Wednesday, Sept. 25, 1957 Daily hansan —(Dally Kansan photo) EMPTY POCKETS—Jack Harrison, Hays freshman, illustrates the fate of many of the students who will pay their fees Thursday. Fee cards are to be picked up in the basement of Strong Hall and presented at the Business Office for payment. Identification cards will be given to the student at that time. Fee payments may be made until Monday. All fees received after that time will be $6 more for late payment. Students must pay their fees by Oct. 4 or be withdrawn from school. Eight of 20 persons on the campus who were called by the University Daily Kansan Tuesday night had seen President Eisenhower deliver his television speech on the integration crisis. 8 Of 20 See Ike Deliver Telecast Of the 12 who did see the telecast, seven said they were studying at the time, two were at meetings, one was delivering posters over the campus, one was at choir practice and one was downtown on an errand. He said he considered his speech a forceful statement representing strong determination on the part of the executive department to enforce the decision of the federal District Court involved. Everyone at the Phi Kappa fraternity house was so busy studying, no one could be called to the telephone to talk to the Daily Kansan reporter. The members of Pi Beta Phi sorority were entertaining their alumni with a party. "The President made an effort to express recognition of the intricacies and complexities of the problem facing the South, and the understanding of it." Robinson said. Jack Kollmann, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, saw the telecast and said he was impressed by the calmness with which the President handled the problem. He believed Pres. Eisenhower cooled down the opposition by making the speech. W. Stitt Robinson Jr., associate professor of history, represented the faculty in the survey. LITTLE ROCK, Ark., —(UP)— Central High School was integrated today under the protection of bayonet-toting paratroopers of the 101st Airborne Division. Ed Wheeler, Casper, Wyo. junior, saw the telecast, and said he favors the action of the President. He said someone has to keep control of the country and Ike is doing a good job. Bayonets Protect Negro Students The Army regulars escorted nine Negro students into the high school building without incident. Twenty minutes after the Negro children entered the school, a detachment of 25 troops advanced with fixed bayonets toward a crowd which had gathered at another intersection a block from the school and the crowd was quickly dispersed. "If the situation should mushroom, it could wreck all of what our country stands for," he said. NEW YORK. —(UP)— The AFL-CIO executive council today in effect ordered the Teamsters Union to remove James R. Hoffa from any union office within 30 days or face possible suspension from the federation. Bulletin LAWRENCE, KANSAS 55th Year, No.9 New Units Plan Delayed; Finish Date Uncertain A duplicate of Stouffer Place, KU married students' apartments, will be finished sometime next year, J. J. Wilson, director of dormitories, said Tuesday. Stouffer Place, at 19th and Iowa Streets, now includes 10 buildings with 120 units, 80 with one bedroom and 40 with two. The proposed addition will be northeast of the present development. Mr. Wilson estimated that the construction costs will be $1 million not including furnishings and some utilities. The latter will be let under separate contracts. It is hoped that the project will be completed by September, 1958, but developments are now about 60 days behind schedule due to delays in planning and preparing bids. The project is designed to cut down costs and eventually pay for itself through rent. The two bedroom units rent for $70 per month and one bedroom units for $60, not including utilities. Morality Is A Debate Topic If you have any strong opinions on the question "Resolved: That the moral standards of an individual are determined by his environment," you will have an opportunity to express them at the KU-Y Campus Forum English-style debate at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Student Union Ballroom. Debaters will be Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women, and Emil L. Telfel, associate professor of journalism, affirmative; Dr. John Patton, professor of religion and Dr. Frank Nelick, assistant professor of English, negative. Dr. Francis Heller, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, will be the moderator. Game Parking To Cost $1 Cast Selected For 'Henry IV' A total of approximately 1,100 choice parking spots near Memorial Stadium will cost the users one dollar each at football games this fall, Keith Lawson, administrative assistant for operations, said Monday. Gene Ladd, Asheville, N. C. sophomore, has been chosen for the lead in "King Henry IV" the University Theatre's opening production Nov. 12-16. Other members of the cast which were selected Tuesday include Vera Stough, Lawrence senior, as Lady Percy; William Kuhlke, Denver, Colo. graduate student, as Prine Hal; Roger Brown, Topela senior, as Hotspur, and Maralyn Shackelford, St. Joseph, Mo. graduate student, as Madame Quickly. Falstaff will be played by Jerome Kilty, a professional broadway actor. Lewin Goff, director of the University Theatre, will direct the play. Assistant director is Bruce Logan-bill, Newton graduate student. AGI Starts Work On Election Ticket Freshmen interested in running for class offices on the Allied-Greek Independent party ticket in the freshman elections Oct. 23, should contact Bob Jackson, Mission junior, and newly elected chairman of the AGI candidates committee for freshman elections. Other students who were elected to the committee Tuesday night at the first meeting of the party are, Pat Stitt, Lakewood, Colo. junior; Judy Clark, Topeka, John J. Hanrahan, Russell, and Ann Humann, Mission, sophomores, and Pete Protzman, Kansas City, Mo., and Kurt Kessinger, Junction City, freshman. 一(Daily Kansan photo) the KU program will need 50,000 yearly. They will be temporarily housed under the stadium in an area to be ready in November. (See story "KU Mouse Production" on Page 3.) OF MICE AND MEN—Speedy breeders such as these two may make KU the mouse headquarters of the world. At least $ 1^{1 / 2} $ million mice are needed for cancer study, authorities say, and $\textcircled{9}$ The decision is to charge for parking at games is a result of a bill passed last spring by the Kansas Legislature to raise money for additional all-weather parking lots. Charge For Basketball Too Mr. Lawton said during basketball season there will also be a charge for parking around Allen Field House. Zones A and B, behind Carruth- O'Leary dormitory, which hold 323 cars, will be in the pay section. Fees will also be collected for parking in the former practice field east of the stadium and the former baseball field southeast of the stadium. Don't Go To Game Without ID Card Only temporary identification cards will admit students to the football game Saturday. Although some students will have their regular identification cards they will not be valid for the first game. There will not be any exchange of identification cards for other students or parents, according to E. L. Falkenstien, athletic business manager. The old practice field will hold 300 cars and the former baseball field 500. These two areas are grassed surfaces and will be used only in good weather. An entrance to the former baseball field is now being built. It will enter the grove east of the Memorial Campanile from Mississippi Street and run through the grove. The old baseball field was made available for parking by the construction of a new baseball field west of Allen Field House. This field should be in use by spring. Saturday, some of the pay parking area will be used to park more than 50 buses which will bring high school bands to participate in Band Day. Vosper On HST Library Board Robert Vosper, director of libraries, is KU's representative to the board of the Harry S. Truman Library Institute for National and International Affairs. Mr. Vosper was appointed to the position this summer by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. He attended the organization meeting July 5, and will serve for three years on the board. Mr. Vosper said the nearness of Lawrence and Independence, Mo., where the library is located, gives KU excellent opportunities for research, using the papers and books concerned with the Truman administration. President of the board is Dr. Fliner Ellis, president of the University of Missouri. Secretary is Dr. Philip C. Brooks, of the U. S. National Archives staff. Weather Partly cloudy tonight and Thursday. Little change in temperatures onnight and Thursday. Low tonight 15-55 High Thursday 80s. Low Tuesday was 51 degrees, high 84 degrees. Low this morning was 52 degrees.