of the ak atrence school ce is Pro- luca cago, 2572 Freshman Primary Due Candidates To Be Named In October 23 Election Primary elections for candidates for freshman class officers and All Student Council representatives will be held Oct. 23. The general election will be Oct. 30. The primary will choose the four class officers: president, vice president, secretary and treasurer. Any freshman may run in the primary, but the field will be cut to three for each office in the general election. A number of ASC representative candidates on the ballot is determined by the political parties. Two freshman women and two men will be chosen for the ASC, John Downing, Kansas City, Mo. senior, elections chairman, said today. Candidates for class offices and the ASC must file their names by midnight, Oct. 17, with Downing. Class officer candidates must present a petition with names of 25 freshmen to Downing. Robert McGee, Olathe senior and president of the Allied-Greek Independent party, said any AGI member who wants to run in the election should see Robert Jackson, Mission junior, to have his name put on the ballot. The ASC constitution states that no class officer candidate can be affiliated with a political party. No name of a political party can appear on any ballot and no party may endorse a candidate. William Wilson, Colby senior, said students interested in running for the Vox Populi party will meet with the executive council Oct. 13. Eight members will select primary candidates on the basis of experience and personal history. The council will then present the candidates to a general assembly of the party Oct. 17. A two-thirds majority is needed for approval. Braves Win Series, 5-0 NEW YORK —(UP)— The Milwaukee Braves won the World Series defeating the New York Yankees, 5-0 in the seventh game. But the Yankees did not go down easy. They loaded the bases with two outs in the ninth. Hank Bauer, Yankee right fielder, grounded to third for a force play that gave the Braves their first championship since their move to Milwaukee. The Braves took advantage of a Yankee fielding lapse in the third inning and went on to knock Don Larsen out of the box to take a 4-0 lead. The fifth run was scored on catcher Don Crandall's home run into the lower left field stands. With Lew Burdette, a two-game winner in the Series going for Milwaukee, the Yankees threatened in the first inning, but fell short. Burdette went the distance and gave up seven hits. Larsen was charged with the loss. He was relieved by four pitchers. Tom Sturdivant, Tommv Byrne, Bobby Shantz and Art Ditmar. Milwaukee 004 000 010-5 91 Burdette and Crandall: Larsen. Shantz (3), Ditmar (4), Sturdivant (6), Byrne (8) and Berra. W—Burdette I—Burdette Fulbright Program Adds 5 Counties Prints by several artists are included in the "Animal Kingdom" collection now on display in the South Lounge of the Student Union. The prints are one of the George Benet traveling colections. Art Collection On Exhibit Scholarships to Argentina, Ecuador, Iceland, Peru, and Turkey have been added to the Fulbright Scholarship program. All applications for scholarships to study abroad must be in by Oct. 25. Freshmen To Get Petitions For AWS Candidates Petitions will be distributed to freshman women Monday for the selection of candidates for two representatives to the Associated Women Students Senate. Freshman women will receive their petitions through the executive councils of the freshman residence halls or through special representatives in the scholarship halls. The petitions will be turned in during a briefing session at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct.17 in 106 Strong. "The freshmen will be given information concerning the history, constitution, regulations, various offices, general organization and functions of AWS at the meeting," said Sue Frederick, Kirkwood, Mo., senior and AWS president. A test over the briefing session will be given 7:30 p.m. Oct.21 in 106 Strong. Following the test the candidates will be chosen through interviews with a Senate committee. Freshman representatives will be elected Oct. 30. His Chamber Music To Be Performed John Pozdro, assistant professor of music theory, has been notified his chamber orchestra composition, "In Memory of a Friend," will be performed at the Louisiana Symposium of Contemporary Music, under the direction of Vincent de Frank. Partly cloudy tonight and Friday except early morning drizzle extreme west. Warmer Friday. Low tonight 35 to 45. High Friday in 60's. Professor Pozdro composed the work last year while on sabbatical leave to study at the Eastman School of Music, Rochester, N. Y. It was performed there last April with Dr. Howard Hanson conducting. The piece is dedicated to the late Robert M. Delaney, a Pulitzer Prize winner and professor of composition at Northwestern University, with whom Professor Pozdro studied. Daily hansan Weather 55th Year, No. 20 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Thursday, Oct. 10, 1957 —(Daily Kansan photo) THE PROBLEM'S LICKED — These senior women and 11 others addressed and mailed 1,600 letters to seniors. From left—Janetha Schmalzried. Dighton, class secretary; Soni Hayn, Wichita; Mary Sanborn, Chapman, and Celia Welch, Herington. Seniors! An Event For You Seniors, 15 women worked three hours Wednesday night preparing letters that will tell you all about the senior coffee planned for Tuesday and senior day plans. ington, Gamma Phi Beta; Shirley Andrish, Topeka, Kappa Alpha Theta; Marcia Goodwin, Columbus, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Polly Peppercorn, Lawrence, Pi Beta Phi; Wanda Welliver, Oberlin, Douthart Hall; Shirley Stout, Lombard, Ill., Sellards, and Joyce Klemp, Leavenworth, Watkins. The letter will tell you the coffee will be at 10 a.m. in the Student Union Ballroom. It will also say seats will be reserved for you on the 50-yard line for the Nov. 9 Kansas-Kansas State football game. The day has been named Class of '58 Football Day. The queen and two attendants will be selected at the coffee. The queen is called a calendar queen because her picture will be on the cover of the calendar that seniors sell annually as a money-raising project. Candidates for calendar queen are: Carol Barker, Independence, Mo., Alpha Chi Omega; Mary Sanborn, Chapman, Alpha Delta Pi; Janetha Schmalzried, Dighton, Alpha Omicron Pi; Sue Bye, Kansas City, Alpha Phi; Jerre Glover, Salina, Chi Omega; Dale Barham, Topeka, Delta Delta Delta; Bonny Golden, Kansas City, Mo., Delta Gamma; Jo Le Potucke, Well- The class yell will be practiced. Miss Stout is heading a group of seniors working on the yell. Class pennants and badges will be sold at the coffee. Seniors will be excused from class to attend. Quarterbacks To Talk At Pre-Game Rally Two quarterbacks of the KU football squad, Duane Morris, Salina junior, and Wally Strauch, Elmhurst, Ill, senior, will speak at a pre-game rally at 9:50 a.m. Friday at the east end of Strong Hall. Cheerleaders and pep club officers said that the morning rallies will be regular occurrences before home games this year. Geometry Taught At Prison He's High On Phog, Campus In the Oct. 6 issue of the Portland Oregonian, Portland daily, L. H Gregory, sports editor, writes of his trip to Kansas with the Oregon State football team Sept. 28. University Extension has added its 22nd class, analytic geometry, to the teaching program at the Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary this week. In his column, "Greg's Gossip." Mr. Gregory writes about Forrest C. (Phog) Allen, former KU basketball coach, and the KU campus. Following are excerpts from the column: About the campus — "Our own education on Kansas got quite a lift on the football trip to Lawrence. (We) had never thought of scenic beauty in connection with a Kansas landscape or college campus—but no campus we have seen is more attractive than that of the University of Kansas. While Kansas does have plenty of dreary brownish landscape, the impression of the state we'll keep is the very different one of the university grounds, as well as the handsome white homes of the college residence section." About Phog Allen — "... We have met the one and only Dr. Forrest C. (Phog) Allen, and he's tremendous. Phog is a big, active, keenly blueeyed man who could pass for 20 years younger than his 71, a most fluent and interesting talker. Having met Phog, listened to him, found him more interesting and versatile than we had heard he was, we are correspondingly high in spirit." Fund To Pay Scholars'Way A minimum of 10 per cent of the Campus Chest contributions for this year will help pay traveling expenses for five KU students who are awarded graduate direct exchange scholarships to five English schools. The scholarships pay for the students' room, board, fees and incidentals while in England, but do not pay his traveling expenses. English universities participating in this direct exchange also send a student to KU each year. The universities are Southhampton, Birmingham, Exeter, Reading and Aberdeen. The exact percentage of Campus Chest contributions to be given to this fund and other organizations has not yet been decided. The drive will begin Dec. 4 at the first home basketball game and will continue through Dec. 10. Rayburn Will Speak In Kansas TOPEKA, —(UP)— Acceptance by Rep. Sam Rayburn, Texas Democrat and Speaker of the House, of an invitation to be guest speaker at the Fifth District Congressional Dinner at Dodge City Nov. 18 was announced yesterday by Kansas Democratic leaders. The Dodge City event is the third of a series of district dinners each of which will be highlighted by a nationally known guest speaker. The KU chapter of the Music Education National Conference is leading a movement to develop unity among 17 schools in Kansas that train music educators. They are organizing a planning session to be held at KU Oct. 27. The 17 schools are invited. Miss Elin K. Jorgensen, professor of music education and state counselor of MENC, said a state meeting of the conference will be held Nov. 7 in Wichita. Music Conference Set For Oct.27 Miss Jorgensen said it is planned to have all 17 schools represented at a student symposium. Roundtable discussions will be held to find ways to strengthen the student chapters in Kansas, she said. 10 Auto Accidents So Far This Year Ten automobile accidents, one which involved an injury, have been investigated by the campus police this year. Joe G. Skillman, campus police chief, said. One person has been arrested for speeding this year. Last year there were 97 accidents which involved 7 injuries and 17 arrests. Chief Skillman said the cause of most accidents on campus is the failure to yield the right of way. He said that the campus speed limit is 20 m.p.h. and that pedestrians have the right of way at all marked crosswalks.