Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, June 13, 1958 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Education Is Worth Cost If we are going to raise the educational level of the nation and the state of Kansas,we must stop and consider how much it is going to cost us. The two main things to consider are the educational plants and the teachers. To really do a good job in educating our youth the necessary equipment must be available. This is especially true along the more scientific lines of the educational system which is the part now receiving the most publicity, If a boy is going to learn physics he must have the necessary equipment to learn how the physical sciences work. It isn't enough to tell him how they work. He must be shown and allowed to do it himself. To make sure that our children are getting the best education possible we must make sure that they are getting the benefits of the best teachers available. If that means paying them a salary comparable to what they can make in industry, then we must pay it. What is more important to the future of our country than the quality of people our school systems put out? Where else could we make a better investment in the future prosperity of our land? Gary Hale Quotes From The News NEW YORK—Mrs. Paul Edward Bell, department store secretary who won top honors and a $25,000 check in the annual Singer Grand National "Sew Off." "We certainly can use the money. We don't own our home, and we need a new car." WASHINGTON—State Department spokesman Lincoln White, noting that the United States has been giving military aid to middle eastern nations which have shown their resolve to defend their territorial integrity and independence, "Under these programs the United States has been supplying certain There will be about three thousand of us on the Hill during the growing season while the All Student Council recesses. For all practical purposes, therefore, we constitute an anarchy. Some people might take the lack of any governing organization as an indication that we are all incompetent, unfit to hold office. They would say that we will spend the summer pursuing illicit goals without a proper law-making body to guide us. They believe that the predatory instincts in man take over when the restraining influence of government is abandoned. But we who take Mt. Oread as our summer resort (out **last** resort) know better. We know items of military equipment to Iraq, Lebanon, Jordan and other countries. Among the military items being sent to these countries are limited numbers of tanks and aircraft." We who are verdant throughout the year learn other items during the summer besides the traditional scholarly subjects. We learn, for example, that a University can function without student government. We summer session people are a different breed from the hum-drum student who follows the ordinary routine of producing academic fruit during only three quarters of the year; we bloom constantly. ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. — French writer Pierre De La Salle, replying to reporters who asked him why he had kept his three-year-old marriage to model-actress Suzy Parker a secret. "I didn't want to reveal my private life." Another summer session got under way without ceremony, opening convocation, or the other ballyhoo which normally signals the opening of a University term. Texas refineries in 1956 manufactured approximately 36 per cent of the nation's kerosene supply. We Survive Without The ASC —John Waite Bowers They would have us believe that during the regular school term the faculty would never square dance with the students, Jayhawkers would refuse to attend high school band concerts, the campus queen would not be caught dead attending a five-year-old movie at a Lawrence theatre with a penniless and pedestrian fellow student. They may be right. Our sceptical friends object. They say that the low summer crime rate and the high summer marriage rate are not the result of enlightened lack of government but of an esprit de corps born of desperation. They tell us that we are comrades in misery which in fact is not friendship but a grasping at straws. that students have been summering here for years without benefit of government. We know that during these months when most of the organized houses are closed the true spirit of fraternity can be felt here. We know that from this moment until September the administration will feel more kindly toward the faculty, the faculty will feel more kindly toward the students,the students will feel more kindly toward each other and the campus police will feel more kindly toward everybody. Terrill's One Group 1000 Yards Cottons Summer Fabric Sale Reg. 79c & 98c Yard 50c Yard A great selection of cotton fabrics including cotton satins, polished lawns, drip-dry prints, and poplins. All 36" wide. First quality, of course. TV Notes Simplicity Vogue McCall's "DIDN'TCHA SEE TH'SIGN BUDDIE?" patterns A new ABC adventure series for all is "Rough Riders," dealing with veterans of both sides in the Civil War making new homes for themselves in the West. 803 Mass. St. From The Hart ABC is preparing a new series of special, hour-long public affairs reports for next season. They will be in the pattern of "Prologue 1958" and "Report Card 1958" shown this season. The first of the new series will be "Youth Anonymous," dealing with teenagers and discipline problems. VI 3-2241 We stood by Potter Lake for nearly three days waiting for it to be drained, and when it was over we were certainly disappointed. After four years (and then some) we were dumbfounded that there really wasn't a whale in Potter Lake. The disease is spreading. First the president of Kansas City University levels a blast at public-supported schools soliciting private patronage. Now we learn via reprint in a local paper—that those central Kansas crusaders, the editorial staff of the Hutchinson News, have joined the Campaign for Collections for Common Colleges. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler SUMMER SESSION KANSAN The Coloseum, the Pantheon, and other famous Roman structures were built from a mixture of volcanic ash and slaked lime. (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) Ed. Phone 251 Bus. Phone 376 Editor Martina Crosier Business Manager Bill Irvine Bachelor B.A. We see that Chancellor Murphy spoke to the Lawrence city planners about several subjects last week including traffic and housing problems. Of course we're always glad to see the chancellor asking for better things for a better University, but he may have a student revolt if he carries through one plan. He said some thought has gone into blocking off Jawhawk Boulevard from the Chi Omega Catastrophe to Bailey Hall. Doesn't he realize that students escaping after dropping dye in the fountain will have to use their feet instead of a car. We live in a nice neighborhood—with one exception. Since it hasn't been too long ago since we were teenagers we can't shout too loud about their taste in music, but we were at the door of teenicide the other night. On a most convenient sleeping porch about three houses away this joker was putting on his own version of "The Fabulous Fifty" so loud it was disturbing us as we crushed grapes in our basement. We wiped off our feet and walked over to the young man's home and requested—shouted—what was going on? He answered: "I'm trying to make contact with a flying purple people eater." You gotta have hart. . . Bob Hartley Bob Macy, Harry Ritter, Fred Miller Photographer Ron Miller Manager James E. Dykes THE DINE-A-MITE 23rd and Louisiana The place that offers you more Air Conditioned DANCING Fresh Fish U.S. Inspected Choice Steaks Chicken Sandwiches Baked Potatoes with sour cream & chives or butter Salads with choice of dressing Businessman's lunch All dinners can be foil-wrapped to go