Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Feb. 15, 1961 Campus Chest Meets Expenses The Campus Chest was described last night as having tremendous momentum, with major expenses already met. "Brubeck is paid for and we have 800 excellent seats left. If these are bought, we will have a sell out." Douglas Mayor, Kansas City junior and chairman of the Campus Chest drive, said: The Campus Chest is paying Brubeck $3,000 for the one-night performance, according to Mayor. THE REMAINING TICKETS are being sold at the information booth between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. "I hope the student body realizes the role they are playing on the campus and across the nation." Mayor said. "The goal has already been set and the money will go all over the world. We have people who are less fortunate than we counting on us." A number of groups are helping with the drive. THE INTERFRATERNITY Pledge Council placed an old car in front of Flint Hall yesterday and began charging 50 cents for a swing at it with a sledge hammer. All money received above the cost of the car is to go to the Campus Chest. According to Mayor, the cost of the car was met yesterday. Members of Phi Epsilon Kappa, professional physical education fraternity, swung sledge hammers collectively this morning in a group effort to smash the car. Mayor said the Campus Chest committee was contacting the fraternities and sororities to see how many would participate in a "tea and rice" dinner program to raise funds. These items would be served instead of the regular meal and the money saved on food donated to Campus Chest. OTHER GROUPS helping are the Jay James, who will usher at the Dave Brubeck concert Sunday and Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, which built the Magoo figure in front of Flint Hall. Mayor said that four first place trophies would be awarded for the highest per capita donations. The four divisions are: fraternities, sororities, men's residence halls and women's residence halls. Double Feature Today in Bailey The Visual Education Series, Film Features of Fact and Fiction, will present a double feature at 4 p.m. today in 3 Bailey. The two films will be, "Six-Gun to Sixty-One" and "Star 34." "Six-Gun to Sixty-One" was produced by Robert D. Brooks, Lyons, and J. William Walker, Terre Haute, Ind., both graduate students in radio-television. The film indicates the growth of Kansas from the time when it was only a territory up to the present. It is narrated by Prof. Allen Crafton of the speech and drama department and the folk music is performed by Prof. Charles H. Oldfather Jr. of the School of Law. The other film, "Star 34" illustrates the formation of Kansas, the thirty-fourth state. Russia Releases Research Rockets MOSCOW — (UPI) — Soviet Russia launched a "series of geophysical rockets" equipped to make special studies of the total eclipse of the sun today, the official Soviet news agency Tass reported. It said photographs of the eclipse taken from "geophysical stations" sent into space by the rockets were returned to earth by parachute. The announcement said: The simultaneous launching of a series of geophysical rockets, equipped with apparatus for special investigations, was effected in the Soviet Union about noon Feb. 15 (6 a.m. Lawrence time) in the zone of the total solar eclipse." Quill Club Takes 34 New Members The Quill Club has selected 34 new members. They were selected on the basis of manuscripts submitted before the Fall, 1960 Quill magazine was issued. The next issue of Quill will be on sale next week. The new members who have articles in the coming issue are Sidney Berger, Brooklyn, New York, graduate student; Janet Bramel, Wichita sophomore; Mimi Wood, Junction City senior; Donald Eulert, Lawrence graduate student; and Cliff Caruthers. The other new members are: Pat Koch, Haven freshman; Evan Tatchell, Topeka junior; Jon Shaffer, Iola sophomore; Dan Ralston, Kansas City freshman; Sally Douglas; David Woolsey, Cincinnati junior; Gerald Prager, Cincinnati, Ohio; junior; Monte Seewald, Brooklyn, New York; senior; Marilyn Mitchell, New Orleans, La. freshman; Barbara Care, Independence, Mo. freshman; Independence, Mo. freshman; Mal T Streater, New York, N. Y., graduate student; William Gordon; Susan Lawrence, Kansas City, Mo. senior; Colleen Carey, Irwin, Chanute medical student; Sandy Grubb, Mission junior; J. L. Porter, Kansas City, Mo.; senior; Robert Eberly, Salina sophomore; james Dawner, Lausanne, Lawrence junior; Brian Liebst, Lawrence junior; John丹肇barger, Concordia freshman; Ellen Humphrey, Baytown, Tex., sophomore; james Beuder, Michael Smith, Bartlesville, Okla., freshman; Paul Holt, Caney freshman; and Tom Eaton, Wichita junior. Wrong Number COLOGNE, Germany —(UPI)— Bruno Stenschke, whose telephone number a local television station wrongly gave as that of a beautiful woman, complained he's tired of receiving hundreds of calls from men who hang up agrily. Try the Kansan Want Ads I T The relationship of bilateral and patrilineal kinship ties to politics in non-western countries was discussed by Carl Lande, assistant professor of political science, at the Humanities Forum last night. "Patrilineal ties represent security for the clan when there is no central government." Prof. Lande said. "However, there is great rivalry among clans. China once had many problems with the bloody fights among its established lines. BILATERAL TIES were traced through both the maternal and paternal relatives. Women were often rulers in this system, he said. Lande Discusses Kinship Tie In Non-Western Politics Prof. Lande said patrilineal ties traced descent through the male line. Land was willed to males and they were the unquestioned rulers. Females had very few rights, he said. "Children in bilateral lines learn to cultivate useful relatives and ignore others," he said. "There are no strong customs to weld the group together as in the partilineal system where ties represent security." Prof. Lande then discussed Africa and the unrest there. He said Lumumba dominated, or at least tried to dominate, the other tribes in Africa. As a result, they were intimidated and revolted, Lande said. "A PAPER found in the Congo recently, which may or may not be actually true, stated the 'code' of the Bakusu Tribe, to which Lumumba belonged," Prof. Lande said. The paper, 'A Parchment Every Bakusu Should Own and Know By Heart', stated that each Bakusu tribe should show their nobility, intimidate others, remember the white man is an enemy and pretend only to do good deeds for those easily deceived," he said. THE BAKUSUS planned to put their tribe members in key positions, and eventually dominate every other tribe, he said. Prof. Lande also discussed the kinship and politics in Burma. "There were no rules concerning which child would rule, so there was chaos when the ruler died," Prof. Lande said. DOING IT THE HARD WAY byhoff (GETTING RID OF DANDRUFF, THAT IS!) easier 3-minute way for men: FITCH Men, get rid of embarrassing dandruff easy as 1-2-3 with FITCH! In just 3 minutes (one rubbing, one lathering, one rinsing), every trace of dandruff, grime, gummy old hair tonic goes right down the drain! Your hair looks hand- FITCH LEADING MAN'S SHAMPOO somer, healthier. Your scalp tingles, feels so refreshed. Use FITCH Dandruff Remover SHAMPOO every week for positive dandruff control. Keep your hair and scalp really clean, dandruff-free! Weekdays 8 a.m. - 11:30 p.m. Sundays 1 p.m. - 11:30 p.m. Bowling Designed With the University in Mind OPEN BOWLING AT ALL TIMES "The Jay Bowl is never closed to individual university bowlers, even during league play. Try lunch time bowling and date bowling especially for weekends." NOTE: FACULTY & STAFF LEAGUE BOWLING TUES. 4 P.M., WED. 6:30 P.M. Contact Jay Bowl Now for Details 2 Receive Awards For Zoology Grades Charles A. Leone, professor of zoology, last night presented two awards for the highest grades in the animal biology class. Leo M. Pivonka, La Crosse junior received the Spring 1960 award and Marilyn Sue Hardisty, Salina sophomore, was honored for the Fall 1960 class. Where the Antelope Roam CHEYENNE, Wyo. — (UPI)— Antelope hunters apparently were still fairly plentiful in major antelope areas of Wyoming during 1960. Figures released by the Wyoming Fish Department show that 36,171 permits were issued in the last year. 835 Mass. 1144 Indiana SLIM COLUMN, UNDERSTATED — to blissfully accessorize. Luxurious matched leather belt carves a "dropped" waistline camouflage. Black. Corn, or Green in nubbed acetate rayon and cotton. Sizes 5 to 15 $22.95