first have Around The World Page 3 President To Veto Farm Bill; Senate OKs Highway Move President Eisenhower will veto the bill providing a year freeze on farm price supports and make no accompanying concessions to farm bloc pressure in doing so, informed sources said today. (Compiled from United Press) The bill, if signed into law by the President, would freeze all 1958 farm price supports and 1959 planting allotments at not less than 1957 levels. This would reverse support cuts ordered by Secretary of Agriculture Ezra T. Benson. In one of his toughest speeches in years, the President bluntly told Congress that it will jeopardize the jobs of $4\frac{1}{2}$ million Americans and put the nation in "deadly peril" if it cripples the reciprocal trade program. Meanwhile, overwhelming Senate approval sent an anti-recession highway bill to the House today where leaders mapped a short cut to put it into effect by Easter. The bill will create thousands of new jobs by increasing road construction over the next two years. In Washington, the United States and its allies today planned early moves to find out if Nikita Khrushchev's move into the Soviet premiership signals any new chance to break the east-west impasse over a summit conference. Administration sources have been predicting confidently that there would be a veto ever since Congress began debating the measure several weeks ago. Joan Stafford, St. Joseph, Mo. junior has been elected chairman of the KU Collegiate Young Republicans for the coming year. Miss Stafford was chosen Miss GOP of Kansas at the state Young Republics meeting in Hays March 8th. Vice-chairman for the organization will be Bill Cronin, Kirkwood, Mo. sophomore; secretary, Sharon Hagman, Pittsburg sophomore; treasurer, Janice Tanner, Pittsburg sophomore; delegate at large, Steve Flood, Hays sophomore. Kent Pelz, Des Plaines, Ill, senior and outgoing president, said KU would send delegates to the Midwest Federation Convention of Collegiate Young Republicans at Bloomington, Ind. The convention will be April 11-13. Young Republicans wishing to go should notify Miss Stafford at VI 3-7874. Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office. 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to publication. Please Russen. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. Official Bulletin Friday, March 28.1958 University Daily Kansar TODAY Junior Elected KU GOP Head Student Union Activities officer and board applications may be picked up in the SUA office in the Union. Applications will be due Friday, April 11. Job interviews, Engineering School- General Electric, Schemadency, N. Y. Frisco Railroad, Enid, Okla; City of St. Louis, Mo. Film, Shakespeare's "Hamlet." 3:30 p.m. rehearsal room, University Theatre. Music and Dramatic Arts Building Everyone welcome. Mathematics Colloquium, 4 p.m., 203 Strong. Speaker, Mr. Howard B. Jen- Strong, Speaker of the Technology. "Conversation Laws and two Dimensional Variational Problems." Hillel Friday evening services, 7:30 p.m., Jewish Community Center. SATURDAY Mathematics Colloquium, 10 a.m., 217 Strong. Speaker, Prof. W. W. Rogosinski. University of Durham, England and Universi- ty Colorado, "Moments of Nonnegative Mass" Museum of Art record concert, 2 p.m. M.B. Te Deum'; J. S. Bach—Organ Works. SUNDAY Newman Club regular meeting, followi ng 11 o'clock Mass. Gamma Delta, 5:30 p.m., Immanuel Lutheran Church. Cost supper, panel discussion, fellowship, and vespers. All students welcome. The United States anticipates some word from Moscow that the Russians are ready to halt nuclear tests or nuclear weapons production without an international agreement. Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. "Te Deum"; "Te Deum"; J. S. Bach "Organ Works." In Moscow, Russia published today the membership of a reshuffled parliamentary presidium which suggested further important changes may be coming. MONDAY Mathematics colloquium. 4 p.m., 203 Strong Speaker, Dr. David S.Carter, New University. Existence Theory of a Class University Inquiry in Gravity Flows. With a, a Free, Boundary. Mathematics Club. 4 p.m. 203 Strong Geometry. 14 Alfred Gray. "4 Dimensional Geometry." Khrushchev will announce the make-up of his cabinet before the current Supreme Soviet ends its sitting. He is also believed to be planning a spectacular, unilateral suspension of atomic and hydrogen bomb tests. In Washington, the United States may send at least one rocket to or close to the moon within the next seven to nine months. high-ranking defense sources said today. Whether Russia will get there first is unknown. The Russians had been expected to send a rocket to the moon soon, but Moscow's Pravda indicated that the launching may be held off. Howard F. Stettler, professor of business administration, has been selected as one of the 20 participants in the summer program of instruction on the use and writing of cases in teaching business administration to be held at Harvard Business School from June 16 through Aug. 8. To Teach At Harvard A freshman coed was having trouble writing an English theme. She was trying to be very creative by injecting flowery adjectives and dynamic verbs into the theme, but she couldn't think of the right words to express herself. It's Tough For Her Too "What is a descriptive word meaning cold," she asked her roommate? "Why don't you use a thesaurus," the roommate replied. The coed thought for a minute and then asked, "How do you spell it?" Alumnus To Air Force Post Robert Dula, a KU physical education alumnus from Hollywood, has been appointed recreational director at Lincoln Air Force Base in Nebraska. He will supervise the service club, hobby shops, recreation areas and dependent youth program. He was assistant recreation director for the Lawrence recreation commission. A banquet honoring three retiring.KU faculty members will be held at 6:15 p.m. April 30 in the Kansas Union ballroom. A fourth, Edward Hashinger, professor of medicine and gerontology and lecturer in history of medicine at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Mo. will not be able to attend. The first Roman Catholic mass in the United States was celebrated at St. Mary's in Maryland in 1634. Retirement Fete To Honor Three Austin H. Turney, professor of education, came to KU in 1927 as an assistant professor. The three are: John W. Twente, professor of education, who is chairman of the board of directors of the Kansas State Teachers Assn., came here in 1925 as a full professor. He received his M.A. at KU in 1916. Sam E. Roberts, clinical professor of otorhinolaryngology at the medical center, who became a KU faculty member in 1913 as an instructor. He received his M.D. at KU in 1911. The professors will be the guests of friends and staff members at a banquet sponsored by the Endowment Assn. Sticklers! SMOKE RINGS come in all shapes and sizes. Like 4-sided smoke rings for squares. Sturdy smoke rings for windy days. Even invisible smoke rings for people who aren't ostentatious. As any competent smoke ringer (Vapor Shaper in Sticklese!) will tell you, the best way to start one is to light up a Lucky. It's best mostly because a Lucky tastes best. A Lucky gives you naturally light, wonderfully good-tasting tobacco, toasted to taste even better. Why settle for less? You'll say a light smoke's the right smoke for you! DON'T JUST STAND THERE... STICKLE! MAKE $25 LIGHT UP A light SMOKE-LIGHT UP A LUCKY! 10 A. P. CO. D. Product of The American Tobacco Company = "Tobacco is our middle name"