ected human Daily Hansan Bag- ident; tary; Mo.,. trom, 55th Year, No. 30 11 Groups To Split Chest Fund Total The Campus Chest fund will be split among 11 charity organizations, the Campus Chest steering committee decided Wednesday. Thursday, Oct. 24, 1957 The Campus Chest drive will be Dec. 4 to 10. A meeting of the members of the solicitations, publicity and special events committees will be held Dec. 3 to make last minute plans. Solicitations will begin at the KU-Canisius basketball game Dec. 4. This year's fund will be divided among 11 organizations as follows: World University Service, 30 per cent, KU-Y, 15 per cent, traveling expenses for five KU students who are awarded graduate direct exchange scholarships to five English schools and the standing emergency fund, each 10 per cent. CARE, Damon Runyan Heart Fund, infantile paralysis, Cancer Fund, tuberculosis, National Scholarship Fund For Negro Students and multiple sclerosis will each receive five per cent. This is the first year the fund has paid travel expenses for scholarship winners. The National Scholarship Fund For Negro Students was a part of the drive two years ago. All the other organizations received support from the Campus Chest last year. The KU-Y will receive five per cent more than it did last year and CARE, Damon Runyan Heart Fund, infantile paralysis, Cancer Fund, tuberulosis and multiple sclerosis will receive three per cent more. Spencer Gives Home To KU The University has accepted as a gift the Mission Hills residence in Kansas City, Kan. of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth A. Spencer for use as a home for the dean of the University's School of Medicine in Kansas City, Kan. Mr. Spencer is president of the Spencer Chemical Co. and the Pittsburg and Midway Coal Mining Co. The Spencer home, at 5800 Mission Dr., will be deeded to the Kansas University Endowment Assn. about Nov. 13. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy said today. Dr. Murphy said in accepting the gift for the University, "It is this kind of dedicated interest and loyalty to the University that gives us constantly renewed conviction that the growth and development of KU will continue unabated into a future in which the role of American education looms so crucial." The 5800 Mission Dr. residence has been the Spencer home for 16 years. It is situated on approximately three acres of land. Deputy To Succeed Herbert Brownell WASHINGTIN — (UP) — President Eisenhower's choice of William P. Rogers to succeed Herbert Brownell Jr. as Attorney General portends no change in the Justice Department's firm civil right policy. Mr. Brownnell will bow out around the second week in November and will be free to resume his role as former New York Gov. Thomas E. Dewev's political strategist. Mr Rogers has been deputy attorney general since 1953, and was educated at Colgate University and Cornell Law School. Weather Cloudy through Friday with light rain or drizzle west portion tonight changing to freezing drizzle north-west. Freezing drizzle or drizzle west Friday. Colder this afternoon and east portion tonight. Low tonight 25 to 30 northwest to 30's east and south. High Fridav 30's northwest to 40's east and south. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Eight Freshman Candidates For AWS Chosen A slate of eight freshman women was chosen to run for two freshman representatives to the Associated Women Students' Senate in the election Wednesday. The candidates are Carolyn Caskey, Independence, Mo., Carole Ann Cowen, Independence, Ada Sue Cox, Cherry, Ann Hoopingner, Dallas, Tex., Sharon Mather, Stafford, Nan Newton, Betsy Lyon, Kansas City, Kan, and Mary Stephenson, Pittsburg. Campaigning will be done through the AWS House of Representatives and not by individuals. The candidates were chosen from personal interviews by a senate committee with each of 25 women ranking highest on a test given Monday. More than 65 freshman women petitioned for the representative offices in AWS Senate. KU Band To Play At Nebraska Game The KU marching band will present a show entitled "Around the World in Six Minutes" during the halftime at the Nebraska-Kansas game Nov. 2 in Lincoln, Neb. The band will form a rocket which will be fired and will intercept the Russian satellite "Sputnik." It will form a coffee pot and play "They Grow an Awful Lot of Coffee in Brazil." The next formation will be a dancing hula girl with crepe paper streamers as a skirt. The band will then go into formation of a British grenadier guard and will end with a salute to the University of Nebraska. The marching band will perform the same show for the Kansas State-Kansas game here Nov. 9. Election Bill To Go Before Chancellor The amendment to the All Student Council election bill which was shown to be invalid due to the lack of the Chancellor's signature will now go to the Chancellor, the chairman of the ASC, Dick Patterson, Kansas City, Kan junior, said Wednesday night. 674 Turn Out For Primary Patterson said that after the amended bill is signed then a wait of two weeks will be allowed for any students who do not want the bill to petition for a referendum. The amendment was passed by the ASC at its Oct. 14 meeting. One-Third Of Eligible Freshmen Bother To Vote —(Daily Kansan photo) A total of 674 freshmen voted in the primary elections Wednesday. This was about one-third of the eligible voters, John Downing, Kansas City, Mo. senior and chairman of the All Student Council Elections Committee, said today. CANDIDATES FO RPRESIDENT—They are Philip Anschutz, Roger Whiten and Don Logan. IFPC Lists Committees ali. St. Joseph. Mo. iuniors. Committee appointments were announced at a meeting of the InterFraternity Pledge Council Monday night. On the public relations committee are Mike Garrison, chairman, Mac Johnson, both of Topeka, Ron Cowden, Pittsburg, Ron Dalby, Peoria, III, Steve Chalfant, Hutchinson, all freshmen, and Henry Asbell, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore. Social committee members are Phil Ballard, Wichita, chairman. Howard Lackow, New York City, Bill Chaffin, Moscow, and Al Moore, Topeka, all freshmen, Howard Blenden, Arkansas City, and Don Bach- Students on the steering committee are Scott Gilles, Prairie Village, chairman, Bob Smith, Salina, both freshmen, Jim Gore, Pittsburg sophomore, John Mayer, Kansas City, Mo., Kent Wilkinson, Independence, and Kermit Dyer, Kansas City, Mo., juniors. On the special events committee are Ron Broun, Phillipsburg, chairman, Jim Hixon, Kansas City, Mo. Paul Smith, Commerce, Tex., Jeff Hickey, Great Bend, Dave Blaker Bartlesville, Okla, and George Cartlich, Kansas City, Mo., all freshmen Queen, LMOC Judges Selected Thirty-six women and 33 men have been chosen judges to select candidates for the Student Union Activities Carnival queen and Little Man on Campus. LMOC judges are Mary Ann Daugherty, Meade, Gretchen Griswold, Silver City, N.M., Gayle Harper, Pawnee Rock, Margie Williamson, Hutchinson, Barbara Bastin, Scott City, Judy Chambers, Leavenworth, Judy Morgan, Emporia, Sondra Mcintosh, Chapman, Janet Williams and Kay Morgan, Wichita, Sally Montgomery, Lawrence, Sandra Rogers, Independence, Mo., Kay Crumly, St. Francis, Florence Lile, Garden City, Sadie Anderson, Webster Groves, Mo., Marilyn Whelan, El Dorado, sophomores. Organized house candidates will be picked by teams of three judges who will visit the houses on Oct. 29. Carole Allvine, Long Beach, N.Y. Janet Voss, Omaha, Mo. Sue Whitney, Bartlesville, Okla., Marilyn Mover, Kansas City, Kan., Susan Broadie, Des Moines, Iowa, Kay Prelogar, Rayton, Mo., freshmen. Mary Helen Clark, Leawood, Debby Hollinberry, Glencoe, Ill., Mary Ann Clark, Pat Florida, Kay Stoner, and Mary Birney, Kansas City, Mo. Marilyn Wiebke, Merriam Mary Adams, Topeka, Joyce县, Kansas City, aKn, Marilyn Erickson, Mission, iuniors. Judy Anthony, Kansas City, Mo. Mae Chetland, Glencoe, Ill., Ann Markwell, Garland, Mo., Suzanne Adams, Springfield,Mo., seniors. Queen candidates judges are Dick Goode, Overland Park, Mac Johnson, Topeka, freshmen; Bob Lynn, Gainsville, Tex., Phil Lonecar and Jim Eddy, Kansas City, Mo, Pete Anderson, Terry Marriott, Harry Miller and Dale Flory, Lawrence, Bruce Wingerd, Marion, Bill Cronin, Kirkwood, Warren DeGoler, Kansas City, Kan., sophomores. Don Day, St. Joseph, Mo, Phil Kirk and Bill Doty, Kansas City, Mo, Tom Gee, Leavenworth, Paul Nielsen, Chicago, Ill., Bob Weltz, Goodland, Ed Cooper, Hillsdale, Ill., Tom Galloway, Wichita, juniors. Alan Morris and Roger Gramley, Caney, Bob Mettlen, Hutchinson, Fred Allwine, Kansas City, Kan, Robert Boyd, Prairie Village, Rodierk Dollsy, Bulington, Bill Jackson, Florence, Jay Templin, St. John, Nick Classon, El Paso, Texas, Ron Jones, Kansas City, Mo., Bob Hall, Halstead, Bob Endres, Wichita, seniors; Wolfgang Sannwald, Calu, Germany special student. Downing said the turnout of voters was a little low probably due to the weather. About half of the eligible voters should have gotten to the polls, Downing said. General elections will be held Oct. 30. At that time, in addition to the election of officers and representatives, a referendum will be offered to change the minimum requirement of votes needed to elect representatives from living and school districts. Freshman women representatives to the Associated Women Students Senate will be elected at that time. Strong Hall had the heaviest run of voters with 191. Candidates for president are Don Logan, Kansas City, Mo.; Roger Whitten, Wichita, and Philip Anschutz, Wichita. Candidates for secretary are Barbara Bowin, Osage City; Robert A. Miller, Great Bend, and Joyce Malicky, Baldwin. Candidates for vice president are Michael Wilcox, Kansas City, Mo.; James Haight, Kansas City, Kan., and Marybeth True, Kansas City, Mo. Candidates for treasurer are Susanne Black, Wilmette, Ill.; Robert Blackwill, Wichita, and Judith Benedix, Leawood. Allied-Greek Independent candidates for seats in the ASC are Judith Gaskins, Kansas City, Mo; Mary Helen McPherson, Wichita, and Myra Lewis, Prairie Village. A $3,185 sidewalk construction project in the parking lot north of Allen Field House should be underway within two weeks. Vox Populi candidates are Mary Olson, Wichita, and Naomi Cross, Kansas City, Kan. Field House Walk Project To Begin Bids were opened in Topeka Tuesday, and the apparent low bidder was the Kansas Construction Co. of Lawrence. Construction time is 60 days. Keith Lawton, administrative assis tsant for operation, said it will take about two weeks for the bids to be processed in the state offices, and the contract should be let then. The sidewalk will be an addition to those already in the parking lot. U.S., Britain To Pool Missile Information WASHINGTON — (UP) — President Eisenhower and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan directed their aides today to draft immediate recommendations for pooling British and American resources in developing missiles and atomic energy. A joint statement issued after the meeting said two special study groups were set up on "nuclear relationship and cooperation" between the United States and Great Britain and the "field of military defense, particularly those problems dealing with missiles and rocketry."