University Daily Kansan Pare 12 δΈ€ Friday, Sept. 28, 1956 Editors' Day Scheduled For October 6 The name of the 39th member to be elected to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame by editors of Kansas weekly and daily newspapers will be announced Oct. 6 when the newsmen convene on the campus for the annual Kansas Editors' Day. Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information will announce the name of the Kansas editor elected to the Hall of Fame at a general meeting of the group at 11 p.m. in Flint Hall. Maurice C. Lungren, assistant director of the William Allen White Foundation, said that about 200 persons representing over 50 Kansas newspapers are expected to attend. The Hall of Fame, sponsored by the School of Journalism, is an honor roll of editors who made outstanding contributions to their profession and to their state. One new member is added each year from a list of editors deceased at least three years. Special recognition will also be given to another veteran Kansas editor during the general session. The annual Kansas Editors' Dav will begin with registration at 8:30 a.m. in the Memorial Reading Room in Flint Hall. McDill (Huck) Boyd, publisher of the Phillips County Review at Phillipsburg and president of the Kansas Press Assn., will lead the traditional "Wrangle Session" at 9:45 a.m. in Flint Hall. A buffet luncheon will be served to the editors and their families in the Student Union ballroom. The newsmen will receive complimentary tickets for the KU-Colorado football game in the afternoon. The host at the game will be A.C. (Dutch) Lonborg, director of athletics. Advise Walking To Football Games Take a bus to the stadium, but avoid parking your car near there when going to a football game, advises Sgt. Jack Evans of the Lawrence Police Department. About 75 police are required to handle the thousands of cars which pour into Lawrence when KU has a home football game. In addition to the 20-man Lawrence police force, a 20 to 30-man detail from the Kansas City Police Department, plus men from the Kansas State Highway Patrol and the Douglas County Sheriff's Office are needed. "Many motorists find that walking to their car is faster than driving the same distance when streets around the stadium are crowded." Sgt. Evans said. Lawrence has recently completed changes in its street system which will help speed traffic in and out of the city. Alabama and Illinois streets between Ninth and Eleventh Streets have been designated temporary one-way streets, and provide more direct access to the stadium from highways coming into Lawrence. Newman Club Sets Dinner Meeting The Newman Club, Catholic students' organization, will hold a dinner meeting at 5:30 p.m. Sunday in the basement of St. John the Evangelist Church, 1224 Kentucky St. In past years the club has met for breakfast following the 10 a.m. Mass, but because of a change in time, all meetings will be held in the evening. Future plans include the showing of a semi-religious film, initiation of new members, and a talk about John Henry Cardinal Newman, patron of the club, and a hayrack ride. Watkins' X-Ray Program Continues Watkins Memorial Hospital will continue to X-ray all student food handlers next week and will start X-raying all employees and faculty of the University after Monday, said Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of health services. The hospital will start mass influenza vaccination about Nov. 1 to immunize students before the holidays. 'Newscope' Is New KDGU Feature "Newscope," a program designed for a more complete coverage of local, state, national and international news is being offered by KDGU radio this year. Bill Harmon, Topea senior and "Newspose" director, said. The new program consists of five 15-minute news shows beginning at 6:30 p.m. Mondays through Fridays. The programs will include news and special features with student-faculty participation. The first of the weekly programs is "Memo," a Monday evening roundup of significant news stories of the preceding week. "Memo" includes commentaries and analyses of news with occasional dramatization of news events, Harmon said. Oninions" on Tuesdays The Tuesday evening program, "Opinions," features opinions of members of the KDGU news staff and listeners' opinions on campus, state, national and international issues. Commentators for next week are Jim Riley, Ottawa junior, and Kenneth Plumb, Sunflower graduate student. "Newsmakers," the program for Wednesdays, consists of interviews with persons who make news. Local personalities connected with news happening will be interviewed on the program next week. A political news program, "If I Am Elected," is the feature for Thursdays. The program will consist of speeches and debates by the KU Young Republicans and Young Democrats with a five minute special feature on some aspect of government, politics, or voting procedures. The final show of the week is "Sportscope," which will feature interviews with members of KU sports teams and KU sports officials. The programs will also include sports previews for the weekends. Test Lab "Upstairs" Even in aviation's earliest years, it was axiomatic that "proof must come in the air". Out of this, the flying test bed was born . and slowly grew to its present-day stature as an indispensable engineering tool, implemented by an extensive variety of engineering skills. The problems of observing and recording an engine's performance in the air are legion. Most recently, a Boeing B-50 and a North American B-45 were readied as test beds for Pratt & Whitney Aircraft's J-57 and J-75 turbojets. The experimental power plant, contained in a retractable pod in the bomb bay, can be flown to locations where atmospheric conditions permit most efficient testing. The prototype is then extended into the air stream for actual flight work with the regular engines idled, and the job of observing and recording in-flight performance begins. From the first shakedown flight to the test engine's eventual acceptance, invaluable information is gathered. Perhaps the most vital contribution made by P & W A's flying test-bed program is the great reduction in time between initial development and quantity production of engines. Important, too, is the quality and diversity of engineering talent involved in such a program, for it spells out remarkable opportunity for today's engineering student. After exhaustive testing in the highly advanced facilities of Willgoos Laboratory, the mighty P & WA J-75 is run in ground test prior to test-bed flight. The four-engined B-45 bomber (above) allowed test flight at high speeds and altitudes early in the J-75's development. World's foremost designer and builder of aircraft engines PRATT & WHITNEY AIRCRAFT Division of United Aircraft Corporation. EAST HARTFORD 8.,CONNECTICUT.