma mater and that he will continue his creative work at KU. Since leaving his position as director of Philbrook Art Museum in Tulsa, Okla., in 1950, Frazier has devoted full time to professional sculpture commissions, including the bronze door panels for the KU War Memorial Campanile. Although he has achieved considerable success through his works which are now in private museum collections, he feels that his important field is architecture and structural sculpture. As sculptor-in-residence, Mr. Frazier also will contribute to the teaching of the new major in sculpture, leading to the bachelor of fine arts degree, and will assist in the department of architecture. Active In Track Born on a western Kansas farm near Athol in Smith county, Mr. Frazier adapted native clays and stones to modest sculpture at an early age without art training. At the University, where he was graduated in 1929 with a major in design, he won six individual championships in the old "Big Six" conference and established new conference records at two-mile and five-mile distances. He was elected captain of the varsity track and cross-country teams and was active in campus affairs. In 1938 Mr. Frazier received a grant from the Andrew Carnegie Foundation for assignment as sculptor-in-residence for creative research at KU. He remained here until 1944, establishing the first regular classes in sculpture and participating in the organization of the occupational therapy curriculum. At Philbrook, he inaugurated an annual competition for Indian painters, with prizes up to $350 and numerous purchases, and an art jury composed of a majority of Indians. 2 LHS Students Killed In Crash Hinderliter, who moved to Lawrence a year ago from Ottawa, was a senior, and Shirk, a lifelong resident of Lawrence, was a junior at the high school. Both youths worked in the concession stand of the Granada Theatre. Two Lawrence high school students were killed instantly and a third escaped serious injury at 7 am. today when the car in which they were riding collided with a Santa Fe passenger train on a Douglas County road about five miles northwest of Lawrence. Dead are Eldon Hinderliter, 16, of 1209 West 21st St., a son of Mrs. Pauline DeGraff; and Ronnie Shirk, 17, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence E. Shirk, 1230 Connecticut St. John Miller, son of John Miller, Lawrence fire chief, and driver of the vehicle, suffered a laceration of the foot and body bruises. All three were thrown from the car. The two dead youths suffered multiple compound fractures, Dr. Byron Walters, Douglas County coroner, said today. Douglas County Sheriff, Billy Hodson, said late this morning it had not been determined whether the car plummeted into the side of the train or was hit after ascending the tracks from the incline at the crossing. Sheriff Hodson planned to question Miller later today. Sheriff Hodson said the youths had been duck hunting in the area shortly before the accident. Several other boys notified officials of the accident after they heard Miller's cries for help.